On Monday evening, Aug. 27, Hays High School will host its annual V.I.P. Night (Very Important Parents’ Night), a special Open House just for them.The event will begin at 7 p.m. in Gym A.
After a welcome and introductions, parents will walk through their students’ class schedules hearing brief presentations from their teachers. The evening will give parents a real feel about the day in the life of a Hays High student.
HHS postsecondary planning for junior and senior parents
In conjunction with the annual open house, Hays High School will also host post-secondary planning presentations for junior and senior parents at 6 p.m. Monday, Aug. 27.
The presentations are designed to help parents assist their students in navigating the college and technical school selection, admission and financial aid process.
All parents are welcome, but the program is especially timely for parents of juniors and seniors.
The programs will begin at 6 p.m. with junior parents meeting in the HHS lecture hall and senior parents meeting in the HHS cafeteria.
The postsecondary presentations will conclude at 6:45 p.m. so that parents may attend the open house, which starts at 7 p.m. If parents have questions, they can contact the HHS counseling office at 623-2608.
DETROIT (AP) — Aretha Franklin, the undisputed “Queen of Soul” who sang with matchless style on such classics as “Think,” ”I Say a Little Prayer” and her signature song, “Respect,” and stood as a cultural icon around the globe, has died at age 76 from advanced pancreatic cancer.
Publicist Gwendolyn Quinn tells The Associated Press through a family statement that Franklin died Thursday at 9:50 a.m. at her home in Detroit. The statement said “Franklin’s official cause of death was due to advance pancreatic cancer of the neuroendocrine type, which was confirmed by Franklin’s oncologist, Dr. Philip Phillips of Karmanos Cancer Institute” in Detroit.
The family added: “In one of the darkest moments of our lives, we are not able to find the appropriate words to express the pain in our heart. We have lost the matriarch and rock of our family. The love she had for her children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and cousins knew no bounds.”
The statement continued:
“We have been deeply touched by the incredible outpouring of love and support we have received from close friends, supporters and fans all around the world. Thank you for your compassion and prayers. We have felt your love for Aretha and it brings us comfort to know that her legacy will live on. As we grieve, we ask that you respect our privacy during this difficult time.”
Funeral arrangements will be announced in the coming days.
Franklin, who had battled undisclosed health issues in recent years, had in 2017 announced her retirement from touring.
Franklin sang at White House in 2014 -Photo Courtesy White House
A professional singer and accomplished pianist by her late teens, a superstar by her mid-20s, Franklin had long ago settled any arguments over who was the greatest popular vocalist of her time. Her gifts, natural and acquired, were a multi-octave mezzo-soprano, gospel passion and training worthy of a preacher’s daughter, taste sophisticated and eccentric, and the courage to channel private pain into liberating song.
She recorded hundreds of tracks and had dozens of hits over the span of a half century, including 20 that reached No. 1 on the R&B charts. But her reputation was defined by an extraordinary run of top 10 smashes in the late 1960s, from the morning-after bliss of “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” to the wised-up “Chain of Fools” to her unstoppable call for “Respect.”
Her records sold millions of copies and the music industry couldn’t honor her enough. Franklin won 18 Grammy awards. In 1987, she became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Fellow singers bowed to her eminence and political and civic leaders treated her as a peer. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was a longtime friend, and she sang at the dedication of King’s memorial, in 2011. She performed at the inaugurations of Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, and at the funeral for civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks. Clinton gave Franklin the National Medal of Arts. President George W. Bush awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, in 2005.
Franklin’s best-known appearance with a president was in January 2009, when she sang “My Country ’tis of Thee” at Barack Obama’s inauguration. She wore a gray felt hat with a huge, Swarovski rhinestone-bordered bow that became an Internet sensation and even had its own website. In 2015, she brought Obama and others to tears with a triumphant performance of “Natural Woman” at a Kennedy Center tribute to the song’s co-writer, Carole King.
Franklin endured the exhausting grind of celebrity and personal troubles dating back to childhood. She was married from 1961 to 1969 to her manager, Ted White, and their battles are widely believed to have inspired her performances on several songs, including “(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You’ve Been Gone,” ”Think” and her heartbreaking ballad of despair, “Ain’t No Way.” The mother of two sons by age 16 (she later had two more), she was often in turmoil as she struggled with her weight, family problems and financial predicaments. Her best known producer, Jerry Wexler, nicknamed her “Our Lady of Mysterious Sorrows.”
