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Fort Hays State’s Stramel elected KATM president

Stramel

FHSU University Relations

Fort Hays State University’s Dr. Janet Stramel, associate professor of teacher education, was recently elected to serve as president of the Kansas Association of Teachers and Mathematics.

Stramel will serve as KATM president for the 2019-2020 year and will lead more than 30,000 elementary and secondary math teachers across Kansas.

KATM, an affiliate of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, fosters an engaged community to advance effective practices in teaching and learning mathematics throughout Kansas.

Goals of KATM include: to create and maintain greater interest in the learning and teaching of mathematics; to provide opportunities for professional growth and development of teachers of mathematics; to provide a forum through which educators can discuss and respond to issues and activities affecting mathematics education in Kansas and the nation; to promote the value of learning mathematics; and to foster cordial relations among and between various groups in Kansas who are interested in and impacted by mathematics education in Kansas.

SPONSORED: Hays chamber seeking membership coordinator

The Hays Area Chamber of Commerce (HACC) is seeking qualified applicants for the full-time position of Membership Coordinator. This position reports to the President/CEO of the HACC and works closely with the rest of the HACC staff, Board of Directors, Chamber members and other stakeholders. This position is responsible for communicating, connecting and developing quality relationships with existing and prospective chamber members. Furthermore, this position will assist with selling sponsorships and other event programming details.

Must have proficiency in general computer skills in Word and Excel; strong written and oral communication abilities; able to build effective rapport with others; be highly energetic, organized and self-motivated with superior attention to details; be able to understand, assist and promote the Chamber mission. Send cover letter and resume to:

Sarah Wasinger
Hays Area Chamber of Commerce
2700 Vine Street
Hays, KS 67601
[email protected]

Resumes will be accepted until position filled. For more information, click HERE.

First Five: When is a religious symbol not a religious symbol?

Benjamin P. Marcus is religious literacy specialist at the Religious Freedom Center of the Freedom Forum Institute.

By BENJAMIN MARCUS
Freedom Forum Institute

Can a Latin cross ever be anything other than a symbol of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus? Can religious symbols or practices — Christian, Hindu, Native American or other — take on other meanings?

In the “Peace Cross Case” — American Legion v. American Humanist Association — the U.S. Supreme Court was presented with the question of whether it was constitutional for a 32-foot cross, maintained by taxpayer dollars, to remain on Maryland state property, where it has been since 1925.

Justice Samuel Alito, a Roman Catholic, wrote: “The cross came into widespread use as a symbol of Christianity by the fourth century and it retains that meaning today. But there are many contexts in which the symbol has also taken on a secular meaning. Indeed, there are instances in which its message is now almost entirely secular.”

Perhaps the most important question raised by the ruling: Are courts or government agencies competent to adjudicate what is religious and what is not?

I think not. But the more we include religion in government-funded, public spaces, the more that courts and government agencies will be asked to determine the meaning and significance of religious symbols and practices.

Let’s go back to the Peace Cross Case. The cross in question was completed by the American Legion in 1925 to honor fallen soldiers from Bladensburg, Md., during World War I. A Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist pastor took part in the dedication ceremony and U.S. Rep. Stephen W. Gambrill asked attendees to think of the cross as “symbolic of Calvary.”

What did the court say? The cross can stay. It does not violate the Establishment Clause. Why? Justice Alito — writing the majority opinion and joined by Chief Justice Roberts and justices Breyer, Kagan and Kavanaugh — explained that though the cross is certainly religious for some folks, “With sufficient time, religiously expressive monuments, symbols and practices can become embedded features of a community’s landscape and identity. The community may come to value them without necessarily embracing their religious roots.”

Perhaps this ruling, and the court’s reasoning, should not surprise us. After all, 25 years ago, in the majority opinion in Lynch v. Donnelly, the U.S. Supreme Court repeatedly referred to wreaths, garlands, reindeer, carolers and even Santa Claus as “secular images” and “secular figures.” Tell that to the Christian carolers singing “O Come, O Come Emmanuel.” Or to Saint Nicholas of Myra.

