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FHSU Foundation to award 7 scholarships at Student Awareness Day

FHSU University Relations

The seventh annual Student Awareness Day will be hosted by the Fort Hays State University Foundation from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday, April 17, in FHSU’s Robbins Center.

Students who attend will be eligible for one of seven scholarships to use in the fall 2019 semester. Students will be entered to win one of five $100 scholarships and one $1,000 scholarship just for attending.

Students will be entered to win an additional $500 award if they post on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram with the hashtag “AwarenessDay.”

Attendees will also enjoy a free lunch. In years past, approximately 375 Fort Hays State students have stopped by to receive a free lunch and for the opportunity to win a scholarship.

Awareness Day was created to further educate current Tigers about the importance of private support and fundraising.

To learn more about the FHSU Foundation, visit https://foundation.fhsu.edu/.

Jerome N. Heim

September 16, 1930 – April 14, 2019

An obituary is pending with Mickey-Leopold Funeral Home.

Click HERE for service details.

Marvin J. Struik

Rural Agra resident Marvin J. Struik passed away April 13, 2019 at his home at the age of 77. He was born July 9, 1941 in Jasper County, IA, the son of Hubert & Hendrika (Van Norden) Struik.

Survivors include his wife Loretta of the home; 2 sons, Kenton of Cedar Rapids, IA & Kurtis of Mesa, AZ; his daughter, Kathy Schmid of Kensington; 3 sisters: Linda Vande Lune & Phyllis Vander Pol of Pella, IA & Carol Van Zee of Ankeny, IA; 5 grandchildren and 4 Great Grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Friday, April 19 at 2:00 p.m. in the Heartland Worship Center, Agra, with Pastors Lorna Paulus & Becky Saddler officiating. Burial will follow in the Agra Cemetery.

Visitation will be from noon to 9:00 Wednesday at the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg. The family will receive friends from 5:00 to 7:00 Thursday at the Heartland Worship Center.

Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice Services or the Agra Fire Dept.

John V. Marquardt

John V. Marquardt, age 92, passed away Sunday, April 14th at Smith Center Health and Rehab in Smith Center, KS.

Arrangements are pending with Simmons-Rentschler Mortuary.

Diane Arment

Diane Arment, age 81, passed away Sunday, April 14th at Smith Center Health and Rehab in Smith Center, KS.

An obituary is pending with Simmons-Rentschler Mortuary.

Click HERE for service details.

Kansas tells court broad support is reason to OK school funding plan

By JOHN HANNA 

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Lawyers for Kansas told the state Supreme Court on Monday that it should sign off on a new law boosting spending on public schools and end a protracted education funding lawsuit partly because the law has broad, bipartisan support.

photo Kansas News Service

Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican, filed written legal arguments defending the new law. It contains Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s proposal for an education funding increase of roughly $90 million a year and is aimed at satisfying a state Supreme Court ruling last year that education funding remained inadequate.

Four school districts sued the state in 2010, and their attorneys have said that the new law does not provide enough additional funding after the 2019-20 school year. Schmidt said the districts are seeking a “heckler’s veto” after Kelly, many Republican lawmakers and the GOP-led State Board of Education agreed that the increase she sought would satisfy the court.

“This court should give great weight to the considered decisions of both the education officials and the people’s representatives,” Schmidt’s written argument said. “That is particularly true here given the widespread, bipartisan consensus.”

Attorneys for the four school districts asked in their own filing for the Supreme Court to order higher spending after the 2019-20 school year, give legislators another year to comply and keep the case open so that the state’s actions can be monitored.

“The state cannot demonstrate it has met its burden,” they wrote.

The Supreme Court plans to hear oral arguments from both sides’ attorneys May 9 and has promised to rule on whether the new law is sufficient by June 30. The justices have ruled repeatedly that the state constitution requires lawmakers to fund a suitable education for every child.

The high court has issued six rulings directing lawmakers to increase education funding in a little more than five years, so that it now tops $4 billion a year. The court declared last year that a 2018 law promising funding increases into the future wasn’t sufficient because it hadn’t accounted for inflation.

