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105th annual Roundup at Ag Research Center is April 18

The 105th annual Roundup will be Thursday, April 18 in the Auditorium at the KSU Agricultural Research Center, Hays. The Trade Show and registration will open at 9 a.m. with the program beginning at 10 a.m. Lunch will be provided and there is no cost to attend.

Topics include Variability of weather and climate in the Great Plains, Bovine anaplasmosis, Limit feeding in current production systems, Rangeland Recovery after wildfire, and Modified intensive early stocking for cow/calf production.

The following presentations will begin at 10 a.m.

  • New Insights into Subseasonal, Seasonal, and Interanual Variability of Weather and Climate Extremes in the Great Plains – Jeffrey Basara, School of Meterology, University of Oklahoma
  • Bovine Anaplasmosis – What We Know/ What We Want to Know – Dr. Kathryn Reif, Center of Excellence for Vector-Borne Diseases, KSU School of Veterinary Medicine
  • A Review of Limit Feeding: An Old Time Feeding Method that Deserves Attention in Today’s Feeding and Environment Conditions – Dr. Dale Blasi, Beef Cattle Nutrition and Management Extension Specialist, KSU Dept. of Animal Science and Industry
  • Rangeland Wildfire: The Road to Recovery – Keith Harmoney, Range Scientist, KSU ARCH
  • Effect of Intensive Early Stocking Cow/Calf Pairs on Cow Performance – John Jaeger, Beef Cattle Scientist, KSU ARCH

For more information, contact John Jaeger, [email protected], 785-625-3425, Ext. 211

  • Early registration is available by contracting Milissa at 785-625-3425, Ext. 200 or [email protected].

KRUG: Volunteers are crucial to a successful Extension program

Donna Krug

This week is designated as National Volunteer Week. What better time of year than this to say a big “Thank You” to the many volunteers who support our Extension programming efforts?

I don’t have to look far to see the volunteers who give freely of their time to help others. Our 4-H and Youth program relies heavily on volunteers to share their expertise with our youth. Recently we hosted a Fiber Arts Fun Day in Great Bend and I solicited help from some friends who could encourage children who were learning to crochet.

Volunteers are an important part of any active and growing community. Volunteers demonstrate to others that by working together, we have the fortitude to meet our challenges and accomplish our goals. National Volunteer Week is about taking action and encouraging individuals and their respective communities to be at the center of social change – discovering and actively demonstrating their collective power to make a difference.

This year marks the 45th anniversary of National Volunteer Week, demonstrating the enduring importance of recognizing our country’s volunteers for their vital contributions. Each year, it has grown exponentially, with thousands of volunteer projects and special events scheduled across the country. I hope you are thinking of ways you can become a volunteer; a mentor or a friend through an organization that you are active in. Churches and civic organizations have similar needs related to volunteerism.

Today, as people strive to lead lives that reflect their values, the expression of civic life has evolved. Whether online, at the office, or the local food bank; whether with a vote, a voice, or a wallet — doing good comes in many forms, and we recognize and celebrate them all.

For more information about volunteering and leadership opportunities feel free to give me a call at the Cottonwood District Extension office in Great Bend.

Donna Krug, is the District Director and Family & Consumer Science Agent with K-State Research and Extension – Cottonwood District. You may reach her at (620)793-1910 or [email protected]

Zoning Appeals Board to consider sign variance request Tuesday

CITY OF HAYS

The Hays Board of Zoning Appeals will meet at 8:15 a.m. Tuesday in Hays City Hall, 1507 Main.

Agenda items include a variance request for an additional sign on a building other than the storefront.

The applicant, John Kyle Doerfler, recently opened a new business at 810 E. 11th.

The property is zoned I-1 Light Industrial and sign regulations allow signs on the building front façade only. The applicant has placed a sign on the east side for visibility to Vine Street and would like to keep it there.

City staff supports a request to set a public hearing for the variance request.

The meeting agenda is available here.

