We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Caroline Kaiser

Caroline Kaiser, 80 years young, of Oakley, departed this life and went to her eternal home on May 5, 2017. She was born April 25, 1937, in Menlo, Kansas, to Joseph and Philomena Kinderknecht. On July 24, 1956 she was joined in marriage to Frank Kaiser, Jr., and they were blessed with two children, Deb and Tim.

Caroline loved polka dancing. She and Frank spent countless hours and many miles of travel going to polka dances, gaining a large circle of friends along the way. Now she is dancing on streets of gold with other family and friends that preceded her home.

Caroline was well-known for her chocolate pie & coconut cream pie. Her grandkids always put in their specific flavor orders for holidays and she always gladly complied.

The extra special time that Caroline got to spend with her Snooks, along with all of her family that came to visit before her surgery, and the smiles on her face when the twins came to see her in the hospital, will be a memory that we will all cherish. She will be sorely missed by her family.

Survivors include Frank, her husband; daughter Deborah (Joseph) Yutzy; son Timothy (Loretta) Kaiser; her grandchildren, Kristen aka Snooks (Steve) Neeley, Brian (Heather) Yutzy, Robert Yutzy, Andrew Kaiser & Cody Kaiser; 7 great-grandchildren; her sisters Angeline Kaiser, Berniece Heier and Dorothy Schroeder, her brother-in-law Doug Ziegler and a great number of Nieces & Nephews that all adored her. She was preceded in death by her parents; brother Emmanuel Kinderknecht and sisters Alberta Wolf & Olinda Zeigler.

Visitation is 4-7:00 p.m. Wednesday, May 10, 2017 at Baalmann Mortuary, Oakley, with a Vigil at 7:00 p.m. Funeral Mass is 10:00 a.m. Thursday, May 11, 2017 at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Oakley, with burial to follow in the church cemetery. Memorials are suggested to the Susan G. Komen Foundation in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 204, Oakley, KS 67748. For condolences or information visit www.baalmannmortuary.com

Kent Lyn Hamilton

Kent Lyn Hamilton, 69, of Colby, died Sunday, May 7, 2017 at Hays Medical Center, Hays, KS. Kent was born August 14, 1947, in Colby, to Forrest Fay and Olive E (Manweiler) Hamilton.

As a young boy Kent moved with his family from the Rexford area to Colorado. Kent graduated high school then farmed with his father in Colorado and in Kansas. Kent became his father’s caregiver after his stroke. Kent also worked in the car business and at the time of his death, he was working as a gas attendant at Dillons in Colby. He loved the interaction with the customers.

Kent was preceded in death by his parents and brother-in-law, Bud Ward.

He is survived by his children Dana Byers and Murry Hamilton, both of Colorado; sisters, Naomi Ward and Sandra (David) Harper, all of Colby; cousin, Hereldene English, Westminister, CO; aunt, Marilyn Carmichael, Husum, WA and other relative and friends.

Cremation was chosen. Inurnment will be held at a later time. Memorials are suggested to the Thomas County Historical Society in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby KS 67701. Online condolences: www.baalmannnorturary.com

Kansas man dies, 2 hospitalized after Oklahoma head-on crash

BEAVER COUNTY, OK – A Kansas man died in an accident just after 10:30p.m. Sunday in Beaver County, Oklahoma.

A 2015 Chevy Suburban driven by Brandon Shaw Porter, 41, Beaver, was eastbound on U.S. 64 three miles west of Forgan, according to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.

The SUV traveled left of center to pass an SUV and hit a 2015 Dodge Challenger driven by Gustavo Marino, 30, Liberal head-on.

Marino was partially ejected from the vehicle and pronounced dead at the scene.

Oscar A. Anaya, 34, Liberal, a passenger in the Dodge, was transported to Southwest Medical Center where he was treated for a head injury, according to the OHP.

Porter remains hospitalized at Southwest Medical center with a leg injury. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the OHP.

Garden City Community College football player found dead

A member of the Garden City Community College football team died over the weekend.

