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  • Westar Energy Plant Fire Near Wichita Linked to Transformer Malfunction WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A fire that burned for more than four hours at a Westar Energy plant apparently began when a large transformer malfunctioned. No injuries were reported after the fire Wednesday morning at the plant just east of Colwich. The Wichita Eagle reports more than 20 fire trucks were sent to the plant northwest of Wichita. The fire burned for more than four hours before fire crews were released from the scene. Foam trucks from McConnell Air Force Base were used to help put out the fire. Westar spokesman Nick Bundy says mineral oil used to cool the transformer caught on fire. Two employees at the plant called 911. Bundy says the fire caused no power outages or evacuations. Bundy says no damage estimate was available yet.=====================UPDATE: Kansas Powerball Lottery Ticket Sales Hit $1.1M in 1 Day TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The mammoth jackpot in Wednesday night's Powerball drawing is proving irresistible to thousands of hopeful Kansans. The Kansas Lottery reports that sales of Powerball tickets in the state topped $1.1 million on Tuesday alone, for a total of nearly $1.8 million since Sunday. And that was when the jackpot was estimated at a mere $500 million. On Wednesday morning, officials of the multistate game boosted the estimated payout to $550 million. Kansas Lottery officials were expecting another huge sales day Wednesday. Ticket sales in Kansas end at 8:59 pm Central, one hour before the drawing. A winner taking the cash option of a $550 million jackpot would get $360.2 million before taxes.=====================Ex-Senator Dole Hospitalized for Routine ProcedureWASHINGTON (AP) — Former Senator Bob Dole of Kansas has checked himself into Walter Reed Army Medical Center for what his spokeswoman described as a routine procedure. Spokeswoman Marion Watkins says the 89-year-old Dole is "doing very well" and is expected to leave the hospital Wednesday. Dole's name drew mention as the Senate on Tuesday debated a U.N. treaty promoting equal rights for the disabled. Dole overcame disabling war wounds to forge a 36-year political career. In the early 1990s, he underwent successful surgery for prostate cancer and in 2001 he had surgery to treat an aneurysm. Dole spent 10 months at Walter Reed in 2010 after suffering pneumonia following knee surgery. He was the Republican nominee for president in 1996, losing to Bill Clinton.=====================Investigators: Fires in St. Marys Were ArsonST. MARYS, Kan. (AP) — Investigators in northeastern Kansas are looking for links between recent arson fires at a partly demolished grain elevator and a nearby home. The Manhattan Mercury reports officials have identified two people as "persons of interest" in the St. Marys fires. The first blaze broke out around 2 am Friday at the downtown St. Marys grain elevator owned by Nemaha County Co-op. The fire destroyed the elevator, which was being razed. It also scattered chunks of burning wood for several blocks and caused heat damage to nearby buildings. Late Sunday, another fire broke out at an unoccupied residence about a block from the elevator. Authorities say that fire was also intentionally set. St. Marys is located about 25 miles northwest of Topeka.=====================Topeka, State Win in Lawsuit over Drowning DeathsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Shawnee County judge has ruled the city of Topeka and the state of Kansas were not liable in a lawsuit filed by the father of a Topeka man who drowned when a canoe capsized in the Kansas River in 2007. Jim Bryant, the father of one of two men who drowned, alleged in the lawsuit that authorities did not adequately warn boaters of the danger posed by a low-water weir on the river. Twenty-five-year-old Joshua Bryant and 30-year-old Richard Heyroth drowned when their canoe capsized after it went over a spillway in August 2007. Shawnee County Judge Larry Hendricks on Tuesday rejected Byrant's contention. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the judge ruled the city and state did not show "wanton or gross conduct" regarding the river conditions.=====================Federal Judge Grants Extension in Salina Cleanup Settlement TalksSALINA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has granted an extension to groups trying to reach a financial settlement to clean up contamination at a former Air Force base in Salina. Federal District Judge Carlos Murguia on Tuesday gave the groups until February 15 to finalize the financial settlement for cleaning up the pollution at the former Schilling Air Force base. The deadline had been Tuesday. Soil and groundwater at the base, which was closed in the mid-1960s, is contaminated with the toxic solvent TCE, or trichloroethylene. Several Salina public entities, including the city of Salina and the Salina Airport Authority, filed a federal lawsuit in 2010, seeking a settlement to recoup the cost of cleaning up the pollution. The parties reached a proposed deal earlier and are trying to finalize the details.