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Kansas teen dies after car lands in river

SEDGWICK COUNTY — One person died in an accident early Sunday in Sedgwick County.

First responders on the scene of the fatal crash-photo courtesy KWCH

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Ford Fusion driven by Lexus A. Lemuz, 18, Wichita, was eastbound on Kansas 96 just east of West Street.

The vehicle traveled off the road to the left, struck a guardrail and continued eastbound in the ditch.

The vehicle then vaulted over an embankment, struck a fence post and came to rest in the Arkansas river.

Lemuz was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to the Sedgwick County Forensics Center. She was not wearing a seat belt, according the KHP.   Authorities are still unsure on the time of the crash.

On One Earth Under One Sky to open at Deines

DCC

RUSSELL – The next exhibition at the Deines Cultural Center, On One Earth, Under On Sky features award winning ceramists, painters, and photographers from Barton County.

Dolores Baker, Virginia Kay Bitters, Rose Dudek, Steve Dudek, Carol Erickson, and Jay Miller will have their work in the Deines galleries April 20th through June 3, 2018.

An artist attended reception will be held the evening of Friday, April 20, from 5 to 7 pm.

Admission is free and everyone is welcome.

The Deines is located at 820 N. Main Street in Russell. Call 785-483-3742 for information.

Police: Suspect took Kansas woman’s keys, purse and car

SEDGWICK COUNTY  — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an armed robbery and asking for help to identify a suspect.

Just before 7a.m. Sunday, police responded to an armed robbery call at Transporte Rodriguez in the 300 block of west 21st Street north in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

A 41-year-old female employee told police an unknown suspect described as a 30-year-old white male,  tall and thin build wearing a brown work jack, dark gloves and armed with a black handgun entered the business demanding money.

The suspect took the employee’s keys, purse, and vehicle. The vehicle  is a gray 2004 Buick Rendezvous, bearing Kansas tag 834EEP.

There were no injuries. If anyone has any additional information on the case please call Crime Stoppers at 316-267-2111 or WPD Detectives at 316-268-4407. If anyone sees this vehicle please call 911. The case number is 18C023756.

 

YOUNKER: Managing soil moisture

Dale Younker is a Soil Health Specialist with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service in Jetmore.

On one the most limiting factors in western Kansas dryland cropping systems is moisture. It is critical that we do everything we can to capture and store as much water in the soil as possible. One of the key elements of doing this is to keep the soil covered with crop residue and crop canopy as much as possible. Not an easy task to accomplish in a semi-arid environment where sometimes we struggle to just grow a decent crop.

In Wheat – Row Crop – Fallow rotations, which are common in western Kansas, wheat stubble height can also help in storing more soil moisture. Tall stubble decreases the wind speeds at the soil surface which slows the water evaporation rate at the soil surface. Less evaporation means more moisture is stored in the soil profile that can be used by the next crop.

Tall wheat stubble also provides more “snow catch” when we have winters with snow. During a heavy snow event, with wind, a tall wheat stubble field will be filled with snow to the top of the stubble. Depending on the year this can be twice as much then a field that has a low stubble height.

I know the tendency for most farmers and custom cutters is to have the header cutter bar low enough so every last “sucker head” goes through the combine. In reality most of these heads have very little grain and it’s generally has a lower test weight. Research completed by Kansas State University shows that if you run the header cutter bar just 10” below the top of the majority of wheat heads the amount of heads not harvested is less than one half of a percent. So in a sixty bushel wheat crop you would lose about 0.3 bushels of wheat.

So it would only stand to reason that the more moisture we capture and store in the moisture profile the higher the yields would be in the next crop. Several years Kansas State University research shows corn yields on an average can be increased by around 10%. Grain sorghum yields weren’t quite as dramatic but still increased by 3 – 5%. Most of the yield increase was due to the increased of amount of kernels per ear or head, and increased kernel size. On tall wheat stubble plots the wheat after corn also showed a three to five bushel increase indicating that the benefits are there for multiple years.

An added bonus to the tall stubble height is that it provides excellent habitat for upland game birds. Research completed several years ago by Kansas Wildlife and Parks shows that increasing stubble height from about 8 inches to around 18 inches more than doubled the amount of pheasants the field.