Franklin married actor Glynn Turman in 1978 in Los Angeles but returned to her hometown of Detroit the following year after her father was shot by burglars and left semi-comatose until his death in 1984. She and Turman divorced that year.
Despite growing up in Detroit, and having Smokey Robinson as a childhood friend, Franklin never recorded for Motown Records; stints with Columbia and Arista were sandwiched around her prime years with Atlantic Records. But it was at Detroit’s New Bethel Baptist Church, where her father was pastor, that Franklin learned the gospel fundamentals that would make her a soul institution.
Aretha Louise Franklin was born March 25, 1942, in Memphis, Tennessee. The Rev. C.L. Franklin soon moved his family to Buffalo, New York, then to Detroit, where the Franklins settled after the marriage of Aretha’s parents collapsed and her mother (and reputed sound-alike) Barbara returned to Buffalo.
C.L. Franklin was among the most prominent Baptist ministers of his time. He recorded dozens of albums of sermons and music and knew such gospel stars as Marion Williams and Clara Ward, who mentored Aretha and her sisters Carolyn and Erma. (Both sisters sang on Aretha’s records, and Carolyn also wrote “Ain’t No Way” and other songs for Aretha). Music was the family business and performers from Sam Cooke to Lou Rawls were guests at the Franklin house. In the living room, the shy young Aretha awed friends with her playing on the grand piano.
Franklin occasionally performed at New Bethel Baptist throughout her career; her 1987 gospel album “One Lord One Faith One Baptism” was recorded live at the church.
Her most acclaimed gospel recording came in 1972 with the Grammy-winning album “Amazing Grace,” which was recorded live at New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in South Central Los Angeles and featured gospel legend James Cleveland, along with her own father (Mick Jagger was one of the celebrities in the audience). It became one of of the best-selling gospel albums ever.
The piano she began learning at age 8 became a jazzy component of much of her work, including arranging as well as songwriting. “If I’m writing and I’m producing and singing, too, you get more of me that way, rather than having four or five different people working on one song,” Franklin told The Detroit News in 2003.
Franklin was in her early teens when she began touring with her father, and she released a gospel album in 1956 through J-V-B Records. Four years later, she signed with Columbia Records producer John Hammond, who called Franklin the most exciting singer he had heard since a vocalist he promoted decades earlier, Billie Holiday. Franklin knew Motown founder Berry Gordy Jr. and considered joining his label, but decided it was just a local company at the time.
Franklin recorded several albums for Columbia Records over the next six years. She had a handful of minor hits, including “Rock-A-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody” and “Runnin’ Out of Fools,” but never quite caught on as the label tried to fit into her a variety of styles, from jazz and show songs to such pop numbers as “Mockingbird.” Franklin jumped to Atlantic Records when her contract ran out, in 1966.
“But the years at Columbia also taught her several important things,” critic Russell Gersten later wrote. “She worked hard at controlling and modulating her phrasing, giving her a discipline that most other soul singers lacked. She also developed a versatility with mainstream music that gave her later albums a breadth that was lacking on Motown LPs from the same period.
“Most important, she learned what she didn’t like: to do what she was told to do.”
At Atlantic, Wexler teamed her with veteran R&B musicians from Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, and the result was a tougher, soulful sound, with call-and-response vocals and Franklin’s gospel-style piano, which anchored “I Say a Little Prayer,” ”Natural Woman” and others.
Of Franklin’s dozens of hits, none was linked more firmly to her than the funky, horn-led march “Respect” and its spelled out demand for “R-E-S-P-E-C-T.”
Writing in Rolling Stone magazine in 2004, Wexler said: “It was an appeal for dignity combined with a blatant lubricity. There are songs that are a call to action. There are love songs. There are sex songs. But it’s hard to think of another song where all those elements are combined.”
Franklin had decided she wanted to “embellish” the R&B song written by Otis Redding, whose version had been a modest hit in 1965, Wexler said.
“When she walked into the studio, it was already worked out in her head,” the producer wrote. “Otis came up to my office right before ‘Respect’ was released, and I played him the tape. He said, ‘She done took my song.’ He said it benignly and ruefully. He knew the identity of the song was slipping away from him to her.”
