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Hot, breezy Sunday

Today
Mostly sunny, with a high near 97. Breezy, with a south wind 11 to 16 mph increasing to 17 to 22 mph in the afternoon.

Tonight
Partly cloudy, with a low around 73. South wind around 18 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 98. South southwest wind 15 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 29 mph.

Monday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 71. South wind 13 to 15 mph.

Tuesday
Sunny, with a high near 85. West southwest wind 11 to 15 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 60.

Wednesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.

Wednesday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 65.

Thursday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 93.

Learning outside the classroom, outside the U.S., an invaluable experience for FHSU students

By DIANE GASPER-O’BRIEN
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

While preparing for his first trip abroad this summer, Jacob Long wasn’t sure what to expect. After all, he had only visited two other states while growing up in rural north-central Kansas.

It turned out to be even more of a learning experience than anticipated for Long, who joined 17 fellow Fort Hays State University students on a study abroad trip to Costa Rica.

Now, Long enters his junior year at FHSU with a newfound energy after spending three weeks learning in a much different way than in a classroom. And he would recommend taking such a trip to every student.

“I had been to New Mexico once for a mission trip and to New York for spring break, but that’s about it,” said Long, who grew up on a farm in Smith County. “I love traveling, and it’s been a dream of mine to go outside the country, so this was the perfect opportunity to do that.”

“And, I learned so much,” he added, with an emphasis on the word “so.”

The trip, sponsored by the Department of Teacher Education – believed to be a first-time venture for that department – was open to all FHSU students, regardless of their majors. Participants had the option to enroll in a teacher education course that supported the study abroad experience by journaling, and a few of them enrolled in a course to earn Spanish credit.

Long said he had a hard time deciding on the one- or three-week option, but he is thankful he chose the latter.

“The three-week thing was a last-minute decision for me,” he said. “I decided if I was going to go, one week seemed kind of short.”

Long attended Spanish classes four days a week and visited sites on the weekends with a student from Sweden who was staying with the same host family as Long.

During his stay, Long soaked up the culture. He was introduced to public transportation by bus, hiking and visiting popular tourist attractions such as the Monteverde Biological Reserve. Monteverde is a cloud forest high up in the mountains where clouds hover around the upper canopy and drop mist on the trees and plants below.

“The clouds go right through it, and it was amazing,” he said. “You would be walking through the forest and see mist coming down.”

One of Long’s first culture shocks, he said, “was how disorganized the traffic was. They don’t have any traffic signs and not many stop lights.”

Long visited a coffee bean farm, much different than the farm where grew up and where his family grows milo, wheat, corn and soy beans.

The FHSU students lived with host families during their stay. But Long – a music education major who is minoring in Spanish – said despite his knowledge of their native language, the learning curve was still steep.

“That’s one thing you can’t get in the classroom is the dialect, so that was difficult sometimes,” Long said. “But the more I was forced to speak Spanish, the more I realized I actually knew. I would doubt myself what to say, and that’s when I struggled the most. You don’t realize what you’re capable of until you’re in a position you can’t do anything else.”

That’s exactly what Dr. Chris Jochum had in mind when he began helping organize the trip to Costa Rica.

Jochum, chair of the Department of Teacher Education, had sponsored study abroad trips of this kind at other institutions. Last fall, in his second year at FHSU, he decided to give Fort Hays State students the same opportunity, which is for some a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

“Studying abroad is an invaluable life experience for college students as it provides them with a unique perspective, understanding and appreciation of individuals with different backgrounds, world views and native languages, which enhances their cultural awareness and global competency,” he said.

Jochum co-sponsored the trip with Dr. Elodie Jones and Dr. Betsy Crawford, assistant professors in the Department of Advanced Education Programs, and Dr. Chris Mohn, chair of the Department of Modern Languages. They said they plan to offer the same trip in June 2019.

“Trying to teach diversity in class is like trying to teach someone to swim by giving them an instruction manual,” Jochum said. “Fort Hays State does a wonderful job of exposing students to different worlds. What better way to embody that mission than to offer our students the opportunity to take a trip abroad.”

Anyone interested in participating in next summer’s trip should contact Jochum at [email protected].