On our farm we use a stripper header to harvest our wheat. This header just removes the kernels out of the head leaving the stubble height the same as the original wheat plant height. As expected, the stripper straw fields typically have more moisture at the soil surface than fields that were harvested with a conventional header. This helps get the next crop up and growing, especially in a dry spring. It also works well in lodged wheat. Since it uses fingers attached to a high speed rotor the header actually lifts and stands the wheat stubble up again nearly to the height that it originally was.

For more information about this or other soil health practices you can contact me at [email protected] or any local NRCS office.

Kan. man convicted for soliciting sex from apparent teen

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 38-year-old man who sent hundreds of emails to someone he thought was a 14-year-old girl has been convicted of soliciting sex.

Henderson-photo Douglas Co.

The person he was communicating with was a sheriff’s deputy. Prosecutors say when Michael Henderson of Lawrence showed up with condoms to meet the “child” he was arrested.

Henderson was convicted Wednesday of electronic solicitation of child. He will be sentenced May 17 and could face up to 20 years in prison.

The investigation started after a resident told police she believed Henderson was trying to meet young girls for sex.

The email conversation, which involved 660 messages, began when the deputy responded to a Craigslist ad.

Henderson’s attorney argued Henderson was entrapped by law enforcement.

New state website connects job seekers with companies offering apprenticeships

KDC

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Commerce, in partnership with KANSASWORKS, has launched a new website aimed at connecting job seekers with Kansas companies offering on-the-job training through the state’s Registered Apprenticeship program. KSapprenticeship.org offers easy-to-follow navigation for both job seekers and businesses, enabling both to better leverage the resources available to connect employers with potential apprentices.

“The new KSapprenticeship.org site is a powerful tool to help meet the rising needs of Kansas industry for a workforce trained on the latest in advanced technology and equipment,” says Kansas Governor Jeff Colyer, M.D. “The Registered Apprenticeship program in our state is invaluable in preparing Kansas workers to compete in today’s ever-changing economy. This new website will help us continue to grow the number and quality of Registered Apprentices in our state.”

“We are excited about the launch of this new website which will help our state’s employers find and develop a loyal and highly-skilled workforce,” said Mike Beene, Director of Employment Services for the Kansas Department of Commerce. “Like the Registered Apprenticeship program itself, the new website will effectively meet the needs of both employers and workers.”

Guided informational pathways for job seekers include information for veterans and students, plus an application to get started as an apprentice. For businesses, the website provides a wealth of information on the process of offering Registered Apprenticeships and an application to apply for the program.

About the Kansas Registered Apprenticeship Program

The Kansas Registered Apprenticeship Program balances a unique partnership between job seekers and employers throughout the state. Registered Apprenticeship is an employment-and-training program where job seekers earn wages while learning a skilled profession in a specific field, such as construction, healthcare, or culinary arts.

Registered Apprenticeship combines classroom studies with on-the-job training supervised by a skilled employee. Much like a college education, it takes several years to become fully trained in an occupation. Unlike college, apprentices earn a paycheck and gain valuable work experience while they learn. Beginners in the program make less money than skilled workers, but they progress with regular wage increases.

Registered Apprenticeship requires an employer/employee relationship. The sponsor must have a position opening, and individual sponsors select the apprentices.

Minimum age requirements differ by industry, although the typical minimum age is 18 years old. Apprentices complete one to six years of paid, supervised, work-based training and technical instruction. Apprenticeship length varies based on the occupation and should be considered completed when the apprentice performs at the highest skill levels in their professions.

Eight HHS students place in Hays Arts Council writing contest

Freshman Andrew Duke and sophomore Levi Hickert stand with their winning poems. (Photo by Rebekah Porter)

By REBEKAH PORTER
HHS Guidon

Every year, students have the opportunity to submit a short story or a poem for the Hays Arts Council writing contest.

“I know some of my students like to write outside of class and they really enjoy creative writing,” English instructor Lisa Renz said. “So I usually send out emails or encourage them in class to send stuff to me and we go through it and proof it. Then I submit it to the Hays Arts Council.”