FHSU men’s golf runner-up at Bethel College Spring Invitational

NEWTON, Kan. – The Fort Hays State men’s golf team claimed a runner-up finish at the Bethel College Spring Invitational (April 6-7). The first round of competition was hosted at Hesston Golf Park, while the second round was hosted at Sand Creek Station. The Tigers shot rounds of 286 and 301 to finish 15-over par (587) for the tournament.

Freshman Pete Carney led the Tigers after shooting rounds of 68 and 76 (144) and finishing in a tie for fifth for the tournament.

Seniors Connor Schultz (68 & 77) and Mac McNish (75 & 73) also finished in the top-10 for the Tigers. Schultz finished in a tie for seventh, while McNish tied for 10th. Bryce Cowan shot identical rounds of 75 to finish in a tie for 16th. Isaiah Grover carded rounds of 78 and 80.

Kansas Wesleyan took home the team title with rounds of 284 and 299 for a 11-over par score (583) as a team. Fort Hays State finished four strokes behind the Coyotes. Murray State College (596) finished in third.

The Tigers will be back in action in eight days when they make their way to Bolivar, Mo. to compete in the SBU Invitational (April 15-16) hosted at Silo Ridge Country Club.

Kansas school district superintendent arrested for alleged DUI

JEFFERSON COUNTY — A Kansas school district superintendent was arrested for alleged DUI over the weekend.

Martin Stessman-photo Jefferson Co..

Just before 8:30 p.m. Saturday, The Kansas Highway Patrol arrested 55-year-old Dr. Martin Stessman, the superintendent at USD 450 Tecumseh after a 911 call reporting a reckless driver on Interstate 70, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department.

Just after 10:30p.m., Stessman was booked into jail, posted the $1000 bond and was released just before midnight.

USD 450 released no statement on the incident Sunday.

Sunny, warm Monday

Monday Sunny, with a high near 78. West wind 5 to 10 mph increasing to 11 to 16 mph in the afternoon.

Monday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 48. North wind 5 to 10 mph.
TuesdaySunny, with a high near 81. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south 11 to 16 mph in the afternoon.

Tuesday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 56. South southeast wind 15 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph.

WednesdayA 20 percent chance of showers after 2pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 76. Windy.

Wednesday NightA chance of showers, mainly between 8pm and 11pm, then a chance of rain after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 34. Windy. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

ThursdayA chance of snow before 9am, then a chance of rain and snow between 9am and 11am, then a chance of rain after 11am. Cloudy, with a high near 45. Very windy. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Kan. man dies after semi hits pickup disabled from earlier crash

JOHNSON COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after midnight Sunday in Johnson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Dodge Ram driven by Nolvin Nain Lopez-Flores, 35, Kansas City, Kansas, was northbound on Interstate 35 at 119th Street in Olathe. The driver lost control, ran off the road to the left, struck the median barrier wall, and became disabled.

A northbound semi 2014 International semi driven by Elmer A. Reuse,62, Buckner, MO., did not see disabled pickup lane and struck it.

Lopez-Flores was pronounced dead at the scene. Reuse was properly restrained at the time of the accident and not injured, according to the KHP.

FHSU softball scores 22 runs in doubleheader sweep of Northwest Missouri State

HAYS, Kan. – A day after scoring just two runs in a doubleheader against Missouri Western, Fort Hays State had a 22-run outburst in a pair of wins over Northwest Missouri State on Sunday at Tiger Stadium. Fort Hays State took the first contest by run rule, 14-6, before hanging on for an 8-6 win in the second contest. FHSU is now 16-15 overall, 9-7 in the MIAA, while NWMSU dropped to 9-18 overall, 4-10 in the MIAA.

Game 1: Fort Hays State 14, Northwest Missouri State 6
The Tigers had two big scoring innings in the first contest, scoring six runs in the first and seven in the third to build a big lead. The Tigers fell down 2-0 after the top of the first, but a seven-hit first inning propelled the Tigers to a 6-2 lead after one inning.

