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BILLINGER: Senate Update March 25

Sen. Rick Billinger (R-Goodland)

Last week was the final week for committees to meet.

The most important thing we did this week was passing the budget out of the Senate.

Some of the highlights are: Sub SB75 K-12, school funding, which includes over $4 billion. Part of the funding is an inflation factor of $92.7 million in court ordered funding for K-12 to settle the lawsuit. It also includes $197 million additional new money for K-12. This budget includes full funding of $7.37 million for this years KPERS payment. The Board of Regents will receive an additional $5.5 million in new money.

Additional funds were allocated for Corrections in order to address a shortage in staff and for the treatment of Hepatitis C for inmates.

KDADS, DCF, mental health and the IDD community will all receive a small increase in funding.

KDOT will receive $160 million through FY 2020. The Governor’s budget continues to transfer $200 million per year from KDOT to the state general fund.

A 1% increase was included in the budget for Community Home Base services. Senate Democrats did not vote for this bill even though it follows most of the recommendations made by the Governor, other than the re-amortization. Over 90% of the budget consists of education, Kan-care caseloads and corrections. The Senate Democrats wanted to postpone voting on the budget until next Tuesday in order to determine whether the Governor will raise taxes on middle class Kansans and Kansas businesses that do business in foreign countries. If the Governor vetoes SB 22 it will add $200 million to the ending balance. The Democrat Minority Senate leader, Senator Hensley, stated that he was hopeful that the Governor would veto SB 22.

SB 125 passed the Senate and will extend the Rural Opportunity Zone Program by 5 years.

SB 125 extends the deadline for a participant to begin in the student loan repayment portion of the program to July 1, 2026 and the individual income tax credit portion of the program would be extended through tax year 2026.

For the next 3 days we will be on the floor debating House and Senate bills.

I would like to thank everyone who stopped by the Capitol and my office last week.

I am honored and grateful to represent the 40th Senate District of Kansas.

Please do not hesitate to contact me by e-mail at [email protected] or call me with your questions and concerns. My office number is 785 296-7399 or my cell is 785-899-4700. If you are in Topeka stop by my office at 236-E.

Sen. Rick Billinger, R-Goodland, is the Kansas state senator for the 40th District, which includes Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Gove, Graham, Logan, Norton, Rawlins, Sheridan, Sherman, Thomas, Trego and Wallace counties as well as portions of Phillips County.

Blood drive Friday in Ellis

The Ellis community will host a blood drive Fri., March 29, at the Knights of Columbus, 1013 Washington, from 1-6 p.m.

Walk-ins are welcome.

Click here to make an appointment

Right now, the Red Cross has less than a three-day supply of most blood types, and blood products are being distributed to hospitals faster than donations are coming in. Donors of all blood types are urgently needed. A low blood supply may mean that critical medical treatments or emergency care may be delayed or canceled. Won’t you help ensure there is blood on the shelf for those in need?

The need for blood is constant and only volunteer donors can fulfill that need for patients in our community. Nationwide, someone needs a unit of blood every 2 to 3 seconds and most of us will need blood in our lifetime.

 

Kan. man sentenced for using Playpen website to access child porn

TOPEKA, KAN. —A Kansas man was sentenced Monday to eight years in federal prison for downloading child pornography from the internet, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister. In addition, he was ordered to pay $29,000 in restitution to victims.

Wagner -photo Shawnee Co.

Wesley Wagner, 54, White City, Kan., was convicted in October 2018 on 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 hundreds of the site’s users, including Wagner. Based on that information, the FBI obtained a warrant to search the defendant’s home.

New Kansas nonprofit to aid government transparency efforts

Kansas Press Association

A new nonprofit institute to aid efforts at making government more transparent has received tax-exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service.

The Kansas Institute for Government Transparency, Inc., (KIGT) is the brainchild of Mike Kautsch, a University of Kansas law professor and longtime media law consultant for the Kansas Press Association.

