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Former Ellis County resident convicted in double-voting prosecution

voteHAYS, Kan. (AP) — A man who illegally voted in both Kansas and Colorado has pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor.

The conviction against Randal Kilian is the second under a new state law that gives Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach the power to prosecute election fraud allegations.

The Wichita Eagle reports that the 62-year-old Kilian agreed to pay a $2,500 fine under a plea entered Thursday in Ellis County District Court. As part of the plea, two companion charges were dropped.

Kobach says the fine shows how seriously the state takes voter fraud.

Kilian was registered as a Republican in Hays when he voted illegally in 2012. He’s now a Colorado resident.

Another man pleaded guilty in December in Johnson County District Court to voting illegally in Arkansas and Kansas while moving.

2017 Branson Trip

Fall Time in Branson

September 11 – 14, 2017

Join hosts Scarlett Deutscher and Scott Boomer from Eagle Radio of Hays, for a trip to Branson, MO, during a beautiful time to visit the Ozarks and see some of the best shows Branson has to offer.

Monday, September 11

Leave Hays and travel to Branson

6:00 PM   Dinner at Plaza View Restaurant on the 9th Floor of the Grand Plaza Hotel

8:00 PM   Presley’s Jubilee

 

Tuesday, September 12

1:00 PM   Moses Behind the Scenes Tour

3:30 PM   Moses (This is in the last year of  production at the Sight and Sound Theater.)

6:45 PM   Stage Door Cafe – Dinner Buffet

8:00 PM   Million Dollar Quartet

 

Wednesday, September 13

10:00 AM  Bretts   (Long-running variety show at Dick Clark’s American Bandstand Theater, starring a musical family.)

Lunch and shopping in Downtown Branson and Branson Landing

5:30 PM   Dixie Stampede Dinner & Show

Thursday, September 14

Leave Branson and travel home with stops at Osceola Cheese & Russell Stover’s enroute. Arrive back in Hays approximately 7pm.

———————–

This trip includes 3 nights lodging, baggage handling, roundtrip bus transportation, dinner & 5 shows, all taxes and gratuities on the above items. Lunch will be on your own throughout the entire trip.

Single Occupancy $888, Double Occupancy $789, Triple Occupancy $699 and Quad $679.

Call Scarlett Deutscher at 785-301-2211 for information or to book the trip.

KBI helping search for missing western Kansas man

Click to ENLARGE
Click to ENLARGE

GRANT COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Grant County are investigating a missing resident, according to a media release from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

On April 12,the KBI received a request for assistance from Grant County Sheriff Lance Babcock regarding 54-year-old Jimmy Wayne Martin.

He has been missing since March 23.

The KBI and Grant County Sheriff’s Office responded to Martin’s residence attempting to discover any possible indications as to Martin’s whereabouts.

The KBI along with Grant County Sheriff Deputies, Ulysses Police Department, and a Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper assisted in searching the residence and nearby property approximately 4 miles southeast of Ulysses.

Suspended corrections employee to stand trial in Great Bend killing

Thomas- photo Barton Co. Sheriff
Thomas- photo Barton Co. Sheriff

GREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — A judge has found sufficient evidence for a suspended correctional employee to stand trial in a fatal western Kansas shooting.

The Great Bend-Tribune reports that the ruling was issued after Freddie Alec Thomas appeared in Barton County District Court on Thursday for a preliminary hearing. Thomas is charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of 39-year-old Jeremy Alan Saldana outside a Great Bend home.

The shooting happened after Thomas went to the home with a woman whom Saldana had dated previously. Saldana was living with the woman’s daughter and grandchildren but wasn’t at the home when the visit began. Witnesses testified that a pushing match ensued when the unarmed Saldana arrived, and he was shot.

An Ellsworth Correctional Facility spokesman said previously that Thomas is on administrative leave.

Kansas woman hospitalized after SUV hit making a u-turn

Screen-Shot-2014-07-03-at-5.13.15-AM.pngSHAWNEE COUNTY – A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 9a.m. on Friday in Shawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2010 Mercury Milan driven by Justin Harrison Neeley, 26, Manhattan, was northbound U.S. 75 at Interstate 70 and Gage Avenue.

The vehicle hit a 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe driven by Michelle Lee Ramos, 30, Topeka, as she attempted to make a U-turn from the right lane.

Ramos was transported to Stormont Vail.