In a 2004 interview with the St. Petersburg (Florida) Times, Franklin was asked whether she sensed in the ’60s that she was helping change popular music.
“Somewhat, certainly with ‘Respect,’ that was a battle cry for freedom and many people of many ethnicities took pride in that word,” she answered. “It was meaningful to all of us.”
In 1968, Franklin was pictured on the cover of Time magazine and had more than 10 Top 20 hits in 1967 and 1968. At a time of rebellion and division, Franklin’s records were a musical union of the church and the secular, man and woman, black and white, North and South, East and West. They were produced and engineered by New Yorkers Wexler and Tom Dowd, arranged by Turkish-born Arif Mardin and backed by an interracial assembly of top session musicians based mostly in Alabama.
Her popularity faded during the 1970s despite such hits as the funky “Rock Steady” and such acclaimed albums as the intimate “Spirit in the Dark.” But her career was revived in 1980 with a cameo appearance in the smash movie “The Blues Brothers” and her switch to Arista Records. Franklin collaborated with such pop and soul artists as Luther Vandross, Elton John, Whitney Houston and George Michael, with whom she recorded a No. 1 single, “I Knew You Were Waiting (for Me).” Her 1985 album “Who’s Zoomin’ Who” received some of her best reviews and included such hits as the title track and “Freeway of Love.”
Critics consistently praised Franklin’s singing but sometimes questioned her material; she covered songs by Stephen Sondheim, Bread, the Doobie Brothers. For Aretha, anything she performed was “soul.”
From her earliest recording sessions at Columbia, when she asked to sing “Over the Rainbow,” she defied category. The 1998 Grammys gave her a chance to demonstrate her range. Franklin performed “Respect,” then, with only a few minutes’ notice, filled in for an ailing Luciano Pavarotti and drew rave reviews for her rendition of “Nessun Dorma,” a stirring aria for tenors from Puccini’s “Turandot.”
“I’m sure many people were surprised, but I’m not there to prove anything,” Franklin told The Associated Press. “Not necessary.”
Fame never eclipsed Franklin’s charitable works, or her loyalty to Detroit.
Franklin sang the national anthem at Super Bowl in her hometown in 2006, after grousing that Detroit’s rich musical legacy was being snubbed when the Rolling Stones were chosen as halftime performers.
“I didn’t think there was enough (Detroit representation) by any means,” she said. “And it was my feeling, ‘How dare you come to Detroit, a city of legends — musical legends, plural — and not ask one or two of them to participate?’ That’s not the way it should be.”
Franklin did most of her extensive touring by bus after Redding’s death in a 1967 plane crash, and a rough flight to Detroit in 1982 left her with a fear of flying that anti-anxiety tapes and classes couldn’t help. She told Time in 1998 that the custom bus was a comfortable alternative: “You can pull over, go to Red Lobster. You can’t pull over at 35,000 feet.”
She only released a few albums over the past two decades, including “A Rose is Still a Rose,” which featured songs by Sean “Diddy” Combs, Lauryn Hill and other contemporary artists, and “So Damn Happy,” for which Franklin wrote the gratified title ballad. Franklin’s autobiography, “Aretha: From These Roots,” came out in 1999, when she was in her 50s. But she always made it clear that her story would continue.
“Music is my thing, it’s who I am. I’m in it for the long run,” she told The Associated Press in 2008. “I’ll be around, singing, ‘What you want, baby I got it.’ Having fun all the way.”
KANSAS CITY (AP) – Authorities are investigating after two bodies were found in the woods near a Kansas City area lake.
Area near where authorities found the bodies -google image
Police aren’t identifying the people found Wednesday afternoon at Longview Lake or said how they died. But relatives and friends of 29-year-old Michael Brewer and 25-year-old Keith Wasmer gathered at the lake because they suspect the bodies were those of the missing men.
The friends disappeared after going to the Longview Marina on Aug. 6 to meet someone. Wasmer’s mother, Shannon Wasmer, says her “mom-stinct is not doing so well right now.” Her son has four children, the youngest just 1-month-old.
Michael Brewer’s father, Jeff Brewer, says there will at least be “some sort of closure” if the bodies are identified as those of the two friends.
Romanus (Bob) J. Racette, age 90, passed away on August 11, 2018 at McKee Medical Center in Loveland, Colorado. Bob was born on April 12, 1928 at home in St. Joseph, Kansas to Delphos and Emma (Pelland) Racette. Bob was a graduate of Clyde High School of 1946. On September 11, 1950, Bob married Shirley Ann Resco in Clyde, Kansas. The day following their wedding, Bob was inducted into the U.S. Army.
