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Western Kan. Ag Research Center business manager honored by K-State

Spencer Casey
Spencer Casey

By K-State Communications and Marketing

Four unclassified professionals at Kansas State University are receiving awards for their excellent contributions to the university.

Dawn Caldwell, senior grant specialist for the Agricultural Experiment Station; Spencer Casey, business manager for the Western Kansas Agricultural Research Centers; Lisa Duer, lead grant administrator for the dean’s office in the College of Veterinary Medicine; and Brandon Utech, instructional media administrator for the Office of Mediated Education have been selected for the 2017 President’s Award of Excellence for Unclassified Professionals.

Caldwell was selected for the team building, group activity and service to the university award. She meticulously and precisely scrutinizes each budget and proposal document to ensure the university is conforming to request-for-proposal requirements and university policies. She has saved the college many times from what would have been terminal errors or oversights in this regard. She operates with extreme efficiently and time management, always meeting submission deadlines despite last-minute delivery of necessary documents by departments well after internal deadlines. Caldwell is an instrumental part of the externally funded projects that come into K-State each year.

Casey was selected for the productivity, creativity and innovation award. He is constantly developing ideas that improve the university’s research centers. Casey excels at meeting nontraditional challenges that do not have standard solutions. He is highly skilled at computer network development. He has written several online software applications and databases for the Western Kansas Agricultural Research Centers. Casey’s efforts benefit western Kansas research and extension faculty and administrative staff by making account transactions and balances accessible online, easing the process of updating and tracking capital and noncapital inventory, simplifying the record-keeping requirements for acquiring and tracking federal surplus property, and making report-filing processes much more efficient.

Duer was selected for the leadership award. She is very understanding, accommodative and flexible with the needs of faculty, staff and students. She always goes the extra mile to meet and surpass faculty’s expectations with their grant proposals. Duer’s leadership in the grants administration office is exceptional, and she approaches her role with a high degree of professionalism and sincerity. She has a unique insight on when certain agreements with industry require an elevated sense of urgency to be completed. Duer actively practices effective leadership strategies to provide support within the college for the pursuit of external funding. Under her leadership and encouragement, all the college’s grant specialists have earned certified research administrator certificates, which is a rare distinction among grant specialists.

Utech was selected for the distinguished accomplishment award. He successfully coordinated K-State’s transition from using a small, limited video capture and streaming solution to using Mediasite, a commercial software for enterprise video management. This change allowed K-State to dramatically improve video streaming quality and service for students, researchers, faculty and staff and for people around the world who view K-State’s videos. This project involved coordination with Information Technology Services staff, campus video teams, and instructors who use videos for courses and research. Utech was successful in driving this complex project to completion on a tight timeline — less than one year — in a budget situation that required his department to reduce costs while improving services.

Eagle Communications honored for ‘Employee-Ownership’ communications

Eagle-Logo-cropWASHINGTON, DC — Eagle Communications, Inc. has been selected by the ESOP Association as the winner of the 2017 Printed Materials Annual Award for Communications Excellence.

The AACE Awards are sponsored each year by the Association to recognize the outstanding communications and educational programs of its members. The awards are presented each May at the ESOP Association’s Annual Conference in Washington to companies that have excelled in communicating the ESOP (employee stock ownership plan) and its meaning to the company’s
employees.

This is the third time in the past four years Eagle has been recognized by the national ESOP Association in the Printed Materials category.

This award recognizes excellence in the use of original, printed informational materials to explain or promote the company’s ESOP to employee-owners, customers, or community.

Eagle was also recognized for its Intranet.

This award recognizes company Intranets that excel at educating the employee-owners about the company ESOP, and excel at spurring employee-owners to engage in the company’s ownership culture.

esop-association-logo“We are excited to have been selected as a 2017 AACE Award winner by The ESOP Association,” Eagle President and CEO, Gary Shorman said. “We are proud to be an ESOP company and strongly believe in the power of employee-ownership and work hard to share that belief with all our employee-owners and our customers.”

