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FHSU track and field team earns academic honors

FHSU Athletics

NEW ORLEANS – The Fort Hays State men’s and women’s track and field programs both earned the USTFCCCA All-Academic Team award for the third year in a row, announced Monday (July 22) by the organization. The Tigers were also well represented on the individuals list, with six student-athletes earning All-Academic Individual honors.

To qualify for the USTFCCCA All-Academic award, student-athletes must compile a cumulative grade point average of 3.25 and reach a provisional or automatic qualifying standard for the NCAA Championships in either indoor or outdoor seasons.

Student-athletes earning the All-Academic award include Israel Barco, Brett Meyer, Kolt Newell, Seppe van ‘t Westende, Mirena Goncalves and Mattie Rossi.

To earn the team academic distinction, a program must have a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. The Tiger women amassed a 3.44 GPA while Tiger men accumulated a 3.22 GPA to earn the honor. A total of 209 NCAA DII programs earned All-Academic Team status in 2018-19.

Western Kansas farm is finalist for Kansas Leopold Conservation Award

KLA

WICHITA – Four finalists have been selected for the prestigious 2019 Kansas Leopold Conservation Award.

Given in honor of renowned conservationist Aldo Leopold, the award recognizes those who inspire others with their dedication to land, water and wildlife resources in their care.

In Kansas the $10,000 award is presented annually by Sand County Foundation, Kansas Association of Conservation Districts and the Ranchland Trust of Kansas.

The finalists are:

· Ted Alexander of Sun City in Barber County. Native plant and wildlife diversity have flourished thanks to conservation practices implemented at Alexander Ranch. Removing thousands of acres of invasive Eastern Red Cedar trees through cutting and prescribed burning has improved water quality in the ranch’s creeks. Researchers have documented an influx of reptiles, amphibians and diverse vegetation to the ranch. Habitat for lesser prairie chickens have been restored, and the ranch’s beef cattle benefit from a managed-intensive rotational grazing system.

· Vance and Louise Ehmke of Healy in Lane County. To remain profitable while conserving soil and water, these fourth-generation farmers experiment with crops like triticale. This cross between wheat and rye is popular as cattle feed and produces enough crop residue to protect fields from soil erosion. With more than 50 playas on their land, the Ehmkes are involved in research, education and outreach on playas’ contribution to recharging the Ogallala aquifer. They have also enrolled hundreds of acres into conservation program for migratory bird, butterfly and pollinator habitat.

· Dwane Roth of Manhattan in Riley County. Roth owns Big D Farms near Holcomb in Finney County. He uses cover crops to build soil health and combat wind erosion on sandy soils. As one of Kansas’ first Water Technology Farmers, he is passionate about addressing the declining water levels, and extending the life of the Ogallala aquifer. His participation involves researching and testing new irrigation strategies and technologies that maintain crop production with reduced water usage.

· Z Bar Ranch of Lake City in Barber County. Managed by Keith and Eva Yearout and owned by Turner Enterprises, this ranch is a self-supporting enterprise managed under a philosophy of economic sustainability and ecological sensitivity with a focus on maximizing habitat potential for native species like the lesser prairie chicken. The ranch produces enough grass forage to sustain a 1,200 head bison herd. Improvements in water

infrastructure, grazing management, and fire prescriptive have allowed range and soil health to recover from decades of uneven, season-long grazing.

The Kansas Leopold Conservation Award will be presented at the Kansas Association of Conservation Districts’ 75th Annual Convention in Wichita in November. The award recipient will receive $10,000 and a crystal depicting Aldo Leopold.

“Kansas Association of Conservation Districts is excited to recognize these outstanding landowners who are committed to conservation on their land,” said Dan Meyerhoff, KACD Executive Director, Hays. “We are proud to partner with Sand County Foundation and the Ranchland Trust of Kansas to give these families the recognition they deserve.”

“The Ranchland Trust of Kansas would like to congratulate this year’s finalists for the 2019 Leopold Award. Sharing their stewardship successes is critical to spreading the word about how sound conservation practices are good for business,” said Cade Rensink, Ranchland Trust of Kansas Chairman.

