We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Cooking camp and more at FHSU KAMS

kams
A KAMS instructor with campers from the Chemistry of Cooking camp.

By DIANE GASPER-O’BRIEN
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

High school students entering ninth and 10th grades this fall are getting a glimpse of college life at Fort Hays State University this summer.

Up to 30 students could sign up for one or more of six Kansas Association of Mathematics and Science summer camps during the month of June.

The KAMS camp program, in its second year, gives youngsters a chance to learn about science and math in a fun environment.

This year’s six choices were Computer Animation, Chemistry of Cooking, Becoming An Everyday Mathematician, Roots and Wings Biology Camp, Google Cardboard Virtual Reality, and Capturing the Storm: Learning the Basics of Meteorology and Storm Photography.

FHSU faculty teach each of the camp sessions, while FHSU students serve as counselors and other assistants. In addition to living in Custer Hall, students are also given a campus tour and get to rub elbows each day with folks who call Fort Hays State home.

A $100 registration fee gets each student room and board for five days, camp supplies and a T-shirt.

“They get the lifestyle of a college student,” said Ann Noble, KAMS financial administrator who oversees the camps. “They get to experience college faculty, college students and college facilities.”

Some like the experience so well that they keep coming back.

Hap Waddell participated in the maximum number of two camps this summer. He will be a sophomore at Marion High School this fall, and he is entertaining the idea of returning to the FHSU campus full time his junior year.

KAMS is the state’s premier academic high school program for the state’s best and brightest students who study at Fort Hays State full time their junior and senior years. They receive college-level instruction and a high school diploma along with 68 hours college credit.

Waddell said his high school biology teacher told him about the camps, and he signed up to make the two and a half hour hour trip from home for the Computer Animation and Chemistry of Cooking sessions.

During his first visit to campus, Waddell and his fellow campers used an object-based educational programming language to produce a short animation movie.

“I’m more of a math person, and I thought that particular camp was going to be different animation,” he said. “But I still enjoyed it.”

Waddell knew he would like the second camp, too.

“I enjoy baking in my free time, so that was one I really wanted to do,” said Waddell, who is interested in studying architectural engineering.

The camps are run by Fort Hays State graduate students Regina Tolbert, the camps director, and Amber Isom, who is in charge of evening activities.

“I think it’s a good experience for everyone involved,” Noble said.

Wild West Festival 2016: Blackhawk

blackhawk-logo-2016

These special previews are brought to you by PAUL-WERTENBERGER CONSTRUCTION INC.
NORTHWESTERN PRINTERS
DISCOUNT FIREWORKS, 2306 Vine
EAGLE COMMUNICATIONS

The 22nd annual Wild West Festival in Hays is scheduled for June 30 to July 4.

Hays Post is partnering with the Wild West Festival committee to offer a sneak peak at the performers taking the stage this year.

Multi-platinum-selling country group Blackhawk have signed with Loud & Proud Records and are working on their first studio release in 12 years. The band (guitarist/vocalist Henry Paul and keyboardist/vocalist Dave Robbins) are currently in Nashville with co-producer Dale Oliver (Casting Crowns, Steven Curtis Chapman), putting the finishing touches on their new album Brothers Of The Southland, currently scheduled for a late spring release.

“Brothers of the Southland is the product of BlackHawk’s evolution,” says Loud & Proud Owner & President Tom Lipsky. “It represents the band through the years and their many hits, the adversity they faced and Henry and Dave’s decision to continue their musical journey together. BlackHawk’s sound remains a beautiful blend of melody and harmony with genuine and purposeful lyrics and Loud & Proud is excited to be their label partner. We know their legions of fans are going to love experiencing this new music.”

“We’re thrilled to be working with Tom Lipsky and Loud & Proud,” says Henry Paul. “His belief, commitment and appreciation for our music has us excited for the future. We’re looking forward to the next chapter of our story.”

Along with third founding member Van Stephenson, Henry Paul and Dave Robbins exploded onto the country music landscape in 1993 with their self-titled album and top 10 hit single “Goodbye Says It All.” Three more hit singles followed (“Every Once In A While,” “I Sure Can Smell The Rain” and “That’s Just About Right”), propelling the album to platinum status. They maintained that pace in the years that followed, scoring a dozen top ten hits, including two number ones, while selling more than seven million records.

Tragedy struck in 1999 when Van was diagnosed with melanoma, a deadly form of skin cancer. After a long and courageous fight, Van lost his battle in 2001. Henry and Dave honored his dying wish that BlackHawk continue to make great music and fight for a cure. They established the Van Stephenson Memorial Cancer Research Fund in his memory, donating the proceeds of their efforts to the Vanderbilt Cancer Research Center.

Over the course of their amazing career, BlackHawk’s songs have touched people young and old. Their unique musical character has been a catalyst in bringing non-country music fans to the genre. Twenty-one years after their arrival, BlackHawk’s legend grows.

Blackhawk takes the stage July 1.

Check HaysPost.com for more acts in the coming days.

