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Kansas woman hospitalized after SUV hits a tree

KHPGEARY COUNTY – A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 8:30 a.m. on Wednesday in Geary County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Hyundai SUV driven by Andrea N. Jackson, 27, Milford, was northbound on U.S. 77 four miles northwest of Junction City.

The SUV traveled off onto the right shoulder, came back onto the road, entered the east ditch and struck a tree sideways.

Jackson was transported to the hospital in Topeka.
She was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Marianne Ladenburger

125751“God is love and she who abides in love abides in God and God in her.” (1John 4:16)

Marianne Ladenburger loved life – both its blessings and its challenges. “Abundance” became her focus following her cancer diagnosis in December 2014. Marianne taught by example how to live, to love, and to let go of all, including the life she loved so very much, to possess Eternal Life with the Spirit, whom she most related to as God. The Spirit’s fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control were the gifts of being in her presence.

Marianne was born February 11, 1930, to E.A. Baalman and Leoba Robben Baalman on the family farm near Menlo, KS. She graduated from Sacred Heart High School, Wichita, in 1948. She married Willus P. Ladenburger in Seguin, December 28, 1949. She died October 8, 2016 in her home. She is survived by children Dixie, and husband Murray Heinrich of Fairway, KS; Bob Ladenburger and wife Susie of Denver, CO; Cheryl and husband Bobby Patrick of Calgary, Alberta; Jay Ladenburger and wife Susan of Topeka; and Pat and husband Keith Kennedy of Hoxie, KS. Current events, politics, the importance of education, and the Golden Rule were among the many topics of conversation at three sit-down meals each day while the children were growing up. Cooking, gardening, and sewing clothing for her three daughters were a few talents of her early years of marriage in Grainfield. She loved the fruits of her yearly garden…lettuce, green beans, cucumbers, and tomatoes best of all! In 1979, Marianne returned to school and became an LPN. She loved nursing and pediatrics was her favorite. She quilted, tole painted, scrapbooked, tended her flower gardens and traveled with Willus during the late 80’s and 90’s. Willus died in 2002. In 2008, ever the seeker, Marianne moved from Grainfield to Topeka. She played lots of bridge, enjoyed the symphony and theater, participated in Osher classes, and enjoyed many new friends. She traveled the country to participate in family happenings, graduations, weddings, vacations, and to stay connected!

Marianne is also survived by fourteen grandchildren, who were the delight of her life: Jason Heinrich, Jonas Heinrich, Sarah Ladenburger Dominick, Anne Ladenburger Feighner, Ali Ladenburger, Drew Patrick, Angie Patrick, Jessie Patrick Provience, Jenna Kennedy Sloan, Jill Kennedy Schoendaler, Kyle Kennedy, Megan Ladenburger Howard, Paige Ladenburger Wynne and Rachel Ladenburger Irons; and fifteen great grandchildren under the age of six: Landon, Henry, Rowan, Peter, Skye, Sophia, Brynn, Teddy, Hannah, Austin, Owen, Alvy, Beatrice, Eli and Oliver.

In honor of Marianne, we ask ourselves, “Am I treating others, as I would like to be treated?” Marianne will be greatly missed!

A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, October 14, 2016 at the St. Agnes Catholic Church, 266 Cedar Street, Grainfield, Kansas 67737. Visitation will take place at the church one hour prior to the service. Interment will follow in the Grainfield Cemetery. Everyone is invited to join the family for a luncheon following the interment at the St. Agnes Education Center.

Memorial contributions may be made to Catholic Relief Services, P.O. Box 17090, Baltimore, Maryland 21297, Midland Hospice, 200 SW Frazier, Topeka, Kansas 66606 or a charity of your choice.

Heartland Community Foundation receives grant from ITC to enhance the Healthy Living Fund

From left to right: Sandy Jacobs, Executive Director, Heartland Community Foundation; Susan Bowles, President of the Board of Directors/Heartland Community Foundation and Kim Goodnight, Regional Manager, Community Affairs, ITC.
From left: Sandy Jacobs, Executive Director, Heartland Community Foundation; Susan Bowles, President of the Board of Directors/Heartland Community Foundation; and Kim Goodnight, Regional Manager, Community Affairs, ITC.

