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  • Bombardier Learjet Machinists Go On Strike at Wichita PlantWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Workers at the Bombardier Learjet plant in Wichita are striking after voting Saturday to reject a contract that would have increased health care costs. On Monday morning, traffic at the only gate open to non-striking employees backed up more than three miles as picketers briefly stopped vehicles attempting to enter. Company spokeswoman Peggy Gross says the aircraft manufacturer is seeking more control over such things as how long picketers can hold up cars trying to enter the plant. She says the company plans to continue production, delivery and servicing of aircraft during the strike. Machinists' spokesman Tony Larkin says the union is ready to negotiate anytime. He says workers recognize the aircraft market has slowed down. But he adds all the burden cannot be placed on workers without sacrifices by those at the top.==============State to Investigate Complaint Against Kansas AGTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — State officials will investigate ethics complaints filed against the Kansas attorney general and Johnson County district attorney over their handling of an investigation into a Planned Parenthood clinic. The anti-abortion group Operation Rescue filed separate complaints in September against Attorney General Derek Schmidt and Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe. The group alleges the two men, both Republicans, helped engineer the dismissal of criminal charges against a Planned Parenthood clinic in Johnson County. Operation Rescue announced Monday that the state Office of the Disciplinary Administrator said in a letter in late September the complaints would be investigated. Operation Rescue has the men undermined criminal cases started by former Attorney General Phill Kline against the late abortion doctor George Tiller and the clinic. The charges were dismissed in August.==============Ruling Has Some Questioning Clout of KS Atty General's Written OpinionsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas attorney general's opinion that cities are not allowed to ban open carry of loaded firearms has raised the question of how much weight such opinions carry. The opinion issued by Attorney General Derek Schmidt's office in late December prompted city councils in Wichita and Overland Park to rewrite their firearms laws to allow residents to openly carry their guns. The Wichita Eagle reports that even former attorneys general are divided on how much weight an AG's opinion carries. Bob Stephan held the office from 1979 to 1995. He says an attorney general's opinion carries significant weight in Kansas courtrooms. But Vern Miller, who served two terms starting in 1970, says an AG's opinion is merely an opinion that has no real authority behind it.============== Hensley Returning Hallmark Donation Due to Topeka Plant ClosureTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A state senator is returning a donation he received from Hallmark because of the greeting card company's decision to close its Topeka plant. Senator Anthony Hensley, a Democrat, says he'll return the $500 donation from Hallmark he received this week. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Hallmark announced this week that it's consolidating operations in Topeka, Leavenworth and Lawrence. The move is expected to cut about 300 employees. Hensley said his wife worked at the Topeka plant for 19 years as an assembly employee. He says he cannot accept a campaign contribution from a company that's leaving Topeka. Casey Moore, Hensley's Republican opponent in the upcoming election, says Hensley is right to return the donation. But he says it would have been better Henlsey "had worked to keep jobs here.''============== Social Media Among Threats to Greeting Card MakersKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Fewer people are sending paper greeting cards, a worrisome challenge for the nation's top card company. Kansas City, Missouri-based Hallmark Cards Incorporated announced last week it's closing a Kansas plant that produced a third of its signature product. Hallmark is shedding about 300 jobs as it shifts work to two other plants. Hallmark and companies like it are dealing with a cultural shift in which consumers are increasingly choosing cheaper and quicker ways to communicate. Hallmark says that over the past decade, the number of greeting cards sold in the U.S. has dropped from 6 billion to 5 billion. An industry trade group puts the figure at 7 billion. Hallmark executive Pete Burney says competition in the industry is "formidable" and that consumers have more ways to connect digitally.============== Kansas School Efficiencies Task Force to Begin WorkTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new Kansas task force charged with finding ways for schools to put more of their state funding directly into classrooms is getting down to work. Governor Sam Brownback created the School Efficiency Task Force in September. The governor said he wanted to find ways for the state's 286 school districts to reduce administrative costs, eliminate overhead and devote more spending to supporting classroom instruction. The panel's first meeting was set for Monday at the Statehouse. Members will hear from a school finance expert, the head of the state school boards association and a Kansas Policy Institute researcher. State Board of Education member Ken Willard heads the task force. Among the other members are certified public accountants. Democrats have criticized the absence of teachers and school administrators on the board.