“By and large, the kids on our campus represent this surrounding area,” Jochum said. “For the most part, if you grew up around those who look, talk and act like you, then you need to go somewhere where you are the minority.”

Jones agreed.

“After my recent experience in Costa Rica with teacher candidates who focused on both language acquisition, efficacy and cultural competency, it solidified my belief that all FHSU students desperately need these types of programs,” she said.

“For future educators who are going to impact PK-12 students, they need to know what it feels like to be the minority and to not understand the language, in order to relate to future students in their classroom,” Jones continued. “This program helped teacher candidates to build language skills, develop cultural understanding and compassion for others. Moreover, it helped them to pinpoint their own biases and areas for development in their current classes and future classrooms.”

Carridy Storer was one of the FHSU students who took a crash course in Spanish, at the Costa Rica Language Academy.

“That is a fast-paced way to learn Spanish and learn about the culture,” she said. “It was good because I hadn’t realized what I was getting myself into. Luckily, my host mom spoke a little bit of English because her daughters had married American men.”

The FHSU contingent toured an outdoor elementary school that was built around an area preserved for natural growth.

“It was different than what our kids think an elementary school should look like,” Jochum said. “They got to see that how we teach things varies by culture. This classroom was part of the rain forest.”

Storer said she came home with “a whole different perspective on education. I was thinking of ESL students the whole time and was thinking, ‘How can I better myself as a teacher?’ ”

“We always talk strategy about how to teach those kids,” she added. “It’s easy to talk about it, but doing it is a different thing. Going to Costa Rica really made me consider those kids and think about strategies and make my classroom applicable to them.”

Long agreed.

“Participating in something like this teaches you to have empathy with students who are out of their element,” he said. “It teaches you to understand where someone might be coming from if their culture isn’t the same as yours instead of the mentality, ‘This is how we do things; this is how it needs to be done.’ ”

Storer is doing her student teaching in Houston this fall semester. She said the Costa Rica experience was invaluable for the next step in her education.

“I’m going into a different culture in Houston, where I will be a minority,” Storer said. “I thought going on the Costa Rica trip would give me a little bit of a feel for Houston. I am so glad I went.”

One of the biggest lessons she learned, Storer said, is how valuable it is to learn a foreign language.

Jochum agreed.

“A big addition to whatever you study on campus, to prepare yourself for global education, is through foreign language study,” Jochum said. “Being bilingual is no longer a luxury; it’s a necessity.”

Students who participated in the trip are listed with their classifications and their majors. Those without a classification are full-time students seeking a second degree.

ARAPAHOE, Neb.: Rhiley Fiene, freshman, nursing
BELOIT: Alyssa Houghman, sophomore, elementary education.
CAWKER CITY: Carridy Storer, senior, elementary education.
CONCORDIA: Kirstyn Dvorak, political science.
DIGHTON: Tristan Wilson, senior, education (English).
GARDEN CITY: Brooklen Skipton, junior, modern languages.
GLADE: Erika Norris, senior, elementary education.
HAYS: Liliana Garcia, sophomore, secondary education.
Imelda Koenke, art education.
LEBANON: Jacob Long, junior, music education.
LEWIS: Kaitelyn Blevins, junior, elementary education.
LOVELAND, Colo.: Samantha Villarreal, elementary education.
MEADE: Lexus Luetters, junior, elementary education.
MERIDEN: Alexandria Cozadd, sophomore, communication science and disorders.
PARADISE: Gracyn Miller, junior, psychology.
PARKER, Colo.: Briauna Hysaw, sophomore, exercise science.
WICHITA: Cassidy Locke, senior, education (English).
Bria Tucker, sophomore, education (English).

Nominations accepted now for Kansas Health Champion Awards

OFFICE OF GOV.

TOPEKA The Governor’s Council on Fitness is now accepting nominations for its annual Kansas Health Champion Awards. Awards are given to individuals and organizations that make an exceptional effort to model, encourage and promote health and fitness in Kansas. Award recipients will be recognized at the Community Health Promotion Summit on Jan. 24, in Manhattan, Kan. The deadline for nominations is Sept. 30.

“The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) is proud to partner in this important initiative to improve the health and wellness of Kansans,” said KDHE State Health Officer, Dr. Greg Lakin. “Many people and organizations throughout the state have made healthy living a priority, and it’s important that we recognize their efforts that impact others”.