Since it is dedicated exclusively to charitable and educational purposes, KIGT has been approved for tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

Mike Kautsch / KU photo

Kautsch said KIGT is non-partisan, and its specific purposes are to educate the public about:

• Transparency laws, including Kansas statutes requiring that government records and meetings be open to the public;

• Rules and regulations that affect the balance between the public’s interest in access to information and competing interests in privacy and security; and

• Citizens’ First Amendment rights to express themselves freely.

“KIGT’s plans include researching and analyzing Kansas laws and public policies related to government transparency,” Kautsch said. “In addition, KIGT anticipates supporting or undertaking litigation in matters that bear significantly on advancement of open government or freedom of expression in Kansas. KIGT has developed criteria for determining when litigation may be warranted.

“I am grateful to the Kansas Press Association for being strongly supportive of KIGT. When I was with Doug Anstaett before he retired as the KPA’s full-time executive director, he referred to the free press as the ‘champion of the people.’ He and his successor, Emily Bradbury, are champions of government transparency, too.”

“During the formation of KIGT, I also appreciated encouragement and advice given by Kent Cornish and Ron Keefover, respectively, the leaders of the Kansas Association of Broadcasters and the Kansas Sunshine Coalition for Open Government.  KIGT aims to operate in harmony with the KAB, the Coalition and the KPA,” Kautsch said.

“I view KIGT as an experimental public-interest venture, and I appreciate the support of KIGT’s founding board members — Russell Hickey, Nate Lindsey, Ann Premer and Leita Walker. All are outstanding alumni of the KU School of Law and were superb students in my media law-related classes.  I hope to involve even more former students in KIGT and others who have an interest in open government and the First Amendment.”

To assist the nonprofit’s effort, the Kansas Newspaper Foundation Board of Trustees in the spring of 2018 authorized the $25,000 in seed money for the proposed project.

Kautsch expects KIGT to create opportunities for law students to participate in its public-interest endeavors. In this way, the students will be able to gain practical experience and advance the skills and knowledge they acquire in the classroom.

The benefits of the bill-tracking process include informing the public about: model language for transparency bills; the projected impact of proposed legislation on transparency, and the provisions of any particular current or prospective legislative proposal that would increase or decrease the flow of information to the public on matters of public concern.

The bill-tracking process was developed for KIGT by attorney Max Kautsch, who also serves as KPA’s legal hotline attorney, with support from Lex Lumina, an LLC devoted to the public interest, in Lawrence.

You can find the nonprofit’s website at www.kigt.org.

It contains weekly lists of the bills that have been reviewed by Max Kautsch and his interpretation of their importance to the ongoing transparency efforts in Kansas.

— Hays Post is a member of the Kansas Press Association

Coach with FHSU ties takes over offensive line at Valdosta State

Valdosta State Athletics

VALDOSTA, Ga. – Valdosta State newly hired head coach Gary Goff has filled out his coaching staff for the 2019 season as he hired four highly talented coaches to complete his initial staff as a Blazer.

Goff brought two coaches with him from Tiffin University in defensive coordinator Lee Stalker and offensive line coach Ryan Allgood, while adding the services of Levi Brown to coach the quarterbacks and Michael Johnson will coach the defensive backs/secondary.

Allgood was formerly a graduate assistant at Fort Hays State University.

Ryan Allgood

Kerry Webb and Kenny McClendon, who helped coach the Blazers to a perfect 14-0 record and a national championship in 2018, remain on staff for 2019, along with a number of graduate assistants.

Stalker, comes to VSU from Tiffin where he spent the past five seasons alongside Goff. At Tiffin, Stalker coached numerous positions, including the defensive line, special teams and was the run game coordinator for the Dragons. While there, he coached and developed eight all-conference honorees, including Willie Mays who went on to play for the Green Bay Packers and Los Angeles Rams.

In helping to rebuild the Tiffin program, Stalker and the Dragons’ defense made vast strides in 2017, finishing in the top-ten nationally in tackles for loss (96), while ranking in the top 20 in sacks (33) and third down and fourth down conversion percentages. He took over a defensive line in 2014 who only posted seven sacks and 19.5. tackles for loss prior to his arrival and turned into a group averaging 20 sacks and 40 tackles for loss per season, becoming one of the most dominate fronts in the conference.

