Board of Regents names
I5 KU Chancellor. Today the Kansas Board of Regents
announced that Dr. Bernadette Gray-Little will be the University Kansas (KU) new chancellor. The
Board voted to approve Dr. Gray-
Little s appointment then officially
introduced the new chancellor during
a special meeting at the Board of Regents office in Topeka. Dr. Gray-
Little will begin her chancellorship on August 15.
The Board is proud to announce
that Dr. Gray-Little will be the next
chancellor of the University of Kansas, .
said, Regent Donna Shank of
Liberal, Chair of the Board of Regents.
She rose to the top of an exceptionally
talented and competitive
pooi of applicants. Dr. Gray-Little s
outstanding record of academic excellence
and impressive administrative
leadership throughout her notable
career, along with her inspiring
enthusiasm and character, make it clear that she is ideally-suited to
propel KU to even loftiei heights.
Dr. Gray-Little is currently the
Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost
at the University of North Caroline at Chapel Hill (IJNC), a position
she has held sitic 2006. She is
a former Dean of UNC s College of
Arts and Sciences, and a former Executive
Associate Pr at UNC. p Gray-Little earned a Ph.D. and
a M.S. from St. Louis University
and an A.B. from Mary College.
(Pennsylvania). Her resume
and photograph can be found on
the KU Chancellor Search page on
the Board s website at the following
link: http kusearch.html
Dr. Gray-Little will be formally
introduced to the KU campus and
the Lawrence community at an
event tomorrow at 1:00 p.m. on the 6 floor of the Kansas Union. Additional
details will be posted on KU s website at the following link: http//
www.ku.edu The campus and community
are invited and are encouraged
to attend.
I. certainly want to thank Drue
Jennings, the Chancellor Search
Committee Chair, and the members of the committee for their time, hard
vork, and dedication to the search
process. They have served KU and
this Board very well, added Shank.
I also want to thank Mr. Bill Funk
of R. William Funk and Associates
for the assistance he provided
throughout the process. This is an
exciting time at KU, and I m confident
that Dr. Gray-Little s leadership
abilities will serve the university,
the Lawrence community, the state
of Kansas, and the region well for
many years to come. J
LindsborgNews-RecordLindsborg,KS
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County:McPherson
3 students receive music scholarshi Russell Ronnebaum, Amy
Stalibumer and James Shaughnessy
were recipients of the Authey
they E. Brinker Music Scholarships
for 2009.
Ronnebaum has completed
his bachelor s degree in music
at the Univers of Kansas and is plannmg to seek a mas er s of
music in piano at the University
of Arizona. He was a long-term
student of Brinker. He has recently
added composer to his list of
accomplishments.
Stailbaumer is in the 2009
Axtell High School graduating
class. She was a piano student of
Brinker for four years. In addition
to the piano, she plays the saxophone
in the pep band and sings
in the choir.
She pians to attend the Uni
University of Kansas in pursuit of a
nursing degree.
Shaughnessy attends Kansas
State University and is seeking a
degree in business management.
He took piano lessons from
Brinker for nine years while in
grade school and high school. He
used his music to serve both.his
church and school.
MarysvilleAdvocate
Marysville,KSCirc. 5284
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County:Marshall
Laura (Mertens) Whisler,
Wichita, graduated from the
University of Kansas- School
of Medicine on Sunday May
17th, 2009. She is the wife of
Jason Whisler and the mother of
Addison and Kolton. Her parents
are Barbara Rican, Hooper,
NE and Tom Mertens, Akron,
CO. Her grandparents are Joe
Mertens, Meade and Mary
Ann Simons, Wahoo, NE. Dr.
Whisler has been accepted into
the Obstetrics and Gynecology
Residency program at the
University of Kansas-Wichita
where she will complete her 4
year training at Wesley Medic
Center.
Mei%ensWhisler
graduates
Meade Co.News
Meade,KSCirc. 1613
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County:Meade
Special to the Globe
The Department of
nglish at the Univers f rei Ut 70 unc1erg
d graduate students May
with more than $26,000 in
wards and scholarships
or outstanding academic
rformance, writing and
eaching.