According to college officials Sophomore Sean Callahan was found dead in Liberal on Sunday.

Callahan was a member of the Broncbusters 2016 National Championship team. He started 11 games and was a second-team All-Jayhawk Conference selection.

The Seward County Sheriff’s Department is investigating Callahan’s death.

Click HERE for more.

JD’s Country Style Chicken – Monday Special – 1 or 2 Piece Pork Chop Dinner

1 or 2 piece pork chop dinner- 1 piece is $7.50 and 2 pieces is 9.50 free drink also

Hours of Business:
Monday to Saturday: 10:30 am to 9:00 pm
Sunday: 10:30 am to 3:00 pm

J D’s Country Style Chicken is a chicken restaurant and the name you can trust in providing catering services to Hays, KS. We have been offering great tasting food and the best catering services at reasonable prices. Let us satisfy your cravings; enjoy our freshly made dishes every day, and let us help you with all your catering services needs.

Contact J D’s Country Style Chicken today at 785-625-3013 for all of your catering services needs

ra jds chicken 20160212

HAWVER: LLC tax change a bulls-eye, but not a cure-all for Kan. budget woes

martin hawver line artWe didn’t see a lot of asterisks on those campaign handouts last year in which candidates—and a lot of successful legislative candidates—promised to repeal the 2012 tax law which exempted “non-wage income” from most notably Limited Liability Companies.

If there was ever a bullseye on the T-shirts of a group of at least 330,000 Kansans who own those LLCs, it was last election. The pitch was to eliminate the LLC exemption, which was sold back in ’12 as a way to make the Kansas economy flourish — which didn’t happen.

So, the campaign trail solution was to reimpose taxes on those LLCs and fix everything. That was the slogan.

While we didn’t see an asterisk, or even a footnote on those campaign flyers, most of the successful campaigners for House and Senate seats didn’t mention that just the LLC “fix” doesn’t really fix the whole problem.

Anyone remember a flyer that read: “I’ll represent my constituents by raising your income taxes, oh, and of course, getting those LLCs to pay up, too…”

Well, lawmakers are now stuck with both ending that LLC income tax vacation while also pulling more money from regular paycheck-earning Kansans’ pockets. That $1 billion or so in decreased income tax receipts the past four years? Well over half of it was caused by lower income tax rates on wage earners, or the W-2 crowd, as they have become known in the Statehouse.

Lawmakers the past week have been trying to assemble a new tax bill that will raise enough money to operate the state—to finance public education, welfare, health care, public safety and all of that stuff. But it is the additional tax on individuals that is the political problem.

Which, not surprisingly, makes that simple, widely promised and sought by voters move to tax the non-wage income of LLC owners almost dangerous to the rest of the tax bill.

It’s the one tax that nearly everyone except the hard-core Republican right and Gov. Sam Brownback is in favor of. Which means that canny conservatives may just float out a simple “tax the LLCs” to the House or Senate and watch nearly everyone vote for it. It’s about that simple. Now, both chambers have passed bills that include that LLC provision, but not as one simple bill containing only the LLC provision that we all saw candidates talk about last November.

That one simple bill gives legislators a vote that they promised, with no damage to the rest of their voters. It’s a bulls-eye, and the one that remains popular with what some polls report are as many as 80 percent of Kansans.

Nope, doesn’t fix everything, but it’s the campaign promise that is simply made and delivered on.

And after that campaign-promised vote is made, interest tends to fall off on raising taxes on everyone else who pointed at the LLCs but never much considered that their own bank accounts are going to shrink due to higher taxes.

It’s going to be interesting to watch the leadership of the House and Senate and what it can do to prevent a single-issue LLC bill to get to the floor for debate. It’s tough for lawmakers who realize that rates on all other taxpayers are going to have to rise to vote against that single-issue LLC bill that doesn’t eliminate the problem, but is widely popular.

Tactics are the game now, how to assemble a bill that will actually raise enough money to give Kansans services they want and need and not just meet those narrow campaign promises.