===================== Former NFL Players to Meet with Military to Discuss Brain InjuriesFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Former Kansas City Chiefs players, including Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker Willie Lanier, are heading to Fort Leavenworth for talks with Army officials on traumatic brain injuries. Wednesday afternoon's meeting at the northeast Kansas post is part of an Army-NFL partnership on treating and preventing head injuries in both organizations. Lanier, who played from 1967 through 1977, serves on an NFL player safety panel studying ways to make the game safer. Lanier suffered numerous concussions in his early playing days before converting to a padded helmet and changing his tackling technique. The military has been looking at the impact of traumatic brain injuries as soldiers return from combat.=====================Woman Denied Bid to Withdraw Plea in Kansas KillingEL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — A judge has refused to let a southeastern Kansas woman withdraw her guilty plea in last year's killing of her boyfriend's grandmother. Lyndsey Giovinazzo and Jacob Hoyt were both 19 when they were arrested in December 2011 in the death of Loyce Cody. The 69-year-old teacher was found strangled in her Augusta home; her car and debit cards were missing. The El Dorado Times reports Giovinazzo was in Butler County District Court on Tuesday, seeking to change her plea of guilty to first-degree murder. Judge Jan Satterfield rejected the defendant's arguments that she received poor advice from her trial attorney. Giovinazzo will be sentenced December 13. Hoyt, who was Cody's grandson, is scheduled to go on trial December 10.=====================KU Med Gets $100K for Ovarian Cancer ResearchKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas Medical Center has received a $100,000 grant for ovarian cancer research. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the grant is one of 13 announced this month from the Mary Kay Foundation. The foundation for the cosmetics company donated a total of $1.3 million to researchers around the country working on cancers that affect women. The University of Kansas Medical Center said in a release it will use the grant to help develop better technology for detecting and treating early-stage ovarian cancer.=====================Kansas State Researchers Help Sequence Wheat GenesMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State University researchers have helped create a genetic blueprint for many of the traits found in the most common type of wheat. Bikram Gill and Sunish Sehgal were part of an international collaboration that sequenced most of the genes of common wheat, also known as bread wheat. Gill is the director of Kansas State's Wheat Genetics Resource Center, and Sehgal is a research associate in plant pathology. Their study appears in the November 29 issue of the journal Nature. Kansas State says researchers anticipate using the information to improve wheat genetically. The goal is to help growers meet the increasing demand for food and feed. The research also could help scientists learn more about a chromosomal driving force in plant genome evolution.=====================Arkansas River Compact Administrators Plan MeetingGARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — The Arkansas River Compact Administration meets in Kansas next week to review operations at the John Martin Reservoir in Colorado. The panel's annual meeting takes place December 6 in Garden City. Also on the agenda are a compliance update, committee reports, and other developments from state and federal agencies. The group administers provisions of the Kansas-Colorado Arkansas River Compact, including operations at the John Martin Reservoir. The compact was negotiated in 1948 between Kansas and Colorado to settle disputes and remove sources of future controversy over water in the Arkansas River.=====================Professional Hunter Pleads to Hunting ViolationKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Tennessee hunter featured in cable television shows admits he illegally killed a trophy deer in Kansas. Fifty-year-old William "Spook" Spann of Dickson, Tennessee pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court to killing the deer in Stafford County in 2007 and taking its antlers across state lines. Federal prosecutors say Spann, who is featured on several cable television shows and hunting videos, killed the white-tail deer with an arrow on land owned by another person. His permit allowed him to hunt only on land that he owned. Attorneys have agreed to recommend a sentence of three years of probation. His hunting privileges would be suspended in the U.S. for six months, and an additional six months in Kansas. The proposed sentence includes a $10,000 fine and restitution of $10,000 to the state of Kansas.=====================Kansas Governor Launches Weight-Loss ChallengeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback and members of his Cabinet are taking the lead in a weight-loss contest aimed at encouraging Kansans to fight obesity and adopt healthier eating habits. The Republican governor on Tuesday challenged other executive, legislative and judicial branch employees to field five-member teams that will compete to lose the largest percentage of body weight. The contest will run January 15 through May 15. Brownback says the rising obesity rates in Kansas and the nation pose serious health risks. The governor said he's recruiting four members of his Cabinet to join his team. Prizes will be awarded to the top two state employee teams with the biggest weight losses by percentage. Brownback also encouraged local governments and private businesses to form teams and join the challenge.