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Oil price drop could mean fewer Saudis in Kansas

photo WSU
photo WSU

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita State University officials say a steep drop in oil prices could mean fewer Saudi Arabian students at the university in the future.

Provost Tony Vizzini says losing the Saudi Arabian students would cost the university about $4 million in annual revenue.

The Wichita Eagle reports about 260 of the 319 Saudi students currently attending Wichita State are supported by Saudi government-sponsored scholarships. But with the drop in oil revenue, the Saudi government has sharply reduced its scholarships for students who study overseas.

Vizzini says Wichita State will continue to recruit international students and he believes many will continue to study in Wichita even if they have to pay their own way. The school’s recruiters also will concentrate on other countries that need to train more engineers.

FHSU political science student receives Newman Civic Fellows Award

Anna Hand
Anna Hand

FHSU University Relations and Marketing

Campus Compact, a Boston-based non-profit organization working to advance the public purposes of higher education, has announced in a news release that Anna Hand, an Ellsworth senior majoring in political science at Fort Hays State University, is a recipient of the 2016 Newman Civic Fellows Award.

The award honors the late Frank Newman, one of Campus Compact’s founders and a tireless advocate for the civic engagement of higher education.

“As I continue to pursue my career in politics, I have had the opportunity to volunteer with numerous campaigns across Kansas and the U.S.,” said Hand. “These campaigns ask me to perform student outreach and encourage millennials to become active in the election process. This has not always been easy, but it has been rewarding to see other students realize that they can make a difference in the world just by casting a ballot.”

During her FHSU career, Hand has accumulated more than 300 hours of community service. She has worked with the American Democracy Project and presidential campaigns. She has dedicated a lot of her time to get-out-the-vote efforts, which informs people on how to vote and when elections happen. She has even traveled out of state to get out the vote for the Iowa caucus. Hand has also been heavily involved with mission trips.

In total, 218 students from 36 states, Washington D.C. and Mexico were nominated by their universities’ presidents or chancellors and are being honored with the award this year.

Those chosen to receive this honor have taken action in pursuit of long-term positive social change and are proven leaders with both the motivation and ability to make substantial contributions toward public problem solving. A complete list of the 2016 Newman Civic Fellows and more about Hand can be found at https://compact.org/newman-civic-fellow/.

campus compact logoAbout Campus Compact
Campus Compact is a nonprofit coalition of nearly 1,100 college and university presidents— representing some 6 million students–who are committed to fulfilling the civic purposes of higher education. As the only national association dedicated to this mission, Campus Compact is a leader in building community engagement into campus and academic life. For more information, visit www.compact.org or follow @Campus_Compact on Twitter.

Itch mites that survived Kansas winter are biting again

CDC image- photo A Broce, L Zurek- KSU
CDC image- photo A Broce, L Zurek- KSU

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some oak leaf itch mites that fell from trees and bit people in the Wichita area last fall have managed to stay alive over the mild winter and are biting again.

Sedgwick County Extension Education Center agent Matthew McKernan says the office has received about a half-dozen calls over the past couple of weeks from people who have been bitten.

The Wichita Eagle reports that the oak leaf itch mite isn’t an issue most years and that during a normal winter, low temperatures would have killed them. But some that are living in in leaves fallen from oak trees are too small to see.

McKernan says that mites lasting through the winter doesn’t necessarily mean there will be another bad crop of new ones later this year.

Search continues for 2nd Kan. suspect in weekend shooting death

Patillo, Jr. is in custody- photo Topeka Police
Patillo, Jr. is in custody- photo Topeka Police

TOPEKA -Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County have made an arrest in connection with weekend shooting death.

Christopher Pattillo Jr., is in custody, according to a media release on Tuesday afternoon from police in Topeka. He was captured by the US Marshals Fugitive Task Force in Wichita on Tuesday.

Authorities continue to search for 20-year-old Deangelo Martinez.