Prior to Tiffin, Stalker coached one season at NCAA Division III Oberlin College (Ohio), where he served as linebackers coach, defensive line coach and head strength and conditioning coach. During his time at Oberlin, he coached three all-conference selections and one All-America honoree. His coaching career began at Butler High School in Butler, Pa., where he was a 2007 graduate and worked with the offensive and defensive lines.

He played collegiately at Kent State University as a defensive end from 2007-2011. Stalker was a two-year starter for the Golden Flashes and served as team captain as a senior. Following the 2011 campaign, he was a finalist for the NCAA Burlsworth Trophy, which is given to the most outstanding FBS college football player who began his career as a walk-on. Stalker earned his bachelor’s degree in architectural studies and a minor in sports administration from Kent State.

Allgood spent the last two years as offensive line coach for the Dragons. In 2018, his unit continued to excel, leading an offense averaging 30.4 points per game, 271.2 passing yards per game and 425.7 total yards per game. He had three students-athletes earn all-conference honors. In 2017, the offensive line aided a Tiffin offense which averaged 23.8 points per game, 366 passing yards and 202.5 rushing yards per game. His line was a big part of JaQuan Hardy’s 1,000-yard rushing season, marking the first for the Dragons since 2005. Allgood also had three all-conference selections in 2017.

Prior to Tiffin, Allgood was graduate assistant at his alma mater the University of Oklahoma. There as a graduate assistant, the offensive line had one of its most productive years in Sooner history as it ranked first nationally in passing efficiency (193.79) and pass completion percentage (.706), while ranking second nationally in total offense at 554.8 yards per game and third in scoring offense (43.9 ppg). OU also led the Big 12 Conference in allowing just 1.6 sacks per game.

Allgood played for the Sooners from 2006-2008 and was a student assistant from 2009-2011 and a graduate assistant from 2014-2016. In 2015, he helped an offensive line unit featuring First Team All-Big 12 selections Ty Darlington and Nila Kasitati. Darlington won the Campbell Trophy, Wuerffel Trophy and Bowden Award for his efforts on the field and in the classroom. OU had a pair of freshmen at the tackle positions, including left tackle Orlando Brown, who was named a Freshman All-America selection by Sporting News. That line led the way for an offense that ranked fourth in scoring, 17th in passing and 22nd in rushing. He earned his bachelor’s degree in sociology from Oklahoma in 2011.

In 2014, Allgood helped OU to lead the nation in sacks allowed at just 9.0 for the season, while the Sooners led the Big 12 and ranked tenth nationally averaging 261.2 yards rushing, the highest total produced by the Sooners under head coach Bob Stoops. The offensive line helped freshman Samaje Perine lead the Big 12 in rushing (131.8 ypg), and set the FBS single-game rushing record with 427 yards against Kansas (11/22/14).

In between his stints with the Sooners, Allgood was the offensive line coach during the 2013 season at NCAA Division III College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minn., where it won the UMAC Championship. He also spent two years as a graduate assistant at Fort Hays State in Fort Hays, Kan., where he coached tight ends, full backs and was the assistant offensive line coach in 2011-12.

Brown comes to VSU from Faulkner University in Montgomery, Ala., where he completed his first season as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the Eagles.

Prior to Faulkner Brown began his coaching career in 2014 as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Mount Juliet High School in Tennessee. He returned to his alma mater in 2016 at Troy University, where he spent the 2016 and 2017 seasons working with the quarterbacks for the Trojans.

Brown was a two-year letterman at the University of Richmond and a two-year letterwinner at Troy where, in his senior season, he threw for 4,254 yards, broke the Troy and Sun Belt Conference single season passing yardage records, finished second nationally in passing yards and was named Sun Belt Conference Player of the Year.

He was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the seventh round of the 2010 NFL Draft. Brown spent two seasons with the Bills and one season each with the Saskatchewan Roughriders and Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the CFL. He earned a bachelor’s degree in political science in 2010, and a master’s degree in sport and fitness management in 2017, both from Troy University. Brown is engaged to Maria Martin and they plan on getting married in April of 2020.