Neeley, Eric David Weeden, 32, and a 2-year-old girl both of Manhattan were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas minority students seek parallel university government

Members of Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk during a November Forum at KU
Members of Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk during a November Forum at KU

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Minority students at the University of Kansas are pushing for an independent governing body to represent their interests — and have won recognition and funding to start the long process that could let them do so.

Students insist they’re not trying to set up a wholly separate student government. But they are frustrated by what they see as a lack of attention to issues they care about. They want a structure that focuses on social justice issues and multicultural students, with programs such as longer orientations for some students or funding for those with financial emergencies. They say it would complement the work of the traditional student government.

Experts see the novel approach as the latest example of the impatience minority students feel after generations of exclusion from campus government.

Text, course materials are factors increasing cost of college

Hunsicker-Meier-Guyot-web
Dr. Melissa Hunsicker Walburn, Dr. Robert Meier and Dr. Wally Guyot

FHSU University Relations and Marketing

Three Fort Hays State University faculty members co-authored an article on digital content for the Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice.

Faculty members Dr. Melissa Hunsicker Walburn, assistant professor of informatics, Dr. Robert Meier, professor of informatics, and Dr. Wally Guyot, professor of management, co-authored the paper, “From Books to Bits: Digital Content got a New Age,” with Dr. Loretta Beavers, a professor at Southwest Virginia Community College in Cedar Bluff, Va.

The paper describes the factors contributing to higher education costs and legislative reaction to high costs charged by publishers, and explores trends that lower text usage.

It focuses on text and course materials as factors increasing the cost of attending school.

Open education resources, which are typically free, have been found to lower text and materials costs for students. The paper reports findings from a study about student preferences of OERs.

William Lee ‘Bill’ Schaben

MEADE – William Lee “Bill” Schaben, age 84, passed away late Tuesday evening, April 19, 2016, at the Minneola District Hospital, Minneola, Kansas.

He was born November 1, 1931, at Bazine, Kansas, the son of Lee and Mildred N. (Cranston) Schaben. As a young boy he attended the Ness City, Kansas, school system. He later attended the University of Kansas where he played for the Jayhawk football team and was known as the “Schabe,” part of the Western Kansas Roughnecks. After his graduation he returned to the Ness City area and began his career in farming.

He was a member of St. John Lutheran Church, Meade. Bill enjoyed working, traveling, gardening, attending dinner theaters, helping others, and spending time with his family and friends.

On February 14, 1999, he married Elsie Blehm Porter at Meade, Kansas. She survives.

Other survivors include: His children,Mitzi Rezin of Kansas City, Kansas Robert Schaben of Lancaster, California Jezan Bastian of Tampa Bay, Florida Codi Schaben of Humble, Texas Bill Schaben of Viola, Kansas Lennie Schaben of Aurora, Colorado Jim Schaben of Columbus, Nebraska Jennie Mills o Glendale, Arizona Maxine Griffin of Littleton, Colorado Laurita Burbach of Collyer, Kansas Janet Cook of Tonganoxie, Kansas Kenneth Porter of Meade, Kansas Cathy Rosenberry of Meade, Kansas Judy Fox of Towanda, Kansas Jeff Porter of Meade, Kansas Keith Porter of Milport, Alabama; a sister, Wilma Gabel of Ness City, Kansas; 40 grandchildren; 48 great-grandchildren; and 2 great-great-grandchildren.

He is preceded in death by his parents and a sister, Carol Cochran.

Memorial services will be held at 11:00 a.m. Monday, April 25, 2016, at St. John Lutheran Church, Meade. In accordance to his request, he has donated his body to medical science at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Private family committal services will be held at a later date.

The family would welcome memorials to the St. John Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall Fund in care of Fidler-Orme-Bachman Mortuary, Meade.

K-State announces contract extension for AD John Currie

Kansas State Athletics

KSU-AD-CurrieMANHATTAN, Kan. – John Currie, who since arriving in 2009 has led K-State Athletics through one of the most successful periods in department history, has agreed to a two-year contract extension through the 2022 academic year, the Kansas State Athletics, Inc., Board of Directors announced Friday.

The agreement extends Currie’s contract two years through June 30, 2022, with his annual salary remaining unchanged at $775,000. Under the new agreement, Currie will receive a $100,000 retention incentive on June 30, 2017. He is also eligible for additional retention incentives of $275,000 in 2021 and $325,000 in 2022 should he remain in his position through June 30 of those respective years.

