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Eagle Communications is hiring a Sales Manager

Are you looking for the right fit? So are we! Eagle Communications is seeking a Sales Manager for one of the largest unrated metros. Job responsibilities include, but are not limited to, leading and managing the sales team for four radio stations plus digital, while successfully driving revenue performance. This position is located in St. Joseph, MO.

Requirements:
1. The right individual will have experience in recruiting and training new sellers.
2. Proficiency in developing plans for revenue and team growth.
3. Ability to work well with other departments to achieve success.
4. Ability to work independently and collaboratively with others.
5. Excellent communication skills, flexibility and assertiveness to meet goals.

Qualifications:
1. Five years of media sales experience.
2. Sales management experience preferred.
3. Experience with Marketron and V Creative is beneficial.

Compensation is commensurate with experience, along with a competitive benefits package.

Applications may be found online at www.eaglecom.net/Career.html.
Apply by sending your resume, cover letter and application to Gary Exline, General Manager, gary.exline@eagleradio.net Applications will be accepted until position is filled.

All inquiries will be confidential. Eagle Communications is an Employee-Owned company and an EEO employer.
The selected candidate will be required to pass a criminal history background check.

US seeks stay of ruling on Obama immigration action

CourtJUAN A. LOZANO, Associated Press

HOUSTON (AP) — The U.S. government has asked a federal judge to lift his temporary hold on President Barack Obama’s executive action to shield millions of immigrants from deportation.

The Justice Department’s motion for a stay was filed Monday with U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen in Brownsville, Texas.

Last week, Hanen issued a preliminary injunction sought by 26 states suing to halt immigration action by Obama, who wants to spare from deportation as many as 5 million people who are in the U.S. illegally. The states, led by Texas, have argued Obama’s action is unconstitutional.

Legal experts say it is unlikely Hanen will put his ruling on hold, meaning the request would then go before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

Judge won’t hear retrial of N.E. Kan. man who punched his attorney

CourtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A judge is recusing himself from hearing the sexual assault retrial of a man accused of knocking his attorney unconscious during his first trial.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Shawnee County District Court Judge Mark Braun announced the decision in a ruling he issued this past week in the case of Lance Franklin. Braun was in court in December when attorney David McDonald was punched. McDonald suffered a concussion, cuts, swollen eyes and chipped teeth.

Braun found Franklin to be in contempt of court and will continue to handle that decision. Franklin also was charged with felony aggravated battery.

Franklin’s new defense attorney is appealing “all adverse rulings” against Franklin, including the contempt sentence. The contempt sentence won’t be credited toward any of Franklin’s other sentences.

CDC describes new virus that may have led to Kansas man’s death

Photo by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The newly discovered Bourbon virus is thought to have contributed to the death of a Kansas man last spring. -
Photo by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The newly discovered Bourbon virus is thought to have contributed to the death of a Kansas man last spring. –

By Dan Margolies

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided more details about a new virus that may have contributed to the death of an eastern Kansas resident late last spring.

The Bourbon virus is named after the county where the man, who was in his 50s, received multiple tick bites while working on his property. Several days later he developed nausea, weakness and diarrhea. Eleven days after he was bitten, he suffered multiple organ failure and died of cardiac arrest.

The CDC has now officially identified the novel virus as belonging to a group called thogotovirus, named for a pool of ticks collected in 1960 from the Thogoto forest near Nairobi, Kenya.

It says the Kansas case is the first instance of a virus in this group causing human illness in the United States. And it’s only the eighth known case of a virus in the group causing symptoms in people worldwide, the CDC says. “We’ve identified a new virus that appears to be a pathogen that could be dangerous to humans,” said Kansas state epidemiologist Charles Hunt, one of the authors of the CDC study.

“We don’t know much about it because it’s only been identified in one patient. But any new virus or agent that has the potential to harm human health is something that we need to be concerned about potentially and learn as much as we can about so we can help the public avoid it.”

The discovery of the virus, along with those of Heartland virus in Missouri and other pathogens in China, leads the CDC to believe that other undiscovered viruses may be making people sick. The CDC says it doesn’t know yet whether the Bourbon virus can be found in other parts of the United States.

But because thogotovirus pathogens have been linked to ticks and mosquitos in parts of Europe, Asia and Africa, it says the Bourbon virus might also be spread that way. There’s no vaccine or drug currently available to counter the virus.

The CDC recommends that people protect themselves from outdoor tick and bug bites by using insect repellant, wearing long sleeves and pants, avoiding bushy and wooded areas, and performing thorough tick checks after spending time outdoors. “Ticks are dangerous to people,” Hunt said.

“They can carry lots of things. This is one additional thing that we think can be transmitted by ticks. And we obviously have a lot more work to do in terms of understanding this virus. But it’s prudent to avoid tick bites.”

 

Dan Margolies is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Downtown block to get new infusions (VIDEO)

Brian Myers at 517 Felix
Brian Myers at 517 Felix

A pair of downtown activists and business people hope to infuse a long-vacant block with some new life.

Brian Myers and Amy Heath of the “Lucky Tiger” store were expected to sign a lease this week for a long-neglected storefront at 517 Felix Street. The pair hope to open the “Tiger’s Den” in mid to late spring.