Terran Caldwell led off with a double and then came in to score on a Grace Philop RBI single. Sara Breckbill kept the line moving with another single and then Bailey Boxberger had an RBI single of her own to tie the game. Allison Jurgensen recorded the fourth straight single for the Tigers up the middle, which plated two more runs and pushed the Tigers in front 4-2. Elise Capra made it five singles in a row before the streak ended on a Jeni Mohr sacrifice bunt. The sacrifice helped though as Lily Sale roped a two-RBI double to the right-center gap to push the lead to four runs.

Northwest Missouri trimmed the lead back to three with an unearned run in the top of the third, but the next Tiger outburst pushed the lead to a comfortable 13-3 in the bottom half of the inning. The Tigers loaded the bases with one out and then Caldwell produced a two-RBI single, making the score 8-3. Katie Adler joined the hit parade with an RBI single to make it 9-3. With two outs, Breckbill laced a two-RBI triple down the left-field line, just out of the reach of the Bearcat fielder, pushing the score to 11-3. Boxberger backed that up with an RBI double to the right-center gap and Jurgensen followed with another RBI single to cap the seven-run inning.

Two of three runs by the Bearcats in the fourth were unearned. The lone earned run was the doubleheader’s only home run, hit by Karli Allen. Fort Hays State added a run back to its lead in the bottom half of the fourth on an RBI double by Caldwell.

Hailey Chapman earned a complete-game win, moving to 9-7 on the season. Three of her six runs allowed were earned, while allowing eight hits and a walk. She struck out five. Regan Thompson took the loss for NWMSU, now 4-8 after allowing six runs and lasting just two-thirds of an inning. Kaitlyn Weis also allowed six runs for NWMSU in 2.0 innings of work. Logan Wenzel allowed the final two in 1.1 innings of work.

Caldwell and Jurgensen had a team-best three RBIs each in the game, while Caldwell and Breckbill each had three hits in four at bats. All but two Tigers recorded RBIs in the game and Mohr was the only Tiger without a hit, though she reached base twice and scored two runs.

Game 2: Fort Hays State 8, Northwest Missouri State 6
Fort Hays State built a big lead early, but had to hang on in the waning moments of game two. After both teams scored one run in the first, the Tigers opened up a six-run lead with a six-run second inning. Northwest Missouri scored twice in the third, but FHSU got a run back in the bottom of the fourth inning to make it 8-3 after three innings.

A leadoff walk by Terran Caldwell led to the Tigers’ first run, getting under the tag of a throw from the NWMSU first baseman to home plate on a ground ball off the bat of Grace Philop. The Tigers opened the second with five straight hits, a single by Allison Jurgensen, double by Elise Capra, and then three straight singles by Jeni Mohr, Lily Sale, and Caldwell. Northwest Missouri starter Sheridan Thompson ran into a patch of wildness throughout the hit parade, allowing the Tigers to score on one of her five wild pitches in her brief appearance of one inning plus five batters faced in the second. Sale and Caldwell each notched RBIs on their singles. Northwest Missouri reliever Rachel Smith also fought wildness in the inning. She allowed a bases-loaded walk to Sara Breckbill, then allowed two more runs to score on a wild pitches. Northwest Missouri uncorked four of its seven wild pitches in the game in the second inning.

A throwing error by the pitcher that would have been the third out of the fourth inning plated Fort Hays State’s final run. Jurgensen came in to score on the play after roping a double just beforehand.

Fort Hays State starter Michaelanne Nelson ran into trouble in the fifth when the Bearcats loaded the bases with two outs. Megan Jamison got the Tigers out of the jam by inducing a fly ball to left fielder Elise Capra to end the threat. The Bearcats had a runner reach third in the sixth, but on an appeal play, was called out for leaving the bag early trying to tag up on a fly out to right field.