“Leopold Conservation Award recipients are at the forefront of a movement by America’s farmers and ranchers to simultaneously achieve economic and environmental success,” said Kevin McAleese, Sand County Foundation President and Chief Executive Officer.

The first Kansas Leopold Conservation Award recipient was named in 2015. The 2018 recipient was Hoeme Family Farm and Ranch of Scott City.

The Leopold Conservation Award in Kansas is made possible thanks to the generous support of Kansas Association of Conservation Districts, Ranchland Trust of Kansas, Ducks Unlimited, Farm Credit Associations of Kansas, ITC Great Plains, Westar Energy, Clean Line Energy Partners, Kansas Department of Agriculture (Division of Conservation), Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism; Kansas Forest Service, USDA NRCS of Kansas, McDonald’s, and The Nature Conservancy in Kansas.

In his influential 1949 book, A Sand County Almanac, Leopold called for an ethical relationship between people and the land they own and manage, which he called “an evolutionary possibility and an ecological necessity.”

Sand County Foundation presents the Leopold Conservation Award to private landowners in 20 states for extraordinary achievement in voluntary conservation. For more information, visit www.leopoldconservationaward.org.

 

LEOPOLD CONSERVATION AWARD PROGRAM

The Leopold Conservation Award is a competitive award that recognizes landowner achievement in voluntary conservation. Sand County Foundation presents the award in California, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, and in New England.

SAND COUNTY FOUNDATION

Sand County Foundation inspires and enables a growing number of private landowners to ethically manage natural resources in their care, so future generations have clean and abundant water, healthy soil to support agriculture and forestry, plentiful habitat for wildlife and opportunities for outdoor recreation. www.sandcountyfoundation.org

KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF CONSERVATION DISTRICTS

The Kansas Association of Conservation Districts is a voluntary, non-governmental, non-profit, incorporated organization composed of members from the conservation districts located throughout Kansas’ 105 counties. Through partnerships with federal, state, and local entities, the Kansas Association of Conservation Districts has brought together groups that share the common goal of wise and efficient conservation practices that protect Kansas’ natural resources. The Kansas Association of Conservation Districts promotes and supports the establishment of programs dedicated to conservation and the organized development of Kansas land, water and related resources. www.kacdnet.org

RANCHLAND TRUST OF KANSAS

The Ranchland Trust of Kansas is a private, non-profit organization founded by members of the Kansas Livestock Association in 2003. The organization was created to provide assistance to ranchers and landowners who desire to conserve their land with conservation easements. Guided by their mission to preserve Kansas’ ranching heritage and open spaces for future generations through the conservation of working landscapes, the Ranchland Trust of Kansas values a commitment to conservation, respect for private landownership, integrity, organizational excellence and collaboration with those who share their values. The Ranchland Trust of Kansas remains an affiliate of the Kansas Livestock Association. www.ranchlandtrustofkansas.org

Former FHSU professor takes reins at Nevada university’s honors program

Matt Means

University of Nevada-Reno

RENO, Nev. — This summer, the University of Nevada-Reno Honors Program welcomed Matt Means as its new director. For nearly 60 years, the Honors Program has catered to highly motivated students by providing rigorous academic courses, personal advisors, priority enrollment and extra encouragement for students to succeed in their academic and professional aspirations.

“There are infinite benefits for an honors student,” Means said. “Students in turn benefit the community around them.”

The current model of the program dates back to 1989, and Means hopes to launch a planning process that will enhance and build upon the honors foundation in place.

“I think there is a little bit of honors in everybody,” Means said. “Honors should be about innovation, risk taking, embracing challenge – it should be about accepting and looking for new and diverse student populations – it should be about impacting multiple communities because the majority of our lives and careers aren’t going to be sequestered to a narrow band of a population.”

Means has come to the University from Fort Hays State University in Kansas, where he was initially an associate professor of music. Following stints in the faculty and as a department chair, he developed an honors college, when no such program had existed, in one semester. He then directed the honors college to multiple successes: the program posted double digit percentage increases yearly, retained 90% of its members through to graduation, and demonstrated an average yield of accepted students of 90%. As an accomplished violinist and successful honors college director Means has inspired others on many occasions, including multiple presentations at National Collegiate Honors Council’s national conferences, and highly regarded musical performances in the US, Europe, and Asia.