The English departent
recognized tephanie Ann Scurto, an
English Ph.D graduate
teaching assistant, of
Qska1qo with the tYL InsthiCttir
For more information
about the KU English department, go to
www.english.ku.edu, or to see a full list of departmental
awards, visit
www.news.ku.edu/2OO9/ may/28/eng. lishawardsO9.shtml.
It UU.511 icurt
icurt English honor
Atchison GlobeAtchison,KS
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County:Atchison
suo fl,_Ls..,
iss earns KU edical degree
Kallie (Bechtold) Foss tduated May16 at a hoodceremony
ceremony from the Unisit of Kansas, Sc1T
_________
edicine.
The green
velvet edging
of the
hood indicates
doctor of medicine degree, and in the lining
of the hood e the college colors of
e institution that confers e degree.
Foss will begin her resincy
training program pediatrics at Children s ercy Hospital in Kansas ty, Mo. in July.
Kallie graduated from orton High School in 2000 d from Baker University 2004.
Kallie is the daughter of indy BeOlithld Of Everest.
ci Ga1e ooynton
Beach, Fla., grandughter
of the late Jay and
tta Smith of Everest, and - orraine and the late Jack
echtold of Hiawatha.
Hiawatha WorldHiawatha,KS
Circ. 1987From Page:
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County:Brown
*aii?as r h in debate over abortion
WICHITA (AP) In a nation divid d yabortion,
Kansas has become perhaps the fiercest
battleground with mass protests, pros lawsuits and now a killing keeping the ssu almost
constantly in the public eye.
Dr. George Tiller, shot to death at hi church last Sunday, had been the target of a r protest campaign for most of the 36 year that he
performed abortions at his Wichita clinic He was
a focal point of the abortion conflict, bu it transcended
him, often becoming the state s 4ominant
political topic.
Some Kansans are sick of th rancorou debate; for some, it permeates their lives and aff their
personal relations.
Most of my adult life has been in th middle
of this fight, said Peggy Bowman, $io lives
near Tiller s church and oversees a fund t!iat helps women cover the cost of abortions. I ha people
in my neighborhood who, once they foi4nd out I
was pro-choice, turned their back on me. In part, it s a power struggle co$ervative
Republicans, many of them evangelical qhristian, battling over abortion and other hot-butt social
issues with moderates of their own party nd with the Democrats.
When you get down to the heart of the ,split
among Kansas Republicans, it always co back
to abortion, said University of Ka political
spience professor Burcfett Loomis. It ma pop out
in gun laws, homesch volution but it
starts and stops with abortion.
Unlike many states where either si or foes of abortion hold sway politically Kansas
often seesaws. For example, the ReijublicandOminated
Legislature passed numerou bills to
restrict abortions during the past six ye only
to ee many vetoed by Democratic Gov. (athleeti Sebelius, now President Barack Obam4 s health
and human services secretary.
As a result, to the frustration of some nti-abortion
groups, abortion remains relatively available
in the state despite widespread opposi ion to it
among legislators and the Kansas con ressional
delegation.
Mary Kay Culp, executive director of Kansans for Life, said she and her in-state allies d from
many of their counterparts elsewhere it pressing
for rigorous observance of the restrictioi that are in place.
In Kansas, we re working and working to try to seethe enforcement of the law, she s
Tille also played a part in intensifyii the debate.
He became one of the nation s few pr*viders of
late-term abortions and, unlike many of his peers,
embraced a high profile even after he w shot in
both arms by an anti-abortion activist in 1993.
His clinic, heavily fortified after bombing in 1 becarnethe target of both pea and
violent In 1991, a 45-day Summer of
Mercy organized by Operation Rescue
,
Parsons SunParsons,KS
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County:Labette
drew thousands of anti-ab4rtÒiOn demonstrators to Wichita. More than 2,700 rrestsÒ resulted.
Abortion opponents gaii strength in the Legislature
in tl 1990s and began pushing annually
f new resttictions oft citing TillerÒs clinic
as a reason. A 1998 law restricting late-term procedures
wM aimed at him. Tiller also found himself under investigation by
the attorney generalÒs off and, most recently,
the Kansas Board of Healing Arts, which regulates
doctors.
