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  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers. Our weekday headlines are generally posted by 10 a.m. and updated throughout the day. Feel free to browse our ad-free news summary. And when you're done, feel free to make a pledge to KPR. Thanks for your support.
  • A new mayor takes office in KCK … Catholic bishops in Kansas call for an end to capital punishment in the state … and a Kansas school district begins its holiday break early due to illnesses among students and teachers. These stories and more can be found inside. This commercial-free news summary is generally posted by 10 am weekdays and updated through 7 pm.
  • Kansas House Advances Tax Cut Bill TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House members have given first-round approval legislation cutting state income tax rates and abolishing the sales tax on groceries. The 68-53 vote Tuesday afternoon capped five hours of debate on taxes. Approval on a second vote would send the bill to the Senate. The measure would lower the tax rates in all income brackets and require any growth in state revenue above 3 percent be used to cut taxes further. It would also phase out earnings taxes for thousands of partnerships, sole proprietorships and other small businesses. The sales tax rate would drop to 5.7 percent from 6.3 percent in July 2013, as previously scheduled. Proponents say the changes would give all Kansans more disposable and create jobs. Critics called the policy misguided.======================================= Kansas House Votes to End Sales Tax on FoodTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ The state of Kansas would no longer charge sales tax on groceries under an amendment approved by the House. The 76-44 vote Tuesday came as the chamber debated a plan that would reduce income tax rates for individuals and some classes of businesses. Representative Jana Goodman, a Leavenworth Republican, offered the amendment on groceries, arguing that all Kansas residents deserved to have more money in their pockets. Ending the sales tax on groceries would cost the state an estimated $350 million annually. Goodman says Kansas is struggling in a recession and the best way to start a recovery is by cutting taxes. The amendment was one of several considered by the House as it debated the income tax measure.================================== Budget Plan Draws Criticism for School FundingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A proposed $14 billion budget for the state of Kansas is drawing bipartisan criticism because it would withhold some education funds to push local school districts to tap their cash reserves first. The issue for critics Tuesday was the elimination of $29 million in new money for the state's 286 school districts to cover higher-than-expected costs during the current school year. Republican Governor Sam Brownback endorsed the spending. But the House Appropriations Committee removed the money before endorsing a bill containing its proposed budget Monday night. The change would force districts to absorb the costs and potentially dip into their reserves. The state's overall spending would drop about 4 percent during the fiscal year that begins July 1, or roughly $650 million.===================================== Kansas Unemployment Rate DropsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A new report shows the Kansas unemployment rate fell to 6.1 percent in January, with modest job growth over the previous year. The state Department of Labor said Tuesday the January jobless rate declined from 6.4 percent in December and 6.8 percent in January 2011, with the figures adjusted for seasonal factors. Department officials said one sign the state's economy is improving was January's increase in jobs from the same month a year earlier. The number rose by 12,200, or almost 1 percent. The agency noted that while government jobs declined, private employers added about 22,000 jobs over the year, an increase of about 2 percent. Labor Secretary Karin Brownlee says the job growth in the private sector is encouraging.=====================================KS House Committee Votes to Freeze KNI AdmissionsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas House committee endorsed a proposal to freeze admissions to the Kansas Neurological Institute for one year. The home for the disabled in Topeka has been the center of controversy since 2010, when a commission recommended it be closed. That recommendation was rejected but Governor Sam Brownback and some legislators continue to look for ways to cut costs at the institute. Rep. Dave Crum, a Republican from Augusta, says care of disabled people is moving away from central institutions like KNI to community-based care. He says Kansans who need residential care could still live at Parsons State Hospital. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Rep. Sydney Carlin, a Manhattan Democrat, criticized those who voted for the amendment yesterday (MON), saying the state is obligated to care for its disabled citizens.=================================KS Gov Wants to Add $3.4 Million for Medicaid OverhaulTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback is asking Kansas legislators to add $3.4 million to the state budget to help with an overhaul of the Medicaid program. Brownback submitted his request for the funds yesterday (MON). His administration is planning to issue contracts this summer to three companies to manage the $2.9 billion-a-year Medicaid program, which provides health coverage for the poor, the disabled and elderly. The changes are designed to cut the state's costs while improving the coordination of medical care. Brownback is asking legislators to add $1 million to the budget for what he called a robust public education campaign about the coming changes. His request also includes $2.4 million to upgrade the computer system that handles bills submitted by health care providers to the Medicaid program.===================================Lawmaker Faces New Complaints from ActivistTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A longtime Republican activist in Kansas has filed two ethics complaints against a state senator, accusing him of misusing campaign funds and filing a false campaign finance report with the state. Kris Van Meteren, of Ozawkie, filed the complaints Tuesday against Senator Dwayne Umbarger, a Thayer Republican, with the state Governmental Ethics Commission. Van Meteren is a reviving a case he pursued unsuccessfully in 2008, but he's also added new allegations. Umbarger called the complaints a waste of taxpayer dollars. He said it's a sign he's likely to face opposition in the GOP primary in August. Van Meteren is questioning about $6,000 worth of expenditures made by Umbarger from his campaign fund from 2004 into 2009, alleging that Umbarger illegally converted campaign funds to personal use. Umbarger disputes the allegations. ======================================8-Year-Old Topeka Girl Found Dead, Man ArrestedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A man is jailed in Topeka after an 8-year-old girl was found dead. The girl, Ahliyah Irvin, was reported missing about 5 am Tuesday and police announced about 9:45 am that she had been found dead. Police did not immediately say how the girl died or where her body was found. A 28-year-old man was taken into custody later Tuesday. Police did not say how he was connected to Ahliyah.