“The worst word to affiliate with an honors program is elitism,” Means said. “An honors program or college should be inclusive, flexible, and offer different pathways to success by engaging students in collaboration and cooperation with other academic interests and programs – honors should be about locking arms.”

In the past 30 years, there has been a major shift in education. Advanced Placement (AP) and International Baccalaureate (IB) programs have allowed students to reach higher education with more and more college credits.

“An honors program or college has to meet students where they’re at,” Means said. “It has to accommodate those who have college credits from high school. Moreover, with online education, there’s a great opportunity to reach honors students from a distance – something only eight-to-nine percent of programs across the country have utilized. I’m also interested in non-traditional students, such as adult learners – I want to help those students be considered honors too. Admissions can’t just be about a student’s past because standardized test scores alone are not a good predictor of a student’s success in college. Admissions needs to be holistic for the program to welcome and encourage all kinds of students.”

This year, Means wants to engage in a strategic planning process that will look comprehensively at the Honors Program to see how it can better serve the next generation of college students. In the future, Means hopes to double the population of students participating in the program.

“I want students to be able to reflect on how their experience in college has uniquely expanded their capability for impact on their graduation day,” Means said. “The college experience is critical for students because their whole schedule changes, their lives are completely different, and it’s an enormously transformative period for them. If we do a great job, this will inform the next seven generations of the student’s lives. The potential is something I find thrilling about my job.”

Register now for Esther McMurtrie Memorial Golf Tournament

DSNWK

DSNWK is hosting the 2019 Esther McMurtrie Memorial Golf Tournament to be held on September 20 at the Ellis Golf Club (1301 Spruce Street, Ellis, Kansas). Registration will begin at 8 a.m. with tee-off beginning at 9 a.m. The cost of playing in this four person scramble is $300 per team (four person teams); this includes green fees, golf carts, lunch on the course, and flight prizes. There will be additional opportunities to win raffles, prizes, and a golf cart.

You can also participate by making a financial/in-kind donation or by sponsoring a hole on the course. Hole Sponsorship is $300 and includes a sign with your company name on the tee box.

Proceeds will go towards the maintenance and improvement of group homes in Ellis County, greatly benefiting individuals served by DSNWK.

We hope you will be able to join us in this year’s tournament!

You can register online at golf.mydsnwk.org or by contacting Rachel Luedders at 785-650-4968, [email protected] or Steve Keil at 785-625-5678, [email protected].

Ramirez homers in 14th, Indians outlast Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Jose Ramirez hit a go-ahead homer in the 14th inning and the Cleveland Indians held on to beat the Kansas City Royals 5-4 Thursday night in a game that lasted just shy of five hours and finished after midnight.

Jake Bauers singled home Jason Kipnis later in the 14th off Brian Flynn (2-2) to add an insurance run – and Cleveland needed it.

A.J. Cole earned his first save since May 15, 2015, in his second major league appearance. After allowing the first three batters to reach, Cole retired the next three in order, striking out Bubba Starling to end the game.

Kansas City got one run in the 14th on Jorge Soler’s sacrifice fly.

Francisco Lindor homered on the first pitch of the night for the Indians, who remained two games behind first-place Minnesota in the AL Central.

Nick Goody (2-0) threw two scoreless innings for the win. Cleveland’s bullpen worked 8 2/3 innings, allowing just one run and four hits.

Indians starter Adam Plutko pitched 5 1/3 innings and gave up three runs on seven hits while making his second consecutive start against the Royals.

Lindor hit his 17th home run but Hunter Dozier answered in the bottom of the first with his 16th of the season, a two-run shot to put Kansas City up 2-1.

The Indians scored twice in the sixth to briefly take a 3-2 lead before the Royals tied it in the bottom half. Neither bullpen flinched for the next seven innings.

Josh Staumont pitched out of jams in the 11th and 12th to throw two scoreless innings in his big league debut for the Royals. Kevin McCarthy and Scott Barlow also tossed two scoreless innings apiece.

