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Norton man accused of wife’s murder makes court appearance

Shields is being held on a $1 million bond, according to the Norton County Sheriff.

NORTON COUNTY — A Norton man accused in the murder of his wife made his first court appearance Monday afternoon, according to the Kansas Attorney General’s office.

Damien L. Shields, 42, Norton, is charged with the first-degree murder of 38-year-old Lori Shields. She was found dead April 7 in her home in Norton, according to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

Shields was arrested the following day in Cape Girardeau, Mo., when police responded to a hotel after receiving a call for help.

Shields was hospitalized in Cape Girardeau for injuries that appeared to be self-inflicted. He was later booked into the Cape Girardeau County jail and then extradited to Norton on April 13, according to the sheriff’s department.  He remains jailed on a $1 million dollar bond.

Lori Shields photo GoFundMe

He has three previous convictions for domestic battery, aggravated battery and violation of a protection order, according to the Kansas Department of Correction. He is scheduled for a preliminary hearing April 29.

Lori Shields was a secretary at Eisenhower Elementary School in Norton. Friends have established a GoFundMe account to assist her three children.

Jester nominees announced for area high school theater productions

“Bright Star” by Hays High performers. Photo courtesy Brenda Meder

18th annual Jester Awards will be May 5

WICHITA – Music Theatre Wichita’s Jester Awards program, which has been honoring outstanding achievements by Kansas high schools in the field of musical theatre since 2002, is adding a brand new element to its annual awards event. On Sunday, May 5, as part of the 18th annual Jester Awards Ceremony, Leading Actor and Leading Actress awards will be determined through live performances by the nominees, which will be evaluated by a team of professional judges.

Hays High School has been nominated for best overall production for its production of “Bright Star,” which also received nods for best director (Alex Underwood), best leading actress (Caitlin Leiker), best leading actor (Cade Swayne), best ensemble/chorus, best vocal musical direction, best stage crew and best design guest.

Thomas More Prep’Marian production of “Oklahoma!” received nominations for best supporting actor (Dylan Werth), best choreography/staging, best scenic design and best lobby display.

Russell High School earned nominations for its production of “Once Upon a Mattress” in the production number and choreography/staging categories.

Click here for a full list of nominations.

“Oklahoma!” by TMP-M performers. Photo by Cristina Janney

Since the inception of the program, trained volunteer judges have been attending and evaluating dozens of performances across south central Kansas, and the judges’ scoring has determined the award recipients in two dozen categories. This year, 72 judges viewed 115 performances of 38 productions, involving more than 2400 students and extending as far as Liberal, Hays, Salina, Pittsburg, and Topeka, in addition to the greater Wichita area.

This year, for the first time, each of the 20 Leading Actor and Actress nominees will perform a brief solo from the show in which they appeared, and the professional judges’ scores will determine the awards given in these categories, as well as who will receive two monetary scholarships. The ten school productions which have been nominated as Outstanding Overall Production will also each perform an excerpt from their school production, with additional entertainment provided by The Trust Company of Kansas Music Theatre Wichita Teen Choir.

The Jester Awards Ceremony will take place at Century II Performing Arts Center’s Convention Hall in Wichita on Sunday, May 5, 2019 at 4pm. Honorees in 24 categories will be announced during the ceremony, and several of the honorees will perform. Scholarship awards will be presented to three students, lead male and female honorees and a technical theatre recipient. Tickets to the ceremony are $10 each in advance (online only), or may be purchased the day of the show for $15 each. Black Hills Energy is sponsoring the awards ceremony, and ongoing support for the program is provided by founder Belden Mills and his wife Anna, and the Lois K. Walls Jester Fund at MTWichita.

Alumni of the Jester Awards program can be seen onstage and backstage at Music Theatre Wichita this summer, as well as on Broadway and in regional theatres across the country. MTWichita Board President Michelle Moe Witte says: “As students study theatre, they learn a new discipline and develop empathy by exploring the thoughts and feelings of other people, including the very characters that they play on the stage. These are core life skills. Some will go on to theatrical careers, but others will simply benefit from the life skills developed on a high school stage. That alone is worth celebrating. The Jester Awards is our opportunity to honor the musical theatre art form and the hard work, collaboration, creativity, and dedication of the young people who brought these productions to life.”

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/.

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.

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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Partly sunny, mild Tuesday

Tuesday Partly sunny, with a high near 75. North northwest wind 6 to 9 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night Isolated showers and thunderstorms between 10pm and 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 53. East southeast wind 8 to 13 mph becoming light and variable after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

WednesdayA chance of showers between 1pm and 4pm, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 71. West southwest wind 9 to 16 mph becoming north in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Wednesday NightA slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 7pm, then a slight chance of showers between 7pm and 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 43. Breezy, with a north wind 17 to 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

ThursdayMostly sunny, with a high near 62. Breezy.

Thursday NightMostly clear, with a low around 40. Breezy.
FridaySunny, with a high near 71.

Hydrant testing set between Allen and Vine today

The Hays Fire Department will be inspecting and flow testing fire hydrants on April 16 in the area of Allen St. to Vine St. between Fifth St. and 13th St. This is part of a coordinated effort by the City of Hays to inspect all fire hydrants in the city and flush all water mains annually.   