Jamison then ran into trouble of her own in the seventh after getting one out. Three hits by the Bearcats, a double and then two singles made it 8-4. Jamison handed the ball to Hailey Chapman, who had to work around danger to get the final two outs. A double and single by the Bearcats with Chapman pitching made the score 8-6 with runners at first and third. Chapman then picked up her second save of the season by getting an infield pop up and a strikeout looking to end the game.

Nelson allowed seven hits and four walks in her start that lasted 4.2 inning. She picked up the win, now 6-8 on the season, while striking out three. All three of her runs allowed were unearned. Jamison bridged the gap to Chapman by throwing 1.2 innings, allowing three runs on four hits.

Thompson of NWMSU received her first pitching decision of the season, moving to 0-1 with the loss with six runs allowed. Smith threw the final 5.0 innings and allowed two runs (one earned).

Tiger Notes
-Fort Hays State produced 22 runs on 25 hits in the doubleheader, batting .446 for the two games.
-Lily Sale went a perfect 4-for-4 at the plate in the doubleheader with 3 RBIs.
-Terran Caldwell produced a team-best 4 RBIs for the day.
-Six Tigers had a multi-RBI afternoon in the sweep.
-FHSU moved back up to sixth place in the MIAA standings with the wins.

Up Next
Fort Hays State goes on the road next weekend to Emporia State and Washburn for two more MIAA doubleheaders. The games at Emporia State on Friday (Apr. 12) start at 3 pm, while the contests at Washburn on Saturday (Apr. 13) begin at 1 pm.

Sheriff: Kansas man accused of recording people in restroom

JACKSON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas man for allegedly recording victims in a restroom on multiple occasions.

Wathen -photo Jackson Co.

On November 1st, 2018, Jackson Co. Sheriff’s Deputies and investigators served search warrants on two homes including Wathen’s residence east of Mayetta, according to Sheriff Tim Morse.

Deputies confiscated computers and other electronics during the search.

On Friday, Kerry Wathen Jr., 52, was jailed on requested charges that include two counts of sexual exploitation of a child and four counts of breach of privacy, according to Morse.

Wathen paid a $10,000 bond and is no longer in custody, according to online jail records.

Tigers baseball falls to Bearcats in series finale

MARYVILLE, Mo. – The Fort Hays State baseball team dropped the series finale to Northwest Missouri State on Sunday (April 7), 16-1. The Tigers moved to 3-27 overall and 2-19 in the MIAA, while the Bearcats moved to 17-15 on the season and 13-8 in conference action.

Offensive production was hard to come by for the Tigers in the contest as they were only able to squeeze in four hits on the afternoon. Marcus Altman led the way with a 2-for-2 outing at the dish. Ryan Grasser and Jordan Wilkerson were the other Tigers to earn base pokes.

FHSU used four pitchers with Jake Taylor (0-5) starting the game on the mound. Taylor tossed 3.2 innings, giving up seven runs on nine hits with one strikeout. Cody Rottinghaus, Cole Zimmerman and Jake Vieira pitched the rest of the way out of the bullpen. Rottinghaus allowed four runs on four hits, Zimmerman was charged with five runs on four hits and Vieira (0.1 IP) had a scoreless outing.

The Tigers will be back home for a four-game swing, beginning with a non-conference contest against Bethany College on Tuesday (April 9). First pitch from Larks Park is slated for 6 p.m.

Conflict in Myanmar reaches southwest Kansas immigrants

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — A conflict across the world in Myanmar has reached into a refugee center that for years has helped immigrants who arrive in Garden City to find jobs.

Neighborghood Learning Center photo courtesy United Way of Finney Co.

Workers at the LiveWell Finney County’s Neighborhood Learning Center say they have noticed tension between predominantly Muslim ethnic Rohingya and the Buddhist Buddhists who all fled from Myanmar during upheaval there, The Kansas News Service reported .

More than 700,000 ethnic Rohingya have fled from Myanmar since August 2017, the country’s military launched a purge of Rohingya, an ethnic minority of mostly Muslims and some Hindus in the predominantly Buddhist Burmese country.