Nominees would be expected to have demonstrated:

  • Work that goes above and beyond what is expected to model, encourage and promote fitness
  • Far-reaching impact
  • Sustainable influence or activity

“In addition to promoting effective models for increasing physical activity, nutrition and tobacco-free living for replication by organizations and communities around the state, the awards also allow us the opportunity to honor the outstanding work of one individual and one organization this year,” said Marlou Wegener, Manager of Community Relations, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas.

Eligible nominees might include an outstanding volunteer, a school, a local community, a newspaper or individual reporter, a local or State policy maker, or an employer, among others.

For more information and to submit a nomination, go to getactivekansas.org, and click on the nomination form link. If you have questions about the nomination process, contact Jennifer Church at 785-296-6801.

The Governor’s Council on Fitness advises the Governor and others on ways to enhance the health of all Kansans through promotion of physical activity, good dietary choices and prevention of tobacco use.

KRUG: Become a lifelong learner

Donna Krug

School has started just about everywhere, so kids from pre-school to graduate school are getting used to a new routine. But what about you? Are you a life-long learner? Moms and dads, grandmas and grandpas are never too old to learn something new. I don’t mean you have to enroll in a formal class, complete with a syllabus and a final exam. I’m talking about the many classes offered in our community through our Extension offices, 4-H and Youth programs, or recreation centers.

I am getting ready to participate in our annual Family and Consumer Science Agent update on campus next week. I know when I return to the office I will have some great new resources at my fingertips to share. My goal is to provide programs that meet the needs of our county residents. Realizing we live in a diverse community means we need to be cognizant of learning styles and barriers that may be present.

Programs for the upcoming months focus on topics like: Nutrition, Health and Wellness. I will be joining my colleague who helped write a new Fact Sheet titled, “Everyday Mindfulness” and we will present one of the break-out sessions. I’m planning to present the information in Great Bend in early October and will be sharing the fact sheet in Ellis County in a program early next year. My husband, John, who is a retired Chiropractor, helps with the presentation by leading a short meditation with the participants. Mindfulness is a popular topic these days and studies show effective uses in many settings. I will be offering the Stay Strong, Stay Healthy workshop again in Great Bend beginning October 23rd

The Program Development Committee that I work closely with has jumped in to help carry out a couple of events in the Hays community in September. Mark your calendar for Thursday, September 20th and bring your young children to the Armory on south Main Street in Hays from 5-7 for the Go Truck Go event. We will have a StoryWalk activity set up in the grassy area across the street from the Armory for children to enjoy the book, “If I Built a Car.” The following week, on Monday, September 24th, the Cottonwood Extension District, along with the Hays Kiwanis, and Papa Murphy’s Pizza, will be sponsoring the Family Day Make and Take Pizza Event. In its 11th year, a core of dedicated volunteers will be providing 80 pizzas for families for a small cost. You will need to call the Hays office at (785)628-9430 for more details.

I will share reminders about the events listed above as the dates draw closer. So take some time for yourself in the weeks ahead. Sign up for a class related to something you have always wanted to so. You will be glad you did!

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

WINKEL: Compost, more than you thought, part 2

Rip Winkel

When starting your compost pile, it is important to layer your browns and greens while adding water to each layer. For a quick review of last weeks’ article, the “browns” are carbon-rich, mostly dry material consisting of items like stems, dried leaves, dried grass clippings, sawdust pellets, wood ash and the like.

“Greens” however, are nitrogen or protein-rich material like herbivore manures, kitchen food scraps, coffee grounds, green lawn clippings, lawn and garden weeds (without seeds), or even green leaves.

To properly construct a compost pile, you should alternate layers of these brown (60%) and green (30%) materials. While constructing these layers, add a shovel or two every two to three layers of soil from your yard. This will give the pile a jump-start with the microorganisms needed in the composting process. An ideal size for a back yard compost pile is around 5’ x 5’ x 5’. Remember, for your compost pile to work it is important to know what can and should not be added. A lot of materials are great for composting, while others can bind up the decomposition process. See the list below for dos and don’ts.