============== Analysts: Health Care Fight Exposes GOP Fissures in StatesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ An acrimonious debate over the federal health care overhaul is seeping into state capitols and creating fissures among Republicans as the tea party movement reasserts its influence in GOP-controlled areas. States face decisions about setting up online health insurance marketplaces, and a mid-November deadline for declaring their intentions has sparked conflicts between governors and legislators across the country. In two GOP strongholds, Kansas and Mississippi, elected insurance commissioners are at odds with governors, even though they're all Republicans. In Kansas, Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger's disagreement with Governor Sam Brownback has political consequences for her. She's among a dwindling number of GOP moderates. Praeger disclosed in a recent interview that she's all but decided against running again in 2014 and acknowledged she'd have difficulty winning a Republican primary.============== Kansas Agency Considering Rules for Casino 'Junkets' TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas regulators are considering whether they need new rules for providers of promotional tours to three state-owned casinos. The state Racing and Gaming Commission has scheduled a hearing Friday on the issue. The commission regulates the companies that operate casinos for the Kansas Lottery in Dodge City, Mulvane and Kansas City, Kansas. The commission also licenses companies that provide casino junkets financed in part or entirely by the casino managers. Commission spokesman Bill Miskell says the agency wants to make sure that the trips are safe and their providers operate honestly. Miskell says the commission is soliciting comments about the current licensing process and whether changes are needed.============== Chief Judge of Kansas Appeals Court DiesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Richard Greene, the chief judge of the Kansas Court of Appeals, has died. He was 62. Ron Keefover, spokesman for the Kansas judicial system, said Greene died Sunday at a Cleveland hospital where was being treated for complications from a heart condition. Greene was appointed to lead the Kansas Court of Appeals in 2010 after serving on the appeals panel since 2003. Governor Sam Brownback will select Greene's replacement on the 13-member appeals panel from people recommended by a judicial nominating committee. Greene was born in Hermann, Missouri and earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Missouri-Columbia. His law degree was from Southern Methodist University. He is survived by his wife, Mary Sue, four daughters and four granddaughters.==============EPA to Test Great Bend Industrial SitesGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency is collecting soil and water samples this month from industrial sites in Great Bend. The Great Bend Tribune reported that the samples will be taken from around the former O'Neill Tank site and the former Plating Inc. site near the Great Bend Municipal Airport. Plating Inc. is a contaminated site that is monitored by EPA's Superfund Division, under a federal program to clean up uncontrolled hazardous waste sites. Meanwhile, officials are trying to determine is there's contamination at the former O'Neill Tank site. EPA spokesman David Bryan says oil and water samples collected at the O'Neill Tank site and adjacent properties will assess low-level radium contamination and other possible contaminants, such as arsenic, chromium and other metals.============== Fire Crews Rescue Woman from Well in MerriamMERRIAM, Kan. (AP) — Firefighters have rescued a woman who fell into a well in suburban Kansas City. The Kansas City Star reports that the fire crews responded to a call Sunday afternoon that the woman had fallen into the well in Merriam. Firefighters from Overland Park and Merriam had her safely out of the well within about 20 minutes. She was taken to a hospital, but it's unclear how far she fell into the well and if she was injured.============== Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Against KUKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) _ A federal judge has dismissed an age discrimination lawsuit filed against the University of Kansas. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that U.S. District Court Judge Kathryn Vratil dismissed the lawsuit Thursday. Cynthia Cook had been seeking more than $100,000 in damages in the lawsuit filed in 2011. The lawsuit said Cook, who was born in 1957 and hired in 1980 as a secretary, was laid off in 2009. Cook contended that she was passed over for other positions that were filled by younger, less-qualified people.============== Veterans Group to Receive $25K Dole PrizeLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) _ A group dedicated to helping veterans who have been wounded in combat is receiving the 2012 Dole Leadership Prize from the University of Kansas. The Wounded Warrior Project is receiving the honor and the $25,000 prize from the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics in Lawrence. Previous recipients include President George H.W. Bush, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala, former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani, and former U.S. Senators Howard Baker and George McGovern. Dole, a former Republican U.S. senator from Kansas, was himself a wounded veteran, suffering his injuries while serving in the Army during World War Two. Bill Lacy, director of the Dole Institute, says the Wounded Warrior Project shares Dole's lifelong devotion to helping the nation's veterans.