Starling had a career-high three hits and has a nine-game hitting streak dating to his second career game.

Mike Montgomery matched his longest outing of the season, pitching five innings and giving up one run on five hits. Since July 15, Royals starters are 6-2 with a 2.45 ERA.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: Tyler Naquin was out of the lineup for a third straight game with a tight right hamstring. Naquin did some running in the outfield pregame to test out the muscle. Cleveland manager Terry Francona said the outfielder could be available Friday. … Dan Otero (right shoulder inflammation) threw one inning Wednesday for Triple-A Columbus, but reported to the team Thursday that he still didn’t feel right. Francona said the Indians are trying to figure out what the next step is.

UP NEXT

The Royals and Indians play the second of their four-game series Friday night. Zach Plesac (4-3) starts for Cleveland, and Kansas City will hand the ball to Jakob Junis (6-8), who was placed on the paternity list Wednesday for the birth of his third child. Junis is pitching as well as he has at any point in his career, allowing just three runs in 20 innings over his last three starts. Plesac will make his second straight start against the Royals. He was the winning pitcher Sunday, tossing six innings of two-run ball.

70 cars from Union Pacific train derail north of Kansas City

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Union Pacific officials say no one was injured when 70 train cars derailed in north-central Missouri.

70 car train derailment image courtesy Jerry Girdner YouTube

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spokeswoman Kristen South says the train derailed Thursday near Mercer, about 125 miles northeast of Kansas City near the Iowa border.

South says the train was not carrying hazardous materials.

The train was traveling to Ft. Worth, Texas, from Butler, Wisconsin. The cause of the derailment is under investigation.

CLINKSCALES: Transitions

Randy Clinkscales

I really do feel fortunate in my life.  Though there have been bumps and bruises, and even heartache, I generally feel like I have been blessed.  I have been blessed with three sons and a wife who love me, in spite of my flaws, my sometimes lack of patience, and my failure to always be a good role model.

I have also been fortunate in that my children have hung around and have remained good friends with each other. 

But life starts to happen.  In the last few months, one of my sons has transitioned out of Hays as a traveling nurse, and my oldest son, who works with me, is transitioning as well.

I work with a lot of families that are small business owners or farmers.  One of the difficulties for all of them is when a child, for whatever reason, needs to move on, perhaps out of the business, or at least to a new location. Perhaps it is a new job, or marriage, or one of many other factors.  But that child, for his or her sake, needs to move on.

Equally as difficult is when a family wants to pass on a business to a child or children. How does that look and how does that work? 

I see a lot of lack of planning.  Many times it is just not addressed. 

I also see guilt trips laid on children.  “You should stay and take care of mom and dad.” 

One of the biggest issues that we deal with in my office is children working themselves to the point of exhaustion trying to take care of a parent who is chronically ill.  They have not been able to transition to bringing in help.  They are driven by obligation versus common sense. 

The following are not uncommon statements that I hear in my office: 

“I am going to leave everything to the kids.  I am going to let them figure it out.”

“My kids will never let me go to a nursing home.”

“I am going to leave everything to my son Johnny, and he will take care of the other kids.” 

“My kids get along really well, and they will figure it all out.”

“I promised my spouse that I would never put him in a nursing home, and I intend to keep that promise.”

One of the things that we do in our office is have difficult conversations with our clients.  We want to talk about the “What Ifs:” What if your son does not want to stay here?  What if your wife cannot keep you at home?  What if you need long-term care, how are we going to pay for that?  It is all part of transition planning.

I think the most difficult part of transition planning is not deciding what is best for yourself, but trying to decide what is best for others as well.  As my oldest son is transitioning to a new stage of life, which involves him leaving my office, it is very inconvenient for me.  Not only am I losing a trusted employee, I am also losing someone who is always frank with me; and always gives me good advice.  But I know the transition that he is making is the transition he needs to go through for his own sake. 

I also know that if I truly love him, I need to love him enough to let him go.

Sometimes you need to think about that:  If you love your family, think about those transitions and plan for them, even if that transition is not the way you had hoped it would go. But you make the decision.  Lack of planning makes it much more difficult on your family in the long run. 

