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  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers. By the way, Kansas Public Radio is celebrating its 68th birthday this week! Help us celebrate by making a pledge. Thanks for supporting the Kansas Association of Broadcasters' Station of the Year for 2020.
  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers. Our weekday headlines are generally posted by 10 a.m. and updated throughout the day. Feel free to browse our ad-free news summary. And when you're done, feel free to make a pledge to KPR. Thanks for your support.
  • 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. This news summary is made possible by KPR listener-members. Become one today!
  • Read an exclusive excerpt of Allen Salkin's new history of the Food Network, From Scratch. It's an affectionate but unsparing look at a scrappy little startup network that became a national broadcasting behemoth — and brought people like Emeril Lagasse and Rachael Ray into millions of homes.
  • UPDATE: Kansas Senate Rejects 401(k) but Passes Pension BillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate has rejected a proposal for a 401(k)-style retirement plan for some public employees but approved other changes for the state pension system. An amendment creating a 401(k)-type plan for teachers and government workers hired after 2013 failed Thursday on a 20-20 vote. But a larger bill meant to bolster the state pension system's long-term health passed on a vote of 32-8 and now goes to the House. The measure is not a 401(k)-type system, but it does require new hires to join a plan that departs from the traditional guarantee of benefits based on salaries and years of service. Officials of the pension system expect an $8.3 billion gap between anticipated revenues and benefits through 2033.===========================UPDATE: Kansas Lawmakers Revise Deal on Proposed Tax CutsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House and Senate negotiators have revised a tax-cutting plan to address concerns about possible future budget problems. The negotiators agreed Thursday on language reducing individual income tax rates less aggressively than earlier planned. The measure will also phase out income taxes for 191,000 businesses and reduce the state sales tax to 5.7 percent from the current 6.3 percent in July 2013. The negotiators revised the plan after legislative analysts said an earlier version could create a budget shortfall of $712 million by mid- 2018.===========================Hawker Beechcraft Files for Bankruptcy ProtectionWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Aircraft maker Hawker Beechcraft has filed for bankruptcy protection as it works to restructure its massive debt amid sluggish demand for the military planes and business jets it makes. The Wichita-based manufacturer said in a statement Thursday that it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New York. Hawker Beechcraft says it entered an agreement with a majority of its senior secured lenders and bondholders to eliminate $2.5 billion in debt and $125 million of annual cash interest expenses. It says it obtained a commitment for $400 million in financing to enable it to continue paying employees, vendors and others. It says it filed for bankruptcy to implement the terms of its prearranged restructuring. The company listed a total debt of more than $2.3 billion at the end of 2011.============================= Anti-Abortion Bill Passes KS Senate, Heads to GovernorTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A bill giving more legal protection to Kansas health care providers who refuse to participate in abortions is on its way to Governor Sam Brownback. The Senate approved the so-called "conscience" measure on a 23-16 vote Wednesday. The House passed the measure last month and is expected to be signed by Brownback, who strongly opposes abortion. Kansas law already says doctors and hospitals can't be penalized for refusing to participate in abortions or sterilizations. This year's bill extends the protection to other health care providers. It also covers refusal to prescribe abortion-inducing drugs or to refer patients to providers to terminate pregnancies. Critics worry the legislation is broad enough to restrict access to birth control.===============================Kansas Woman Files Federal Suit over RedistrictingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman has filed a federal lawsuit over the state Legislature's failure so far to redraw the state's political boundaries. Robyn Renee Essex, a resident of the Kansas City suburb of Olathe, filed her litigation Thursday in U.S. District Court. She argues the state's existing political boundaries violate her constitutional rights because they haven't been adjusted yet to account for changes in population over the past decade. One of her attorneys, Brent Haden, of Columbia, Missouri, is a former chief of staff to Kansas House Speaker Mike O'Neal, a Hutchinson Republican. In the lawsuit, Essex expressed doubt that legislators will be able to break a stalemate on redistricting. She suggests that one option would be for a panel of three federal judges to set new legislative and congressional districts.============================== Brownback Economic Team Disputes Budget Gap ProjectionsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback's administration is issuing its own projections to argue that proposed tax cuts wouldn't create budget problems in future years. Top aides to the governor Wednesday disputed new projections from legislative staff showing that the cuts in income and sales taxes would create a budget gap of more than $700 million in 2018. The Department of Revenue issued two new forecasts, based on slightly different assumptions. The first showed the tax cuts creating a shortfall of $121 million in by July 2017, with that gap shrinking a year later. The second forecast is more optimistic about increased economic activity in 2013 and 2014. It predicts no budget shortfalls for the next six years and a surplus of $138 million in July 2018.==============================UPDATE: Anti-Abortion Group Says It Has Patient RecordsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The leader of a Kansas anti-abortion group says unredacted abortion records it received recently aren't the first to be discovered by the confidential informant who provided them. Operation Rescue president Troy Newman told The Associated Press on Thursday that the same man found similar records last summer and turned them over to the state, but it did nothing. Newman says the man two weeks ago gave his group the records of 86 female patients treated in April at a Kansas City, Kansas clinic. He says the man didn't say how he got the records but that he claimed he obtained them legally. Clinic officials say someone broke into a locked trash bin on their property last week, but that records like Operation Rescue purports to have wouldn't have been there.================================Kansas to Honor Fallen Law Enforcement OfficersTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback will be in attendance Friday for the annual Kansas Law Enforcement Memorial Ceremony on the Statehouse grounds. Brownback and Attorney General Derek Schmidt are both scheduled to speak, and the names of all Kansas law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty will be read. The name of Atchison police Sergeant David Enzbrenner will be added to the 266 others on the monument. Enzbrenner was killed December 9 while helping code enforcement officers serving a nuisance order. He was the only Kansas officer killed on duty last year.===============================Tornado-Stricken Kansas Town Receives Large GrantHARVEYVILLE, Kan. (AP) — A northeastern Kansas town recovering from a February tornado has received a grant to repair its wastewater treatment system and remove storm debris. The state Commerce Department said Thursday the nearly $246,000 awarded to Harveyville comes from the Community Development Block Grant program. About 40 percent of the buildings in Harveyville sustained significant damage when an EF-2 tornado struck the Wabaunsee County town of about 300 people on February 28. The twister killed one person and injured 13. Kansas officials say the grant will help finance repairs to the water treatment system's pump house building, alarm dialer and other components.================================Alert Issued After Man Found in Women's RestroomOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A northeastern Kansas community college has issued a campus alert after an employee found a man with a camera inside a women's restroom. Johnson County Community College in Overland Park issued the alert Wednesday and released a surveillance photo of a man considered a person of interest. The Kansas City Star reports the man was described as white, in his mid-20s, about 6 feet tall and 150 to 165 pounds. He has short black hair and was wearing glasses and a white shirt.===============================Koch Gives Smithsonian $35M for New Dinosaur HallWASHINGTON (AP) — An energy businessman is donating a record $35 million to the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History to build a new dinosaur hall on the National Mall. The Smithsonian is announcing the gift Thursday from David H. Koch, the executive vice president of Koch Industries Incorporated of Wichita. It is the single largest gift in the museum's 102-year history. The Smithsonian Board of Regents voted Monday to name the new dinosaur hall in Koch's honor. Koch, an engineer, is a billionaire who lives in New York City. He was the Libertarian Party's vice presidential candidate in 1980 and has been a major donor to conservative political causes. Koch gave the Smithsonian $15 million in 2009 to build a new exhibit hall exploring human evolution over 6 million years.================================Experts Forecast Big Increase in Kansas Wheat OutputKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Experts who spent three days viewing Kansas winter wheat fields are predicting sharply higher production this year over the drought-damaged 2011 crop. Participants in the Kansas Wheat Quality tour on Thursday forecast total production of 403.9 bushels — 40 percent higher than the 276.5 million bushels harvested last year. Average yields across Kansas were forecast at 49 bushels per acre. Members of the tour traveled about 4,000 miles throughout Kansas before convening Thursday at the Kansas City Board of Trade to offer forecasts. The warm spring has hastened ripening by two to three weeks, making it easier to predict potential production more accurately. Kansas Wheat marketing director Aaron Harries says the crop looks better than average. But he also says drought-stressed southwestern Kansas needs rain in the next week to reach projections.================================ Lawrence Police Shift Focus on Curbing Underage Drinking LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A crackdown on underage drinking in Lawrence is moving from bars to parties and neighborhoods gatherings where teens may think they're likely to escape the notice of police. The Lawrence Journal World reports a task force of city and University of Kansas police, along with state alcohol control officers, patrolled areas around the Oread neighborhood last Friday night. Some of the officers were in plain clothes. Lawrence police Sergeant Trent McKinley says they issued eight citations for minors in possession of alcohol and four for using or possessing fake ID or driver's licenses. The task force focused during the fall semester on underage drinking at Lawrence bars. McKinley says the team will be out this spring looking for underage drinking amid proms, graduations and college parties.================================ Man Charged in 2 Deaths in Separate ShootingsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 19-year-old man has been charged with killing two people and wounding two others in separate shootings in Kansas City, Kansas. Wyandotte County prosecutors charged Eric D. Clay Wednesday with two counts of first-degree murder in the March 4 shooting deaths of 16-year-old Renesha Jones and 21-year-old Keith E. Barrett. Barrett, of Kansas City, Kansas, and Jones, of Kansas City, Missouri, were killed at an apartment in a shooting that also wounded a baby. Prosecutors also charged Clay with two counts of criminal discharge of a firearm for shootings in January and February that injured two women. The Kansas City Star reports Clay's bond is $750,000. He is in custody on unrelated charges. A court appearance on the new charges has not been set.