The doctor himself bec a significant player
in state politics, forming a political action committee
in 2002 that funneled $153,000 into unsuccessful
efforts to defeat ar Republican Phill Kline as attorney gei
Just months into his term in 2003, Kline began
investigating TillerÒs clinic and one operated by
Planned I in the Kansas City suburb of
Overland Park. Through a judge, Kline tried to
obtain access to patientsÒ medical files, touching
off a lengthy legal battle that helped lead to his
re-election defeat in 200 by an abortion-rights
Democrat. KlineÒs successor as attorney general filed misdemeanor
charges against Filler in 2007, accusing
the doctor of failing to coqiply fully with the 1998
late-term abortion law, but a jury acquitted Tiller
on all charges in March. The Board of Healing Arts
immediately went public with its own complaint. Kline, meanwhile, became district attorney in
Johnson Cdunty, home to affluent Kansas City
suburbs, and continued investigating the Planned Parenthood clinic there. In 2007, he filed 107
criminal charges against the clinic; that case is
pending, though Kline was voted out of office in
2008.
ÓThereÒs a very promine vein in Kansas politics that tends toward moral righteousness,Ô said Kansas
State University ,politic scientist Joe Aistrup.
That contributes to the unending abortion battle:
ÓItÒs an unsettled deb4e that produces extremists on both, sides.Ô -
Peter Brownlie, as CEO of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, has been on the front lines on th conflict for a decade and describes
Kansas as Ñthe epicenter of the abortion debate.Ô
ÓThere is a very clear and growing gap between the general public, and the political leaders who are committed to this being suñh a constant and volatile issue,Ô Bro*nlie said. ÓOn issues relating to family
planning, abortion, sex education, KansansÒ views
Ñare not markedly differer from most Americans Ù but there are political forces at work, some of
them well beyond the state borders.Ô Conflicts over social issues go back to KansasÒ
early days. It became a state in 1861 amid the
sometimes violent battle ever slavery, was among the forerunners in grantii voting rights tO women,
and also attracted Carrie Nation with her antiliquor
liquor crusade. ,
Parsons SunParsons,KS
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( J55
KUtohosta recognition
program for
schools
The University of Kansas will
host a state recognition program at
1:30 p.m. Sunday, June 7, at the
Lied Center for more than 300 of
the more than 900 academically
talented seventh-grade students selected
for the 2009 Duke University
Talent Identification Program.
Kevin Willmott, associate
professor of theatre and film, will
deliver a special address on his approach
to flimmaking.
Teresa Porter, Duke TIP representative,
will present the awards.
Selection to Duke TIP is based
on college entrance exam scores
that are in the top 5 percent while
the students are in middle school.
Students participate by taking either
the SAT or ACT national achievement
tests. Working with host
academic institutions such as KU,
Duke TIP sponsors 35 ceremonies
in its 16-state talent search region.
Each Duke TIP student receives
a medallion. The state recognition
ceremonies honor seventh-graders
who earned scores above the average
scores of college-bound high
school seniors. Of more than 74,000
applicants this year, 24,204 students
qualified and have been invited to
state recognition events, including
more than 900 students being recognized
at KU.
Area students recognized will
include:
Tricia Schmitz, Axtell; Matthew
Haverkamp, Bern; and Sarah
Gerber, Goff.
Courier-TribuneSeneca,KSCirc. 3068
From Page:10
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County:Nemaha
165 (ncoaEsw k aissics
The Department of Classics
at the University of Kansas recognized
11 of its top students
with mon than $5,500 In
awards and scholarships at its
34th annual spring honors
reception.
Anthony Corbeill, professor
of classics at KU, presented
special honors to students for
outstanding achievements relate Ing to classics, classical languages
and classical antiquity
attheMay4event Emille Jordan, a master s 5W-
dent in classics who holds a
bachelors degree fWm St.
Mary s College, received the\
Albert 0. Greef banslation-
Wamego SmokeSignal
Wamego,KSCirc. 9728
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County:Pottawatomie
HIGHLIGHTS i-j Wayne and Patricia Hilburn
of Valley Center will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary
June 8. In 1959, they were married
in the chapel of the First
United Methodist Church in
Wichita.
They returned to this area
in 1999 after retiring in Washington,
D.C. Pat worked at the
Smithsonian s National Portrait
Gallery and the Commerce Department. Wayne was an art
director and graphic designer in
his own design studio.
