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2 Barton County women arrested for alleged drug possession

Julie Huntwork- photo Geary County
Julie Huntwork- photo Geary County

GEARY COUNTY – Two women from Barton County were arrested over the weekend.

The Junction City Police Department reported the arrest of Julie Ann Huntwork, 53, Hoisington, on suspicion of Possession of Methamphetamine, Possession of Marijuana, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

The arrest occurred at 8:52 p.m. Saturday at 500 East Chestnut Street.

Tia Lilley- photo Geary County
Tia Lilley- photo Geary County

At the same time and locatiuon Tia L. Lilley, 48, Great Bend, was arrested on suspicion of Possession of Methamphetamine and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

Tiger men’s and women’s basketball headed to NCAA tournament; both No. 5 seeds

For the first time in school history, both the Fort Hays State men’s and women’s basketball teams are headed to the NCAA Division II tournament in the same year. Both teams will be the No. 5 seed in the Central Regional the NCAA announced during the selection show Sunday evening.

The women’s tournament will be played in Pittsburg, Kan. and hosted by Pittsburg State while the men’s tournament will be played in Sioux Falls, S.D. and hosted by Augustana.

The Central Region is made up of teams from the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference the Mid-America Athletic Association and the Great American Conference.

The Tiger women (25-5), who are making their second straight tournament appearance and third overall, will play Winona State (Minn.) on Friday at John Lance Arena. The Warriors (29-3) are making their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2011 and the third in program history. They won the Northern Sun Conference regular season title by three games.

The FHSU men (20-10), making their second appearance in three years and 13th overall, will face Nebraska-Kearney on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Sanford Pentagon. The Lopers (20-11) are making their 12th tournament appearance after tying for second in the MIAA and finishing second on the conference tournamant.

NCAA II Women’s Central Regional
John Lance Arena; Pittsburg, Kan.
March 11, 12, 14

No. 4. Winona State (29-3) vs. No. 5. Fort Hays State (25-5), 12 p.m.
No. 1. Emporia State (26-5) vs. No. 7. Northern State (23-7), 2:30 p.m.
No. 2. Pittsburg State (27-5) vs. No. 7. Sioux Falls (27-5), 6 p.m.
No. 3. Missouri Western (27-3) vs. No. 6. Arkansas Tech (26-3), 8:30 p.m.

NCAA II Men’s Central Regional
Sanford Pentagon; Sioux Falls, S.D.
March 12, 13, 15

No. 3. MSU-Moorhead (30-5) vs. Minnesota State (21-9), 12 p.m.
No. 2. Northwest Missouri State (25-5) vs. No. 7 Ouachita Baptist (19-12), 2:30 p.m.
No. 1 Augustana (28-2) vs. No. 8 Harding (20-10), 5:30 p.m.
No. 4 Nebraska-Kearney (20-11) vs. No. 5 Fort Hays State (20-10). 8 p.m.

Tiger baseball drops series finale with Central Oklahoma

FHSU Athletics

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State baseball dropped the series finale with Central Oklahoma on Sunday by run rule, 15-4 after seven innings. The Broncho offense managed to score at least one run in every inning. With the loss, Fort Hays State now sits at 9-8 overall and 3-3 in the MIAA, while UCO moves to 9-5 overall and 4-2 in the MIAA.

Central Oklahoma scored one run in each of the first four innings while holding the Tigers scoreless. They added four runs in the top of the fifth pushing their lead to 8-0.

The Tiger bats came to life in the bottom half of the fifth when they were able to cut the lead in half scoring four runs. Nick Hammeke reached on an error to start the inning, then Clayton Basgall singled. With two outs, Austin Unrein singled to plate the first run. Designated hitter Joe Mapes loaded the bases with a single. After a wild pitch scored Basgall, Connor Ross cleared the bases with a two RBI double.

That was all the Tigers could muster though and Central Oklahoma put the game away by scoring two runs in the sixth and five more in the seventh.

Connor Boyer took the loss for the Tigers throwing 2.2 innings, giving up three runs on five hits with three strikeouts and a walk.

