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  • Here's a look at area headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • SE Kansas Braced for 2nd Round of Violent Storms DEARING, Kan. (AP) — A second round of potentially violent weather has emergency managers in southeastern and east-central Kansas preparing for any necessary response. The National Weather Service placed about 20 counties under a tornado watch until 10 pm Monday. A smattering of tornado warnings were posted by late afternoon for far southeastern counties as forecasters noted strong rotation in thunderstorms. In rural Montgomery County near the Oklahoma line, law enforcement reported a brief touchdown shortly after 4 pm along U.S. 166, about three miles from the small town Dearing. Residents in parts of south-central Kansas continued cleaning up Monday from a powerful storm system that struck the day before, producing at least one confirmed tornado south of Wichita. ================Kansas Legislature's Annual Session Hits 87th DayTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Legislature has been in session a week longer than its leaders had anticipated, and lawmakers still must resolve major tax and budget issues. Monday was the 87th day of lawmakers' annual session. Republican leaders in the GOP-dominated Legislature had promised that it would wrap up its business in 80 days. That would have trimmed 10 days off the normal expected 90-day schedule. But the House and Senate have had trouble reconciling their differences on a proposed state budget for each of the next two fiscal years, beginning in July. They've also had trouble agreeing on proposals for cutting income taxes while possibly stabilizing the budget by canceling all or part of a scheduled sales tax decrease set by law for July. Their 90th day would be Thursday.================Kansas Lawmakers' Talks on Taxes at StandstillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Negotiations among Kansas legislators on tax issues are stalled amid bickering between Republican leaders in the House and Senate. Senators and House negotiators had no meetings Monday. House GOP leaders complained that Republican senators have not responded to their compromise proposal to drop the 6.3 percent state sales tax to 6 percent. The tax is now scheduled to drop to 5.7 percent in July, but the Senate has approved Republican Governor Sam Brownback's plan to cancel the roll-back. Senate Republican leaders wanted to finish work on budget issues before resolving the tax question. Brownback and GOP leaders in the Republican-dominated Legislature want to follow last year's reductions in in personal income taxes with more cuts. But they also need revenue to stabilize the budget.================ Higher Ed Spending Key Issue in Kansas Budget TalksTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Proposed cuts in spending on higher education is a key issue for Kansas legislators as the House and Senate attempt to reconcile their differences on the state budget. Legislative leaders hoped negotiations would resume Monday on proposed budgets of roughly $14.5 billion for each of the next two fiscal years, beginning in July. Talks broke off Friday, delaying the end of lawmakers' annual session The two chambers disagree over funding for state universities, community colleges and technical colleges — and both are at odds with Republican Governor Sam Brownback's recommendations. Brownback wants to hold higher education funding flat for two years. The House is proposing a 4 percent cut during the next fiscal year. The Senate is proposing to phase in a 2 percent cut over two years.================ Analysis: Bigger Push on Kansas Courts May Be ComingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A prominent conservative Kansas legislator has launched what could become the most aggressive campaign to date to rein in the state Supreme Court. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lance Kinzer says he wants to make the state's appellate courts, including the Supreme Court, more accountable to the public they're supposed to serve. Proposals outlined by the Olathe Republican last week include a measure to reorganize the state's top courts. The plan would remove the Supreme Court as the final arbiter of many of the cases that now come before the seven justices. Conservatives' desire to overhaul the courts intensified in recent years following Supreme Court decisions in abortion, death penalty and education funding cases. Kinzer expects the proposals to be considered next year. Democratic legislative leaders are reportedly alarmed by the measures.================ Kansas House Preparing to Consider Gun-Rights BillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A favorable Kansas House vote is all supporters need for final legislative approval of restrictions on the use of state tax dollars for promoting or opposing gun-control measures. The bill also would prohibit using state tax dollars to lobby local, state or federal officials on the issue. The House planned to debate the measure Tuesday. The Senate approved it last week. The measure is backed by the National Rifle Association. The House's vote will come less than a month after a new state law took effect that says the federal government has no power to regulate firearms, ammunition and accessories manufactured, sold and kept only in Kansas.