1 Kylie Covey, a student-athlete
at Ottawa University, was
nominated by the
Kansas
Collegiate
Athletic
Conference
(KCAC) for the Dr.
LeRoy Walker
Covey hampions
of
Character
Award,
presented by the National
Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics (NAIA).
Covey, a 2007 graduate of
Valley Center High School,
is the daughter of Lyman and
Gayle Covey of Valley Center.
The junior-to-be competes in basketball and track and field.
The award, considered one
of the NAIA s most prestigious,
honors a student-athlete
who excels in athletics and
academics and is committed to the Champions of Character
I rnr t,flhllflC flf
pnt 0 11V… S VCl1t&…0 .51
respect, responsibility, integrity,
servant leadership and sportsmanship.
The winner of the award was Micah Johnson from Central
Christian College in McPherson.
1-11-
Kristen Bartel was recognized
by the College of Arts and
Sciences at Southern Illinois
University-Edwardsville during its annual Honors Day Convocation
on April 19. Bartel, formerly
of Valley Center, received
the Friends of Art Honor Award
in Studio Arts.
Ark ValleyNews
ValleyCenter,KSCirc. 1931
From Page:3
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County:Sedgwick
Four members of the class
of 2009 of Valley Center High
School have accepted scholarships to State Uni j fof the 2009-2010 academic year.
Zachary Bates, the son of
Jennifer Bates of Valley Center,
accepted a $500 Copper Academic
Award. He plans to major in graphic design.
Cade Canaday, the son of Pat and Jean Canaday of Valley
Center, accepted a $900
Academic Opportunity Award in physics. He plans a career in
engineering.
Silas Decker, the son of Tim
and Rachael Decker of Valley Center, accepted a $500 Copper
Academic Opportunity Award in teacher education. He plans
to major in elementary education.
Stevon Kiine, the son of
Stephen and Marci Kline of
Valley Center, accepted a $900
Academic Opportunity Award in physics. He plans to major in
physics.
Several area students were
named to the DeanÒs List for
the spring semester of 2009 at
Newman Univ To qualify
for this achievement, a student
must complete 12 credit hours
and have attained a grade point
average of 3.5 or better.
From Bel Aire were Kimberly
Brandt, Isaac Hathaway,
Donna Jł Hunsinger and TonVinh
Nguyen; from Kechi were
Nicholas May and Alexandria
Santiago; Stephanie Vetter
from Park City and from Valley
Center were R. Chad Dove,
John Hagan, Theresa Hagan, Michelle Noone, Jessica Normandin
and Aaron Sullivan.
1-1Õ1
The Universityłf Kansas
will ho pr gram at 1:30 p.m. June 7 at the
Lied Center for more than 300
academically talented seventhgrade
students from Kansas
selected for the 2009 Duke University Talent Identification
Program (TIP). Selection is based on college
entrance exam scores that are
in the top 5 percent while the
students are in middle school.
Students participate by taking
either the SAT or ACT national
achievement tests.
Each Duke TIP student
receives a medallion. The state
recognition ceremonies honor seventh-graders who earned
scores above the average scores
of college-bound high school seniors.
The Duke program is in its
29th year, and this is the 11th
year KU has hosted the Kansas recognition program.
Kevin Willmott, associate
professor of theater and film,
will deliver a special address to
the students and their families
and guests about his approach
to filmmaking.
Teresa Porter, Duke TIP representative, will present the
awards.
Area students to be honored
are listed below.
Bel Aire: Nicholas L. Connell
and Christine A. Wolf; Ke
Ark ValleyNews
ValleyCenter,KSCirc. 1931
From Page:3
6/4/200934100
Kechi: Matthew T. Souter; Valley
Center: Kyle B. Harper, Laura
E. Karst and Jared P. Kirkland;
Wichita: Mackenzie A. Bair,
Jacob J. Bambick, Jacob J. Barrett,
Joseph M. Coq, David L.
Ewers, Samuel T. Gilman, Hallie
R. Heard, Paige E. Hungate,
William D. Lecompte, Jack McGrath, Henry J. McKenzie,
Scott J. Rider, Karson K. Rowe, Ryan C. Downing, Nathanael W. Lawton, Deven Mittman,
Trevor A. Scheopnei Nathan Jin and Dane B. Laughlin.