Bob was a loving husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, mentor and great friend to many. Bob served in the Korean War and is a Bronze Star and Purple Heart recipient. Bob worked for Kansas Power and Light Company for 38 years and retired in 1990. Bob was a dedicated member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, as well as an active member of the Knights of Columbus of Larned, KS. He was a dedicated fireman for many years at the Larned Fire Department.
Bob enjoyed traveling, spending time with friends and family, camping and fishing, and watching his grandchildren’s sports and other activities. He was an avid sports fan and followed many college teams. Bob could accomplish anything that he set his mind to and was a very hard worker.
Bob is survived by his wife of 68 blessed years, Shirley Racette, Loveland, Co; his children, Larry Racette and wife Trudy, Allen, Tx; Kathy Kolb, Salina, Ks; Kevin Racette and wife Barbara, Loveland, Co; and Lori Prescott, Loveland, Co; his seven grandchildren, Ann Collins, Salina, KS, Amy Hallman (Rich), Blue Springs, MO, Brian Racette (Jenny) Valparaiso, Indiana, Julie Rembold (Dan), Allen, TX, Scott Racette, Loveland, CO, Shane Carr, Dillon, CO, Shanna Prescott, Hays, KS; and twelve great-grandchildren. He has one surviving sister, Darlene Weatherhead, Clyde, KS.
Bob is preceded in death by his parents, Delphos and Emma (Pelland) Racette; one sister, Jean Weatherhead; three brothers, Ronald Racette, Wilbur Racette, and Eldon Racette (infant brother), and son-in-law, Kiah Kolb.
Visitation will be held on Thursday, September 6, 2018 from 1:00 P.M.–8:00 P.M. with a Knights of Columbus Rosary Service held at 7:00 p.m., Thursday, evening at the Chaput Mortuary, Clyde. Family will receive friends after the Rosary Service.
Mass of a Christian burial will be held 10:00 A.M., on Friday, September 7, 2018 at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Clyde, Kansas with Fr. Steven Heina officiating. Burial will follow in the Mt. Calvary Catholic Cemetery, Clyde. Military Honors will be conducted by the VFW Post #7515 of Clyde.
Memorial contributions may be given to Kansas Honor Flight or Larned Fire Department in c/o Chaput Mortuary. For online condolences, please visit www.chaputbuoy.com
LaNita Kay Shepard was born to Gerald and Ila Shepard on March 15, 1956 in Phoenix, AZ. LaNita passed away peacefully on August 13, 2018 at Citizens Medical Center Colby, KS.
LaNita lived a full life with strong faith and a deep love for her family. Over the years she has worked as a C.N.A. at Colby Medical Center, personnel caregiver, paraprofessional at Colby High School, Nanny for Wyricks, assistance at the fitness center, and sales associate at WalMart, LaNita also enjoyed being with her family especially swimming with her grandkids and teaching them to swim. She also spent time with the Victory House girls teaching them to crochet and any other activity they were doing at the time.
Preceding her in death are dad Gerald, granddaughters Abigail and Brittany, Grandparents Glen and Henrietta Banister and Ezra and Thesell Shepard, Aunt LaVena Thompson and uncles Richard Banister and Lyn Banister.
Surving LaNita are her son Brandon (Andrea) Shepard, mother Ila Shepard, Grandchildren Cheyanne, Chase, Darick, and Michael, Sister Denise (John)Sinkovitz, Brother Steve (Kizzie) Shepard, Neices and Nephews Mark, Kelly, Jay Sinkovitz, Patti Culmer, Amber Dockter, Jason Hemmingson, Courtney Hemminson,Jason Hemminsoss Great nieces and nephews Sophia and Ethan Culmer, Alayna and Caleb Dockter, and Gabriel and Adam Hemmingson.
Family is requesting that pink be worn in memory of LaNita.
Magdalena L. Zink of Kirwin, Kansas passed away on Monday, August 13, 2018 at Phillips County Hospital in Phillipsburg, Kansas at the age of 83. She was born on June 21, 1935 in Germany. In 1965 she was united in marriage to William Charles Zink, Jr. in England.