Inspecting fire hydrants ensures the valves operate properly and there is no damage or obstructions that will prevent or interfere with the prompt use of fire hydrants in an emergency.  Firefighters are also checking the pressure and volume of water mains in each neighborhood for firefighting purposes. The associated flushing of water mains allows chlorine to be distributed throughout the system to eliminate bio-filming in the water mains.

Slight discoloration of the water supply may be encountered although there will be no health risks to the consumer. All reasonable efforts will be taken to minimize the inconvenience to the public.  Drivers are asked to avoid driving through water discharging from a fire hydrant during the short flushing period.

For more information, please contact the Hays Fire Department at 628-7330.

Lt. Gov. Rogers to tour Goodland hospital Tuesday

Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers with Hays Med’s Dr. Jeff Curtis April 9 in Hays. (Photo by Cristina Janney)

OFFICE OF LT. GOV.

TOPEKA – Kansas Lt. Governor Lynn Rogers will continue his tour of rural health care facilities in the state with a stop in Goodland Tuesday, April 16.

Rogers is scheduled to tour Goodland Regional Medical Center at 9 a.m. (CST). Later that day at 12 p.m., he will tour St. Catherine Hospital in Garden City.

Rogers toured HaysMed and talked with employees and local legislators April 2.

FHSU Department of Mathematics well represented at state conference

FHSU University Relations

Seven faculty members and five students from the Fort Hays State University Department of Mathematics attended the recent Kansas Section Meeting of the Mathematical Association of America in Pittsburg.

“FHSU was well represented in the number of talks that were presented,” said Dr. Keith Dreiling, chair of the department. “Our university contributed almost half of all talks given during the conference. Special recognition should go out to our two students, Tyler and Ashley, for presenting at this conference.”

Two students and four faculty presented papers at the conference, making up six of the 13 speakers.

Tyler Bloom, Netawaka senior majoring in physics, presented “The Devil’s Chessboard and How to Solve It,” and Ashley Pritchard, Wichita freshman, presented “Fibonacci Cordial Labeling of Comb Graphs.”

Dreiling presented on “Kaprekar’s Constant”; Dr. Tom Dunn, assistant professor of mathematics, presented “Algebraic Geometry and Intersections”; Dr. Sarbari Mitra, assistant professor of mathematics, presented “Channel Assignment Problems of Circulants”; and Dr. Hong Zeng, professor of computer science, presented “Functional Programming and Math Problems.”

Two FHSU teams competed in a math event.

The first team was Fernando Guzman, Hays junior majoring in mathematics, and Bloom. The second team was Lailah Collins, Wichita freshman majoring in mathematics, Sheena Zeng, Hays freshman, and Pritchard.

🎥 Project Director: 43rd St. reconstruction should be done by Memorial Day

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

In Oct. 2018, 45th Street was reconstructed on the north side of the Hays Walmart by the project general contractor Vogts-Parga, Newton.

Work was stopped over the winter and resumed March 18 on 43rd Street on the south side of Walmart.

“They started busting out the old concrete and found out the base underneath was in bad shape, which we expected,” according to John Braun, Hays public works director. “It was really wet. The weather didn’t help a whole lot in getting it dried out quickly.”

A subcontractor, M&D Excavating, Hays, has been working diligently to prepare the base, and it’s now ready, Braun told Hays city commissioners Thursday.

Vogts-Parga began pouring sidewalks Friday.

This week crews are scheduled to pour concrete in the north lanes of 43rd near Wolf Furniture Galleries on Monday and Tuesday.

Wednesday and Thursday, the west end of 43rd, which is completely torn out, will be poured.

Next week traffic control will shift; the next few weeks, work will shift to the south lanes of 43rd in front of Wendy’s restaurant.

Braun anticipates the project will be completed before Memorial Day.

The sections of 45th and 43rd Streets adjacent to Walmart were approved for reconstruction due to pavement failure.

The pavement reconstructions are separate from the planned extension of 43rd Street by developers to serve the forthcoming Hilton Garden Inn and convention center west of Walmart.

Hays city commissioners to attend farewell dinner Tuesday

CITY OF HAYS

Hays City Commissioner Sandy Jacobs will host a small social event honoring Hays City Commissioner James Meier and Assistant City Manager Jacob Wood, who are both leaving Hays for other employment at the first of May.

Other city commissioners will be in attendance for a meal and refreshments and to bid farewell to Meier and Wood. No business will be conducted and the meeting is purely social.

The event is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 16, 2019, Smoky Hill Country Club in Hays.

While serving as mayor, James Meier offers the opening toast of the 2018 Hays Oktoberfest.
Hays Asst. City Manager Jacob Wood points to the roundabout proposal for north Vine Street during a public open house in February.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Meier will be moving to Wichita where he will be manager of the in-patient pharmacy at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis hospital.

Wood has taken the position of deputy city manager in Salina.

Both men were thanked for their work for the city of Hays during the April 11 city commission meeting.

(Photos by Hays Post)

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