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Fort Hays State hits 18th consecutive record fall enrollment

FHSU University Relations

However you measure it, Fort Hays State University has turned in an 18th consecutive fall semester record with a 20th-day enrollment of 9,473 full-time-equivalent students.

Full time equivalency (FTE) is calculated by dividing the total number of undergraduate student credit hours (SCH) taken in a semester by 15 and graduate credit hours by 12.

The Kansas Board of Regents decided this summer to transition the traditional preliminary enrollment count – the 20th day count – from the headcount metric to a full-time-equivalency metric for 2018.

According to the KBOR news release on systemwide enrollment, “This change will provide uniform data across the system to the Board, to leaders from across the system, and to the public.”

The 20th day, set by the Regents as the official enrollment day to provide a standard basis of comparison from year to year, was Sept. 17 for Fort Hays State. Regents policy is to hold any announcement of enrollments until numbers are in and verified for all Regents institutions.

The increase in FTE at Fort Hays State was the largest among the six Regents universities and Washburn, the state’s municipal university, both in number, 190, and percentage, 2.05.

“There are so many metrics we use to measure a university – enrollment, academic quality, financial stability, and community and global engagement, all areas in which Fort Hays State consistently demonstrates excellence,” said Dr. Tisa Mason, president of Fort Hays State.

“But for us, it is about much more than moving the needle. It is about impacting lives and communities,” she said. “Every single day we invest in students with the personal care and innovative education that will become the foundation for their success.”

While the university’s student body has drawn its record-setting increases from around the world, the university’s population of Kansas students has also shown continuous increases. This year’s total of 7,848 Kansans is 280 more than last year’s 7,568. This increase is especially notable since the Kansas Board of Regents (KBOR) for a number of years has challenged the regent universities to serve and credential more Kansans. FHSU has responded as the Kansas resident student body at FHSU has grown by 2,344 since 2008.

Dr. Dennis King, assistant vice president for enrollment management, pointed to a significant milestone this year: “For the first time, enrollment in the Virtual College, not including enrollment at the university’s international partners, was over the 7,000 mark at 7,005. Enrollment at the international partners of the Virtual College was an additional 4,007 students.”

King also noted that this year’s success includes the fourth-largest on-campus freshman class in history at 948. The number of transfer students also increased for FHSU this year, even though nationally the numbers of transfer students are in decline.

Fort Hays State set another record in headcount, with 15,523, an increase of 423, or slightly more than 2.8 percent, from the fall 2017 headcount of 15,100. Those numbers represent 4,511 on-campus students taking a total of 52,680 student credit hours; 7,005 Virtual College students taking a total of 63,873 SCH; and 4,007 students in FHSU’s international partner institutions, primarily in China, taking a total of 21,480 SCH.

Total enrollment, by headcount, is 12,780 undergraduates and 2,743 graduate students.

“Increasing student retention has also been an intentional focus for FHSU,” said Dr. Tim Crowley, associate provost for academic affairs. Student retention is a measure of how many students return for a second and succeeding years. This year’s overall retention rate, 73.8%, he said, includes retention of last year’s freshmen at the second-highest level in the last 15 years.

“Over the past decade,” said Crowley, “we have added learning communities, the Honors College and the Kansas Academy of Mathematics and Science. We have developed the freshman seminar course, redesigned our college algebra curriculum and created the student engagement and advisor program to provide support for our online students.”
Another metric – an especially important one for Fort Hays State – is also one of the factors that prompted the Regents to move to the credit-hour metric from the headcount metric. That is part-time students. In the 2017 academic year, 63 percent of students across the Regents system were part-time students. The KBOR system encompasses six four-year universities, 19 community colleges and six technical colleges.

At FHSU for the 20th-day count for fall 2018, more than 58 percent of the student body is part time. That is 9,065 students, graduate and undergraduate, taking 50,298 credit hours, or 36 percent of the university’s total 138,033 credit hours.