===============================Kansas Man Receives Advanced Foot ProsthesisTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 68-year-old Kansas man who lost his lower left leg to diabetes has a new generation microprocessor-controlled foot — the first of its kind in Kansas. Ignacio Guerroro demonstrated his new foot Thursday at Topeka's Hanger Clinic, where he was outfitted with the device. The computer-controlled foot, called an elan, is attached to a metal "calf" with an electronic suction device at the knee. It adjusts to angles and movement as Guerroro walks, improving his mobility on uneven terrain like stairs. Hanger says while other microprocessor-controlled feet are in use in Kansas but the elan is the most current variety. It costs between $15,000 and $20,000. The Amputee Coalition, a national group that advocates for people who have lost limbs, says there are about 2 million amputees in the U.S.===============================Auto Sale Scammer Sentenced in KansasOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A Colorado man suspected in several states of scamming people selling motor vehicles online has been sentenced in Kansas to five years and three months in prison. The Kansas City Star reports 33-year-old Othello K. Bland, of Aurora, Colorado was sentenced Thursday in Johnson County District Court. Besides the prison time, he was ordered to pay more than $42,000 in restitution. Bland was convicted earlier this year of 16 counts of theft and identity theft. Prosecutors said Bland, or someone working with him, contacted people who advertised cars for sale on Craigslist or Autotrader. The victims were paid with counterfeit insurance checks, and the criminals then sold the vehicles online for cash. Johnson County authorities say Bland is suspected of similar crimes in Colorado, Idaho, Missouri, Nebraska and Oregon.=============================== Judge: Kansas Restaurant Failed to Pay Back WagesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal magistrate has found a Wichita restaurant in contempt for failing to pay workers more than $223,000 in back pay and damages. U.S. District Judge Karen Humphreys had given the China Star and its owners until Monday to pay the money awarded in a 2008 consent judgment or submit a payment plan. Defense attorney Joseph Cassell told the judge this week his clients were unable to pay the judgment or start a payment plan that would be acceptable to the court. The U.S. Labor Department announced the contempt order Wednesday. The agency says its investigation found that China Star's workers were paid a flat rate in cash, often less than the minimum wage and without compensation for overtime work.==============================Child Whose Story Touched Many Dies BELTON, Mo. (AP) — A northwest Missouri boy whose desire to see the ocean before he died of a rare disease touched people around the world has died. Tadan Foss, a 5-year-old from Belton, died last week of leukodystrophy, a disease that progressively causes loss of brain functions. A ceremony to remember his life is planned for Friday in Olathe. His mother, Carisa Rockers, wanted her son to see the ocean before he died. The volunteer group called Elves of Christmas Present eventually organized a trip through St. Louis, the Grand Ole Opry, Washington D.C. and other cities. Everything was donated. And Tadan got to play in the ocean in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina in June 2011. The Kansas City Star reports Tadan's trip made headlines and brought support from around the world.============================== Wichita Man Pleads Guilty to $1M Bank FraudWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has pleaded guilty to bank fraud in which he stole more than $1 million. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a statement Thursday that 59-year-old John Kammerer pleaded guilty to one count of bank fraud. Kammerer admitted that while working as a controller for Network Results of Kansas, he accessed the company's bank account to steal more than $1.2 million. The fraud involved Kammerer issuing checks to the account of HMK Enterprises, which he controlled. Sentencing is set for July 19. He faces a maximum penalty of 30 years in federal prison and forfeiture of $1.2 million.============================== Wig-Wearing Bank Robber SentencedKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Missouri man who twice dressed as a woman to hold up a northeastern Kansas bank is going to prison for 37 months. The U.S. Attorney's office says 20-year-old Joshua Parker of Kansas City, Missouri was sentenced Wednesday. He pleaded guilty earlier this year to two counts of bank robbery. Parker's disguise included a woman's wig and dark sunglasses when he entered a U.S. Bank branch in Prairie Village last October 21st, jumped on the counter and said, "I'm back." A teller recognized him as the same wig-wearing person who robbed the bank two months earlier. Police chased a getaway car for a few blocks before Parker got out. He ran through a residential neighborhood wearing only shorts and socks before being arrested in a creek bed.============================== NCAA Denies Transfer Waiver to Former Sooner Football PlayerLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The NCAA has denied an eligibility waiver filed on behalf of University of Kansas wide receiver Justin McCay that would have allowed him to play during the 2012 season. McCay transferred from the University of Oklahoma at the end of last semester so that he could be closer to family in suburban Kansas City. He filed a waiver request with the NCAA under personal hardship guidelines so that he would not be forced to sit out a season under normal transfer rules. The initial waiver was declined, and McCay appealed to the NCAA subcommittee for legislative relief, which ruled Wednesday that the former top recruit must sit out the upcoming season. McCay will be eligible to play for the Jayhawks in 2013 as a junior.================================ Group Says It Received Dumped Abortion RecordsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — An anti-abortion group says it has been given abortion records that were improperly discarded at a clinic in Kansas City, Kansas. Operation Rescue said Wednesday a confidential informant delivered the records from Central Family Medicine to the organization. The records involve 86 women and minors treated at the clinic in April. The Kansas City Star reports clinic officials said Wednesday that a locked trash bin was broken into last week but no records were improperly discarded. The clinic's attorney said Kansas City, Kansas police and the FBI have been notified. Operation Rescue president Troy Newman says the records are being kept in a secure location and have been offered them to state officials. He said the organization has no intention of making the records public.**this story has been updated. Please see above. ============================= Kansas Senate Approves $14.4B Budget PlanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate has approved a $14.4 billion state budget for the next fiscal year after adding money for public schools and property tax relief. Wednesday's 34-5 vote sends the bill to the House, where a separate spending plan for the fiscal year that starts in July is awaiting debate. Senators amended the budget to add $50 million to increase base state aid for schools, plus $27 million to equalize school aid payments among poorer districts. Language authorizing the increases is in another bill already approved by the Senate but still pending in the House. The Senate also added $45 million for cities and counties to reduce property taxes. The money restores a revenue-sharing program that began in 1938 but was suspended in 2002 when the state faced financial difficulties.**this story has been updated. Please see above.=============================Kansas Senate to Debate 401(k)-Style Pension PlanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate's leading advocate of starting a 401(k)-style pension plan for new teachers and government workers says he'll push fellow senators to endorse the idea. State senator Jeff King, an Independence Republican, says he'll offer such a proposal during Thursday's debate on legislation designed to bolster the long-term financial health of the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System. The pension system projects an $8.3 billion gap between its anticipated revenues and the benefits promised to public employees through 2033. The bill before the Senate would require new hires to join a plan that's not a traditional one guaranteeing benefits up front based on their salaries and years of service. But it's also not a 401(k)-style plan, in which benefits are tied to investment earnings.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • UPDATE: Venue Disputed for Suit over KS Voter ID LawTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Secretary of State Kris Kobach is embroiled in a legal dispute over which court should hear a challenge to a Kansas law requiring voters to present photo identification at the polls. Kobach's office moved successfully to have the lawsuit transferred from state court to federal court. Kobach said Tuesday that the lawsuit raises federal voting law issues. But Wichita attorney Jim Lawing responded with court filings that denied he's raising federal issues in representing two northeast Kansas residents challenging the photo ID requirement. Lawing asked to have the lawsuit returned to Shawnee County District Court. Lawing represents Arthur Spry and Charles Hamner of Overbrook. They're retirees, and their votes in the November 2012 general election weren't counted because neither had a government-issued ID card with a photograph.================Most of Tardy KS Lawmaker's Compensation Claim RejectedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas legislative committee has rejected most of a state senator's request for pay for a meeting he nearly missed by arriving late. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Kansas City Democrat David Haley appealed to the joint claims committee after failing to receive $291 for his salary, expense allowance and mileage for a December 2012 meeting of another panel. The claims committee said Monday that Haley should receive only $73 for mileage. Haley's claim was for a session of the joint health care oversight committee. Haley arrived shortly before it ended. Committee Chairwoman and Topeka Republican Senator Vicki Schmidt took the unusual step of blocking Haley's compensation. Lawmakers aren't supposed to be paid without attending at least half a meeting, but Haley noted that the committee shortened its session unexpectedly.================Hallmark Dropping Party Wares, Cutting 225 JobsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Hallmark Cards says will eliminate at least 225 jobs by doing away with its party ware business and streamlining parts of its greeting card operation. The Kansas City Star reports 125 to 150 jobs will be cut over the next 15 to 20 months by eliminating party wares, which Hallmark says weren't meeting revenue expectations. An additional 100 positions will be axed this year through streamlining. Hallmark has about 3,200 employees in Kansas City and roughly 12,000 worldwide. It says the staff reductions will include severance packages for those who lose their jobs, while some workers may be reassigned to other positions within the company.================KS GOP to Hold Convention in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Republicans will hold their biggest gathering of 2014 in Wichita. The annual GOP convention will take place January 24 and 25 and is tied to Kansas Day, the January 29 anniversary of the state's admission to the union in 1861. Two days of meetings are scheduled for the Friday and Saturday nearest the anniversary. The party announced Wichita as the site Monday, saying a full schedule will be released as the event nears. Hundreds of party activists and elected officials usually attend. Through 2011, the event was held each year in Topeka. But the Republican state committee decided to rotate it among the state's four congressional districts. The 2012 convention was held in Overland Park, and this year's gathering took place in Hutchinson.