*Be sure that grass clippings have not been treated with pre-emergent.
**Dairy, fats, animal bones and meat, and oils will begin to smell and attract insect pests and varmints.

Another point is every few weeks give the pile a quick turn with a pitchfork or shovel. This aerates the pile. Oxygen is required for the decomposition process to work, and turning the pile “adds” oxygen. You can skip this step if you have a regular supply of coarse brown material, like straw. Once you’ve established your compost pile, add new materials by mixing them in. It is not necessary to add them in by layers at this point. Mixing, or turning, the compost pile is essential to aerating the composting materials and speeding the process to completion.

Also add water to the pile as necessary. As was mentioned in Part I of this article from last week, keeping the pile moist is best for micro biotic activity; not too dry, and not too wet. The key indicator of composting is when temperature in the center of the pile warms up. These temperatures can easily warm up to 130o F due to the micro biotic activity in breaking down the organic material. The ideal temperature to achieve killing off of fungal spores and weed seeds is between 150-160o F.

Once your compost pile is uniform in consistency, it is time to start reaping the benefits. Compost can be used by simply spreading it across the surface of your garden and flower bed or by incorporating it into the soil through tilling. One resource, “Building Better Soils for Better Crops”, says that applying compost can substitute for mulch and can even suppress disease is your garden. For more information about composting follow this link, https://bit.ly/2MtlXVa , to “Building Better Soils for Better Crops” chapter called Making and Using Compost. For more information about what goes into compost and why, follow these links to videos provides by Kansas Healthy Yards called “Composting: What to Add”, https://bit.ly/2nnP3dy, and “Composting: Making Black Gold” , https://bit.ly/2nnO7G4.

Rip Winkel is the Horticulture agent in the Cottonwood District (Barton and Ellis Counties) for K-State Research and Extension. You can contact him by e-mail at [email protected] or calling either 785-682-9430, or 620-793-1910.

In Case You Missed It: Eagle Morning Show 8/20-8/24

It was another busy week on the KAYS Eagle Morning Show. Here’s what you missed!

Monday

Catholic Schools Report – Holy Family Elementary Principal: Rachel Wentling

Rachel Wentling joined the Eagle Morning Show to talk about kicking off the school year and the Red Wheel Kickoff

Sternberg Museum Outreach Coordinator: Ian Trevethan

Ian was on the Eagle Morning Show to talk about the upcoming attractions and after school programs available at the Sternberg Museum

 

Tuesday

USD 489 Report Cristina Janney and Superintendent John Thissen

Ellis County Commission Report: Jonathan Zweygardt, County Administrator Phillip Smith-Hanes & County Commissioner Dean Haselhorst

 

Wednesday

Protect & Serve: Hays Fire Department – Chief Ryan Hagans

Chief Hagans was on the Eagle Morning Show to talk about heater safety for the upcoming cold months and construction of the new training facility:

 

Thursday

Bob Schwarz Financial: Bob Schwarz

USD 489 Report: Sarah Wasinger

 

Friday

Voice of the FHSU Tigers Gerard Wellbrock and Fort Hays State University Athletic Director Curtis Hammeke

 

Tune in next week to the Eagle Morning Show every weekday morning from 7-9am with C.D. DeSalvo and Mike Koerner!

 

41st annual Logan Labor Day Celebration

LOGAN – The 41st annual Logan Labor Day Celebration at the Logan Golf Course located 1 ¼ miles east of Logan on Highway 9, will be held on Sunday, September 2, 2018. The Dane G. Hansen Museum with funds from the Dane G. Hansen Foundation sponsors this annual family friendly event. There is no admission fee.

The day starts at 8:00 a.m. with a remote control fly-in and a sand volleyball tournament at 9:00 a.m. The Dane G. Bales, Jr. Memorial Car Show begins at 10:00 a.m. and ends at 4:00 p.m. The car show has been a highlight of the Labor Day Celebration since 1998. This year’s featured car is Greg Andrew’s 1991 Callaway Corvette. Be sure to check out the many makes and models that enter the show.

Come out for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The Logan Chamber of Commerce Food Booth, The Corn Kettle, and Buck’s Snow Shack will have many fine options to satisfy your hunger.