Those part-time students include 1,706 undergraduate Kansas students and 5,211 non-Kansans. In the Graduate School, the number includes 1,465 part-time Kansas students and 683 non-Kansas students.

The high percentage of part-time students who choose Fort Hays State was a key factor in the university’s ranking in September as No. 10 in the nation for adult learners by The Washington Monthly, which focuses its rankings on adult learners. Another factor in that ranking was FHSU’s 80-percent graduation rate for part-time students and ease of transfer.

Jury: Kan. man guilty of getting child porn from now defunct website

TOPEKA, KAN. – A federal jury Thursday found a Morris County man guilty of downloading child pornography from the internet, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Wagner -photo Shawnee Co.

Wesley Wagner, 54, White City, Kan., was convicted of one count of receiving child pornography and one count of possessing child pornography. During trial, the prosecutor presented evidence that the FBI seized a server belonging to a now-defunct website called Playpen that provided users access to child pornography.

The FBI used computer forensics to identify the site’s users, including Wagner. Based on that information, the FBI obtained a warrant to search the defendant’s home.

Sentencing is set for Jan. 7. Wagner faces a penalty of not less than five years and not more than 20 years in federal prison on the charge of receiving child pornography, and up to 10 years on possession charge.

 

Kan. man convicted of child endangerment for driving into oncoming traffic

BARTON COUNTY — A Kansas man was convicted Friday on a charge of aggravated endangerment of a child.

Bitter -photo Barton County

According to Barton County Attorney the case began when 31-year-old Jason Bitter was observed driving a vehicle on U.S. 56 into oncoming traffic at a high rate of speed. At the time, Bitter’s daughter was in the vehicle with him as the result of an argument between Bitter and the child’s mother.

Barton County deputies tracked Bitter to a location in Pawnee Rock, where he was arrested.

The child was not harmed. Sentencing on the charge, a felony, is also for December, according to Mellor.

Police ask for help to locate SW Kan. aggravated assault suspect

SEWARD COUNTY—Law enforcement authorities are investigating an aggravated assault and asking the public to help locate a suspect.

photo courtesy Liberal Police

Paulino Castro-Pablo, 31, is wanted for aggravated assault, according to the police department in Liberal. He is described a 5-foot-6, 170 pounds, brown eyes and black hair. Police say if you see him to use caution because he may be armed.

If you have any information on Castro-Pablo, contact police.

MARSHALL: Doctor’s Note Oct. 5

Dr. Roger Marshall, R-Great Bend, is the First District Kansas Congressman.

Friends,

What a week!

On Sunday, at midnight, the 2014 Farm Bill expired. That means 39 important Farm Bill programs lost their funding.

Our producers shouldn’t become the punching bag for political jabs. Compromise is a two-way street.

While extremely disappointed, I do not want to undermine the effort that has been put into the Farm Bill, and I am hopeful my colleagues on the left will come around and drop the “my way or the highway” attitudes and negotiate. I also want to make clear that the differences over SNAP are not what is holding up the work on the farm bill.

On a brighter note, the U.S. and Canada struck a deal in the final hours to secure a modernized NAFTA, now called the USMC deal. Last year Kansas exports to Canada totaled $2.5 billion, so having Canada on board is a huge win for Kansas.

And we end the week hopeful that we will #ConfrimKavanaugh, a tried and true constitutionalist.

ECSTATIC! US-Canada Reach NAFTA Deal

After more than a year of negotiations, I am ecstatic to see Canada agree to a fair deal and join the U.S. and Mexico in reinstating NAFTA, now called the United States-Mexico-Canada-Agreement (USMCA). Last year Kansas exports to Canada totaled $2.5 billion dollars, so having Canada on board is a huge win for Kansas. In total, trade supports 400,000 jobs across Kansas. From day one this administration advocated for fair trade agreements.