=====================================Grocer Gets 6 Months for Food Stamp Fraud ConspiracyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ A Wichita grocery store owner will go to federal prison for his part in a scheme that paid customers cash for less than the value of their food stamps and pocketed the difference. Ahmed Al-Maleki was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Judge J. Thomas Marten to six months in prison followed by six months of home detention. The owner of Kansas Food Market had pleaded guilty to conspiracy, wire fraud and food stamp fraud. Marten also found that the loss to taxpayers amounted to $130,000, and ordered Al-Maleki to pay restitution in that amount. Marten said there are consequences to breaking the law. But he also imposed a sentence below advisory guidelines because Al-Maleki's wife speaks no English and cannot drive, making it difficult to care for their five children.===================================== Man Gets Probation in Death of Salina ManSALINA, Kan. (AP) — A defense attorney says a man who died after a confrontation with four Salina men started the fight that led to his death. Attorney Roger Struble made that argument in a motion filed on behalf of 20-year-old Justin Taddiken in the January 2011 death of 48-year-old Robert Unselt. Taddiken pleaded no contest to aggravated battery in Unselt's fatal beating. Yesterday (MON), he was placed on two years of supervised probation. Unselt's widow and sister disputed Struble's account of the confrontation, saying Unselt was a peacemaker. The Salina Journal reports that Unselt's widow is seeking $1 million in a wrongful death lawsuit against Taddiken and three co-defendants. Two of the other men have settled their criminal cases without going to trial. Charges have been refiled against the fourth man.======================================Wichita Officer Who Led BTK Investigation RetiresWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A lieutenant who was the public face of the Wichita police department during several high-profile investigations, including the capture of the BTK serial killer, has retired. Lt. Ken Landwehr retired yesterday (MON), after 35 years with the Wichita police force, the last 20 as commander of the homicide unit. The Wichita Eagle reports that Landwehr helped his unit solve most of 600 homicides it investigated. During a ceremony attended hundreds of co-workers and friends, he gave credit to the detectives in the unit. He was best known for his work on the BTK case and the prosecution of Reginald and Jonathan Carr, who were sentenced to death for killing four people in 2000. Speakers at his retirement ceremony praised Landwehr as a dedicated, top-flight detective who will be difficult to replace.=========================================Kansas Makes Food Inspections Available OnlineTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is posting its inspection reports for restaurants and other food-handling business on a state website. Reports dating back to March 2010 can be viewed on the website of the state Department of Agriculture. The agency does unannounced inspections of restaurants, grocery stores, food-processing operations and hotels and motels at least once a year. Last year, the department conducted about 23,000 inspections. Agency officials say having the reports online will help consumers who want to see how the restaurants they frequent are faring. But officials say it's best to examine inspections over time to get a more accurate picture.==============================EPA Chief Says Kansas Students Can Shape PolicyLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The head of the Environmental Protection Agency told students at the University of Kansas that her job involves ensuring their future. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson told the students yesterday (MON) that they have the power to influence the course of environmental policies. She also said students should look at how they already live on campus by using public transportation, choosing efficient foods and living in small spaces. The Lawrence Journal World reports that Jackson acknowledged the criticism the federal agency has received recently from those who say environmental regulations have "hobbled" the economy. But she defended the EPA's policies, saying it's consistent with American values to keep industries from polluting, to keep vehicles from emitting toxins and to monitor chemicals used in producing food.==============================KS Gov Reports Expenses at Residence DecliningTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says that spending at his official residence has declined since he took office. Brownback's office released figures yesterday (MON) for Cedar Crest, the governor's official residence, at the request of several news organizations. The numbers show a budget of $115,000 for the fiscal year that began last July. Two years ago, the annual budget for the residence was nearly $189,000. Brownback took office in January 2011 and cut the staff for Cedar Crest from two to one, leaving only a personal assistant for the first lady. Since July 1, about $8,300 has been spent on hospitality at Cedar Crest. The figure for the previous fiscal year was about $15,000, and hospitality spending peaked at almost $28,000 for the fiscal year ending in June 2010.========================================Legislature Decides to Ignore Plea for State DogTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A proposal to name a state dog has lost its bite. A Kansas House committee has declined to hear a bill that would have named the Cairn Terrier the official state dog. The breed is best known in Kansas for playing Toto in "The Wizard of Oz." Brenda Moore, of the South Central Kansas Kennel Club, originally asked State Rep. Ed Trimmer, a Democrat from Winfield, to introduce the bill. She said she plans to conduct a statewide campaign this summer, including a petition drive to present to state politicians. The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals opposed the measure, saying it believes the designation would cause Kansas puppy mills to "churn out litter after litter of the breed" and lead to fewer adoptions from animal shelters. Trimmer says he plans to re-introduce the bill next year. In the meantime, he will visit with Kansas schoolchildren about the process of getting the Legislature to pass a law.