============== Wichita Considering Fluoride for Drinking WaterWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Wichita residents are gearing up to consider whether the city should add fluoride to its drinking water. The Wichita public television station is hosting a debate October 18 on whether the city should add fluoride to its drinking water. The Wichita Eagle reports that two representatives from Wichitans for Healthy Teeth and Wichitans Opposed to Fluoridation will take part in the televised debate. The League of Women Voters is also sponsoring a second forum on the topic set for October 23. Wichita voters will then decide November 6 whether to pass a ballot initiative to fluoridate the municipal water supply.============== Veterans Attend Annual Weekend HuntFALL RIVER, Kan. (AP) — About two dozen veterans took part in a special hunting event designed for them in southeast Kansas. The Wichita Eagle reports that 23 wounded veterans showed up for this weekend's third annual Kansas Salutes the Troops event at Flint Oak, a 5,000-acre hunting facility near Fall River. Sonny Conner, one of the program's founders and organizers, says the weekend is a way to show the veterans they're not alone. Conner says all expenses are paid for the veterans, thanks to several sponsors who pay upwards of $5,000 for the chance to spend the weekend hunting, target shooting and dining with the veterans. Conner says some friendships between veterans and sponsors have developed through the years, and he's also seen signs of helping in the wounded veterans' healing.============== 'Modern Family' Stars to Attend KC FundraiserKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ Four stars from the Emmy award-winning television show "Modern Family'' are scheduled to attend a Kansas City fundraiser. The Kansas City Star reports that Eric Stonestreet, Julie Bowen, Ty Burrell and Jesse Tyler Ferguson are scheduled to headline the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Kansas City's benefit on March 1st at Crown Center. Stonestreet is from Kansas City, Kansas. Individual tickets cost $300. Proceeds will support the five area clubs that serve more than 1,100 children a day.============== Wichita Mayor Promotes Fire Prevention EffortsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Wichita Fire Department and Mayor Carl Brewer are kicking off Fire Prevention Week with two media events. Brewer will speak about fire prevention efforts at 10 am Monday during a public safety briefing at City Hall. The mayor later plans to go to Ortiz Elementary School for the unveiling of the so-called Mobile Prevention Experience unit.============== Lawrence Woman Waives Hearing in Child's DeathLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) _ A 25-year-old Lawrence woman charged in the death of her 5-year-old son has waived her preliminary hearing. Rebecca Wynne was charged with reckless involuntary manslaughter after her son died in April after he swallowed opiates at Wynne's home. She waived her preliminary hearing Thursday in Douglas County District Court. Wynne also is charged with two counts of aggravated child endangerment involving her other children, ages 6 and 4, who were in the home at the time of her son's death. The children are now in protective custody. Wynne is scheduled to be arraigned on November 1st.============== Topeka Honors FirefightersTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — About 200 people turned out to honor seven Topeka firefighters who have died in the line of duty. The gathering Saturday was held at a new monument in their honor. The red brick Topeka Fallen Firefighter Memorial features a silver fire bell near its top and a bronzed firefighter's helmet, boots and gloves in front. The memorial also has plaques with names of fallen firefighters. Topeka firefighters devised the monument and built it using private funds. It's outside the front door of fire department headquarters. Randy Phillips, president of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 83, said he hopes "we never add another name to this monument."============== Police Identify 2 Killed in Johnson County CrashOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified the victims of a double-fatality crash at a Johnson County intersection. Overland Park police say 49 year-old Wayne A. Willeford of Prairie Village was pronounced dead at the scene. Seventy-seven year-old William G. Pennington of Overland Park died at a hospital. The crash happened around 5:40 am Saturday when the pickup truck that Willeford was driving hit the passenger car Pennington was driving. The truck also collided with a light pole. The two victims were the only people in either vehicle.