The Tigers host another three game series next weekend against Southwest Baptist starting on Friday.

Governor recognizes Hays DCF worker as DCF West Regional Employee of the Quarter

(Left to right: DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore, DCF Accountant Debra Fisher, Governor Sam Brownback)
(Left to right: DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore, DCF Accountant Debra Fisher, Governor Sam Brownback)

TOPEKA – Debra Fisher was honored Feb. 15, at a reception at the State Capitol Building, Topeka, for having been named employee of the 2015 fourth quarter for the Kansas Department for Children and Families’ (DCF) West Region.

An accountant in DCF’s Budgeting and Fiscal department, based in the Hays Service Center, Fisher joined four other DCF employees who were recognized by Governor Sam Brownback for their service to the State.

Fisher has served the State for 10 years, overseeing and tracking a budget of just under $30 million. She trains and supervises five staff across a region of 65 counties and 17 service centers.

“Debra’s ability to quickly pull information from a variety of sources and present it in a clear and concise manner is highly valued and appreciated in the West Region,” said DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore.

Outside of work, Fisher enjoys being active with family and friends. Some of her favorite activities include boating, reading, word games and watching movies.

80-year-old marijuana dealer, stopped on I-70, faces sentencing

Dion- photo Geary County
Dion- photo Geary County

BOSTON (AP) — An 80-year-old man who admitted running a sprawling multistate marijuana-dealing operation faces sentencing this week.

Marshall Dion pleaded guilty to several charges under a plea agreement with prosecutors.

A federal judge postponed Dion’s sentencing scheduled for last month. She asked prosecutors and Dion’s lawyers to submit written arguments on why the proposed sentence in the plea agreement is up to seven years in prison when federal sentencing guidelines call for 30 years.

A stop for speeding in 2013 in Junction City led authorities to Massachusetts and Arizona, where they found about $15 million in cash, nearly 400 pounds of marijuana and ledgers detailing drug deals going back to 1992.

A sentencing hearing is scheduled for Thursday in U.S. District Court.

FHSU prepares Hispanic students for college with Hispanic College Institute

hispanic college instituteBy Randy Gonzales
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

Dr. Mirta M. Martin knows all too well Hispanic students often are ill-prepared for college. She was in that position herself 33 years ago.

Now, Martin — president of Fort Hays State University — hopes to help prepare this generation’s Hispanic and Latino students for college.

Fort Hays State’s inaugural Hispanic College Institute for high school sophomores (class of 2018) and juniors (class of 2017) is scheduled for June 22-25 on the FHSU campus. The institute is a free, four-day residential program that prepares Hispanic students for success in higher education.

Students can visit www.fhsu.edu/hci/Academics for more information or to apply online for the Hispanic College Institute. Applications are being accepted until April 1. All applicants will receive an email notification sometime in April, informing them of their acceptance status. FHSU’s goal is to have 150 students participate.

Brett Bruner, director of Transition and Student Conduct at FHSU, is in charge of coordinating the programming.

“It’s really a jam-packed four days for the students,” Bruner said. “The students will be going through various workshops. They will focus on topics like public speaking, social media, understanding foundations to succeed in college, how to apply to college and understanding the ACT process.”

Students also will meet Hispanic leaders who have been successful, providing inspiration as well as networking opportunities. Participants also will experience an opportunity to break up into small groups and discuss issues in the Hispanic and Latino communities and provide solutions.

On the Friday of that week, students will participate in a math and technology day. Martin said a Fort Hays State graduate who is with NASA’s Orion project — an initiative for deep-space exploration — is slated to speak on that day.

“It will be incredible,” Martin said.

The final day will feature a brunch, with parents invited to help celebrate the accomplishments of their students, Bruner said.

The HCI showcases the best FHSU has to offer. It’s an opportunity for Fort Hays State to feel like home.

“The HCI puts a hook onto the students that says to them — and to the parents — Fort Hays State is an institution that welcomes you, is ready and willing to open its arms to educate you,” Martin said. “It’s an institution where your values are the values of our institution.