Johnson comes to Titletown from Huntingdon College, also in Montgomery, Ala., where he has served as defensive backs coach since the 2016 season. During his time at Huntingdon, Johnson coached three all-conference defensive backs in 2016 and 2017, along with one all-league honoree in 2018. In 2017, Johnson helped coach Huntingdon to its third-straight USA South Conference title and advanced to the NCAA playoffs for the third-straight year.

He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in communication from NCAA Division I FCS Bryant in 2014, he then began his coaching career at NCAA Division II Malone University in February 2015. He produced one all-conference defensive back while he was at Malone.

Johnson was a four-year starter in the Bryant secondary at cornerback. During his senior year, he helped lead the Bulldogs to their most successful season in program history as they reached their highest national ranking in Week 11 at No. 21 in both the Coaches and Sports Network polls. Bryant finished the season 8-3 for the best record since the program moved to FCS.

Goff and the Blazers open the 2019 spring season Thursday, Mar. 28, at 4 p.m. at The VSU Field House. The 2019 Spring Game is set for 11 a.m. on Apr. 27 at Bazemore-Hyder Stadium. All spring practices are free and open to the public. Practice times and dates are subject to change without notice.

Fundraisers this week for Dancing Together for DSNWK

There will be a pari of fundraisers for Dancing Together for DSNWK, a benefit show in partnership with the Styles Dance Center where individuals from Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas will be featured.

From 5 to 10 p.m. Tuesday at Freddy’s, if customers mention they are supporting DSNWK during their order, the group will receive a portion of the night’s proceeds.

From 5 to 10 p.m. Thursday at IHOP, the group will receive a portion of the proceeds from customers presenting the flyer below.

Dancing Together for DSNWK will be 3 p.m. April 7 at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center on the Fort Hays State University campus.

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Walter Clifford Ehrlich

Walter Clifford Ehrlich, 90, of Leavenworth, Kansas, and former Russell and Great Bend, Kansas resident, died on Monday, March 25, 2019, at St. John Hospital in Leavenworth, Kansas.

A celebration of Walter’s life will be held at 10:30 A.M. on Friday, March 29, 2019, at the First Southern Baptist Church in Great Bend, Kansas, with Pastor Tim Singleton officiating. A graveside service will be held at 2 P.M. Friday afternoon at the Russell City Cemetery. Visitation will be from 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. on Thursday, March 28, 2019, at the mortuary.

Memorials may be given to the First Southern Baptist Church and may be sent in care of the mortuary. Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, Kansas, is in charge of the funeral service arrangements.

Kendall Mae Ottley

Kendall Mae Ottley, age 75, of rural WaKeeney, Kansas, died Friday, March 22, 2019, at Wesley Medical Center, Wichita, Ks. She was born July 19, 1943 in Garden City, Kansas to Kenneth Durant and Ollie Mae (Slawson) Durant.

Kendall attended schools in Holcomb, Russell Springs, and graduated with her senior class in Monument, Kansas from Monument Consolidated High School in 1961. On April 20, 1963, she was united in marriage to William (Bill) A. Ottley at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Oakley, Kansas. Bill and Kendall’s married life began in Oakley, where Kendall worked as a telephone operator. They moved to Scott County when Bill found a job working for a farmer/rancher there and eventually they owned their own farm in Scott County.

In 1974, Bill, Kendall, and their family moved to WaKeeney. There they owned and operated their own farm operation raising crops and cattle. Kendall was involved in day to day farm operations and decisions, calving season was one of her favorites, as was summer wheat harvest. Kendall was a bus driver for USD 208 for many years and enjoyed meeting the children every morning and afternoon. Kendall & Bill owned/operated the Sprint Mart store for 14 years where she made many friends and loved the public. One of Kendall’s favorite hobbies was to read. She could sit and read for hours. She also loved to sew, and made all of her daughter’s clothes and clothing for her granddaughters. Kendall was involved in the Catholic Church and the alter society for many years. She worked part-time at the hospital auxiliary, the public library, and enjoyed working at the WaKeeney Livestock Sale Barn. Kendall’s proudest moments were of her children and her grandchildren. She followed her kids’ events and lives in just about everything they did.