We’ll see how that works out…

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

NW Kan. students among spring 2017 candidates for degree at KU

KU logo 001LAWRENCE — The names of nearly 5,000 candidates for degree from the University of Kansas this spring — representing 96 Kansas counties, 48 states and territories, and 51 countries — have been announced by the University Registrar. Degrees are officially conferred in June.

Many candidates will choose to participate in KU’s annual Commencement ceremony, which will take place Sunday, May 14, 2017. That information is available at commencement.ku.edu.

The following area students are among the candidates:

Ellis
Mikayla Gottschalk, Ellis, Master of Accounting
Shea Briggs, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Exercise Science
Amy Dreiling, Hays, Doctor of Nurse Anesthesia Practice
Alex Green, Hays, Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy
Haylee Hedge, Hays, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Design
Derek Kandt, Hays, Juris Doctor
Lauren Keller, Hays, Bachelor of Arts in Human Biology
David Klaus, Hays, Doctor of Physical Therapy
Mikayla Linn, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Pharmaceutical Studies
Blake Mathews, Hays, Bachelor of General Studies in Political Science and Business minor
Christopher Rooney, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Physics and Bachelor of Science in Astronomy
Katelyn Schumacher, Hays, Bachelor of Arts in Microbiology
Ryan Unruh, Hays, Bachelor of General Studies in Communication Studies and Business minor
Lucas Walker, Hays, Bachelor of Science in Biology

Norton
Rachel Slipke, New Almelo, Bachelor of Science in Finance and Bachelor of General Studies in Economics
KaraJo Sprigg, Norton, Doctor of Medicine
Brooklyn Winkel, Norton, Bachelor of Science in Journalism and Business minor

Osborne
Stevie St. Clair, Portis, Master of Social Work

Phillips
Bailey Imm, Agra, Bachelor of Science in Pharmaceutical Studies
Jade Bui, Phillipsburg, Bachelor of Science in Finance
Loan Nguyen, Phillipsburg, Doctor of Pharmacy

Rooks
Breet Davis, Plainville, Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training

Smith
Debra Fricker, Lebanon, Doctor of Occupational Therapy
Charyne Tovar, Smith Center, Doctor of Pharmacy
Danielle Snell, Topeka, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Design

Trego
Dona Diec, Wakeeney, Doctor of Pharmacy and Bachelor of Science in Pharmaceutical Studies
Lexsie Newcomer, Wakeeney, Master of Occupational Therapy.

Gladys A. Hinman

Gladys A. Hinman, 81, Brownell, Kansas, died Wednesday, May 3, 2017, at Brookdale Rosehill, Shawnee, Kansas.

Mrs. Hinman was born May 9, 1935, in Pawnee County, Kansas, the daughter of Arthur and Alta (Meier) Wagner. She was a lifelong resident of Rush County, Kansas, and Ness County, Kansas. She was a homemaker and farm wife.

She was a member of Hope Lutheran Church, and the Hope Lutheran Church “Quilting Ladies”, both of Rush Center, Kansas. She was instrumental in helping establish ladies golf, and the rodeo in McCracken, Kansas. She spent many hours volunteering with church activities, and at the McCracken Library, McCracken, Kansas.
On September 18, 1952, she married Wendell C. “Wendy” Hinman at Hope Lutheran Church, Rush Center, Kansas. He preceded her in death April 29, 2015.

Survivors include: three sons, Greg Hinman (Sheila), Lewis, Kansas, Larry Hinman (Ellen), Lenexa, Kansas, and Wade Hinman (Sue), Kansas City, Kansas; two daughters, Lynne Hinman-Reckling (Frederick), Las Vegas, Nevada, and Laura Wierman (Ray), Bennington, Kansas; 11 grandchildren, Jeannie, Jeffrey, Jessica, Jill, Cindy, Jerod, Jennifer, Coty, Zaccary, Cheryl, and Sarah; five great grandchildren, Connor, Claire, Hailey, Brayden, and Hudson; and one sister, Carolyn Helmer, Pawhuska, Oklahoma.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, three brothers, Lloyd Wagner, Kenneth Wagner, and Virgil Wagner; and two sisters, Hazel McNemee O’Jibway, and Norma Lawrence.