Just before 6 p.m. on Friday officers responded to the 2000 Block of Echo Ridge Circle in Topeka. They found a shooting victim Brian Miller, 20, Topeka, behind a residence on the east side of road.
Police administered life saving measures and EMS transported Miller to Stormont Vail where he died.

Martinez- photo Topeka Police
Martinez- photo Topeka Police

Police are asking the public’s help to locate Martinez. He is described as 5’7″ tall and weighs approximately 150 pounds.

Sylvia Kathleen Wolf

Sylvia WolfSylvia Kathleen Wolf, 83, passed away on April 9, 2016 with her family by her side.  Sylvia was born on January 21, 1933 in Solomon, KS, to Harold and Zelma (Butcher) Boettcher.  She was preceded in death by her parents. 

On May 30, 1953 in the First Presbyterian Church in Beloit, KS, Sylvia Boettcher married John Irvin Wolf.  Married 63 years, Sylvia and Irvin honeymooned in Grand Lake, CO which has been a family tradition to return to ever since. 

Surviving are their children, Karen Heinrich of Paola, KS; Tom Wolf of Olathe, KS; Melissa Atkins of Hill City, KS; and Kim Renyer of Quinter, KS.  Survivors also include her siblings Jarold Boettcher, Beloit, KS; Janet Wesselowski, Wichita, KS; and Kathy Aros, Tuscon, AZ.  Also surviving are 14 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren, all of whom brought her great joy. 

Sylvia lived in Solomon until she moved to Beloit as a toddler.  She graduated from Beloit High School in 1951.  Sylvia graduated from Fort Hays State University with a degree in Education in 1966, and later received her Master’s in Reading Education from Fort Hays State University in 1987.   

Sylvia taught school for 29 years spanning from third grade through freshman algebra.  Sylvia was a member of Church of the Brethren.  Sylvia’s family will always treasure memories of her cooking, relaxing a bit with a good book, and sharing her love of teaching with others.  Sylvia thought her greatest legacy was her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Per Sylvia’s request, a private service for immediate family only is planned.  In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made in Sylvia’s name to the Sylvia Wolf Memorial Scholarship to support students who plan to major in mathematics or education.  Checks can be mailed to Schmitt Funeral Home, at 901 Main Street in Quinter, KS.

Condolences may be sent to the family at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Dorothy Irene Bemis

Dorothy I. BemisDorothy Irene Bemis, 93, while battling pneumonia, passed quietly in her sleep April 9th, 2016 at the Sunny Vista Living Center in Colorado Springs. The third child of six, and only daughter of Carl and Sadie Kraus, she was born in the northwest bedroom on the first floor of the family home July 27, 1922, She grew up during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression on the family farm located southwest of Hays on Yocemento Road. In 1940 she entered Fort Hays College as a journalism major. The next fall she transferred to Kansas State University and joined the college newspaper. That spring she found herself writing many obituaries of the alumni who perished at Pearl Harbor.
 
In June 1942 she married Ralph Bemis, Jr. who lived on a farm seven miles west of Hays. Both families were members of the Hays First United Methodist Church. Ralph Jr. had volunteered for the Army Air Force Cadet program to become a pilot. Shortly after arriving in England, his plane crashed due to maintenance issues. He is buried in a group plot at Zachary Taylor Memorial Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
 
Dorothy returned to Kansas State University, changing to become a nutrition major. As a part of her training, she interned for a year at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. After the war, she worked as a dietitian at Fort Logan, a VA hospital in Denver.
 
The VA sent Dorothy to the Harvard School of Public Health for further training. The plan was for her to become the supervising dietitian at a new VA hospital in California. But Robert “Guy” Bemis, the younger brother of Ralph Jr., had other plans. In December 1949 they were the second couple married in the newly completed sanctuary of the Hays First United Methodist Church and soon bought a small farm near Oberlin, Ks. Three of their five children were born there. In 1957 they returned to Hays after they bought his parents’ farm. Dorothy was pregnant with their fourth child when the whole family fled to the safety of the farmhouse garage roof during the Flood of the Century.
 