=====================Attorney: Prayer Group Killing Confession Was FabricatedKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ An attorney for a Kansas City man accused of killing the wife of his prayer group leader says he made up his confession. Twenty-three-year-old Micah Moore was charged with murder in the death of 27-year-old Bethany Deaton after he confessed to Grandview police on November 9. He was scheduled for a preliminary hearing Wednesday but that was delayed at prosecutors' request. Moore's attorney Melanie Morgan made a statement afterward, saying Moore didn't kill Deaton, was distraught over her death and made up his confession after being dropped off at the police station by other prayer group members. Morgan did not address Moore's allegations that he killed Deaton at the request of her husband, his prayer group leader, or that Deaton had been sexually assaulted by members of the prayer group. =====================20 KU Freshmen 'Learning Community' Finish FilmLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A new program at the University of Kansas requires high-ability students who all live near each other to complete a project connected to an introductory general-education course they all take. The Mount Oread Scholars program requires the students to take a special seminar that highlights an aspect of the class. Twenty freshmen who took part in the program this semester were enrolled in an introductory film course. They all live on the same floor of a KU residence hall. Although they weren't film majors, the students were required to produce a movie in a month-and-half. The finished product, "Te' Buffet of Life," will be shown Wednesday at the Kansas Union. The Lawrence Journal-World reports the students say the program taught them a lot about teamwork.=====================Judge Sets Hearing over Meatpacking SettlementWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has set a hearing over a proposed class action settlement in a lawsuit by workers against the Creekstone Farms slaughterhouse in Arkansas City. U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren on Wednesday set a fairness hearing on the motion for approval for December 17 at the federal courthouse in Topeka. The lawsuit alleged that Creekstone failed to pay employees for all of the time they worked. Creekstone Farms said it paid for all time worked, including overtime. Under the proposed $195,000 settlement, about $110,000 would be split among the 144 class members. The amount paid each worker would be based on how many overtime weeks the employee worked during the three-year claim period. Most of the rest of the money would go to the employees' attorneys.=====================Ex-NFL Player to Give KSU Commencement SpeechMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Former Kansas State football captain Nick Leckey is graduating and speaking at the university's December commencement nine years after leaving for the NFL without a degree. Leckey earned a Super Bowl ring in 2009 as a center with the New Orleans Saints. He also played for the Arizona Cardinals and the St. Louis Rams. But he remained 46 credits short of the college degree he'd promised his mother and his aunt he would finish. After leaving pro football and moving from Phoenix to Kansas City, he began taking classes at Kansas State as a distance student. Now, he's about to receive a bachelor's degree in hotel and restaurant management. Leckey also will give the student commencement address December 8 for the College of Human Ecology.=====================Missouri Body Shop Owner Admits $2M Bank FraudKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The former owner of a northwest Missouri auto body shop has admitted defrauding three banks of more than $2 million. The U.S. Attorney's office says 35-year-old Clint Edward Dukes, of Mayview, pleaded guilty to bank fraud Wednesday in federal court. Dukes owned the now-defunct Dukes Auto Repair in Higginsville from 2004 to 2011. In his plea, Dukes admitted obtaining nearly $3 million in loans from First Community Bank, US Bank and First Central Bank by falsely claiming he had repair contracts with the state. He also used phony paperwork to hide the fact that he was using loans from each bank to pay off previous loans from the other banks. Prosecutors put the total loss to the banks from the seven-year scheme at slightly more than $2 million.=====================Klein, Manziel Lead Walter Camp Award FinalistsNEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein, Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel and Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o are among the five finalists for the Walter Camp player of the year award. Oregon running back Kenjon Barner and Southern California receiver Marqise Lee are the other finalists. The award will be presented Thursday, December 6. Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck won last year's Walter Camp Award.