Visitation will be Sunday, May 7, 2017, from 4:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. at the Janousek Funeral Home, La Crosse, Kansas, with the family receiving friends from 6:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. A prayer service will be at 7:00 P.M.
Church visitation will be Monday, May 8, 2017, from 9:30 A.M. to 10:20 A.M. at Hope Lutheran Church, Rush Center, Kansas.

Funeral service will be Monday, May 8, 2017, at 10:30 A.M. at Hope Lutheran Church, Rush Center, Kansas, with Pastor Shelly Klingensmith officiating.

Interment will be Monday, May 8, 2017, at 2:00 P.M. in the McCracken City Cemetery, McCracken, Kansas.
Memorials are suggested to Hope Lutheran Church, Rush Center, Kansas, or Hope Lutheran Church Quilters, Rush Center, Kansas, or McCracken Library, McCracken, Kansas, or Head For The Cure.

Condolences or remembrances may be left for the family at www.charterfunerals.com/locations/janousek-lacrosse.php.

Arrangements were by Janousek Funeral Home, 719 Pine Street, P O Box 550, La Crosse, Kansas 67548, 785/222-2517.

Hays 11U Expos win Hays tourney

img_4976The 11U Hays Expos won a the championship in the NBC Points Tournament in Hays this past weekend.

Back row: Joe Sanders, Scott Roe, Gunner Cox, Will Linenberger, Daniel Giebler, Nolan Dreher, Corbin Werth, Lex Lummus, Lane Lummus

Front Row: Cooper “Tiger” Johnson, Cooper Sanders, Braxton Banker, Charlie Roe, Camden Sanders

Send your spring/summer sports photos to [email protected] and let us help share the good news!

Dane G. Hansen Foundation announces funding, goal-setting

dane-hansenThe Dane G. Hansen Foundation has announced a commitment to infuse up to $150,000 in new funds in the next 12 months in each of the 26 counties in its service area. The funds will support immediate needs for local community grants and build or grow permanent funds for future community grants.

Pass-through grants
2017 is the third year the Hansen Foundation has offered counties funding for pass-through grants. The funding will be distributed in May and September. Local community foundation boards or grant review committees will make the decisions regarding how the dollars are spent in their counties.

The Hansen Foundation has already provided a total of $5.2 million in pass-through grants since 2015. An additional $2.6 million will be awarded this year.

The county-specific funds are administered in partnership with the Greater Northwest Kansas Community Foundation and the Greater Salina Community Foundation. Both of these partner foundations offer online grant applications to make the process easier for applicants.

Endowment Building Grants
The Hansen Foundation first offered matching dollars for county-specific endowments last March. Each county selected a particular month From April 2016 to April 2017 in which to host a matching-event or campaign for an unrestricted county-wide grant fund. The Hansen Foundation matched each donation dollar for dollar, up to $50,000 per county. Twenty-four of the 26 counties participated. Total donations Were more than $1.5 million dollars.

The Hansen Foundation awarded over a million dollars in matching funds, with one county still completing their campaign.

“The Trustees were very pleased with the response from most of our counties with regard to the endowment building initiative, and are eager to see how that continues to develop,” said Hansen Trustee Gary Poore.
“Ideally, each county will be developing a sustainable source of grant funding it can rely on for future county needs. We are basically helping them to replicate the model established by Mr. Hansen 51 years ago.”

Three counties in the Hansen service area, Decatur, Logan and Osborne, used the matching initiative to establish a community foundation.

“In addition to the fundraising success, the five communities in Osborne County collectively worked together, said Sarah LaRosh, of the newly established Osborne County Community Foundation. “This collective collaboration was refreshing and possibly more beneficial to Osborne County even than the funds raised.”