“The sense of family, the sense of integrity, the sense of honor, the sense of the work ethic — more so than any other institution, we are uniquely positioned to educate that generation that has come to the United States seeking their American Dream, but do not know how to achieve it.”

Martin’s American Dream started with her grandmother entrusting her with a priest at Duke University, taking a leap of faith. And now, Martin is asking parents to do as her grandmother did all those years ago. At Sunday’s Student Recognition Program at Dodge City and Garden City, Martin met with parents of Hispanic students. The children for many of those parents will be first-generation college students.

“These parents, it was touching, because 33 years after, they’re saying to me what my grandmother was saying to the priest at Duke University when she let me go: ‘This is the light of my life. This is the light of my eyes. She is now your responsibility,’ ” Martin said. “Thirty-three years later, these parents, in tears, in Spanish, are saying to me, ‘I’m going to turn my (child) over to you because I know he or she will be your son or daughter.’

“I am very honored. I am very touched at various levels,” she added. “One, listening to them, I was listening to my grandmother. She gave me freedom.”

Born in Havana, Cuba, Martin left her native country as a child with her grandmother and eventually immigrated to the United States. But when it came time for Martin to go to college, her grandmother was reluctant to let go.

“It was not until she found somebody who would protect me,” Martin said. “That’s what I saw in these parents. I am honored. I understand first-hand that these kids are these parents’ most precious possessions. When they offer us the privilege to turn them over to us they become my children, they become my most precious possession. They’re not turning them over to a president. They’re turning them over to a mother.”

Martin, at the urging of then-Virginia Gov. Tim Kane, created a state-wide Hispanic College Institute when she worked in higher education in Virginia. With the Hispanic population growing in Kansas, Martin’s goal was to do the same at FHSU. But Martin doesn’t want to stop with just the HCI.

“My goal and dream is that the HCI will be the template for many others,” Martin said. “If you’re a first-generation student, it doesn’t matter whether you’re purple, green or white. You’re a first-generation student.

“There’s no reason why we couldn’t have an African American College Institute,” she added. “There’s no reason we couldn’t have a Farmers College Institute. They don’t need to feel they are alone.”

HINEMAN: Budget troubles already

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

The Kansas House and Senate agreed on a budget during the week of February 15. That is an extraordinary event because it is likely that the legislature has never before agreed on a budget so early in the session. That accelerated schedule was made possible by the fact that we are now on a biennial budget cycle. The budgets for fiscal years 2016 and 2017 were first adopted during the 2015 session. That means that this year it was only necessary to revise those previous budgets to reflect changing circumstances since that time.

But all is not well with the budget. As passed, the budget only allowed for a year-end cash balance of $6 million… a minuscule amount when one is dealing with an annual state general fund budget of $6.3 billion. At the time I remarked that it appeared the budget was held together with baling wire and duct tape. Unfortunately it seems the baling wire has now broken and the duct tape has lost its grip. Last week we received the unfortunate news that the February revenues to the state were $53 million less than expected. The really troubling part is that disappointing revenue reports are now a recurring event. State revenues have come in below expectations in eleven of the last twelve months.

Some folks have begun to blame the revenue estimating group for missing the mark with their past estimates. I believe that blame is misplaced. The estimating group has had an excellent record in the past of producing on-target revenue estimates. It is only since the tax cut of 2012 that the estimates have begun to diverge significantly from the actual numbers. I believe that tax cut is to blame for the estimates missing the mark in recent months. It represents a dramatic shift away from long-established state tax policy. That makes it very difficult to predict the outcome. When economists attempt to predict economic activity, they are really trying to predict human behavior. The bigger the change in the economic system or tax system, the harder it becomes to accurately predict the response of the people and the economy.

The February report pushed the projected ending balance to a negative $47 million. That is a deficiency which must be corrected, because the state is required to have a positive ending balance at the end of the fiscal year on June 30. Governor Brownback immediately responded by making an allotment (reduction) of $17 million to the appropriation for regents institutions for the current fiscal year. That theoretically makes the projected ending balance a negative $30 million. It is quite likely that Governor Brownback will be forced to use his newly-granted authority to delay up to $100 million of state employer contributions into KPERS.