Submitted

The Heartland Community Foundation, a regional community foundation serving Ellis, Rooks, and Trego counties, announced this week it received a charitable contribution from ITC Holdings Corp. to enhance its Healthy Living Fund.

“The grant received from ITC enabled Heartland’s Healthy Living Fund to grow beyond the minimum threshold to be able to award Healthy Living Grants next year,” said Nikki Pfannenstiel, vice president of Heartland Community Foundation. “The ability to provide grants to communities with programs to promote healthy lifestyles and environments will only add value to the Community Foundation. This is the first opportunity to partner with ITC, and we are thrilled they have chosen Heartland Community Foundation for this grant.”

ITC Holdings Corp. is the nation’s largest independent electric transmission company and has operated in Kansas through its subsidiary, ITC Great Plains, since 2006. ITC’s presence in Kansas has allowed the company to participate in the state’s growing economy. The gift to the Heartland Community Foundation is an expression of its dedication to the region.

“As a regional transmission utility, we are pleased to support Heartland Community Foundation’s goal of promoting health and wellness for communities,” said Brett Leopold, president of ITC Great Plains. “We are proud of our company’s legacy of community investment and engagement as we believe that promoting initiatives such as Heartland’s Healthy Living Fund are critical to ensuring thriving and successful communities.”

About Heartland Community Foundation
The Heartland Community Foundation was founded in 2007 to serve as a vehicle for charitable giving benefiting Ellis, Rooks and Trego counties. The Foundation is a permanent source of charitable assets to meet both emerging and existing needs of the local communities. The Heartland Community Foundation is an affiliate of the Greater Salina Community Foundation in Salina, Kan.

About ITC Great Plains
ITC Great Plains, LLC is a transmission-only utility operating in the Southwest Power Pool region. The company currently operates approximately 436 circuit miles of transmission lines in Kansas and Oklahoma. ITC Great Plains maintains regional offices in Dodge City, Topeka and Wichita Kansas; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; and Little Rock, Arkansas. ITC Great Plains is a subsidiary of ITC Grid Development, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of ITC Holdings Corp., the nation’s largest independent electric transmission company. ITC’s focus on transmission and grid expansion drives operational excellence and delivers superior value for customers, communities and other stakeholders.

HPD Activity Log Oct. 11

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The Hays Police Department responded to 20 traffic accidents and 8 animal calls Tue., Oct. 11, 2016, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Drug Offenses–300 block W 6th St, Hays; 1:45 AM; 2:37 AM
Drug Offenses/DUI–1100 block Vine St, Hays; 2:14 AM; 4 AM
Animal At Large–1200 block E 30th St, Hays; 8:03 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–100 block E 22nd St, Hays; 8:35 AM
MV Accident-Private Property-Hit and Run–2800 block Vine St, Hays; 8:48 AM
Obstruction of Legal Process–1000 block Fort St, Hays; 10:36 AM
Animal At Large–20th and Main St, Hays; 11:42 AM
Theft (general)–1200 block Vine St, Hays; 9/21
Civil Dispute–1500 block E 17th St, Hays; 12:48 PM
Mental Health Call–200 block E 7th St, Hays; 5:30 PM; 12 AM
Theft (general)–500 block Vine St, Hays; 7 AM; 9 AM
Theft (general)–1500 block E 17TH St, Hays; 10/10
Battery on LEO–105 block W 12th St, Hays; 7:25 PM
Animal Bite Investigation–2100 block Lincoln Dr, Hays; 9:06 PM
Civil Transport–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 10:18 PM; 12 AM

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Kansas moves to preserve voter proof-of-citizenship rule

Vote

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has taken a step toward allowing the state to enforce its proof-of-citizenship requirement for some new voters.

Late Tuesday, an attorney for Kobach filed a formal answer to a federal lawsuit challenging a 2013 state law requiring new voters to provide papers documenting their U.S. citizenship when registering.