The awards are split into two Divisions. Division A: 250 or Fewer Employees and Division B: Over 250 Employees. With 300 employee-owners, Eagle was among the smallest companies competing in the larger division.

AACE Award winners are chosen by a panel of five judges made up of both management and non-management employee-owners, each of whom has demonstrated active experience and interest in the field of ESOPs and employeeownership communications. Awards are based on: overall quality and quantity of employee-owner education, contributions of employee-owners, integration of the ESOP into company culture, frequency of ownership communications, involvement and/or response of employee-owners, encouragement of ownership attitudes, clear explanations, creative ideas, graphic design, and technical quality.

Eagle Communications, Inc. is a Kansas-based Broadband Services and Media Company with over 290 employee-owners. The company operates 28 radio stations in Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri as well as cable TV systems in 60 Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado communities. The company also offers ebusiness solutions, web hosting, telephone service, high-speed Internet, and wireless Internet in most service areas. For more information log on to https://www.eaglecom.net.

The ESOP Association is the national trade association for companies with employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) and the leading voice in America for employee ownership. The core belief of The ESOP Association is that employee ownership will improve American competitiveness, increase productivity through greater employee participation, and strengthen our free enterprise economy. More information: website – www.esopassociation.org and blog – www.esopassociationblog.org.

Upset Possible? Kan. Voters To Decide First Trump-Era Congressional Election

By FRANK MORRIS

Kansas 4th District Candidate James Thompson takes a look at the crowd, before addressing the Sanders rally at the state Democrats’ annual gathering in Topeka in February.
CREDIT FRANK MORRIS / KCUR

Voters in south central Kansas will be the first in the nation to decide a congressional race in the age of Trump. The special election in the Kansas 4th District will replace Mike Pompeo, who now leads the CIA. It’s a district that would, under normal circumstances, be considered a lock for the Republican candidate. But of course, these are not normal times, and resources are flowing into the district from left and right.

Last November, when Democrats in rest of the country woke up to Donald Trump’s surprise win, Kansas Democrats had something to celebrate. After years in the wilderness, Kansas Democrats converted a dozen seats in the state Legislature in 2016. Trump’s victory and his appointment of then Kansas 4th District Congressman Mike Pompeo to head the CIA presented another opportunity.

The Democrat is a Sanders guy

James Thompson, a Sanders-inspired newbie, managed to beat a well-known politician in a local party convention to become the Democrats’ candidate in the 4th.

Thompson is a civil rights attorney and strongly pro-union. He grew up dirt poor, mainly in Oklahoma, and he served in the Army, a fact he promotes in his advertisements.

“I want to be your congressman,” states Thompson in one 30-second spot. “I’m going to fight for our jobs, fight for our veterans, and fight for our personal freedoms,” says Thompson as an image of him aiming a military-style rifle crosses the screen.

Thompson says he has lots of grassroots support, and he has been able to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars, reportedly, with help from a Sanders email list. The liberal website Daily Kos has been promoting his candidacy, and a group called Democracy for America has been lining up people from across the country to call 4th District voters on Thompson’s behalf.

The Republican is a Trump guy 

GOP candidate Ron Estes from one of his many TV ads

Thompson’s Republican opponent, Ron Estes, is hardly defenseless. The Kansas 4th is, after all, home to Charles Koch, Koch Industries and the Kansas Chamber of Commerce. In addition to Wichita, the district includes most of south central Kansas, a conservative stronghold. And Estes is an established insider.

“Ron Estes is the Kansas State Treasurer, and he’s, not a very well-known person, and nothing against him, but not a very dynamic politician,” says Bob Beatty, professor of political science at Washburn University.

Beatty says Estes is, however, a familiar face around Wichita, where he served as Sedgwick County Treasurer. Estes has worked as a manager in the oil and manufacturing businesses. He stands out among Kansas Republicans as an early and avid Trump supporter. Like Trump, Estes promises to cut regulations, and bring back manufacturing jobs.