The upshot? If religious communities want to spare themselves the pain of having a court say that a Latin cross or Santa are not primarily religious symbols for some people in some circumstances, then religious communities should reconsider whether it is in their best interest to ask governments to play a role in creating or maintaining religious symbols or practices in the public square.

Ultimately this is about what we want our government saying about religion. History tells us that individuals and communities ascribe new meanings to religious symbols and even religious ritual practices, in different times and places. The American Academy of Religion — the world’s largest and most respected professional association for scholars who study religion — affirms that a central premise of the study of religion is that religious interpretations and expressions change over time as they influence and are influenced by culture. But should we ask the government in a religiously diverse democracy to dictate how society should understand specific religious symbols or practices?

To be fair to courts, deciding whether a symbol or practice is religious, secular or both can be an incredibly difficult task that vexes even the most savvy theologians and religious studies scholars. It is precisely because answers to questions of definition and classification are so nuanced — and so important — that we should avoid putting the government in a position to make the call whenever possible.

Take yoga as a reminder of what is at stake. The type of yoga practiced today by tens of millions of Americans in the United States is often considered a secular physical activity that promotes mindfulness. Yet it has its origins in a Hindu religious practice. In 2015, the Court of Appeal for the Fourth Appellate District in California was asked to decide whether a yoga program in a physical education class is a religious activity that violates the California Constitution’s ban on the establishment of religion. Its answer: no. You might agree with the decision. But have you contemplated its effect on the religious identities of the Hindu Americans who started a Take Back Yoga campaign in 2010 because they mourned the fact that “Hinduism has lost control of [yoga’s] brand?”

Or take lacrosse. I would guess that fewer Americans recognize the connection — historic and contemporary — between the stick-and-ball sport and religion. Yet members of the Haudenosaunee, including the Onondaga Nation, consider the game to be sacred. From the Onondaga Nation website: “It is a game that was given by the Creator, to be played for the Creator, and has been known to have healing power.” What pain do we inflict on Haudenosaunee communities when we ignore the religious significance of the game while playing it in our public schools?

I do not mean to suggest it is easy to determine the extent to which yoga and lacrosse are religious — and by extension whether they should be allowed in public schools. But I know that when courts and government agencies decide that yoga and lacrosse are not entirely religious, they can compound the pain of religious communities that already consider themselves marginalized.

Back to Bladensburg. The Supreme Court affirmed the religious significance of the Latin cross, but they also suggested that the cross might be understood as both a religious and secular symbol in certain contexts. That should give pause to those Christians who feel sidelined by secularism but support governmental ownership and upkeep of the Peace Cross.

In the aftermath of the case, Harvey Weiner, the national judge advocate of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States Inc., lamented the suggestion that the Peace Cross is not primarily a symbol of Christ: “Alas, to Christians, that a war memorial Latin cross has significant meanings other than being the ultimate symbol of Christianity.”

So next time you want the government to support a religious practice or display your most cherished religious symbol, consider whether you are willing to have the government later say that those symbols or practices are not entirely religious after all.

Benjamin P. Marcus is religious literacy specialist at the Religious Freedom Center of the Freedom Forum Institute. His email address is: [email protected].

KBI: Statewide Silver Alert issued for missing McPherson woman

Schoen photo KBI

MCPHERSON COUNTY – The McPherson Police Department requested that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) issue a statewide Silver Alert for a missing McPherson woman.

The whereabouts of Sharoll Joy Schoen, 65, are unknown, and the public’s assistance is requested to help locate her. Sharoll was last seen on July 11, 2019 at approximately 5:30 p.m. leaving the VFW, 120 S. Taft St, in McPherson, Ks.

Sharoll is 5 feet 4 inches tall and weighs 150 pounds. Sharoll has grey hair, brown eyes and glasses. She was last seen wearing light blue jeans, bright green shirt, and glasses. Sharoll is prescribed medication, which she is required to take, and she does not have with her. Please see attached photograph.

