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‘Dancing Around the World’ presentation offered by Barton Community College dance students

Members of the Barton Dance Theatre, Barton’s dance company, pose for a photo in the woods.

BUSINESS NEWS

Students of the History of Dance class at Barton Community College invite the public to enjoy a free presentation titled Dancing Around the World at 7:30 p.m. November 28 in Studio 34, which is in the old housing units on the far southeast corner of campus. Students will be assisted by other students from the Barton Performing Arts Dance Department. Refreshments will be served.

The presentation will last about an hour, and will include background on cultural dances followed by demonstrations. Dances represented include West African, Jamaican, Russian, Persian, Hula, Columbian and Salsa.

“This event is meant to show how movement and dance is universal, connecting people across cultural boundaries,” Dance Instructor Danika Bielek said. The students used learning these dances as a way to increase cultural and historical awareness. Even though the students only just started learning these dances, they have gained a glimpse into the lives of others. The famous modern dance pioneer, Martha Graham, said ‘Movement never lies.’ You can learn so much about people by how they move!”

For more information, contact Bielek at (620) 792-9253 or bielekd@bartonccc.edu.

Trying to secure a large convention to come to Great Bend

The Great Bend Convention Center has been renamed as the Great Bend Events Center for a couple of years now, but one of its prime objectives is to still attract conventions.

Great Bend Convention & Visitors Bureau Director Christina Hayes says that has not been easy with a nonoperational hotel next door. The Great Bend Hotel and Convention Center to the east has been closed for years and has struggled even when it was open.

Christina Hayes Audio

The Events Center, at 3111 10th Street, has hosted several wedding receptions, meetings, fundraiser dinners, and other events but the large convention that brings a lot of people into town has mostly eluded the City of Great Bend.

Hayes says the North American Falconers Association wants to bring their annual conference to Great Bend next November. Falconers use live falcons as hunting tools, sending the birds out to snatch up prey.

Christina Hayes Audio

Hayes noted they are still working out the details to bring NAFA to Great Bend, but Cheyenne Bottoms was a big factor in attracting them to central Kansas. Hayes expected anywhere from 150 to 275 falcon hunters and their families to show up for the week.

Winter kill in wheat and some things to look for

Winter-like cold temperatures overspread Kansas during the first half of November. That created worries for winter wheat growers about the prospect of crop winterkill. But according to a K-State wheat production specialist, the odds are in favor of very little crop damage. Romulo Lollato says that warm soil temperatures and ample moisture likely served to shield most wheat fields from winterkill. He notes, though, that there might be some situations to monitor.

Romulo Lollato Audio

Lolato says if a stand was planted in wetter-than-preferred soils, there could be damage issues as well. But overall he is confident that the majority of wheat fields in Kansas will come out of those cold temperatures unscathed.

Romulo Lollato Audio

That’s K-State wheat production specialist Romulo Lollato, commenting on the early arrival of cold temperatures in Kansas and the ensuing impact on the winter wheat crop.

Russell teen injured in 4-wheeler accident

A 15-year old Russell teenager was injured Friday in an accident in Russell County.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, a 1998 Kawasaki 4-wheeler operated by Erik Finger was east bound in the north ditch in the 18500 block of Homer Road or 1 mile east of US 281. When the vehicle jumped a sewer entrace and became airborne, the Kawasaki landed on its wheels and Finger was ejected from the 4-wheeler.

Finger was transported to Russell Regionl Hospital with unknown injuries.

The Highway Patrol says he was not wearing a helmet.

Monday Barton County Commission Meeting Agenda

BOARD OF BARTON COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Monday, November 26, 2018 – 9:00 a.m. until Close

I. OPENING BUSINESS:
A. Call Meeting to Order.
B. Recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance.
C. Consider Approval of the Agenda.
D. Consider Minutes of the November 5, 2018, the November 13, 2018, and the November 19, 2018, Regular Meetings.
E. Any citizen wishing to make statements during the discussion of any item must first be recognized by the Commission Chair. After being recognized, that person should state their name and the name of any organization represented. Statements should be limited to five minutes.
F. Cell phones and other electronic devices, other than those used by the media and law enforcement, should be shut off.

II. APPROVAL OF APPROPRIATIONS:
-An Accounts Payable Register will be submitted to the Commission for the period of November 13, 2018, and ending November 26, 2018.

III. OLD BUSINESS – Items tabled, or scheduled, from previous Commission Meetings, will be heard at this time.
-There is no Old Business at this time.

IV. NEW BUSINESS – All new business to be considered by the Commission will be heard at this time.

A. COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE: Request for Approval – Added / Abated / Escaped / Refunded Taxes:
-Donna Zimmerman, County Clerk, will present a listing of Added / Abated / Escaped / Refunded Taxes. Orders for these actions are kept on file in the County Clerk’s Office. These are used to correct assessments and are requested by the County Appraiser’s Office or the County Clerk’s Office.