Partly Cloudy, warm Sunday with a chance of rain

FileLA weak cold front will extend from eastern Kansas into the northern Texas Panhandle this afternoon. Moist and unstable air will continue across much of Kansas behind the front, and an upper level trough will support thunderstorm development again in the afternoon, especially from south central into southeast Kansas. The primary threat will be damaging microburst winds, although small hail is possible. Locally heavy rainfall may occur.

The weather pattern will change this week, resulting in cooler temperatures and increasing chances for rain. A series of cool fronts will drop south out of Canada, with cool high pressure behind each one. These fronts will become stationary across Kansas. Ingredients will be in place along these fronts for a chance of thunderstorms each day.

Today: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 85. Calm wind becoming east 5 to 9 mph in the morning.

Tonight: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 66. East southeast wind 5 to 10 mph becoming light east after midnight.

Monday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 91. East wind 5 to 10 mph.

Monday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 7pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 66. East wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tuesday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 11am, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 87. East northeast wind 6 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

KanCare expansion group launches campaign to educate voters

BY JIM MCLEAN

Photo by Susie Fagan/KHI News Service File David Jordan, left, executive director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, says a series of meetings across the state are designed to inform voters about the economic and health benefits of expanding eligibility for Medicaid.
Photo by Susie Fagan/KHI News Service File David Jordan, left, executive director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, says a series of meetings across the state are designed to inform voters about the economic and health benefits of expanding eligibility for Medicaid.

Supporters of Medicaid expansion are kicking off a campaign to mobilize Kansas voters on the issue. Federal tax rules prohibit the nonprofit Alliance for a Healthy Kansas from engaging in direct political activity, so the group is mounting a vigorous educational campaign through a series of community meetings across the state.

The goal is to educate Kansans about the economic and health benefits of expanding eligibility for KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, so that they can question incumbent lawmakers and challengers about the issue during the primary and general election campaigns, said David Jordan, executive director of the alliance.

“These aren’t political events, they are events to engage community members and community leaders,” said Jordan, noting that Kansas has so far lost out on more than $1.2 billion in additional federal Medicaid funds.

The alliance, which boasts more than 70 member organizations, kicked off the series Tuesday in Wichita and has meetings scheduled Wednesday in Dodge City and Thursday in Garden City.

Meetings scheduled through mid-July include sessions in Topeka, Overland Park, Independence and Hutchinson.

“We expect to hold over two dozen meetings between now and November,” Jordan said. Carl Shay, one of two Democrats vying for the right to challenge Republican Sen. Forrest Knox, an expansion opponent, in the November general election attended the Wichita meeting and made it clear in a Facebook post where he stands on the issue.

“Kansans already pay for this and aren’t allowed to use it for purely political reasons,” Shay wrote. “Kansans shouldn’t have to choose between eating and being healthy.”

Shay, a member of the Fredonia Unified School District Board of Education, is running against Mark Pringle, Yates Center, for the Democratic nomination.

Knox is being challenged by Bruce Givens, El Dorado, in the GOP primary.

Forcing a discussion

There has been relatively little discussion of Medicaid expansion at the Statehouse since it became an option for states almost three years ago as part of the federal Affordable Care Act. Gov. Sam Brownback and Republican legislative leaders have blocked consideration of the issue despite polls conducted by the Kansas Hospital Association and others that show a majority of Kansans support it. But expansion advocates see this year’s election as an opportunity to force the issue.

Polls indicate a majority of Kansas voters are dissatisfied with Brownback and the Legislature because of their inability to solve ongoing budget problems that have forced them to cut spending on highways, higher education, KanCare and other social programs.

“The will of the people has been overlooked on the issue of expanding KanCare,” Jordan said. “Now, it’s incumbent upon us as Kansans who want the best for our state to make sure that policymakers and candidates understand that and see the energy for this issue in their communities.”

In addition to the community meetings, Jordan said the alliance will launch a petition drive once lawmakers conclude their special session on school finance.

Online signatures will automatically trigger targeted emails to incumbent legislators and candidates. Several health foundations are members of the alliance, including the Kansas Health Foundation, which is the primary funder of the Kansas Health Institute, the parent organization of the editorially independent KHI News Service.

Cost and fairness issues

Brownback and other expansion opponents say the state can’t afford the additional cost of Medicaid expansion even though the federal government will shoulder all but 10 percent of the cost and studies by the hospital association indicate that expansion would pay for itself.

Opponents also object to expanding KanCare coverage to non-disabled adults at a time when many Kansans with physical and developmental disabilities are on waiting lists for support services.

Last fall, Melika Willoughby, Brownback’s deputy communications director, detailed the governor’s opposition to expansion in an email to supporters.

She wrote that the governor believes it would be “morally reprehensible” for the state to provide health coverage to low-income Kansans “who choose not to work” before providing support services to all of the disabled Kansans now on waiting lists.

Since the start of 2014, when the main provisions of the Affordable Care Act took effect, 31 states and the District of Columbia have expanded Medicaid eligibility to all adults earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Kansas is among 19 states that have rejected expansion.

The annual income limits in expansion states are $16,242 for an individual and $33,465 for a family of four.