Kendall’s grandchildren were so special to her. She spent time with them helping them to learn to sew and bake for 4-H, and hardly ever missed a sporting event. Teaching life lessons on the farm was where you would usually find her. Her favorite saying was “Hard work never hurt anyone”, and you had better pitch in or she would hand deliver you to a chore that needed done.

Her family includes two children, Tamera Mae (Ottley) Riedel & Glenn of WaKeeney, Ks., William John Ottley & Laura of Wichita, Ks.; five grandchildren, Courtney (Riedel) Berning & Braxton of WaKeeney, Ks., Cindy (Riedel) Hilgers & Ricky of Ogallah, Ks., Catie Riedel, Hays, Ks., Clayton Riedel, WaKeeney, Ks., Nicole (Ottley) Sherfick & Dylan of WaKeeney, Ks.; three great-grandchildren, Briant Berning, Brodie Berning, and Colton Sherfick all of WaKeeney, Ks. and identical twins due in June; two sisters, Kathy Wessel of Scott City, Ks., Janet Smith of Yukon, OK., two brothers, Bob Durant, Oakley, Ks., and Steven Durant, Omaha, NE. Many nieces, nephews and great nieces and nephews that she dearly enjoyed.

Kendall was preceded in death by her parents, Kenneth Hand Durant and Ollie Mae (Slawson) Durant.

A memorial service will be held at 10:30 a.m., Saturday, April 6, 2019 at Schmitt Funeral Home, in WaKeeney, Ks.

There will be no visitation as cremation was chosen.

In Lieu of Flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to Christ the King Church (for building improvements) or WaKeeney Public Library.

Donations made to the organization may be sent to Schmitt Funeral Home, 336 N. 12th St., WaKeeney, Kansas 67672.

43rd street traffic control change begins today

CITY OF HAYS

Please be advised that beginning Tuesday, March 26, 2019, traffic control will be installed in Hays which blocks off the north side of 43rd Street between Roth Avenue and Vine Street.

This will reduce traffic to one lane in each direction. The double left turn lane on Vine Street to westbound 43rd Street will be reduced to a single left turn lane.

43rd Street will remain closed west of Roth Avenue.

Traffic remains one-way northbound into Walmart Parking lot. Traffic leaving Walmart must go north via 45th Street.

This construction is expected to last approximately 3 months pending weather conditions. Signs will be in place to direct the traveling public. Motorists should use caution in these areas.

The city of Hays regrets any inconvenience this may cause to the public.

If there are any questions, please call the Office of Project Management at 785-628-7350 or the contractor, Vogts-Parga Construction, at 316-217-1961.

Kansan featured in ‘The Vietnam War’ documentary to speak at FHSU

 

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Vietnam War Veteran John Musgrave thinks America has forgotten lessons of the Vietnam War.

A decorated Vietnam veteran, John Musgrave will be welcomed to Fort Hays State University’s campus by the Department of Political Science at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Memorial Union Black and Gold Room to share his experiences and memories from serving in the Vietnam War.

Musgrave has been featured in a 2017 documentary, “The Vietnam War,” produced by Ken Burns and Lynne Novick.

Even after decades of speaking and advocating for veterans, Musgrave said the documentary was still important for millions of people to understand the war, what happened its consequences even to this day.

He said the country needs to remember the sacrifice of tens of thousands of young Americans, who believed in what their country was doing or not believed in serving their country.

“The country’s attitude when we came back was not positive,” he said. “If they remembered, they tried to remember as only misfits, criminals, drug addicts, crazies. I great many of us still carry a great deal of bitterness over the way we were treated when we came home because we gave everything we had. Nearly 60,000 of us did give everything.”

When he came home from Vietnam, Musgrave was called a war criminal and a baby killer. In Vietnam, veterans were portrayed as criminals.

“It was a poisonous atmosphere. It was ridiculous and it’s why tens of thousands of Vietnam veterans came home, shoved their uniforms in their closets — or worse threw them in the trash — and never told anybody, even their own children, that they served their country honorably in a war.”

Many veterans lived with their service as a stigma, which lead to more veterans dying of suicide after the war than died in the war, Musgrave said.