Inflatable amusements  and 25 foot rock climbing wall will be up and ready to entertain the children and those who are young at heart from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The Siruta Pedal Pullers State Sanctioned Kid’s Tractor Pull begins at 2:00 p.m. Winners are eligible to compete in the State Pull at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. Free face painting will be available during the day to transform your little one’s face into a magical canvas.

A shuttle will carry visitors to and from the Dane G. Hansen Museum from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. to view the exhibit, “Luster:  Realism and Hyperrealism in Contemporary Automobile and Motorcycle Painting.”   This is a fantastic must-see exhibition of some of today’s finest automotive artists.  Many of these paintings are so realistic that viewers will think they are looking at photographs. The shuttle will load in the golf course parking lot and on Main Street in front of the Museum.

The 41st Annual Logan Labor Day Celebration’s musical entertainment will start at 5:30 p.m. under the tent by the Logan Chamber of Commerce Food Booth with Patsy Cline impersonator Melinda Ferree and at 7:30 p.m. “The Innoncence” will take the stage and wow the crowd with their superior musicianship and vocals.

Last, but definitely not least, the grand finale, Rainbow Fireworks of Inman, Kansas, will light up the sky with a brilliant display of fireworks that can be seen for miles.

All this and more happens at the 41st ANNUAL LOGAN LABOR DAY CELEBRATION, at the Logan Golf Course located 1¼ miles east of Logan, Kansas, on Sunday, September 2, 2018.

For more information, call the Dane G. Hansen Museum at 785-689-4846 or visit us on the web at www.hansenmuseum.org.

Sunny, hot Saturday


Today
Sunny, with a high near 95. Light and variable wind becoming south southeast 9 to 14 mph in the morning.

Tonight
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Increasing clouds, with a low around 72. South wind 9 to 13 mph.

Sunday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 96. Breezy, with a south wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 17 to 22 mph in the afternoon.

Sunday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 74. South wind 15 to 18 mph
.
Monday
Sunny, with a high near 98. South southwest wind 15 to 17 mph.

Monday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 70.

Tuesday
Sunny, with a high near 83.

Tuesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 60.

Wednesday
Sunny, with a high near 84.

🎥 Mrs. Kansas of Hays competes for Mrs. America

Anissa Pfeifer, Hays, was crowned Mrs. Kansas June 23. She’s competing this week in Las Vegas for Mrs. America 2018. (Photo courtesy Mrs. Kansas Pageant)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

For the second consecutive year, the winner of the Mrs. Kansas Pageant is a Hays woman.

Mrs. Kansas 2018, Anissa Pfeifer, 25, is in Las Vegas this week to compete in the national pageant, Mrs. America.

Pfeifer’s journey to the competition is due in part to Mrs. Kansas 2017, Cassie Hickel of Hays.

Hickel’s pageant clothing and styling were provided by Pfeifer and her sister Sonia, who co-own the Blue Heron Boutique in downtown Hays. During those fashion advice sessions, Hickel encouraged Pfeifer to enter the Mrs. Kansas competition.

“Cassie knows I have a passion for believing in the best in everyone and want people to follow their dreams. Having her believe in me, and saying ‘you might be scared but you just have to do it,’ kind of roped me in to it a little bit. But I’m grateful.

“I never in a million years thought I would be wearing a crown in my life,” Pfeifer said.

Pfeifer was crowned Mrs. Kansas June 23 at the pageant in Chillicothe, Missouri.

Since then she’s been busy working on her state pageant platform and local project to bring Toys for Tots to Ellis County while prepping for the national contest.

“We’ve always had Toys for Tots in this area and now I will now be able to have a location here, so you won’t have to go outside of Hays. So if you live in Ellis County you can come to Hays at Christmas time to get toys for your children.

Kim McDonald takes a picture of Pfeifer with one of her sponsors, Paisley Pear owners Heather and Shaun Musil, Hays.

She’s working with her friend Kim McDonald, who organizes the Toys for Tots campaign in the Hill City area, to work out the details.  Pfeifer and her sister are also from Hill City.

“I’m really excited to be working with Kim and making this difference in the community.

“Children are near and dear to my heart,” Pfeifer says. “I love seeing their smiles. This organization is perfect because it helps those families who are in desperate need of just a little bit of kindness.

