We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

MASON: HCI helps connect Hispanic students with America’s promise

Dr. Tisa Mason, FHSU president

One of my favorite summer activities is meeting the students and families who participate in Fort Hays State University’s Hispanic College Institute (HCI). For the past several years we have intentionally focused on initiatives which enhance opportunities, access, and support for Hispanic students to succeed in college. HCI is our most valuable contribution to fulfilling our promise.

Why is this timely? Ten counties in the southwest corner of Kansas have more than twice the percentage of Hispanic population than the state average. This past year, some of the regional high school senior classes were comprised primarily of Hispanic students: 81 percent in Liberal; 77 percent in Ford County; 65 percent in Garden City. Clearly, the education of this population is critical to the success of our state.

We are leading the way in meeting the higher educational needs of this growing population in Kansas and across the Midwest. HCI has already engaged over 275 Hispanic high school juniors and seniors from across the states of Kansas, Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, and Oklahoma.

The HCI is a free, four-day residential program that prepares Hispanic high school students to enter and succeed in higher education. It is designed to bring in Hispanic educators and community leaders from all over the Midwest to build confidence in HCI students. The majority of the curriculum provides opportunities to get connected with Hispanic community leaders, college students, and university leaders who can relate to the students’ experiences and challenges. All students go through the college application process, learn about scholarship opportunities and financing college, and participate in mock classes and academic programs. They also take part in community service projects and create an issues-to-action presentation to cultivate our institutional mission to build engaged citizen-leaders.

The Institute is also valuable for the Hispanic students who are already Tigers and who serve as HCI Tiger Team leaders. Many were participants in the Institute when they were in high school, and now they help guide, support and inspire the students who will come after them. At the same time, they gain real-life experience as leaders and mentors, and practice the joy of “paying it forward.”

Each year, the university also brings in a dynamic keynote speaker and role model. This year’s students had the opportunity to learn from Oscar Rodriquez Jr., a 2005 FHSU graduate. Oscar, a native of Liberal, played football at Fort Hays State as a safety while earning his bachelor’s degree in physical education and health. He has just started his first season as the Zips’ secondary coach at the University of Akron. In 2015, Bruce Feldman from Fox Sports highlighted his heroic comeback from cancer to resume his coaching career.

Oscar was an NFL Bill Walsh Fellowship participant in 2018 with the Chicago Bears, and he has coached and mentored seven student athletes who are playing in the NFL. As an engaged citizen-leader, Oscar founded the Coaches Against Cancer Foundation and is involved in the Big Brothers Big Sisters program.

Of course, my absolute favorite part of the HCI is listening to student stories. I was captivated by the students’ honesty about what they were learning and the deep friendships they were forming. Grace Johnson (Wichita), a rising junior at Bishop Carroll High School, spoke with great enthusiasm and affection about the value of experiencing college life from living in a residence hall, being in a classroom, and touring a college town. I was especially pleased with how the Institute incorporates the city of Hays, because I know our close-knit community fuels the success of students through a deep and sincere connection.

I smiled as Grace described the late night conversations with her HCI roommate and the lasting friendships she formed with her small group – called a familia. She talked about the confidence she gained in her leadership, communication, teamwork, problem solving and conflict management skills, and about how she felt more prepared for college life. Grace shared: “I didn’t know coming into HCI how to deal with conflict. Now, I know not only how to avoid it, but to work through it with others.”

Most importantly, I loved listening to students capture the essence of why we invest so much into programs like the HCI: “I am more compelled than ever to go to college, succeed, and graduate” said Grace.

The education of students matters to us. We get to know students and help them discover their talents and their dreams. With each conversation, we see their potential and are inspired to walk with them and to challenge them. We provide access to the opportunity to learn and to thrive. The HCI is just one of many examples of how we deliver on America’s promise to help people and communities prosper.

Junior Monarchs, Junior Eagles both fall to Great Bend in Zone play

GREAT BEND – Neither the Hays Junior Eagles or the TMP-Marian Junior Monarchs could beat Great Bend Wednesday night. The Braves beat the Eagles 10-5 then knocked off the Monarchs 16-10 to secure the second spot out of their own Zone Tournament to the Class A American Legion state tournament next week in Topeka.

The Braves scored five runs in the bottom of the sixth inning after the Monarchs had rallied with four in the top of the inning to pull within two. Great Bend scored six in the bottom of the third to take the lead for good then added two in the fourth and another run in the fifth to go up 11-5.

Jacob Pfeifer had three of the Monarchs 12 hits. Jace Wentling added two RBIs. Kade Harris pitched three innings and suffered the loss.