In retrospect the prudent thing to do, if such a dramatic change in tax policy was contemplated, would have been to initiate that change at a time when state cash reserves were large enough to effectively deal with unexpected shortfalls if things didn’t work out as expected. Instead the abrupt change in tax policy forced the state to quickly consume what cash balance we had at the time. Since then the budgets have been cobbled together with fee sweeps, transfers from KDOT, decreased contributions to KPERS, and true cuts to many vital state programs. Most recently the Kansas sales tax was raised to second highest in the nation to avoid adjusting the income tax plan.

So now the budget is underwater with nearly four months left in the current fiscal year. That means four revenue reports yet to go, and the trend has certainly not been our friend. The oil and gas industry is in a major recession and agriculture is not doing well either. But the seeds of this fiscal crisis were sown long before those industries started to slump. It is increasingly evident that the income tax cut of 2012 went too far too fast, and the expectations for the economic growth it would produce were far too optimistic.

There is no time to craft any sort of revenue plan which would provide relief over the next four months. Any anemic revenue reports over that time must be dealt with by imposing even more harmful fund transfers or cuts to programs which vitally need the dollars remaining in their budgets. Reflect for a moment on how difficult it will be on those agencies and departments to absorb cuts so late during the budget year. And yet it must be done; there is no alternative.

The time has come to quit holding on to the vain hope that the tax cut will eventually work and the economy will grow accordingly. It is not happening, and it is now time for us to deal with that reality. Core governmental functions are now being seriously compromised and we can wait no longer for the miracle to happen.

Former Kan. high school star, Dallas Cowboy returns to jail

Randle- photo Irving, TX police
Randle- photo Irving, TX police

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former Dallas Cowboys running back has been arrested in his Kansas hometown for failure to appear in court.

Sedgwick County Jail records indicate 24-year-old Joseph Randle of Wichita was booked at 1:44 a.m. on Sunday. Bond is set at $150,000.

Randle was charged Feb. 22 with four counts of aggravated battery and other charges after police say he backed his car into three people the previous day while leaving a party.

Police say he later returned to the Wichita home he’d been asked to leave and forced his way inside.

A judge rejected his request to reduce his $100,000 bond because Randle hadn’t hired an attorney or applied for court-appointed counsel. Randle posted bond and was released early last week.

The Cowboys released Randle last year.

$5K camping package new to Symphony in the Flint Hills

Screen Shot 2016-03-06 at 11.15.52 AMELMDALE, Kan. (AP) — Well-heeled patrons can sign up for a luxury, weekend-long encampment when the Kansas City Symphony makes its annual journey to the Flint Hills to perform.

The Kansas City Star reports that the “Out of Africa” experience will run $5,000 per couple. Up to 20 15-foot, air-conditioned Belgian tents will be erected in a remote prairie a few miles from this year’s June 11 concert site near the Chase County town of Clements. The all-inclusive camping experience will begin the Friday before the Saturday concert and wrap up that Sunday.

The tents will offer 360-degree views of natural rock outcroppings and a small pond.

Lodging is an ongoing challenge for the event, which each year draws 7,000 people to remote areas where accommodation options are few.

Warrant for rental property inspection considered in Kansas

courtesy photo
courtesy photo

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Legislature is considering a bill that would require cities and counties to obtain a warrant to inspect rental properties.

The House Commerce, Labor and Economic Development Committee conducted a hearing on the bill Wednesday.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the bill would prohibit cities and counties from adopting local laws that allow periodic inspection of rental housing without a search warrant, and it would declare any existing rental licensing ordinances that don’t meet the bill’s standards null and void.

The bill would also allow tenants to retain the right to request an inspection as long as they are not subject to an eviction order.

The committee took no action on the bill Wednesday.

Trial set for Kan. inmate accused of attempted murder of another inmate

Garza
Garza

HUTCHINSON- One of two Kansas Department of Corrections inmates charged with attempted capital murder, or in the alternative, aggravated battery will face trial on May 24.