“Like my four-year-old said, I get to play Santa for a day so I’m really excited about that.”

Pfeifer and her husband Marcus, 27, have two “very strong willed” children, Brantley, 4, and Oakleigh, 2. “They’re full of life and they keep me running around all the time,” she smiled. Marcus has his own welding shop and specializes in oilfield equipment.

Her family has been very supportive of her pageant work, according to Pfeifer, as well as her dreams before she wore a crown.

“They are 100 percent behind me, pushing me toward all my goals.”

Pfeifer joins friends and supporters at an event in the Paisley Pear.

She also considers her close friends as family. “I’ve been really blessed to have great friends and family that have been an enormous support system and believing in me.”

Pfeifer hopes she can be that hope and encouragement to other women as they follow their dreams.

“God kind of pushed me out of my comfort zone,” she declared, “and this has been one of my biggest blessings.”

Pfeifer’s official appearance clothing and pageant costumes feature styles and accessories from Blue Heron Boutique, which in May moved into the historic George Phillip Hardware building, 719 Main. “We’re still kind of tweaking it a little bit and making all the little changes to make it ‘our home.’ It’s the perfect spot for our vision and what we want our brand to be.”

She enjoys fashion and glamour looks, which are a part of the pageant world, but says it’s what’s on the inside that is most important.

Her Mrs. America pageant platform is women’s empowerment through fashion and business.

“It’s not necessarily about how you look. You can have your hair and makeup done and still not feel beautiful or confident. It’s mainly the way you’re carrying yourself when you walk into a room in that perfect outfit and say ‘I’ve got this.’ You feel in control because it’s the confidence you have in yourself, not necessarily the outfit.”

Pfeifer credits her mother, Laura Larcom, Olathe, for instilling her confidence.

“She’s very strong and very bold. She has supported us, a single mother of four kids. I’ve had such a great role model to look up to. She definitely plays a role in who I am and why I go for things all the time.”

Although Pfeifer’s mother will be unable to go to Vegas and her husband will remain in Hays with the kids, best friend Kim McDonald, and sister Sonia will accompany her to the pageant.

Pfeifer is looking forward to her interviews with the pageant judges. “That’s where I feel I’m able to shine the most because I’m able to speak and just tell my heart.”

Still, she admits to a fear of public speaking. “I’m excited about stepping out of my boundaries, though. You’re never following your calling if you’re not a little bit uncomfortable.”

Entering its 41st year, the final competition round for Mrs. America 2018 will be streamed live beginning at 7 p.m. CST, Sat., Aug. 25, at https://mrsamerica.com/ from the Westgate Las Vegas Resort and Casino. The winner will go on to compete for the title of Mrs. World 2018.

Regardless of who wins the Mrs. America title, Pfeifer hopes Hays will keep its streak running with another Mrs. Kansas. “We’re gonna have to find a third local winner,” she laughed, “because we’ve got to keep up the trend.”

 

 

 

FHSU’s Forsyth Library receives grant to create smart classroom prototype

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Fort Hays State University received a $50,000 federal grant Friday for Forsyth Library.

The National Leadership Grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services will help pay for a smart classroom prototype, which will allow teachers to use more interactive teaching techniques with the aid of technology.

Students will be able to stand inside 3-D models and manipulate data across multiple screens.

Claire Nickerson, learning initiatives and open educational resources librarian, talks about the smart classroom prototype during a press conference at FHSU Friday morning.

“The grant will also allow the library to offer more interactive exhibits,” said Claire Nickerson, learning initiatives and open educational resources librarian. “Students will be able to work through history or a virtual art gallery. These capabilities are valuable because they help students gain new media skills that are increasingly necessary in the workplace.”

FHSU’s smart classroom will be a prototype that would ultimately become a portable kit that could be used in classrooms at other higher learning institutions across Kansas and the nation.

The goal is to increase equity and access to technology by removing cost barriers, especially for rural colleges.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services received 113 grant proposals. FHSU was one of 31 awards granted.

“I am excited to part of this,” said Rep. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., who was at FHSU to present the award. “I am excited for what the library is going to do with this, developing a prototype for students, for what the future of what learning will look like. I am excited to see what this will look like five or 10 years from now.”