Freshman Kalyssa Boyle said that she had entered during her eighth-grade year and won 3rd place but is still striving to get 1st place.

Other students like junior Genevieve Newsom entered for the first time this year.

Newsom said that she wanted to write something last year but had been unable to enter because the story was over the word limit. This year she entered and placed first.

“My entry is like a paranormal horror type,” Newsom said. “It’s not based off of a personal experience or anything, but it came from the mind. As I like to put it, I put my blood, sweat and tears into it.”

This year, eight students placed in the competition and will be recognized on April 29 at FHSU during the Hays Arts Council Creative Writing Awards Ceremony.

Freshman poetry:

2nd place- Audrey Rymer

3rd place- Andrew Duke

Freshman prose:

Honorable Mention- Kalyssa Boyle

Sophomore poetry:

1st place- Mulu Bannister

2nd place- Levi Hickert (tie)

3rd place- Emily Goetz

Junior prose:

1st place- Genevieve Newsom

2nd place- Jackson Stanton

“If you enjoy writing about things that inspire you, you should just go ahead and do it,” sophomore Emily Goetz said. “I wasn’t really comfortable with what I wrote about at first, but then I realized that it could help a lot more people that feel the same way.”

FHSU Virtual College earns four rankings in March

FHSU University Relations

Programs offered through the Fort Hays State University Virtual College received four recognitions, including a No. 1 ranking, in March from various agencies as among the best and most affordable online programs offered by U.S. colleges and universities.

BestValueSchools.org
No. 1, Best Colleges in Kansas 2018
BestValueSchools cited FHSU’s affordability, enrollment and graduation rate as primary reasons for naming it the No. 1 college in the state of Kansas.

“With one of the lowest tuition rates in the nation, students love the affordability, convenience, and flexibility of FHSU’s online programs,” said BestValueSchools. “The professors at the university make themselves available through many forms of communication for students to reach them to answer questions and give extra help.”

More than 40 degrees at the associate, bachelor’s and master’s levels are available through the Virtual College. All online degree programs are fully accredited, affordable, and utilize the latest in learning technology. “Whether you want a degree, professional certification, or simply the pleasure of exploring a new subject, we’re ready to help you. We offer a comprehensive menu of online student services including tutoring, personal advising and other support services to help ensure your success,” says the FHSU website.

To view this ranking, visit https://bit.ly/2GVZRLJ.

BestCollegeReviews.org
No. 6, The 25 Most Affordable Colleges Online for 2018
Affordability, financial-aid availability, and diverse degree options earned FHSU the No. 6 spot on BestCollegeReviews’ list of the most affordable online colleges.
“FHSU’s affordable online school is a student-centered education that works with individual career goals,” said BestCollegeReviews. FHSU offers more than 40 degree options at the associate, bachelor’s and master’s levels through the Virtual College.

To view this ranking, visit https://bit.ly/2EqugMQ.

Master-Of-Finance.org
No. 6, 50 Best Online Master of Finance Degree Programs 2018
FHSU’s Master of Business Administration in finance earned the attention of Master-Of-Finance, which named it the sixth best MBA in finance program in the country.
The MBA requires courses in money, banking, financial institutions and international finance. FHSU graduates have gone to work for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Koch Industries, International Business Machines Corporation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and General Electric.

To view this ranking, visit https://bit.ly/2be0u2A.

OnlineU.org
No. 2, 2018 Most Affordable Online College for Sociology Degrees
FHSU’s affordability earned it the No. 2 spot on OnlineU’s list of most affordable online sociology degree programs.
FHSU offers both a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Science in sociology. Students can add an addictions counseling track to either degree program. Courses include introduction to sociology, principles of culture, sociological theory and literature, methods of social research, grant writing, social inequality and advanced sociological research.

To view this ranking, visit https://bit.ly/2GCN1SY.

About the FHSU Virtual College 
Distance education at Fort Hays State began in 1911 when faculty voted to offer courses free by mail so that one-room school teachers across western Kansas could afford to gain the continuing education required to teach. The distance education department created then evolved continuously with changing technology and culture until, in 1997, the Department of Continuing Education and Instructional Technology became the FHSU Virtual College.

