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  • The Trump administration is targeting top climate and weather labs for cuts. Insiders worry about the impact on research and NOAA's ability to forecast severe weather like hurricanes and tornadoes.
  • President Trump lashed out on social media late Sunday against ABC and NBC, putting the nation's top broadcast regulator once more at the center of his culture wars.
  • NPR has compiled a timeline of when local, state and federal officials posted warnings on social media as well as the timeline of events as presented by local officials.
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention accepted a controversial recommendation from outside vaccine advisers to tighten guidelines for the COVID vaccine.
  • Afraid to sneak into a British embassy? MI6's new dark web portal Silent Courier lets you share secrets online.
  • Update: Lawyer Claims Afghanistan Massacre Suspect's Memory Not PreciseFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — The lawyer for the Army staff sergeant accused of slaughtering 16 Afghan civilians said the solider has a sketchy memory of the night of the massacre. Lawyer John Henry Browne said 38-year-old Robert Bales remembers some details from before and after the killings, but very little during the time the military believes he went on a rampage through two Afghan villages. Browne spoke with The Associated Press from Fort Leavenworth, where Bales is being held. Bales, 38, has not been charged yet in the March 11 shootings, though charges could come this week. The killings sparked protests in Afghanistan, endangered relations between the two countries and threatened to upend American policy over the decade-old war.=============================Lawyer Describes Conversation with Afghanistan Murder SuspectFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — An attorney for the American soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians says meeting his client in person was one of the most emotional meetings of his life. Seattle lawyer John Henry Browne flew to Kansas on Sunday to meet with Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, and spent three-and-a-half hours with him Monday morning at Fort Leavenworth. Bales is being held in isolation at the military prison. They met again in the afternoon. Browne spoke briefly by telephone with The Associated Press during a lunch break. Browne says Bales clarified one story: It was two days before the Afghan shootings when one of Bales's friends, another soldier, had his leg blown off by a roadside bomb. Browne says Bales didn't witness the explosion but saw the aftermath.======================================= Kansas House Passes $14B BudgetTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas House has approved a $14.1 billion state budget that cuts overall spending by about $600 million, or 4 percent. House members voted 87-36 Monday on the bill containing the spending plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1. The measure now moves to the Senate, which is working out details of its version of the budget for the fiscal year starting July 1. The House legislation also contains a provision to prohibit state employees from being involved in abortions. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the House added $29 million to help K-12 public schools grapple with high student enrollment. The bill also retains a ban by the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services to deny food stamp benefits to some U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants.=================================== State of Kansas to Receive $4.4M to Fix Faltering SchoolsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Kansas is receiving a $4.4 million federal grant to continue efforts to turn around its persistently lowest-achieving schools. The Kansas State Department of Education says the money will benefit seven schools in the Wichita, Kansas City, Kansas, Topeka, Cherokee and Liberal school districts. The schools have received funding previously from the U.S. Department of Education program, which requires districts to choose an aggressive turnaround model. One option is replacing the principal and improving the school through comprehensive reforms.=========================================Survey: Kansas Among Top 10 States for Government Transparency TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas ranks among the top 10 states in a study of government transparency, accountability and anti-corruption mechanisms. The state is one of 19 to receive an average grade of "C'' in the State Integrity Investigation, conducted by the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity, Public Radio International and Global Integrity. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the study found that states are doing a poor job delivering accountability and transparency to their residents. No state received an A from the months-long probe that looked at 330 "Corruption Risk Indicators" across 14 categories of government. Kansas scored a 75 in the study, ninth best in the nation, while Missouri also received a C grade with 72 points. New Jersey had the highest grade with a B-plus, while eight states received an F.=====================================Topeka-Area Legislators Omit KNI Admissions Freeze from Budget TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A bipartisan group of Shawnee County legislators has managed to strip the House budget of a provision that would have frozen admissions to the Kansas Neurological Institute. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that lawmakers led by Representative Annie Kuether, a Topeka Democrat, introduced an amendment on the House floor Friday to overturn the one-year freeze. One Topeka legislator after another lined up to support the amendment, saying KNI provides unique and necessary services to Kansans with severe disabilities. The measure passed 75-46. The admissions freeze was proposed by Social Services Budget Committee chairman Dave Crum, an Augusta Republican, who spoke against Kuether's amendment on the floor. He says there's been no attempt to close KNI, but that there's a trend to home-and-community-based services for the developmentally disabled.===================================State Ethics Panel to Hear E-mail Solicitation ComplaintWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ The state ethics panel will hear a complaint this week about a Wichita City Council member's email use. Wichita City Council member Michael O'Donnell has admitted using his city e-mail to send out 39 solicitations for financial sponsors for an October 30 meet-and-greet for his friend, state Sen. Garrett Love, a Republican from Montezuma. Some of the emails were sent from the bench during a council meeting. O'Donnell said it was a mistake and he wants to put it behind him. State law prohibits the use of public resources for any campaign for elective office. O'Donnell faces a hearing Wednesday before the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission, a nine-member commission appointed by the governor, Legislature and state officials.===================================State of Ohio Signs Concealed-Carry Reciprocity Agreement with KansasCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ Ohioans who have permits to carry concealed handguns will be allowed to do the same in Kansas under an agreement signed by the attorneys general in those states. The same will be true for Kansas residents with valid permits who visit Ohio. People carrying concealed weapons in either location still must follow state laws on having, storing and using such firearms. Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine says the deal he signed with Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt means Ohio has reciprocity agreements with a total of 23 states. Ohio law allows for such agreements with states where the eligibility requirements for carrying concealed weapons are "substantially comparable'' to those in Ohio.===================================US Attorney Plans Discussion of Kansas PrioritiesHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) _ U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom will be in Hutchinson to talk about his priorities for federal law enforcement in Kansas. Grissom is scheduled to speak at noon at the Hutchinson Rotary Club meeting at the Ramada Inn. In 2010, President Barack Obama nominated Grissom. He was recommended by then-Kansas Governor Mark Parkinson and then-Representative Dennis Moore, both Democrats. Grissom was legal counsel for Moore's 1998 and 2000 campaigns and served on the committee for a major fundraiser in 2007 for Obama in Kansas City, Missouri. At the time, Grissom was an Overland Park, Kansas attorney who specialized in discrimination claims under the Civil Rights Act.===================================KU Men Survive Narrow Contest with Purdue to Advance to NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Elijah Johnson scored 18 points, including the go-ahead basket in the final minute, and No. 2 seed Kansas rallied to beat Robbie Hummel and No. 10 seed Purdue 63-60 on Sunday night. Thomas Robinson managed 11 points and 13 rebounds for the Jayhawks (29-6), who trailed nearly the entire game but still managed to advance to St. Louis. They'll play No. 11 seed North Carolina State in the Midwest Regional semifinals. Purdue was clinging to a 60-59 lead and had the ball and under a minute remaining when Lewis Jackson, the shot clock winding down, lost control at the top of the key. Johnson picked it up and went the other way for the go-ahead layup with 23.3 seconds left. Hummel missed an open 3-pointer at the other end and Tyshawn Taylor scored a transition dunk for Kansas with 2.5 seconds left. After a timeout, Purdue sharpshooter Ryne Smith unloaded a long potential tying 3-point try that hit the backboard and the rim before falling away. Hummel finished with 26 points to lead the Boilermakers (22-13).===================================KU Women Defeat Nebraska to Advance in NCAA Tournament LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) _ Angel Goodrich scored 20 points to lead 11th-seeded Kansas to a 57-49 win over former Big 12 rival and sixth-seeded Nebraska in the Little Rock Regional on Sunday. The Jayhawks led by as many as 10 points in the first half and held on in the second for their first NCAA tournament win since 1999. The appearance was the school's first since 2000 and the first in eight seasons under coach Bonnie Henrickson. The win comes after Kansas narrowly made the tournament after losing six of its final eight games when leading scorer Carolyn Davis injured her knee. Goodrich picked up the slack, and Chelsea Gardner added 15 points and 16 rebounds. Kaitlyn Burke led the Lady Cornhuskers, which was just 20 of 61 or 33 percent from the field, with 14 points.