=====================Record Powerball Jackpot Boosted to $550MDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The record Powerball lottery jackpot is now even bigger. Powerball officials say they've boosted the jackpot for Wednesday's drawing to $550 million from the previously posted $425 million. People in Kansas and 41 other states have been snapping up tickets, pushing the payout higher. Record jackpots often encourage players who usually sit on the sidelines to play, and group purchases from work pools increase. The jackpot is the largest ever for the Powerball game and the second largest lottery jackpot of all time, eclipsed only by the $656 million Mega Millions record set in March. **this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • **UPDATE: 8:38 p.m.KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An official says 14 people have been confirmed as injured in a massive gas explosion in an upscale Kansas City shopping district. Kansas City Manager Troy Schulte says officials don't yet know if anyone was killed in the explosion, which destroyed JJ's restaurant. Authorities also are still trying to determine the full cause of the blast. Schulte says they do know there was a gas leak followed by an explosion. At this point, he says authorities believe it may have stemmed from an accident involving a utility contractor. Earlier, police spokeswoman Rhonda Flores said it appeared that a car crashed into a gas main near JJ's just after 6 p.m. People have been cleared from the area around the restaurant. **This story is continuing to develop. The Associated Press's and KPR's earlier stories on this incident follow.**7:45 p.m. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Police say seven or eight people have been injured in the gas main explosion and fire at a restaurant in the Country Club Plaza shopping district in Kansas City. Police Sergeant Tony Sanders said the manager of JJ's restaurant also has told police three people are unaccounted for, but he doesn't know if they left before the explosion. Sanders says a few of those injured have been taken to hospitals. The Kansas City Star reports that Major Anthony Ell of the Kansas City Police Department says there are no known deaths in connection with the incident. A spokesman for the University of Kansas Hospital reports that the facility is treating five patients, but that all have trauma injuries rather than burn injuries. He said that one of the patients is in critical condition. The Kansas City Star also reports that fire crews said the gas company had shut off the gas flow in the area around 7:45 p.m.**7 p.m. A car crashed into a gas main Tuesday evening in an upscale Kansas City shopping district, sparking a massive blaze that engulfed an entire block and caused multiple injuries, police said. Police spokeswoman Rhonda Flores said it appeared that a car crashed into a gas main near a restaurant at 6:03 p.m. Flores said injuries were reported but that she did not know how many or how severe they are. She noted an initial call for three ambulances had been increased to 10. She said she had not heard of any reported fatalities. Flores said the car crash appeared to have been accidental. Kerry O'Connor, a spokeswoman for St. Luke's Hospital, which is near the scene of the fire, said several patients were on the way to the hospital. She said they haven't been assessed yet but "they appear to be critical at this time." Fire officials didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment Tuesday evening. The smell of gas was very strong near the area long after the suspected explosion. Video showed dozens of firefighters and other emergency responders battling a massive blaze that appeared to have engulfed an entire block, with flames burning through the roofs. Black smoke swirled in the air and debris littered surrounding streets. The shopping area was established in 1922 by J.C. Nichols. Based on the architecture of Seville, Spain, it includes retail, restaurants, apartments and offices. **6 p.m.-6:45 p.m. (culled from area news reports) A massive fire broke out Tuesday evening in an upscale shopping and entertainment district in Kansas City. Fire officials didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment, but television video showed dozens of firefighters and other emergency responders battling a massive blaze through heavy smoke, and debris littering surrounding streets. Multiple Kansas City news outlets reported early in their coverage of the incident that the fire was caused by a gas explosion. The Associated Press reports that Kansas City police now say it appears a car crashed into a gas main before a massive fire erupted in an upscale shopping and entertainment district. Police spokeswoman Rhonda Flores said injuries were reported, but she didn't know how many or how severe. She says an initial call for three ambulances had been increased to 10. Flores said it appears a car crashed into a gas main near a restaurant in the area at about 6:03 p.m. She says the crash appeared to be accidental. KCTV5.com reports that the fire occurred at the site of JJ's Restaurant near 48th Street and Belleview Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri. KMBC-TV reported that a spokesperson for St. Luke's Hospital has confirmed that patients with critical injuries were brought to the facility. KCTV5 says that the University of Kansas Hospital, which operates the area's only burn unit, has reported treating five patients. The Kansas City Star reports that the blaze was a three-alarm fire, with a fourth alarm notification for staffing purposes; that ambulances from Kansas City, Kansas and Johnson County were brought in on standby; and that a nearby apartment building was evacuated. Roads on the west side of the Plaza were closed, and authorities urged people to stay away from the area.