B. BARTON COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Steel Builders Construction, Inc:
-In 2017, the Commission authorized paying Steel Builders Construction, Inc. $12,800.00.00 for a roofing project at the Barton County Historical Society. The finished project included change orders that bring the project total to $15,503.17. Phil Hathcock, County Administrator, will provide details.

V. ENDING BUSINESS – After new items are heard by the Commission, the following items, including announcements, will be heard.

A. ANNOUNCEMENTS: -Following the close of the Agenda Meeting, the Commission will consider the authorization of personnel changes, sign any documentation approved during the agenda meeting or sign any other documentation required for regular County business. Similar action may take place throughout the day.
-The Barton County Commission has been invited to the USD 428 Community Feedback Meeting at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 27, 2018, at the Great Bend Middle School Commons, 1919 Harrison, Great Bend, Kansas. The meeting is a part of the Master Facilities Plan for USD 428.

B. APPOINTMENTS-Although subject to change, the following appointments have been scheduled:
NOVEMBER 26, 2018
9:30 a.m. or following the close of the agenda meeting – Liability Insurance – Phil Hathcock, County Administrator, and Amy Miller, Emergency Risk Manager
10:00 a.m. – Viewing – Rebuilt Scraper with Mr. Hathcock
10:30 a.m. – Regular Business Discussion – Mr. Hathcock and Donna Zimmerman, County Clerk
THE COUNTY EDITION, KVGB-AM – Thursdays at 11:05 a.m. Sheriff Brian Bellendir is scheduled for November 29, 2018.

VI. OTHER BUSINESS:
A. Discussion Items.
B. Citizens or organizations may present requests or proposals for initial consideration.
C. The Commissioners are available to the Public on Mondays during regular business hours.
D. The Commissioners may, individually, schedule personal appointments related to County business at their discretion.
E. The next Regular Meeting will be at 9:00 a.m., Monday, December 3, 2018.