====================================== K-State Women Prepare to Play Basketball Powerhouse UConn in NCAA TournamentBRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) _ Deb Patterson and Kansas State will finally get their chance to play the University of Connecticut. The eighth-seeded Wildcats will face the top-seeded Huskies in the second round of the NCAA women's tournament Monday night. It will be the first meeting between the two schools despite Kansas State being in UConn's draw five times in the past 11 years. K-State lost in the first round last season to Purdue, blowing a chance to play against UConn. The Wildcats survived a tough test from Princeton in the opening round Saturday, beating the Tigers 67-64. Senior Branshea Brown had a career-high 22 points to lead the Kansas State women's team. The Wildcats have made the NCAA tournament six times since advancing to the regional semifinals in 2002, but haven't been able to win more than one game.===================================KS Military School Has History of Abuse ClaimsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Court documents show a Kansas military school accused of fostering a culture of abuse has been repeatedly sued by parents. St. John's Military School is due in federal court tomorrow (TUE). The Salina school is seeking a gag order prohibiting people involved in the case from publicly talking about the current litigation or past lawsuits that ended in settlements. But evidence in the public record hint at long-running abuses. Nine other abuse-related lawsuits have been filed since 2006. One lawsuit included photos of a student who had been branded on his arm with a hot, star-shaped medal. A school official acknowledged in a deposition that at least 10 other students were similarly branded. A cadet testified how higher ranking students would swat young cadets on their bare bottoms with ceremonial sabers.=====================================SE Kansas Ready for Predicted Rain PARSONS, Kan. (AP) — Weather officials say southeast Kansas is in good shape to handle several days of steady rainfall because of a shortage of precipitation that goes back a year. State Climatologist Mary Knapp says the area's precipitation since last April is about 72 percent of what it normally would be. She says National Weather Service forecasts for up to 8 inches of rain between Monday and Wednesday night in southeast Kansas "would be a very, very good start to our spring season." Labette County emergency management director Larry Steeby says his county is relatively dry, so "the first couple of inches will probably not be a big deal." He says several more inches of rain on top of that might cause some initial flooding in low-lying areas and possible flash floods.=======================================Former UN Ambassador Bolton to Speak in Lawrence LAWRENCE, Kan.(AP) _ The former ambassador to the United Nations is scheduled to speak in Lawrence next month. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that John Bolton is scheduled to speak about threats to American security on April 4 at the Lied Center in Lawrence. Bolton is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he researches U.S. foreign and national security policy. He previously served as the U.S. permanent representative to the United Nations from 2005 to 2006. He also served previously in the U.S. State Department as undersecretary for arms control and international security. ===================================High School Custodian Hailed as HeroHIAWATHA, Kan. (AP) _ An eastern Kansas sheriff is calling a high school janitor a hero for pulling an elderly man from a burning car that had backed into a ditch. Denny Gray and his wife, Lori, were headed home from the store earlier this month when he saw what he thought was a brush fire on the side of the road. Gray, a custodian at Hiawatha High School, instead discovered it was a car that was on fire. Gray ran to the vehicle and found 94-year-old Gerry Alkire of Hiawatha trapped inside. He pulled Alkire, who suffered only minor burns, to safety as tires started blowing out from the heat. Brown County Sheriff John Merchant said Gray was a hero for risking his life to save another's.=====================================5 to Be Inducted into National Teachers Hall of FameEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) _ Five teachers from across the country will be the latest additions to the National Teachers Hall of Fame at Emporia State University. Surprise announcements were made last week at the teachers' schools. The inductees will be honored May 8 during a reception at the Washington headquarters of the National Education Association. In June they will be in Emporia for a recognition banquet and the induction ceremony. The trip also will give them a chance to meet students and attend a roundtable discussion and community events.=====================================Armenian Delegation Visits KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Two delegations of Armenian officials are visiting with Kansas military and civilian leaders to foster continued relations. The first group arrived Saturday and a second is due to arrive today (MON). The Armenians are scheduled to meet with officials with the Kansas National Guard, including Major General Lee Tafanelli, the state's adjutant general. Tafanelli led a delegation of Kansas officials to Armenia in September 2011. During their stay the Armenians also will visit the Statehouse to speak with Governor Sam Brownback and other state government leaders. Kansas has had a relationship with Armenia since 2003 through the State Partnership Program of the National Guard Bureau. The Armenians are also expected to make stops in New York and Washington to meet with senior U.S. Defense Department officials.