==================================California Man Sentenced for Dodge City Bank HoldupKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A California man is going to prison for the armed holdup of a Dodge City bank in October 2010. The U.S. Attorney's office says 33-year-old Angel Garcia Aguirre, of Santa Paula, California, was sentenced Tuesday to 12 years and three months behind bars. Garcia Aguirre pleaded guilty last year to one count each of bank robbery and brandishing a firearm, admitting he and another man robbed a Bank of America branch in Dodge City on October 21, 2010. He said he stood in the lobby while the other man jumped over a teller's counter and grabbed money. Garcia Aguirre was shot and wounded by police the following day when he climbed out a window of a home where investigators confronted him and tried to scale a fence.===================================Kansas Wheat Crop Comes Out of Winter DormancyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas winter wheat crop continues to come out of dormancy with the warm temperatures. The Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service says the crop's condition improved slightly over the past week. The agency now rates 11 percent of the wheat in poor to very poor condition, 36 percent fair, 45 percent good and 8 percent excellent. Only 4 percent of the wheat is showing light freeze damage.====================================== Scott City Fire Victims IdentifiedSCOTT CITY, Kan. (AP) _ Authorities have identified a Scott City woman and three children who died in a house fire in the western Kansas town. The fire on Saturday killed 28-year-old Jackie Ann Coberly and her son, 4-year-old Brandon Carter. Eight-year-old Terra Renee Murphy and 6-year-old Cassie Linn Murphy also died. They were the daughters of Coberly's boyfriend. Scott City Police Chief Chris Jurgens said Monday the fire is believed to be accidental but an investigation is continuing. The Garden City Telegram reports that the fire started Saturday morning near a heater in the laundry room of a home the family was renting. Officials said Coberly reported the fire but wasn't able to get out of the house because she was disabled.==============================Ex-Official Pleads Guilty in Kansas Theft CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The former public works director in Barber County has admitted stealing from the county. Forty-nine-year-old Steven Collier, of Nashville, Kansas, pleaded guilty in federal court yesterday (MON) to two counts of theft from a program receiving federal funds. He agreed to make restitution of $116,310. In return, the government agreed to drop nine counts. Sentencing is set for May 30. Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan Metzger says prosecutors plan to ask the court to dismiss the indictment against Collier's wife, Diana, of Medicine Lodge. Steven Collier admitted forging an invoice for the purchase of steel beams and using the money instead to buy a bulldozer for his own use. He later sold the bulldozer and kept the proceeds. He also admitted selling a county-owned tractor for $20,000 and keeping the money.==================================Kansas Commission Seeking Artists for Brown v. Board MuralTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas commission is looking for artists interested in painting a mural at the Statehouse commemorating the historic U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring segregated schools unconstitutional. The Capitol Preservation Committee is asking artists to submit applications to be declared qualified to execute the project, which is to be completed in 2014. House member Valdenia Winn, a Kansas City Democrat who chairs the Preservation Committee, says applications will be taken until May 1. The mural will honor the Supreme Court's 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling, which declared that separate schools for black and white children where inherently unequal. The high court consolidated a lawsuit challenging segregation in Topeka's public schools with cases from Delaware, South Carolina, Virginia and the District of Columbia.====================================Monsanto Plans Widespread Tests of Drought-Tolerant CornBISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Seed giant Monsanto plans large-scale tests this year of the first government-approved biotech crop developed to deal with drought. The new corn is being introduced as much of the U.S. remains abnormally dry and areas in the South and Southwest still face severe drought. Monsanto says the corn won't be a panacea for drought-stricken farmers but when combined with improved agricultural practices could help those in areas like the western Great Plains, where production without irrigation can be half as much as the national average. The St. Louis-based company plans on-farm trials from South Dakota to Texas to quantify how well the corn works before releasing it commercially next year. Drought-tolerant corn sold by competitors such as Pioneer Hi-Bred were developed with conventional and molecular breeding.======================================Reserve Missouri QB Arrested for Unpaid TicketsCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri backup quarterback Ashton Glaser has been arrested in Columbia on Laclede County warrants issued after he failed to show up in court for a speeding ticket. Columbia police say Glaser was punched in the face early Sunday by an unidentified man who answered the door when Glaser sought out a female neighbor. Witnesses called police, but only the 21-year-old Glaser was arrested after officers discovered the outstanding warrants. The arrest was first reported by the Columbia Daily Tribune. Glaser was charged in a November 2011 traffic stop in Laclede County with speeding and not having a valid driver's license. The warrants were issued after he failed to appear in court in January and February. Glaser is listed as the Tigers' third-string quarterback on spring football depth charts.======================================KS House Sets Tax Cut DebateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — After a one-day delay, the Kansas House is ready to debate a Republican plan to cut income taxes. The measure, which supporters say will improve the Kansas business climate, was originally set for debate yesterday (MON), but pushed back to today (TUE) by other issues. As written by a GOP-dominated committee, the bill would promise future cuts to individual income taxes as revenues grow, forcing the state to check the annual growth in its spending at 2 percent. The state would phase out taxes on the earnings of thousands of partnerships, sole proprietorships and other small businesses. The sales tax rate would drop to 5.7 percent from 6.3 percent in July 2013, as scheduled. Republican Governor Sam Brownback has made tax change a top priority in 2012.