  • UPDATE: Obama's Spot on Kansas Ballot Set as Challenge Ends TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — President Barack Obama's place on the November election ballot in Kansas is now secure. The all-Republican State Objections Board on Monday formally ended its review of whether the Democratic president should be listed as a candidate for re-election. The board's action came after Manhattan resident Joe Montgomery dropped his objection. Montgomery said Friday he was withdrawing his challenge because of what he called intimidation directed at him and people around him. But California lawyer and dentist Orly Taitz showed up at the meeting demanding to speak. She told board members they were ignoring evidence questioning Obama's citizenship. That brought an angry response from Topeka progressive activist T.J. Gaughan. He and a few other Obama supporters shouted at Taitz. A security officer ordered them outside.=================Council Approves Kansas Employee Pay RaisesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Raises for thousands of Kansas state employees have cleared a final step. The increases were given formal approval Monday by the State Finance Council, made up of Governor Sam Brownback and top legislative leaders. Kansas lawmakers approved $11.2 million for the raises in May as part of the state budget for the fiscal year that began in July. Nearly 4,300 state employees will benefit, including some Highway Patrol troopers and corrections officers at state prisons and juvenile detention centers. This is the fourth round of annual raises under a plan approved by the Legislature to bring the salaries of state employees closer to those of private sector workers. The raises were suspended for one year in 2011 because of budget constraints.=================Former Lawmaker Named as Shawnee County Elections OfficialTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has named a former state House member as the top elections official in one of the state's most populous counties. The appointment of 43-year-old Andrew Howell as Shawnee County election commissioner was announced Monday. Howell replaces Elizabeth Ensley Deiter, who stepped down last week to become a magistrate judge for four northeast Kansas counties. Shawnee County is home to the city of Topeka and the state Capitol. Howell runs a small home-renovation company in the Topeka area. He served in the Kansas House from 1995 through 2004. He, like Kobach, is a Republican. Elections in most Kansas counties are run by elected clerks. But Kansas law requires the secretary of state to appoint election commissioners for the state's four most populous counties.=================Cool Temperatures, Scattered Rain Help Kansas CropsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Cooler temperatures and scattered rainfall in Kansas over the past week helped improve the condition of row crops a bit. But the picture remained fairly dismal. The Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service said in its weekly update Monday that about 69 of the state's soybeans and 68 percent of the sorghum crop are in poor to very poor condition. The agency also said range and pasture conditions have improved somewhat, with 86 percent now rated poor to very poor. Meanwhile, the corn harvest is rapidly progressing. Fifty-one percent of the corn crop was harvested as of Sunday, about three weeks ahead of last year's pace. Kansas growers have begun planting winter wheat. Five percent of seeding is now complete.=================Copper Thieves Cause $750K in Damage in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Copper thieves tore out electrical systems at a Wichita industrial park, causing about $750,000 in damage. The theft was reported Friday at Kamen Industrial Park in Wichita. Police said the vandals stole about 2,000 feet of copper wiring. The Wichita Eagle reports that police received the call Friday afternoon after someone with the company found a large pile of heavy-strand copper wire on the ground. The thieves hit the roof of the building tearing out electrical systems to get to the copper wiring. Sergeant Bart Brunscheen, a spokesman for the Wichita Police Department, says detectives are looking at a potential suspect.=================== Mission Mulls Ban on Drivers' Hand-Held PhonesMISSION, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City suburb has been considering a ban on the use of hand-held cellphones while driving. A proposed ordinance under consideration in the Johnson County suburb of Mission would allow people to talk on hands-free cellphones. But police would be able to pull over drivers who are holding phones within about 8 inches of their heads. The ordinance is before the Mission City Council's finance and administration committee and will come up for discussion, possibly in November. The Kansas City Star reports that the only city in Kansas to ban cellphone use by drivers is Manhattan. Mission Mayor Laura McConwell said the council recognizes the safety issues involved. But she says the ordinance may require workshops and public hearings, and other activities aimed at educating the public.