================1 Dead, 1 Arrested in Lawrence ShootingLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence police have arrested a male suspect on suspicion of first-degree murder in a fatal shooting in the northern part of the city. Officers went to a home on a report of a shooting around 8:45 am Tuesday and found one adult dead. A male suspect was taken into custody. Police said in a news release that the male was arrested and taken to the Douglas County jail after being questioned. The victim and the suspect are described as having had a domestic relationship. Their names and ages were not released Tuesday. Investigators were preparing to forward the case to the county prosecutor, who will file any charges.================KS Professional Groups Seek Mortgage Fee RepealHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers will be asked during the upcoming session to repeal a fee on mortgage loans that bankers and real estate agents call an unfair tax that duplicates other charges in the loan process. The Hutchinson News reports counties receive about $47 million annually from the mortgage registration fee, charged to borrowers who purchase real estate. The Kansas Bankers Association and Kansas Association of Realtors say counties already collect a document recording fee, so the mortgage charge is unnecessary. Opponents of the mortgage registration fee say it's an obstacle in the Kansas City metro area because Missouri doesn't impose such a fee, which would be about $315 on a $121,000 loan. Legislation to repeal the charge is expected to be introduced in the 2014 legislative session.================State of KS Recommends Dredging Redmond ReservoirBURLINGTON, Kan. (AP) — State water officials are recommending a plan to dredge the John Redmond Reservoir in Coffey County, which has been filling with silt for decades. Besides offering recreation, the 50-year-old reservoir on the Neosho River near Burlington supplies backup water to 14 communities in southeast Kansas. It also supplies water to two smaller lakes that feed cooling towers at the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant. The Lawrence Journal-World reports the proposed dredging could become a model for managing other federal lakes in Kansas that also have silting problems. The Redmond reservoir has lost about 1,000 surface acres and nearly half its volume since it was completed in 1964. Tracy Streeter, head of the Kansas Water Office, says a contract to dredge the lake is tentative until funding can be found.================$5,000 Reward in Great Bend Animal Cruelty CaseGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — The Humane Society of the United States is offering up to $5,000 for information in the death of a cat that was decapitated in Great Bend. Great Bend police found the body of a male cat missing its head and front paw on October 26. Great Bend Police Lieutenant David Bailey says evidence indicated the cat's body parts were cut off. The Humane Society says in a news release that a donation from a board member enabled the organization to double its standard cruelty award to $5,000.================KS Slaying Suspect Convicted in Nebraska Police Chase CaseTECUMSEH, Neb. (AP) — A 33-year-old Kansas slaying suspect has been convicted of five felony charges stemming from a shot-filled police chase in southeast Nebraska. Johnson County (Nebraska) court records say Michael Engstrom pleaded no contest on Monday to intentionally or knowingly attempting to cause serious injury by firing at five officers while fleeing from a robbery in neighboring Pawnee County. He also pleaded no contest to two Pawnee County charges. Prosecutors dropped 16 other felony charges in exchange for Engstrom's pleas. His sentencing is scheduled for January 13. Kansas authorities say Engstrom and his wife, Jamie, are suspected of killing a Topeka man and wounding a woman on the afternoon of February 13 before fleeing north into Nebraska. Jamie Engstrom has been given five years in a Nebraska prison.================CA Men Admit Roles in Kansas Cargo Theft CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Two California men have admitted their part in the attempted theft of beef from a Kansas slaughterhouse. Prosecutors say the case exemplifies a relatively new form of identity theft in which suspects pose as a legitimate trucking firm to steal cargo. Fifty-three year old Oganes Nagapetian pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court in Wichita to conspiracy to commit interstate shipment fraud. His 50-year-old brother, Tigran Nagapetian, pleaded guilty to misprision of a felony for lying to Kansas state troopers and concealing his brother's actions. Both are from North Hollywood, California. U.S. District Judge Monti Belot set sentencing for January 27. Federal prosecutors charged the brothers with the attempted theft in 2011 of packaged beef valued at $87,500 from the Tyson Fresh Meats plant in Holcomb.================Salina Approves Athletic Complex at Kansas WesleyanSALINA, Kan. (AP) — The Salina City Commission has approved a plan to build a new athletic complex at Kansas Wesleyan University. The commission on Monday unanimously approved plans for a 2,000-seat stadium, a practice field, a press box and new concessions and restrooms. The $7.5 million project also includes the demolition of Glenn Martin Stadium. The Salina Journal reports the complex is expected to be completed next year.================Colorado Man Found Dead at Kansas Truck StopSALINA, Kan. (AP) — A Colorado man reported missing by his family last month has been found dead at a truck stop in central Kansas. The Salina Journal reports that police do not suspect foul play in the death of 67-year-old Terry Hamilton, although an autopsy was planned. A customer at a Salina truck stop along Interstate 70 reported a man in a car in the parking lot Monday afternoon. Hamilton's family in the Denver suburb of Aurora had reported him missing in mid-October. Police said Hamilton's car had been noticed at the truck stop earlier Monday. It wasn't clear if the vehicle had left the lot at any time before Hamilton's body was discovered several hours later.================NORAD Exercise Taking Place over Colorado, KansasPETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. (AP) — The North American Aerospace Defense Command is conducting an air exercise over Colorado and Kansas. Officials say residents in an area between Hugo, Colorado and Garden City, Kansas may see F-16 fighter jets or Learjet planes participating in the exercise Tuesday afternoon. The exercise, called Felix Hawk, is designed to test the rapid-response capability of NORAD's Western Air Defense Sector. NORAD is a joint U.S.-Canada command responsible for defending the skies over both nations and monitoring sea approaches. Its headquarters are at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado.================Topeka Man Pleads Guilty to Making Pipe BombsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 36-year-old Topeka man could spend up to 10 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to making a pipe bomb. Joseph E. Rogers entered his plea Monday in Topeka to one count of making a destructive device. He told investigators he used PVC pipe and smokeless powder removed from ammunition to make explosive devices for entertainment value. Rogers and 29-year-old Kyle C. Roe of Topeka were stopped by Topeka police officers on November 12, 2012. When Roe was being taken into custody after police discovered he had an active felony warrant, he told officers he had a bomb in his pocket. Roe pleaded guilty in September to possessing a destructive device. He is to be sentenced November 26, while Rogers has a January 27 sentencing date.================Pharmacist Gets 4 Years for Misbranding DrugsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Tennessee pharmacist has been sentenced to four years in prison for distributing a misbranded Chinese-made drug that was given to kidney dialysis patients in Kansas. The U.S. Attorney's office in Topeka says 53-year-old Robert Harshbarger Jr., of Kingsport, Tennessee also was ordered to pay nearly $850,000 in restitution and a $25,000 fine and to forfeit $425,000. Harshbarger pleaded guilty in May to one count each of fraud and distributing a misbranded drug. He admitted that from 2004 to 2009, he substituted a cheaper Chinese import for an iron sucrose drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Prosecutors say there were no reports of harm, but patients at Kansas Dialysis Services were put at risk because the FDA could not assure the drugs' effectiveness and safety.================ KS Army College to Host EducatorsFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Teachers and principals from around the country are heading to the Army's Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth to study leadership development. The three-day event starts November 13 and is organized by the National Association of Secondary School Principals. Thirty educators are participating in what is being called an inaugural event to improve public school leaders. Association executive director JoAnn Bartoletti says in a release that the educators will study the Army's learning model, which focuses on continuous education for soldiers as they advance in their careers and meet changing missions. The symposium will include hands-on exercises, discussions and other activities to make the connection between the Army model and the work of educators in high schools and middle schools.================NTSB Report Fails to State Cause for Fatal CrashWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A preliminary federal report on a Kansas plane crash that killed a traveling California pastor and his pilot does not conclude what caused the aircraft to plummet to the ground 10 minutes after take-off. The Wichita Eagle reports the National Transportation Safety Board report released this week did note that pilots in the area at the time of the October 18 crash indicated there was light to moderate icing conditions above 6,000 feet. The 1975 Cessna Citation was carrying 72-year-old Ed Dufresne and his pilot, 49-year-old Mitchell Morgan, to a speaking engagement in Texas when it suddenly went into a nosedive and crashed near Derby. The report says the flight left Mid-Continent airport in Wichita at 10:07 am and went down at 10:17 am, destroying the plane on impact.================KCMO Hospital Unveils Mobile Dental UnitKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City hospital is going on the road to provide dental care to students. Truman Medical Center says its Lakewood hospital unveiled the Mobile Dental Coach on Monday at an Independence elementary school. Nearly $500,000 was raised over two years to purchase and outfit a 40-foot bus to provide dental screenings, X-rays and treatment for students. The money also will pay to operate the bus. The Lakewood hospital's dental practice began providing screenings and basic services to students in the Independence School Districts in late 2011. More than 6,000 students have received care. But until now, that care was provided in whatever space was available in the schools. Independence superintendent Dale Herl says the mobile dental unit will remove barriers for young dental patients.================ MO Superintendents Offer Student-Transfer Woes Solution KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A group of Missouri school superintendents has developed an alternative to a state law allowing students to transfer from unaccredited to accredited districts. The Kansas City Star reports that under the plan, students in struggling districts could transfer to better-performing schools in their home districts. And after five years of failure, districts could be dissolved and distributed to accredited districts. Twenty leaders from around Missouri drafted the school-improvement plan and provided it to The Star on Monday. The draft says the existing transfer law "is not in the best interest of all students and will not lead to improvement of unaccredited districts." A spokeswoman for the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education says Education Commissioner Chris Nicastro hasn't yet had a chance to review the proposal.