============== 41-Year-Old Reportedly Drowns in Hot TubHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are investigating the death of a 41-year-old woman after receiving a report that she drowned in a Hutchinson hot tub. Reno County Sheriff Randy Henderson identified the victim Monday as Michelle Price. He said in a news release that authorities found her dead late Sunday morning at a home in eastern Reno County. Henderson said a preliminary autopsy indicated that Price drowned. He says toxicology results will not be available for several months. Two people were allowing Price to stay in the home.============== Last of 3-Room Miner's Houses Finds Permanent HomeFRONTENAC, Kan. (AP) — One of the last standard-issue, three-room miner's houses in southeast Kansas will move next week to a mining museum. The Joplin Globe reports that the Franklin Miners Hall Museum will be at least the home's fourth address. Originally built about 125 years ago, the home was moved in 1976 to Pittsburg to be used as headquarters for the city's bicentennial celebrations. The house went on to serve as headquarters for an extermination business. In 2004, it was moved to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Frontenac. The plan was to restore the home, but the project faltered. At its newest location five miles away, it will join an area being developed to look like a small, historical mining town. Restoration work will begin later this fall. Donations are being accepted.============== Ellis Names New Police ChiefELLIS, Kan. (AP) _ The western Kansas town of Ellis has a new police chief. The Hays Daily News reports that the Ellis City Council voted 5-1 this week to approve the hiring committee's recommendation to name part-time Ellis police officer Taft Yates as the new police chief. He replaces Randy Taylor, who resigned recently to become chief of police in Clarkdale, Arizona. Yates's starting salary is about $19 per hour. The Ellis Police Department has five full-time officers, including the chief, and one part-time officer. Mayor Dave McDaniel says the town of about 200 residents also recently hired a new fire chief and a new city clerk.============== Victims of Kansas Car-Train Collision IdentifiedLANGDON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified the Harvey County woman who died and two others who were injured in a car-train accident near Walton. The Harvey County Sheriff's office says 19-year-old Taylor Sowell of Newton died when the car she was driving collided with a BNSF freight train Saturday about a mile southwest of Walton. Her 20-year-old husband, Dylan Sowell, and her 17-year-old brother, Kyle Malek of Sedgwick, were taken to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita. On Monday, the hospital said Dylan Sowell was in fair condition but information was not available on Malek. The Hutchinson News reports the railroad crossing did not have flashing lights or gates.==============K-State Dedicates New $18M Basketball FacilityMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) _ Kansas State has unveiled its new $18 million Basketball Training Facility. About 600 people attended a dedication and ribbon cutting ceremony Friday at the facility. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the new 50,000 square-foot building is located east of Bramlage Coliseum and has two full-length practice courts _ one for the men's team and one for the women's team. There are also coaches' offices, locker rooms and player lounges, meeting rooms and a weight room. The lead donors in the privately-funded project were Patti and Rand Berney and Laura and Jim Johnson. Jim Johnson says the new facility will make the Wildcats the "envy of the Big 12.''============== Cosmosphere Changes from IMAX to Digital TheaterHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) _ The Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center has gone digital. The center's former IMAX theater is changing from film to digital projections run on 4K resolution, which is the highest resolution possible on a single projector. The Hutchinson News reports the projection upgrade is part of a nearly $300,000 renovation plan for the Carey Digital Dome Theater. It includes 114 new chairs, new carpeting and a new concession stand. Spokeswoman Becky Christner says the Cosmosphere is the first to show digital film at a dome theater. The change is expected to save the center $100,000 annually, as well as increase the clarity of the films. Chief projectionist Brian Shull says the digital projection allows the Cosmosphere to show all types of films, but for now the center will stick with documentaries.==============Sedgwick County Zoo Hopes to Begin Gorilla Breeding ProgramWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas zoo is hoping to hear the pitter patter of baby gorilla feet by 2014. The Wichita Eagle reports that the Sedgwick County Zoo has nine male gorillas. But officials confirmed that a 33-year-old female gorilla from Philadelphia is arriving in the spring, and an 11-year-old female from Calgary is expected as soon as late summer. Meanwhile, three male gorillas will go to Como Park Zoo and Conservatory in St. Paul, Minnesota. The move comes after the national coordinator of the Species Survival Plan recommended last week that the zoo be entrusted with breeding gorillas. Currently, there are about 350 gorillas in exhibit at 52 zoos across the nation. To keep the population steady, the survival plan calls for 10 to 14 babies to be born each year.