Strategic Doing Initiative
In addition to the funding announcements, the Hansen Foundation also announced a new initiative to help with county goal setting. The Foundation has contracted with Betty Johnson and Associates to facilitate the Strategic Doing process in each of the 26 counties that elects to participate.

The process will include broad representation from the county over a series of gatherings. Participants will work through three questions: what could we do to better our county; what should we do to better our county; and finally, what will we do to better our county?

The Hansen Foundation is eager to see where the individual counties and the region go with this goal-setting process. For counties that agree to fully participate, the Foundation will provide additional pass-through funding through the community foundations for up to four more years. These funds will help complete the projects identified in the Strategic Doing process.

The announcements of the additional dollars and the Strategic Doing initiative was revealed to community foundations last month in Hays at the Hansen Foundation’s Community Foundation Forum. More than 150 community foundation and economic development representatives from northwest Kansas attended.

Hutch Community College trustees to discuss dispute over student newspaper

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The temporary seizure of newspapers at a Kansas community college last week shone a media spotlight on a long-running dispute between administrators and student journalists.

Hutchinson Community College’s board of trustees is expected Tuesday to wade into the controversy.

That is when suspended journalism professor Alan Montgomery plans to talk to trustees about the administration’s treatment of the student journalists and its alleged use of disciplinary procedures to punish them for news stories.

The administration earlier this month suspended him and cancelled his classes before the end of the semester.

Montgomery calls it an absolute planned conspiracy to deny these students their First Amendment rights.

HCC President Carter File defended the college’s actions, saying he doesn’t care what is in the paper.

MADORIN: Hanging clothes outside — a prescription for good health

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.
Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

A friend recently sent me a cartoon that struck my funny bone. In it, two women stand near an old-fashioned clothesline as one ironically tells the other this device dries her laundry using the very latest solar and wind technology. It made me think about people who’ve never hung clothes outside to dry. It also helped me recall helping mom and grandma pin wet laundry on the line and then remove and fold it afterward. Grasping sun-warmed fabric and breathing in breeze-scented sheets and towels is a heady experience, even in a technology-oriented world.

I suspect if more of us depended less on dryers and more on clotheslines, we’d be healthier. Several recently published articles suggest older Americans need more sunshine to help with vitamin D absorption. I’m guessing the amount of time it takes to hang a basket of wet laundry and then retrieve the dry result delivers that daily requirement.

Not only are many folks in need of more vitamin D, they also suffer from anxiety. Experts who deal with such issues remind us fresh air and exercise are good medicine for such ills. It would be interesting to know if our grandmothers fretted less because they spent more time with their clotheslines. After hanging a couple of loads of sheets and towels the other morning, I see how time outside listening to birds sing and feeling warm breezes caress skin contributes to a peaceful disposition. In addition, you get exercise by repetitively bending, reaching, and pinning wet fabric. Once my basket was empty and the laundry fluttered in the breeze, my concerns seemed to shake away as well.

Add that repetitive action to sunshine and fresh air, and you have the ingredients necessary to generate a good mood. It satisfies the soul to see a clothesline weighed down with clean linens and clothing. The reverse efforts of unpinning dry objects and folding them to put in the basket just as effectively reduces stress. Listening to and watching birds multiplies these positive effects.

In fact, once those fresh sheets and towels are ready to go back on the beds and in the cupboards, you discover another boon. What feels and smells better that sun-dried bedding or terrycloth? Perhaps it’s my imagination, but I swear line-dried sheets freshen a whole room. When I crawled between them that night, that outdoor scent plunged me into deep slumber the minute my head hit the pillow. The fact I’d labored to hang, fold, and put away king-size bedding and towels may have contributed to my exhaustion.

Humans have so many labor saving devices that make life easier. Despite such convenience, we should consider what we lose in terms of physical and mental health. Do some of our grandparents’ old- fashioned housekeeping techniques aid in vitamin absorption as well as connect us to the outdoors where sunlight, fresh air, and exercise renew spirits without requiring prescription drug use.

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File