================ Tornado Touchdown Reported in Lyon CountyEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — A tornado touched down in rural Lyon County on Sunday, causing structural damage to homes. Kansas Division of Emergency Management spokeswoman Sharon Watson says the tornado hit around 5:40 pm Sunday. She didn't know how many homes sustained damage. Earlier in the evening, a tornado touched down in the Wichita area, causing structural damage to homes near Wichita Mid-Continent Airport and in nearby rural areas. As of 7 pm, Westar Energy reported about 10,000 power outages in Sedgwick County. Watson says there are no reports of injuries or fatalities in the state. The tornadoes were part of a large storm system moving through the Plains and upper Midwest.================ Army Team Inspecting Fort Riley CemeteryFORT RILEY, Kan. (AP) — An Army team is inspecting the cemetery at Fort Riley to verify that all service members buried there are properly identified and commemorated. The work is part of the Army's initiative to make proper accounting of 27 cemeteries at 17 sites nationwide by June 30. Nearly 40,000 graves will be reviewed in all. The work at Fort Riley began last week. The Army team is photographing all grave markers and linking them to a web-based system to help families and visitors locate the graves. The secretary of the Army issued a directive in 2011 to account for all service members buried at military cemeteries. That order followed the discovery of irregularities at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.================Furloughs to Hit More Than 6,000 Military WorkersTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas military officials are juggling schedules and changing plans to accommodate furloughs of more than 6,000 civilian employees because of federal budget cuts. The staff to be idled starting this summer ranges from operations and logistics employees with the Kansas National Guard to instructors at the Army's Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth. Furloughs are necessary because of automatic federal spending cuts that took effect in March, which forced the Department of Defense to adjust staffing and operations. The cuts are in addition to already planned reductions related to cutting the Army by about 80,000 soldiers by 2017. The impact in Kansas also will be felt at Fort Riley, home to the Army's 1st Infantry Division and nearly 18,000 soldiers and their families.================Georgia Firm to Appeal KS Nuclear Plant Whistleblower CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — An engineering firm says it plans to appeal a decision by federal regulators in favor of a whistleblower allegedly fired for reporting unsafe conditions at a nuclear power plant in eastern Kansas. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration found Georgia-based Enercon Services violated whistleblower protections when it retaliated against an engineer for raising concerns during construction work at the Wolf Creek plant in Burlington. OSHA acting regional administrator Marcia Drumm said in a news release Monday that professionals in the nuclear power industry have a right and responsibility to report safety-related concerns. Enercon said in an email Monday it welcomes the opportunity for a full hearing to establish the firing was for legitimate reasons and not for reporting safety concerns. The company provides engineering support services to nuclear plants nationwide.================ Tim McGraw Booked to Play Kansas Star Arena OpeningMULVANE, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Star has booked country singer Tim McGraw for the grand opening concert of its arena in Mulvane. Its grand opening concert July 7 marks the latest phase of the development at the Kansas Star Casino. McGraw is best known for hits like "Live Like You Were Dying," ''Where the Green Grass Grows" and his latest hit, "Highway Don't Care." The Kansas Star Casino was temporarily located on the arena floor for its first year of operation. It moved into its permanent facility in December. That allowed work to begin on remodeling the arena for its original purpose as a multi-purpose venue capable of hosting concerts, sporting events and horse shows. The arena will seat about 6,000 people for its opening concert. Tickets go on sale May 24.================ Party Bus Operating Illegally in Fatal KCK CaseKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A party bus was operating illegally when a bachelorette party attendee tumbled out of it in Kansas City, Kansas and was killed. The Kansas City Star reported that the Midnight Express party bus in which 26-year-old victim Jamie Frecks was riding lacked the proper registration. Kansas law required it to have a proper U.S. Department of Transportation number, but it didn't. The Star reported that if the van had been registered, DOT regulations would have triggered vehicle inspections. They might have caught some of the problems with the bus, including a malfunctioning "door ajar" warning system. Transportation safety consultant Jim Hall says it's appalling that the vehicle was permitted to operate for two years. A Midnight Express attorney says the company has been cooperating with the investigation.