The past year has been hard not knowing what agreement would come out of the administration’s tough negotiations, but rural America had confidence in the President and his trade negotiators that we’d strike a better deal. This agreement will eliminate Canada’s class 7 milk pricing scheme and includes provisions requiring equity in grain grading, two significant wins for Kansas. Kansas dairy is a big winner here, and Kansas farmers and ranchers will see the benefit of this deal for decades.

Read more on this agreement HERE.

Confirm Kavanaugh

Read my op-ed on why I believe Kavanaugh will defend our constitution and be a great addition on our Supreme Court HERE.

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Given that October is Breast Cancer Awareness month, I thought it was an opportune time to mention the efforts taken by Congress to improve the diagnosis and treatment of this horrible disease.

During my time as an Obstetrician-Gynecologist, I, unfortunately, saw a number of patients fighting breast cancer. In the past 30 years, I have seen us get a better understanding and treatment of breast cancer and beyond due to extensive research and federal support for these studies.

I am proud of the work being done by this Congress to better conditions for our patients – after all, improving our nation’s health care system was a top concern driving my run for Congress.

Read my op-ed HERE.

The First District of Kansas is home to a diverse and robust manufacturing industry, employing thousands of individuals and serving as the backbone of many rural communities. On National Manufacturing Day, I want to thank the hard working men and women who build and manufacturer the goods we rely on every day.

FUN FACT:
I was 9 years old, in the fourth grade, the last time this nation saw record low unemployment numbers like this. Today the Department of Labor announced that the U.S. unemployment rate for September is 3.7 percent, the lowest this country has seen since December 1969.
o The unemployment rate for those that graduated high school but did not attend college is the lowest since April 2001.

o The unemployment rate for women matches the lowest rate in 65 years.

o In August, Unemployment in Kansas was at 3.3 percent. (The September Labor Report will be released on Oct. 19th)

Roger Marshall is the Kansas First District Congressman.

Jury: Kan. man guilty of shooting death of twin brother, wife

SEDGWICK COUNTY – A jury Friday has found Luis Alvarado-Meraz, 28 of Wichita, guilty of capital murder in the shooting deaths of his twin brother Manuel and Manuel’s wife Lucero Rodriquez, according to a media release from the Sedgwick County Attorney.

Alvarado-Meraz -photo Sedgwick County

The victim’s bodies were found in their apartment on the night of January 14, 2015, in the 2800 block of S. Emporia in Wichita.

Manuel Alvarado-Meraz was shot 12 times while his wife Lucero was shot 8 times.

The jury deliberated just over 90 minutes before reaching their verdict. Under Kansas law, Alvarado- Meraz is facing life in prison with no chance of parole. A sentencing date has not been set.

Police: Kansas man in custody after 4-hour standoff

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on numerous charges following an afternoon standoff.

Quinton Bame -photo Shawnee Co.

Just after 1:30 Thursday, police responded to 630 SE Chester in Topeka after report of a domestic disturbance, according to Lt. Jerry Monasmith.

As officers arrive, the suspect later identified as 23-year-old Quinton Michael Bame, ran inside and barricaded himself inside the residence.

Officers attempted to have the suspect exit the residence through several forms of communication, for several hours, without any success.

After a search warrant for the residence was served, police were able to take the suspect into custody without incident.

Detectives and Crime Scene investigators responded to process the scene and gather evidence. Police reported no additional injuries as a result of the incident.

Bame was transported to the Department of Corrections for charges of Aggravated Battery and Aggravated Assault. 

 

Democrat Scores Fundraising Win Against Kansas Congressional Incumbent

 

Democrat Sharice Davids walloped incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder in fundraising last quarter.

Democratic candidate Sharice Davids raised $2.7 million in the last quarter in her bid to unseat incumbent Republican Rep. Kevin Yoder in the Kansas 3rd District.
CREDIT SAM ZEFF -Kansas News Service

The Davids campaign says the first-time candidate raised $2.7 million between July and September. In that same period Yoder, running for a fifth term in the Kansas 3rd District, raised almost $1.3 million.