I implore you to have those difficult conversations with someone who can guide you through the options.  There is not always a black and white answer.  And indeed, the answer may evolve over time. But get the conversation started.  Have the difficult conversation with your attorney and with your family. 

In the end, even after you are gone, people will appreciate what you have done. 

Randy Clinkscales of Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, PA, Hays, Kansas, is an elder care attorney, practicing in western Kansas. To contact him, please send an email to [email protected]. Disclaimer: The information in the column is for general information purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Each case is different and outcomes depend on the fact of each case and the then applicable law. For specific questions, you should contact a qualified attorney.

Man enters plea in drive-by shooting death of 5-year-old Kan. girl

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man has pleaded no contest to crimes linked to the drive-by shooting death of a 5-year-old girl.

Hughes-photo Shawnee Co.

Twenty-two-year-old Jessie Dean Deshawn Hughes pleaded Thursday in the July 2015 death of Lily Coats-Nichols. Shawnee County District Attorney Mike Kagay said Hughes pleaded to involuntary manslaughter, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied vehicle.

Hughes was originally charged with first-degree murder.

The plea deal requires Hughes to spend 25 years in prison.Kagay said the girl’s family supported the plea deal.

Authorities said Lily was shot in the head while in the back seat of a car driven by her mother.

Kagay said prosecutors believe Hughes thought he was shooting at rival gang members in the area.

Governor announces appointment to Midwestern Higher Education Compact

Aaron Otto (Photo courtesy Johnson Co. Airport)

OFFICE OF GOV.

TOPEKA – Governor Laura Kelly appointed Aaron Otto, Roeland Park, to the Midwestern Higher Education Compact.

“We are excited to have Aaron to represent Kansas in the Midwestern Higher Education Compact,” Kelly said. “Kansas has unique educational needs and deserves a passionate and experienced leader.”

The compact provides greater higher education opportunities and services in the Midwestern region, with the goal of furthering regional access for citizens residing in states in the compact. The compact is headquartered in Minneapolis and member states include: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Michigan, Missouri, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin.

Governor Kelly also has appointed Otto to the Governor’s Council on Education.

He currently serves as the acting assistant county manager and executive director for the Johnson County Airport Commission. Previously, Otto served as city administrator for Roeland Park and worked in the Kansas State Treasurer’s office as assistant state treasurer. Otto graduated with a bachelor’s degree in political science from Kansas State University and received a master’s degree in public administration from George Washington University.

Girlfriend: Mexican immigrant pulled from car in Kansas City deported

Image from facebook broadcast during the arrest

KANSAS CITY (AP) — The girlfriend of the Mexican national whose arrest was featured in a Facebook Live video that showed federal officers breaking his car window says he was deported to Mexico.

Cheyenne Hoyt tells Kansas City media that Florencio Millan-Vazquez called Wednesday evening to say he had been flown to Brownsville, Texas, and then taken to Matamoros, Mexico.

Federal immigration officers trying to arrest Millan-Vazquez on Monday smashed a car window and dragged him from the vehicle in front of Hoyt and their two young children. Millan-Vazquez was in the U.S. illegally and asked that the agents show him a warrant before he would get out of the car. The agents didn’t show a warrant.

Hoyt said he is a chef and family man who never caused trouble. Immigration officials said he re-entered the country twice after being voluntarily deported in 2011.

Michigan man accused of blackmailing Kansas teen on Snapchat

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A 22-year-old Michigan man is charged with using Snapchat to coerce a Kansas teenager to send him sexually explicit videos.

Hurst photo Johnson Co.

Martez Hurst, of suburban Detroit, is charged in Johnson County, Kansas, with two counts of sexual exploitation of a child and one count of blackmail.

Charging documents say Hurst told police he had tried to commit similar crimes against about 20 other females.

Investigators say Hurst began communicating with the 16-year-old Overland Park girl in January 2018, while posing as a 17-year-old boy who attended a nearby high school.

The teenager told investigators she sent Hurst about 10 nude photos of herself but refused to send sexually explicit videos. She said in March, Hurst threatened to release the photos if she didn’t send a video.

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