================Missouri Education Dept: KC Charter School Inflating AttendanceKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri education officials are investigating academic integrity issues and reports that attendance was inflated at a struggling Kansas City charter school. The Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education said in a news release Tuesday that Hope Academy's sponsor, the University of Missouri-Kansas City, was notified about the problems Friday. DESE says the charter's board of directors has placed some staff on leave, appointed an interim superintendent and hired an external auditor to look into the concerns. DESE spokeswoman Sarah Potter says one issue is that only 27.4 percent of the school's 636 students were in school during a surprise visit last month, although the school was reporting a 99.5 percent attendance rate. The school's board said in a statement that its swift response shows it is taking the issues seriously.================Construction Supplier Gives $210M to KSU, OSU, OUOKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A company that supplies construction materials has split a $210 million stock donation among Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University and the University of Oklahoma. Oklahoma City-based Dolese Brothers recently announced the gift after completing the stock distribution. The supplier of ready-mix concrete, crushed stone, gravel and sand is using the gift as a way to transfer ownership of the company to its employees. Here's how it works: The company is gradually buying back the stock from the universities. Until the buy-back is complete, the universities own the company, although they have no voting or operational rights. The universities spend the buy-back payments — at least $500,000 annually per school — to help more students earn engineering degrees. The unusual gift was the vision of the company's late owner, Roger Dolese.================ KS Soldier Killed in AfghanistanTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Defense Department says a soldier from northeast Kansas has died after his patrol came under fire in Afghanistan. The soldier was identified Monday as 35-year-old Sergeant 1st Class Forrest W. Robertson, of Westmoreland. The Pentagon says Robertson's unit was attacked Sunday by small-arms fire in Afghanistan's Logar province. Robertson was assigned to the Headquarters and Headquarters Troop of the 6th Squadron, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division based at Fort Stewart, Georgia. Kansas Senator Jerry Moran said in a statement that Robertson's wife and children live in Hinesville, Georgia., and his mother lives in Westmoreland, northeast of Manhattan.================ Report: KS Winter Wheat Planting Nears CompletionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new report says rain slowed fieldwork on farms in southern and eastern Kansas in the past week, while most of the western part of the state remains dry. Monday's weekly update from the National Agricultural Statistics Service pegs winter wheat seeding in Kansas at 96 percent complete. About 86 of the wheat has now emerged. The agency rated wheat condition as 1 percent very poor, 3 percent poor, 36 percent fair, 55 percent good and 5 percent excellent. Among other crops, the agency estimates Kansas farmers have cut 87 percent of the corn crop. Sorghum harvest had reached the 67 percent mark. About 81 percent of the state's soybeans and 60 percent of sunflowers have also been harvested.================KC Chiefs Top AP Power Rankings ListKansas City, the only unbeaten team in the NFL, is now alone atop The Associated Press power rankings. The Chiefs didn't exactly impress the voters in a 23-13 victory against Buffalo that included two touchdowns from the defense and none from the offense. Some panelists figure Kansas City's 9-0 record will get a test soon enough — as in the next game. The Chiefs, 2-14 a year ago, go to Denver after this week's bye. Alex Marvez of Foxsports.com writes that everyone will finally get a good gauge of "how good the Chiefs are" against the Broncos on November 17. Seattle is second after dropping out of a tie for the top spot with Kansas City, and Denver stayed at number 3.================Kauffman Stadium 'Fountain Lady' Granted Iowa Jobless PayDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa has approved unemployment benefits for a Des Moines woman who was fired after her frolic in a stadium fountain at a Kansas City Royals baseball game. The Des Moines Register says that 25-year-old Jessica McCoy was granted the benefits after a hearing last month. She'd become an Internet sensation after her August 5 antics were recorded at Kauffman Stadium. The YouTube video has been seen more than 147,000 times, and she's been dubbed "Fountain Lady" and "Fountain Mom." She subsequently was fired by First American Bank in the Des Moines neighborhood of Beaverdale. Her manager said she violated company policy barring off-duty conduct that reflects poorly on the bank. At her hearing, McCoy said the incident was blown out of proportion and that she was under the influence of alcohol.
  • Changes to Kansas Motor Vehicle System DelayedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A state agency has put fixing problems with its motor vehicle system on hold, as a software vendor implements new changes in the Kansas law. The laws that go into effect January 1 will change truck and permit fees and allow county treasurers to sell permits to access state parks. The software used by the state is provided by Minnesota-based 3M Company. Department of Revenue spokeswoman Jeannine Koranda told the Topeka Capital-Journal that changes are made every year to adjust for new laws passed by legislators. The state's motor vehicle system has been plagued with problems as it changed to a new 3M system, which resulted in long lines and delays as residents tried to register their vehicles. The company has been working with the state to resolve the issues.==================US Drought Worsens After Weeks of Improvement ST. LOUIS (AP) — A new report shows that the nation's worst drought in decades is getting worse again, ending an encouraging five-week run of improving conditions. The weekly U.S. Drought Monitor report shows that 60.1 percent of the continental U.S. was in some form of drought as of Tuesday. That's up from 58.8 percent the previous week. The portion of the lower 48 states in extreme or exceptional drought — the two worst classifications — also rose, to 19.04 percent from last week's 18.3 percent. The stubbornly dry conditions intensified in Kansas, the top U.S. producer of winter wheat. The latest update shows that while 77.5 percent of that state remains in extreme or exceptional drought, the amount of land in the most-dire classification rose nearly 4 percentage points to 34.5 percent.==================Topeka-Area Dairy Farm Files for Chapter 12 BankruptcyTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas dairy farm says it has filed for Chapter 12 bankruptcy because continued drought and heat reduced the amount of quality feed and increased stress for the operation's 55 cows. Iwig Family Dairy issued a news release Wednesday saying its output was further compromised by higher fuel and energy costs. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the dairy operates out of Tecumseh, just east of Topeka, and has been run by the Iwig family since 1910. It started dairy production, bottling and retail services in 2005. The dairy will have 90 days to create a reorganization plan to provide for payment to its creditors. The company says it will continue its operations and pay its employees, with its retail locations in Topeka, Tecumseh and Lawrence to remain open.==================Cherry Tomatoes Recalled in Kansas and MissouriNORWALK, Iowa (AP) — A central Iowa fruit and vegetable distributor is recalling several lots of cherry tomatoes after the grower notified the distributor that Salmonella was found in random sample testing by the Food and Drug Administration. Capital City Fruit of Norwalk, Iowa says the recalled cherry tomatoes from Rio Queen Citrus are packaged in one-pint containers as Capital Brand Clamshell Cherry Tomatoes. They were shipped to retail stores from November 14 to November 18 and sold in stores in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. No illnesses have been reported. Capital City Fruit on Wednesday says it asked retailers to remove the product from their store shelves. Salmonella can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems.==================Judge Set to Rule on Suit in Topeka River DeathTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Shawnee County judge says he plans to issue a decision next week in a lawsuit involving the death of two Topeka men who drowned when their canoe capsized in the Kansas River in 2007. The Topeka Capital-Journal reportsthat District Judge Larry Hendrix said Tuesday he plans issue a memorandum decision in the lawsuit by Jim Bryant against the city of Topeka and state of Kansas. Bryant is the father of 25-year-old Joshua Bryant, who along with 30-year-old Richard Heyroth drowned on August 5, 2007, after their canoe capsized after going over a spillway in Topeka. Two other men on the float trip also fell into the water, but survived. Bryant claims authorities failed to adequately warn boaters of the approaching danger posed by a low-water weir.==================Hay Thefts Increase Amid High Prices, Drought in KansasEL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — Frustrated farmers in a south-central Kansas county are coping with a rash of hay bale thefts. KAKE-TV reports that Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet has ordered his deputies to patrol rural roads, aiming to halt what's become an almost daily crime. Herzet blames the thefts on the severe drought, which has tightened supplies of hay and driven up prices. Butler County farmer Orville Carver says that someone cut the lock to his gate and stole nearly $500 worth of hay. Carver says the economy has something to do with the crime, but it doesn't justify stealing from others. Authorities and some farmers have set up deer cameras, hoping to catch the thieves. Herzet is also encouraging farmers and ranchers to move hay from their fields closer to their homes.==================SE Kansas Mayor Resigns Following Turmoil with City CouncilBAXTER SPRINGS, Kan. (AP) — A southeast Kansas mayor who has been embroiled in disputes with city council members over personnel moves has abruptly called it quits. The Joplin Globe reports Baxter Springs Mayor Jenifer Bingham resigned on Tuesday. She was replaced by Mike Kaufmann, who was told Tuesday afternoon by the city attorney that he had to go to City Hall and sign payroll checks. Kaufmann says he wasn't expecting to be promoted, but he looks forward to returning stability to city government. Bingham ruffled feathers in April when she named replacements for the city clerk and police chief, both of whom were longtime employees of the city. The City Council rejected the appointments and Bingham put the clerk on paid suspension. The council later took action to restore her to her position.==================Judge Upholds Woman's Conviction in Highway DeathsLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Douglas County judge has upheld the conviction and sentence of a Washington-state woman who killed two highway workers while driving south of Lawrence in 2007. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that District Judge Paula Martin ruled earlier this month that Ramona Morgan's court-appointed attorney committed some errors, but nothing bad enough to affect the jury's decision. Morgan had argued she received ineffective counsel and that her 26-year sentence was excessive. Witnesses testified at Morgan's 2008 trial that she drove around a pilot car twice in a U.S. 59 work zone on September 11, 2007, and the second time struck and killed two workers. Law enforcement officers had to puncture her pickup truck's tires after a chase to get her to stop. Her earliest possible parole date is 2030.==================Kansas Supreme Court Disbars Former Navy AttorneyTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court has disbarred a former Navy lawyer who was convicted during a court martial in 2007 for mailing secret information about Guantanamo Bay detainees. The justices issued a ruling Wednesday rejecting efforts by Matthew Diaz, who was licensed to practice law in Kansas in 1995, to have his license reinstated so he could practice law in New York. The Office of Judicial Administration had recommended that the justices suspend his law license for three years starting in 2008, which would have made him eligible to get it reinstated immediately. Messages left for Diaz and his attorney weren't immediately returned. Diaz is living in New York. He earned his law degree in 1994 from Washburn University in Topeka and was admitted to practice law in Kansas.