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🎥 ‘The American Soldier’ to come to Hays on Sept. 8

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Two local veterans organizations are bringing a play based on letters written by veterans and their families to Hays on Sept. 8.

Douglas Taurel wrote and performs “The America Soldier,” a one-man show that highlights the experiences of veterans from the Revolutionary War through Afghanistan.

The performance will be 7 p.m. Sept. 8 at the Beach-Schmidt Performing Arts Center at Fort Hays State University, 600 Park, Hays. Tickets are $10 at the door.

There is no charge for veterans (discharge papers or VFW or American Legion membership cards are preferred, but not required). The event is sponsored by the FHSU Veterans Association and Vietnam Veterans of America.

John Pyle of the local chapter of Vietnam Veterans of America said he hopes the performance helps non-veterans and family members to understand the fears and hopes veterans experience.

Taurel is not a veteran, but spent eight years researching and selecting actual letters to portray in the play. He also has family members who are veterans and active service military.

Taurel explained the play does not attempt to judge if war is good or bad, rather he tries to depict the experiences of veterans and their families during and after their service.

“My play is really to give audiences appreciation of what veterans and families go through and what their sacrifices really are,” he said. “We talk about sacrifice but really don’t know what that means to lose a father, to lose a mother, to lose a son, to lose a wife, to financially not to be able to support your family because you are not really able to reassimilate back into society and make money anymore.”

Taurel said these are things society doesn’t really talk about anymore.

“We only talk about the shiny part of war,” he said. “We don’t talk about the back side of war. There is a very deep price, and a small population of our society is paying for it.”

Taurel wanted to bring more awareness of the experiences of veterans to non-veterans through his play. Many themes arise in the play, put Taurel said a common thread for many who have viewed the play has been difficultly reassimilating into society.

“If you see heavy combat, you almost have to go into some kind of decompression group therapy for six months to a year to reassimilate — to learn that a tire in the road is not an IED, it’s just a tire in the road. Knowing that huge crowds of people around you are not people trying to blow you up, they are actually just huge crowds of people,” he said. “As a country, we just don’t put any money into the reassimilation of veterans back into society.”

Taurel said this has been a thread through all the wars he has studied.

“It is the same story. We throw our veterans away kind of like used trash,” he said.

Of the 14 people who are portrayed in the one-hour play, most are infantrymen. However, Taurel also has included a letter from a mother who lost her son during the Vietnam War, and a soldier’s wife and her 8-year-old son.

Taurel said the play is very emotionally draining to perform and has been emotional for many of his audience members.

“Family members sometimes cry,” he said. “I have really emotional moments afterwards literally crying with family members or veterans. It becomes a catharsis for some people. It allows them to release things that they have never been able to release for any reason.”

“The American Soldier” first appeared off Broadway in 2015. Since, Taurel has performed at the international Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the Kennedy Center and is set to perform later this year at the U.S. Library of Congress and in front of members of the U.S. Congress. The play also was nominated for Amnesty International’s annual Freedom of Expression Award.

Taurel has been in talks to bring a longer version of the play to Broadway and film.

More information on the play can be found on Taurel’s website at https://www.theamericansoldiersoloshow.com/. You can also follow him on Facebook or on Twitter @DouglasTaurel.

Triston Lee Werth

Triston Lee Werth, 19, Hays, passed away Monday, August 14, 2017 in Houston, Texas.

Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home.

Scott M. Clark

Scott M. Clark, 42, Hays, passed away Monday, August 14, 2017 in an accident in the 1400 block of 160th Avenue.

Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home.

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 8/16/17

khaz cheesy joke logo 20110802It Pays To Laugh

The boss joined a group of his workers at the coffee urn and told a series of jokes he’d heard recently. Everybody laughed loudly. Everybody, that is, except Mike.

When he noticed that he was getting no reaction from Mike, the boss said, “What’s the matter, Mike? No sense of humor?”

“My sense of humor is fine,” he said. “But I don’t have to laugh. I’m quitting tomorrow.”

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

State Treasurer: Graham Co. has $98K in unclaimed property

KS. STATE TREASURER

TOPEKA–Kansas Treasurer Jake LaTurner is on his tour of Kansas’ 105 counties to promote many of the programs and services administered by the Treasurer’s Office.

The tour will be stopping in Graham County on Wednesday, August 16. Treasurer LaTurner and his staff will be in Hill City at the Graham County Courthouse from 2:00 to 3:00 p.m.

The State Treasurer’s Office is currently safeguarding $350 million in unclaimed property and is charged with returning it to its rightful owners and heirs. There’s over $98,000 of unclaimed property in Graham County.

LaTurner will make several stops in northwest Kansas this week.