“Under John Currie’s leadership, K-State has realized our aspirational goal of building a Model Intercollegiate Athletics Program,” said Kirk Schulz, outgoing university president. “From my work as an NCAA and Big 12 board member, I can attest to the high regard our peers have for John’s leadership. Our athletic programs reflect the high level of quality that a top public university deserves.”

“I fully endorse the board and President Schulz’s recommendation and appreciate John making this commitment to K-State during a time of leadership transition,” said Interim President Gen. Richard Myers. “It has been impressive to see the growth of our athletics department under his leadership, and I look forward to working with John and his staff as we continue to strengthen what is already a strong relationship between intercollegiate athletics and the university community.”

Since Currie’s introduction as director of athletics in May 2009, the Wildcats’ athletics program has experienced a seven-year period of athletic, academic and fundraising excellence that ranks among the best in school history.

Under Currie’s leadership, K-State has evolved into one of the NCAA’s most financially solvent programs while initiating $210 million in comprehensive facility improvements – all privately funded with zero state tax or university tuition dollars – including the new Vanier Football Complex, West Stadium Center at Bill Snyder Family Stadium, Ice Family Basketball Center, Intercollegiate Rowing Center and Mike Goss Tennis Stadium.

“Our family is grateful to belong to the K-State family and call Manhattan home,” Currie said. “While much progress has been made across the department over the past seven years toward our vision of a Model Intercollegiate Athletics Program, I believe that even better days are ahead for K-State Athletics. Mary Lawrence and I look forward to continuing to serve the Wildcat faithful and help usher in a new era for Kansas State University under the leadership of General Myers.”

Athletically, Currie’s tenure has been marked by across the board success including six straight bowl appearances in football, Big 12 Conference championships in football, men’s basketball and baseball, 45 individual Big 12 and eight NCAA titles in track and field, five men’s basketball NCAA Tournament appearances, three in women’s basketball and four each in volleyball and baseball. The 2012-13 campaign was also one for the ages as K-State became just the fourth BCS school since 1998 to win league titles in football, men’s basketball and baseball the same year.

Academically, all Wildcat programs boast multi-year APR marks of at least .944, with the football, men’s golf and women’s cross country teams sporting Big 12-leading scores. Approximately one-half of all 450-plus Wildcat student-athletes achieved a 3.0 GPA or higher this past academic year, while 40 student-athletes have earned Academic All-American honors since 2009.

With the tag line of “Welcome to K-State” symbolizing the goal of providing The Best Fan Experience in the Big 12, K-State’s marketing and fundraising efforts have been completely overhauled in Currie’s tenure. K-State supporters have pushed attendance to new heights, while $200 million in total gifts have now been raised for K-State Athletics since Currie’s arrival.

K-State Athletics has also proven to be a great partner to the university, having eliminated approximately $3 million in annual state and direct university funding of intercollegiate athletics under Currie’s leadership to become the only institution in Kansas and one of only approximately two dozen nationwide to operate without these subsidies.

New ticket initiatives have led to 36 sellout crowds at Bill Snyder Family Stadium since 2009, including a current streak of 27 straight. The Cats have also set new season total and average attendance records in baseball, sold a record number of season tickets for volleyball and baseball and rank among the Top 35 nationally in attendance in men’s basketball, women’s basketball, volleyball and baseball.

The 2013 Bobby Dodd AD award winner and a 2012 UnderArmour AD of the Year, Currie has served on the NCAA Division I Administrative Cabinet and was the chair of the Big 12 ADs in 2013-14 while also being one of only two intercollegiate ADs named toSportsBusiness Journal’s 2011 prestigious Forty Under 40 list of national sports leaders.

HINEMAN: The future of public education in Kansas

Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, 118th Dist.
Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, 118th Dist.

Public education has a long tradition in the U.S., having first germinated in Thomas Jefferson’s early advocacy. In 1837 the concept was put into practice by Horace Mann of Massachusetts, when he established a statewide system of professional teachers and common schools. Mann’s system soon spread to other states as many began to subscribe to the idea that the common school could be the “great equalizer” in American society. The schools were termed “common” because they were viewed as a civic asset held in common by all and available to all.