“The Rohingyas … were just really upset about the situation at home. And then also not that comfortable being around Burmese,” said Birgit Lemke, the program coordinator for LiveWell Finney County. “The Rohingyas just didn’t come to class anymore.”

It is a change for the center, which has served refugees who have arrived in Garden City for decades to work at the region’s meatpacking plants. The city includes several immigrant communities that offer refugees a connection to their homelands of Southeast Asia, Eastern Africa and Central America.

Khaing Pyi, 24, a community health worker at the Neighborhood Learning Center, fled a refugee camp in Thailand and arrived in Garden City after her family came to the U.S. in 2011. She considers herself ethnically Burmese.

“With the Rohingya people, we try our best to help them,” Pyi said. “They have family back home and me, of course, you’re going to feel bad or, you know, because of what happened back home.”

Numan Mohammed, 26, is Rohingya and continues to study at the center while working as a meat cutter at a Tyson plant.

“I like school and work,” said Mohammed, who said both are hard but necessary because he needs the money.

All refugees who attend the center might soon have nowhere to go. The grant funding the center expires at the end of June, and the organization hasn’t been granted new funding.

Callie Dyer, executive director of Livewell Finney County, says people who arrived in Garden City when the center opened six years ago still go there.

“It’s a place where people feel safe, and they trust the individuals that are there to help them,” Dyer said. “But we also are a place where other organizations in town dovetail, come in and let the residents know of what they’re doing.”

Tigers hand Royals sixth straight loss

DETROIT (AP) — Tyson Ross pitched seven impressive innings in his Comerica Park debut, and the Detroit Tigers extended their winning streak to five with a 3-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Sunday.

Ross (1-1) signed with the Tigers in the offseason, and this was the last current ballpark he hadn’t pitched in. He allowed a run and five hits with a walk and eight strikeouts.

Rookie outfielder Christin Stewart, whose grand slam lifted Detroit to a win Saturday, drove in two more runs to help the Tigers complete a three-game sweep of their first home series. Joe Jimenez pitched the eighth for Detroit and Shane Greene finished. Greene has saves in all seven victories this season for the Tigers and has not blown any.

With two outs in the ninth and a man on base, center fielder Niko Goodrum ended the game with a diving catch. Greene became the first pitcher since saves became an official stat in 1969 to earn seven in his team’s first 10 games.

Brad Keller (1-1) allowed three runs in six innings for the Royals, who have dropped six in a row.

Whit Merrifield and Billy Hamilton had three hits each for Kansas City. Merrifield extended his hitting streak to 28 games dating to last season. He’s just two shy of George Brett’s franchise record.

Merrifield led off the game with a double and eventually scored on Alex Gordon’s one-out groundout. Stewart tied it in the second with an RBI triple, and the Tigers took the lead when he scored on Gordon Beckham’s double play grounder.

Stewart added an RBI single in the sixth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Hamilton stole second base in the third inning, but he paid a price when the throw hit him in the left arm, and his head appeared to crash into the glove of Detroit’s Josh Harrison. Both players were a bit shaken up but remained in the game.

Tigers: Detroit reinstated RHP Drew VerHagen (right shoulder) from the 10-day injured list to replace LHP Matt Moore, who went on the IL with a right knee injury.

UP NEXT

Royals: Kansas City returns home to face Seattle. RHP Homer Bailey (0-0) starts for the Royals on Monday night against RHP Felix Hernandez (1-0).

Tigers: Detroit has Monday off before hosting a series with Cleveland. Jordan Zimmermann (0-0) takes the mound Tuesday for the Tigers against Corey Kluber (0-2).

Should the SAT be optional? College bribery scandal renews debate

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The most brazen abuses of standardized testing in the college bribery scandal could be chalked up to security lapses: the ringer hired to take the SAT, the proctors paid to look the other way, the accommodations for extra time obtained through false diagnoses of disabilities.