In the first game of the night against the Junior Eagles, the Braves scored three in the second and three in the third to go up 6-2 but the Eagles answered with three in the bottom of the third to pull within one. They had the potential tying run thrown out at the plate on a double steal attempt.

Keatyn Barnett wiggled his way out of bases loaded jams in the fifth and sixth without giving up a run but the Braves got a three-run double an inning later to blow the game open.

Dawson VonFeldt and Dominic Bainter both had two of the Eagles eight hits with Bainter driving in two runs.

The Junior Monarchs end their season with a 13-10 record while the Junior Eagles finish 14-17-1.

Royals send struggling White Sox to sixth straight loss

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Danny Duffy pitched a strong six innings and ended a nine-start winless skid, and Jorge Soler and Nicky Lopez hit back-to-back RBI singles twice as the Kansas City Royals beat the Chicago White Sox 7-5 on Wednesday night.

Duffy (4-5) who took a liner off his throwing hand against Detroit in his last start Friday, scattered six hits and struck out five in sending Chicago to its season-worst sixth straight loss.

Duffy’s strong start followed Jakob Junis’ seven innings of one-run ball Monday and Glenn Sparkman’s complete game shutout Tuesday.

The second of Soler and Lopez’s consecutive two-out, RBI hits put Kansas City up 6-0 and gave Duffy some run support. The Royals had scored just 15 runs over Duffy’s last eight outings.

A.J. Reed hit a three-run homer, his first, with two outs in the ninth inning off Wily Peralta. Ian Kennedy entered the game and completed the one-out save, his 15th in 18 opportunities..

Ivan Nova (4-9) lasted just 4 2/3 innings and struggled with his command. He allowed six runs and six hits with five walks. White Sox starters have struggled over the last three weeks, going 4-8 with a 5.11 ERA in the last 17 games. The last White Sox starter to throw more than six innings was Lucas Giolito on June 8.

Ryan Goins homered in his first major league game this season, a two-run shot into the Royals’ bullpen in the sixth inning. That snapped a 15-inning scoring drought for the White Sox that dating to Monday’s game.

The White Sox have scored just 18 runs in their last eight games and scored more than three runs for the first time since Independence Day. In six games since the All-Star break, Chicago has been outscored 44-12.

The Royals have come roaring out of the All-Star break, winning five of six, for their best stretch of the season. Kansas City has also won two consecutive series for the first time this season.

Soler and Lopez also slapped RBI singles in the first inning, the fourth time in six games since the All-Star break Kansas City has scored in the opening frame.

Whit Merrifield had three more hits and was on base five times, extending his hitting streak to 15 games. He also increased his league-leading hit total to 128. During the streak, Merrifield is hitting .410 (25-61).

BASERUNNING GAFFES

Kansas City made three outs on the basepaths and Chicago made two. Merrifield was thrown out trying to advance to third on a ground out in the first inning and was picked off between first and second to end the second inning. Soler ended the fifth inning when he was thrown out at second after Lopez’s single. Leury Garcia was doubled off second on a line drive by James McCann, ending a threat by the White Sox in the fourth inning. Wellington Castillo was thrown out trying to advance to third on a passed ball in the fifth.

UP NEXT

The Royals and White Sox conclude their four-game set with a day game Thursday. Brad Keller (5-9) will start for the Royals, looking to continue a strong July. Keller has allowed just two runs in 13 2/3 innings this month and is coming off a career-high eight innings Saturday in a 4-1 win over Detroit. Ross Detwiler will get the ball for the White Sox, making his third start of the season. The righthander is 1-0 with a 5.02 ERA this year.

McCrae advances to Match Play at the Kansas Amateur

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. – Former Hays High standout Tradgon McCrae has advanced to match play at the 109th Kansas Amateur at Milburn Country Club in Overland Park.

McCrae shot rounds of 73 and 76 to finish 5-over in his two qualifying rounds and is one of 64 golfers to advance to Thursday’s first round of match play where he is paired with Pete Krsnich of Wichita.

Krsnich finished at 1-over par in his two qualifying rounds.

Kan. school superintendent: Did not know nurse had been fired on sex allegations

DE SOTO, Kan. (AP) — The superintendent of a suburban Kansas City school district says he wasn’t aware that a school nurse who’s charged with two counts of unlawful sexual relations with a minor had faced similar accusations at a previous job.

Finazzo photo Johnson Co.

De Soto, Kansas, Superintendent Frank Harwood said Tuesday that Richard Finazzo wouldn’t have been hired if the district “had any idea” of the suspicions. Charging documents say Finazzo resigned from De Soto High School in October while under suspicion for the same conduct that led to his firing two years ago from the nearby Gardner-Edgerton High School.

Prosecutors say Finazzo has claimed he was the victim of a “double standard” that wouldn’t apply to female nurses. The Gardner-Edgerton district didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment from The Star or The Associated Press.

