© 2026 Kansas Public Radio

91.5 FM | KANU | Lawrence, Topeka, Kansas City
96.1 FM | K241AR | Lawrence (KPR2)
89.7 FM | KANH | Emporia
99.5 FM | K258BT | Manhattan
97.9 FM | K250AY | Manhattan (KPR2)
91.3 FM | KANV | Junction City, Olsburg
89.9 FM | K210CR | Atchison
90.3 FM | KANQ | Chanute

See the Coverage Map for more details

FCC On-line Public Inspection Files:
KANU, KANH, KANV, KANQ

Questions about KPR's Public Inspection Files?
Contact General Manager Feloniz Lovato-Winston at fwinston@ku.edu
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • From higher payroll taxes to automatic cuts in military spending, the looming budget crisis could drag the economy back into recession and create turmoil in the financial markets, economists say. To better understand what's at stake, have a look at some of the key phrases involved in the crisis.
  • The report on the deadly London high-rise fire blames government, regulators and the industry for the deaths of 72 people.
  • The turbulent 2024 campaign has reached its end. Here are some things to keep in mind throughout Election Day and beyond.
  • Military lawyers question Pentagon head Pete Hegseth's defense that he didn't share anything revealing in Signal chat group with his wife and brother.
  • We look at recent upheaval in Nepal, where Gen Z protesters toppled the government, and put the country's first female prime minister in power.
  • British news executives go to trial Monday following the phone hacking and bribery scandal that sank Rupert Murdoch's News of the World. The trial is expected to reveal details of the uncomfortably cozy relationship between the media and political elites.
  • These counties will help tell the story of how either former President Donald Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris will become the next president.
  • KS House Panel's Leader Resigns over School BillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The House Appropriations Committee's chairman has resigned from the committee because he says he can't support a school funding plan drafted by the chamber's Republican leaders. Newton Republican Marc Rhoades resigned Monday, just before the start of his committee's hearings on the plan. The proposal seeks to address two flaws in funding for poor school districts identified by the Kansas Supreme Court in a March 7 ruling in a school funding lawsuit. The court said the state must boost aid to poor districts. The fix is estimated to cost $129 million, but the House plan would fund part of that increase by adjusting transportation aid to school districts. Rhoades said even with the offset, the new spending isn't sustainable. He said his resignation allows the bill to move forward.===============Kansas School Funding Solution Proves ElusiveTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — It would seem a simple task. Write a check for $129 million and satisfy a Kansas Supreme Court ruling regarding the constitutionality of school funding. But the process is proving difficult as legislators dive into the 20-year-old school finance formula, scanning about to look at various aspects of how $3 billion in state aid is distributed and whether the money is producing the desired results. Republican Governor Sam Brownback has asked for a clean funding bill before legislators leave town Friday, though he will look at changes to the formula. He wants something in place to meet the court's July deadline for resolving the issue. Legislators are looking a bit broader, but the governor's likely opponent in November says lawmakers just need to write the check.===============Sales, Corporate Taxes Boost Kansas RevenuesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new report says better-than-expected collections of Kansas sales and corporate income taxes helped swell state revenue by $12.2 million more than anticipated in March. Monday's report from the state Revenue Department also says tax collections through the first eight months of the fiscal year totaled nearly $4 billion, about $130 million more than expected. Corporate taxes in March had been projected at $30 million but totaled $47.7 million instead. Sales tax receipts in the month were $7.9 million more than the $155 million that was anticipated. The state's fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30.===============Kansas Republican Spat Blunts Redistricting EdgeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas's redistricting experience shows that even when Republicans dominate a state, the outcome is not always preordained. Republican bickering between tea party conservatives and moderates landed the decision with federal judges, who approved a Kansas election map that gives Democrats at least a shot at breaking the GOP stranglehold on the state's four U.S. congressional seats. Republicans hold a nearly 20-percentage point advantage among registered voters in Kansas. There never was a chance that redistricting would make any of districts Democratic-leaning. But the map drawn by judges assigned the city of Lawrence, home of the University of Kansas and often seen as the state's most liberal community, to the district of Republican three-term Representative Lynn Jenkins, giving Democrats hope of being competitive.