 

The Steps and Potential Stumbles Ahead for Kan. On School Spending

 CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN

Kansas lawmakers voted last weekend to increase public school funding over the next half decade — the latest chapter in a long and winding court battle.

            Five things about Kansas’ school finance fight

The story is far from over. Here’s what’s ahead in the coming weeks and months, and where it could all spin out of control.

Gov. Jeff Colyer plans to sign the school finance bill early next week.

After that, the funding boost is scheduled to start on July 1 — the new fiscal year — and ratchet upward in the four years after that one.

There’s just one problem …

… As it turns out, that bill had a pretty big error in it.

Lawmakers thought they were voting to ratchet up K-12 spending year by year so that schools would, by Year Five, get more than half a billion dollars above what they get today.

Instead, schools will get $80 million less per year than planned.

Colyer wants that fixed. So when lawmakers get back from spring break on April 26, expect some legislative deja vu: Conservatives arguing Kansas can’t afford another $80 million, moderates arguing it can, and Democrats arguing $80 million isn’t enough.

They won’t have much time to fight about it before the state and the school districts suing it have to turn in their homework.

April 30 is when the Kansas Supreme Court wants to see legal arguments — in writing — about that five-year plan.

If Kansas wants to end seven years of legal headaches, it needs to convince the justices the plan is enough to give kids an appropriate education.

Because one thing is clear — the plaintiffs will be arguing the opposite.

In the middle of brief-filing season, watch for a vote on changes meant to stop lawsuits like the current one.

Business groups and conservative Republicans are chomping at the bit to amend the state constitution.

But can they? It takes a two-thirds majority in each chamber to get to a public referendum. With 40 Democrats in the House, Republicans spearheading the charge there can only afford to lose a single vote from their side of the aisle.

A few moderate Republicans are already telling them to take a hike. So proponents either need to change some Republicans’ minds or win over some Democrats.

Lawyers for both sides will face off — yet again — for oral arguments.

The plaintiffs will say the five-year plan isn’t enough money to help the tens of thousands of students who aren’t even on grade level in math and reading. Why? They say schools will spend most of it just on keeping up with the inflation for all their regular expenses. So … not much will be left over for after-school tutoring, smaller class sizes or other changes needed for such large-scale academic progress.

The burden is on the state to prove them wrong. It will likely argue lawmakers took a look at school finance research, checked in with educators, and worked hard to target money where it’s needed.

In October, the justices said they would rule by the last day of June — just in time for the new fiscal year.

That would be pretty fast. The last time they ruled on the adequacy of state aid, it took them about three months after receiving each side’s briefs. The time before that, it took more than half a year.

And what will the court decide?

Well … any number of things.

  • The justices could say Kansas needs to spend more. If that happens, they could give lawmakers time — say, another year — to fix it, or make them rush straight back to Topeka to get it done in a special session. And, yes, they could even shut down summer school or delay the coming school year by blocking the state from sending money to districts until it complies.

                Read about the year Kansas came closer than ever to constitutional crisis

  • Or the state could win its case. Though even if that happens, the court could retain jurisdiction to make sure Kansas follows through on that five-year plan. (In the 2000s Kansas ditched a multiyear court-approved school finance plan part-way through.)
  • Or the state could partly win and partly lose. For example, the justices could decide the state’s plan is pretty much okay, but unfair to poorer school districts and in need of some tweaks.
  • Or neither party might win. The justices could decide a lower court or a specially appointed third party needs to take another look at some of the underlying facts. That would potentially mean many more months of legal wrangling before coming back to the Supreme Court for even more.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Sunny, warmer Sunday

Today
Sunny, with a high near 46. Breezy, with a north northwest wind 18 to 22 mph.

Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around 21. North wind 9 to 14 mph becoming light and variable after midnight.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 60. Southeast wind 5 to 13 mph.

Monday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 38. Southeast wind 10 to 14 mph.

Tuesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 79. Breezy, with an east southeast wind 10 to 20 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 42. Very windy.