The four school districts argued that accounting for inflation is a straightforward math problem that requires increasingly larger amounts of money each year through the 2022-23 school year. Under their calculations, the increase for that year would be $363 million instead of the roughly $90 million under the new law.

“While the state has increased funding to account for some inflation, it has not completed the plan,” the school districts’ attorneys wrote.

Schmidt’s filing argues that given that the new law represents the consensus of “just about every other stakeholder” in the education funding debate, the court should not declare the law insufficient simply because some districts “will always want more money.” The four districts are part of a coalition that initially endorsed Kelly’s plan , then withdrew its backing.

“They should not be allowed to single-handedly override the governor’s and Legislature’s reasonable and considered funding determinations,” Schmidt wrote, adding that the law was passed “in light of the many competing demands on limited state funds.”

Kelly’s chief counsel also filed a request Monday with the Supreme Court, asking for permission to file “friend of the court” arguments by April 26. Her attorney argued that as a former state senator “intimately familiar” with school funding issues, she has a “unique” perspective on the law now that she is governor.

Man stopped in Russell Co. with 23 pounds of meth sentenced

WICHITA, KAN. – A California man was sentenced to 75 months in federal prison Monday for smuggling more than 23 pounds of methamphetamine to Kansas, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Beltran photo Shawnee Co.

Juan Beltran, 28, Bell Gardens, Calif., pleaded guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

In his plea, he admitted that the Kansas Highway Patrol stopped him on I-70 in Russell County, Kan. Troopers found the drugs in the trunk of his car.

KGS: Groundwater levels up slightly or near steady in western KS

KU NEWS SERVICE

LAWRENCE — Groundwater levels during 2018, on average, rose slightly or remained about even throughout most of western and central Kansas, according to preliminary data compiled by the Kansas Geological Survey.

“By and large, 2018 was a good year for groundwater levels,” said Brownie Wilson, KGS water-data manager. “Virtually all levels in south-central Kansas wells were up along with a good portion of those in northwest Kansas, and although southwest Kansas saw a few decline areas in the usual spots, they were not as great as in years past.”

The KGS, based at the University of Kansas, and the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Division of Water Resources (DWR) measure more than 1,400 water wells in Kansas annually. Most of the wells are drilled into the High Plains aquifer, a network of water-bearing rocks underlying parts of eight states and the state’s most valuable groundwater resource.

Ninety percent of the collected data comes from wells tapping the aquifer. The other wells are drilled into other aquifers underlying the High Plains aquifer and shallow aquifers adjacent to surface-water sources, such as the Arkansas River. Most of the 1,400 wells have been measured for decades.

In Kansas, the High Plains aquifer comprises three individual aquifers—the widespread Ogallala aquifer that underlies most of the western third of Kansas, the Equus Beds around Wichita and Hutchinson, and the Great Bend Prairie aquifer around Pratt and Great Bend.

Water levels in the Ogallala aquifer are influenced mainly by the amount of water withdrawn each year, which in turn is affected by the rate and timing of precipitation. Recharge, or water seeping down from the surface, adds little groundwater to the Ogallala. In central Kansas, however, recharge has more of an impact because the Equus Beds and Great Bend Prairie aquifer are shallower and average precipitation in that part of the state is higher.

Most of the wells in the network monitored by the KGS and DWR are within the boundaries of the state’s five Groundwater Management Districts (GMDs), which are organized and governed by area landowners and local water users to address water-resource issues.

In Southwest Kansas GMD 3, average levels dropped .39 feet. Although down, the change was less than in 17 of the last 20 years when levels fell between .5  and 3.5 feet annually. A rise of .05 feet in 2017 was the only positive movement during that time.

For the second summer in a row, water flowed for a time from the Colorado state line to Garden City. The river, which interacts with its adjacent shallow alluvial aquifer, has been mainly dry in western Kansas for decades.

Wells monitored in GMD 3 are drilled into the Ogallala aquifer except in a few areas where they draw from the deeper Dakota aquifer. The district includes all or part of Grant, Haskell, Gray, Finney, Stanton, Ford, Morton, Stevens, Seward, Hamilton, Kearny and Meade counties.