VII. ADJOURN.

U.S. farmers visit Cuban farms, discuss future relationships

Delegates from the U.S. agriculture industry were in Cuba last week for the Cuba-U.S. Agriculture Business Conference. The conference brought about much interest from the Cuban Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Cuban media.
Representing the soybean, corn, wheat, poultry, potato, rice, sorghum and barley industries, the 20 conference participants met with Cuban government officials and farmers on November 8-10, 2018.
While about 30% of Cuba’s 42,000 square miles of land area is currently used for farming, Cuban farmers do not have access to the latest technologies, equipment and inputs to reach their yield potential. The majority of the food production in Cuba is done through farmer-owned cooperatives, but it’s not sufficient. Due to the climate, there is no wheat grown commercially. In fact, much of the food for Cuba’s 11 million people and 4 million annual tourists must be imported, including an estimated 30 million bushels of wheat, which comes primarily from the EU and Canada.
“The reason I’m here isn’t to sell potatoes,” said participant Carl Hoverson, CEO of Hoverson Farms, Larimore, N.D., “but to help people live better.”
The traditional Cuban diet is made up of rice, black beans, chicken, bread and locally-produced fruits and root vegetables.
According to Alejandro Mustelier Zamora, chairman and CEO of Alimport, Cuba’s food importing enterprise, “When buying grains from Argentina, it takes a long time to get here and affects the quality of the food we import.” Rice imported from Japan can take up to five months to arrive.
There are many advantages of importing food from the United States, most notably the proximity in terms of getting high quality food in a timely and freight-efficient manner.
Cuba can buy products from the U.S. and finance the sale until the product arrives in Cuba, with one exception – food. Food purchases, which have been allowed since 2000, must be paid for up front, before the ships are allowed to sail. U.S. banks are allowed to provide direct financing for exports of any other product except agricultural commodities.
Hon. Rick Crawford, United States Representative, First District of Arkansas, spoke to the group about the legislation “HR525, which allows extension of credit terms from U.S. entities to Cuba to be able to sell ag commodities.” Half of the U.S. rice production is grown in his district. He said, “It’s not about rice; it’s not about wheat; it’s not about chicken. It’s about U.S. ag commodities and market access to areas that have really been difficult for us, and this is a market that I would certainly like to see us participate in.”
After hearing from Cuban government officials, participants had the opportunity to visit a farmer’s market in Havana and tour two farmer cooperatives.
The President of the first cooperative talked about the variety of crops they grow, including tubers and vegetables, mainly carrots. They provide carrots for the Cuban tourism industry. The cooperative’s board of directors, or assembly, is in charge of creating a planting plan and supplying the resources, such as fuel and fertilizer that their 200 members need to grow the crops. The planting plan is based on the experience of the farmer, demand for crops and what can be sold to the government. Once they sign the planting plan, the government sells inputs to the cooperative, which sells them to the individual farmers. He said there is a formula for how much fertilizer they receive, which is not always the right amount and it doesn’t always arrive at the right time. His cooperative uses an obsolete and old system of flood irrigation because it is what they have.
“We are far from reaching our potential. We need technology, modern equipment and timely inputs,” he said. “We know that tilling the soil is bad for the land, but that’s all the machinery we have.”
While planting genetically modified crops is not yet allowed in Cuba, there is research being done in laboratories. Ambassador Juan Jose Leon Vega, Cuban Ministry of Agriculture International Affairs Division, told the group, “It would be a benefit to the world if it was demonstrated that GMO was safe and could be planted to end hunger. There are 77 million hungry in Latin America.”
The President of the second farm cooperative reported that they grow potatoes, sweet potatoes, plantains and taro root, white red and black beans, garbanzos and corn and have a small cow herd that provides milk for their 210 members and to the state for infants and the elderly. The farmer members of the cooperative are compensated based on their work. They receive monthly payments, and after harvest, they distribute the profits to every member of the coop based on results and the work that they do. Compensation has nothing to do with how much land they contributed because the land is collective property. Planting plans are based on what seed is available to grow.
At the wrap-up meeting, Ambassador Juan Jose Leon Vega told the group, “Farmers in the U.S. and Cuba can have better relationships. There is a strong distinction in Cuba between the American government and the American people. We want people to be able to do business together.”
The Cuba-U.S. Agriculture Business Conference was organized by the U.S. Ag Coalition for Cuba, which believes that the improvement of agricultural trade between the U.S. and Cuba is the foundation for building successful and enduring relations between both countries. U.S. participants in the conference included:
  • Paul Johnson, Chair, U.S. Ag Coalition for Cuba, Chicago, Illinois
  • Philip Peters, President, Cuba Research Center, Alexandria, Virginia
  • Mirella Betancourt, Principal, Cuba Solutions LLC, Falls Church, Virginia
  • Marsha Boswell, Director of Communications, Kansas Wheat, Manhattan, Kansas
  • Marion Calmer, CEO of Calmer Corn Heads, Inc., Alpha, Illinois, and daughter Aliza
  • Catalina Correa, Regional Marketing Specialist, U.S. Grains Council, Medellin, Colombia
  • Hon. Rick Crawford, United States Representative, First District of Arkansas
  • David Frederickson, Commissioner of Agriculture, State of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota
  • Richard Fritz, Managing Director, World Poultry Foundation, Huntsville, Alabama
  • Tara Smith, Vice President, Michael Torrey Associates, Washington, D.C.
  • Carl Hoverson, Chief Executive Officer, Hoverson Farms, Larimore, North Dakota
  • Jon Mark and Marda Isbell, Zero Grade Farms, England, Arkansas
  • Douglas Keesling, Keesling Farms, Past Chairman of the Kansas Wheat Commission, and Co-Chair of U.S. Ag Coalition for Cuba, Chase, Kansas
  • Terry Jo Keesling, Keesling Farms, Chase, Kansas
  • Chaitanya Kosaraju, Director, Industrial Trinidad Ammonia and International Feed Sales, Nutrien Ltd., Northbrook, Illinois
  • Mark Mueller, Farmer and Director, Iowa Corn Growers Association, Waverly, Iowa
  • Christopher Popio, Popio Stumpf Photography, Chicago, Illinois
  • Joe Steinkamp, Farmer and Board of Directors, American Soybean Association, Evansville, Indiana

Fort Hays State shows appreciation for Barton County connection

Dr. Jeff Briggs

A more than 30-year tradition at Fort Hays State University stopped through Great Bend this month as part of the president’s tour. Dr. Jeff Briggs filled in as acting president as Tisa Mason was recovering from illness.

While speaking at the Eagle Media Center in Great Bend, Briggs noted the increase in enrollment up to 15,523 students this fall, 423 more than last year. He accredits the constant increase over the years to the investment the university made in the late 1990s into their virtual college online program.

Jeff Briggs Audio

Briggs says the university is meeting their mission of being a state-supported institution by serving 7,848 Kansans this fall, a 3.6-percent increase from last year. Along with sharing FHSU’s story, the tour is also meant to show appreciation to communities like Barton County and Barton Community College.

Jeff Briggs Audio

Briggs made stops in 12 cities during the tour to meet with media and alumni.

Rep. Marshall serves Thanksgiving meals to troops overseas

WASHINGTON D.C.- This Thanksgiving Congressman Marshall traveled overseas to visit with our troops. On his trip he met with Kansas soldiers and served them Thanksgiving dinner.