Lauren L. Schwab, formerly of Kechi and Valley Center, recentiy
graduated
with
highest
honors
from
y She
received a
bachelorÒs of degreein.
Schwab r
business
administration with a minor in
marketing.
A graduate of Friends
UniversityÒs CBASE (College
of Business, Science and
Education), Schwab maintained
a 4.0 GPA and received both Presidential and Legacy scholarships.
A 2005 graduate of Valley
Center High School, she is the
daughter of Jeffrey Schwab of
Kechi and Ronda Schwab of
Wichita, and the granddaughter
of Raleigh and Bonnie Lackey
of Valley Center and the late
Dixie Schwab-Beal of Emporia.
Following graduation,
Schwab moved to Venice, Calif.,
to pursue a career in sports
management.
1 The second annual Sedgwick
County Senior Law
Day will be held from 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m. June 16 at the
Sedgwick County Extension
Education Center, 7001 W.
21st North in Wichita.
Sponsored by Senior Ser
Services Inc. of Wichita, Central
Plains Area Agency on Aging and K-State Research and
Extension, this seminar will include topics about Advance
Directives, Estate Planning,
Identity Theft, Social Security,
New Medi-Gap Policies and more. Lany Hatteberg will be
the guest speaker at lunch.
Register by June 10. A $10
contribution is requested to
help pay for copies, coffee
refreshments and box lunch
but scholarships are available.
Call Denise Dias, County Extension
Agent for Family and
Consumer Sciences Department,
at 660-0100, ext. 0116,
for more information.
11Õ1-
The Valley Center High School Class of 1999 will be
holding its 20-year reunion
Sept. 11 and 12. There will
be a family get-together Sept.
11 at the park, followed by a
tour of the school. For those
who wish to go, the class will
Ark ValleyNews
ValleyCenter,KSCirc. 1931
From Page:3
6/4/200934100
attend Valley CenterÒs home football game. There will be
a dinner Sept. 12 at PlayerÒs
Sports Bar. Please contact
Ivan Moore at 755-486 or [email protected] to
RVSP or for more information.
The class is still looking
for several classmates. Call
Ivan if you have information
on any of these classmates:
Lisa Acuff, Tiffany Adams, Woodrow Bird, Ryan Bomberry,
Heather Campbell, Chris
Cheney, Crystal Cook, Jeremy Dawson, Vanessa Dempsey,
Jeremy DeVore, Michale Duncan,
Amy Duree, Sara Geer,
Eva Guhr, Misti Hamby, Brianne
Harmon, Heather Hipps,
Jason Hobaugh, Kenneth Holsey, Nicholas Johnson, Satrina
Kester, Jason Kirk, Jason
Kittrell, Jennifer Linder, Levi
Love, Kinda Mader, Daniel Marquez, Lindsay Moon,
Andrew Rensel, Jannafer Shonk, Matt Snider, Jenna Sullivan, cohn Sutter, Mandy
Thompson, Joshua Truman, Elizabeth Underwood, Janel
Wade-Jacobs, Evan Walton, Donald Wilson, Naomi Wilson and Gary Yost.
11 Air National Guard Airman
Corey 1. Brazil graduated from basic
military
training at
Lackland
Air Force
Base, San
Antonio,
Texas.
The airman
completed
an
intensive Brazil eight-week
program that included
training in military discipline
and studies, Air Force
core values, physical fitness
and basic warfare principles
and skills.
Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits
toward an associate in applied
science degree through the
Community College of the Air
Force.
He is the son of Steve and
Marcia Brazil of Wichita.
11 Three area students were
named to the 2009 spring honor rolls at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.
Named to the PresidentÒs
Honor Roll were Krista
Lauren Ellis, a 2006 graduate of Valley Center High School,
and Audra Alane Blasi, a 2007 graduate of Heights High School. Named to the DeanÒs
Honor Roll was Latrice Tinia
Williams, also a 2007 graduate
of Heights High School. Full-time undergraduate
students who completed 12 or
more hours with a grade point
average of 4.00 were placed
on the PresidentÒs Honor Roll.