==================Cigarette in Potting Soil Blamed for KC House FireKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Investigators in Kansas City have traced a fire that left a home in ruins to a cigarette someone put out in a container of potting soil. KCTV reports that the cigarette and the potting soil smoldered for at least four days before igniting last week and setting the house on fire. No one was injured, but the flames quickly spread through the house and the roof. Investigators reported their findings this week. Authorities say it's a good reminder that potting soil is flammable. Tricia Roberts is an education specialist with the fire department in nearby Overland Park, Kan. Roberts says potting soil looks like dirt, but it actually contains a large proportion of organic matter, such as peat moss, that easily catches fire when it dries out.==================Kansas Officials Tout Weekend Pheasant HuntOAKLEY, Kan. (AP) — Seventy pheasant hunters joined Governor Sam Brownback and other state officials over the weekend for the second annual Governor's Ringneck Classic in northwestern Kansas. The city of Oakley hosted the event, with hunters taking to the fields near surrounding communities. Brownback began the hunt in 2011 as a way to promote tourism and expand the Kansas economy. Among those taking part were state Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Secretary Robin Jennison and former Kansas City Chiefs player Bill Maas. Brownback's office says hunting contributes some $400 million annually to the Kansas economy. Proceeds from the hunt benefited the Northwest Kansas Classic Conservation Foundation, Logan County Health Care Foundation, the Buffalo Bill Cultural Center and the group Pheasants Forever.==================3 Kansas Children Endure Bombings in Gaza Strip WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A divorced Palestinian man accused of illegally moving his three young children from their Kansas home to the Gaza Strip insists they are safe. Ahmed Abuhamda was charged in Kansas with aggravated interference with parental custody after he took his children overseas earlier this year amid a custody dispute with their American mother. He told The Associated Press in an interview that while he believes the family is in no real danger, as a Muslim he has taught his children that everybody has to die one day. Nine-year-old Jannah Abuhamda told AP in a phone call from Gaza that she can hear the barrage of bombings as she plays with her Barbie dolls in her father's home. Such talk only heightens fears for the children's safety from their mother, Bethany Gonzales, in the Kansas City suburb of Overland Park. Their father moved the children to the Middle East in February. ================== Kansas Man Sentenced to Life in Prison Under Jessica's Law NESS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former Ness City man who was convicted in August of raping someone under 14 years old has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports 37-year-old Benito Cardenas was convicted in Ness County of rape and aggravated sodomy under Jessica's Law. He was sentenced Tuesday to life on each of the two convictions, with the sentences to run concurrently. The crimes happened in Ness City in September 2010. Cardenas was living in Dodge City at the time of his arrest in April 2011. Also Tuesday, prosecutors filed aggravated escape and felony theft charges against Cardenas, who escaped from the Ness County Jail after his conviction and was later apprehended in Trego County.================== Man to Face Trial in Girl's Stray-Bullet DeathWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man accused in the stray-bullet killing of a sleeping 8-year-old girl has been ordered to stand trial. Twenty-four-year-old Zachary Gaston is charged with first-degree murder in the September 4 killing of Kimbra Moore at a mobile home park. KFDI-FM reports a Sedgwick County judge ordered Gaston to go on trial following a preliminary hearing Tuesday. Police have said the gunfire followed an early-morning dispute in a nearby parking lot between a group of four men and a man in a stolen car. Gaston is accused of shooting at the car while chasing it into the mobile home park. A police officer testified Tuesday about noticing a bullet hole in the side of Kimbra's mobile home and going inside to find the little girl dead in her bed.================ 2 Bins Collapse at NW Kansas Grain ElevatorOAKLEY, Kan. (AP) — No injuries were reported but a lot of corn is on the ground after two grain bins collapsed at a northwest Kansas elevator. The Hays Daily News reports the exterior walls of the two concrete bins at one end of Frontier Ag's elevator annex in Oakley gave way around 2:30 pm Tuesday. Emergency personnel said all employees were accounted for. Frontier Ag grain marketing manager Ben Brandvik says each bin could hold about 25,000 bushels when full. He said the far end of the elevator was not very full when the walls crumbled, although a witness reported seeing a large of amount of spilled corn. Brandvik says insurance adjusters are surveying the damage to determine when it will be safe to start cleanup efforts. The cause of the collapse is under investigation.================== Reno County Tightens Aerial Fireworks RestrictionsHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Reno County officials have approved new restrictions on fireworks that prohibit any fireworks that emit flaming balls or shoot sparks more than 6 feet. The commission on Tuesday also voted to ban aerial luminaries, or sky lanterns, and shortened by one hour the hours fireworks may be sold or discharged. The Hutchinson News reports the new rules are the same as those recently passed by the Hutchinson City Council. County commissioners briefly considered an exception for some rural residents but chose not to after hearing from Hutchinson Fire Chief Kim Forbes. Forbes says the regulations let people get a permit for a "commercial public" fireworks display if it is supervised by someone holding a fireworks operator's license and have $500,000 in liability insurance.================== KU's Dole Institute to Host Post-Election ConferenceLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas is holding a post-election conference of strategists, journalists and pollsters to analyze the 2012 presidential campaign. The free, public event will take place from 3 pm to 6:30 pm on December 6, and 8:30 am to 10 am on December 7 at the Dole Institute. Campaign officials for President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney will join other political insiders talking about the issues and outcome of the election. Topics will also include how Obama's next term will differ from his first, and what the future holds for the GOP. The Dole Institute of Politics has hosted similar gatherings since 2006 looking at how and why elections are won and lost.================== KU Launches Online Exhibition of Black PhotographyLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A photo collection featuring images of African-Americans in Wichita from the late 1940s through the 1970s is now available online through the University of Kansas Libraries. The photos were taken by Leon K. Hughes, who began his photography career in 1946 while working in the city's aircraft industry. Hughes became a leading photographer for Wichita's family, church and civic events. He shot marriages, birthdays, graduations and more. The collection offers an inside view of the African-American community. Hughes died in 1978. His widow donated the photos in 2009. The interactive online collection includes more than 1,000 images. Some details about the photos and their subjects aren't known, and curators hope those viewing the images will submit any information they have.==================Number 7-Ranked K-State Working to Recover from DisappointmentMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State couldn't pick a better place to convalesce than Manhattan, Kansas. The home of the seventh-ranked Wildcats is tucked away in the Flint Hills, far enough away from the noise and distractions that come with major college football, and should provide a good place for them to recover from last week's monumental disappointment at Baylor. The Wildcats were ranked number 1 in the BCS standings when they were trounced 52-24 by the Bears. They could still sneak into the national title game, but it's a longshot now. The reality is they're likely playing for a Big 12 title — and nothing more — next Saturday against Texas. The Wildcats (10-1, 7-1) are off this week. They'll return Sunday to begin prepping for the Longhorns.==================Quinn Next Up for Chiefs on QB CarouselKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Brady Quinn is getting another shot on the Kansas City Chiefs' quarterback merry-go-round. Coach Romeo Crennel announced Wednesday that Quinn will start Sunday's game against the Denver Broncos, regaining the job he lost when he sustained a concussion against Oakland. Quinn was cleared to play last week against Cincinnati and came on in the second half for the ineffective Matt Cassel, who was the starter early in the season before sustaining his own concussion. That thrust Quinn, a former first-round draft pick, into the starting lineup against Tampa Bay, and when Cassel was cleared to play, Crennel decided to stick with Quinn on a permanent basis. He lasted less than a quarter before getting hurt against the Raiders on October 28.==================Kansas Bioscience Authority Hires New PresidentOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A former top executive at Topeka-based Payless ShoeSource has been chosen to head the Kansas Bioscience Authority. Authority officials announced the selection of Duane Cantrell as president and CEO on Tuesday. He'll replace David Vranicar, who became interim president after former president and CEO Tom Thornton resigned under pressure in 2011. The Kansas Bioscience Authority is charged with investing in and nurturing new companies in the biosciences and life sciences fields. Cantrell is currently the managing partner of a retail consulting firm. Before that he spent 26 at Payless ShoeSource, where he was president from 2001-2004. Authority Board chairman Dan Watkins says Cantrell became a candidate after serving as a consultant in recent months. Watkins said Vranicar would stay on with KBA in a capacity to be determined.================== Southwest Airlines to Offer Wichita FlightsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Southwest Airlines says it will begin service in June from Wichita Mid-Continent Airport. The Wichita Eagle reports the carrier said Monday it plans to have two daily flights from Wichita to Dallas Love Field, along with two daily flights to Chicago Midway Airport. It also plans one daily flight to Las Vegas. Wichita officials welcomed the announcement as a boon to the city's economic development efforts. Southwest plans to use a 143-seat Boeing 737 for its Dallas and Chicago flights and a 127-seat 737 for the Las Vegas flights. One-way rates are expected to range between $94 and $178. Bob Montgomery, the company's vice president for airport affairs, says the airline may initially use public subsidies to mitigate its risk, but hopes business grows so they aren't needed.================== Survey Establishes Baseline in Kansas Children's StatusTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State University researchers have completed a report on baseline data on childhood poverty that will be used in efforts to improve the lives of children, including reducing the number of births to unwed mothers. The data was presented Monday as a new task force created by Governor Sam Brownback begins its work finding ways to reduce childhood poverty in Kansas. The task force includes members of the Republican governor's cabinet, nonprofit organizations and the clergy. The Kansas State report ranked all 105 counties based on 18 indicators, including the percentage of children in poverty, divorce, employment and births to unwed mothers. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that a senior fellow from the Brookings Institution says births to unwed mothers was a leading cause of poverty.