“Our troops are doing an outstanding job. I was so honored to spend Thanksgiving with our men and women in uniform,” Rep. Marshall said. “I got to meet individually with these soldiers and learn about their journey to the military. I cannot thank them enough for the sacrifices they consistently make for our great nation.”

In Kuwait, Rep. Marshall met with over 700 Kansas Guardsman from the 2-137 Combined Arms Battalion and Battery C, 161st Field Artillery. The Guardsmen were deployed in April as part of Operation Enduring Freedom, Spartan Shield (OEF-SS).

“They are spending the holidays far from their families, it was a privilege for me to be able to serve them a Thanksgiving meal and sit down with them to discuss their mission and their time abroad,” Rep. Marshall said. “Some of these soldiers were newly married or had young children back at home, but they explained to me how grateful they are to serve our country and for all the continued support they get back at home.”

On his trip, Rep. Marshall was briefed by military leaders on the current posture, readiness, and security concerns of our U.S. forces.

“We have the strongest military in the world, I saw that first hand this week. The holidays are especially hard to be away from home, and I enjoyed hearing each soldier tell me about their families’ Thanksgiving traditions. I learned a lot from these brave men and women in the past few days, and their love for our country will inspire me for days to come.”

The soldiers on this mission are expected to return to the states in March of 2019.

New Barton Community College art instructor brings diverse skillset, desire to teach

Scott Arthur, Barton Community College’s new Art Instructor, poses for a photo in the college’s painting studio.

BUSINESS NEWS

Story and photo by Brandon Steinert

Scott Arthur has been soaking up every moment spent influencing and impacting his pupils as Barton Community College’s new Art Instructor since he began prior to the fall semester, saying he finds purpose in teaching.

Arthur comes to Barton with more than two decades of experience and training in painting, drawing, graphic design and other artistic endeavors, a jack of all trades. However, his love for art didn’t surface until later in his education.

“No one in my family knew anything about it; it wasn’t in my upbringing,” he said. “I got drawn to it. I took a photography class, then took a painting class. I loved it.”

He said his experience so far at Barton has been rewarding, citing talented students and an environment friendly to the arts.

“I’ve never been to a school as supportive of the arts as Barton; it’s been nice,” he said.

He said in his artist statement that his work has changed over the years, but it all focuses on everyday observations of typical things throughout the day, from coffee cups and parking lots to human figures.

“I feel my work exists in the middle ground between myself and the subject I am painting,” he said in his statement. “This space is where I meet my subject. Allowing each experience to influence the choices I make while painting is essential to the conversation between the subject and myself. While I begin with observation, my hope is to capture what is essential in what I see and feel, more than simply recording the information before me.”

Ultimately, he said he is here for the students and to help them realize their potential as creators.

“I love teaching,” he said. “Some artists teach to support themselves as artists, but I really enjoy passing along what others taught me. It’s great to see students have their breakthroughs and neat to see where they start and how they progress as the semester goes on.”

Biography

Scott Arthur was born in Bushnell, IL. He graduated from Western Illinois University and studied painting with Michael Mahoney and sculpture with Don Crouch. After completing a second bachelor degree in graphic design Scott began living and working in Chicago, Ill. and later Oakland, Cali. He worked as a graphic artist and art director for the next ten years. In the fall of 2008 he was admitted to the Master of Arts painting program at Eastern Illinois University. After completing the program, Scott began teaching at Carl Sandburg College. The following year he was accepted into the Master of Fine Arts program at Louisiana State University. While at LSU Scott studied with Rick Ortner, Denyce Celentano, Ed Smith, James Beaman, and Kelli Scott Kelley.

Education

M.F.A., Louisiana State University, May 2013 – Concentration: Painting and Drawing

M.A., Art, Eastern Illinois University, May 2009 – Concentration: Painting and Drawing

B.A., Individual Studies, Western Illinois University, May 1999 – Concentration: Graphic Design

B.A., Art, Western Illinois University, July 1995 – Concentration: Painting and Drawing

Teaching Experience

Barton Community College, Missouri University of Science & Technology, MacMurray College,  Carl Sandburg College, Louisiana State University, University of Louisiana Lafayette and Eastern Illinois University.

Two injured in Pratt County ATV accident

Two teenagers were injured Thursday in an ATV accident in Pratt County.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, a John Deere Gator driven by 16-year old Carson Thomas of Clearwater was driving the Gator on Southeast 1st Street just West of 70th Avenue in Pratt County at around 3:00 p.m. when he lost control and entered the north shoulder and overturned.

Thomas and a passenger, 19-year old Jake Thomas of Wichita were thrown from the Gator and sustained injuries and were transported to Pratt Regional Medical Center.

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