Unclaimed property includes inactive savings and checking accounts, uncashed checks, stock shares and bonds, dividend checks, insurance proceeds, mineral royalties and utility deposits. Kansans who can’t make it to the event may call the State Treasurer’s Office at 1-800-432-0386 or log onto www.KansasCash.com to search for unclaimed property. There is no cost to search and claim your rightful property.

Along with assisting Kansans in their search for unclaimed property, Treasurer LaTurner and staff will be talking to Kansans about how the Office can help Kansans plan and save for the future. The Treasurer’s Office administers the Learning Quest 529 Education Savings Accounts, which helps Kansans save for the students in their lives. The funds are invested and then can be utilized for higher education expenses.

Treasurer LaTurner and his staff will also be helping people living with a disability save for their future by signing eligible Kansans up for the brand new ABLE accounts. The Kansas ABLE checking accounts help make paying for qualified expenses safe and easy, and they continue to empower individuals with disabilities to gain financial independence and save the money they earn.

Northwest Kansas students attend FFA district officer’s conference

Pictured is the NORTHWEST DISTRICT District Officer Team: (Left to Right) Eli Ohlde, State FFA President from Clifton Clyde; Tierney Kester, District President from Stockton; Natalie Hawkins, District Vice President from Atwood; Jaylinn Pfeifer, District Secretary from Ellis; Trey Kuhlmann, District Treasurer from Stockton; Jaden Smith, District Reporter from Northern Valley; and Lane Fischer, District Sentinel from Ellis; and Mr. Shane Austin, District Advisor from Stockton.

MANHATTAN — Several northwest Kansas students participated in the Kansas FFA District Officer’s Conference held in Junction City Aug. 12 and 13.

Students taking part included Eli Ohlde, State FFA President from Clifton Clyde; Tierney Kester, District President from Stockton; Natalie Hawkins, District Vice President from Atwood; Jaylinn Pfeifer, District Secretary from Ellis; Trey Kuhlmann, District Treasurer from Stockton; Jaden Smith, District Reporter from Northern Valley; and Lane Fischer, District Sentinel from Ellis; and Mr. Shane Austin, District Advisor from Stockton.

The strengths-oriented theme of “The Leadership Games” encompassed the key elements of identifying our StrengthsFinder theme, working through conflict, and identifying processes to solve problems throughout their year of service. Just as each of these ideas is necessary in any business or organization, district officers are expected to serve with these key themes in mind as they use their strengths to impact the lives of FFA members. Throughout the year, they will be serving FFA members across the state and building leadership skills that will make them capable, responsible citizens in life.

Starting with an executive committee meeting, officers were able to discuss current issues facing Kansas FFA and Kansas agricultural education. Students are able to bring perspectives from around the state which will be put into action by the Kansas FFA Association.

The conference continued with an exciting session which allowed students to explore their StrengthsQuest themes. District officers were able to explore the ways they interact with their teammates, and how they can help their district officer team to navigate the upcoming year. In the second session, the district officers discovered the importance of knowing how they individually deal with conflict and what different conflicts might arise throughout their year of service. They were then given tools to help them solve those conflicts and identified an accountability partner for the coming year.

Inspiring words from the Associate Dean of Academics Programs for the K-State College of Agriculture, Dr. Don Boggs further encouraged the officers in their endeavors. Later, the officers focused their energy in a training session specifically focusing on key skills that will enable them to produce great workshops. District officers were able to practice these skills and learn how to apply them in their own workshops through a rotational, hands-on experience.

The third session included the officers discovering how they can work through different problems they will encounter by using the adaptive leadership process. In the final session, led by national officer candidate Kyler Langvardt of Chapman, district officer teams brought together the ideas that they had learned, and used them to create a brand that they will use throughout the next year.

As the conference drew to a close, district officers reported on the ideas that they choose to pursue before heading home to implement the skills that they learned.

The Kansas FFA District Officers Conference is facilitated and organized by the officers of the Kansas FFA Association, the College of Agriculture at Kansas State University, and the Kansas State Board of Education.

The Kansas FFA Association has over 9,000 members in 185 chapters. The National FFA Organization is the largest high school vocational organization in the nation and prepares its 649,355 members for leadership and careers in science, business, and technology in agriculture. The mission of the FFA is to make a positive difference in the lives of students by developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth, and career success through agricultural education.

SHPTV named non-metro station of the year by KAB

BUNKER HILL – Smoky Hills Public Television has been named the 2017 Non-Metro Television Station of the Year by the Kansas Association of Broadcasters after accumulating 10 awards in individual categories.

Along with broadcasting PBS programming, SHPTV produces a variety of local programs. Several of those programs were recognized with this year’s KAB awards, including Doctors on Call, Traveling Kansas and Real Ag.

The awards will be presented at the KAB Convention on Oct. 16 in Manhattan.