Students who completed 12 or
more hours with a grade point
average of 3.50 to 3.99 with
no grade below a ÓCÔ were
placed on the DeanÒs Honor
Ark ValleyNews
ValleyCenter,KSCirc. 1931
From Page:3
6/4/200934100
J. Ablah
Award during
May
16 commencement
at
Newman University.
The
award was
established
Sullivan by Geri
(Ablah)
and Fran
Jabara to
honor the memory of GeriÒs
parents, Leona J. and Harvey
J. Ablah. The Harvey J. Ablah Award is presented annually to
a graduating male student who exemplifies the spirit of Newman
and shows great promise to make a strong and positive
contribution to society.
Sullivan was also honored
at a May 29 luncheon, which was also attended by his
mentor, chaplain and assistant
professor of theology Father
Joseph Tatro.
1-11Õ
The Little Arkansas Chapter of Daughters of the American
Revolution will have its
monthly meeting at 1 p.m.
June 6 at the Edna Buschow Library in Valley Center. All
women over 18 are invited to
Roll.
.tli.
Shannon Kay Spangler received a bachelor of science
degree from Washburn
Universi in Top commencement ceremonies held May 16. She is a 2005
graduate of her school-athome
home in Kechi.
She has been accepted into
the physician assistant program
at Wichita St e Univerthat
egan June 1.
Shannon is the oldest
daughter of Darryl and Kay Spangler and older sister of
Kacey, Krystal and Abby.
11 t
Seniors Cassandra Preston and Kaylee Wiechman, along with sophomore John Goering,
were named to the DeanÒs List for the spring 2009
semester at Bethel College in
North Newton. Students were
eligible for this list if they had
completed a minimum of 12
graded hours and do not have
an incomplete, not reported or
in process in any letter-graded course during the semester.
The DeanÒs List is for students
who maintained a grade point
average of between 3.7 and
4.0 during the semester.
1 Katherine S. Han, daughter
of Alan and Debra Han of
Park City, and Robert Elliot
Boyle, son of Ron and Julie
Boyle and Morgan Leigh
Fulmer, daughter of Britt and Brenda Fulmer, both of
Wichita, were initiated into
the University of KansasÒ Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Kappa
academic honor society during
a may 16 ceremony.
ttl.
Aaron Sullivan of Valley Center received the Harvey
Ark ValleyNews
ValleyCenter,KSCirc. 1931
From Page:3
6/4/200934100
anu lvniry.
liem About People You
Know
Day Bayer, Don Becker,
and Bill Bradley returned
home Sunday evening, from
Indianapolis, md., where
they attended the 500-mile
Speedway Race on Decoration
Day. Mrs. Bradley and
Kandi accompanied them to
Centerville, Ia., where they
will visit her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Basil Tade, and
other relatives.
Gary Taylor of Lawrence,
spent the Memorial
Day holiday weekend visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bedford Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Cooley and Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Becker of Wichita,
Miss Gladys Becker of Pratt
and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Dyche
spent Saturday and Sunday
in Dodge City and Mmneola,
visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Orth and family.
Gale Hams, son Qt Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Harris of
Cunningham, received a
Master of Science Degree in
Physics from the University
of Kansas at Commencement
Exercises, Monday, June 1.
Jerry Schafer, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Schafer of
Cunningham, was graduated
from Kansas State University
in Manhattan, Sunday
afternoon. He received two
degrees, Doctor of Veterinary M and Bachelor
of Science. Relatives at-
attending
tending the commencement exercises were Mr. and Mrs.
Schafer and A.J. and Mrs.
IreneSchnittker of Cunningham,
Mrs. Medora Schafer
of Kansas City, Mo., Mr. anu
Mrs. Bill Schafer and family
of Pratt, and Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Schafer of Waco,
Tex., Jerry will be located
and associated with Dr. Norman
Lutheroff and Animal
Clinic at Seneca. Dr. and
Mrs. Schafer and family
moved from Manhattan to
Seneca, Monday.
Mrs. Alma Nichols ofZenda,
graduated from Friends
University in Wichita, Monday
morning. Her daughter,
Mrs. Dean Mantooth, and
children attended the graduLati
n exercises.
CunninghamCourier
Cunningham,KSCirc. 650
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County:Kingman