======================================University Press of Kansas Publishes Book on Watergate Scandal LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University Press of Kansas is publishing a new book about the reasons the man known as "Deep Throat" helped newspaper reporters in the Watergate case. The book by author Max Holland is entitled "Leak: Why Mark Felt became Deep Throat." The Lawrence Journal-World reports that in the book, Holland says Felt was upset that he was had not been immediately chosen to lead the FBI after J. Edgar Hoover died. Felt provided reporters in 1972 and 1973 with information that exposed the Nixon administration's obstruction of an FBI investigation. Nixon resigned in 1974. Michael Briggs, editor-in-chief at the University Press in Lawrence, edited the book. He said the University Press of Kansas has taken a special interest in the topics of American politics, American history and military studies.==================================Manhattan-Based Company to Acquire Louisiana Hotel ALEXANDRIA, La. (AP) — The mayor of Alexandria, Louisiana, Jacques Roy, says the town has a deal to sell the Alexander Fulton Hotel to the company that is managing it. The Town Talk newspaper reports that Noble Hospitality Incorporated of Manhattan, Kansas would pay $4 million. The city would put in about $2 million worth of repairs to the hotel and the connected Alexandria Riverfront Center, give up to five years of utility and tax breaks, and offer up to $2 million more in breaks on the purchase price. Roy says Noble would need to meet what he calls "onerous" requirements to get the price breaks. The City Council is to consider the proposal Tuesday. Council President Harry Silver calls it "a double win" for the city, putting the hotel back into private commerce and money into the treasury.===================================KCK Police Officer One of Nation's Leading Enforcers of DUI LawsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) _ People who drink and drive in Kansas City, Kan., don't care much for Kenneth Garrett. The police officer has earned a reputation as a tough enforcer of drunken driving laws. The Kansas City Star reports Garrett made more than 400 arrests for DUI last year. In his 20-year career, he's taken an estimated 10,000 impaired drivers to jail. State statistics say no other officer in Kansas comes close to those numbers. And a spokeswoman for MADD says Garrett is easily one of the top DUI enforcers in the country. Garrett says he uses different methods to catch drunken drivers. He says he looks for drivers who are weaving, making wide turns, straddling lane dividers or driving at night without headlights.====================================Siblings Seek to Keep Sister's Killer Behind BarsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Two sisters are gathering hundreds of signatures as they seek to keep the man who killed their sibling nearly 33 years ago behind bars. During a hearing Tuesday in Wichita, Allen Jordan will be considered for parole for the third time. The hearing will give members of the state Prisoner Review Board a chance to hear from the sisters, Jan Colvin and Sue Jones. Jordan received essentially a life sentence after being convicted of first-degree murder, rape and aggravated burglary in the May 1979 death of Augusta High School senior Kay Robinson. The Wichita Eagle reports that Robinson's sisters don't expect to learn the board's decision until next month. Colvin says she would be "very fearful" of Jordan being paroled. He is now 56.======================================Kansas City Chiefs Sign Backup Quarterback, Right TackleKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs have formally announced the signing of free agent quarterback Brady Quinn and veteran right tackle Eric Winston. Winston was in the fourth year of a $30 million, five-year deal when he was cut by the Houston Texans to save salary cap space. Winston helped Houston become the NFL's second-leading rushing team, and he will address a glaring need for the Chiefs. Quinn will back up Matt Cassel, who is coming back from a season-ending injury to his throwing hand. The former first-round pick of the Browns started 12 games over three seasons in Cleveland, completing 52 percent of his passes for 1,902 yards and 10 touchdowns with nine interceptions. He did not play in Denver last season. Terms for the two deals were not disclosed Monday.===================================Lawyer Visits Afghanistan Mass-Murder SuspectFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A Seattle defense attorney has arrived at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas and is meeting with an Army staff sergeant who is suspected of carrying out a deadly nighttime attack on two Afghan villages. Post spokeswoman Rebecca Steed says lawyer John Henry Browne is having his first face-to-face meeting Monday with Robert Bales. The 10-year Army veteran is being held in an isolated cell at the military prison. The meeting has been described as a privileged visit. Along with medical visits, such meetings are generally more private than others conducted in the prison. Bales hasn't been charged in the March 11 shootings that left 16 people dead, including nine children. The attacks have endangered relations between the U.S. and Afghanistan and threaten to upend U.S. policy over the decade-old war.