Dorothy took an active interest in her children’s activities. In the 1960’s she helped teenage 4-Hers make decorative ceramics to sell at Sidewalk Bazaar to finance their summer trips. In the 1970’s she oversaw the many fundraising projects for the Hays High School Orchestra’s European trip.
 
When the kids were grown, she renewed her dietitian’s license in order to consult area small hospitals with their meal service for several years.
 
Over the years she was also active in Chapter BQ, P.E.O., Prairie Garden Club, the Sorosis Club, and Kansas CowBelles (currently Kansas CattleWomen – the women’s half of the Kansas Livestock Association). She served as President of most of these organizations. She was an avid quilter.
 
At the unexpected death of her husband in 1985, she maintained his business interests which included Ellis County Feeders, Black Gold Oil, 1st National Bank, and cattle and farming interests, in order to sell them.
 
Four years ago she moved to Colorado Springs near a daughter to enter assisted living. While Dorothy enjoyed the view of Pikes Peak from her apartment, she always missed Kansas.
 
Dorothy is survived by three brothers, Kenneth Kraus and wife Dottie of Hays, Warren Kraus and wife Rosemary of Ellis, and Harold Kraus and wife Virginia of Hays, and three of her children. They are son, Taylor Bemis and his wife Sheryl of Hays, grandchildren Dustin Bemis and wife Anne of Hays and Kristi Koch and husband Larry of Clyde, Kansas, great-grandchildren Tee, Trextin and Brodin, Kara and Gavin; daughter Faye and husband Scott Palmer of Colorado Springs, Colorado, grandchildren Ray Palmer and wife Melanie of Fayetteville, Arkansas, and Carl Palmer of Wichita, great-grandchild Elise; and daughter Amy and husband Bill Stricker of Rochester Hills, Michigan.

She is preceded in death by her older brothers, Eldon and John Kraus, first husband Ralph Bemis Jr., second husband Robert “Guy” Bemis, and two daughters, Sue Malinda (1951-1954) and Sally Kay (1964-1973).

Funeral services will be at 2:00 pm on Saturday, April 16, 2016 at the First United Methodist Church, 305 W. 7th Street, Hays. Burial will follow in the Fort Hays Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Visitation will be from 5:00 until 7:00 pm on Friday at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street, and from 1:00 pm until service time on Saturday at the church. In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to the First United Methodist Church, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

Electronic issues delay Ellis County jail progress

Image from a recent tour of the remodeled Ellis County jail.
Image from a recent tour of the remodeled Ellis County jail.

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The Ellis County Sheriff’s Office continues to transfer inmates back to the newly remodeled jail, but issues with electronics have slowed progress.

According to Ellis County Administrator Phillip Smith-Hanes, there were 32 inmates housed in the county jail, as of Monday, with approximately 40 still housed out of county.

Smith-Hanes told the county commission Monday they are working to fix some of the problems but the electronics continue to present issues.

“The elevator is an issue. The doors are an issue. The hatch is an issue,” Smith-Hanes said “Basically anything that has a cord attached to it is an issue.

“But all the manual stuff is working just fine; they feel like they are making progress,” he added.

Progress is about 60 to 90 days behind schedule, and it is costing the county at least $70,000 per month to house inmates out of county.

The newly remodeled facility features a control center that controls everything from the locks on the jail cells to security cameras across the facility.

According to Smith-Hanes, the person who was working to resolve the problem was in Hays on Monday and was hoping to have the issue resolved by the end of the day. He said they were installing new hard drives Monday.

Kansas police official accused of fraud over part-time job

Bachman -photo courtesy KSN
Bachman -photo courtesy KSN

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A police lieutenant in Wichita is charged in federal court with making fraudulent reports so she would be paid for working a part-time job while on duty.

Heather D. Bachman faces seven wire-fraud counts and one count of making a false statement to a federal investigator.

Bachman is accused of defrauding the Wichita Police Department by working part time for Orion Security Services while on duty and being paid by the department. The city says she has been suspended without pay.