================Appeals Court Rejects Kansas Ex-Doctor's ClaimsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court has scathingly brushed off the claims of a former Kansas doctor as "bitter whining." The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Monday that Lawrence Simons's appeal of his sentence for illegally distributing prescription drugs was nothing more than a "conclusory diatribe." The appeals panel says the 57-year-old Wichita man considers himself a victim — of overzealous police, his attorney's incompetence, an unresponsive justice system and unfair laws. Simons was sentenced in 2010 to two years in prison followed by three years of probation. The court says he seems to think a doctor's "promiscuous distribution" of very potent controlled substances is noble, not criminal. The 10th Circuit decision is Simons's latest setback. Earlier this month, he was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm after a felony conviction.================ New Judge Sought in Topeka Sperm Donor CaseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka sperm donor being sued by the state for child support wants a different judge. The Topeka Capital-Journal reported that William Marotta's attorney filed a motion Friday asking Judge Mary E. Mattivi to disqualify herself from the case. The filing doesn't include a reason for the request, and state statute doesn't require Marotta to give one. Marotta says he signed a contract waiving his parental rights and responsibilities when he answered a sperm donor ad from a lesbian couple on Craigslist. A child was born in 2009. But issues arose when the women split up and the birth mother sought state health insurance for the child. Because no doctor was involved in the artificial insemination, the state sought to hold Marotta financially responsible for the child.================Salina Man's Trial Moved to Riley CountySALINA, Kan. (AP) — The trial of a Salina man charged in the abuse death of a toddler will be moved to Riley County. Antonio M. Brown is charged with first-degree murder and child abuse in the October 2011 death of his girlfriend's 14-month-old son, Clayden Lee Urbanek. Saline County District Court Administrator Todd Heitschmidt said Monday that county officials were notified late last week of the trial's new location. The Salina Journal reports that Judge Rene Young granted Brown a change of venue after his case and a plea he previously entered received intense media coverage. The trial is expected to start Sept. 25. Brown had pleaded no contest in the case but Young later allowed him to withdraw the plea after finding the Brown's attorney gave him inaccurate advice.================ Jury Selection Begins in Ex-Deputy's Murder TrialKINGMAN, Kan. (AP) — Jury selection has begun in the trial of a former sheriff's deputy accused of killing his wife and torching their house. KAKE-TV reports that more than 15 percent of Kingman's population is expected to be called for the jury pool for Brett Seacat's trial, which began Monday in Kingman. The 37-year-old man is charged with first-degree murder, aggravated arson and child endangerment. He is accused in the April 2011 shooting death of Vashti Seacat, who had filed for divorce 16 days earlier. Her body was found in the burned home along with a pistol. The defense contends she set the fire and committed suicide. Seacat was an instructor at the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center at the time. He is also is a former Sedgwick County sheriff's deputy.================Drought Accelerates Use of Drugs to Increase Cattle WeightWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Cattle feeders in the U.S. are coping with smaller herds and high corn costs in part by using more growth-inducing drugs designed to bulk up animals and get more beef from each carcass. Accelerated use of the drugs, known as "beta-agonists," is defended by producers who say they are essential to withstanding the drought. Their pharmaceutical creators insist the additives are safe. Their use is drawing new scrutiny both at home and abroad. Russia and other key markets have banned them. Some domestic producers worry about the potential effects on tenderness and flavor. In February, Russia joined the European Union and China in banning beef raised on the additives. The United States blames politics for the export bans. But some U.S. consumer groups are taking notice.================Kansas Students Receive Record Number of Food BackpacksWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Food Bank has given out record numbers of its backpacks full of food this year. The highest number of backpacks handed out this year to school children in need was 7,158 during one week in February. Larry Gunkel is a Kansas Food Bank official who runs the program. He tells The Wichita Eagle the backpacks are part of the organization's Food 4 Kids program. It is designed to ensure students identified by school staff as chronically hungry can get a backpack of food each Friday. May 17th is the last distribution of the backpacks before students begin summer break on May 22nd.================Kansas Man Gets 260 Years for Producing Child PornographyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas man has been sentenced to 260 years in prison for using a 9-year-old girl to produce child pornography. U.S. District Judge J. Thomas Marten handed down the punishment Monday to 50-year-old Philip Andra Grigsby, of Marquette. Grigsby pleaded guilty earlier to eight counts of sexual exploitation of a child and one count each of possession of child pornography and unlawful possession of a firearm after a felony conviction. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says in a news release that he wants the sentence to send a message. The investigation began after Grigsby sent emails containing child porn to an Australian man. Investigators were able to identify the victim after noticing the name of a middle school on a physical fitness certificate. A restitution hearing is scheduled June 24.