If located, please contact the McPherson Police Department at (620)245‐1266 or call 911.

Kansas companies participate in STEP grant trade missions

Mike Bergmeier, left, of Shield Ag in Hutchinson, speaks with potential customers at the AGRO 2019 ag equipment show in Ukraine.

KDA

MANHATTAN — The Kansas Department of Agriculture recently hosted two State Trade Expansion Program (STEP) Grant trade missions to Foro Mascotas Pet Food International in Guadalajara, Mexico, and AGRO 2019 in Kyiv, Ukraine. The trade missions provided Kansas companies an opportunity to showcase and offer their products to an international audience. Companies participating in the trade mission to Mexico included: Engineered Systems and Equipment (E.S.E), Caney, and NorthWind Technical Services, Sabetha. Companies participating in the trade mission to Ukraine included: Moridge Manufacturing Inc. (Grasshopper Company), Moundridge, ShieldAg Equipment, Hutchinson, and USC, Sabetha.

“The STEP Grant was designed to help small businesses expand their exports. We’ve been fortunate in Kansas to have received the STEP grant to help Kansas farmers, ranchers and agribusinesses to explore new markets or increase the value of export sales in existing markets,” said Suzanne Ryan-Numrich, international trade director at KDA.

Exports are important to the Kansas economy. In 2018, over $3.8 billion of agricultural goods were shipped around the globe to 74 different countries.

The trade missions were sponsored by KDA and funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration using a STEP grant in cooperation with the Kansas Department of Commerce.

Ray Garvey, export manager at the Grasshopper Company, was among those who traveled to AGRO 2019. “From my point of view, there are several aspects of the AGRO show that were a success,” he said. “I want to thank the state of Kansas and the SBA for this opportunity to discover a new market in Ukraine. I’m looking forward to further exploring this market for my company.”

The Kansas Department of Agriculture is dedicated to providing an environment that enhances and encourages economic growth of the agriculture industry and the Kansas economy including the further development and expansion of marketing opportunities for agricultural goods and services around the globe.

The KDA is offering an upcoming opportunity for Kansas farmers, ranchers and agribusinesses to participate in a livestock genetic trade mission to Uruguay this fall, from September 10-16. Additionally, two STEP Grant trade missions are planned for 2020: VICTAM Asia/Petfood Forum Asia, Bangkok, Thailand, March 24-26; and NAMPO Harvest Day, Bothaville, South Africa, May 12-15. Interested persons should contact Ryan-Numrich at [email protected] or 785-564-6704.

Divis homer leads Larks past Denver

HAYS – Wyatt Divis hit a three-run homer to break a 3-3 tie in the third inning to lead the Hays Larks to a 7-3 win over the Denver Cougars Friday night at Larks Park.

Justin Lee had three of the Larks 12 hits and drove in two runs as the Larks (27-7) won their sixth straight.

After giving up three runs in the second, Ryan Ruder (5-1) pitched four scoreless innings and picked up the win. Ruder struck out four with one walk over six innings. Trevor Munsch, Drew Marrufo and Tommy Garcia combined to pitch three scoreless innings to close out the game.

The Larks continue their final weekend homestand of the season Saturday night with the first to two against the Boulder Collegians.

Maldonado, Soler hit home runs, Royals beat Tigers

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Martin Maldonado was as shocked as anyone by his tiebreaking homer in the seventh inning.

“No, I thought it was a pop up,” Maldonado said. “I’ve hit balls better than that and they’ve been caught, so I was happy to be rounding third base.”

Maldonado hit a solo homer off Detroit reliever Blaine Hardy that snapped a 5-all tie. Then, Whit Merrifield doubled, stole third and scored on a wild pitch, and Jorge Soler added an insurance run with his 24th homer in the eighth inning as the Royals beat the Tigers 8-5.