Yoder’s campaign charged that most of the challenger’s money comes from outside Kansas. It pointed to a story on Axios.com that showed only about 30 percent of Davids’ individual contributions came from within Kansas. However, that is based on last quarter’s Federal Election Commission finance report.

“Sharice has been completely non-existent in the district because she’s raising liberal money around the country,” Yoder spokesman C.J. Grover said in a statement. “She’s skipped important local events for swanky New York fundraisers,” referring to an event at the Stonewall Inn last month.

Davids responded by saying “momentum continues to build” for her campaign. “So many people have made small-dollar investments in this campaign because they know I’ll work for Kansas families, unlike Congressman Kevin Yoder, who looks out for his special interest donors,” Davids said in a statement to KCUR.

Davids has been on a bit of a roll the last two weeks. Over the weekend, the National Republican Congressional Committee reportedly pulled a million dollars in advertising support from Yoder, Inside Elections moved the race to “tilt Democratic” and a New York Times poll has Davids up by eight points.

New FEC reports are due on Oct. 15.

Sam Zeff is a metro reporter in conjunction with the Kansas News Service. You can follow Sam on Twitter @samzeff

Toddler dies after wind topples bounce pad at pumpkin patch

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A 2-year-old  boy was killed and his sister was injured when wind tore a giant inflatable from its moorings and tossed it 30 feet into the air before depositing it, with the toddler wrapped up inside, more than 100 feet  away, authorities said Friday.

Image -JK’s Pumpkin Patch

The Lancaster County, Nebraska sheriff’s office said Caleb Acuna suffered severe head trauma in his ordeal Wednesday evening at JK’s Pumpkin Patch, just north of Lincoln. Caleb was taken off life support Thursday afternoon.

His 5-year-old sister, Arra, suffered a broken arm.

“It’s certainly a tragic situation,” said Lancaster County Sheriff’s Capt. Tom Brookhouser. “The sheriff’s office has never worked an incident like this in the 28 years I’ve been here.”

The siblings were playing on the bounce pillow — similar to a bounce house, but without any walls — around 6 p.m. Wednesday when an estimated 59 mph (95 kilometers per hour) wind gust tore it from its moorings.

Raymond Fire Safety Officer Nick Monnier told the Lincoln Journal Star that the children’s parents had just climbed off the inflatable when the wind swept it up. Monnier said Arra was thrown about 30 feet, but that the pillow folded over on top of Caleb Acuna and carried him more than 100 feet.

A nearby bounce house was also blown away by the same wind gust, he said.

Brookhouser said authorities are still investigating, and that an autopsy is planned.

The National Weather Service had issued a wind advisory for Wednesday afternoon, warning of gusts up to 60 mph. Winds throughout the day consistently exceeded 20 mph (32 kph).

The large, pillow-shaped inflatables are common at county fairs and on lakes. Manufacturers commonly warn that they should not be used when winds exceed 20 mph.

The Lancaster County Board of Commissions in August approved an amusement license for the pumpkin patch, according to the Journal Star.

Owners of the pumpkin patch haven’t responded to a phone message from The Associated Press. According to the company’s voicemail, the pumpkin patch had been closed the previous weekend because of concerns about the weather.

Mattress Firm files for bankruptcy, closing up to 700 stores

HOUSTON (AP) — Mattress Firm, Inc., the nation’s largest mattress retailer, is filing for bankruptcy protection and plans to close up to 700 stores around the country.

The Houston-based company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Friday in federal court in Delaware.

According to court documents, Mattress Firm has more than $1 billion in liabilities and has more than 50,000 creditors. It owes its largest creditor, mattress maker Simmons Manufacturing Co., nearly $65 million.

In a statement, CEO and president Steve Stagner says the bankruptcy filing will allow the company to “strengthen our balance sheet” and close stores in certain markets with “too many locations in close proximity to each other.”

The company has more than 3,000 stores in the U.S. and in recent years had been aggressively expanding as it purchased competitors.