================Petro Chief's Lawsuit Hurt by Guilty VerdictKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A former prosecutor says the head of Petro America has little chance of prevailing in a civil lawsuit against the federal government after he was convicted on six criminal charges. Isreal Owen Hawkins, of Kansas City, Kansas and four others were convicted last week of falsely claiming the company had $284 billion in assets and keeping $10 million in proceeds. Before the trial, Hawkins filed a $100 million civil lawsuit against prosecutors and the Department of Justice, alleging prosecutorial misconduct. Todd Graves, a former federal prosecutor, says the guilty verdict means Hawkins's chances of winning his lawsuit are "slim and none." A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office says prosecutors could file a motion to dismiss the lawsuit or seek other resolution, which would require a judge's ruling.================ Researchers on Working Out: Drop the EncouragementMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — If you want your workout buddy to improve, keep your mouth shut. That's the advice from researchers at Kansas State University and Michigan State University. Assistant Kansas State kinesiology professor Brandon Irwin said in a news release that the initial hunch was that encouragement would be motivating. But the researchers found it had almost the opposite effect. In the study, subjects were told they would be exercising with a partner, although the partner was a looped video recording. Researchers found that people exercised the longest when working out with a partner who was better and wasn't verbally encouraging. Irwin says the encouragement may have been perceived as condescending. The findings are being published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research. Funding came from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.================ Kansas Lawmakers' Talks on Taxes at StandstillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Negotiations are at a standstill between the Kansas House and Senate over the state's sales tax rate and proposals to cut individual income taxes. Three senators and three House members appointed to reconcile the differences between their chambers on tax issues had no meetings scheduled Monday. Republican Governor Sam Brownback and GOP leaders in the Republican-dominated Legislature want to follow up on individual income tax cuts enacted this year with more cuts. But the two chambers disagree over Brownback's proposal to stabilize the budget by keeping the sales tax at 6.3 percent, rather than letting it drop to 5.7 percent in July, as scheduled by state law. The Senate approved Brownback's sales tax plan. House GOP leaders have proposed setting the rate at 6 percent.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • Turkish authorities say a magnitude 6.4 earthquake, followed by a magnitude 5.8 tremor, struck the Antakya region around 8 p.m. local time Monday. The quake was also felt in Syria.
  • Lightning Causes Power Outages in Northeast Kansas TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Lightning strikes that rolled through northeast Kansas early Wednesday caused power outages throughout the region. KVOE reports that Newman Regional Health Center in Emporia was operating on generator power after lightning took out power about 1 am Wednesday. Westar says outages were reduced to 297 customers in Lyon County by 6:45 am Wednesday. Another lightning strike hit a Westar Energy transformer in Topeka, briefly knocking out power to about 1,200 customers. That number was reduced to 50 by 6:45 am. Westar was reporting 2,352 outages in the state by 6:45 am, with 1,581 in Douglas County.=================Libertarian Candidate Files for Kansas Governor's RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Bonner Springs woman has become the first Libertarian Party candidate to file for the 2014 Kansas governor's race. Tresa McAlhaney announced Wednesday that she has filed the necessary paperwork to establish her campaign. She and running mate Grant Nelson are the first team to go public about seeking to oust Republican Governor Sam Brownback next year. Libertarians are hoping to achieve 5 percent of the total vote in the governor's race, a threshold that would elevate the party's status equal to Republicans and Democrats. Currently, minor parties can only get on the ballot by holding nominating conventions and filing candidates with the secretary of state. Kansas State University political scientist Joe Aistrup says third parties have struggled to get 2 to 3 percent of the vote in past elections.=================Panel to Meet Before Special Legislative SessionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A special committee of Kansas lawmakers will meet August 26 to consider proposals for rewriting a state law allowing judges to sentence convicted murderers to at least 50 years in prison. House Republican Lance Kinzer, the panel's chairman, said Wednesday the 14-member committee will draft recommendations on repairing the "Hard 50'' law at the meeting. A U.S. Supreme Court decision in June raised questions about the law's constitutionality. Governor Sam Brownback has called a special session of the Legislature for September 3 to revise the statute. Kinzer said he'll have a hearing on a proposal from Attorney General Derek Schmidt, but also will consider amendments from committee members. Schmidt has said his office is working with prosecutors on legislation.