=================== Lawrence to Utilize Effluent for IrrigationLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has recently approved a plan for Lawrence to use treated wastewater for irrigating city shrubbery and plots of land. Jeanette Klamm, utilities program manager for Lawrence, says this summer's drought influenced the city's decision to seek approval for the plan, which calls for integrating effluent — or treated wastewater — into the city's irrigation plan. The Lawrence Journal World reports that Lawrence will soon be getting water for trees, grass, flowers in medians, roundabouts and other plots of land from the wastewater treatment facility instead of from a fire hydrant. Wichita also pumps effluent water from Cowskin Creek Water Quality Reclamation Facility to recreational ponds. Many other towns across Kansas have been pumping effluent water to golf courses for years.=================== National Catholic Group Calls on KC Bishop to ResignKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A national Catholic organization is pushing for Bishop Robert Finn to resign after he became the highest-ranking U.S. church official convicted of a crime related to the child sexual abuse scandal. The Kansas City Star reported that the National Survivor Advocates Coalition made the demand during a news conference Sunday in downtown Kansas City. Coalition chairwoman Kristine Ward says a criminally convicted bishop "cannot lead." Finn leads the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. He was convicted earlier this month of one misdemeanor for failing to report child abuse suspicions. The charges stem from a case in which church officials knew about child porn photos on a priest's computer but didn't turn him in until six months later. A diocese spokesman says the bishop continues to focus on his work.===================Duncan Due in Kansas on TuesdayEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is getting a visit from U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan. Duncan is due in Emporia Tuesday for a town hall meeting at Emporia State University. He's also scheduled to visit Topeka, with a stop planned at the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic site. Duncan is on a 10-day national tour that ends Friday in Washington. In Emporia, he plans an afternoon town hall at Emporia State University as well as a visit to the National Teachers Hall of Fame, which is located on the Emporia campus.===================Lenexa Man Pleads No Contest in Wife's DeathOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A northeastern Kansas man has avoided a trial by pleading no contest in the killing of his wife earlier this year. Thirty-seven-year-old Dominic Camacho had been scheduled to go on trial Monday in Johnson County District Court on a charge of first-degree murder. The Kansas City Star reports the Lenexa man instead pleaded no contest to a charge of second-degree murder. Camacho's wife, 35-year-old Leslie Camacho, was found strangled March 13 in the couple's suburban Kansas City home. Police went to the home when relatives became worried after being unable to reach Leslie Camacho. The victim worked at the University of Kansas Hospital's Cancer Center, processing outpatient registrations in breast imaging. Sentencing for Dominic Camacho is scheduled for October 22.===================KCK Police ID Men Killed in Shooting, Suicide KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas police have released the name of a man killed in a shooting and the suspect who committed suicide during a police standoff. Police said Monday that 27-year-old Gabriel Valedivia was the person whose body was discovered Thursday outside a home. While responding to the homicide, police were told that a possible suspect was in a nearby home. After a more than seven hour standoff, police went inside the home and found the suspect dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. The suspect was identified as 31-year-old Michael Brothers. Both men were residents of Kansas City, Kansas.=================== Naturalization Ceremony Set for KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is scheduled to host a naturalization ceremony Monday at the Dole Institute of Politics. About 100 prospective U.S. citizens are expected to attend the event Monday afternoon. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the ceremony is an annual event and will be presided over by U.S. Judge John Lungstrum. University of Kansas Provost Jeffrey Vitter and Kansas business school dean Neeli Bendapudi will also be on hand to greet the new citizens.===================New WSU President to Be Inaugurated Next MonthWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The public is invited to next month's inauguration of Wichita State University's new president. John Bardo succeeds Donald Beggs, who stepped down over the summer after 12 years in the job. Governor Sam Brownback is scheduled to speak at the ceremony the afternoon of October 12 in the Hughes Metropolitan Complex, about a mile north of the Wichita State campus. Bardo began his academic career at Wichita State. He chaired the sociology and social work department from 1978 to 1983. He later worked at the University of North Florida and Bridgewater State College in Massachusetts. More recently, Bardo served as chancellor of Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina from 1995 to 2011. He returned to the classroom last year as a professor of education.