While living in Germany she worked for a suit manufacturing company. After coming to the United States she worked as a cook and waitress. As a faithful wife, mother, and homemaker, she not only took care of her home and family but also found time to take up knitting as well as enjoy the occasional bowling outing with friends.
Magdalena is survived by her son Joseph Zink; brother-in-law Leonard Zink of Glade; sister-in-law Jeannine Goertz and husband Bob of Hutchinson; grandsons Todd Allen Zink and wife Jessica of Norton, and Michael Ryan Zink of Norton; and great-grandson Kasen.
She was preceded in death by her parents, and her husband William Zink, Jr.
A Graveside Service will be held at 11:00am on Tuesday, August 21, 2018 at St. Thomas Catholic Cemetery in Stockton. Inurnment will follow in the cemetery. There will be no visitation.
Norma Lea Simonton, 71, of Colby, died August 14, 2018 at Citizens Medial Center, Colby.
She was born February 13, 1947, in Norton, KS, to Burton and Beulah (Bretton) Bruinekool. Norma attended Norton Schools, graduated and worked a variety of jobs in her lifetime. She went back to school later in life and received her Associates Degree of Nursing from Colby Community College, where she was a member of Phi Theta Kappa. She worked at Citizens Medical Center as an RN. She enjoyed her job and her service and care to others. Norma enjoyed dancing with the Sunflower Polka Club and volunteered at Genesis Food Bank and as a “Pink Lady” at Citizens Medical Center.
Norma was preceded in death by her parents and husband of 33 years, Charles Simonton.
She is survived by her children, Jolena (LeRoy) McMillin-Wipf, Dodge City, KS, Kimberly (Michael) Schriner, Colby, KS and Tamira (Michael) Quattlebaum, Montgomery, AL; brother, Gary (Bertsie) Bruinekool, Lenora, KS; grandchildren, Aaron (Ashley) Schriner, Gabriel Schriner, Taylor Quattlebaum, Michael Quattlebaum II and Alexandra Quattlebaum ; great-grandchildren, Caden and Kiley Schriner and the love of her life, Alvin Dellere.
Cremation was chosen. A memorial service will be at 2 p.m., Saturday, August 18, at the College Drive Assembly of God Church, Colby. Private inurnment will be held at the Norton Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to Heartland Christian School or Genesis Food Bank in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby, KS 67701. Sacred Heart Catholic Church-Colby, Memorial Mass will be held August 24, at 6 p.m. at the church. For information or condolences, please visit www.baalmannmortuary.com
Verna Lang, age 85, of Hays, KS, died on Wednesday, August 15, 2018 at St. Catherine Hospital in Garden City, KS.
Funeral services will be at 10:00 A.M., on Saturday, August 18, 2018 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, 1805 Vine St., Hays. KS. Burial will follow at St. Joseph Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 5:00 to 8:00 P.M. on Friday, August 17 and from 9:00-9:45 A.M. on Saturday, August 18, both at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd St., Hays, KS 67601.
A Daughters of Isabella rosary will be at 7:00 P.M., followed by a parish vigil service on Friday both at the funeral home.
Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or by email at [email protected].
Eris (McClellan) Waller was born on October 31, 1923 (yes, called a “little spook”) in a small house north of Zurich, Kansas (still standing, barely).
Later her family moved into Zurich where as a child she became popular one day giving candy to the other kids after “charging it” at the local grocery. Her father had quite a shock when he received the grocery bill and commenced to scolding Eris, who refused to cry because he had never scolded her mother when she charged things!
In her junior high days she lived for a period in Osborne where she met friends she remembered for a lifetime. Eris tells of the boys trying to set off the fire alarm at school without getting caught whenever they won a game. They’d run and hide when the teachers all came out. She spoke of the fun she had with her friends riding a horse-drawn cart up and down Osborne’s main street on Saturday advertising the upcoming sale at the Hoagland sale barn.
In high school, Eris learned tap dancing and then taught her sister Bonnie and cousins, Marion Renner and Bob McClellan how to tap dance.
Back in Zurich, she hopped on the “Jitney” (a short-run train that went to Salina) and attended the Brown-Mackie School of Business. The country was in the throngs of World War II and she was told it would be “good practice” to take the Civil Service Exam. She scored high and shortly thereafter received notice to report to Washington DC so she and another girl from the area traveled by train to Washington. There she clerked for various government agencies.