=================Kansas Chief Justice Appointed to National BoardTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton Nuss has been appointed to the board of directors of the national Conference of Chief Justices. The appointment was made last week during the organization's national conference on July 31 in Vermont. Nuss was named to the Kansas Supreme Court by then-Gov. Bill Graves in 2002. He became chief justice in August 2010. The Conference of Chief Justices is made up of the top judicial officers of each state, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. The organization meets to develop policies and procedures to improve the operations of state judicial systems.=================Escaped Arkansas Inmate Possibly Seen in Kansas OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Police in northeast Kansas are looking into a possible sighting of a man who escaped custody in Arkansas, but they haven't been able to confirm the report. The Kansas City Star reports that someone called Overland Park police Monday to say they saw a vehicle that had a license plate associated with Derrick Estell. Estell escaped July 28 from a jail in Garland County, Arkansas, and he was believed to have been headed to southwest Missouri's Dallas County. He broke out by diving head-first through a window at the jail lobby, running outside and getting into a waiting car believed to have been driven by his girlfriend. His mother also is charged with aiding his escape. Police say Estell should be considered armed and dangerous.=================Reno County Warns People to Stay Out of WaterHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas county is cracking down on people who place themselves in danger in rain-swollen rivers and creeks. Reno County Sheriff Randy Henderson says deputies issued nearly 25 tickets Wednesday for driving around barricades on flooded roadways. Henderson issued a notice of possible prosecutions Wednesday after authorities learned a group of high school students planned to go tubing in South Hutchinson. He says it is too dangerous to go wading, swimming or canoeing in the swollen rivers. Reno County emergency crews have already conducted four water rescues during the past three days due to vehicles being swept off roadways.=================Halstead to Close Floodgate as River RisesHALSTEAD, Kan. (AP) — Volunteers are filling sandbags in the south-central Kansas town of Halstead amid preparations to close a floodgate against the rising Little Arkansas River. KAKE-TV reports that the first of Halstead's three floodgates will close as soon as volunteers finish filling the first 500 sandbags. The city was asking Wednesday for help filling a total of 1,500 sandbags. The community of more than 2,000 people is located about 30 miles north of Wichita. It is protected by a three-and-a-half mile levee built more than 20 years ago to separate the city from the river. Kansas Highway 89 into Halstead is closed due to high water.=================Smelly Chicken Meal Being Removed in HaysHAYS, Kan. (AP) — Union Pacific crews are starting to clear out tons of chicken meal that spilled in Hays after a mid-July train derailment. The meal, destined for use in making cat food, has been giving off a powerful odor that's drawn complaints from residents of the northwest Kansas community. But Dan Wells, an administrator with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, tells KAYS-AM that there's no danger to public health. Eighteen cars of a westbound Union Pacific train went off the tracks July 16 when the train hit a standing train. A car containing the chicken meal split in half. Crews later bulldozed the meal into a large pile and covered it with tarps.=================Gator Pulled from Kansas Lake Had Been ShotATCHISON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in northeast Kansas say a small alligator spotted in a lake was shot and wounded in the snout before it could be rescued. Fishermen spotted the 3-foot-long alligator on Saturday in Atchison County Lake. Sheriff's deputies monitored the animal until the Atchison County Humane Society helped catch it Monday using a dog kennel and other tools. KMBC-TV reports that investigators learned of the shooting while arranging to transfer the alligator to a sanctuary near Lee's Summit, Missouri. Experts at the Monkey Island sanctuary say the bullet traveled between the gator's eyes through its body. They expect it to recover. The Atchison County sheriff says a 53-year-old Horton man has been cited as the shooter. Deputies are still looking for whoever dumped the alligator in the lake.=================Kansas Doctor Seeks Release in Prescription CaseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Attorneys for a northeast Kansas doctor accused of having employees illegally dispense prescriptions are trying again to persuade a federal judge that he won't flee if he's released on bail. Dr. Michael P. Schuster's lawyers said in a federal court filing Wednesday that the Manhattan doctor's wife has moved $474,000 from overseas accounts back to the U.S. since May. The defense also said the couple is willing to surrender personal property and the deeds to their real estate holdings. Schuster is being held without bail on four counts involving what authorities contend was the illegal distribution of drugs from his pain clinic for at least five years, starting in 2007. A spokesman for U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says the office plans a written reply.