Thirty-one-year-old Juan Garza is accused in a case where the victim was beaten in the recreation yard of the central unit. Miguel Garcia was first taken to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center then transported to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita for treatment. The incident occurred back in June of 2014.

During a pretrial hearing Friday, Judge Trish Rose set the trial date as well as a motion deadline of April 22. That means both sides have until that date to file any motions they want heard prior to trial.

The other defendant in this case, 22-year-old Jerrod Green entered a plea to two counts of aggravated battery, one for this case and the other for an incident inside the old Reno County Jail where he battered another inmate, Ross Chaney.

He was sentenced on December 18, and was given eight years and five months in prison added to his sentence.

Changes coming in times, procedures for FHSU Commencement May 13 and 14

mortar boardFHSU University Relations and Marketing

Although it is still months away, officials at Fort Hays State University are alerting faculty and students to changes that will take place for Commencement in May.

The annual ceremony has undergone several adjustments over the past few years, necessitated by huge increases in the number of graduates. With the second-lowest in-state tuition in the nation and multiple academic programs of distinction, Fort Hays State has become an ever more popular destination of choice. Enrollment increased to an official count of 14,210 in the fall 2015 semester, up from about 5,800 in the year 2000. As a result, the number of graduates has also nearly tripled over the past decade.

To enable more family members and other well-wishers to attend, Commencement in May 2015 was divided into two separate ceremonies. Students who received undergraduate and graduate degrees from two of the four FHSU colleges participated in Commencement on a Friday evening, and students who received degrees from the other two colleges participated in Commencement on the following Saturday morning.

That same arrangement of two separate Commencement ceremonies will continue this year, but with the addition of a fifth college, there will be a different arrangement for participation.

Graduates from the College of Business and Entrepreneurship, the College of Education, and the College of Science, Technology and Mathematics will gather for Commencement at 6 p.m. on Friday, May 13. Graduates from the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences and the College of Health and Behavioral Sciences will gather for Commencement at 9 a.m. on Saturday, May 14. With a 9 a.m. starting time, the Saturday ceremony will begin an hour earlier than last year. Both Commencement ceremonies will take place in Gross Memorial Coliseum, which is immediately adjacent to the U.S. 183 Bypass on the south side of the FHSU campus.

“By making this announcement at the start of the spring semester, we are providing ample time for our graduates and their families to make plans for Commencement,” said Dr. Graham Glynn, FHSU provost. “Hays has 950 hotel rooms, but the demand created by Commencement can quickly exhaust that supply of rooms. Those who will need accommodations would be wise to make their reservations early, ahead of the rush.”

The division into two Commencements is necessary to avoid overcrowding in Gross Memorial Coliseum. “This arrangement allows plenty of space at both ceremonies so that we do not have to limit the number of people who can attend,” said Dr. Mirta M. Martin, FHSU president. “Fort Hays State is a family, and the last thing we would do is tell some of the members of our graduates’ families that they cannot attend Commencement. This is a day of celebration. We invite everyone to join us in commemorating the success of our students.”

In recent years, the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Sheridan Hall has been offered as an alternate viewing site for Commencement through a live video feed, but it is being discontinued this year because the number of people using that venue has dwindled to fewer than a dozen.

Up-to-date information about Commencement 2016 is available on the FHSU website at:
https://www.fhsu.edu/commencement/

Search for missing Kansas woman continues

Search in Rice County on Saturday
Search in Rice County on Saturday

RICE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities spent Saturday searching for a missing Rice County woman, according to a social media report from Kansas Game Wardens.

The Wardens partnered with a number of other agencies to search along the Arkansas River for Megan Foglesong, 23, Alden, reported missing since November.

“We had planned this search based on a tip we received,” said Rice County Under Sheriff Brian Treaster.

Other agencies included Reno, and Barton County Sheriff’s Offices, Lyons Police Department, Kansas Search and Rescue Dog Association.

photos Kan. Dpt. of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism
photos Kan. Dpt. of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism

The search is to continue on Sunday.  Screen Shot 2016-03-06 at 12.18.02 PMNo additional details have been released.

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