The lack of a formal response on Tuesday prompted a court clerk to enter a default judgment for the prospective voter suing Kobach.

Previous court rulings have temporarily narrowed the rule so it doesn’t apply to people who use a federal registration form or register at state motor vehicle offices.

It’s not clear whether U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson will accept Kobach’s filing, but attorneys challenging the law’s constitutionality said judges often do.

———-

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal court clerk has entered a default judgment against Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach for failing to file a timely response to a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a state law requiring prospective voters to prove they are U.S. citizens.

It remains unclear whether U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson will give Kobach more time to respond. Kobach is facing four separate lawsuits challenging aspects of that law.

If Tuesday’s judgment stands it would entirely strike down the state’s proof-of-citizenship requirement. The lawsuit contends it violates the U.S. Constitution’s protections against depriving a person of life, liberty or property without due process.

It also contends the state law discriminates against citizens born outside of Kansas.

Kobach did not immediately return a message, but his spokeswoman says he would comment.

TMP-Marian volleyball holds at No. 3 in latest KVA rankings

TOPEKA, Kan. – The Thomas More Prep-Marian volleyball team checks in at No. 3 in class 3A for a second straight week in the latest Kansas Volleyball Association poll released Wednesday.

Abilene (4A DI) and Central Plains (2A), the only teams to beat the Monarchs, remain ranked No. 1 in their respective classes.

In 1A Division I, La Crosse remains third and Stockton is 10th. Wheatland-Grinnell continues to hold down the top spot in 1A Division II. Otis-Bison is up one spot to No. 9.

Class 6A
1. Blue Valley West 34-0 (1)
2. Olathe Northwest 23-4 (2)
3. Blue Valley Northwest 21-5 (3)
4. Lawrence-Free State 21-5 (4)
5. Blue Valley North 19-8 (5)
6. Shawnee Mission East 21-7 (6)
7. Manhattan 22-11 (7)
8. Blue Valley 15-8 (8)
9. Garden City 28-4 (9)
10. Washburn Rural 19-10 (NR)

Class 5A
1. St. Thomas Aquinas 24-8 (2)
2. Shawnee Heights 29-6 (1)
3. Lansing 28-4 (3)
4. Newton 32-4 (5)
5. Maize 24-7 (4)
6. Pittsburg 29-5 (6)
7. Andover 22-8 (7)
8. Goddard-Eisenhower 27-5 (9)
9. DeSoto 21-8 (8)
10. Emporia 19-7 (10)

Class 4A – Division 1
1. Abilene 27-3 (1)
2. Rose Hill 23-6 (2)
3. Louisburg 18-11 (3)
4. Ulysses 20-10 (5)
5. El Dorado 21-11 (6)
6. McPherson 20-15 (4)
7. Wamego 13-15 (7)
8. Paola 18-12 (10)
9. Andover Central 10-12 (9)
10. Kansas City-Piper 14-11 (8)

Class 4A – Division 2
1. Topeka-Hayden 26-8 (1)
2. Burlington 22-6 (4)
3. Concordia 23-8 (6)
4. Girard 22-6 (3)
5. Santa Fe Trail 25-8 (2)
6. Andale 19-9 (5)
7. Nickerson 25-9 (9)
8. Smoky Valley 20-8 (8)
9. Holcomb 24-5 (10)
10. Frontenac 19-7 (NR)

Class 3A 1. Cheney 25-2 (1)
2. Silver Lake 28-5 (2)
3. Thomas More Prep-Marian 29-2 (3)
4. Hesston 24-4 (5)
5. Beloit 28-4 (6)
6. Kingman 29-4 (4)
7. Wellsville 23-4 (7)
8. Garden Plain 22-6 (8)
9. Douglass 21-4 (9)
10. St. Marys 23-4 (10)