Court upholds death sentence in case that prompted Kan. Amber Alert

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — The Missouri Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence for a man who kidnapped, raped and killed a 10-year-old girl in Springfield. The search for Hailey Owens prompted a state-wide Amber Alert in Kansas and Missouri.

Craig Wood-photo MDC

The court ruled Tuesday that the decisions of the trial court judge in Craig Wood’s case were appropriate and that the death sentence wasn’t disproportionate.

At issue was that jurors who convicted Wood of first-degree murder in the 2014 death of Owens couldn’t decide whether to sentence him to death or life in prison without parole. That left the decision in the hands of the judge who oversaw Wood’s trial.

Missouri and Indiana are the only states where a judge can impose a death sentence. Other states follow the federal procedure that a defendant is sentenced to life imprisonment if jurors deadlock.

Lawrence will require bar managers get sex harassment training

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence city leaders have voted to require some bar and restaurant workers to get sexual violence intervention training.

A large crowd attended the commission meeting -image courtesy city of Lawerence

The city commission adopted an ordinance Tuesday requiring the training as a requirement for the establishments to keep their local liquor licenses.

The ordinance requires training for on-site managers. Both the city-issued license and a state liquor license are required to serve alcoholic beverages.

Businesses where alcohol is not consumed, such as liquor and grocery stores, are exempt.

Several bar owners asked for the city to reconsider the ordinance, saying they were concerned that intervening in harassment situations could create liability for a bar owner and that it might hurt some bars financially.

Couple wins 1, loses 1 discrimination lawsuit against Emporia State

EMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — A black couple who filed separate discrimination lawsuits against Emporia State University won one lawsuit while the other was dismissed.

Melvin Hale-photo Emporia State

A federal judge ruled Tuesday the university retaliated against Angelica Hale by not renewing her contract after she complained about racial discrimination during the 2014-2015 school year. A jury on Monday dismissed her husband Melvin’s $10 million lawsuit against five university administrators.

The couple worked at Emporia State’s School of Library and Information Management. They alleged their employment ended after they found a racial slur written in a notebook and pushed for an investigation.

U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree awarded Angelica Hale damages of $1 and said she may recover her costs. She also will be allowed to submit a brief concerning whether front pay, reinstatement and back pay are appropriate.

Repairs on heat-buckled street to begin Monday

High temperatures caused 22nd Street to buckle on the west side of the Canterbury Drive intersection late Tuesday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Hays PD)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

High temperatures in Hays caused 22nd Street and the nearby sidewalk to buckle at the Canterbury Drive intersection late Tuesday afternoon, closing 22nd between Douglas and Canterbury Drive.

The official high in Hays yesterday was 97 degrees, according to the report from the K-State Agricultural Research Center.

City of Hays Public Works employees have done some temporary work on the road.

The city issued a notice Wednesday afternoon that pavement repairs will begin Monday, July 22 at 7 a.m., requiring East 22nd to be closed to through traffic at Canterbury Drive.

The work is expected to be completed by Friday, July 26 at the end of of the day.

 

A year after tragedy, Branson debates future of duck boats

BRANSON, Mo. (AP) — One year after 17 people died when a boat sank on a Missouri lake near the tourist town of Branson, the question of whether the boats should return to the lake remains a topic of debate.

Duck boat involved in the fatal accident- Photo courtesy NTSB

Former Branson Mayor Karen Best had to inform the 17 victims’ families that they had died when the boat sank during a storm on July 19, 2018, on Table Rock Lake. She said she will never forget the cries and screaming of the families and survivors.

“I don’t know that they need to come back to this community,” Best said about the duck boats.

The amphibious vehicles, which operated on land and water, were a popular attraction in Branson for nearly 50 years. They are not operating this year, and Ripley Entertainment, which owns Branson Ride The Ducks, has not said whether they will return, The Kansas City Star reported .

The current mayor, Edd Akers, who was elected in April, said it’s possible the duck boats could return to Branson if they are altered and have improved safety features.

“They’re still operating in other parts of the country,” he said. “They are still successful in different areas. You know, if they are meant to come back and are supposed to come back, I think it could.”

Akers acknowledged that the boats are still a sensitive topic after the tragedy.

“I just want you to know that people are still hurting here,” he said.

Thirty-one people were aboard when the duck boat entered the lake. A storm came up suddenly and the waves swamped the boat before it could make it back to shore. Fourteen people survived.

First responders on the scene of the July 2018 Duck Boat accident -photo courtesy KYTV

Some witnesses aboard the Showboat Branson Belle and first responders who tried to save people have struggled with emotional and psychological scars left from the tragedy.