In one ad he stands in an algae-covered pond, repeating Trump’s pledge to “drain the swamp”.

“After eight years of Obama, America is weaker, and the swamp is deeper than we thought,” says Estes in the ad. “And now the liberal activists are trying to steal this election, by supporting a Bernie Sanders-backed lawyer,” Estes continues with swamp images flashing on the screen.

4th District race overshadowed

With the Trump guy versus Sanders guy match-up, you’d expect this first congressional election of the new presidency to draw attention. But another race is attracting millions of dollars from all over the country sucking the political oxygen — money that is — out of the Kansas 4th where fundraising is measured in hundreds of thousands.

“There’s clearly going to be enough to run a solid campaign,” says Neal Allen, who teaches political science at Wichita State University. “But for both Republicans and especially Democrats, the fact that the Georgia 6th, looks to be very competitive, and that election occurs a week after the Kansas 4th, that has drawn most of the national money.”

That Georgia race is to replace Tom Price, who Trump named to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. Georgia’s 6th is in suburban Atlanta. It’s also supposed to be a safe Republican seat. But the four viable Republican contenders face one Democrat; and the Democrat, Jon Ossoff, has raised more than $8 million. Ossoff is generating so much support that he threatens to win 50 percent in a crowded field and forego a runoff election. The national GOP is going to the mat to stop him.

While the race in Georgia overshadows the Kansas 4th on the national scene, Thompson isn’t even getting a lot of support from the Kansas Democratic Party. In fact his campaign has feuded with party leaders over a request for a measly $20,000. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has been completely silent in Thompson’s race.

“If the Democrats are going to take the House back, they probably have to take a few districts like the Georgia 6th in the north Atlanta suburbs,” says Allen. “But the Kansas 4th is just a lot more Republican.  And the kind of voters that tend to be swinging toward the Democrats are just not that populous around Wichita.”

Tough territory for Democrats 

In the last three congressional elections, Democratic challengers attracted only about 30 percent of the vote against Mike Pompeo. Beatty says it’s unlikely Thompson will turn that around in the space of a few months.

“Everybody would just be shocked if Thompson won. Personally, if it were within single digits, in Kansas, I’d say, that’s unbelievable!” says Beatty

But, guess what, late last week the Kansas 4th District race suddenly popped up on Washington’s radar. The National Republican Congressional Committee abruptly weighed in with an attack ad. Republican operatives have been telling reporters that the Kansas race is uncomfortably close.

Beatty doesn’t buy it. He doesn’t think the talk, or the GOP’s last-minute ad buy necessarily signals a big turn in the race. He says the idea may be simply to make sure that Estes’s base takes the election seriously. Because, as early turnouts indicate, it’s a pretty safe bet that Thompson’s core people will.

Frank Morris is a national correspondent and senior editor at kcur.org, a partner in the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @FrankNewsman.

‘Dancing Together’ event will benefit DSNWK

screen-shot-2017-04-06-at-8-00-49-am“Dancing Together for DSNWK” will be 5:30 p.m. April 24 at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center on the campus of Fort Hays State University.

The event includes all members of the competitive team of Styles Dance Centre and members of DSNWK of Hays.

Community members can come and enjoy an evening of Styles Dance Centre’s competition company accompanied by members of DSNWK of Hays.

Tickets are $5 for ages 4 and older. Three and younger are free. Tickets can be purchased at Styles Dance Centre or at the door the night of the show.

All funds raised will be donated to DSNWK.

