Several Wyandotte County students to graduate from Emporia State

Several Wyandotte County students are among more than 1,000 candidates for graduation at Emporia State University, Emporia, Kan.

Undergraduate commencement ceremonies are at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, May 16, at the William L. White auditorium, Emporia. Graduate ceremonies begin at 2 p.m. at Albert Taylor Hall in Plumb Hall on the Emporia State campus.

Candidates for degrees from this area include:

Mark A. McVay of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Educational Administration with a concentration in educational administration pre K-12.
Rachelle Leigh Thoman of Bonner Springs, Kan., Master of Library Science degree with a concentration in librarianship for children-young adults.
Kayla Irene Daniels of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Communication with a concentration in public relations.
Joshua Denzell Wallace of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Communication with a concentration in public relations.
Ashley Nicole Washington of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Communication with a minor in ethnic gender studies and a concentration in relational communication.
Shannon Dale Callahan of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Master Teacher with a concentration in subject matter concentration-elementary.
Erickia Rashondra Grant of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Master Teacher with a concentration in subject matter concentration-elementary.
Emily J. McDonnell of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Special Education with a concentration in teaching of gifted.
Lacy Janae McIntosh of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Special Education with a concentration in teaching of gifted.
Tayler Brionne Wash of Kansas City, Kan., magna cum laude, Bachelor of Science in Education degree in elementary education with a minor in leadership.
Kellie L. Cornwell of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science in Education degree in elementary education.
Juan Jose Reyes of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science in Education degree in elementary education .
Kaleb Lyle Sauer of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science in Education degree in elementary education.
Brenda Leigh Mesmer of Bonner Springs, Kan., Bachelor of Science in Education degree in elementary education.
Alexis Renee Gatson of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Arts degree in political science.
Ashley Diane King of Bonner Springs, Kan., Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies degree.
Jalessa Latrice Lorick of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies degree.
Bobby Lee McFarland of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies degree.
Frederick Michael Avery of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Health Promotion.
Nikita Lamont Brown of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology.
Tiara Jones of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Rehabilitation Services Education.
Quinton Okoye La Blance of Kansas City, Kan., Bachelor of Science degree in Sociology.
Alicia Lee Houston of Kansas City, Kansas, Master of Library Science degree .
Dawn Elizabeth Mackey of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Library Science degree.
Dorcas Scofield of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Library Science degree.
Devon Tschumakow of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Early Childhood Education.
Leslie Ann Zimmer of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Early Childhood Education.
Catherine J Walsh of Kansas City, Kan., Master of Science degree in Mathematics.

Feilhaber named MLS Player of Month

Benny Feilhaber
Benny Feilhaber

Sporting Kansas City midfielder Benny Feilhaber was voted MLS Player of the Month for April.

The veteran midfielder finished the month with two goals and three assists including the first brace of his five-year MLS career.

“It’s an honor to be nominated alongside a great group of MLS players and I’m humbled to have won the award,” Feilhaber said. “It’s great that our team is improving throughout this stage of the season and I’m pleased to have been able to play my part.”

Feilhaber, 30, is tied for first in MLS with five assists in 2015 after logging three in the month of April.

During a month in which Feilhaber played every minute in Sporting Kansas City’s four games, the World Cup veteran started strong by setting up two goals with corner kicks in a 3-2 comeback victory over the Philadelphia Union on April 5.

After Dom Dwyer headed home his service in the 16th minute, Feilhaber delivered the game-winning assist on the club’s 1,000th goal in all competitions when Sporting KC scored their second of two goals in stoppage-time.

Named the Man of the Match in a scoreless draw against Real Salt Lake on April 11, Feilhaber then became the second fastest KC player all-time to reach the five-assist mark in a season — doing so in his seventh league appearance — when he provided the final pass for Krisztian Nemeth’s equalizer at the LA Galaxy on April 18. He also entered the club’s record books as only the second player to assist on five of the team’s first seven goals in a season.