“That is an indictment of our society,” he said. “They felt so alone.”

Treatment of Vietnam veterans has improved over the years. Today, strangers thank Musgrave for his service and pay for his dinner.

“I am flabbergasted when that happens because I still expect people to call me a war criminal, but when I turn around and look down that long road to someone coming up to me and thanking me for your service, I see it strewn with tens of thousands of bodies of forgotten men who lost everything. I can’t allow that to be forgotten.”

Musgrave also wants Americans to remember how slippery the slope is on foreign policy. He says the United States chose to support a dubious and anything but democratic Vietnamese government.

The buildup of U.S. troops in Vietnam grew without the public really realizing what was happening.

He said there are similar disconnects today.

“I am talking to kids who have no memory of the towers coming down. They have only seen pictures of it, so they are fighting in a war now they have no living memory of,” he said.

“I was in Vietnam 52 years ago, I think America has tried very hard governmentally and on a society level not to learn anything from it. They prefer to forget it. It is a bad memory. We lost or at least we didn’t win. … I think we have repeated the same mistakes since, getting our children involved in no-win wars with no end in sight.

“Yet the specter of Vietnam hovers over us almost shouting, ‘Notice me! Learn from me!’ And I don’t think we have. I think we are working hard not to.”

The U.S. has also forgotten it left hundreds of living American prisoners of war in Laos and Vietnam in the hands of the communists.

“The government knew about them, had their names, had their locations and wrote them off because they decided they were just too inconvenient to save. You can’t call that peace with honor. For many Vietnam veterans, that is an open festering wound to know that the war doesn’t end until everyone comes home and that we mattered so little to the government of the United States that it would do that. …

“That was a conscience decision made by Nixon and Kissinger,” he said. “I could curl your hair with the information I have on that.”

Musgrave was born in Missouri in 1948 and enlisted with the Marine Corps at the age of 17. He served with Delta Company, 1st Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division in Quang Tri Province, Northern I Corps, during the Vietnam war for 11 and a half months before being permanently disabled by his third wound. He was eventually medically discharged.

His Marine Infantry Battalion lost more men than any other battalion in the history of the Marine Corps. They are referred to as the Walking Dead.

Musgrave was medically retired from the Marine Corps as a corporal in 1969 after a long hospitalization. He still suffers from some physical disability from the wounds he suffered in Vietnam.

He also has suffered from PTSD since his time in combat. His wife to had to explain to his children why he slept with a night light. He was afraid of the dark.

Musgrave was only 17 when he joined the Marines. He said he was terrified.

“You’re damn right I have nightmares. It was horror on horror.”

He described the North Vietnamese Army as vicious.

“I am alive today because buddies of mine gave their lives in attempts to rescue me when I was wounded. The guy that shot me used me as bait, because he knew that Marines never left a wounded Marine on the field, so he left me as bait. He knew as long as I was screaming, my buddies would keep coming. I don’t have the right to allow them to be forgotten.”

Musgrave says mental health services for active duty service personnel and veterans is getting better, but it still is not enough. He said young soldiers are being used up by repeated deployments to combat zones.

When he first came home from Vietnam in 1968 and 1969, he was sent home periodically as he was recovering from his injuries. He was asked to speak to local groups about the positive role of the military in Vietnam. He was being asked questions from student groups that he couldn’t answer.

“The more I read … the more I discovered reasons for us not to be there,” he said. “It was heartbreaking. I gave everything I had for that cause, but I was still a Marine and I won’t say a word about it.”

He felt conflicted, but he wanted to feel he was still supporting his buddies who were now serving their second tours in Vietnam.

“I am spewing things that I don’t believe in any more. In fact, that I knew were bullshit, but I felt as if I had to do it to be loyal.”

The U.S. invaded Laos and Cambodia. Students were killed at Kent State. Nixon began a troop withdrawal, but American soldiers were still dying daily.  Finally, he said he couldn’t do it any more.

“I realized  I didn’t have the right to sit at home and drink and cry in my beer when my buddies were over there fighting for nothing. … I realized what I owed my country was the truth.”