Wednesday
Sunny, with a high near 64. Breezy.

Wednesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 34.

Thursday
Sunny, with a high near 65.

‘What Were You Wearing?’ exhibit takes aim at sexual assault myth

Submitted

“What were you wearing?”

Photos provided by Jana’s Campaign

It’s a question people ask survivors of sexual violence all too often—a question wrought with victim-blaming and an implication that, maybe, the survivor could have prevented their assault if they had worn something less revealing, less sexy.

To spotlight National Sexual Assault Awareness Month, three local organizations—Options Domestic and Sexual Violence Services, Jana’s Campaign, and the Fort Hays State University Women’s Leadership Project—have worked together to bring this Survivor Art Installation to Hays.

“We want students, or anyone, to view the show and to see themselves reflected in the outfits,” said Christie Brungardt from Jana’s Campaign. “…and put the blame where it belongs which is on the rapist, the person who’s caused the harm, rather than the victim.”

The Survivor Art Installation displays a collection of articles of clothing worn by sexual assault victims. Each story represents what each victim was wearing at the time of their assault. None of those outfits invited the people wearing them to be sexually assaulted.

Photos provided by Jana’s Campaign

This installation will be available for viewing from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday,  April 18 through Friday April, 20 at the Hays Arts Center Annex, 1010 Main St. in downtown Hays. The following week, the installation will be available for viewing from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 24 and Wednesday, April 25 at FHSU in Forsyth Library, main floor on the west wall.

The National Sexual Violence Resource Center reports one in three women and one in six men in the United States have experienced some form of sexual violence in their lifetimes. On U.S. campuses, 20 to 25 percent of college women and 15 percent of college men are victims of forced sexual contact during their time in college.

iWIHA offers high-quality turkey hunting opportunities

KDWPT

PRATT – A place to hunt. Ninety-eight percent of Kansas is privately owned, so providing Kansas hunters with access to land for hunting is an important part the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism’s (KDWPT) mission. Because purchasing land for public access is both cost prohibitive and complicated, KDWPT has focused on leasing private land to give the public a place to hunt.

In 1995, the Walk-In Hunting Access program (WIHA) was born. The program, which opens private land to public hunting is popular and has grown to include more than 1 million acres. However, one of the most difficult issues has been providing access near urban areas due to landowner concerns about the amount of hunting pressure their land may endure.

To address the urban access issue, KDWPT has begun a pilot program called iWIHA. This program limits access to a tract of land through the iSportsman application. iSportsman is currently used on several KDWPT Wildlife Areas where it replaces paper daily hunt permits. Hunters check in and out and submit harvest reports by phone or computer using iSportsman. Land tracts enrolled in the iWIHA program have limits set on the number of hunters allowed access on a given day. Hunters can log on electronically the night before or the morning of a hunt and check in to hunt an area if slots are available. iWIHA will also be applied to Special Hunts on private lands, allowing access to hunts that didn’t fill up during the online application process.

Six tracts of land in northeast Kansas are enrolled in the iWIHA pilot program for the spring turkey season. To view maps of the iWIHA tracts, go to www.ksoutdoors.com, click on “Hunting,” “Hunting Programs,” then “iWIHA limited access Hunts.”

To register for iSportsman (if you don’t already have an account), and to view and check in or out of iWIHA locations, visit www.kdwpt.isportsman.net.

Ex-Kansas sheriff’s deputy sentenced for theft

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former Wyandotte County Sheriff’s deputy accused of stealing nearly $7,000 from the agency has been sentenced to a year of probation.

Pennington-photo Wyandotte Co.

Jay Pennington was sentence on a felony theft count Friday.

Wyandotte County District Attorney spokesman Jonathan Carter says Pennington stole about $6,800 from Offender Registration Unit, taking cash payments from dozens of offenders required by state law to register with the sheriff’s office and pay a $20 registration fee each.

Pennington was a team leader for the offender registration unit at the time.

Pennington had no prior offenses. He faces up to a year in prison if he violates the terms of his probation.

Pennington also was ordered to pay restitution.
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