HPD Activity Log April 10

kbyw-november16

cleland pharm hpd activity log

The Hays Police Department responded to 5 animal calls and 18 traffic stops Mon., April 10, 2017, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Juvenile Complaint–300 block W 12th St, Hays; 7:46 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1900 block E 13th St, Hays; 7:45 AM
Juvenile Complaint–Hays; 9:19 AM
Found/Lost Property–2900 block Broadway Ave, Hays; 9:34 AM
Child in Need of Care–300 block W 12th St, Hays; 11:39 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–2200 block Vine St, Hays; 12:15 PM
Animal At Large–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 1:42 PM
Criminal Damage to Property–300 block E 14th St, Hays; 11/1/16 1 PM; 4/3/17 5 PM
Animal At Large–1100 block E 13th St, Hays; 4:23 PM
Violation of Restraining Order/PFA–2800 block Augusta Ln, Hays; 4:45 PM
Worthless Check–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 1:05 PM; 1:06 PM
Animal At Large–100 block Ash St, Hays; 5:29 PM
Theft (general)–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:25 PM; 4:26 PM
Worthless Check–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 4 PM; 4:09 PM
Theft (general)–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:29 PM; 4:30 PM
Juvenile Complaint–4100 block Covenant Dr, Hays; 7:30 PM
Theft (general)–2100 block Vine St, Hays; 4:30 PM; 7:30 PM
Suspicious Activity–600 block Allen St, Hays; 8:30 PM; 8:51 PM
Harassment (All Other)–1500 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 4/8 7 PM; 4/10 9:50 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–3200 block Vine St, Hays; 8:15 PM
Disturbance – Noise–400 block Oak St, Hays; 11:49 PM

kbyw-november16

Life after congestive heart failure to topic of Coffee and Conversation

hays-med2The next session of Coffee and Conversation will be held Tuesday, May 2, at CHI Education Room, 2500 Canterbury Drive. Participants are asked to use the Southeast Entrance F.

The program will feature a presentation and roundtable discussion with Dr. Anil Pandit, Cardiologist, HaysMed DeBakey Heart Institute. Topic for the discussion is “What YOU can do to live a healthy life with Congestive Heart Failure”

The program begins at 5:30 pm with healthy snacks followed by the discussion from 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm. The program is designed for those who have had Open Heart Surgery, Stents (PTCA), Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) or a Health Attack (MI) and the people who care about them.

There is not charge for this program but RSVPs are due May 1.

SCHLAGECK: Storytelling in Downs April 28-29

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

Storytelling, as we know it, began with the advent of man and woman on the earth.

Before we learned to write, we learned to rely on our memory to learn anything. For this, we had to be a good listener.

Why?

To tell the story we’d just heard.

A good story teller is always in demand and respected. He or she can easily find an audience, eager to devour every exciting bit of information in the stories.

When people traveled, they shared these stories with others. When they returned home, they brought with them exciting new tales of exotic people and places.

To celebrate this art, a storytelling festival is slated for the weekend of April 28-29 in Downs. Now in its 24th year, the Kansas Storytelling Festival began in 1994.

This festival draws people who appreciate stories and realize their power in shaping our identities as well as pure enjoyment.

At this year’s event, storytellers will take us to a different time and place and stretch our imaginations. They will make us laugh and cry. They will make us think about our own stories and how important it is to pass on to others what we learn in this life.

Every spring, the citizens of this small north-central Kansas town bring nationally recognized talent to their community of 900 souls. Tim Lowry, who makes his home in Summerville, S.C., headlines this year’s festival.

Lowry is best known for his folk tales and stories from American history. He’s presented thousands of educational programs for schools across the country.

Other featured storytellers include Adam Miller, described as a natural-born storytelle, Brian “Fox” Ellis, an author, storyteller of song, myth and poetry; and Linda Gorham, who specializes in surprising twists and unconventional humor tied in her tales.

Osborne County’s Glennys Doane serves on the Festival steering committee and explains how the two-day event works.

Four stages of entertainment run concurrently during the Festival. This gives festivalgoers the chance to choose which performer or story type to attend.

Individual backgrounds and styles make each storyteller distinctive. Tellers are rotated to all stages and story sessions are planned around the interests of children, history, music and personal, anecdotal stories.