============== Family, Friends Gather to Honor Ill TeacherWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Friends and family held a special vigil for a 45-year-old Wichita teacher who's in the last stages of breast cancer. Kelli Frazier watched the crowd Saturday at Wesley Medical Center from a wheelchair. The Wichita Eagle reports that Frazier, a teacher at Pleasant Valley Middle School, was diagnosed with cancer a few years ago, but had been in remission until recently. She announced this week that her cancer has spread and she expects to live only a few weeks more. Dozens of her students packed into a hospital courtyard, where they sang and cried. Fellow teacher Darcy Busch said Frazier's impact will last because of all the students whose lives she's affected. Frazier will spend her final days at Wesley, and says she doesn't want a funeral.================= Bombardier Learjet Machinists on Strike Machinists union members went on strike at midnight at the Bombardier Learjet plant in west Wichita. KFDI Radio reports that sign-carrying union members were walking back and forth at the Tyler Road entrance to the plant early today (MON), under large spotlights. Around 6 am, one officer said traffic on Tyler Road was nearly impassable because of slow-moving cars. A vote on a proposed contract took place on Saturday, and union officials say 95% of the 825 union members voted. 79% of those cast a ballot in favor of staging a strike. The union specifically pointed to disagreements with Bombardier Learjet over workers' health care benefits and the proposed length of the contract. Union members told KFDI that the proposed one-percent-a-year raise over the length of the contract was not ideal, but acceptable. However, the real sticking point had to do with an increase in health insurance costs; union members said paying an extra $100 or more a month for health insurance was not something they could tolerate. This is only the second strike in the plant's history. Workers staged a three-week strike in 2006.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • Congress is wrapping up the year without a lot of legislative accomplishments under its belt and a growing list of lawmakers who are retiring. Former members say the challenges on Capitol Hill have been brewing for a long time.
  • In some ways, COVID shrank the distance between musicians and listeners. But then, it also threw nearly everything about the industry into disarray, and for many, things have never been the same.
  • 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.
  • Davis Teaming with Docking in KS Governor's RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic gubernatorial candidate Paul Davis has chosen Wichita businesswoman Jill Docking as his running mate in his bid to be the next Kansas governor. Docking was introduced Tuesday in Prairie Village as Davis kicked off a four-city bus tour. Stops were planned in Topeka, Salina and Wichita. Davis is the Kansas House minority leader and is seeking his party's nomination for the right to challenge GOP incumbent Republican Governor Sam Brownback next November. In 1996, Docking was Brownback's Democratic opponent for the U.S. Senate, garnering 43 percent of the vote to Brownback's 54 percent. Docking's husband was lieutenant governor in the 1980s. Davis announced he was seeking his party's nomination in September. Brownback won his first term as governor in 2010. He hasn't yet formally announced his re-election campaign.===============Documents Help Reduce Suspended Voter CountThe Kansas Department of Revenue has submitted 6,000 documents containing citizenship information to local election officials in Kansas. Around 18,000 voters registrations have been put on hold because of a lack of accompanying citizenship documents required by a law that took effect this year in Kansas. The documents were submitted by people applying for a new Kansas driver's license. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the documents were in a database. A spokesperson for the Department of Revenue says the agency is going through the database and transmitting the citizenship info. There have been some reports that documents submitted to the DMV haven't been making it to local elections officials for use in processing voter registrations. =============== KS Supreme Court: Why Now on Hard 50 Appeal?TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Supreme Court justices are being asked to decide whether revisions made last month by the Legislature in the state's "Hard 50" sentencing law should be applied retroactively. The issue arose Tuesday during the appeal of Johnson County resident Dustin B. Hilt. Hilt was convicted of first-degree murder in 2010 to life in prison without the chance of parole for 50 years for the murder of a 19-year-old woman. Hilt's lawyer argued that the sentence should be reversed in light of revisions passed in September. The amended law requires juries rather than judges to decide whether to impose the sentence. Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe says the court needed to rule on the law to provide guidance to lower courts and allow pending cases to proceed.===============Judge Mulls Whether to Dismiss Abortion Stalking CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge is mulling over whether a Wichita abortion clinic operator can use the state's stalking laws to force an anti-abortion activist to stay away from her. Sedgwick County Judge James Beasley heard oral arguments Tuesday on a defense request to dismiss the case filed by the woman who opened Wichita's first abortion clinic since abortion provider George Tiller was murdered in church. Julie Burkhart won a temporary protection from stalking order earlier this year against Mark Holick, pastor of Spirit One Ministries. The pastor is accused of distributing "wanted-style" posters with Burkhart's picture and home address. Beasley says he will rule in 5-10 days. He says he realizes the case will have an effect on Burkhart and to the way Sedgwick County handles similar cases in the future.