From its very beginnings the objective of free and universal public education went beyond mere learning to include social efficiency, civic virtue, and development of character. And in the formative days of Kansas “The Territorial Legislature believed education was key to the state’s growth and development, since a literate and skilled citizenry could help build business and industry.”

Support for public education remains strong today, as stated by Tom Brokaw: “There is a place in America to take a stand: it is public education. It is the underpinning of our cultural and political system. It is the great common ground. Public education after all is the engine that moves us as a society toward a common destiny… It is in public education that the American dream begins to take shape.”

In short, the purpose of public education was, and still remains, the creation and advancement of a well-educated citizenry.

Like any well-conceived governmental program, public education exists for the benefit of all, whether that benefit is direct or indirect. It was never intended as a government subsidy for the parents of school-age children, for if it were then logic implies that childless couples would be entitled to a refund of that portion of their taxes which went for the support of public education. They are not, of course, just as an individual without a car isn’t entitled to a refund of taxes which are devoted to creation and maintenance of public roadways.

Recent attempts have been made to divert Kansas state government funds to private education and to chip away at the concept of public education as a bedrock principle of society. It began during the 2014 legislative session, when a provision was inserted into a school finance bill to provide tax credits for corporate scholarships to private schools. That marks the first time in state history that state tax dollars have been diverted from public education to private schools.

Now a much greater threat to public education has been proposed as part of HB 2741, which would provide for a payment to the parents of home-schooled students, or those enrolled in private school, equal to 70% of per pupil state aid. Estimates put the cost of that program at $130 million to $300 million per year. Those are dollars which would be unavailable for public education, at a time when financing public education is the subject of an ongoing court dispute over adequacy of funding.

If this proposal were to become law it would cause a shrinking of the public education system as funding dwindles, leading the brightest and most capable students to increasingly choose private education instead. Public schools would be left as residual institutions for the education of the most impoverished students as well as those most difficult to educate (and therefore not accepted into private schools). The result would be vast disparities of educational opportunity for Kansas school children, and an end of the long-held concept of public education as a foundational building block of our society.

Are Kansans ready to take this step? Are we collectively willing to endorse the downsizing and impoverishment of public education? Are we willing to support the transfer of hundreds of millions of state dollars to private and home-school institutions with little of the oversight or control under which public schools must operate? This proposal is a revolutionary approach to the way Kansas supports education. It is imperative that all Kansans join in the discussion and let their opinions be known. As for me, I remain committed to the principle that public dollars are intended for and must be devoted exclusively to public education.

Kansas State Representative Don Hineman
118th District
[email protected]

HPD Activity Log April 21

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The Hays Police Department responded to 13 animal calls and 11 traffic stops Thursday, April 21, 2016, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Aggravated Battery–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 12:20 AM; 12:30 AM
Suspicious Activity–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 5:37 AM
Animal At Large–1700 block Marjorie Dr, Hays; 9:23 AM
Animal At Large–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 10:32 AM
Animal Bite Investigation–94 block Lewis Dr, Hays; 11:23 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–500 block W 23rd St, Hays; 12:40 PM
Theft (general)–11/25/15; 4/20/16
Animal At Large–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 2:28 PM
Drug Offenses–100 block Ash St, Hays; 5:36 PM
Suicidal Subject–1600 block Main St, Hays; 6:14 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1000 block E 33rd St, Hays; 6:40 PM
Animal Call–2700 block Hickory St, Hays; 8:24 PM
Suicidal Subject–2800 block Canal Blvd, Hays; 8:29 PM
Disturbance – Noise–400 block E 6th St, Hays; 10:0 PM

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Kan. woman admits aiding man who kidnapped, raped 8-year-old

Harris- photo Topeka Police
Harris- photo Topeka Police

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman has pleaded guilty to aiding a man convicted of abducting an 8-year-old girl from her Topeka home, then drugging and raping her.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that 24-year-old Michelle Lee Harris, Topeka, admitted Thursday to reduced charges of attempted kidnapping and aiding a felon. As part of the plea, a third charge was dismissed.

She testified against Jeremy James Lindsey at his trial earlier this year. Prosecutors said he removed a sleeping girl from her mother’s Topeka home in 2014 and transported her in a car trunk. He raped her twice before calling Harris, who gave him and the girl a ride. Lindsey then raped the child a third time before she managed to free herself and escape.

Harris’ sentencing is scheduled for May 23.

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