Dr. Tisa Mason, FHSU president, said “I am so proud of this university. Throughout the campus we are constantly working on improving on teaching and learning not only for our students but the state and the nation and the world.”

Interim provost Jeff Briggs said the grant was an example of how government funding can support innovation and outreach to rural communities.

“The ability and willingness to collaborate to create a model that will enhance teaching and learning experiences, especially with a sensitivity for cost and portability and especially for the rural and frontier areas we serve is really notable,” he said.

Rep. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., who was a member of the Congressional baseball team, gives FHSU President Tisa Mason a bat signed by several Congressional leaders.

At the conclusion of the ceremony, Marshall, who was a member of the Congressional baseball team, gave the university a bat signed by several Congressional leaders. The bat will be auctioned at the Tiger Auction Saturday to benefit FHSU athletics.

Mason presented Marshall with a Tiger pin.

Family donates building in Colby to Options

Options

COLBY—A $160,000 gift from the Jim and LaNette Kellar Family will bring help, hope, and healing to countless victims in Northwest Kansas.

Options Domestic & Sexual Violence Services, Inc. will use the generous gift – the largest ever for the organization – to expand its life-saving services.

The Kellar Family donated a commercial building in Colby to the organization. Additional community members were also involved in making the generous donation happen. The Kellars recognize Ken Eland for donating all the title work and closing costs, as well as real estate agent Molly Oliver and Stock Realty for their hard work in making the donation possible.

Since 1983, Options has provided free and confidential life-saving services to victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking. It recently expanded to serve victims of human trafficking.

The non-profit victim advocacy organization serves 18 counties in Northwest Kansas, with a service area of more than 17,000 square miles.

The organization currently operates out of its main office in Hays, its safe shelter in Ellis County, and a satellite office in Colby, which is a rented house only able to accommodate limited services.

The Kellar Family’s investment will support the expansion of services for victims and their families in Northwest Kansas. In the coming months, the organization plans to further enhance services with an additional safe shelter after a capital campaign and remodel of the newly donated building in Colby.

“We are profoundly grateful to the Kellar Family for their incredibly generous donation,” said Jennifer Hecker, Options executive director. “This donation is the largest in our organization’s history, and the effects will have a lasting impact on the community and victims in surrounding counties.”

Geographic isolation is a real barrier for victims of abuse in Western Kansas, making it difficult to access services. It is not uncommon for victims who are farther away from walk-in services and shelter to experience greater delays in accessing services than victims who live in closer proximity.

“We recently worked with a victim who desperately needed safe shelter but felt forced to turn it down because of the sheer distance to get to our only shelter in Ellis county,” Hecker said. “She would have had to quit her job, pull her children out of school and leave behind the little support system she had left. 

“She needed her job so she could provide for her family – she was in a no-win situation. Sadly, she is not the only one, and victims of abuse should never have to choose between their physical safety and their financial safety,” Hecker said. “We are grateful for this level of support from the Jim and LaNette Kellar Family, Mr. Eland, Ms. Oliver and Stock Realty, who recognize the important role these services have in our communities.”

If you or someone you know needs help because of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, or human trafficking, call Options free Helpline at 1-800-794-4624 for help 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Marshall to farmers: Short-term pain for long-term gain on trade

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Rep. Roger Marshall said Kansas farmers need to hold on and endure some short-term pain to reap long-term gain on trade.

Marshall said to expect news any day on the tariffs with Mexico. He said Mexico, Japan, the European Union, Canada and other trade partners know President Trump is not going to flinch on tariffs.

Marshall was in Hays on Friday and was on hand during the announcement of a $50,000 grant for Fort Hays State University’s Forsyth Library and at a Hays Area Chamber of Commerce Chat at the Historic Fort Hays.

“It is not fair that China charges us 25 percent minimum tariff and we can only charge them a 2 percent tariff based on (World Trade Organization) rules,” Marshall said.

President Trump recently announced a $12 billion aid package to U.S. farmers to compensate for ag losses in the trade war. That aid will be under the control of the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture. Marshall said he saw the aid going proportionally to the producers with the commodities hardest hit by the tariff’s, especially pork and sorghum.