Prosecutors allege Bachman made a claim for mileage with Orion, even though she used a Wichita police patrol car. She also is alleged to have electronically filed a state tax return that didn’t accurately report part-time earnings.

A message left Tuesday with Bachman’s attorney, Cyd Gilman, wasn’t immediately returned.

 

Reminder: Hays USD 489 bond issue town hall Tuesday night

By JAMES BELL
Hays Post

The first in the next series of Hays USD 489 bond issue town hall meetings is scheduled for 6 p.m. Tuesday at Lincoln Elementary School, 1906 Ash.

The meetings are being led by the Fund Our Future First speakers bureau volunteer committee, which is working to inform voters about the $94 million bond issue that will be used to repair and upgrade facilities throughout the district.

The bond election is set for June 7, with polling locations at the American Legion, 1305 Canterbury, for Hays voters and St. Nicholas of Myra, 2901 E. 13th, for non-Hays district voters.

Mail-in ballot requests can also be made from now until the end of May at the Ellis County Clerk’s office, 718 Main.

Further information can be found at fundourfuturefirst.com and the USD 489 website.


March 30 USD 489 bond issue town hall meeting – video courtesy USD 489 News

Mounting number of victims in Kan. VA hospital sex abuse scandal

Leavenworth VA Med Center
Leavenworth VA Med Center

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former physician assistant is accused of sexual battery and other crimes involving at least seven patients at a Veterans Affairs hospital in Kansas, and a lawyer says more victims will emerge.

Three civil lawsuits filed in recent weeks in U.S. District Court in Kansas accuse Mark Wisner of conducting unnecessary and improper genital examinations at the Leavenworth VA Medical Center.

He also faces criminal charges of aggravated criminal sodomy, solicitation and sexual battery in Leavenworth County.

Wisner surrendered his medical license last year after seven patients accused him of abuse. He acknowledged in a consent decree that he had sexual contact with some patients, made inappropriate sexual comments and overprescribed.

His attorney has said little except that Wisner is innocent until proven otherwise.

Hays High’s Albany Schaffer signs with Louisiana-Monroe

Schaffer Signing

By Dustin Armbruster

It was a long process but, after a number of school visits, it is done. On Tuesday, Albany Schaffer made her decision official, signing to play volleyball for the University of Louisiana-Monroe.

Schaffer goes down as one of the best to play in the history of the Hays High volleyball program. She holds the school record for digs in a single season with 542 her sophomore season. She also holds the second, third and fourth spots on that list, as well. Despite missing seven matches her senior season, she still finished with 508 digs for the second spot. 482 digs her junior year ranks third while her freshman campaign led to 367 digs to land fourth on the list.

Albany Schaffer

Schaffer was twice named the Western Athletic Conference player of the year, earning the honor in 2014 and 2015. She was also named Honorable Mention as a sophomore. Schaffer was named to the All-State Honorable Mention team following her senior season.

Schaffer heads to Monroe, La., to join the Division 1 program as a DS/Libero. The Warhawks went 14-18 last year and compete in the Sun Belt Conference.

Christin Nunnery

Hays High finished 29-8 this past season. Schaffer joins three other seniors to sign with collegiate programs for volleyball. Kylie Brown and Madison Prough both signed with Fort Hays State University. Taylor Groen-Younger will play at Pratt Community College.

Kansas State freshman Freeman transferring

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) – Kansas State forward Ron Freeman has elected to transfer after seeing little action as a freshman.

Wildcats coach Bruce Weber announced the decision Tuesday.

The 6-foot-5 Freeman only appeared in 11 games, averaging less than one point and one rebound, and intends to sign a letter of intent with Northwest Florida State College when the spring signing period opens.

Kansas State experienced a massive roster turnover last offseason, when leading scorer Marcus Foster and backups Tre Harris and Malek Harris were dismissed from the program. Starting point guard Jevon Thomas and fellow guard Nigel Johnson also transferred to other schools.

The Wildcats were 5-13 in the Big 12 and 17-16 overall last season.

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