People travel from across the country to listen to the yarns. They love the stories and believe in their power to move them.

“Our storytellers tell their tales without reading a book, using photos or showing a video,” Doane says. “They use words, inflection and cadence to create pictures and events in the listener’s mind.”

Doane likes to recall what old-time storyteller Donald Davis says about the art, “My business is in movies. I shift the movie I make in my head to your head.”

In addition to the telling of tales, there’s plenty of other activities including good food prepared by caring local hands. Some the most popular items include the famous Lion Club hamburgers and pies, cakes and cinnamon rolls baked by the ladies from nearby Dispatch.

There’s also a resource center where books, CDs and t-shirts from the featured story tellers can be purchased. A story store incorporates a recording booth where festivalgoers can stop and relate their own stories of rural Kansas, or wherever they’re from.

For more information about the 24th annual Kansas Storytelling Festival, visit www.Kansasstorytelling.com. Mark the dates on your calendar and drive to Downs.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

HAWVER: A closer look at grocery store beer bill

martin hawver line artThey’ve gone home for three weeks, and members of the Kansas Legislature are likely to be questioned not only about the budget or Medicaid or taxes, but also about just what they’ve done to the liquor industry, or will be allowed to do by Gov. Sam Brownback.

With most of the 2017 legislative session over, and what most old-timers refer to as the wrap-up or veto session ready to start May 1, one of the few big issues settled so far on the floor of the House and Senate is whether convenience and grocery stores can sell “strong beer” with about double the fire-power (6 percent alcohol) of what is technically a cereal malt beverage or “grocery store beer” that has about 3.2 percent alcohol.

Now, the issue is a relatively small one that probably only sends shivers down the spines of parents whose children look 18 when they’re younger and can buy grocery store beer if they’re clever enough. But, it’s just that 3.2 stuff, and just the bathroom breaks needed to become a little tipsy are a deterrent.

But, Kansas lawmakers were told that there is such a small national market for 3.2 beer that it’s likely to become extinct and the only beers available to convenience stores and groceries and such—basically, non-liquor stores—are going to be 6 percenters.

So, we go to 6 percent everywhere, and depending on a veto or not, you won’t have to visit the liquor store where you can’t even buy indoor ice, let alone cups or corkscrews or tonic to take the edge off the vodka, to get that strong beer.

The compromise? Because nearly all legislation is a compromise, the deal is that those liquor stores suddenly will be allowed to make up to 20 percent of their revenue from things that aren’t liquor—not allowed now. Imagine buying that ice, or corkscrew, or maybe chips and sandwiches and cups and, who knows, maybe bullets. Those extra permissible sales are designed to make now single-product liquor stores the only stop you’ll have to make on the way to the lake or the park or maybe grandma’s for dinner. Oh, and the liquor stores get to sell all the Lottery tickets and cigarettes that they can, which won’t be counted against that 20 percent.

Is this a good idea? Or maybe just the only culture-rattling legislation that the Kansas Legislature could pass in the main portion of its session?

Now, of course, the grocery/convenience store folks are happy, the liquor store folks worried about the future of their business.

And…lingering in the background is the real goal of those non-liquor stores: To be able to sell wine and hard liquor, or at least wine, racks of which they might put just footsteps from cheese trays and other accompaniments for liquor.

Probably most interesting: The grocery/convenience store crowd says if the bill passes, it won’t ask for 10 years for that 6 percent beer benchmark to be expanded to include the wine and liquors that are the financial oxygen for liquor store owners.

Some believe that the 10-year moratorium on the grocery/convenience store liquor product expansion is a guarantee that those liquor stores will still be able to turn a profit for at least a decade…but most Statehouse habitues believe that the 10-year business is just a selling point that will disappear well before then.

Lots of issues, lots of small mom-and-pop liquor stores say they are in danger of being put out of business by the convenience store down the block.

We’ll see where this goes, won’t we?