===============UPDATE: KS Residents Rush to Meet Health Care DeadlineTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Consumers and health care counselors in Kansas are struggling through problems with the federal government's online insurance marketplace ahead of the deadline to sign up for coverage. Kansas residents had until 11 pm Central time Monday to get an application for coverage started under the 2010 federal law, which requires most Americans to have coverage or pay a tax penalty. At the Topeka public library, health care navigators initially had problems accessing the federal marketplace website. Later, they could access the site but found downloading information slow. Katrina McGivern of the Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved said navigators were swamped with appointments. The association trained most of the state's approximately 170 navigators. But the Republican-dominated state Legislature still was looking for ways to resist the 4-year-old federal health care overhaul.===============700 Roofers Now Registered in KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The state attorney general's office is reminding Kansas residents of a new resource for making sure that roofing contractors are legitimate businesses. Legislators approved the Kansas Roofing Contractor Registration Act in 2013. The law requires every contractor that charges for commercial or residential roofing to obtain a registration certificate from the attorney general's office. The law took effect on July 1 of last year. Attorney General Derek Schmidt says that 700 roofers had registered as of Monday. With the start of the spring storm season, Schmidt urged homeowners needing roof repairs to request a copy of a contractor's registration certificate and check it against an online directory kept by his office. Lawmakers created the registry to help protect consumers from untrustworthy and uninsured roofers.===============Kansas Farmers Plan to Sow More Corn, SoybeansWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas farmers are planning to put in more acres of corn and soybeans this season than they did a year ago. Monday's prospective planting report from the National Agricultural Statistics Service offers the season's first glimpse into the major crops Kansas farmers plan to grow. Kansas farmers told the agency they intend to sow 4.4 million acres of corn this spring, up 2 percent from last year. Expected soybean acreage in Kansas is up 8 percent at 3.9 million acres. But farmers plan to devote less land to sorghum, with an expected 2.7 million acres, down 13 percent from last year. A spokeswoman for the Kansas Corn Growers Association notes the figures are simply estimates at this point based on conversations with growers. There is little seed in the ground yet.===============Parents, Teachers Walk for Kansas SchoolsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Despite sore feet and windy weather, five parents and teachers have completed a 60-mile walk from Johnson County to the Statehouse to show support for Kansas public schools. The hikers are part of a group called Game On for Kansas Schools, which is supporting higher state spending for public education. They set out Friday from suburban Kansas City and finished a ceremonial last mile Monday in Topeka. It was the second year for the walk, organized by parents and teachers. They're urging legislators to abide by a recent Kansas Supreme Court decision ordering additional funding for schools without making changes that would hurt the quality of education. The group says that schools have had to reduce spending in recent years, resulting in larger class sizes and fewer opportunities for students.===============Sentencing Delayed for Butler County WomanEL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — Sentencing has been delayed for a 54-year-old southeast Kansas woman who pleaded guilty in the death of man whose decomposed body was found in her backyard. The Wichita Eagle reports that Susan L. May was scheduled for sentencing Thursday on one count of reckless and second-degree murder in the death of 55-year-old Richard Hrejsa. The hearing was continued after May's attorney asked the court to impose a reduced sentence in the case. Her new sentencing date is April 15. May would have faced up to about 10 years in prison under the state's sentencing guidelines. Hrejsa's remains were found in the open at May's home west of Augusta in October 2013, about a month after authorities think he was killed.=============== Crisis City Training Proves PopularCRISIS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A mock community in central Kansas that provides training on responding to disasters has been expanding thanks to its popularity with emergency crews. Crisis City opened in October 2009 southwest of Salina on property owned by the Air Force. It hosts training drills that simulate various catastrophes, such as an active shooter, a train derailment or a building collapse. The various venues at Crisis City are designed to provide law enforcement, emergency medical personnel and military with hands-on training. Joe Pruitt, program consultant and manager, told The Kansas City Star that Crisis City serves military and civilian personnel from Kansas and other states, including Missouri, Nebraska and Texas. The site is expanding to 155 acres and a new shooting course is already nearly full.