  • Kansas GOP Leaders Say Talks on Tax Issues StalledTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Legislature's top Republican leaders are acknowledging that their private negotiations on tax issues have hit an impasse. Senate President Susan Wagle of Wichita told fellow GOP senators Tuesday that her chamber and the House don't even agree on assumptions to use in projecting state revenues and spending. Republican leaders want to follow up on last year's cuts in personal income taxes with additional reductions. But the state must stabilize its budget, and the Senate has approved a bill canceling decrease in the sales tax scheduled for July. The House wants to let the tax drop as planned. Wagle said the House is using unrealistic assumptions to make its proposals look better. House Speaker Ray Merrick of Stilwell said that's not the case.===============Kansas Senate Advances $202M in New Bonds for NBAFTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate has given first-round approval to Governor Sam Brownback's proposal to authorize an additional $202 million in bonds for a new, national biodefense lab in Manhattan. The bill advanced Tuesday on a voice vote after brief debate. Approval on a second vote scheduled Wednesday would send it to the House. Brownback has said the measure fulfills the state's commitment to fund part of the cost of the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility at Kansas State University. The lab would research dangerous animal diseases and replace an aging facility on Plum Island, New York. Its projected cost has more than doubled to $1.15 billion since Kansas landed it in 2009. Kansas previously authorized $105 million in bonds for the lab. President Barack Obama's latest budget proposal includes $714 million for the project.===============Kansas Chief Justice: Senator Linked Budget, PlanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court's chief justice is accusing a prominent legislator of pressuring district court judges into endorsing a proposed judicial selection change. Chief Justice Lawton Nuss sent a letter Tuesday to district judges. It said Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Jeff King "suggested a link" between the judicial selection proposal and a favorable outcome on budget issues. Nuss was not at the meeting, but a member of his staff was. King said the accusation is baseless and demanded a public apology. The Independence Republican released an email from a judge at the meeting saying the allegation is unfounded. King is pushing the proposal. It would amend the Kansas Constitution to require Senate confirmation of appellate court members.===============Kansas Bar Association Board Rejects Judiciary Selection Proposal TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Bar Association's board has rejected a legislative proposal to require Senate confirmation of appointees to the state Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. Association President Lee Smithyman says the board voted unanimously Tuesday against endorsing the proposal to amend the state constitution crafted by lawmakers. The association's board held a private teleconference, and Smithyman disclosed the results to The Associated Press before the group announced it publicly. Supporters of the proposal were waiting on the Bar Association board's decision, because they don't think lawmakers will pass it without the group's endorsement. Currently, a nine-member nominating commission screens applicants and names three finalists for each vacancy. The governor appoints one of the finalists, with no role for legislators. The proposal would preserve the commission but change its membership and add Senate confirmation.=============== Kansas House Democratic Leader Upset over Private Talks on TaxesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A top Kansas Democrat is criticizing Republican Governor Sam Brownback and GOP legislative leaders for holding private talks to resolve tax issues. House Minority Leader Paul Davis says discussions of tax issues should occur during public meetings of negotiators appointed by House and Senate leaders to resolve the chambers' differences. Davis, of Lawrence, issued a statement Monday saying the Republicans' private talks "betray democracy" and deny the public chance to weigh in. Brownback has been meeting with Senate President Susan Wagle and House Speaker Ray Merrick about cutting income taxes and canceling some or all of a sales tax decrease scheduled by law to take effect in July. Wagle said such private talks are common on big issues.===============Kansas Board of Ed Member Criticized for Racial CommentTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Several black leaders in Topeka say a Kansas State Board of Education member's use of a racial slur during a meeting last month was unnecessary and inappropriate. Carolyn Campbell, the only black member of the board, and other black community leaders criticized board member Steve Roberts on Tuesday for using the slur at April's board meeting. Roberts said he used the slur "clinically" during a discussion of state history standards. At the time, he noted that Martin Luther King Jr. twice mentioned the "N-word" in his April 16, 1963 letter from a jail in Birmingham, Alabama. King wrote the famous letter after his arrest during a civil rights protest. Roberts said the slur is highly offensive but said history shouldn't be censored.=============== Topeka Officers' Names Added to National MemorialTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The names of two Topeka police officers who were shot to death last year are now displayed on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C. Family members of officer Jeff Atherly and Corporal David Gogian were among those attending ceremonies Monday when the names of 321 U.S. law enforcement officers were formally dedicated on the walls of the memorial. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Topeka Police Chief Ron Miller also attended the vigil. The officers were killed last December at a Topeka grocery store while investigating a report of suspicious activity. Other officers later shot and killed the suspect, 22-year-old David Tiscareno. The national law enforcement memorial now includes 19,981 names.=============== Kansas Common Core Critics Voice ConcernsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Critics of the Kansas Board of Education's decision to adopt national standards for math and reading urged the board to reconsider its decision to join the education program. Opponents of the Common Core standards, which were developed by a national consortium, spent nearly two hours criticizing the standards during a hearing Tuesday. Kansas is among 46 states that have adopted the national standards, which set out the academic expectations for students from kindergarten through high school. Kansas adopted the standards in 2010 and school districts have begun implementing them in the classrooms and in teacher training. Critics argue that Common Core is too expensive and turns over local districts' control of education standards to a national consortium. Supporters say the standards will improve and increase academic rigor.