A list of SHPTV’s awards is provided below:

Special Program – 1st Place – Doctors On Call – Les Kinderknecht & SHPTV Staff
Single Topic Event News Coverage – 2nd Place – Traveling Kansas: Salina – Les Kinderknecht
In-Depth News Reporting – Honorable Mention – Real Ag – Les Kinderknecht
Station Promotion Announcement – 1st Place – Garden City Soccer Clinic – Michael Quade
Station Promotion Announcement – 2nd Place – Traveling Kansas: Norton County – Les Kinderknecht
Station Promotion Announcement – Honorable Mention – 3-2-1A State Wrestling – Les Kinderknecht
Station Promotion Campaign – 1st Place – Family Fun Day – Michael Quade
Station Promotion Campaign – 2nd Place – Social Media – Michael Quade
Station Promotion Campaign – Kids Club – Matt Campbell
Station Website – 1st Place – Callie Kolacny

SHPTV can be seen on Eagle Cable channels 9 and 609.

1st Amendment: ‘Freedom’ is best response to white supremacy hatemongers

Gene Policinski
Let them march in Charlottesville. Let them speak.

Hate-propagating neo-Nazis and bottom-dwelling white supremacists — the dregs of our open society — have and should have First Amendment rights to speak and march in public.

We need to see them for what they are: a disappointing collection of the disaffected; some parading around in silly costumes, often ignorant of the real meaning and history of the symbols they display, carrying torches meant as much to intimidate as to illuminate.

We need to hear them for what they say: advocacy of discredited ideas involving racial purity and intolerance, couched in misrepresentations of U.S. history and the American experience.

We need to understand them for what they are: betrayers of what President Lincoln called “our better angels,” of the principles of equality, justice and the rule of law — painfully worked out over time and sometimes imperfectly at the outset, through the self-correcting processes of speaking and writing freely, of assembling and petitioning peaceably for change.

Granted, it is tempting after events like those of last weekend to take another view. While there is only a small fraction of our fellow citizens who hold such repellent views on white supremacy and racial hatred, there is the very real danger that a few more, and then a few more than that, will be seduced by false pretentions and misleading presentations of patriotism, economic security and personal safety.

History tells us of the rise at various times in our nation of groups preaching hate and bigotry and violence, using their rights of speech, press and assembly to inflame rather than inform, incite rather than inspire, and indoctrinate rather than educate. Nativists, the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and others at various times have used fear, prejudice and ignorance to flourish and gain public accommodation or support — sometimes for decades — before crawling back under the social rocks from whence they came.

It’s tempting to believe that if only such domestic terrorists were silenced by government, their views would dissipate; that “out of sight” truly would mean “out of mind.” But such censoring, suppressing and silencing is a betrayal of our core principles — along with being ineffective and often counterproductive. If it ever was possible, never mind desirable, to counter such anti-American sentiments by silencing its proponents, it is now a lost cause in the Age of the Internet and social media. A few provocative tweets or a viral video can reach a global audience that dwarfs anything possible in earlier human history.

But, the desire “to do something” when we witness demonstrations of hate and regressive ideologies can tempt us to take actions that ultimately erode our freedoms.

More than a decade ago, when the hatemongering Westboro Baptist Church group began appearing at the funerals of U.S. military personnel who died in combat, the tiny assembly gained far more visibility than it could have purchased otherwise through its well-publicized fights with municipal authorities seeking to shut down or shunt to remote locations its offensive messages about gays and others.

Defenders of free expression sometimes are the target of those who espouse what the late First Amendment advocate Nat Hentoff described as “Free Speech for Me, but not for Thee.” The ACLU of Virginia is being vehemently attacked online for representing in court the white supremacist group that successfully challenged the Charlottesville government’s initial decision to ban the group from gathering in a centrally-located city park, in favor of a more isolated park about a mile away. What other stand should the ACLU, which has been protecting the free speech rights of opposing groups for nearly a century, have taken?

The First Amendment protects us all from government actions based solely on our views or the content of our expression. There is no national authority on what’s right or acceptable — no “national nanny” to rap knuckles over offensive, disgusting or repugnant views. U.S. District Judge Glen Conrad, in rejecting the government ban on the alt-right rally in Charlottesville, was not validating the views of those who gathered. Rather, Conrad was upholding the nation’s commitment to free speech, and the view of the nation’s founders that their descendants would, over time and when left to freely discuss and consider all options, arrive at the best solution for the greatest number of people.

Hate speech, racial prejudice and policies rooted in white supremacy beliefs were accepted in much of the nation for decades, until confronted by a modern civil rights movement that finally touched a nation’s conscience — and altered its law books — by using all five of the First Amendment freedoms. And the right of free expression stood strong to counter public officials of that era who also cited “public safety” as justification to oppose or arrest those calling for racial justice.