=============== Old Kansas Statehouse Dome Copper ReusedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Some of the copper from the old Kansas Statehouse dome is being repurposed. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports several artists are using some of the weathered copper that was removed from the dome during renovations to make jewelry and sculptures. The creations are on sale in the Capitol gift shop. Artist Kristen Haug says the artists get the copper in rough-edged sheets, which they then work into their creations. She cuts hers into smaller rectangles or circles, applies lacquer to keep the green color from rubbing off and sets them in sterling silver frames to make jewelry.=============== Kansas Historic Site Hosts Bleeding Kansas PlayLECOMPTON, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Historical Society says an acting troupe of history re-enactors plans to present the play "Bleeding Kansas Characters." The Lecompton Re-enactors plan to portray notable people from the Bleeding Kansas era discussing slavery. The event is set for 2 pm on April 6 at Constitution Hall State Historic Site. Set in a 1850s Kansas territorial town hall political meeting, the dramatization is written by J. Howard Duncan. The April 6 presentation is the fifth in a series, with the final performance scheduled for May 4.=============== Moundridge Manufacturer Acquires Italian PlantMOUNDRIDGE, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas company has bought an Italian manufacturing company. The Hutchinson News reports that Moundridge-based Bradbury Company, has acquired Industrie Pu. Ma. Bradbury's facility in Tribano, Italy, will include sales, engineering, assembly and equipment testing. The companies of The Bradbury Group, which employ about 600 people, manufacture and supply roll forming and coil processing equipment. The acquisition expands Bradbury's operations into 14 countries.=============== Kansas Extends Testing Amid Computer ProblemsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas education officials have extended this year's student testing period because of persistent computer glitches with the state tests. School districts statewide have reported technical problems with the March rollout of new state assessment tests. Delays have raised concerns that some schools would not complete the tests within the allotted time period. The Wichita Eagle reports because of the computer problems, the schools now have until May 16th to complete state reading, math and science assessments. That's two weeks more than originally planned, The State Board of Education also decided earlier this month that all public schools in Kansas will remain accredited next year, regardless of how they perform on the tests.=============== Hays Works to Conserve WaterHAYS, Kan. (AP) — The Hays City Commission has taken steps to increase water conservation measures for residents and businesses. The Hays Daily News reports commissioners unanimously approved resolutions Thursday to make plumbing more efficient in future construction and remodels. The resolutions the commission approved would also update the municipal water conservation plan and drought response plan and revise irrigation regulations. Commercial properties building new irrigation systems have to have 30 percent of their land xeriscaped, which is landscaping that uses vegetation that requires little water. New business customers using permanent irrigation systems will also need to install irrigation meters.=============== Grass Fire Burns 1,500 Acres in KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a grass fire over about 1,500 acres in northeast Kansas damaged two homes and four outbuildings. No injuries were reported. Shawnee County Sheriff Herman Jones told The Topeka Capital-Journal it's unclear what started the fire Sunday. Fire crews from throughout the city and surrounding area fought the fire through strong winds and dry conditions. The fire was relatively under control by mid-afternoon. The National Weather Service also warned of fire conditions in Kansas on Sunday because of temperatures in the 70s, very low humidity and winds in excess of 25 miles per hour. The conditions were expected to continue at least into Monday.=============== Lawyer: Kansas Woman, 19, Doesn't Deny KillingLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The lawyer for a 19-year-old Kansas woman accused of killing her 52-year-old housemate says his client doesn't deny killing the man. Sarah Gonzales McLinn is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Harold Sasko, who was found dead January 17th after police went to the home the two shared and after McLinn's family reported her missing. McLinn appeared with her lawyer, Carl Cornwell, on Thursday in Douglas County District Court, where a preliminary hearing was set for May 16th. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Cornwell said after the hearing that McLinn has never denied killing Sasko. Cornell says understanding why the crime happened is another matter. McLinn has been in Douglas County Jail on a $1 million bond since being extradited from Florida last month.=============== US 50 Expansion in Dodge Deals with Historic AreaDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — The expansion of U.S. 50 in southwestern Kansas no longer includes leveling a historic rock formation. The Dodge City Globe reports the U.S. 50 expansion from a two-lane road into a four-lane expressway will use a paved 16-foot median as it passes the Point of Rocks formation, which was once used as a navigational aid for travelers and cowboys along the Santa Fe Trail. The original plan would have leveled the formation. But the Kansas Department of Transportation considered other options after discussions with groups, including the Santa Fe Trail Association. The 16-foot median, which emerged as a compromise solution, involves cutting into the rock formation and covering the face with a false rock retaining wall made to resemble sandstone. Construction is expected to begin in 2018.=============== Wichita Immigration Mural VandalizedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Volunteers have removed two swastikas that were spray-painted onto a Wichita mural that celebrates immigration. On Saturday, volunteers scrubbed off the two swastikas that had been sprayed in black paint onto the mural. The mural, which was painted by a group of high school students on the side of a store, depicts two people wrapped in flags, one an American and one Mexican. The mural reads: "Immigration is beautiful." In early February, vandals also spray-painted the words "KKK," ''welfare" and slur against people from Mexico on the mural. Volunteers removed that graffiti too and added a clear coat, which made the latest vandalism easier to remove. Security cameras have also been installed to catch any future vandalism.===============Jayhawks' Wiggins Heads to NBALAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — University of Kansas freshman Andrew Wiggins made official Monday what he's been telling folks all along: He's headed to the NBA after his only season with the Jayhawks. The 6-foot-8 forward, who was voted second-team All-America earlier in the day, is expected to go in the top three picks in the June draft. Some believe he could go first overall. Wiggins was the top-rated recruit when he arrived at Kansas, and his brief career was a bit of a roller coaster. He struggled early in the season, caught fire midway through, and then flamed out when it mattered most in an NCAA tournament loss to Stanford. Wiggins only scored four points on 1-for-6 shooting in the third-round defeat. Afterward, he said that he let his team down with his poor performance.===============Train Kills Pedestrian in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 45-year-old man has died after he was hit by a train in south Wichita. KAKE-TV reports the accident happened Sunday morning in south Wichita. Police say the train's engineers told officers the man was standing on the tracks and facing the train before he was hit. The man, who was not identified, died a short time after he was taken to a Wichita hospital.=============== PTSD Affects Military Members' FamiliesHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Two Hutchinson middle-school age sisters want people to know that post-traumatic stress disorder can also affect the children of military men and women. Twelve-year-old Kristin Stowers, and her 14-year-old sister, Kaili Stowers, have learned first-hand about PTSD. Their father, Steve Stowers is a U.S. Marine veteran who was diagnosed with PTSD in 2010 after serving in Operation Desert Storm in 1990-91. He recently finished an intensive PTSD treatment program at Colmery-O'Neil VA Medical Center in Topeka. Kristin and Kaili told The Topeka Capital-Journal that their dad's PTSD affected them, making them more nervous and isolated. Kristin has written an essay about her experience, which Kansas Congressman Tim Huelskamp entered into the Congressional Record last week.===============Polka Lovers Klub of Kansas Officially DisbandsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The dance is over for the Kansas chapter of Polka Lovers Klub of America. President Angie Kaiser announced in the group's March newsletter that the club disbanded because of a lack of new members. She says about $16,000 in the club's treasury has been given to charitable organizations. The club was formed in June 1983 and had about 250 dancers. But most of the members are elderly and it also had trouble finding people to serve as officers. The Wichita Eagle reports that the club's photo albums were donated to the Barton County Historical Society in Great Bend.
  • NPR Music celebrates the alt-rock heroes, Hollywood idols, Pulitzer-winning composers, jazz luminaries, cult legends, bold activists, old masters and rising stars the world lost this year.