Bubba Starling was hitless in his long-awaited major league debut for Kansas City, and the Royals lost starter Danny Duffy to a bruised pitching hand.

Starling, a three-sport star from nearby Gardner-Edgerton (Kan.) High School who was taken by the Royals in the first round of the 2011 draft, ended his 7 ½-year pilgrimage through the minors. He was greeted by a standing ovation from the crowd of 25,059. He walked in his first at-bat in the second inning and scored on a throwing error. He struck out and grounded out twice.

“It was really, really special,” Starling said. “It kind of gave me goosebumps walking up to the box. I kind of settled in after that first at-bat but I definitely had nerves walking in there.”

Playing center field, Starling tried for a diving catch of a sinking liner off the bat of Victor Reyes in the sixth inning, but it went off his glove for a run-scoring double.

“I thought I had a bead on it. Took a step back and then went in on it. But it hit the tip of my glove,” Starling said.

Reyes had three hits and scored twice for the Tigers.

Reyes opened the Tigers’ third with a liner off Duffy’s left hand for a single. Duffy was examined by a trainer and, after a practice toss, stayed in the game. But the left-hander immediately struggled.

Duffy threw a wild pitch and then walked Nicholas Castellanos. Miguel Cabrera followed with a run-scoring single and Brandon Dixon lined an RBI double to right center to give the Tigers a 3-2 lead. Duffy was then pulled in favor of right-hander Jorge Lopez.

Duffy sustained a contusion of the left hand, but the Royals reported that X-rays were negative and his status is day to day.

“It got me kind of on the thumb pad,” Duffy said. “It just went numb and if that’s how your hand feels on the baseball, it’s not going to work out too often. I hate coming out of the game but I’m really thankful with the way my guys picked me up.”

The Tigers scored another run when first baseman Cheslor Cuthbert made an error on a sharp grounder by Jeimer Candelario. Lopez got out of the inning with a strikeout and a double play and worked three scoreless innings. In fact, five Royals relievers combined for seven innings and surrendered just three hits and one run.

“The bullpen came in and did a wonderful job,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “The bullpen was fantastic.”

Cuthbert redeemed himself in the bottom half of the inning with a two-run homer off Tigers starter Spencer Turnbull, giving the Royals a 5-4 lead. The 400-foot blast to left followed a walk to Alex Gordon and an RBI double by Soler.

Turnbull, a rookie, was making his first appearance since June 27 due to shoulder fatigue. He made 56 pitches and worked just three innings, giving up five runs.

“It’s a growing experience. He’s a little confused right now, I’m sure,” Tigers manager Ron Gardenhire said. “They made him work, they got him early on some breaking balls. He went just three innings, but that’s his first comeback after having the dead arm. His arm’s fine, he’s physically great. He was just out of gas. His legs were a little weak and he just kind of hit a wall.”

Jake Newberry (1-0) picked up the win; Ian Kennedy struck out two and earned the save.

Hardy (1-1) allowed two hits and two earned runs with a strikeout in 2/3 of an inning for the loss.

DFA FOR GORE

To make room for Starling on the roster, the Royals designated fleet outfielder Terrance Gore for assignment. General manager Dayton Moore said he had this message for Gore: “We’ll try to find you a contending team so you can do your thing in October.” Moore said Gore has “made his mark by being an elite base stealer in some of the most high-pressure situations the game has to offer.”

In 37 games this season, Gore batted .275 (14-for-51) and stole 13 bases in 18 attempts. The 27-year-old Gore appeared in the 2014-15 postseasons for the Royals and had four steals in five tries.

PEREZ ON SCHEDULE

Catcher Salvador Perez, out for the season with Tommy John surgery, is due to test his right arm with some throwing by the end of the month, according to trainer Nick Kenney. “We wanted to get him at least to the 20-week mark to allow everything to set in,” Kenney said. “He’s right on schedule.”