===============Kansas Board of Ed to Seek AG Opinion on Innovative Education LawTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas education commissioner Diane DeBacker says the department will seek an opinion from the state attorney general's office on implementing a new law that would allow school districts to be named innovative districts. The measure was signed by Governor Sam Brownback last month. It allows up to 29 of the state's 286 school districts to apply for innovative district status, which would make them exempt from certain state laws and regulations. Supporters say the goal is to improve student achievement. DeBacker told the State Board of Education Tuesday that there are many questions about which laws and regulations would be included as possible exemptions. The law takes effect July 1. State staff is developing the innovative district application.===============Mayor Names Advisory Board on KC Airport's FutureKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Amid talk of rebuilding Kansas City International Airport with a single terminal, Mayor Sly James has created a 24-member advisory group to study if the current layout is adequate. KMBC-TV reports that the panel appointed Tuesday is made up chiefly of business people, civic leaders and former public officials, including former Kansas City, Kansas Mayor Joe Reardon. It also includes a prominent critic of a plan to do away with KCI's current three-terminal layout, which critics call inefficient. Kevin Koster started a website, called "Save KCI," as the city accelerated plans for the one-terminal renovation. Koster says his inclusion on the panel proves its membership is not stacked. James is among the supporters of redesigning the 40-year-old airport. Fans of the current design say it's easy to get to and from gates.===============KU Faculty, Staff Seek Improved Tuition BenefitsLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Some University of Kansas faculty and staff are asking for expanded tuition benefits for their families. University officials say they will consider the request but note it could be difficult to fund more benefits in a time of tight state budgets. A report released last month found that the University of Kansas lags behind many other public universities in tuition benefits for families of faculty and staff. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that KU is the only Board of Regents university in the state that doesn't offer assistance to dependents. Kansas and Washburn University are the only two in the state that don't offer tuition assistance for spouses. Supporters say improving tuition benefits would help attract top faculty and staff to Kansas.=============== More Than Half of Kansas Wheat Showing Freeze DamageWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report says just over half the Kansas winter wheat crop shows damage from the hard freezes that hit the state in April. But Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service also reported Monday the wheat is running about three weeks behind normal development amid unseasonably cool spring temperatures. The agency rated the crop as 21 percent very poor, 20 percent poor, 31 percent fair, 25 percent good and 3 percent excellent. Farmers took advantage of a few dry days last week to plant and prepare fields, although they're getting a late start. Corn planting is running well behind average at only 31 percent complete. Plantings of sorghum, soybeans and cotton were all only 1 percent completed. Pasture conditions remain poor to very poor across 60 percent of Kansas.===============Officials to Continue Conserving Missouri River WaterOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The amount of water flowing into the Missouri River is expected to remain lower than usual, so officials are conserving water in the river's reservoirs. Officials said Tuesday the drought continues to affect the river because much of the snowmelt and rainfall in the seven-state region is being absorbed into the soil. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers predicts the amount of runoff flowing into the river this year will be about 79 percent of normal. So the corps has been releasing only enough water for a minimal navigation channel on the river. The navigation season could be shortened by as much as 15 days if the summer is dry. But officials warn the risk of flooding is roughly normal along the river, so flood-prone locations could still have problems.===============Attorneys Make Closing Arguments in Petro America TrialKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City securities fraud case involving a company whose leaders told potential investors the opportunity to buy stock was a blessing from God has gone to jurors after three weeks of testimony. Petro America founder Isreal Owen Hawkins told jurors during closing arguments Tuesday that his company is real, with real assets, and that the federal government was determined to destroy it. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kate Mahoney countered that Petro America's gold mine and oil well assets aren't worth $284 billion, as company leaders had claimed, and that Petro's stock was as valuable as "a pile of Kleenex." Hawkins, Johnny Heurung, Martin Roper, Theresa Brown and William Miller are accused of selling unregistered stock to unaccredited investors despite a Missouri cease and desist order telling them to stop.===============Audit Finds Annual College Baseball Tournament in TroubleWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Auditors say an annual college baseball tournament held in Wichita since 1935 is in financial trouble. The audit of the city-owned National Baseball Congress found the regional tournament is more than a quarter-million dollars in debt and owes two years of lease payments for Lawrence-Dumont Stadium. City officials say the tournament's financial problems threaten its future. The city has begun a study to rescue the tournament, which made only $1,100 in profit last year. The Wichita Eagle reports that initial plans are to seek corporate sponsorships and increase marketing of the tournament through 2014. The tournament is managed by the minor league Wichita Wingnuts. The audit found the tournament's finances have been mingled with the Wingnuts' books for the last two years.