Western Kansas GMD 1 experienced a slight drop of .18 feet following a slight gain of .07 feet in 2017. The GMD includes portions of Wallace, Greeley, Wichita, Scott, and Lane counties, where the majority of wells are drilled into the Ogallala aquifer.

“West central was basically unchanged as a whole but the average is bookended by declines in Wallace County and rises in Scott County,” Wilson said.

Northwest Kansas GMD 4 had an average increase in water levels of .26 feet following a rise of .38 feet in 2017. GMD 4 covers Sherman, Thomas, Sheridan and parts of Cheyenne, Rawlins, Decatur, Graham, Wallace, Logan and Gove counties. Groundwater there is pumped almost exclusively from the Ogallala aquifer and shallow alluvial sources associated with streams. Besides being influenced by precipitation, water-level results in part of GMD 4 were tied to crop loss.

“Some producers south of the Goodland to Colby area got hailed out early in the 2018 growing season,” Wilson said. “With hail damaged crops and higher precipitation rates in the eastern portion of GMD 4, wells there had less declines or even slight recoveries.”

Big Bend GMD 5 had an average increase of 1.21 feet following an increase of .30 feet in 2017. The GMD is centered on the Great Bend Prairie aquifer underlying Stafford and Pratt counties and parts of Barton, Pawnee, Edwards, Kiowa, Reno and Rice counties.

Equus Beds GMD 2, a major source of water for Wichita, Hutchinson and surrounding towns, experienced a gain of 1.35 following a 1.93-foot decline in 2017. The GMD covers portions of Reno, Sedgwick, Harvey and McPherson counties.

The KGS measured 581 wells in western Kansas and DWR staff from field offices in Stockton, Garden City and Stafford measured 223, 260 and 357 wells in western and central Kansas, respectively. Measurements are taken annually, primarily in January when water levels are least likely to fluctuate due to irrigation.

The results are provisional and subject to revision based on additional analysis. Data by well is available at https://www.kgs.ku.edu/Magellan/WaterLevels/index.html.

Castillo’s homer lifts White Sox over Royals

CHICAGO (AP) – Welington Castillo atoned for an error with a two-run homer in the eighth inning, and the Chicago White Sox rallied to beat the Kansas City Royals 5-4 on Monday night.

Castillo’s poor throw on Billy Hamilton’s steal in the seventh helped set up Whit Merrifield’s tiebreaking sacrifice fly. But Castillo came up big after Tim Anderson led off the eighth with a double against Brad Boxberger (0-3), sending an opposite-field drive to right for his first homer of the season.

Manny Banuelos (1-0) pitched three hitless innings for his first win since 2015, and Alex Colome worked the ninth for his fourth save in four chances and No. 100 for his career.

Anderson had three hits and scored twice, lifting his average to a major league-leading .453.

The White Sox returned home with a little momentum after taking two of three from the Yankees in New York over the weekend.

Hunter Dozier and Chris Owings homered for Kansas City, which was coming off a three-game sweep of Cleveland, the AL Central favorites.

Dozier put Kansas City in front when he drove Ervin Santana’s first pitch of the second over the wall in center for his fourth homer. After Ryan O’Hearn flied out, Lucas Duda worked the first of his three walks and Owings connected for his first homer of the season, giving the Royals a 3-0 lead.

Dozier also doubled in the third for his fifth consecutive multihit game, one day after he singled in the winning run in Kansas City’s 9-8 victory over Cleveland. He is batting .522 (12 for 23) with three homers and five RBIs in his last six games.

Heath Fillmyer cruised into the fifth for Kansas City but came unglued a bit after Chicago had two successful replay challenges. The second one overturned an inning-ending double play and got the White Sox on the board, with Anderson scoring from second on Yolmer Sanchez’s grounder to second.

Leury Garcia then doubled in Sanchez and Yoan Moncada dumped a tying RBI single into right field. The White Sox had a chance for more after Fillmyer hit Jose Abreu with a pitch, but Yonder Alonso flied out to end the inning.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Hamilton returned to the lineup after missing three games with a mild MCL sprain and a bone bruise on his left knee. Hamilton got hurt when he crashed into the wall during Thursday’s loss to Seattle. … LHP Danny Duffy (left shoulder tightness) threw 61 pitches in Arizona. He is scheduled to throw 75 to 80 pitches on Saturday.