=================== PSU Named as Top-Tier Regional School by National MagazinePITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — Pittsburg State University has been recognized as a top tier regional university by U.S. News and World Report. The Pittsburg Morning Sun reports that the magazine has also ranked Pittsburg State highest among the state's three regional universities in its 2013 Best Midwest Regional Universities list. The 12-state Midwest region includes Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Missouri, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Wisconsin. Bill Ivy, associate vice president for enrollment management and student success at Pittsburg State, says it's the second year in a row that the university in southeast Kansas has been named a top-tier institution by U.S. News and World Report.===================No Driver's Licensure Changes Pending for Elderly Kansas DriversTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — More elderly drivers are on Kansas roads and the nation as a whole, as baby boomers age and continue to take to the highways. In Kansas, once residents reach age 65 they must renew their licenses every four years instead of six as they did when they were younger. The issue of older drivers and their competence has emerged again after a 100-year-old driver backed over a group of Los Angeles schoolchildren last month. An Associated Press review of state laws nationally shows a hodgepodge of rules, reflecting scientific uncertainty and public unease over when it's time to stop driving. Kansas doesn't have any pending changes to driving requirements, but programs exist to help keep older drivers current. Transit services are also growing, providing rides for those who've given up their keys.===================UPDATE: No Foul Play Suspected in Missouri Remains Case INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — Investigators say no foul play is suspected in the death of a man whose remains were found over the summer along the Little Blue River. The Jackson County Sheriff said at a news conference Monday that the remains were those of 28-year-old Christopher Porter. The Kansas City Star reported that the mentally disabled Independence man walked away from a hospital in February. Porter's phone was found on a bridge over the river. Authorities began investigating in June when kayakers came across bones from a hand while walking along the Little Blue River. Then eight days later, a shoe with a foot inside turned up about 10 miles downstream. The foot was taken to the county crime lab, and the hand was sent to the University of Texas for identification.=================== KS Family Among Those Honored at Reno Tragedy CommemorationRENO, Nev. (AP) — Spectators and racers paid tribute Sunday to 11 people who were killed when a plane crashed into box seats at last year's Reno National Championship Air Races. A moment of silence was held on the anniversary of the accident at Reno-Stead Airport for pilot Jimmy Leeward and 10 victims on the ground. The emotional ceremony before a crowd of tens of thousands also featured the release of white balloons and a flag presentation after each victim's name was read. Among the injured in attendance were members of a Kansas family. The crash killed 73-year-old Cherie Elvin, of Lenexa, Kansas. Her husband Chuck, two sons and daughter-in-law were injured. Leeward's P-51 Mustang fighter reached 530 miles per hour before pitching towards the sky, then slamming nose-first into box seats.=================== Fewer Butterflies at Monarch Watch's Kansas EventLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — There were fewer monarch butterflies found during an annual event aimed at tracking their migration through Kansas. Chip Taylor, director of the University of Kansas-based Monarch Watch conservation group, told The Lawrence Journal World that this summer's drought meant a much smaller population of monarchs at Saturday's event at the Baker Wetlands. Monarch Watch organizes the tagging to track migration through the U.S. and into Mexico for the winter. This is the group's 21st year of tagging, and it's been inviting the public to take part. Taylor says this year's monarch population was the smallest he'd seen in northeast Kansas. Consistently dry conditions led to fewer flowering plants and milkweed, which the butterflies need to survive. Taylor says, however, the nation's northeast coast population...which is normally smaller...is doing well.===================89-Year-Old Driver Hits 3, Killing Baby in KCKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An 89-year-old churchgoer speeding backward out of a handicapped parking spot struck and killed a baby and injured her grandparents. The Kansas City Star reports that the driver also slammed his car into another vehicle and overturned a fire hydrant Sunday morning outside First Baptist Church. The car traveled about 50 feet before coming to a stop. Witness Patty Reed says the elderly driver's vehicle shot out of the parking space "like a cannon." Her husband, Cec Reed, says one woman started CPR on the injured baby. But investigators said the baby died shortly after the accident at an area hospital. The conditions of the other two victims weren't available. Officials said the driver of the vehicle was cooperating with the investigation. The victims' identities haven't been released.