=============== 2nd Kansas Honor Flight of 2013 Takes Off WednesdayWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The year's second Kansas Honor Flight is scheduled to take 24 World War II veterans and their guardians to Washington, D.C., where they will spend two days visiting various memorials. The group plans to leave Wichita at 6:25 am Wednesday and return Friday afternoon. The trip is organized by Kansas Honor Flight Incorporated, which has the mission of transporting veterans to Washington at no cost. Among those expected to make the trip this week is Wichita resident Eddie Graham, who survived the Bataan Death March. Public contributions cover the trips for veterans, while their guardians pay their own way. Organizers say additional trips are scheduled for the summer and fall.=============== Uncle of Missouri Lawmaker Admits to Voter FraudKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The uncle of a Democratic Missouri lawmaker has pleaded guilty to voter fraud in an election that his nephew won by a single vote. John Moretina pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to giving false information when registering and voting. Moretina lived in Gladstone but admitted to giving a false address in July 2010 that allowed him to vote in the 40th House District where his nephew John Rizzo was a candidate. Rizzo defeated Will Royster by a single vote in the August 2010 Democratic primary. Royster alleged voter fraud at the time but an appeals court rejected his request for a new election. Rizzo won re-election last year and remains in the Missouri House. He said Tuesday that he had not been contacted by authorities about his uncle's activities.===============Crop Duster Crashes in SE KansasCRESTLINE, Kan. (AP) — A pilot is recovering from injuries he suffered when his crop duster crashed in far southeastern Kansas. KOAM-TV reports that the plane went down shortly before 11 am Tuesday near an industrial park north of the Cherokee County town of Crestline. Sheriff David Groves identified the pilot as a 48-year-old man from Cherokee County. The sheriff says the pilot was able to walk away from the plane to find the landowners and call emergency crews. His injuries are described as non-life-threatening. The sheriff's office says the plane was carrying a fungicide, but adds that there was no danger from the chemical following the crash.===============Kansas City Royals' Fred White Retires After 40 YearsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Royals veteran Fred White announced his retirement Tuesday after 40 years with the organization, most recently as director of broadcast services and the franchise's alumni. White was a sports anchor at a Topeka television station and the voice of Kansas State athletics before joining the Royals, where he spent 25 years in the broadcast booth. He continued to do Big 12 basketball games while also working for ESPN and others. Upon leaving the broadcast booth, White headed up the Royals Radio Network and supervised the Royals Alumni, assisting with clinics, appearances and the team's fantasy camp. In a statement issued by the team, White said he was retiring due to recent health issues.===============Top Hoops Prospect Andrew Wiggins to Attend KUHUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) — Top basketball prospect Andrew Wiggins is headed to the University of Kansas. Wiggins signed a letter-of-intent with the Jayhawks at a private ceremony Tuesday afternoon in Huntington. He previously narrowed his choices to KU, Kentucky, North Carolina and Florida State. The Canadian star averaged 23.4 points and 11.2 rebounds per game this season for West Virginia's Huntington Prep. Initially rated as a 2014 prospect, Wiggins shot to the top of recruiting charts when he decided last October to reclassify into his original high school class of 2013. The four major recruiting services have rated Wiggins as the No. 1 overall prospect. Although his parents both attended Florida State, the Toronto-born Wiggins had kept quiet about his intentions. He had until Wednesday to sign with a Division I school.
  • Forecasters Warn of Bad Weather ThursdayNORMAN, Okla. (AP) — The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma says a severe weather outbreak is possible Thursday afternoon and evening in an area stretching from Arkansas to Indiana. Storms could also be severe from Texas to Ohio. Moist air could reach into the middle of the country as a low-pressure system and cold front approach from the west. Large hail and high winds will be the main threat early, but supercells could produce tornadoes. Computer models suggest powerful storms could form in the late afternoon and early evening Thursday. The greatest risk is in Arkansas and adjoining parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee, plus southern Illinois and western Kentucky. Storms are also possible in eastern Kansas. The latest weather outlook for northeast and east central Kansas is available here. ===============Kansas Lawmakers Postpone Business for FuneralTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators delayed the start of their work Thursday so that dozens of lawmakers could attend the funeral of a House member's wife. The House speaker's office said Cunningham Republican Jack Thimesch's wife, Diane, died over the weekend after a long illness. Her funeral was to be held Thursday morning at St. Peter's Catholic Church in Willowdale, about 70 miles southwest of Wichita and nearly 200 miles southwest of state capital of Topeka. The speaker's office said dozens of lawmakers planned to take a bus to the funeral. The House was officially convening in the morning but wasn't taking up substantial business until the evening. The Senate wasn't gaveling in until the evening.===============House Panel Debates Bill to Sell Office BuildingsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A House budget panel is expected to vote Friday on a bill authorizing the sale of four state government office buildings in Topeka in a deal that could result in the demolition of the Docking high-rise across the street from the Kansas Statehouse. State Department of Administration secretary Jim Clark says selling the buildings occupied by hundreds of state employees is one of his priorities during the 2014 legislative session. Most employees would be moved to buildings leased by the state, which Clark says is cheaper than owning a building. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the House Appropriations Committee discussed the Senate-passed bill on Wednesday. Committee chairman Representative Gene Suellentrop, a Wichita Republican, postponed a vote on the measure until Friday because of opposition raised by Democrats on the committee.