Class 2A
1. Central Plains 25-1 (1)
2. Heritage Christian 25-3 (2)
3. Kiowa County 29-2 (3)
4. Flinthills 34-2 (6)
5. Oswego 25-2 (8)
6. Jefferson County North 24-4 (4)
7. Wabaunsee 27-5 (5)
8. Valley Falls 25-7 (7)
9. Hoxie 21-5 (9)
10. Chase County 24-5 (NR)

Class 1A – Division 1
1. Centralia 29-0 (1)
2. Goessel 28-1 (2)
3. LaCrosse 23-3 (3)
4. Beloit-St. John’s/Tipton 25-2 (4)
5. Hanover 25-6 (5)
6. South Barber 23-3 (6)
7. South Central 24-6 (7)
8. Immaculata 21-9 (8)
9. Dighton 18-7 (9)
10. Stockton 15-5 (NR)

Class 1A – Division 2
1. Wheatland-Grinnell 23-5 (1)
2. Sylvan-Lucas 23-3 (3)
3. Fowler 22-8 (2)
4. Northern Valley 16-7 (4)
5. Logan 16-8 (5)
6. Axtell 17-12 (6)
7. Waverly 16-8 (8)
8. Wallace County 16-10 (7)
9. Otis-Bison 19-9 (10)
10. Weskan 15-9 (9)

🎥 The cupboard is no longer bare at Community Assistance Center

CAC Co-Director Laurie Mortinger
CAC Co-Director Laurie Mortinger

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The shelves were “really bare,” according to Laurie Mortinger, co-director of the Community Assistance Center, 208 E. 12th, Hays.

Now, the shelves are stacked high with donations of non-perishable food items thanks to Trick Or Treat So Others Can Eat, an annual effort organized by Hays High DECA students.

This is the second year HHS senior Maddie Keller has participated.

“There are about 30 of us from DECA and a few other Hays High students helping tonight,” Keller said. “We go around the different neighborhoods in Hays and collect non-perishable items from residents. We get a lot during this season because Thanksgiving and Christmas are coming up.”

“During the holidays, people seem to be even more generous,” said Mortinger as she loaded flats of canned peas onto a cart. “They really came through. This is great.”

“We’ve been so low, we’ve been purchasing food the past few weeks, spending about $1,000 a week.” Cash donations were also handed over during Tuesday night’s event. About $300 had been collected by 8:15 p.m. according to Mortinger.

HHS DECA McKenzie Hoover
“This looks like Christmas, a yummy Christmas,” said volunteer McKenzie Hoover, HHS DECA junior, as she sat in the midst of a huge pile of donated foods.

Twenty-seven groups of local volunteers canvassed the town, bringing in bags and boxes filled with everything from peanut butter to cereal donated by Hays residents. Then the DECA students and other volunteers  at CAC unpacked and sorted it all. “I won’t have to lift weights tomorrow,” joked one DECA member as he unloaded a cart.

McKenzie Hoover, HHS DECA junior, was working the food drive for the first time. “This looks like Christmas, a yummy Christmas!,” Hoover remarked while sitting in the midst of a huge pile of donated goods .

CAC volunteers Barbara Basinger and Bob Berens
CAC volunteers Barbara Basinger and Bob Berens

Two regular CAC volunteers, Barbara Basinger and Bob Berens, got a head start. They distributed notices about the food drive to 39 local businesses and then went back to retrieve the goods donated at those locations. “We got more than 500 items before today,” Basinger said as the pair volunteered again Tuesday night to sort and count cans.

Low-income Ellis County families can receive a week’s worth of food six times a year.

Non-perishable foods and cash may still be donated to the Community Assistance Center through Oct. 31. For more information, call the CAC at (785) 625-9110.

Toyota recall: Faulty brakes on some Prius hybrid cars

RecallTOKYO (AP) — Toyota Motor Corp. is recalling 340,000 gas-electric hybrid Prius cars around the world, 212,000 of them in Japan and 94,000 in North America, for a defect in their parking brakes.

Toyota said Wednesday it has received reports of crashes, injuries and deaths. The Japanese automaker refused to provide details, saying it was still looking into the reports.

Toyota said the parking brake cable can disengage, causing the brakes to stop working properly. So if the car is left in any gear other than park, it could start rolling away, and possibly crash.