  • KanCare Inspector's Background ScrutinizedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A former state lawmaker appointed to identify fraud in Kansas's privatized Medicaid system has a background that doesn't include a college degree or career experience in insurance, but does include a business bankruptcy and a DUI conviction. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Phil Hermanson, a Republican who resigned from the Kansas House in 2013, started as inspector general for the $3 billion-a-year KanCare health care network in April. He declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 1998 amid closure of his print company and pleaded no contest in 2010 to driving under the influence of prescription drugs. Hermanson says he's learned from his mistakes. He says his preparation for the inspector general's job came from time in the U.S. Navy and private business, as well as five years in the Kansas House.============================== Train Derails in NE Kansas; No Injuries ReportedFRANKFORT, Kan. (AP) — Marshall County sheriff's officials say a train derailed in the northeast Kansas town of Frankfort, causing some traffic problems. No injuries were reported after the derailment Monday morning. KSNT-TV reports that the 137-car Union Pacific Railroad train was carrying coal from Wyoming to Texas when 12 cars derailed. Crews plan to work through Monday to remove the cars and repair the track. The Kansas Department of Transportation said all lanes of Kansas 9 were closed after the derailment. Kansas 99 reopened after being closed briefly. The cause of the derailment is under investigation.============================== Kansas Candidate Filing Deadline PassesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The filing deadline for candidates seeking a spot on the August 5th Kansas primary has passed with no additional Republicans joining the U.S. Senate race. State Senator Dennis Pyle did not file for the race by Monday's noon deadline. The conservative Republican from Hiawatha spent the past few weeks gauging support for a potential challenge to incumbent GOP Senator Pat Roberts. Another Republican, Leawood radiologist Milton Wolf, filed to run against Roberts in January and is endorsed by tea party groups. Pyle had asked conservatives whether he should join the race, and if he or Wolf would be stronger competition for Roberts. Numerous candidates did file for the state House of Representatives. All 125 House districts are up for election this year.==============================Kansas Independent to Run for US SenateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas businessman is planning to challenge Republican Senator Pat Roberts in November as an independent candidate. Greg Orman of Olathe ran briefly against Roberts in 2008 as a Democrat. He said Monday he plans to run this time as an unaffiliated candidate. Orman has until August 4 to submit 5,000 signatures from registered voters to the secretary of state's office to get on the November 4 ballot. Roberts faces three Republican primary challengers in his bid for a fourth Senate term. Two Democrats, including Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor, have also filed for the office. Orman runs a boxing equipment company in Lenexa. He plans formal announcements of his Senate bid around the state Wednesday and Thursday.==============================Kansas Democrats File Complaints in 2nd DistrictTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Democrats have filed two federal complaints against Republican congresswoman Lynn Jenkins alleging she violated ethics and campaign rules because a staff member also serves as an unpaid re-election spokesman. The Kansas Democratic Party said Monday the complaints were filed last week with the U.S. House's Office of Congressional Ethics and the Federal Elections Commission. They deal with Jenkins campaign spokesman Bill Roe, who is also her district director. Jenkins's office said the allegations are without merit. The complaints were filed by Jason Perkey, the Kansas Democratic Party's executive director. Perkey contends that Roe's dual roles violate rules designed to keep congressional staffers from being involved in politics. Jenkins's staff said ethics rules allow staffers to do volunteer campaign work on their own time.==============================KS Governor Decries EPA Carbon Emissions RuleTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says a new federal rule for cutting greenhouse gas emissions from power plants is a "war against middle America" that will increase energy costs. The Republican governor criticized the rule Monday after the Environmental Protection Agency's administrator unveiled it in Washington. It gives states goals for reducing emissions but allows flexibility in meeting them. According to the EPA, the Kansas target would be a 23 percent reduction in emissions by 2030 from 2012 levels. The unveiled the rule three days after Kansas gave the go-ahead for a new, $2.8 billion coal-fired power plant in southwest Kansas. Environmentalists said the plant would hinder Kansas's efforts to comply with the EPA rule. Brownback defended the decision on the power plant, saying its construction develops clean coal technology.==============================Kansas Utilities Worry EPA Rule Will Raise CostsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Two Kansas utilities say they're worried that the federal government's new rule for curbing carbon emissions from power plants will raise costs for consumers. Spokeswomen for Topeka-based Westar Energy and Hays-based Sunflower Electric Power Corporation said Monday the companies are still reviewing the 645-page rule outlined by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Both said it's too early to tell what the effects will be. But Westar's Gina Penzig said tougher environmental regulations have increased the company's costs and have been a major factor in rate increases over the past decade. Sunflower's Cindy Hertel said it is always concerned that regulations will increase costs. The new rule sets goals for states for lowering carbon emissions. Kansas would have to cut its emissions from 2012 levels by 23 percent.