In 1970, he joined and served in a leadership role with the Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

“I realized that I kept my mouth shut so long, because I was a good Marine, but now it was time for me to be a good citizen and good citizens do not stay silent.”

As he speaks to young people across the nation today, Musgrave echoes that hope for today’s youth.

“I tell them all I want them to do is their duty as citizens and their No. 1 duty is as citizens is to make informed decisions and to ask questions. If they see anyone doing anything that is not in the best interest of their country, it is their patriotic duty to stand up and say no. On the other hand, if they see their country doing exactly what it should be doing, then they should stand up and support it. Silence is always consent whether you intend it to be or not.”

Musgrave has written three books of poetry, including “Notes To The Man Who Shot Me,” which won the Robert A. Gannon Award for Poetry by the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation, and he helped co-author “The Vietnam Years: 1000 Questions and Answers,” with Mike Clodfelter.

Musgrave now lives in Baldwin City with his wife.

Pi Sigma Alpha, the political honors society at FHSU, is sponsoring the event.

Musgrave’s talk is free and open to the public.

Russell couple joins Kansas House to recognize World Down Syndrome Day

Rep. Waymaster reads the World Down Syndrome proclamation on the Kansas House floor.

TOPEKA — Representative Troy L. Waymaster introduced a resolution on Thursday, March 21, recognizing March 21 as World Down Syndrome Day in Kansas.

On this day, people with Down syndrome and those who live and work with them throughout the world, organize and participate in activities and events to raise public awareness and create a single global voice for advocating for the rights, inclusion, and well-being of people with Down syndrome.

In his comments, Representative Waymaster said, “Thus, each year, on this symbolic date of March 21st, persons concerned with Down Syndrome organize demonstrations, scientific, social and /or medical meetings, exchange their knowledge as well as their requests at the national, European and international levels.”

Russell residents Mike and Angie McKenna and their daughters, Bryleigh and Brooklyn, with Rep. Troy Waymaster (R-Bunker Hill).

He continued, “Joining us today are Mike and Angie McKenna and their daughters, Bryleigh and Brooklyn, from Russell, Kansas. Their family joined together with other families in 2015 to form the Northwest Kansas Down Syndrome Society. A group that has quickly grown to more 30 families in Northwest Kansas.  Brooklyn, who is 4 years old and was born with Down Syndrome, is thriving with the support of her family, friends and educators.

“Like many families with Down Syndrome children, the McKennas were unsure of the path their lives would take. According to Mike and Angie, Brooklyn has brought joy and love to their family and has and opened doors to people they may have never met and places they may have never gone, such as being here today at the Kansas State Capitol. Their hope for this resolution is to bring more awareness and inclusion for children and adults with special needs like Down Syndrome.”

The resolution passed the House of Representatives unanimously.

The 109th Kansas House District consists of the entire counties of Osborne, Russell and Smith and portions of Barton, Jewell, Lincoln and Rush counties. Representative Waymaster has served the 109th District in the Kansas House of Representatives since 2013.

— Submitted

HHS baseball opens season with sweep of Colby

COLBY, Kan. – The Hays High baseball team used some solid pitching Monday to start their season 2-0. Trey Riggs threw a complete game one-hitter, striking out 16 without a walk in a 4-0 win in game one of their doubleheader. Palmer Hutchison and Dom Bainter combined on a one-hitter in 9-1 six inning run rule victory in the second game.

Riggs doubled to drive in Palmer Hutchison in the top of the first inning in the opener. It would stay that way until the sixth when the Indians scored twice off a Colby error. They added another run in the seventh off an error.

Hutchison allowed one run on no hits with four strikeouts and a walk in 3 2/3 innings in the second game. Bainter gave up a hit with two strikeouts and a walk over the final 2 1/3 innings.

Dylan Dreiling singled home two runs in the first. Cody Peterson knocked in a run with a single in the second. Riggs and Brock Lummus both walked with the bases loaded to put Hays up 5-0 in the second. Lummus’ sac fly in the fourth drove in another run. The Indians then put the game away with a three-run sixth.

Dreiling and Lummus both drove in three while Riggs knocked in two.

The Indians play their home opener Monday against Washburn Rural.

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