=================KCK Teenager Charged with Premeditated MurderKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 15-year-old Kansas City, Kansas boy has been charged with premeditated first-degree murder in the shooting death last month of 28-year-old Nola Pierce of Kansas City. Wyandotte District Attorney Jerome Gorman filed the charge Wednesday against the boy, who has been in custody since Monday and was scheduled to appear in juvenile court Wednesday afternoon. Pierce was shot to death near her home July 25.=================2 Employees Capture Burglar at Cargill in TopekaTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Police say two alert employees caught and held a man who allegedly was trying to burglarize a Cargill plant in Topeka. Topeka police Sergeant Steve Roth says the employees saw the man break into a fenced-in area that holds heavy equipment on Tuesday night. When the employees ran into the area, the man was "messing with" a utility vehicle. Roth says the man took off running but the employees caught him, subdued him and then held him until police arrived. Roth told The Topeka Capital-Journal that the employees did all the work and "I just showed up and applied the cuffs."=================Regulator Visiting Kansas Sees Big Role for States in Future Power Grid LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A federal regulator says states like Kansas must take the lead in improving regional transmission systems to increase the movement of electricity from renewable resources such as wind. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Federal Energy Regulatory Commission member David Moeller was visiting the northeast Kansas community Tuesday. Moeller was invited by state Representative Tom Sloan of Lawrence to meet with officials from other states and energy companies to discuss improving transmission systems. Moeller and Sloan said the goal is to improve transmission grids so that wind power from rural areas like western Kansas can move to places where the need for energy is greater. But Moeller said FERC doesn't have the legal authority to regulate transmission grids, requiring states to work together to improve them. =================Proposed Program to Boost Solar in Douglas County LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A solar panel proponent and a bank are proposing a program to reduce the costs of installing solar power in Douglas County. Aron Cromwell, CEO of Lawrence-based Cromwell Environmental, says and Mid America Bank want to provide 15-year leases for solar power installations at homes and small businesses. Cromwell says many Douglas County residents who want to install solar panels are put off by the upfront costs, which can range up to $30,000. He says the goal of the program is to create leases with a monthly payment that is less than the average cost a home or business saves by using solar panels. The Lawrence Journal-World reportsthat on Tuesday, Lawrence city commissioners agreed to consider reducing building permit fees for solar panels.================= Report: Kansas Among Fastest Growing Wind Markets WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report indicates that Kansas is among the largest and fastest growing wind energy markets in the country. The Energy Department reported Tuesday that Kansas ranks third among all U.S. states in the percentage of in-state electricity generation from wind power. The state installed 1,441 megawatts of new wind power capacity in 2012, bringing its total capacity to 2,713 megawatts. The department says in a news release that Kansas now has enough capacity to generate more than 20 percent of its electricity from wind energy. The agency's annual Wind Technologies Market Report says that in 2012 wind energy became the top source of new U.S. electricity generation for the first time.=================Search Launched for Missing Tortoise in Northeast Kansas JUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — A family pet has disappeared from outside a home in northeast Kansas, but chances are it didn't get very far unless someone gave it a lift. WIBW-TV reportsthat the animal is a 50-pound tortoise that Geary County Sheriff Tony Wolf describes as about the size of a truck tire. Wolf's office received a call Monday night that the African spurred tortoise was missing from its pen in rural Geary County, outside Junction City. Authorities are investigating the case as a possible theft. But they also say the pen's gate may have been left open by accident or that the tortoise was frightened by stormy weather and burrowed underground.=================Cleanup Continues at Storm-Damaged Kansas Marina EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — Cleanup continued Wednesday at the El Dorado Reservoir where winds earlier this week caused a fuel spill and damaged several boats and docks at the Shady Creek Marina. El Dorado State Park manager Seth Turner said Tuesday that the fuel spill is contained and crews were pumping water from a houseboat that was largely under water after winds estimated at 80 to 100 mph swept over the state park Monday evening. The Wichita Eagle reported that an estimated 75 to 100 gallons of fuel spilled when lines running from the shore to pumps at the marina were broken. Some also came from the houseboat. Turner says he is confident an absorbent boom stopped the spread of the spilled fuel. The storm also twisted the walkway to the marina.