See related story: Trump tapping $12B to help farmers affected by tariffs

“I truly, truly think better days are ahead of us,” he said.

Both the House and Senate have approved versions of the Farm Bill, and a conference committee will take up the legislation on Sept. 5. Marshall said he hoped Congress would have a final bill to the president by Sept. 30, when the current Farm Bill is set to expire.

Some Democrats have opposed the Farm Bill because it requires work to receive food assistance.

Marshall supports the work requirement. He said last year more than 9 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 59 without a disability and without young children at home who needed child care had zero income.

“What we wanted to do was give these people the opportunity to work,” Marshall said. “All we ask is that they work or train to work 20 hours a week. If you can’t pay for training, we will help pay for training. We will even let you volunteer — say volunteer at a food bank or volunteer serving meals at a senior center.

“We think we need to engage people. Right now, the biggest problem we have facing Kansas in the economy is a lack of labor, so if you can’t get a job right now, maybe you can’t pass a drug test or maybe you don’t have the work training either. Let’s give those people the opportunity.”

Although most people think of the agriculture industry when they think of the Farm Bill, the bill touches on others aspects of rural life, including improvement of high-speed internet and housing and water projects.

“All across my district, these water projects are aging out,” Marshall said. “110-year-old water towers — guess what? They’re rotting out. So I’m very, very proud of this Farm Bill that is going through.”

Victoria is receiving a federal grant for its latest water project, which will connect the city to the rural water district in WaKeeney. It will provide Victoria with 50,000 gallons of water per day to supplement the Victoria wells, which are running low.

“That is going to alleviate some of the pressure on our wells,” Victoria Mayor John Schulte said, “and at the same time, we are doing some projects in town. We are replacing some lines in town that are 100 plus years old.”

Congress and the president are dedicated to bringing billions of dollars in needed infrastructure funds to rural America, Marshall said.

“The rest of the country’s economy is going incredibly well,” he said “I have never seen an economy like this on a national level, but rural America with four years of lagging commodity prices, low oil prices … Rural America has struggled, and they will be the last piece of this puzzle to put together.”

Marshall also touched briefly on immigration in an interview after the grant presentation at FHSU.

He said he supports giving President Trump the $25 billion he wants to secure the border. He said the president’s “wall” is just an analogy of what securing the border looks like. Portions of the physical border need to be reinforced, but Marshall said he did not see a physical wall spanning the complete border with Mexico. Some of the funds from the president’s request will go toward tools for the border patrol, including UAVs.

Marshall said he has visited the board and was assured the border patrol knows the best way to secure the border.

He also supports agricultural guest worker visas. This would not be a path to citizenship, but help alleviate labor shortages in rural Kansas where unemployment is low.

“We need to fix this immigration system and have long-term solutions that are fair to everybody,” Marshall said.

He also said he would support long-term legal status for young people in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which is also known as DACA. He said would support allowing those in the DACA program to “get in line” for the immigration process, but he said he was not in favor for any special pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients.

Marshall is currently seeking re-election to his second term in Congress. He will face Democrat Alan LaPolice in the November general election.

🎥 Changes in height regs for some fences, accessory buildings approved

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Hays city commissioners unanimously approved two ordinances Thursday night to amend regulations regarding the heights of some side yard fences and of accessory structures, such as garages.

Jesse Rohr, public works director, said city staff and the Hays Area Planning Commission agreed the items in the Unified Development Code (UDC) were “unnecessarily restrictive.”

Commissioner Sandy Jacobs wondered “how that got by us.”

The massive UDC was adopted in August 2016, and has been amended more than once. That is to be expected, according to Mayor James Meier.

“When you do a big update like that, I think that we all knew that when we passed it, we’re going to have to come back and fix stuff,” Meier said.

(Click to enlarge)

“We had a couple changes come back to you I think this past spring,” Rohr added, “and there could be more in the future but hopefully not many.”

Street side yard fences will now be able to be six feet high, rather than just 42 inches, although sight lines will still be required.

Accessory buildings may be 18 feet or the height of the principal dwelling, whichever is taller. The number of stories in the building will not be a factor.

“I think this is easier for lay people to understand,” Commissioner Ron Mellick said. “We won’t have that confusion. Just clears up the whole ordinance.”

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