But the scheme in which wealthy parents allegedly bribed their children’s way into top schools also has highlighted deeper concerns about the fairness of using SAT and ACT tests — focal points of a billion-dollar consulting industry and gatekeepers for a U.S. admissions system already seen as favoring wealth and privilege.

Hundreds of colleges in recent years have made it optional for applicants to submit test scores in an effort to promote equity and diversify applicant pools. Lately, their ranks have been growing by the week.

David Hawkins, executive director for educational content and policy at the National Association for College Admission Counseling, said he expects more colleges will explore going test-optional.

“In the long term, the conversation — even without the bribery scandal of a couple of weeks ago — the conversation about access to higher education has been simmering for a long time, and is starting to take shape in a way that we really are examining every aspect of the admission process to understand fully how it either promotes or inhibits access,” he said.

The ringleader, admissions consultant Rick Singer, was among 50 people charged in the scheme that involved bribes paid to test administrators and college coaches. Perfectly legal, however, are $1,000-an-hour tutors and coaches hired to guide affluent students through the admissions maze, including rigorous test preparation.

In California, lawmakers disgusted with the fraud have proposed reforms to prevent a repeat, including a discussion of whether it’s time to phase out the tests at public colleges statewide.

David Coleman, the chief executive of the College Board, which administers the SAT, said he agrees that commercial prep classes have corrupted the test. But he said the solution is not to do away with the tests, which he sees as complementing a student’s high school grades and as a check on grade inflation, which also tends to benefit wealthy students.

“We’ve got to admit the truth, that wealth inequality has progressed to such a degree that it isn’t fair to look at test scores alone,” Coleman said, “That you must look at them in context of the adversity students face.”

To that end, College Board has begun piloting an “Environmental Context Dashboard” to measure SAT scores in relation to the student’s neighborhood and school. In its pilot phase, the dashboard helped Florida State University admit about 400 more students from disadvantaged backgrounds — which are more likely to be students of color — in 2018, said John Barnhill, the university’s associate vice president for enrollment management.

“It takes the emphasis away from getting the highest score you can get to,” Barnhill said. He added it’s more about, “How did you do where you are?”

But despite a growing number of schools moving away from standardized tests, most U.S. colleges still require them just as much as a high school transcript and application fee. Last year, about 2.1 million students took the SAT, and about 1.9 million took the ACT.

At the University of San Francisco, which announced a shift in its standardized test policy last week, administrators said SAT and ACT scores are more reflective of a student’s economic background than their academic abilities.

DePauw University, the University of Minnesota Crookston, University of Denver and Bucknell University are among others to say recently they won’t ask for the results, joining roughly 1,000 other schools, according to the nonprofit group FairTest, which argues standardized tests are biased against minority groups. The list includes elite liberal arts colleges as well as research universities and for-profit schools. Those caught up in the scheme require scores.

Technology is letting institutions that may have once relied heavily on them to consider other measures, said Dan King, president of the American Association of University Administrators.

“Now a college can look very quickly at the high school. What do we know about this high school, about students who come from here? What do we know about students who come with four units of English and three units of science and students who took chemistry? We can plug all of those into formuli, which give us a lot of information that we just didn’t have before,” he said.

A study published last April of nearly 1 million applicants found that when given the choice to submit scores, about a quarter of applicants did not. Female, underrepresented and low-income applicants chose not to submit scores at higher rates than male applicants. Black students were about twice as likely to exclude scores as white students.

Philip Sheppard, 20, from Houston, knew his SAT scores weren’t great when he applied for Hilbert College just outside of Buffalo, New York. He included them in his application to the test-optional school anyway, hoping the additional effort would be rewarded.

“I saw it was optional but I submitted it just to solidify a place in the class,” said Sheppard, who said he scored just under 1,000 out of a possible 1,600. “My thought process was, my scores weren’t the highest so I just used them as something, ‘Hey, I went the extra mile to take the SAT. Even though I didn’t do the best, still I gave it my best shot.'”

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