We don’t want to hand our government, at any level, the authority to restrain free expression on the mere supposition that it may provoke violence — or worse, because many or even most in a locale oppose it. Over time, we have developed and been well-served by legal doctrines narrowly defining when officials can act to suppress speeches, rallies or marches; doctrines rooted in specific evidence of real, immediate threats to public safety. From schools to sidewalks, those laws focus applying restrictions on conduct rather than suppressing the ideas behind those actions.

Let’s concede that this system is not neat and tidy, nor effective in all cases. It requires both great effort and great restraint on the part of police and elected officials charged with public safety.

We are debating the limits of free expression in other areas of life today. On college campuses, some argue that their right to be “free from” exposure to some views is greater than the freedom for others to express those views. There is also much debate over the extent to which social media platforms and the internet should now be considered “public spaces” rather than private property, and thus subject to the First Amendment. And the speed and rapidity of the web challenges a legal structure built around communications that moved much more slowly, and less pervasively.

In the wake of the tragedy in Charlottesville, we must remain committed to our core belief that we’re better off — and ultimately, more secure — when we may freely discuss, debate and decide.

For those who repudiate hate groups and the ugly messages they work to spread, let’s keep in mind another adage of the First Amendment community: “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.”

Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute. He can be reached at [email protected], or follow him on Twitter at @genefac.

🎥 Street chip sealing projects start Wednesday in Hays

(Click to enlarge)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Chip sealing of a number of streets in Hays is scheduled for eight work days starting Wed., Aug. 16.

Preliminary work began Tuesday evening in Frontier Park, in the Bickle-Schmidt Sports Complex and on the fuel access road at the Hays Regional Airport.

APAC, a contractor for the city of Hays, will lay down a surface primer in those three areas and then apply chip seal tomorrow morning, according to interim Public Works Director John Braun.

The work will gradually move into the northwest residential area and is expected to be completed Fri., Aug. 25.

The chip seal treatment is a spray applied application of polymerized oil followed immediately by small rock chips.

“Chip seals have been used effectively for maintaining asphalt streets in Hays for the past several years,” Braun said.

Traffic will be limited during the short time the streets are being sealed. “Motorists should use caution and avoid driving in the wet oil,” Braun advised.

The work is part of the 2017 street maintenance projects.

Warm, windy Wednesday

Today  Partly sunny, with a high near 86. East wind 7 to 17 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon.

Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 60. West northwest wind 13 to 18 mph decreasing to 7 to 12 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 28 mph.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 89. West northwest wind around 6 mph.

Thursday Night A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64. South wind around 7 mph.

Friday A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92.

Friday NightMostly clear, with a low around 64.

SaturdaySunny, with a high near 93.

USGS: 3 Tuesday quakes shake Kansas

image courtesy Kansas Geological Survey

SUMNER COUNTY – The U.S. Geological Survey recorded three earthquakes that shook Kansas Tuesday.  Two magnitude 3.1 quakes in western Oklahoma at 12:05 p.m. and 12:15 were centered approximately 63 miles southeast of Dodge City.

Just before 6 a.m., A 2.5 quake was centered 14 miles southwest of Conway Springs in Sumner County.

This is the first quake in Kansas since a 3.7 quake near Caldwell on Wednesday August 9.

There are no reports of damage or injuries from Tuesday’s quake.

Joyce’s 3-run double rallies A’s past Royals

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) – Matt Joyce hit a three-run double to cap a six-run eighth inning and the Oakland Athletics rallied past the Kansas City Royals 10-8 on Tuesday night.

Joyce also homered and had four RBIs. Khris Davis added his 33rd home run and Matt Olson hit his fourth in five days to help the A’s clinch at least a tie for the season series between the former division rivals.

The Royals hit three home runs in the top of the eighth, including Mike Moustakas’ 35th, to take a four-run lead before Oakland stormed back against relievers Joakim Soria and Mike Minor (5-5).

Ryon Healy and Olson hit RBI singles off Soria. Matt Chapman and Chad Pinder struck out swinging, and pinch-hitter Rajai Davis was intentionally walked to load the bases before Joyce lined a 1-0 pitch from Minor off the left-field wall.

The loss prevented the Royals from moving past the Angels in the race for the second AL wild card.

Moran adds to statement on weekend violence in Virginia

WASHINGTON -Kansas Senator Jerry Moran issued a statement Tuesday condemning the racism on display during the violence in Virginia.

“As I said this weekend, white supremacy, bigotry and racism have absolutely no place in our society, and no one – especially the President of the United States – should ever tolerate it. We must all come together as a country and denounce this hatred to the fullest extent.”

Kansas Senior Senator Pat Roberts issued a statement earlier.

Over the weekend, Moran wrote on social media, “What happened in #Charlottesville is a sobering reminder of the hateful element that exists in America. Bigotry and racism have no place in our society.”

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