“I have good friends who were on the showboat, either working there or saw the tragedy take place,” Akers said. “Start talking to them and their eyes water because they saw things that they don’t like to remember.”

Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader recalled “utter chaos” at the scene and being told 31 people were aboard the boat but not being able to see many survivors.

“In almost 30 years of law enforcement, that was probably one of the most traumatic events I have been involved in,” He said. ” . I had a deputy on there (the Belle) who jumped in and helped save people and dragged the deceased out of the water. He’ll forever be affected by that. The emotional impact it made on everyone in this area, that tragedy will never be forgotten.”

Tia Coleman, of Indianapolis, lost her husband, three children and five other relatives in the sinking. She said in a statement Tuesday that she draws energy from the memory of her family as she continues her fight to ban “dangerous, death trap duck boats like the one that killed my family and the others.”

Interviews with tourists visiting Branson recently found they were also split on whether the boats should return. Some said the attraction should open again because the sinking was a freak accident caused by a storm that came up to quickly or bad judgment by the operators. Others said they would never consider riding the boats, even if they were altered or improved.

Court filings by Ripley Entertainment this month show that 19 of 33 others who have filed claims against the company have already settled. Three duck boat employees, including the captain, Kenneth Scott McKee, 52, face criminal prosecution.

Akers said that once all the lawsuits are settled, he will propose that the city create a memorial to the duck boat victims.

“I want a peaceful, reverent place,” the mayor said, “close to the lake where families of those lost family members, or those who were affected by the tragedy, could come and pay their respects. That would, to me, be the ideal way to honor those folks.”

Nancy Ann Stewart

Nancy Ann Stewart, born Nancy Ann Scheimo on October 20, 1955, went home to be with the Lord on July 9, 2019 following a long battle with lung cancer and neuropathy. She passed away peacefully at home in the presence of family.

Nancy confessed Jesus Christ as her savior and was baptized in 1965. As an adult later in life, she renewed this affirmation of Christ.

While she was born in Princeton, Minnesota, her family moved several times during her childhood, as her father was a pastor. In Minnesota she lived in Minneapolis, Spring Lake Park, and Ridgefield. In 1959, her family moved to Norton, Kansas, for the first time. They then moved to Goodland and Hays, also in Kansas, and then to Denver, Colorado, where Nancy graduated from Lakewood High School in 1973.

After graduation and while still in Denver, she worked at Parker Drilling Company and the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department. While Nancy enjoyed both jobs and gained valuable knowledge and experience, she needed a change and decided to try her luck in California. By the time she decided to leave, her parents had moved back to Norton and in 1983, she moved back in with them. She also joined the church her parents had helped create and build, the Full Gospel Church (now Cornerstone Church), which she considered “her church” thereafter. In 1984 she gave birth to her son, Justin. In the years following she worked as a bookkeeper at Norton Sheet Metal and the Andbe Home and was able to purchase and make a lovely home for her and her son.

In March of 1997 she married Delmer Stewart and later that year, gave birth to her daughter, Kristin. She continued work as a bookkeeper for C&R Western Construction and then Western Pest Control, but her time after was mostly spent as a mother and homemaker.

Nancy loved her family more than anything in this world. Anyone who knew her well realized that she’d sacrifice anything for her kids and loved nothing more than devoting her time to family. She was raised in the teachings of the Bible, which helped her in the journey of life to find her own walk with Jesus. Her kids benefited from this as she always did her best to instill in them those same teachings.

While she may not have thought so herself, everyone knew how personable Nancy was, making friends with just about anyone. She loved visiting and chatting with people from all walks of life, no matter how well she knew them. Music was usually flowing through her head; she could often be found humming or “jamming out” to rock and hair band music or praising Jesus with modern/contemporary worship music . . . anything from Beach Boys to Led Zeppelin to Aerosmith to Fleetwood Mac to Newsboys to Casting Crowns and everything in between.

Nancy is preceded in death by several aunts and uncles.

Survivors include her husband, Delmer Stewart; son, Justin Scheimo and daughter, Kristin Stewart; parents, Ron & Sylvia Scheimo; brother, Tom (and Hope) Scheimo; sister, Debbie (and Samuel) Pessoa; nephews, Eric (and Eun Hee) Scheimo and Daniel Pessoa; nieces, Sarah Scheimo and Elizabeth Pessoa; as well as one grandniece, Julia.

The family will conduct a memorial service on Thursday, July 18th, 2019 at 2:00 p.m. in the Cornerstone Church, Norton, KS, with Pastor Rob Mohr officiating.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Dreiling/Schmidt Cancer Institution of Hays c/o Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, P. O. Box 563, Phillipsburg, KS 67661.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File