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

Monarch softball sweeps Colby

HAYS, Kan. – The TMP-Marian softball team made quick work of Colby Monday with a couple of three-inning run rule wins. The Monarchs scored 14 runs in the second inning and won the opener 19-4. Alison Helget homered twice and drove in four and picked up the win in the circle. Emily Schulte also had four RBIs.

The Monarchs struck for eight in the first inning and won the second game 16-1. Emily Schulte and Bailey Lacy both homered. Lacy and Alison Helget both knocked in three runs with Lacy picking up the win.

The Monarchs snap their three-game losing streak to move to 3-3. They host Ellis Tuesday afternoon.

HHS boys golf finishes runner-up in McPherson

McPHERSON, Kan. – The Hays High boys golf team shot a 318 and finished second at the McPherson Invitational Monday afternoon at the Turkey Creek Golf Course. The Indians finished 15 shots behind first place Salina Sacred Heart.

Josh Norris fired a five-over-par 75 and finished third. Tradgon McCrae was eighth after a 79 and Allen Zollinger placed 10th with an 80.

Team Finish
1. Salina Sacred Heart 303
2. Hays High 318
3. Ark City 345
4. Sterling 346
5. Salina South 350
6. Winfield 371
7. Derby 371
8. McPherson 383
9. Hutchinson 384
10. El Dorado 384
11. Newton 397
12. Great Bend 400
13. St john 410

Top 15 Medalists
1. Grant Heerrenbruck-Sacred Heart, 70
2. Tate Herrenbruck-Sacred Heart, 74
3. Josh Norris-Hays, 75
4. Kelby Titus-Great Bend, 76
5. Max Ontjes-Hutchinson, 77
6. Jake Lackey-McPherson, 78
7. Cole Elmore-Sacred Heart, 78
8. Tradgon McCrae-Hays, 79
9. Kayden Steiner-Ark City, 79
10. Allen Zollinger-Hays, 80
11. Quentin Shaw-Sacred Heart, 81
12. Josh Reed-Salina South, 83
13. Mikey Kelly-Campus, 83
14. Tanner Randall-Winfield, 84
15. James McNutt-Sterling, 84

Sunny, warmer Tuesday

Tuesday sunny, with a high near 70. Light south wind increasing to 10 to 15 mph in the morning.

Tuesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 46. South southeast wind 10 to 14 mph.

Wednesday A 30 percent chance of showers, mainly after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 73. Breezy, with a south wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 16 to 21 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 32 mph.

Wednesday NightA chance of showers and thunderstorms before 11pm, then a chance of showers between 11pm and 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 52. South wind 6 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

ThursdayA chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 5pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 70. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

Thursday NightA chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

FridayA 30 percent chance of showers before 8am. Partly sunny, with a high near 79. Breezy.

9-year-old Kansas boy hospitalized after run over by tractor

RENO COUNTY – A 9-year-old Kansas boy was injured in a farming accident just after 7p.m. Monday in Reno County.

First responders were dispatched to the southwest corner of a field near Kansas 14 highway and Arlington Road, according to the Reno County Sheriff’s Department.

The boy’s father told deputies his 10-year-old daughter was driving a tractor in the field, when the his 9-year-old son fell and was run over by the front and rear tires of the tractor.

The boy was walking in front of the tractor, cutting small trees down and throwing them in to the bucket of the tractor.

An emergency medical helicopter transported the boy to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita. according to the sheriff’s department.

Name of the victim was not released.

Police investigate alleged threat at Kansas middle school

HARVEY COUNTY – Law enforcement and school authorities are investigating an alleged threat of violence at a school in Newton.

On Monday, the administration at Chisholm Middle School became aware of a threat of violence communicated toward the school by a student, according to a social media report from Newton Police.

School administration and the school resource officer promptly began a thorough investigation of the perceived threat.

There is no evidence of a continuing danger to the school or any student.

Officials asked the community to be patient as they continue to work on this incident and they reminded the public that student safety remains a top priority of USD 373.

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