White Sox: OF Jon Jay (strained right hip) played catch in the outfield. Jay was placed on the 10-day injured list during spring training. “He’s progressing,” manager Rick Renteria said. “He’s doing better.”

UP NEXT

Royals right-hander Jorge Lopez and White Sox right-hander Reynaldo Lopez get the ball Tuesday night. Jorge Lopez (0-1, 3.71 ERA) pitched six innings of two-run ball in a no-decision against the Mariners in his previous start. Reynaldo Lopez (0-2, 12.15 ERA) has struggled so far this year, allowing 22 hits in 13 1/3 innings over three starts.

Kansas man admits role in illegal gambling operation

WICHITA, KAN. – A Kansas man pleaded guilty Monday to trying to keep Wichita police from investigating illegal poker games, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Brock Wedman, 50, St. Marys, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of concealing a felony. In his plea, he admitted he helped organize and recruit players for illegal poker games in Wichita.

On Feb. 12, 2014, Wedman was present at a poker game held at 922 1/2 E. Douglas in Wichita. Wedman did not know it, but a man he invited to play was a Wichita Police Department officer working undercover to investigate organized gambling. When Wedman became suspicious, he found the undercover officer’s car and took down the license plate and VIN numbers. Wedman gave the information to a friend who was a Wichita police officer and asked him to confirm the undercover officer’s identity.

Sentencing is set for Aug. 1.

Hays Toy Show delights collectors young, old

Jason Lamb, 43, Hays, mans his booth Saturday at the Hays Toy Show.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Whether it was a grandma buying a replica of the tractor she remembered using on the farm or a child buying their first action figure, Saturday’s Hays Toy Show had something for young and old.

The annual event was at Big Creek Crossing this year and drew about 30 vendors from the around the region.

Jason Lamb, 43, Hays, has been collecting toys since he was a kid. He said selling toys was an natural progression.

He first caught the collecting bug as a kid when he figured out he could earn some extra money by shoveling snow.

“That Christmas, I came home with money in my hand, and I don’t remember what I got for Christmas that year, but I remember that I could work and figure out a way to buy my toys on my own. I was about 7 or 8 years old.”

He took his shoveling earnings to Woolworths and bought G.I. Joes.

He particularly likes the gross toys and puppets from the ’80s — the Madballs and Boglins.

“I love when kids come by and you can actually see their eyes light up when they get a good deal,” he said. “I actually bring toys to give away to kids sometimes, cheap ones. There is something even about adults when they see a toy they haven’t seen in 20 years, it brings them back to that place in their mind when everything was innocent and life was just fun.

“Because when you are a kid, that is your main objective is just having fun. You get up every day and I just want to play with toys and have fun. That is why I love toys. It brings me back there.”

Sam Oyler  of Garden City works on a semi replica Saturday at the Hays Toy Show.

Sam Oyler of Garden City also tries to connect with buyers who are trying to connect with their past. He creates custom farm trucks and pickups.

He uses a 3-D printer to create the tiny custom parts needed to make a stock toy look exactly like the vehicle the buyer once owned.

“It feels really good when someone walks up and says that is exactly like what we had on the farm or that is exactly like what we use today,” he said. “It is nice when you hit the right color or the right model or something like that.”

He said he also enjoyed the camaraderie at the shows.

“It more about seeing your friends and talking to other vendors is what most all of us have more fun doing and chit-chatting and giving each other ideas,” he said.

Pay Mayo’s antique marionettes.

Pay Mayo of Lawrence is a nurse by day, but as a hobby restores antique marionettes.

“They are colorful, and they are unique. People don’t do puppet shows, including myself, but some of them are 60 and 70 years old. It is kind of a history thing,” he said.

Most of the marionettes are in bad shape, with strings cut. Mayo takes a couple of weeks to restore the pieces and mounts them with artwork so they can be displayed on a tabletop.

“They are colorful and neat,” he said. “It is just something from childhood.”

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