=============== Kansas Senate Approves Insurance for AutismTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A bill that would require insurance coverage for children under the age of 12 with autism has been sent to Governor Sam Brownback. The Kansas Senate Wednesday approved a bill that requires coverage of up to 1,300 hours annually for a therapy called applied behavior analysis for children up to 6 years old. It also requires 520 hours a year for children from 6 to 12 years old. The bill doesn't limit coverage for age and hours of treatment for other autism services. The Kansas City Star reports the requirements would at first apply only to insurance plans offered before the Affordable Care Act was enacted in 2010, and only to businesses with more than 50 employees. In 2016, health plans for small employers and individuals would be added.===============Kansas Lawmakers Avoiding Major Abortion DebateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Top Republican legislators are blocking a debate in Kansas on banning most abortions early in pregnancy while engineering passage of a bill to make technical changes in anti-abortion laws. The Legislature has strong GOP and anti-abortion majorities in each chamber. The handling of abortion issue this year reflects a split among abortion opponents over tactics for further limiting the termination of pregnancies. Some anti-abortion lawmakers favor banning most abortions when a fetal heartbeat can be detected, sometimes as early as the sixth week of pregnancy. But other abortion foes fear enacting such a law would lead to court rulings not only striking down such a ban but eliminating restrictions already in place. Yet abortion opponents also want to make technical changes in existing restrictions to address legal issues.=============== School Finance Bills Affect KU Proposed ProjectsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House and Senate committees approved bills that address possible funding for a health education building proposed by the University of Kansas. The Senate Ways and Means Committee approved taking $24 million in funds from a FICA dispute settlement to pay for its school finance plan. The university hoped to use that money to help build the $75 million health education building. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the House Appropriations Committee approved a bill that would allow the university to issue $25 million in bonds toward the building. Another committee proposed using $15 million from the commerce department to give $5 million each to the Kansas Cancer Center, and research at Kansas State University and Wichita State University. The bills will go to their respective chambers for consideration.===============Eastern KS Barn Fires Declared ArsonREADING, Kan. (AP) — A pair of early-morning hay barn fires in east-central Kansas have been declared arson, and authorities are asking the state fire marshal's office to help investigate. Lyon County Sheriff Jeff Cope told KVOE-AM on Thursday that officials ruled out lightning or other natural causes after checking with the National Weather Service. The two fires were reported within an hour of each other starting at 3:30 am Wednesday near the Lyon county town of Reading. Damage to one of the hay barns is estimated at $100,000. The loss to the other is estimated at $15,000. A $1,000 reward for information has been posted by Lyon County Crime Stoppers. The town of Reading is located about 15 miles east of Emporia.=============== Gift Will Help Protect Kansas Wetland HabitatsGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — A foundation bearing the name of a businessman who helped establish the Cheyenne Bottoms Preserve in central Kansas has donated $100,000 to the state chapter of The Nature Conservancy. The organization said Thursday the $100,000 gift from the Charles Hulme (hyoom) Foundation will be used to protect and improve wetland habitats throughout Kansas, including Cheyenne Bottoms. Nature Conservancy officials said the donation is directed to a $5 million capital campaign begun in 2011 to expand conservation efforts around the state. The 41,000-acre Cheyenne Bottoms complex is considered one of North America's most important inland marshes, drawing hundreds of thousands of waterfowl each year. Hulme was a Great Bend businessman born in the 1890s. During the Depression, he helped the state acquire nearly 20,000 acres of the Cheyenne Bottoms Preserve.===============Douglas County Drops Moratorium on AgritourismLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Douglas County officials reversed an earlier decision and will allow agriculture tourism operations in the county. The county's Board of Commissioners on Wednesday approved new regulations and then rescinded a previous moratorium for agritourism operations. The Lawrence Journal-World reports the regulations include new definitions of smaller agribusinesses and larger commercial operations. The definitions discuss such things as parking requirements. It also says the commission will not have to approve smaller agritourism efforts but larger operations will need a permit from the county. The commission placed the moratorium on agritourism permits in October, in response to criticism of a proposal for a business that included an 800-car parking lot.=============== KU Asks Court to Dismiss Lawsuit Brought by ProfessorWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is seeking dismissal of a lawsuit by a former professor who claims its School of Medicine retaliated for his assertion that the university misappropriated federal research grants. The university and the Kansas Board of Regents argued in court filings Wednesday that they are protected from lawsuit under sovereign immunity. The university also contended that professor Curtis Klaassen failed to exhaust administrative remedies before suing. KU's School of Medicine is seeking to be dismissed because it's not a separate legal entity. Klaassen alleges in a lawsuit filed last year that the school stripped him of his position as principal investigator on research projects. He also contends KUMC fired most of his research assistants and killed important genetically modified laboratory mice used for research.=============== Autopsy Shows Kansas Child Died After Dog AttackTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An autopsy says a Topeka toddler died from crushing head injuries after being bitten by a dog in December 2012. The report says 30-month-old Savannah Mae Edwards died of multiple bites from a 6-year-old pit bull mix while she and her mother were visiting relatives. The dog was later euthanized. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the autopsy report was released Wednesday, more than a year after the newspaper asked for the results. It wasn't immediately clear why it took so long to release the report. Shawnee County District coroner Donald Pojmann's office says the death was ruled accidental. The district attorney's office said Wednesday the case was never referred to the office for possible prosecution.=============== Wichita State's Gregg Marshall Named AP Coach of the YearARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Gregg Marshall, whose Wichita State team was the first to reach the NCAA tournament undefeated in 33 years, has been selected as The Associated Press's coach of the year. The Shockers entered the tournament at 34-0 and as a number 1 seed. They became the first team in NCAA men's history to win its first 35 games. They lost to Kentucky in the third round and fell short of matching Indiana in 1976 as the last unbeaten national champion. Marshall led the Shockers to a No. 2 ranking in the final poll and to the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season and tournament titles. For the fifth straight season, the Shockers won at least 25 games. Marshall received 44 votes Thursday from the same 65-member national media panel that selects the weekly Top 25. Tony Bennett of Virginia had 13 votes, Billy Donovan of Florida drew six and John Beilein of Michigan and Larry Brown of SMU one each. Voting ended on Selection Sunday.=============== One Year After Opening, Wichita Clinic Issues ReportWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita clinic says it has provided about 1,200 abortions in the year since it opened. The South Wind Women's Center says it served about 1,500 patients for reproductive care, including abortions up to 14 weeks. The Wichita Eagle reports patients came from across Kansas, as well states such as Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas. The center operates in the same building where Dr. George Tiller provided abortions before he was murdered at his church in 2009. It is the only clinic that offers abortions in Wichita. Kansas health officials say the number of abortions in the state declined slightly last year despite the clinic opening. A preliminary report says 7,479 abortions were performed last year, the second-lowest number since 1987. A total of 7,598 abortions were performed in 2012.===============Junior College Women's Tournament Leaving SalinaSALINA, Kan. (AP) — The NJCAA Division 1 Women's Basketball National Championship will move from Salina to Lubbock, Texas after the 2015 tournament. Salina has been host of the tournament since the 1997-98 season. But the Salina Area Chamber of Commerce announced Thursday the tournament will move to Lubbock at least for 2016 through 2018. Mary Ellen Leicht, executive director of the NJCAA, announced the decision in a news release. Next year's national championship will be at the Salina Bicentennial Center March 16-21.===============Sentencing Reset for Man Accused in Fatal CrashWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Sentencing has been delayed for a Wichita man who pleaded guilty to two felonies for a hit-and-run accident that killed a man riding a horse. Authorities say a car driven by 26-year-old George Childers hit the horse last July 5. The horse was being ridden by 49-year-old Lloyd Ferguson and a 6-year-old boy. Ferguson was killed in the crash, and the boy was seriously injured. The horse was euthanized after the accident. Childers pleaded guilty earlier to leaving the scene of an accident and interference with law enforcement. The Wichita Eagle reports Childers' sentencing was postponed Wednesday after his lawyer challenged the way his criminal history was calculated. District Judge Joe Kisner rescheduled the sentencing for April 22.===============UPDATE: Federal Commission Rejects Design for Eisenhower MemorialWASHINGTON (AP) — A federal commission that oversees monuments in the nation's capital has voted to reject the current design of the Eisenhower Memorial. The National Capital Planning Commission voted 7-3 on Thursday to accept a staff report opposing the current design. The commission's objections focused primarily on the scale and placement of columns that would hold large tapestries framing the memorial park. Architect Frank Gehry has proposed large metal tapestries depicting the Kansas landscape of Ike's boyhood home. Statues of Eisenhower as president and World War II general would stand at the park's center. The commission is now directing the memorial designers to return every two months with updates.===============Tigers-Royals Game Called Off Because of RainDETROIT (AP) — Thursday's game between the Detroit Tigers and Kansas City Royals has been postponed because of rain. The game was called about an hour before the scheduled first pitch, with temperatures in the 30s and an occasional drizzle. Significantly more rain was expected throughout the day. No makeup date was announced. Detroit took the first two games of this three-game series. Thursday's game will be made up June 19, when the Royals are back in Detroit for what was initially supposed to be a three-game series followed by an off day.
  • Overcrowding is a problem in the Manhattan-Ogden School District. Consultants say it would cost more than $100 million to address the issue.
  • Some mid-level executives are alleging that top-level managers kept some employees from receiving superior ratings on annual performance reviews.
  • KU Defeats Western Kentucky, BarelyKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The top-seeded Kansas Jayhawks got a serious challenge from a Western Kentucky team trying to become the first No. 16 seed to win its first round game. Jeff Withey scored 17 points in the 64-57 victory. The Jayhawks trailed 31-30 at halftime. They built an 11-point lead in the second half but couldn't put Western Kentucky away until two foul shots with 11 seconds left. The Jayhawks goes on to face the North Carolina Tarheels and former KU coach Roy Williams in the next round of the NCAA tournament; tip-off is at 4:15 tomorrow (SUN) at the Spring Center in Kansas City.==========Wildcats Fall to LaSalleKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — On a day of high-seed upsets, Kansas State is out of the NCAA tournament in a stunner. No. 13 La Salle survived 63-61 after blowing an 18-point halftime lead. Jerrell Wright made three foul shots in the final 30 seconds to preserve the victory. He had a game-high 21 points for the Explorers.
  • Former FBI Director James Comey publicly claimed ownership of a Twitter account Monday and signaled that he is about to rejoin a national conversation.
  • A part of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed after the Dali, a nearly 1,000-foot-long container ship, crashed into it.
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