Toyota said 17,000 Prius vehicles were recalled in Europe, and the rest in Australia and other regions. The problem models were manufactured from August 2015 through October 2016.

The company said all the vehicles were manufactured in Japan.

HNEA, Hays USD 489 reach contract agreement

By GARRETT SAGER
Hays Post

At Monday night’s meeting, the Hays USD 489 Board of Education ratified the 2016-17 negotiated agreement between the Hays National Education Association and the district.

In was a unanimous vote with a brief discussion, all seven board members voted to approve the bargaining agreement. The vote came nearly a week after the HNEA voted 163-22 in favor of the agreement.

Typically in work sessions, formal actions are not taken, but USD 489 Superintendent John Thissen said he wanted to bring this in front of the board just in case members wanted to act.

With the agreement, teachers salaries continue to be frozen with both vertical and horizontal movement.

At last month’s work session, where the details of the new agreement were discussed, it was brought up that fairness in pay is an issue across the board for the whole district. The freeze in the salary schedule would make it eight out of the last 11 years that USD 489 has frozen the salary schedule.

“A frozen schedule is more common than you think,” Thissen said at last month’s work session.

A change in the agreement will start new hires at a lower step in the pay scale than in years past.

“Everyone new who came into district was put at a higher level, ” Kathy Wagoner, Hays-NEA bargaining unit co-chairwoman said last month.

It was agreed at the last work session meeting of September that it is wrong that new teachers who come into the district are started out at a higher pay than those who have already been with the district for some time.

“It’s not about people coming to Hays. It’s about people staying in Hays,” Wagoner said in September. “It’s about not saying goodbye.”

At last month’s work session, Wagoner said the bargaining unit wanted new hires to come in at step six and not seven. Part of the new agreement puts the new hires at that step six, instead of step 11 as in years past.

There will be exceptions for the new hires and the steps they come in at. The exceptions fall under the hard-to-fill areas that are defined by the yearly state report.

“What’s nice about voting on this tonight is we can start sending contracts out,” said USD 489 board vice president Sarah Rankin.

Many other provisions are a part of the new agreement.

The Board of Education will continue their contract with the State of Kansas Group Health Insurance Program. The HNEA and USD 489 BOE agreed to continue the contract with the State of Kansas Non State Group Health Plans for the three-year period of 2017-19.

Changes to teachers contracts when they decide to be released from their contracts was also agreed upon.

Amounts for damages and liquidation range from the amount of $500 to $1,500 depending on when the teacher has requested to be released from his or her contract.

Teachers will continue to be entitled to all due process rights as afforded by the law, but the BOE still reserves the right to terminate a contract for unprofessional conduct, cruelty, immorality, negligence or incompetence upon written notice specifying the reasons.

The agreement became valid on the ratification date once the board approved the issue.

 

SCHROCK: Test scores do not guarantee good schools

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

The arguments over whether Kansas is funding an adequate education for Kansas children have mainly focused on test scores as the scale to grade school quality. Defenders of the Kansas Legislature underfunding point to NAEP scores that have remained mediocre over time. Advocates for more spending point to an increase in state assessment scores when funding went up, and a recent decline when funding was cut.

Educational test results are misused by both sides in a manner that recalls Mark Twain’s comment about “lies, damned lies, and statistics.” Student standardized test scores have been mis-used to judge students, teachers, principals, schools and state systems.

But test scores are not an indicator of good schools. And nobody knows the limitations of tests better than Harvard Professor Daniel Koretz, an expert in testing.

In his book for teachers, “Measuring Up: What Educational Testing Really Tells Us,” Koretz explains his frustration with folks who move into a neighborhood and ask him to identify good schools, because as an expert on testing, he obviously would know. While tests scores are not irrelevant, he advises parents to look at many more factors: music and athletic programs, special curricula, the variety of teachers and students, etc. He tells them to visit the school to observe the student engagement, teacher professionalism, school-wide enthusiasm, and “spirited discussion among the students.”