  • UPDATE: Kansas Lawmakers Postpone Talks on Taxes, BudgetTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators aren't resuming negotiations yet on tax issues, and their work on the state budget has stalled. The House and Senate met only briefly Wednesday before adjourning for the day. Lawmakers were in the 96th day of their annual session, already six days past the number specified in the state constitution. The standstill came after the House rejected a proposal Tuesday from its Republican leaders to set the sales tax at 6 percent in July. The measure would have raised new revenues to prevent budget shortfalls while Kansas pursued fresh income tax cuts to follow up on massive reductions enacted last year. The sales tax is 6.3 percent, but it's scheduled by law to drop to 5.7 percent in July. Republican leaders can't agree on adjusting the tax.==============Kansas House GOP's Survey Results in No New Tax PlanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House Speaker Ray Merrick says no new proposal on taxes has emerged from his survey of dozens of fellow Republicans. Merrick met Wednesday with House Republicans in small groups Wednesday after the chamber rejected a proposal to the lower the 6.3 percent state sales tax to 6 percent in July. It's currently scheduled by law to drop to 5.7 percent on July 1. The Stilwell Republican said afterward that House GOP leaders don't yet have a new plan. Lawmakers involved in the meetings said House Republicans expressed a variety of positions. Most Republicans want to cut personal income taxes again after reductions last year. Republican Governor Sam Brownback wants to keep the sales tax at 6.3 percent to raise new revenues and head off budget shortfalls.==============Kansas Democrats See Trouble in GOP Impasse on TaxesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Top Democrats in the Kansas Legislature are criticizing what they describe as "gridlock" among Republicans on tax issues and suggest administrative problems could result. Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley of Topeka and House Minority Leader Paul Davis of Lawrence said Wednesday that the Legislature's research staff sees potential complications if the 2013 session drags into June. Republican legislators can't agree on adjusting the state sales tax to raise new revenues and prevent budget shortfalls while Kansas cuts income taxes. The sales tax is 6.3 percent but is scheduled by law to drop to 5.7 percent in July. Hensley and Davis noted that the state is required by law to give retailers a month's notice of a sales tax change before collecting the new levy.==============Kansas Governor Optimistic Despite Stalled Tax DebateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback believes Kansas lawmakers are making progress in resolving tax issues even though the House and Senate have suspended negotiations for now. Brownback told reporters Wednesday that legislators are starting to work through their differences. He said, "It's going to happen." The biggest disagreement among Brownback's fellow Republicans is over the 6.3 percent state sales tax, which is scheduled by law to fall to 5.7 percent. Brownback has proposed keeping the sales tax at its current rate to raise new revenues and prevent budget shortfalls while Kansas cuts income taxes further. He and GOP leaders want to follow up on income tax cuts approved last year, but some House members have balked at cancelling the sales tax decrease.==============Tornadoes Hit Northern KansasCORNING, Kan. (AP) — Tornadoes have been roaring over parts of northern Kansas for a second straight day. No injuries have been reported. Scattered property damage was reported late Tuesday afternoon in the small Nemaha County town of Corning. Authorities there said a tornado destroyed at least one home and damaged another, while several sheds and outbuildings were also hit. Farther west, a large tornado was reported north of Salina near the Ottawa County town of Bennington. The twister was initially spotted around 5:30 pm and hadn't lifted nearly an hour later. Tuesday's violent weather follows an outbreak Monday night that saw at least four tornadoes in northeastern Kansas counties. Two businesses and about 20 homes in Maryville were damaged or destroyed.==============Tornado Threat Persists in Oklahoma, KansasNORMAN, Okla. (AP) — The Storm Prediction Center says a severe weather outbreak is possible in the Southern Plains today (WED) as more storms take aim at the area. Forecasters say west-central Kansas and west-central Oklahoma are at a moderate risk of severe weather this afternoon and evening. The National Weather Service says the storms could bring baseball-sized hail, wind gusts of up to 70 mph and tornadoes. The moderate risk area includes Moore, Oklahoma, where 24 people were killed May 20 in a massive EF5 tornado. An area stretching from Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin south to Texas has a slight risk for severe weather Wednesday. Forecasters say the risk of nasty weather will persist throughout the week, with severe thunderstorms and isolated tornadoes possible Thursday in the central U.S.============== Appeals Court Refuses to Ease Way for Kansas Power PlantTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court in Washington has refused to clear a potential obstacle to construction of a coal-fired power plant in southwest Kansas. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected a request from Hays-based Sunflower Electric Power Corporation to overturn a federal judge's ruling that put the construction plans on hold. Sunflower wants to build an 895-megawatt plant outside Holcomb. But U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan last year ordered the U.S. Agriculture Department's Rural Utilities Service to complete an environmental study before granting any approvals for the $2.8 billion project. The appeals panel on Tuesday rejected Sunflower's request on technical grounds. The company says it's reviewing the decision.============== Lawrence Won't Comply with State Concealed Knife LawLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence city commissioners are refusing to change the city's laws to comply with a new state law that allows people to carry concealed knives. The commissioners on Tuesday criticized the law that allows people to bring switchblades, daggers and other knives into bars and public places. It takes effect July 1. However, The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the commission's actions will likely have little effect on residents' abilities to carry knives. Staff attorney Randy Larkin told commissioners that the new state law will supersede the city's code, making it impractical to enforce the city's ban on concealed knives. Commissioners said they voted against the new law to indicate their opposition and encourage other cities to do the same.=============='In Cold Blood' DNA Testing Results InconclusiveTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas official says DNA testing is so far inconclusive about whether two men executed in Kansas for the 1959 killings that inspired the book "In Cold Blood" are linked to unsolved murders in Florida. Kansas Bureau of Investigation Deputy Director Kyle Smith said Wednesday that his agency will continue DNA testing on the remains of Richard Hickock and Perry Smith. The men were hanged in 1965, for the killings of Herb Clutter, his wife and two of their children in their farmhouse outside the southwest Kansas town of Holcomb. Weeks later, Cliff Walker, his wife and their two small children were killed in their home in Osprey, Florida. Investigators say Hickock and Smith fled to Florida after the Kansas killings, and then to Las Vegas, where they were caught.==============Firefighters Battle Big Blaze in Southwest KansasMOSCOW, Kan. (AP) — A large grass fire in southwest Kansas has spread to thousands of bales of corn stalks stored at a facility in the Stevens County town of Moscow. KAKE-TV reports that the fire broke out late Tuesday and involved about 50,000 corn stalk bales by Wednesday. Moscow Mayor Billy Bell told the station that a bioenergy company had planned to use the stalks to produce ethanol. Bell says firefighters have contained the blaze, which investigators believe was intentionally set. The mayor also says no injuries have been reported and no structures were in danger, but residents have been told to prepare to evacuate if the wind changes direction. Local farmers also have their irrigation systems on standby to help out if necessary.==============State Holding Kansas Disaster Training EventSALINA, Kan. (AP) — First responders from throughout the state are taking part in a two-day mass disaster exercise in central Kansas. The exercise Wednesday and Thursday brings together more than 230 people from city, county and state agencies, including the Kansas Highway Patrol and search and rescue teams. The event takes place at Crisis City, located at the Great Plains Regional Training Center near Salina. Crisis City is operated by the Kansas Division of Emergency Management. Among its training sites are a collapsed building, piles of rubble, a simulated rail disaster and a high-angle rescue tower.==============4 Victims of Kansas I-70 Accident Still Not IdentifiedELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Investigators are still working to identify four people killed in a traffic accident in Ellsworth County on Tuesday. Patrol trooper Ben Gardner said Wednesday the victims are believed to be from Colorado and authorities in that state are helping to obtain identities. Gardner says the victims' vehicle hit a semi-trailer truck that parked along Interstate 70 about eight miles north of Ellsworth after experiencing mechanical problems. Gardner says two people rescued a child, believed to be between 5 and 8 years old, from the van. The child is hospitalized in Wichita but investigators have not been able to talk to him yet. Gardner says the extent of the damage prevented emergency personnel from positively determining the ages or genders of the people in the vehicle. The truck driver wasn't injured.==============Saline County to Send Juveniles to Junction CitySALINA, Kan. (AP) — Saline County commissioners have approved a plan to house the county's juvenile inmates at a regional detention center in Junction City. The commissioner signed an agreement Tuesday to send juvenile inmates to the North Central Kansas Regional Juvenile Detention Facility. The county will pay a $10,000 membership fee and nearly $405,000 a year to house the inmates. Saline County Sheriff Glen Kochanowski closed the county's juvenile center last month, saying a lack of staff and overcrowding were creating safety issues. The Salina Journal reports that Saline County currently has 12 inmates housed in Junction City.