==============================5 Midwestern States Face Moderate Storm Risk TuesdayST. LOUIS (AP) — An unsettled weather pattern has five Midwestern states facing a moderate risk of severe storms on Tuesday. The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, warned Monday that portions of Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois are at a heightened risk of severe storms with hail, high winds and possibly tornadoes. The weather service says the tornadoes could be strong, if they occur. Greg Carvin, lead forecaster for the Storm Prediction Center, says numerous thunderstorms will be fueled by warm, moist air in the upper Midwest. Localized rainfall may not be too great because the storms will be so fast-moving, but Carvin says the risk of flash flooding exists.==============================Storms Leave Minor Damage in KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - A storm that swept through parts of Kansas downed power poles and caused mostly minor damage. No serious injuries were reported. The National Weather Service says Sunday's storm included possible tornadoes touching down briefly one mile west of Courtland in Republic County, downing several tree limbs. Other tornadoes touched down near Ottawa, also downing trees and power lines. The storms developed Sunday afternoon in western and northwest Kansas and moved east through the evening. KAKE-TV reports a Comanche County official said at least 24 power poles were blown down east of Coldwater along U.S. 160. Minor damage from wind and hail was reported in Stanton and Ford counties, as well as Hays and Dodge City. Some minor flooding was reported on streets in Wichita.==============================Authorities Investigating Hanging Dummy in Obama MaskGRAIN VALLEY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City area authorities are investigating after a life-size dummy with a President Obama mask was found hanging from an interstate bridge. Jackson County (MIssouri) Sheriff spokeswoman Sergeant Ronda Montgomery says authorities were notified early Monday by several motorists who saw the dummy with the Obama mask hanging from a bridge over U.S. Interstate 70 near Grain Valley, which is about 20 miles east of Kansas City. Montgomery says authorities closed the highway in the area for a few minutes to remove the dummy. She says authorities also found an item attached to the dummy that prompted them to call an area bomb and arson squad, but no explosives were found on the dummy. Montgomery says the department is working with federal authorities in the investigation.==============================Kansas Man Killed in Confrontation with DeputyDEXTER, Kan. (AP) — A south-central Kansas sheriff says a deputy was dragged by a vehicle he tried to stop before the motorist was shot and killed. Cowley County Sheriff Don Read released details Monday of Saturday night's incident near Dexter. KWCH-TV reports that the driver has been identified as 22-year-old Tayler Rock, of Arkansas City. Read says the deputy pulled over the car for a traffic violation, then approached the vehicle. The sheriff says Rock tried to drive away, dragging the deputy through a ditch and running him over. At some point, shots were fired, but the sheriff would not say who opened fire. Rock was pronounced dead at a hospital. The deputy was treated for injuries to his lower legs. A 1-year-old girl who was in Rock's car was unhurt.==============================Suspect Arrested in Topeka ShootingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - A 24-year-old Topeka man is scheduled to make his first court appearance today (MON) in connection with a shooting that left one man dead and two others injured. Shawnee County officials say the suspect was booked into jail Sunday evening facing counts of first-degree murder and aggravated battery. The victim of the shooting Saturday in Freedom Valley Park has been identified as 20-year-old Germaul Rayton of Topeka. Police say the victim and suspect knew each other. The two survivors were treated and released Saturday. Saturday's homicide was the second in Topeka this year.==============================Candidates File as KS Primary Deadline ApproachesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) Kansas Democrats have announced their party’s candidate for state treasurer and a Republican state senator has filed to run for insurance commissioner. The announcements came ahead of today's noon deadline for candidates to file for the August 5th primary ballot. Democrats completed their slate for statewide offices when Carmen Alldritt, a former Department of Revenue official filed Friday for state treasurer. Meanwhile, Republican State Senator Clark Shultz of Lindsborg officially filed for insurance commissioner joining four other Republicans and one Democrat running to replace outgoing Commissioner Republican Sandy Praeger. One question remaining ahead of today's (MON) noon deadline was whether state Senator Dennis Pyle would join the race for U.S. Senate. The conservative Republican from Hiawatha has spent the past couple of weeks gauging support for a potential challenge to incumbent GOP Senator Pat Roberts. Another Republican, Leawood radiologist Milton Wolf, filed to run against Roberts in January and has drawn endorsements from tea party groups. Pyle has been asking conservatives whether he should join the race as well and whether he or Wolf would be the stronger threat to Roberts.