UP NEXT

The Royals send RHP Brad Keller (4-9, 4.47 ERA) against the Tigers on Saturday night. The Tigers’ starter is LHP Matthew Boyd (6-6, 3.87), who ranks third in the American League, averaging nearly 12 strikeouts per nine innings.

DFA FOR GORE

To make room for Starling on the roster, the Royals designated fleet outfielder Terrance Gore for assignment. General manager Dayton Moore said he had this message for Gore: “We’ll try to find you a contending team so you can do your thing in October.” Moore said Gore has “made his mark by being an elite base stealer in some of the most high-pressure situations the game has to offer.”

In 37 games this season, Gore batted .275 (14-for-51) and stole 13 bases in 18 attempts. The 27-year-old Gore appeared in the 2014-15 postseasons for the Royals and had four steals in five tries.

PEREZ ON SCHEDULE

Catcher Salvador Perez, out for the season with Tommy John surgery, is due to test his right arm with some throwing by the end of the month, according to trainer Nick Kenney. “We wanted to get him at least to the 20-week mark to allow everything to set in,” Kenney said. “He’s right on schedule.”

UP NEXT

The Royals send RHP Brad Keller (4-9, 4.47 ERA) against the Tigers on Saturday night. The Tigers’ starter is LHP Matthew Boyd (6-6, 3.87), who ranks third in the American League, averaging nearly 12 strikeouts per nine innings.

Police: Kan. man jailed for alleged home invasion, sex assault

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an alleged home-invasion sex crime and have made an arrest.

Johnson photo Sedgwick County

Just after 2a.m. June 16, a suspect later identified as 23-year-old Marquel L. Johnson entered, without permission, the apartment of a 64-year-old woman in the 9200 Block of East Harry in Wichita, according to officer Kevin Wheeler.

Johnson allegedly exposed his genitals and touched her in appropriately, according to Wheeler.

On Thursday, police arrested Johnson for trespassing and for a warrant in connection with the alleged behavior.

He is being held on a $25,000 bond for Aggravated Sexual Battery and Lewd and Lascivious Behavior, according to online booking records.

Comeau discusses fall of Dessin Fournir

By CANDACE RACHEL
Plainville Times Editor

PLAINVILLE — Following the June 27 auction of the Plainville Livestock Commission real estate and effects, another Plainville business is scheduled to go under the auction block Aug. 1.

The other shoe has dropped for Chuck Comeau and Dessin Fournir Cos. The once madly successful DFC Holdings, which includes several businesses in Plainville and Hays, despite filing for restructuring bankruptcy, is to be sold by sheriff’s auction.

RELATED: Dessin Fournir properties set for sheriff’s sale; bankruptcy case dismissed

Comeau commented that several things added up to the demise of the company, that virtually blindsided the company’s plan.

“Prior to 2008, there was nothing we could do wrong,” Comeau said. “It was all we could do to stay in front of it.”

The recession of 2008 started knocking the dominoes down, and according to Comeau, things went from bad to worse.
“Most businesses were developed to grow,” he said. “The hardest thing to do is to downsize. After 2008, in a nine-month period, we lost 40 percent of our business, and it’s been a fight ever since the recession happened. We had an infrastructure here and around the country to support growth, not to get smaller.”

He added leased show rooms in major cities across the country couldn’t be put on hold.

Comeau had to begin scaling down staff in 2016, and again in 2017.

“We tried to continue to grow, but the beginning of 2015 and into 2016, there was a huge change I did not expect. Into 2017, I lost all of my partners in one year.”

In 2017-2018, partner Chris Mraz suffered a disabling stroke; Comeau’s second partner, Len Larson developed severe dementia, and a financial partner died in August.

“It was all over. It was like all the pieces were thrown up in the air, and I had to catch them,” he said.

Not one to look for sympathy, Comeau said it all was on him, not anyone else’s problem, but he began to wonder what else could go wrong.

“All you’re doing [then] is to try to figure out how to stay afloat, and  you need to stop and reorganize,” he said. “We had to furlough everybody in April — and we thought it would be a short one, but it wasn’t.”