===============Former US Ag Secretaries Speak at KSUMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Six former agriculture secretaries have delivered the latest installment of the Landon Lecture series at Kansas State University. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Monday night's panel was made up of Mike Johanns, Ann Veneman, Dan Glickman, Mike Espy, Ed Schafer and John Block. Block served in the administration of President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1986. He says the challenge of doubling food production by 2050 to help nourish an estimated 9 billion people can be met with creative adaptation of technology. The speakers were picked as the school celebrates its 100th anniversary and birth as a land-grant institution. The Landon Lecture is named for Governor Alf Landon, a Republican who was Kansas governor from 1933 to 1937. Landon lost to Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1936 presidential election.=============== Report: Kansas Winter Wheat 87 Percent PlantedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The first crop condition update released since the partial government shutdown ended shows Kansas farmers well on their way to planting the 2014 winter wheat crop. The National Agricultural Statistics Service reports that 87 percent of the wheat crop has been planted. About 61 percent of it has now emerged. The report says 63 percent of the wheat is in good to excellent condition, with 35 percent rated fair and 2 percent rated poor. Harvest of fall crops also has made significant strides in Kansas since the last official government snapshot. The agency reports that 68 percent of the corn harvest is complete. Sorghum harvest has reached the 36 percent mark, while soybean harvest was at 60 percent. About 34 percent of the sunflowers have also been cut.===============KC Superintendent Vows to 'Knuckle Down' in Pursuit of AccreditationKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The superintendent of the Kansas City school district is vowing to "knuckle down" after failing to regain partial accreditation. Superintendent R. Stephen Green spoke to reporters Tuesday after the Missouri State Board of Education took no action on the district's request for provisional accreditation. Green says the district will continue its efforts to improve. The accreditation upgrade would have meant the district no longer was subject to a state law allowing students to transfer to accredited districts. A pending legal challenge is preventing transfers for now. Green says the transfer issue "looms large" and that complying would cause a "serious financial challenge."===============Discovery of Dead Cat Leads to ArrestsHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Hutchinson police say a couple has killed a kitten by taking turns throwing it against doors and walls. Detective Curtis Black said the suspects were upset that the 5-month-old yellow tabby kept "using the restroom inside." The Hutchinson News reports that authorities found the dead kitten in the couple's home Saturday while responding to a disturbance. The animal's body was taken from the home for a necropsy to be performed. The couple was arrested and released on bond.===============UPDATE: Ruling Delayed on Access to KS Teen's Murder CaseHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A Reno County judge has delayed a decision on a 14-year-old Hutchinson boy's request to bar public access to court proceedings over the arson deaths of his mother and younger sister. The teen is charged with first-degree murder in the two deaths and the attempted murder of his father in the Sept. 26 fire at the family's home. The state is seeking to prosecute him as an adult. Judge Patricia Macke Dick put off her ruling after a hearing Tuesday on a defense motion for an order to close hearings, seal the court record and impose a gag order. Reno County District Attorney Keith Schroeder says the judge took the matter under advisement after The Hutchinson News intervened with a motion seeking to keep the proceedings open.===============KS Mom Arrested After Child Found WanderingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A woman has been arrested after her young child was found wandering in southeast Wichita. Lieutenant Doug Nolte said Monday that a neighbor called 911 on Sunday night to report that a 4-year-old boy was walking into the street and crying for his mother. The Wichita Eagle reports that officers found the child's mother passed out on couch in an apartment with an open front door. Nolte says the woman had drunk a large amount of alcohol. Officers took the woman into custody on an outstanding warrant and for suspicion of child endangerment. The boy was placed in the care of other relatives.