==============================Olathe Republican Won’t Run for Re-electionVeteran Republican State Representative Lance Kinzer of Olathe announced that he would not seek a sixth term. Kinzer is chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and has been one of the Legislature's most vocal opponents of abortion and gay rights. In recent years, he has helped draft new abortion restrictions and backed a provision to withhold state funding for the group Planned Parenthood. Kinzer also backed a failed measure that would have allowed businesses in Kansas to refuse service to same-sex couples if they claimed to have a moral or religious objection to doing so. He also authored an unsuccessful bill that would have banned local governments from establishing domestic partner registries. Kinzer was first elected to the State House in 2004.==============================Spencer Museum in Lawrence Gets World War I ArtLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas has been given a large collection of World War I era art. The university says in a release that the museum has received the collection belonging to Eric G. Carlson. The gift includes more than 3,000 pieces of graphic art, paintings and textiles largely from 1914 to 1918. The gift expands the museum's already significant collection of World War I art. The university says Carlson, who taught art history professor at other colleges and universities, is also a member of the International Fine Print Dealers Association.==============================Kansas Parole Officers Want to Carry FirearmsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Kansas parole officers are asking the state to allow them to carry guns just like other law enforcement officers. The parole officers say they need to be armed because of their, sometimes dangerous, interactions with criminals. The parole officers supervise convicted felons after they get out of prison, and an attorney representing them says two recent incidents highlight the risks they face. A parole officer was attacked a few weeks ago by a man who had just gotten off parole and in December a man whose parole had recently ended broke out a window to get to a second-story ledge of the state parole office and fell to the sidewalk during a struggle with officers.==============================Kansas City Man Pleads in Water Threat HoaxKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A 70-year-old Kansas City man has pleaded guilty to charges involving a hoax threat to contaminate water supplies in Kansas and Missouri. The U.S. Attorney for western Missouri says Manuel Garcia pleaded guilty Monday. He admitted making three telephone calls to authorities in October 2013 about the fake plot to contaminate water supplies in Kansas City, St. Louis, Wichita and Topeka. An FBI agent recognized Garcia's voice from a 2010 case in which he was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to making a phone call threatening to bomb the U.S. courthouse in downtown Kansas City. Garcia faces up to five years in federal prison without parole, plus a fine up to $250,000.==============================Study: Tobacco Sellers Target Poor Wichita NeighborhoodsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ A nonprofit anti-tobacco advocacy group's latest survey shows Wichita tobacco retailers have a heavier presence in less affluent parts of the city than in wealthier ones. The Wichita Eagle reports that Tobacco Free Wichita presented its findings at the Kansas Leadership Center. The study found six ZIP codes in Wichita with household incomes less than $39,000 have 38 percent of the city's tobacco retailers. Only 6 percent of the tobacco licenses were in the six wealthier ZIP codes in Wichita. The group says the research shows that life expectancy in the U.S. is more likely dictated by a person's ZIP code than genetic code.==============================National Shooting Competition Comes to KansasCOLUMBUS, Kan. (AP) - A national championship in sporting clays shooting is expected to be an economic boost for southeast Kansas and southwest Missouri this week. The U.S. Open Sporting Clays Championship starts Monday and runs through Sunday at the Claythorne Lodge in Cherokee County. It is expected to draw shooters from 47 states and several countries. Labette County tourism director Jim Zaleski says the tournament will bring people to Parsons, Pittsburg, Joplin, Missouri and several smaller towns in the region. The Wichita Eagle reports sporting clays tournaments are set up on big courses that replicate hunting situations. Target throwers send out several sizes and colors of targets that duplicate such hunting scenarios as pheasants flying above treetops, quail being flushed from heavy growth or a rabbit running across the prairie.=============================KU Wants to Expand Business School ProjectTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - The University of Kansas is asking to expand its new School of Business building before construction even begins. The Lawrence Journal-World reports the school plans to ask the Kansas Board of Regents on Thursday for permission to expand the proposed building. The four-story building was expected to cost about $65.7 million. But the school of business is growing faster than expected, prompting the request for more offices and teaching space. The estimated cost of the addition is $6.8 million. The university is seeking private funds for the expansion. The project will be funded with $62.5 million in private funds and $10 million in university funds. The building is expected to be completed in time for the 2016-17 academic year.
428 of 2,495