  • Connecticut Deaths Have Kansas Governor Focusing on Mental Health Services TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says he wants to examine whether the state is providing adequate mental health services in the wake of last week's mass killings at a Connecticut school. But in an interview Thursday with The Associated Press, Brownback also said he's wary of having a debate about gun control. He says the issue is so politically polarized, and debating it would prevent discussion of other issues. Brownback has previously limited his comments about the killings at Sandy Hook Elementary School to expressing support for the victims' families. A gunman killed 26 people, including 20 children, before turning his weapon on himself. Brownback said he's examining whether Kansas spends enough on mental health services and whether the money is spent effectively.================Spokesperson: Governor Has No Timetable for Filling Cabinet JobTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A top aide says that Kansas Governor Sam Brownback has no timetable for filling a key Cabinet post in his administration. Spokeswoman Sherriene Jones-Sontag said Brownback expects to name an acting secretary of administration to replace Dennis Taylor, who leaves the job next month. Jones-Sontag said the governor plans to conduct a thorough search for a permanent secretary. Taylor will become executive director of the Kansas Lottery on January 13. He'll replace Dennis Wilson, who resigned earlier this month for health reasons. The secretary of administration is typically a close adviser to the governor, running a department that oversees state contracting, personnel and computer services. Taylor has held city and state government positions for 35 years and served in former Governor Mike Hayden's Cabinet.================Driving Hazardous as Winter Storm Crossed KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Driving was challenging in northeast Kansas Thursday morning, as workers struggled to keep roads clear of snow driven by strong winds. Interstate 70, which was closed on Wednesday, was open statewide Thursday morning with conditions described as icy and snow packed. A semitrailer was off the road near the Douglas-Shawnee county line as traffic was moving noticeably slower. The Kansas Department of Transportation reported that a stretch of U.S. 36 from just west of Troy to the Missouri border was closed in northeast Kansas. More than 30 schools called off classes across the state, with some opening late. Governor Sam Brownback delayed the opening of state offices in Shawnee County until midmorning, while only essential staff members were required to report to Fort Leavenworth. At the height of the storm, Kansas City Power & Light reported about 40,000 outages in Missouri and Kansas. The numbers were down to 380 in Kansas and 6,000 in Missouri by early afternoon.================ Blowing Snow, Slick Spots Bedevil US 36 in Northeast KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Blowing snow and slick spots have made driving difficult along U.S. 36 in northeast Kansas. A short portion of the highway from Wathena east to the Missouri border was closed Thursday morning because motorists were sliding off the road. But the Kansas Department of Transportation reported that by mid-morning, all roads in northeast Kansas were open. All Star Travel Plaza employee Joetta Wagoner says she slid off the highway twice early Thursday, trying to get to work at the truck stop at the junction of U.S. 36 and U.S. 73 in Hiawatha. She was coming in because two managers couldn't get in. She said only a couple of inches of snow fell, but wind created white-out conditions, preventing people from seeing anything.================ Patrol Blames Winter Weather for Fatal AccidentDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified the man killed in a three-vehicle collision in southwestern Kansas blamed on the season's first big snowstorm. The crash happened amid blizzard conditions shortly before 8 pm Wednesday on U.S. 50, about 13 miles east of Dodge City. The Kansas Highway Patrol says a westbound tractor-trailer and an eastbound GMC vehicle collided head-on. A second westbound vehicle then ran into the others.The crash killed 21-year-old Roy Gaytan, of Dallas, Texas. He was a passenger in the GMC. Authorities initially said it appeared the tractor-trailer had crossed the center line. But the Highway Patrol on Thursday said the crash was still under investigation.================Wichita Officials Apologize for Icy StreetsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Top officials in Wichita have apologized for failing to prevent streets from icing up just before a morning rush-hour that saw dozens of accidents. The Wichita Eagle reports that Mayor Carl Brewer and city manager Robert Layton issued the apologies Thursday and pledged to do a better job the next time freezing precipitation is in the forecast. With the forecast late Wednesday calling for a light dusting of snow, city crews were prepared overnight to treat and clear intersections, hills and curves. But the snow was preceded by rain, and the temperature stayed above freezing. Layton says crews were caught by surprise when the temperature suddenly plummeted after 6 am, creating a glaze of ice on the roads.================ Some Flights Canceled Due to Midwest Winter StormDALLAS (AP) — American Airlines has canceled about 120 flights due to a winter storm making its snowy way across the Midwest and other bad weather. A spokeswoman for Fort Worth-based American said Thursday that the carrier is trying to delay and not cancel flights for customers trying to make their holiday travel plans. Andrea Huguely says some flights were canceled following thunderstorms in the Dallas-Fort Worth area Wednesday night. Some bus travel has also been disrupted by heavy snow and strong winds that combined for blizzard conditions from Kansas to Wisconsin. Maureen Richmond with Dallas-based Greyhound Bus Lines says the carrier's main delays Thursday were in Minnesota and Wisconsin, on routes between Minneapolis and Milwaukee. She did not immediately have figures on cancellations.================Regents Greenlight Tougher Admissions Standards for KUTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Beginning in 2016, students wanting to study at the University of Kansas will have to meet increased admission standards. The Kansas Board of Regents on Wednesday approved the new standards. Admission standards will remain the same at the other five regents universities in Kansas. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the new standards will require graduating high school students to complete a pre-college curriculum. For automatic admission, they also will be required to have either a minimum 3.0 GPA and an ACT score of at least 24 or SAT of at least 1090, or a minimum 3.25 GPA and an ACT score of 21 or SAT of 980. A committee will review applications from students who don't meet the criteria for automatic admission.================Kansas Regents Approve Room and Board IncreasesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Students at the state's six universities will pay more for room and board next year. The Kansas Board of Regents on Wednesday approved rate increases for all six schools, ranging from a 3.7 percent increase at Emporia State University to 1.08 percent at Fort Hays State. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that other rate increases will be 2.5 percent at the University of Kansas; 3.5 percent at Kansas State and Wichita State universities; and 3 percent at Pittsburg State.================Brownback Urges Moment of Silence for Newtown DeadTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback is urging Kansans to observe a moment of silence this Friday for the victims of the school massacre in Newtown, Connecticut. Brownback and governors across the country are calling for people to pause and reflect at 9:30 a.m. in local time zones. That's the hour of the shooting last Friday at Sandy Hook Elementary School. The gunman killed 20 first-graders and six adults before committing suicide. He also killed his mother at their home. Brownback described the crime as "senseless" in a news release Wednesday. He says that the state's "hearts and prayers are with everyone in Newtown."================Topeka Police Investigating City's 16th HomicideTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka police say a man is in custody for questioning in the stabbing death of a woman. The woman was found dead Wednesday night at an apartment complex. The victim was in her 40s but her name has not been released. Lieutenant Ron Gish says a 23-year-old man is in custody. The Topeka Capital-Journal reportsGish said the suspect told his mother he had stabbed a woman in an apartment. The woman's death is the city's 16th homicide this year.================Drought Continues to Grip MidwestST. LOUIS (AP) — The worst U.S. drought in decades continues its iron-fisted grip across much of the nation's key farming states, though some relief could come from the first major snowstorm of the season trekking eastward across the Midwest. Thursday's weekly U.S. Drought Monitor update shows that roughly 62 percent of the continental U.S. remains in some form of drought, unchanged from the previous week. That number has been above 60 percent largely since July. Nearly 22 percent of the lower 48 states are in extreme or exceptional drought, the two worst categories. That's up a half of a percentage point from a week earlier. The latest numbers are as of Tuesday, before the arrival of the Midwest's first winter snowstorm. All of South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Oklahoma are officially classified as experiencing drought conditions.================Atkins Diet Backer Indicted for Tax EvasionKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence obesity specialist who co-authored the "Atkins Diabetes Revolution" with the late weight loss expert and others has been indicted on tax evasion charges. The U.S. attorney's office said Wednesday that Doctor Mary Vernon is charged with five counts of tax evasion and one count of making a false statement to a bank to obtain a loan. The "Atkins Diabetes Revolution" was published in 2004, a year after the death of Dr. Robert Atkins. The 60-year-old Vernon earned almost $800,000 by working for Atkins' companies from 2003 to 2008. While applying to refinance a home, she is accused of providing documents purported to be income tax returns from 2006 and 2007. But she didn't file returns either year. Vernon didn't immediately return a phone call from The Associated Press.================Midwest, Plains Bankers See Rural Economy GrowingOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A new survey of rural bankers shows that rising commodity prices and lower energy costs are helping businesses in Midwestern states and the northern Plains. The Rural Mainstreet Index released Thursday climbed in December, the fourth straight month of growth. Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, says the reading is the healthiest recorded since June 2007. The survey showed increases in bank borrowing to purchase farmland and equipment, and rising farmland prices. The December hiring index rose half a point, to 53.5. The home-sales index slipped in December, to 61.3 from November's 62.0. The index ranges from 0 to 100, with 50 representing "growth neutral." It's based on a survey of rural bankers in Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming.================ Kansas Man Sentenced to 10 Years for Enticing MinorKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A 24-year-old Kansas man has been sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for using his cell phone to send graphic texts and photos to a 13-year-old girl. Richard J. Byler of Baxter Springs was sentenced Wednesday. He pleaded guilty earlier to attempting to entice a minor to engage in illegal sexual activity. The U.S. Attorney's office for western Missouri says in a release that the child's mother discovered the texts in August 2012 and told authorities. The child met Byler earlier in the summer when she was performing community service at a Joplin non-profit where Byler worked. Federal prosecutors say a law enforcement officer then portrayed himself as the girl on her cell phone, and Byler asked that she send him nude images and proposed meeting for sex.