===============KS Restaurant Operators Face Immigration ChargesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The operators of a Wichita restaurant have been indicted on federal charges of employing people who are in the country unlawfully. The U.S. Attorney's office says 33-year-old Yong Lin and his wife, 29-year-old Zhuo Mei Weng, were arrested Tuesday. They were booked into the Sedgwick County Jail and are scheduled to have initial court appearances Wednesday. Prosecutors brought the case after federal agents and Wichita police searched the couple's World Buffet Grill and three west Wichita apartments. The indictment had been sealed since it was filed September 11. Lin and Weng are charged with conspiracy and harboring people who are in the U.S. unlawfully. The indictment alleges they paid the workers in cash and failed to complete employment eligibility forms. The couple did not have lawyers Tuesday.=============== Parolee Found in KS Pond After Police ChaseANDOVER, Kan. (AP) — A parolee suspected in recent burglaries has been found in a south-central Kansas pond days after a police chase. KWCH reports that Nicholas Vampran had recently been paroled after serving four years for several crimes, including burglary. On Wednesday, Derby Police chased the 35-year-old into southern Butler County, where he ditched a stolen pickup truck and ran into a field. His body was discovered Sunday in a pond and was identified Monday. An autopsy determined he drowned. Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet says he suspects Vampran was trying to hide from the tracking dogs in the water and suffered from hypothermia in the cold water. Herzet says friends told authorities that Vampran wasn't going back to prison.===============Topeka Police Conduct K2-Related SearchesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have served eight search warrants at Topeka businesses that are suspected of selling synthetic marijuana known as K2. Police said in a news release that the warrants served Tuesday morning are the result of a 10-month investigation involving multiple law enforcement agencies. The searches temporarily shut the businesses down. Police didn't immediately have details about arrests.===============MO Town Prepares for Protest over Alleged Teen Sex Assault CaseMARYVILLE, Mo. (AP) — A northwest Missouri sheriff anticipates up to 2,000 people showing up for a protest organized online on behalf of a girl who says she was sexually assaulted when she was 14. Nodaway County Sheriff Darren White says the county is placing portable toilets on Maryville's courthouse square and taking other measures to accommodate whatever crowd shows up for the 6 pm rally Tuesday. At least two activist groups have called for a protest of the county prosecutor's decision last year to drop charges against a boy accused of plying Daisy Coleman with alcohol in January 2012 and sexually assaulting her. White says he's hoping for a peaceful gathering, but with a possible counter-protest also in the works, he acknowledges there is always the risk of a disturbance.===============FBI Getting Tips About Mystery Girl in Greek CampKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The FBI is looking into whether a child found at a Romany camp in Greece is a Kansas City, Missouri girl, although the children's ages don't appear to match. Romany people are often colloquially referred-to as Gypsies. FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton said Tuesday the October 2011 disappearance of Lisa Irwin from her Kansas City home remains an open investigation and that agents follow up on all tips. Patton says the agency began receiving calls after the image of a girl found with a Roma couple appeared in media reports. A dental examination showed the girl in Greece, known only as "Maria," is older than previously thought — 5 or 6, instead of 4. Lisa would turn 3 in November. Her family's attorney, John Picerno, says he has spoken to authorities about the investigation in Greece.===============KC Mother Cited After Teacher Is AssaultedKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City mother has been charged with beating up her child's kindergarten teacher. Jackson County (Missouri) prosecutors filed a third-degree assault charge Monday against 25-year-old Simone Baker. Police said in a news release that Baker isn't currently in custody. No attorney is listed for her in online court records. Police reports say the mother pulled the teacher out of her chair by the hair, punched her in the face and slammed her head against a file cabinet in September at Truman Elementary School in the Hickman Mills School District. Police reports say the mother was upset because her 6-year-old son had blamed his teacher for a scratch on his neck. But a district official has said that the boy told administrators and police that the teacher hadn't hurt him.===============KC Man Pleads Guilty in Bank Robbery with HatchetKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Missouri man has pleaded guilty to robbing a Kansas bank with a hatchet. The U.S. attorney's office announced Tuesday that 35-year-old Derek T. Brownlee, of Kansas City, Missouri, admitted to one count of armed robbery. A criminal complaint alleged Brownlee jumped the teller's counter and demanded money in July at the Metcalf Bank in suburban Overland Park. He took cash from a drawer and some personal items from a teller including a cell phone. He then led police on a chase at speeds up to 90 miles an hour before being stopped in Kansas City, Mo. He was arrested after he fled from the car on foot. Brownlee faces up to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $250,000 when he is sentenced January 21.