============== State Seeks Summary Judgment in Sperm Donor CaseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The state of Kansas is asking a judge to rule in its favor without a trial in a case involving a sperm donor from Topeka. The Kansas Department for Children and Families wants the judge to declare that William Marotta must pay child support because he is the father of a 3-year-old girl born in 2009. Marotta argues that he donated his sperm to a lesbian couple and signed a contract that waived his parental rights and responsibilities. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the state argued in a motion filed Friday that the contract was moot. They say those involved didn't follow a state law that requires a licensed physician to perform artificial inseminations in sperm donor cases. The next hearing in the case is scheduled for June 5.============== Woman Given 18 Years in Drug Case Tied to DeathOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — An Ottawa woman was sentenced to 18 years in federal prison for her role in a drug sale that led to a man's death. Prosecutors say 37-year-old Tamara Ledom crushed prescription drugs into a power that the man thought was methamphetamine. He died in May 2009 after using the drug and taking prescription pills. Ledom was sentenced Tuesday for one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute drugs that led to a death. The case includes eight other co-defendants who have either pleaded guilty or are awaiting trial. The leader of the drug ring, Connie Edwards of Ottawa, is serving a 25-year prison sentence.============== KC Pet Shelter Plans 24-Hour Adoption EventKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City no-kill pet shelter plans to offer adoptions for 24 hours straight next weekend as part of its entry in the 2013 ASPCA Rachael Ray $100,000 challenge. Wayside Waifs is one of 50 shelters across the U.S. chosen to take part in the competition, which is aimed at getting more animals adopted or returned to their owners from June 1 through August 31. The shelter is charging $25 for adoptions, with the fee for a second adoption waived. The "Adopt-Around-the-Clock" event will start at 12:01 am Saturday and end at midnight. Wayside Waifs interim president Ellen Hanson says the group's goal is to find homes for 1,831 animals by August 31. She says Saturday's event is one of several adoption events planned during the contest period.==============Kansas Car Theft Victim Run Over By Own CarWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas car theft victim is out of the hospital after paying a heavy price for trying to recover the vehicle herself. KFDI-FM reports that the 31-year-old Wichita woman had her 2011 Dodge Avenger stolen on May 23. She went looking for the car the next afternoon and found it — with another woman in the driver's seat. The Sedgwick County sheriff's office says the victim opened a door and told the driver to get out. The driver backed up, hit the victim and ran over her before driving off. The victim spent several days in Wesley Medical Center with serious abdominal injuries. She was released Wednesday. The Dodge Avenger is still missing, but investigators are looking for a 21-year-old woman described as the driver.==============NW Missouri Man Sentenced to 20 Years for Road RageKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A northwest Missouri man with more than 35 prior traffic convictions in Kansas and Missouri has been sentenced to 20 years in prison in connection with a 2010 road rage incident. Platte County prosecutor Eric Zahnd says 39-year-old Bradley Ise of Platte City was sentenced Tuesday after being convicted in February of second-degree assault, leaving the scene of an accident, two counts of first-degree property damage and driving while revoked. The charges were filed after a July 22, 2010, incident in which Ise intentionally rammed the back of a car on Interstate 635 north of Kansas City and moments later swerved into a car on Interstate 29. Online Kansas Department of Corrections records indicate a prison sentence Ise was serving for three counts of aggravated assault expired May 17.============== Kansas City Barista Pete Licata Takes World TitleKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A man from Kansas City is the world's best barista. Pete Licata, the quality assurance manager at Parisi Artisan Coffee in Kansas City, won the 2013 World Barista Championship on Sunday in Melbourne, Australia. He competed against champion baristas from more than 50 countries before taking the title. In April, Licata won the U.S. barista championship during competition in Boston. In Australia, each contestant discussed their drinks while preparing espressos, cappuccinos and an original signature drink. Licata's specialty was a non-alcoholic coffee cocktail using chilled palm sugar triple syrup combined with an espresso shot over ice and 2½ droppers of non-alcoholic bitters with orange peel and lemongrass. The Kansas City Star reports that Licata stayed in Australia for a few days and couldn't be reached for comment.============== 80 Kansas City Buildings to Use Solar EquipmentKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City is making an aggressive push into the use of solar power. Officials have signed a deal to install equipment on 80 city buildings to increase the city's use of solar power. The Kansas City Star reports that the project will include installing solar equipment on all of the city's police and fire departments and most of its community centers. Brightergy, a solar installer, and Kansas City Power & Light will team up on the project, which is expected to be completed by the end of the year. City officials say the solar units will supply 2.5 percent of each building's power demands. The city estimates the project will save $40,000 in the first year, with annual savings increasing in the future.