It was in Washington she met and was courted by her future husband, Lamont (Chuck) Waller. Chuck was very popular with the girls but the same night after meeting Eris at a nightclub known as Eddy’s he said to his friends, “That’s the girl I’m going to marry!” In the basement of Eris’s landlord, Chuck taught Eris how to Jitterbug and they were good dancers.
Eris eventually decided that clerking in Washington was not the ideal career and chose to move back to Kansas to attend Fort Hays State University. Chuck decided to come back with her so he saved cans of gasoline (rationed at the time) and stored them under his parent’s porch unbeknownst to them. Eris, Chuck, and another girl from Solomon, Kansas set out in Chuck’s 1935 Ford convertible and drove back to Kansas non-stop using the cans of gasoline stored in the car’s rumble seat.
Due to her Civil Service and Washington credentials, Eris found herself reporting for duty at the Walker Airbase east of Hays. The guard at the gate held a gun to her head wondering why she was there until she presented her papers. Eris was to report to the supply depot and was directed to a building where she heard men singing and water running and thought to herself, “what a crazy office”. Turned out she was sent to one of the men’s showers as a joke. Later that day, being one of the few to have a vehicle, she drove out of the base with the “high brass” in the car, no doubt worrying the gate guard, but she never told on him. She took her work administrating the supply depot very seriously and didn’t take any guff from the officials. She knew all the parts and pieces and recalls knowing when airmen were being sent “over there” by what equipment was being ordered for a crew.
One day Chuck sold his ’35 Ford to buy Eris a ring. They were married and honeymooned in Wichita at the Hotel Allis. The first married years were hard as Eris had a day job and Chuck a night job. Eventually Chuck got a job at the base as mechanical crew chief.
Later, Chuck built (literally) their first house in Zurich. Eris tells a story about how she had just cleaned house from top to bottom to remove all food (to keep out the mice) before they went on vacation. Chuck came in the house all cheerful carrying a package of crackers. Eris got after him and in a “short-lived marital spat” Chuck eventually threw the package of crackers down and stomped on them. But Eris always laughed when recalling the story.
Chuck started working for Eris’s father at the Chevrolet/John Deere dealership in Zurich. Ultimately Eris and Chuck bought what is now the Waller Motor Company dealership in Stockton in October of 1949. Chuck was the youngest franchised car dealer in the nation. Chuck did the selling and Eris did the bookkeeping. They were a team.
Driving was a family tradition. The kids remember fondly the Waller driving trips that took them to nearly all of the 50 states and Mexico and Canada. Eris and Chuck particularly liked going to the World’s Fairs.
Eris had a fascination for a house in town, the Coolbaugh mansion. It came up for sale and often on Main street Eris would pass the attorney, Bob Osborne, selling the house. They would hold up fingers to (jokingly) represent the 1000’s of dollars each might agree on. One day Eris put up her fingers and to her BIG surprise, Bob nodded yes! That house became Eris’s passion. For a while, it was rented as apartments sometimes occupied by Stockton teachers. It became home for Bill (the oldest son) and his family when Bill moved back to Stockton. It was the site of her daughter’s wedding reception. Then Eris got the idea to make it a museum of sorts, calling it the “Twentieth Century House” with each room furnished for different periods. Chuck grew up near the Civil War-torn Spotsylvania County, Virginia area and Eris was fond of that “Gone With the Wind” period of time (so there’s some 19th Century things in the house too).
When they retired, Chuck and Eris spent the winters in central Florida, going to Epcot and Disney World and Cypress Gardens and Universal Studios and watching the Royals farm club.
Eris was a member of the Stockton Methodist Church. She enjoyed being part of the Bellringers group there. Eris loved music and played piano and organ. She and Chuck also enjoyed playing Bridge in a Stockton Bridge club and that was a long-standing tradition even after Chuck passed.
Eris passed away in her sleep on August 14, 2018 while rehabilitating from a fall that broke her leg. She was 94. She was preceded in death by her mother and father, James and Gladys McClellan, her brother Wayne, and her husband Lamont (Chuck). She is survived by her oldest son, Bill and wife Alison of Hays with grandsons Jason and Brandon, her daughter Becky and husband Kevin of Wichita with grandson Alexander, and her youngest son Brad and wife Vicki of Stockton with grandson Drew and granddaughter Brooke, and her sister Bonnie and brother-in-law Bethel McElroy of Palco and later, Hutchinson. Eris will rest in the Stockton Cemetery, always proud to have Stockton as her home.