Unfortunately, we hear little to nothing about these complex factors that spur intellectual growth in our wide variety of schoolchildren.  Instead, combatants in the Kansas school funding case, similar to Koretz’s friends, want a simple criteria: test scores. His reply was simple: “If all you want is high average test scores, tell your realtor that you want to buy into the highest-income neighborhood you can manage. That will buy you the highest average score you can afford.”

I use Koretz’s book to train my student teachers how scores on high-stakes tests do not tell us all we need to know about student achievement or school quality.

But I constantly run into another myth: “The public demands accountability!” Supposedly, everyone in Kansas is only concerned that their child gets high scores on a narrow range of standardized tests in language arts and math. I don’t think so.

The parents I know are interested in having teachers who will care about their child. Who will help them to develop good habits as young ladies and gentlemen. To guide them to be honest. To treat others fairly.  To enjoy some art and some music. To develop their different talents. And to respect other students who are different.

The last 15-years of No Child left Behind test-and-punish has narrowed our children’s education, driven many good veteran teachers from the profession, and discouraged a generation of students from entering the teaching profession.

The core of this problem is the external testing. Teachers have been giving their own customized tests as part of their internal teaching and for their own use to determine how best to teach their students. Teaching-to-the-test never became a problem until the test was externalized as state “assessments.” This in turn drove standardized teaching with the one goal of every student scoring higher on the uniform test.

Students come into our classes unique. They should graduate out unique.  Instead, external one-size-fits-all tests have driven much classroom teaching for over a decade with disastrous results.

Anyone who had taken a course in “Tests and Measurements” would have understood the severe limitations of testing. But ironically, this is the very course that many Schools of Education dropped from their curriculum long ago.  Had they continued teaching the limitations of tests, as Koretz does today, perhaps we would never have gotten into the NCLB testing addiction that continues today under ESSA.

Similar to my colleagues, I have more students who hold up a hand and ask: “Is this going to be on the test?”

I simply reply: “No, it is much more important than that.”

Ellis, Hays students have roles in Emporia State production

EMPORIA — Emporia State University Theatre opens its season with musical “Big River, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”

Propelled by an award winning score from Roger Miller, Mark Twain’s timeless classic sweeps us down the mighty Mississippi as Huck Finn helps his friend Jim, a slave, escape to freedom at the mouth of the Ohio River.

Their adventures bring to life favorite characters from the novel including the Widow Douglas; the uproarious King and Duke; Huck’s pal, Tom Sawyer, and their rowdy gang; Huck’s drunken father, the sinister Pap Finn; the lovely Mary Jane Wilkes and her trusting family.

Students from this area in the production are:

Dustin Bittel, a junior theater major from Ellis, is playing Mark Twain/Doctor.

Rachel Muirhead, a sophomore theater education major from Hays, is playing Widow Douglas/Sally Phelps.

Under the direction of Jim and Lindy Bartruff, Big River will run in The Karl C. Bruder Theatre in King Hall, Oct. 13 through 15 at 7:30 p.m. and Oct. 16 at 2 p.m.

Tickets can be reserved at the university box office in the Memorial Union or by calling 620-341-6378. Proceeds from this production support scholarships for ESU students in the performing arts.

Police: Kansas man arrested for road-rage killing

Askew-photo Shawnee Co.
Askew-photo Shawnee Co.

SHAWNEE COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a suspect in connect with a weekend road rage killing.

On Tuesday, Daniel Alan Askew, 27, Topeka, was arrested in connection with Saturday’s shooting death, according to a media release.

Just after 12:30 a.m. on Saturday officers with Topeka police responded to a local hospital after report of a gunshot victim who had arrived by personal vehicle, according to a media release.

The victim, Michael Sadler, 28, Topeka, was suffering from critical injuries and died, according to police. They say Sadler was a passenger in a vehicle traveling near the intersection of SW 29th and SW Burlingame Road, and became involved in a road rage argument.

The involved parties did not know each other prior to the incident, according to police.

Askew was booked into the Shawnee County jail for conspiracy to commit first-degree murder.

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