=============Nebraska Lawmakers Pass Wind Energy Incentive BillLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) _ A bill that would use sales tax exemptions to attract wind farms to Nebraska has won final approval from lawmakers. Senators voted 38-2 on Wednesday to pass the measure, as a Kansas-based company considers developing a wind farm in Dixon County, near the Iowa and South Dakota border. State Senator Steve Lathrop of Omaha says his bill is designed to keep Nebraska competitive with other high-wind states in the Plains that have offered tax incentives. Nebraska currently charges a sales tax on all equipment and materials used in wind-energy projects. Nebraska ranks as a top state in its potential to generate wind power, but 26th in what it can produce right now. Lawmakers rejected a proposed amendment that would have required companies to purchase Nebraska-made materials.============== Regulation Panel Clears Proposed Sale of Sprint to Japanese BankOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Sprint and Japan's Softbank say regulators haven't found any unresolved national security issues related to Softbank's proposed acquisition of Sprint. The companies say the Treasury Department's Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States has completed its investigation and that they've entered into a National Security Agreement with the U.S. government. As a result, Sprint and Softbank say they expect that the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security will soon notify the Federal Communications Commission that they've completed their national security review. Once that happens, the FCC can complete its review. Softbank wants to buy 70 percent of Sprint for $20.1 billion. That deal is set to close in July, but Sprint also has received a $25.5 billion bid from Dish Network for the entire company.============== Music Festival at Kansas Speedway Called OffKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A two-day festival of alternative, pop and rap music at Kansas Speedway scheduled for late June has been called off. Organizers of Kanrocksas announced the cancellation Tuesday, citing low ticket sales. The festival was scheduled to open June 28th with a lineup that included Fun, Passion Pit, She and Him, Kendrick Lamar and Imagine Dragons. The cancellation was announced jointly by Midwest Music Festivals and Kansas Speedway. A message on the Kanrocksas website says there are no plans to reschedule the event. This year's festival would have been the second Kanrocksas. The first was held in August 2011, also at the NASCAR track in Kansas City, Kansas and attracted more than 30,000 fans with such acts as Eminem, Kid Cudi and the Flaming Lips.==============Missouri High Court Will Hear KC Light Rail ChallengeKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Missouri Supreme Court will hear an appeal of the Kansas City Council's decision not to put a plan for light rail in the city on the election ballot. The state Supreme Court said in an order Tuesday that it would hear arguments in activist Clay Chastain's long-running battle to put a light rail proposal before voters. The Kansas City Star reports that the court did not say when it will hear the case. In 2011, petitioners submitted enough valid signatures to put Chastain's proposal for a sales tax and light rail up for a vote. But the council refused, saying the ballot measure violated the state constitution because it didn't fully fund construction. A circuit court and an appeals court upheld the city's position.==============Player from Small Kansas College Announces He's GayJallen Messersmith of Benedictine College in Atchison has come out, and is believed to be the first openly gay player in U.S. men's college basketball. Messersmith told The Associated Press on Wednesday he revealed his sexual orientation to teammates at the NAIA school before last season and approached Outsports.com about telling his story. Outsports.com is a website that covers gay issues in sports. Messersmith said he's received nothing but positive feedback since the story was posted on Tuesday. He said he wanted to come out with the hope it helps other athletes feel comfortable about who they are. He said he decided to come out long before Jason Collins became the first active NBA player to announce he's gay.
  • An 84-year-old KC area man will stand trial for allegedly shooting a Black teen who rang his doorbell by mistake... Kansas officials will no longer be required to change a transgender person's birth certificate to reflect a change in gender identity... and KU aerospace engineering students win big with a new missile design. Details inside.
  • It was a week that saw not only more twists in the tariffs saga but also Trump's big Hill address, the suspension of aid to Ukraine, more firings at agencies, and more. NPR keeps track, day by day.
  • An Israeli radio station is broadcasting messages and songs to hostages in Gaza, and a Palestinian station in the West Bank is broadcasting families' messages to relatives recently jailed in Israel.
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