In Kansas, only adults with dependent children are eligible for KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, and then only if their annual incomes are below 28 percent of the poverty level, which for a family of four is $9,216.

Expansion would provide coverage to approximately 150,000 Kansans, many but not all of whom are now uninsured, and generate additional federal dollars for providers hit hard by reductions in Medicare reimbursements triggered by the health reform law and a budget-cutting formula that congressional conservatives demanded.

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

Kansas man flown to hospital after Harley hits rock bluff

MotorcycleAccidentGASCONADE COUNTY, MO. – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just after 6p.m. on Saturday in Gasconade County Missouri.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1947 Harley Davidson Motorcycle driven by James D. Sneegas, 66, Lawrence, was traveling on Route A five miles north of Bland.

The driver lost control of the motorcycle on wet pavement. It traveled off the road and hit a rock bluff.

Sneegas was flown to University Hospital in Columbia.

Kansas woman hospitalized after car hits deer on I-70

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMTHOMAS COUNTY – A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 10p.m. on Saturday in Thomas County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2012 Nissan Versa driven by Carol A. Dillon, 46, Harper, was westbound in the passing lane of Interstate 70 thirteen miles west of Colby.

The front driver’s side of the vehicle struck a deer.

Dillon was transported to Citizen’s Medical Center. She was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Altuve gets 4 hits; Astros top Royals 13-5, win 7th straight

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jose Altuve went 4 for 5, including a home run and two doubles, and the Houston Astros extended their winning streak to seven with a 13-5 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

Altuve drove in three runs and scored three runs. He is hitting .417 with a .484 on-base percentage while reaching base in 27 consecutive games, the longest active streak in the major leagues.

Marwin Gonzalez, Altuve and Carlos Correa, the Astros’ two-three-four hitters, combined to go 8 for 15 with seven RBIs, six runs and two homers. Altuve and Correa hit consecutive homers in a seven-run second.

Hays Eagles split their Saturday games at the McPherson tournament

McPHERSON, Kan. – The Hays Eagles Sr. American Legion baseball team split their two games Saturday at the McPherson tournament. The Eagles scored 13 runs  in the first three innings and beat Emporia 13-2. They jumped out to a 4-0 lead after two innings in their second game against Ark City but lost 7-4. The Eagles are now 2-1 in pool play and 12-6 overall.

Ark City rallied with six runs in the fifth inning and one in the eighth. Ricky Hockett went 2-2 and drove in a run and scored a run. He tripled in the first inning and singled in the third inning. Hockett gave up three runs on one hit and took the loss.

Hockett had two hits and three RBIs in the first game against Emporia. Wyatt Schumacher struck out six hitters en route to the win. Schumacher allowed one earned run, three hits and no walks over four innings.

Man accused of killing Kansas detective appears in court

Ayers- photo Kan. City Police
Ayers- photo Kan. City Police

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 29-year-old man charged in the death of a Kansas City, Kansas, police detective has made his first court appearance in Kansas.

Curtis Ayers, of Tonganoxie, is charged with capital murder in the May 9 death of Det. Brad Lancaster. Ayers is accused of fleeing to Missouri in a car after Lancaster was shot.

Kansas City, Missouri, police shot and wounded Ayers before taking him into custody. He had been hospitalized until Monday when he was returned to Kansas to face the charges.

The Kansas City Star reports Ayers appeared Friday in Wyandotte County court, where he waived his right to a preliminary hearing within 10 days. He wasn’t required to enter a plea. His next court date is July 20.

Prosecutors say they anticipate filing additional charges.

SW Kansas man dies after crash with a semi pulling a grain trailer

fatalKEARNEY COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just after 11a.m. on Saturday in Kearney County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Kenworth semi pulling a grain trailer and driven by Tyler Allen Bontrager, 32, Syracuse, was eastbound on Road 320 one mile east of U.S. 50 and the Kearny and Hamilton County line

The semi collided in the uncontrolled intersection with a 2006 Chevy Silverado driven by Manuel A. Perea, 58, Syracuse, that was northbound on Road B.

Bontrager and Perea were transported to the Kearney County Hospital where Perea died.

Both drivers were not wearing seat belts, according to the KHP.

Wind power transmission line supporters to try again

The overview map on this page depicts the route of the Grain Belt Express Clean Line in Kansas- Image Clean Line Energy Partners.- click to expand
The overview map on this page depicts the route of the Grain Belt Express Clean Line in Kansas- Image Clean Line Energy Partners.- click to expand

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Supporters of a transmission line that would carry wind power from western Kansas to the East Coast say they will present the proposal again in Missouri, which rejected it last year.

But opponents of the Grain Belt Express Clean Line say they are ready to stop the proposal again.

The proposed transmission line would run from Kansas through Missouri and Illinois to a substation in Indiana, where it will connect with a grid to take power farther east. Kansas, Illinois and Indiana regulators have approved the project but the Missouri Public Service Commission rejected it after strong opposition from many residents.

The Columbia Daily Tribune reports Clean Line Energy Partners, the Houston-based company leading the project, plans to refile the application with the Missouri commission in the coming weeks.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File