=================== Kansas Couple Bequeath $474K for MWSU ScholarshipsST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Western State University has received a $474,000 gift from the estate of a northeast Kansas couple. The money from the late Earl and Elmyra "Susie" Euler of Blair, Kansas will be used to provide about $19,000 a year worth of scholarships. The money will benefit graduates of Central High School in St. Joseph. Missouri Western President Robert Vartabedian says the university is "extremely grateful." Susie Euler attended Central High School and later Missouri Western when it was still known as St. Joseph Junior College. She and Earl Euler wed in 1945. Besides running a farm, Earl Euler taught grade-schoolers, and Susie Euler worked for Doniphan County, Kansas Agriculture Conservation Services and a bank. Earl Euler died in 2011 at 88. Susie Euler was 81 when she died in 2008.======================Chiefs RB Charles Dings Reconstructed KneeKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles dinged up the same knee that needed reconstructive surgery last season during Sunday's 35-17 loss to the Buffalo Bills. Charles, who tore his left ACL in Week 2, carried only six times for three yards against the Bills. He could be seen riding a bike on the sideline and asking to play the rest of the game. Kansas City coach Romeo Crennel said Monday that the decision was made to rest Charles, who has yet to show the same burst that carried him to more than 1,400 yards rushing in 2010. Crennel said he expects Charles to be ready for Sunday's game at New Orleans, another team that is winless through its first two games.======================Big 12 Warm-Ups Draw to Close; Intraconference Rivals to Face OffThe Big 12's big bore is about to finally come to an end. The league that dominated headlines for a variety of reasons during the offseason, not the least of which was whether it would continue to exist, has been a blip on the national radar once games finally started against a dismal lineup of non-conference weaklings. That should change starting Saturday night. Sixth-ranked Oklahoma plays number 15 Kansas State in a game between two of the league's top teams, one that could go a long way toward determining who wins the conference title. It's a far cry from the likes of James Madison, Western Illinois and Grambling State that the league's programs have been beating up the past few weeks. ====================== Titanic Exhibit at KC's Union Station Exceeds GoalKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Titanic exhibit that coincided with the 100th anniversary of the ill-fated voyage drew nearly 123,000 people to Kansas City's Union Station. The Kansas City Star reports that it wasn't immediately known how much the exhibit netted. But the station's chief financial officer, Jerry Baber, says the break-even point was about 75,000 tickets. A 2001 version of the Titanic exhibit attracted about 280,000 people. Officials did not expect to match that with an encore show. They were hoping for 100,000 or more visitors. In October, Union Station will open its next traveling exhibit, "The Science of Rock 'n' Roll."======================Kansas Expects to End Challenge to Obama Ballot SpotTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas elections officials expect to formally close a challenge to President Barack Obama's listing on the state's November general election ballot. The State Objections Board had already scheduled its Monday meeting before the Manhattan resident who objected to Obama being on the ballot dropped his challenge last week. The board is the secretary of state, attorney general and lieutenant governor. The resident, Joe Montgomery, said Friday he was withdrawing his objection because of what he called animosity and intimidation directed at him and people around him. The all-Republican board had a hearing Thursday on Montgomery's objection, which questioned whether the Democratic president is eligible to hold the office. The board postponed a decision then, saying it wanted documents certifying the authenticity of Obama's birth certificate from Hawaii.**this story has been updated. Please see above. =================== Jackson County Sheriff to Announce Identification of RemainsINDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — The Jackson County Sheriff plans to hold a news conference Monday to reveal the identity of human remains found along a river. Authorities began investigating in June when hikers came across a decomposed human hand while walking along the Little Blue River. Then eight days later, a shoe with a human foot inside turned up about 10 miles downstream. The foot was taken to the county crime lab, and the hand was sent to the University of Texas for possible identification.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • President Bush visited Montana Thursday to help Sen. Conrad Burns' bid for a fourth term. Burns has been trailing his Democratic opponent, Jon Tester, mostly due to fallout from contributions Burns received from convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff. But the race is tightening; many see it as going down to the wire.
  • Merrill Lynch CEO Stanley O'Neal appears to be on his way out days after the company reported a loss of more than $8 billion. The company has not confirmed reports that O'Neal is negotiating the terms of his departure.
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  • Legislative committees met to do some budget work before the session resumes next week.
  • The comments equated Planned Parenthood to the concentration camp Dachau.
  • Lawmakers could leave early unless a tax plan makes progress.
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