Funeral Services will be held at 10:30am on Monday, August 20, 2018 at the United Methodist Church in Stockton. Interment will follow at the Stockton City Cemetery in the Waller Family Mausoleum. Visitation will be from 1:00-8:00pm on Sunday at the funeral home in Stockton with family receiving friends from 5:30-6:30pm.
“Open wider,” requested the dentist as he began his examination. “Good grief!” he said startled. “You’ve got the biggest cavity I’ve ever seen — the biggest cavity I’ve ever seen.”
“OK, doc!” replied the patient. “I’m scared enough without you saying something like that twice.”
KANSAS CITY – A Kansas man was charged in federal court Wednesday with stealing dozens of firearms from an Independence, Mo., gun store, according to the United States Attorney.
Johnson -photo Wyandotte Co.
Keyon D. Johnson, 21, was charged in a criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Mo., with one count of stealing firearms from a federal licensee and one count of transporting stolen firearms across state lines. Johnson remains in federal custody pending a detention hearing on Aug. 20, 2018.
According to an affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint, Johnson stole 64 firearms from Armory KC, 10531 E. US 40 Hwy. in Independence. The firearms were stolen during a break-in at the business that occurred about 1:50 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 9, 2018.
The store’s video surveillance shows a group of thieves smashing out the glass on the front door of the business, the affidavit says, then attaching a chain to the front door of the business and to the rear of a pickup truck in order to rip the door off. The thieves entered the store and used hammers to break the glass on the display cases, then placed the firearms in bags.
A cooperating source identified Johnson as one of the thieves, according to the affidavit. On Monday, Aug. 13, 2018, investigators located a vehicle connected to the theft and attempted to conduct a traffic stop in the area of 27th Street and Parallel Parkway. The vehicle fled the area and was later found parked in a driveway. An officer saw two persons flee the area on foot and run into a wooded area. Additional officers responded to the area to assist and located Johnson, who was placed under arrest.
Officers located a Glock 9mm handgun laying near where Johnson was arrested. It was determined that the firearm had been among those stolen from Armory KC. Investigators searched Johnson’s apartment and found eight additional firearms, all of which had been stolen during the Aug. 9, 2018, burglary of Armory KC.
The charges contained in this complaint are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2001 Ford F150 driven by Tyler S. Burrows, 29, Lenexa, was parked on the shoulder of Interstate 435 at 79th Street in Lenexa.
The vehicle traveled northbound into the southbound lanes of traffic and struck a 2016 Freightliner semi head-on.
Burrows was pronounced dead at the scene. The semi driver Jared M. Fizer, 31, Harrisonville, Missouri, was not transported to treatment.
Debris from the collision hit a 2012 Nissan Altima driven by Najma M. Warsame, 19, Olathe. She was not injured.
All three drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
In April of last year, the HaysMed Foundation announced the Powerful Technology Campaign. The goal was to acquire several new key technologies that would signal a major turning point in patient care. The campaign, chaired by Dr. Tom and Debra McDonald, surpassed its $3 million goal, with a total of $3,822,342 in gifts and pledges.
The Powerful Technology Campaign included four major components:
-A new CT scanner
-New equipment in the HaysMed DeBakey Heart Institute’s two catheterization labs
-Integrated patient monitors
-Endowed funds to benefit department needs both now and for generations to come
The new, large-bore CT scanner, a technological breakthrough, captures detailed images of vital organs in only a fraction of a second. This remarkable speed significantly reduces radiation doses up to 82 percent from traditional CT scanners. New patient monitors tie into HaysMed’s larger electronic medical record system, which tracks patients’ health status at any given moment. The two catheterization labs can now also offer higher quality imaging, while minimizing radiation exposure to patients and providers.
Dr. Tom and Debra McDonald, Powerful Technology Campaign co-chairs
Campaign co-chairs Dr. Tom and Debra McDonald expressed their appreciation to the donors of the Campaign.
“The success of the Powerful Technology Campaign is important, not only because of the state-of-the art tools now available, but because of the increased standard of care they facilitate for our patients and for their families. We owe this achievement to the advocates and benefactors in our community who constantly seek to improve the lives of those who call our region home,” they said.