================ Appeals Court Allows Lawsuit in Child's DeathWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal appeals court has reinstated a lawsuit alleging that a Kansas social worker's inaction led to the beating death of a 23-month-old girl. The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver Wednesday reversed a ruling by a Kansas court throwing out the lawsuit against Linda Gillen. She no longer works for the Kansas social services agency, but the state is defending her in court. The maternal grandparents of Brooklyn Coons of Coffeyville allege in the lawsuit that Gillen intentionally ignored their complaints about their granddaughter's care. The girl was beaten to death in January 2008. Her father's girlfriend, Melissa Wells, was convicted of murdering the girl. The Wichita Eagle reports the appeals court said the remaining issue is whether Gillen intentionally failed to act on the grandparents' complaints.================ Disbarred KC Attorney Seeks Return of Law LicenseKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A disbarred Kansas City attorney whose conviction for killing his law partner was overturned wants his law license back. Richard Buchli II was convicted in 2002 of first-degree murder in the death of his partner, Richard Armitage, in their Kansas City law office. The Missouri Supreme Court disbarred him in 2005 based on the conviction. A judge overturned the conviction 2006 because evidence was withheld from the defense. Jackson County prosecutors dismissed the case earlier this year after a judge threw out most of the evidence. Buchli is asking the Missouri Supreme Court to rescind his disbarment. The Kansas City Star reports that the Jackson County (Missouri) prosecutor and Armitage's widow object to Buchli getting his law license back.================Convict Among Two Topeka Attorneys DisbarredTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka attorney who stole more than $460,000 from several clients' trust funds and another accused of inadequately representing clients will no longer be able to practice law. Dockets provided by the Kansas Supreme Court on Wednesday show that Robert Telthorst and Steven Rosel have been disbarred. The Topeka Capital-Journal reported that the men voluntarily surrendering their law licenses previously. Telthorst pleaded guilty last month to wire fraud and money laundering. He admitted to taking clients' money for his personal use. Meanwhile, three professional conduct complaints had been filed against Rosel. He's accused of making inappropriate advances toward a client's wife and then charging for the time he spent talking to her. Another client says that while he was being interviewed by police, Rosel was "disinterested, and possibly asleep."================Longtime Kansas Teacher Killed in AccidentLOUISBURG, Kan. (AP) — Students and staff at Louisburg High School are mourning the death of a longtime teacher. Miami County authorities say 67-year-old Glenda Beasley was killed Wednesday afternoon on Kansas 68 about one mile west of Louisburg. She had stopped for a school bus that was dropping off children when a pickup truck struck her from behind. Beasley was dead at the scene. The truck driver suffered minor injuries. KMBC-TV reportsBeasley was a business and computer teacher at the high school. She had been a teacher for 29 years and was planning to retire at the end of the school year. About 200 people gathered at the school Wednesday after word of her death spread. Officials said counselors would be on hand Thursday and final exams were postponed.================Kansas Geological Survey to Measure GroundwaterLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Crews from the Kansas Geological Survey will be in western Kansas in early January to measure groundwater levels in more than 500 wells. The work is part of the survey's efforts to track changes in the depth of the region's aquifers. The University of Kansas said in a news release that crews will work near Colby, Goodland, Syracuse and Liberal during the first week of January. The state's Division of Water Resources will measure water levels in nearly 900 more wells in the central and western park of the state. The monitoring focuses on the massive High Plains aquifer system, which consists largely of the Ogallala aquifer. The data is used by landowners, state and federal agencies, local groundwater management districts, private entities and the general public.================$50 Million Powerball Ticket Sold in NE KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Someone in northeast Kansas is a new multimillionaire. Kansas lottery officials say a single ticket sold in northeast Kansas matched all six numbers in Wednesday night's Powerball drawing. The jackpot was worth an estimated $50 million. The ticket matched the numbers of 5-8-20-23-30 with a Powerball of 3. State lottery officials say the cash option for the prize is an estimated $32.6 million. Details of where in the ticket was sold were not immediately released.================Chiefs Prepare for Mirthless Home Finale vs ColtsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Arrowhead Stadium hasn't been much of a home-field advantage for the Chiefs lately. Kansas City must win its home finale Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts to avoid having a single home win over the course of a season for the third time in five years. Prior to that, the Chiefs had won more than once at Arrowhead Stadium every season since 1977. Kansas City is a combined 12-27 over the past five seasons, a winning percentage of .308 — well below the Chiefs' success rate of better than 57 percent at their 40-year-old home. Empty seats have been multiplying with every loss the past two seasons, too. While the Chiefs' average home attendance remains 69,304 — good for 13th in the NFL — it also represents just 90.3 percent of capacity, better only than six teams in the league.================Chiefs' Charles Focused on Finishing Strong KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles says he's focused on finishing strong after coming back from a devastating knee injury and then dealing with a murder-suicide that hit close to home. Charles tore his left ACL early last season, but has returned to be one of the few bright spots for the 2-12 Chiefs. He's run for 1,230 yards and four touchdowns this year. What he's overcome physically pales in comparison to what he's dealt with emotionally. Three weeks ago Saturday, Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher shot to death his girlfriend, Kasandra Perkins, and then drove to Arrowhead Stadium and committed suicide. Perkins was the cousin of Charles's wife, Whitney, and Charles introduced her to Belcher. Charles declined to talk about the shootings Thursday, saying "I just want to talk about football."================Storm Closes Roads in KSTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Portions of two major highways in northwestern Kansas have been closed because of hazardous winter weather conditions. A powerful storm moving out of the Rockies on Wednesday created near blizzard conditions in portions of the state. Transportation officials closed sections of Interstate 70 and U.S. 36. Blowing snow also contributed to a crash that closed Kansas 96 between Tribune and Leoti. At least two school districts canceled Wednesday classes ahead of the storm. **this story has been updated. Please see above. ================Snow Storm Dumps Foot of Snow in RockiesDENVER (AP) — A storm that has dumped more than a foot of snow in the Rocky Mountains is causing problems for travelers as it spreads across the Plains. The main east-west route across Colorado, Interstate 70, was closed from east of Denver to the Kansas line because of poor visibility due to blowing snow Wednesday. Smaller highways were also closed in eastern Colorado. Drivers in Iowa and Nebraska were being warned to be careful or stop driving altogether starting yesterday evening as the Plains gets its first major winter storm of the season. Light snow was also expected at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport Thursday and strong winds could make visibility poor. National Weather Service forecaster Jamie Enderlen says that, combined with low clouds, could cause delays at the nation's second-busiest airport.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • UPDATE: Parties Agree to Delay in KCC Open Meetings LawsuitTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas prosecutor has agreed to delay his lawsuit against the Kansas Corporation Commission over alleged open meetings violations while the utility regulatory board reviews its policies. Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor said Wednesday he filed a motion in state court agreeing to a 120-day stay while the KCC conducts a voluntary audit of its procedures. Taylor's June 19 lawsuit alleges the three-member commission violated the Kansas Open Meetings Act by taking binding action on a Salina water rate increase without convening in public to vote. Taylor's office says the motion was filed Tuesday in Shawnee County District Court.=============Kansas Joins Drug Settlement CaseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas has joined a nationwide settlement over adulterated drugs manufactured by an India-based company. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the Kansas Attorney General's office said in a news release Wednesday that a federal investigation found evidence that India-based Ranbaxy made and distributed 26 generic drugs that did not meet standards set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The 26 drugs were manufactured in two plants in India and included prescription products intended for children, such as the antibiotic amoxicillin. The settlement orders that about $324,000 be refunded to the Kansas Medicaid program. Ranbaxy also entered into a consent decree with the federal government to address outstanding manufacturing quality and data integrity issues at the two manufacturing plants in India.=============White House: Westboro Protests 'Reprehensible'WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says it can't fulfill a request to deem a group that protests at soldiers' funerals a hate group. But it says President Barack Obama believes such actions are reprehensible. The Obama administration is responding to petitions through the White House website to label the Westboro Baptist Church a hate group and revoke its tax-exempt status. Almost 700,000 people signed five related petitions. The group claims when American troops die, it's God's punishment for America tolerating homosexuality and abortion. The White House says the federal government doesn't maintain a list of hate groups. But it's releasing a map showing where the petition-signers come from. The map shows high density in Kansas, where the Westboro group is based, and Connecticut, where church members threatened to picket Newtown victims' funerals.=============New Report: Kansas Highway System No. 2 in Nation TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new report from a libertarian-leaning think tank rates the Kansas highway system second among all states for its overall condition and cost-effectiveness. The Reason Foundation ranked Kansas only behind North Dakota in its annual report on state road systems. In the previous two years, the Los Angeles-based group rated Kansas third in the nation. The foundation said Kansas kept its highways in good condition while having lower-than-average costs per-mile for maintenance and administrative costs. The latest report was based on data reported to the federal government in 2009. The following year, Kansas started a 10-year, $8 billion transportation program, following up on programs in 1989 and 1999. Transportation Secretary Mike King said Tuesday that Kansas will continue to have a "world-class" system.============= Kansas Launches Jobs, Education Site for Veterans TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new website has been launched by the state of Kansas to help link military veterans with educational and employment opportunities. The new KanVet site was announced this week by Governor Sam Brownback and Major General Lee Tafanelli, state adjutant general. It's aimed at active duty veterans, as well as members of the National Guard. Veterans will be able to use the site to find information about educational opportunities in Kansas, including lists of schools and links to scholarship programs. The employment portion offers links to state agencies, the Kansas National Guard, career fairs and information about starting a business. Other information about services and programs and veterans can be found through a link on the site to the Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs.============= Manhattan Man Considers Senate Run Against Roberts MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Manhattan man says he's considering a run against Republican U.S. Senator Pat Roberts. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Aaron Estabrook says he is forming an exploratory committee to look into running against Roberts, who's up for re-election in 2014. Estabrook, an Army veteran, works at the Salvation Army as a case manager for homeless veterans in northern Kansas. He says he'd run under the banner of the "Moderate Party of Kansas," a political action committee he co-founded last year. He ran unsuccessfully for the Kansas House as a Democrat last year. Roberts spokeswoman Sarah Little says Roberts doesn't take any election for granted "and will continue to fight for Kansans each and every day whomever his opponent may be." Roberts is a U.S. Marine Corps veteran.============= Kansas Ag Secretary Announces Management Changes TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Agriculture Secretary Dale Rodman has made changes in the department's top management because of the departures of two high-level administrators. Rodman announced Tuesday the immediate promotion of Assistant Secretary Jackie McClaskey to deputy secretary. McClaskey has worked in the Agriculture Department since January 2011. Erik Wisner will become assistant secretary for administrative services next week. He is now a special assistant on regulatory and policy matters. Chad Bontrager will become an assistant secretary in August, overseeing agribusiness development, food safety and lodging inspections and the state's weights and measures program. He is currently agribusiness development coordinator. They'll replace Assistant Secretary Kim Christiansen, who will become executive director at the utility-regulating Kansas Corporation Commission, and Assistant Secretary Jim Riemann, who's retiring in August.=============Kansas Child Recovering After Pit Bull MaulingHOISINGTON, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas boy is in a Wichita hospital after being mauled by a neighbor's pit bull. KAKE-TV reports that the 4-year-old from Hoisington was in critical condition Wednesday. Hoisington police say the boy was playing in a backyard Monday afternoon when the dog jumped a fence and attacked him. The boy was taken first to a Barton County hospital, then transferred to Wichita due to the severity of his injuries. The pit bull was euthanized and tested negative for rabies.=============Kansas Teen Being Questioned in Father's KillingSHAWNEE, Kan. (AP) — Police in a northeast Kansas community have detained a 14-year-old boy after the fatal shooting of his father. KMBC-TV reports the shooting occurred around 3 pm Tuesday during a custody exchange in the Johnson County community of Shawnee. Police said the boy's mother and stepfather had taken him to a business in rural Shawnee to exchange custody with the mother's ex-husband. Investigators believe the boy walked over to a car where his father was waiting and shot him with a handgun. The mother and stepfather were inside the building at the time. The father's name has not been released. Police say they have no other suspects and don't yet know a possible motive.=============Dodge City Approves Wind Turbine MeasureDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Officials in Dodge City have approved a measure to allow wind energy systems in all zoning districts, including residential areas. The Dodge City Globe reports that the city commission on Monday approved an amendment to the 2000 Dodge City zoning ordinance to add wind energy conversion systems as a conditional use in all zoning districts. Dodge City spokeswoman Jane Longmeyer says the Dodge City Planning Commission held a public hearing on April 16 and recommended permitting wind energy conversion systems on residential and commercial property. City Clerk Nannette Pogue says while wind turbines will now be permitted on residential and commercial property regulations will address how much land is needed for the turbines and how far they must be from buildings.=============New KU Program Aims to Fill Rural Social Worker VoidLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is starting a new program to address a shortage of social workers in western Kansas. Data collected by the university's School of Social Welfare shows that fewer than 200 of the state's 4,000 licensed social workers live in the western half of the state. Last month, the school launched a new yearlong Master of Social Work program based in western Kansas. It's the state's first such program west of Wichita. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that students will complete some work online. They'll also go to class every other weekend at either Fort Hays State University or Garden City Community College. Their instructors will be experienced local social workers. University of Kansas faculty will set the curriculum and provide training.=============Defendant Pleads No Contest in Topeka DeathTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — One of nine defendants charged in the shooting death of a Topeka woman has pleaded no contest. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that 21-year-old Bayate Rayshawn Covington pleaded no contest Tuesday in Shawnee County court to reckless second-degree murder and other charges in the July 2011 shooting death of Natalie Gibson. Sentencing for Covington is July 18. Gibson was killed during an attempted robbery at her home that also left another woman wounded. Terms of the plea include requiring Covington to testify in pending cases related to the death. Five other defendants in the case have been sentenced, two await trials, and the case of another hasn't been resolved yet.============= Lawrence Police Seeking Parking Meter ThiefLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence police are looking for help finding a thief who's been stealing downtown parking meters. The Lawrence Journal-World reports the thief has apparently used a pipe cutter, or a similar tool, to saw off at least five parking meter posts since April. At least two parking meters were also reported stolen in Lawrence in 2010, though it's not clear how they were removed. Police say the destruction of parking meters is far more costly than the loss of the coins in the meter. The cost to replace the post and meter heads is about $800 for the single meters and $1600 for dual-meter assemblies. Police are asking business owners, residents and visitors to call 911 if they see someone tampering with a parking meter.============= Feds Charge 9 KSU Students with Visa FraudTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Nine Kansas State University students from Nepal have been charged with scheming to commit visa fraud. A federal indictment unsealed Tuesday alleges the students conspired to maintain their visas by temporarily pooling their money. Prosecutors contend the goal was to make it appear they had sufficient funds to meet requirements that they could support themselves. All nine are charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud plus varying counts of visa fraud. The government alleges the students presented a notarized bank letter to their international student adviser to obtain certification of financial responsibility. The indictment says that once they got the needed documents, they returned most of the temporarily obtained funds. The U.S. attorney's office says the maximum penalty for each count is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.============= Kansas Utility Regulators Approve Operations ChangesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas board that regulates utilities has approved operational changes after replacing its top staff member and facing allegations that it violated the state's Open Meetings Act. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the Kansas Corporation Commission decided Tuesday to schedule two public meetings a week to handle routine business, rather than just one. Also, the KCC will require that major staff changes be reviewed by all three commission members. Chairman Mark Sievers confirmed Tuesday that he removed Patti Petersen-Klein as KCC executive director in June. The move came after a consultant's report said there was a rift between her and KCC employees. Also in June, the Shawnee County prosecutor filed an open meetings lawsuit against the commission following a water rate increase for a Salina housing development.============= Kansas Star Casino Postpones Tim McGraw Concert MULVANE, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Star casino south of Wichita is postponing Sunday's performance by country singer Tim McGraw to avoid conflicting with a weekend concert for tornado relief in Oklahoma. McGraw was to have been the inaugural performer in the casino's new arena. Kansas Star said Tuesday the show has been rescheduled to October 12. On Saturday, a large cast of country stars including Toby Keith, Garth Brooks, Willie Nelson and Ronnie Dunn will perform in Norman, Oklahoma to raise money for tornado recovery. Tickets for McGraw's postponed show in Kansas will be honored at the October concert. Kansas Star also says it will donate $5 from each ticket sold for either date to Oklahoma's relief efforts.=============1 Killed, 2 Injured in Southern Kansas House FireCALDWELL, Kan. (AP) — One person was killed and two people were injured in a house fire in south-central Kansas. According to The Wichita Eagle, the fire was reported early Wednesday at the home in Sumner County. Caldwell Fire Chief Pat York says that when firefighters arrived the single-family home was fully engulfed in flames. The names of the victim and the injured people were not released. York says the state fire marshal is investigating the cause of the fire.=============Wichita Woman Leaves $6 Million Gift to UniversityWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Officials at Wichita State University say a philanthropist who died last year left a $6 million estate gift to the school's foundation. The university announced the donation from Velma Wallace on Tuesday. She had been a longtime supporter of Wichita State along with her husband, aviation pioneer and Cessna Aircraft executive Dwane Wallace, who died in 1989. More than half of the money will be added to the Dwane and Velma Wallace Endowment Fund, which benefits engineering students and the College of Engineering. About 39 students received engineering scholarships from the fund the last academic year. Other portions of the estate gift will go to the College of Education, Wichita State athletics and the School of Music. Velma Wallace died last July at the age of 95.=============Missouri Teen Sentenced to 3.5 Years for Fatal CrashPLATTE CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City teenager has been sentenced to three and a half years in prison for causing a fatal accident while texting. The Kansas City Star reports that Rachel N. Gannon pleaded guilty in May 2012 when she was 17 to second-degree involuntary manslaughter, third-degree assault and violating the Missouri law that prohibits motorists 21 or younger from texting while driving. The accident killed 72-year-old Loretta Larimer of Camden Point. Gannon told police she was looking at her phone when she lost control of her vehicle. A judge initially placed Gannon on five years' probation and ordered her to serve 48 hours of "shock time" in jail, find a job, serve 72 days of house arrest and perform 300 hours of community service. Authorities say she has violated that probation.============= Missouri AG Says State May Have to Use Gas Chamber for Executions KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster says that state may have to resort to using the gas chamber to carry out death sentences as an "unintended consequence" of the Missouri Supreme Court's refusal to set execution dates. Executions have been on hold in Missouri since the state Supreme Court has declined to set execution dates. The court says execution dates would be "premature" until a federal legal challenge is resolved regarding the use of the drug propofol as Missouri's new execution method. Koster told The Kansas City Star on Tuesday that if the court doesn't change course, the legislature may have to fund alternative execution methods. The only execution methods authorized in Missouri are lethal gas and injection. Koster says the gas chamber may be the last option to enforce state law.
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