LETTER: ‘Dark money’ group’s push polling in Ellis Co. filled with untruths

Open Letter to Fellow Citizens, Friends and Neighbors,

A few weeks ago a “dark money” group used a technique called “push polling” in Ellis County.

A push poll is a fake poll in which the caller makes sensational and untrue claims about a candidate and then pretends to objectively ask if the person being called would vote for the candidate being criticized falsely or the innocent candidate who is actually being promoted by the special interest group. It is a underhanded campaign tactic, like campaign mailers filled with untruths, blatantly attempting to mislead voters.

Unfortunately, this is the first of many such underhanded campaign tactics we will see in our community. The Kansas Chamber and its eastern Kansas partner “dark money” groups have targeted Eber Phelps, our state representative, for defeat. Why? Because he joined over 85 other Republican and Democrat representatives to vote to end the Brownback failed budget experiment.

I do not care what eastern Kansas “dark money” groups want.

To get my vote a candidate will have to support better funding for our local schools and Fort Hays State University, not cuts. To get my vote the candidate will have to support the expansion of Medicaid which will provide $1 million more per year for Hays Medical Center and local healthcare. To get my vote the candidate will need to support funding for our basic roads and highways and support a balanced budget that does not raid funds from retirement accounts or other pre-existing obligations.

The Kansas Chamber PAC and its “dark money” partners are endorsing, planning for and funding Eber’s opponent but they do not support education, Medicaid expansion, roads or a truly balanced state budget. These are the very goals and investments that protect our quality of life in western Kansas. The Kansas Chamber Agenda is not a pro-Hays agenda and may be the reason why the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce and so many other local chambers do not belong to the Kansas Chamber.

After 28 years of watching the shenanigans of the Topeka political environment and no longer being a administrator at FHSU, I urge you to support candidates who defend our western Kansas way of life.

Join me in supporting state representatives like Democrat Eber Phelps (111th Dist.-Hays) and Republican Don Hineman (118th Dist.-Dighton) – that’s right, Democrats and Republicans – who are not controlled by the “dark money” groups of eastern Kansas, and who are representatives that will work for our Hays and western Kansas best interests.

Edward H. Hammond
Hays

Dr. Ed Hammond is the former president of Fort Hays State University.

UPDATE: Kan. man with 6 convictions, accused of child sex crime found dead

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas man on parole after convictions for rape, indecent liberties with a child, aggravated robbery and burglary, theft and aggravated sodomy and jailed in Reno County for new charges of alleged sexual exploitation of a child has been found dead.

Robbins -photo Reno Co.

Gary Robbins, 58, was found dead inside the Reno County Correctional Facility Friday morning, according to Reno County District Attorney Keith Schroeder.

It was around 5:40 a.m. Friday when the staff at the jail facility were alerted to an unresponsive inmate. Staff performed lifesaving measures, but were unsuccessful in reviving Robbins, who was pronounced dead at 6:20 a.m.

Robbins had been in the facility since his parole violation on Sept. 19. On Oct. 1, Robbins was charged with sexual exploitation of a child and possession of media of a child under 18.Robbins was accused of having sexually explicit photos of children. 

A preliminary investigation performed by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation suggests the injuries to Robbins were self-inflicted. No one was in the vicinity of Robbins at the time of his death.

An autopsy will be performed at the Wichita Forensic Center. 

——-

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas man on parole after convictions for rape, indecent liberties with a child, aggravated robbery and burglary, theft and aggravated sodomy is jailed in Reno County for new charges of alleged sexual exploitation of a child.

Gary Robbins, 58, is now accused of having sexually explicit photos of children, according to Reno County District Attorney Keith Schroeder.

Schroeder says he will also file the charges and list Robbins as an aggravated sex offender under the habitual sex offender rule, which could mean a life sentence with no chance of parole. The crime occurred on Sept. 19.

Robbins is also wanted for a parole violation for the previous conviction. He was paroled in 2017.

He’s expected in court Friday for the formal reading of the charge.

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