  • A growing list of lawsuits, shadowy figures, a splintered media environment and prejudice toward hip-hop make Diddy's downfall the "perfect storm."
  • Opposition leaders in Russia have made waves by organizing unsanctioned demonstrations. The group Other Russia includes a former prime minister, a novelist and chessmaster Garry Kasparov.
  • Beechcraft to Protest Air Force ContractWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Airplane maker Beechcraft will formally protest an Air Force decision to award a high-stakes contract worth more than $427 million to a competitor. Beechcraft, formerly Hawker Beechcraft, claimed yesterday that an estimated 1,400 jobs in Kansas and other states are in jeopardy. The Machinists union is urging a reversal of the decision.==========Fort Riley Prepares for Sequester CutsFORT RILEY, Kan. (AP) — Fort Riley officials are continuing to meet with state and local officials on ways to share resources and services in the wake of automatic federal budget cuts. The military is expected to take a large proportion of the $85 billion in federal spending reductions through September. Officials at the northeast Kansas post said yesterday they've been working with local cities and counties to soften the impact of civilian employee furloughs.==========Deadline Passes on Preferred Mediator on School Funding LawsuitTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A lawyer involved in a Kansas education funding lawsuit says the parties expect to disclose next week whether they can agree on a mediator for settlement talks. Newton attorney John Robb confirms the parties hadn't filed anything with the Kansas Supreme Court on who they'd prefer as mediator by last night's deadline.==========Season Tickets Up for KC ChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs have a new coach, a new general manager — and plenty of new season-ticket holders. New season sales are up 112 percent over this time last year, according to figures provided to The Associated Press yesterday. Invoices were sent out January 7th, three days after new coach Andy Reid was hired.
  • Senator Pat Roberts during his victory speech. (Photo by Stephen Koranda) Following the strong Republican wins in Kansas elections this week, some people are trying to determine what drove the wave of victories for Republicans. Senator Pat Roberts and Governor Sam Brownback both won their races, but many polls before the election showed them neck-and-neck with their challengers or losing. KPR's Stephen Koranda reports.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7d2a50000(SCRIPT)One idea in the Kansas Statehouse is that Senator Pat Roberts’ race had a ripple effect.The story goes that Roberts attracted a lot of attention and help from outside groups, which boosted him above independent Greg Orman. Those Roberts voters then supported other Republicans like Governor Brownback and candidates for the state Legislature.But Fort Hays State University Political Science Professor Chapman Rackaway believes it’s even simpler than that. He says Republicans just turned out in greater numbers.“There’s one thing that polls cannot predict, and that is Election Day mobilization,” says Rackaway.Rackaway says the Republican Party in Kansas has sophisticated political modeling and systems they’ve built that help them contact people effectively and get them to vote.“They have the staff, they have the data, they have the will, they have the resources to be able to do all of that,” says Rackaway.Rackaway says this was one of the challenges for Greg Orman. Being an independent, he had no party system to rely on to turn out voters, and he lost by 10 points to Roberts.
  • U.S. Senator Pat Roberts (Photo credit: Charlie Riedel/Associated Press)Despite polls showing a tight race, Kansas Republican Senator Pat Roberts cruised to an easy victory over independent candidate Greg Orman in Tuesday's election. Roberts barely won his party's primary just three months ago, but he defeated Orman by 10 percentage points.Roberts has now earned another six-year term in office. Not since 1932 have Kansas voters elected someone other than a Republican to the U.S. Senate. ==================== OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Republican U.S. Pat Roberts has won re-election while turning back a challenge from suburban Kansas City businessman Greg Orman. Roberts's victory Tuesday continues a dominating streak for Kansas Republicans, who have not lost a U.S. Senate race since 1932. But it didn't come easy. Roberts first survived a close GOP primary against a tea party challenger. Then Orman emerged a formidable independent candidate after the Democratic nominee dropped out. Orman asserted Roberts had become part of the partisan gridlock in Washington after spending 18 years in the Senate and 16 before that in the U.S. House. Roberts told voters his re-election was essential to Republican hopes of gaining control of the Senate and standing up to President Barack Obama. His campaign was aided by numerous high-profile Republicans.
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