 

Myers tells us the bar and bookstore will offer fine wines, specialty beers and cocktails with fresh, and freshly-made ingredients. Myers says he’ll make his own simple syrups and infuse his own flavored-vodka drinks.

Meyers says they’ll start with used books on the shelves, but could sell new books as well.

He expected to get the lease this week and anticipates a grand opening this spring.

What Binds Us Together? Peace & Conflict Studies Speaker Series continues Tuesday at MWSU

MWSU logo with griffonThe 2014-2015 Peace and Conflict Studies Speaker Series at Missouri Western State University continues with a talk titled “What Binds Us Together? Changing Perspectives on the Moral Order of Society” by Dr. Martha Jalali Rabbani at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 24.

The talk is free and open to the public in the Hoff Conference Rooms, at the Blum Student Union (rooms 218-219).

Dr. Rabbani is a lecturer in peace and conflict studies at the University of Kansas. She has an international record of presentations and publications in the areas of both moral education and peace studies and is the autor of two books: “The Development and Antidevelopment Debate: Critical Reflections on the Philosophical Foundations” and “La educación para la ciudadania mundial: reconociendo la unidad y realizando la diversidad humana.”

For more information about the lecture series, or about Peace and Conflict Studies at Missouri Western, contact faculty members Joanne Katz, katz@missouriwestern.edu, David Kratz Mathies, dmathies@missouriwestern.edu, or Ed Taylor, etaylor8@missouriwestern.edu.

KHP to Work Seatbelt Enforcement Near High Schools Across Kansas

Seat belt  SeatbeltBeginning today and running through March 6, 2015, the Kansas Highway Patrol will work on an annual seatbelt enforcement campaign around area high schools.

In a media release,  the KHP reported the campaign is hosted by the Kansas Department of Transportation’s Traffic Safety Section, and is in conjunction with Kansas’ Seatbelts Are For Everyone (SAFE) program.

In 2014, Kansas lost 34 teens (ages 13-19) in crashes, with 63% of those victims not being properly restrained. The hope of the enforcement is to work to increase education and enforcement on seatbelt laws. KDOT, the Kansas Traffic Safety Resource Office (KTSRO), and law enforcement partners across the state have spent more than 20 years educating Kansas teens on the dangers of driving without a seatbelt.

The Kansas SAFE program began in 2008, in southeast Kansas. It is a teen run, peer to peer program, focused on increasing teen restraint compliance through education, positive rewards, and enforcement. It is designed to bring awareness to the importance of wearing a seatbelt, reducing the number of motor vehicle-related injuries and fatalities among Kansas teens. The goal of SAFE is to increase seatbelt use among students while providing strong traffic safety messages throughout the school year.

“Our priority is to keep motorists of all ages safe as they travel to and from their destinations. It is our hope that by encouraging students to wear their seatbelts, this will begin a lifelong practice, which will help keep them safe in the years to come,” said Colonel Mark Bruce, KHP Superintendent. “The SAFE program has already seen life-saving results over the past few years, and we hope these good results will keep building.”

For the two-week enforcement period, troopers and other officers will work near local high schools. Anyone caught not properly restrained could be issued a citation. For more information on the SAFE Program, go to http://www.ktsro.org/safe.

MSHP seeks new troopers

MSHP General HQThe Missouri State Highway Patrol is testing for new troopers.

The Patrol is encouraging qualified individuals of all backgrounds to apply, and will offer testing at nine different locations in Missouri. Those who successfully complete testing will be eligible to continue in the selection process for the 102nd Recruit Class, scheduled to begin training on January 4, 2016.

The application deadline is March 29, 2015. Testing at some locations will begin as early as March 4, 2015.

To be eligible, candidates must possess a minimum of 30 college credits, or two years of federal active duty military service with an honorable discharge, or two years of full-time POST certified experience as a law enforcement officer with arrest authority at the time recruit training begins.

The starting salary for trooper is $3,168 per month while in training; $3,356 per month after six months; and $3,652 per month at two years of service. Other benefits include group health insurance, contributory retirement, career advancement, and more.

The selection process is a multi-phase testing procedure including: written examination, a physical fitness for duty assessment, polygraph examination, background investigation, and oral interview board. After a conditional offer of employment, the applicant must successfully complete a medical examination (to include vision and hearing), psychological examination, a psychological interview, drug screening, and final applicant review.

Interested persons can find out more about the qualifications by contacting a Patrol recruiter at telephone number 1-800-796-7000, or may apply online at www.motrooper.com.

Eastern Kansas couple dies in fiery rollover crash

fatal crash accidentPAOLA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a couple died after their car went off the side of a Miami County road, overturned and caught fire.

The Kansas City Star reports that the crash happened around 2:30 p.m. Sunday. The Miami County Sheriff’s Office identified the victims as 78-year-old Willis D. Hodgson and 77-year-old Beth E. Hodgson. The couple lived in the town of Parker.

Cold weather prompts school delays

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Cold weather is once again prompting late starts at a handful of school districts in our area. Here’s the list:

Breckenridge R-1 and R-4 Delayed 2 Hour late start
Maryville R-2 Delayed 2 hour delayed start
Southwest Livingston R-1 (Ludlow) Delayed 2 Hour late start

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