Feilhaber capped off April with his first two-goal performance in a wild 4-4 draw against the Houston Dynamo at BBVA Compass Stadium. Down 3-2 in the 80th minute, Feilhaber leveled the match with a well-placed penalty kick past goalkeeper Tyler Deric. After the Dynamo regained the lead minutes later, Feilhaber’s stoppage-time blast, which was voted MLS Goal of the Week, gave Sporting KC its fifth consecutive result in Houston.

This is the second MLS Player of the Month award in Feilhaber’s career after earning his first award in July 2014. Sporting KC forward Dom Dwyer and former Sporting KC goalkeeper Eric Kronberg were also voted Player of the Month last year in May and June, respectively. Voting for MLS Player of the Month is open to the public on MLSsoccer.com.

After a 1-0 win over the Chicago Fire on Sunday afternoon at Sporting Park, Sporting Kansas City will hit the road this weekend to take on D.C. United. The match will kick off at 6 p.m. with coverage available locally on KMCI-TV 38 the Spot and across the Midwest on SKCTV.
– Story from Sporting KC

Advocates make last push for tobacco tax

Head of KU cancer center says illness will ‘overwhelm’ health system without tax

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

Advocates of raising the state’s tobacco tax made one last push Monday during a rally at the Statehouse, with a prominent physician saying cancer will overwhelm the state’s health care system if the tax isn’t raised.

Legislators will look this week at options for raising $400 million to $500 million to close a budget gap and end the 2015 session.

Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposal to bring in almost $100 million by raising the tax on cigarettes and other tobacco products had little support early in the session but appears back in play — along with a host of other tax options.

Dr. Roy Jensen, director of the University of Kansas Cancer Center, said the tobacco tax has an advantage over the others: It is projected to prevent 15,000 premature deaths due to tobacco-related illness.

“People tried to cast this initiative solely as a budget Band-Aid,” Jensen said. “I would like to march 15,000 people into this Capitol and show them this is not just a budget Band-Aid. This is, I think, the one initiative that is before the Legislature this year that shows vision, that shows forethought, that shows we are working as a state to improve the health of people of the state of Kansas.”

During the rally, Jensen said it’s critical for Kansas to begin to reduce its tobacco use rate immediately.

Jensen said almost one-third of the 6,200 cases of cancer his hospital treats annually can be directly attributed to tobacco use. Reducing tobacco use is the clearest route to reducing cancer, he said, and if no action is taken, the state’s health care system will be overwhelmed as rates of cancer from all causes increase as the baby boomer generation ages.

Jensen said the state should expect a 45 percent increase in cancer cases between now and 2030.

“We don’t have the resources, we don’t have the facilities and we don’t have the manpower to deal with this,” he said. “And I’m talking collectively across the state.”

At the beginning of the session, the governor proposed a $1.50-per-pack increase in the cigarette tax and a 25 percent increase on smokeless tobacco products. The proposals have been stalled for months.

There were about 10 legislators on hand for Monday’s rally, including a pair of House members who said they’re frustrated that they won’t get to vote on the tobacco tax alone.

“The (news) conference today highlights everything I believe about it,” said Rep. Melissa Rooker, a Republican from Fairway. “But if it comes wrapped up in the middle of a package that otherwise I can’t support, I’m not going to commit to voting based on one element.”

Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Republican from Mission Hills, agreed. “This needs to be separate,” she said.

Instead, the House is likely to get a “mega” tax bill formed and passed by the Senate and be forced to take an up-or-down vote on it.

Sen. Les Donovan, a Republican from Wichita who chairs the tax committee, said last week that if the governor’s proposal can’t get enough votes there to pass, he has prepared amendments for lesser tobacco tax increases.

Jodi Radke, director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids’ Rocky Mountain-Great Plains Region, said her organization thinks the governor’s tobacco tax proposal does the most good for Kansans’ health, and the budget crisis offers a key window for getting it done.

“The higher amount obviously yields the greatest benefit — not in terms of revenue, but reduction of youth use rates,” Radke said. “We know in years to come the likelihood of revisiting this conversation once it happens is pretty marginal.”

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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