=================Kansas Man Takes Plea Deal in Home Invasion Shooting PITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — A man who shot a fleeing suspect after a home invasion in Pittsburg has accepted a plea deal. Twenty-eight-year-old Kyle S. Taggart was scheduled to go on trial Tuesday on an attempted murder charge. But court records indicate he entered a plea of no contest to aggravated battery on July 31. Prosecutors will recommend he serve 30 days in jail and then be on probation for four years. Taggart shot 19-year-old Mitchell E. Owens, of Kansas City, as Owens and two other men were fleeing from a robbery at a Pittsburg home in April 2012. Taggart was a friend of the homeowner. The Joplin Globe reports that Taggart was charged with attempted murder because police investigators and Prosecutor Michael Gayoso did not believe the home invasion justified the shooting.=================Developer Proposes Overhaul of KC's Hotel Savoy KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kentucky company that specializes in reviving historic hotels is hoping to acquire the famed Hotel Savoy and the adjacent Savoy Grill in downtown Kansas City. The hotel was built in 1888 and was host over the decades to the likes of Teddy Roosevelt, W.C. Fields and John D. Rockefeller. The restaurant, built in 1903, is equally rich in history. The Kansas City Star reports that Louisville-based 21c Museum Hotels has an option to buy both buildings. The company's plans include a $47 million restoration, with the Savoy to be made over as a 120-room luxury hotel that retains much of its period atmosphere. The deal is contingent on the city granting tax incentives to help finance the project.=================Crash Spills Pigs on NW Missouri InterstateCAMERON, Mo. (AP) — State troopers had to play hog-wrangler after a collision spilled dozens of pigs on Interstate 35 in northwest Missouri. The accident happened around 7:30 am Wednesday near Cameron, about 50 miles north of Kansas City. The Missouri Highway Patrol says a southbound pickup truck went out of control on the wet pavement and crossed the median. The pickup hit a northbound tractor-trailer that tipped on its side, scattering its cargo of pigs. The southbound lanes were closed for several hours while crews rounded up dozens of pigs from the highway and the median. Some of the animals were injured or did not survive.=================Missouri Family Turns to Kansas Fair in Cancer FightSALINA, Kan. (AP) -- A Missouri couple is turning to a Kansas fair's talent contest in search of someone who might have what it takes to help save their four sons' lives. The Salina Journal reports that Tim and Maggie Murry are looking for bone marrow matches to help their sons fight a rare form of blood cancer called Diamond-Blackfan anemia. On Saturday, the St. Louis family will be asking people at the Salina's Got Talent contest at the Tri-Rivers Fair to have their mouths swabbed for testing, a process that takes less than 10 minutes. Tim Murry says swabs take three months to test and place on the National Bone Marrow Registry. The Murrys have registered 19,000 people in 110 drives during the past two years.=================KU Football Coach Weis Counting on JUCO-Led ReboundLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — After coaching what he called a "pile of crap" last season, University of Kansas head football coach Charlie Weis is counting on an influx of junior college players to turn things around in Year 2. The often-outspoken coach made that assessment of the Jayhawks, who went 1-11 last season, during Big 12 media day in Dallas. His opinion hadn't changed, either, as this year's team prepared for the start of fall camp on Wednesday afternoon. "How else are you going to describe it?" he said. That team had holes throughout the roster, none bigger than at quarterback, where Dayne Crist was anything but the solution Weis hoped he would be. This year's team has former BYU quarterback Jake Heaps under center, surrounded by a whole slew of transfers hoping to make an impact.
  • Several of the key facts of the Jan. 6 insurrection are indisputable. And yet millions on the right do dispute them. Here's a look at how that happened.
  • Ocean explorers think they've discovered Amelia Earhart's missing airplane, which disappeared in the Pacific Ocean in 1937... a new study by the University of Kansas finds a program for veterans and first responders shows promise in treating post-traumatic stress disorder and depression... and another push is underway to legalize marijuana in Kansas. Those headlines and more, inside.
  • A weekend shooting at a Kansas City bar leaves three people dead and two injured... Governor Laura Kelly touts her administration's economic development success since taking office... many Kansas farmers abandon their wheat fields... and the Baker University softball team heads to the NAIA World Series. Those headlines and more... here.
  • The U.S. health system now produces debt on a mass scale, a new investigation shows. Patients face gut-wrenching sacrifices.
  • These area headlines are curated by KPR news staffers, including J. Schafer, Laura Lorson, Kaye McIntyre, and Tom Parkinson. Our headlines are generally posted by 10 am weekdays, 11 am weekends. This news summary is made possible by KPR listener-members. Become one today!
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