Comeau said steps to stop expenses were taken, and showrooms in New York,  Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco were closed.

Had the restructuring been given, Comeau and  his staff decided on different ways of selling the company’s products. His customers — high-end designers — now do the bulk of their shopping online.

“It’s hard to go from feeling positive to feeling negative,” Comeau said, “and losing key people.”

Comeau’s health has also been challenged. He believes stress has a part of those issues.

“But you just try to get out of a situation and give yourself time to heal,” he said. “There are a lot of things to be thankful for. I  have a brand new grandson, and now I have a daughter-in-law, so I have four kids, I have a great wife, and live in a great community.”

He said the biggest stumbling block to selling the company is that buyers want to take the business somewhere else.

Comeau and his doctors are keeping track of the non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma since 2016, and none other than his local hospital is where he prefers to be, any time he needs care.

He became ill when he was in New York, and those around him wanted to take him to a hospital there. Comeau commanded them to get him on a plane, so he could check himself  into Rooks County Health Center.

With the future up in the air, Comeau said, “for the last 20 years this town has been the backbone of this company.”

Now that future will be determined in the front lobby of the Ellis County Courthouse.

Governor appoints 3 members to Kansas Board of Regents

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Laura Kelly has appointed three members to the Kansas Board of Regents.

The governor’s office announced in a news release Friday her picks for the governing body of the state’s six Regents universities and other educational institutions.

Her three appointees are Cheryl Harrison-Lee, Jon Rolph and Shellaine “Shelly” Kiblinger.

Harrison-Lee of Gardner recently served as city administrator for the city of Gardner, Kansas.

Rolph of Wichita is president and CEO of Thrive Restaurant Group, which owns and operates restaurants in 10 states.

Kiblinger of Cherryvale is superintendent of Cherryvale Public Schools.

The bipartisan board is made up of nine members who serve staggered terms of four years. Each is appointed by the governor and subject to confirmation by the state Senate.

Janet M. Jansonius

Prairie View resident Janet M. Jansonius passed away Thursday, July 11, 2019 at her home in Prairie View at the age of 69.

She was born in Hays, KS on May 28, 1950, the daughter of Harold & Jeannine (Bartlett) McCue. She was preceded in death by her first husband, Charles Nichol.

Survivors include her husband, Rodney Jansonius of Prairie View; her son, Ryan Nichol of Russell, KS and stepson, Jacob Jansonius of Omaha, NE; her daughter, Amy Nichol of Leoti, KS; stepdaughters, Jennifer Duley of San Antonio, TX and Joni Goodsell of Geneva, IL; her brother, Duane McCue of Logan, KS; her sister, Karen McCue of Honolulu, HI; two grandchildren, Renee & Dominic Nichol; and three step grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Monday, July 15, 2019 at 10:30 a.m. in the Prairie View Reformed Church, Prairie View, with Pastor Lew VanDerWege officiating. Burial will follow in the Pleasant View Cemetery, Logan, KS.

Visitation will be Saturday & Sunday from noon – 9 p.m. at the Logan Funeral Home in Logan. The family will receive friends Sunday evening from 6 – 8 p.m. at the funeral home.

Memorial contributions may be given to the Logan Public Library or the Prairie View Public Library.

Police identify woman shot at Kansas deli who has died

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Police say a woman who was critically wounded in a double shooting at a Kansas City, Kansas, deli has died from her injuries.

Police on the scene of the shooting investigation photo courtesy KCTV

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department identified her in a news release as 42-year-old Lachell Day of Kansas City, Kansas.

The shooting Wednesday at the Edwards Original Corner Market & Deli also killed market owner Dennis Edwards. Police arrested a suspect after a standoff at the deli and took him to a hospital with a gunshot wound.

Ellis Nave told The Kansas City Star that Day was his niece and she had been dating the suspect. Police say she died Thursday night.

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