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  • The law, which was put on hold by a lower court, restricts one type of abortion procedure.
  • UPDATE: Kansas Chief Justice Announces Employee FurloughsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton Nuss says furloughs for judicial branch employees will begin April 13. Nuss said Wednesday that furloughs would take place every other Friday after that in order to close a shortfall in court operating funds. Legislators failed to appropriate additional money last week after a House and Senate agreement on a proposed $14.1 billion state budget unraveled. Lawmakers began their annual spring break last week without passing a spending plan for the fiscal year beginning July 1. They won't reconvene until April 25. The spending plan also covered a $1.4 million shortfall in the judicial branch's current budget. Nuss warned lawmakers in a February letter that without the extra funding, Kansas courts would have to close five extra days this spring.==================================UPDATE: Kansas Driver's License Stations to Resume Services Thursday The Kansas Department of Revenue has announced that the state Division of Motor Vehicles will resume issuing and renewing driver’s licenses and identification cards Thursday morning. The DMV had been unable to issue new driver's licenses or non-driver identification cards because of problems with a computer server operated by a vendor. Spokeswoman Jeannine Koranda says that the outage had affected all 111 driver's license offices statewide. ====================================Storms Spawn Scattered Funnel Clouds in KansasWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The National Weather Service says a number of funnel clouds reported around eastern and southern Kansas were spawned by a combination of weak storms and cold upper air. No tornado watch was posted Wednesday for anywhere in Kansas, and Weather Service meteorologist Robb Lawson in Wichita said the funnel clouds being seen Wednesday afternoon weren't expected to reach the ground. One such cloud was observed from Lawson's office for 17 minutes beginning shortly after 5 pm. Several others were spotted between 4 and 5 pm in Kingman County, Chase County and other parts of Sedgwick County. Lawson says that such funnels tend to remain several thousand feet in the air and — from a meteorologist's point of view — are "neat to look at."==================================Democratic Kansas House Member Won't Seek Re-ElectionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ The only Democrat from Johnson County in either chamber of the Kansas Legislature has decided against seeking re-election. Mike Slattery, of Mission, says he's giving up his House seat because he plans to go to graduate school to study business management and law. Slattery is a construction projects manager and has served in the House since 2009. Johnson County is the state's most populous county. Seven of the 40 state senators and 22 of the 125 House members represent part of the northeastern Kansas county. Slattery is the son of Jim Slattery, a Democrat who served in both the Kansas Legislature and the U.S. House. The Kansas House minority leader's office say Mike Slattery hasn't decided which university he'll attend but has been accepted at Georgetown University, in Washington, D.C.=================================== Garden City to Challenge Census Results for Second TimeGARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Garden City officials are ready for a second round in a fight with the U.S. Census Bureau over the western Kansas city's population. The city first challenged the federal agency after it said in 2011 that the city had 26,658 residents. Last week, the Census Bureau added seven people to the population count. That prompted the Garden City Commission to decide Tuesday to file a second challenge. City officials believe the population is between 28,000 to 30,300 residents. They contend the bureau didn't count six areas of the city in its 2010 count. The Garden City Telegram reports commissioners acknowledged the challenge might be more symbolic than productive. They said census officials have said they won't send anyone to the city or use other documentation to reconsider the count.==================================== Topeka Social Service Agency Adding Programs to Fight Budget CutsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 111-year-old agency in Topeka that provides residential and outpatient care for at-risk girls is fighting back after losing almost one-third of its budget in the last two years. Florence Crittenton Services, Inc., lost Medicaid funding as the number of clients it helped declined. And United Way of Greater Topeka stopped funding the organization. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the agency has responded by adding four new programs it hopes will bring in more revenue, while also improving community service. Crittenton was once known primarily as a sanctuary for pregnant teenagers. It now offers an outpatient therapy clinic, an exercise program, a wellness program and respite services on the weekends for severely emotionally distressed children. CEO JoLana Pinon says the agency knew it needed to diversify and losing the funding provided motivation.===================================== Topeka Sees Rise in Car Thefts by Tow TruckTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in Topeka are reporting a new trend in crime — thieves using a tow truck to steal cars. Police spokeswoman Kristen Veverka tells the Topeka Capital-Journal that thieves are hooking up cars on city streets, usually in residential neighborhoods, then towing them to another spot to strip the parts. Authorities aren't sure of the number of such crimes, but it's happened often enough that police issued a statement Wednesday urging people to watch for suspicious tow trucks. Police said residents can protect vehicles by parking in a garage if possible, locking their car doors and taking the keys with them.==================================Man Enters No Contest Plea to Manslaughter, Rape ChargesMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) _ A 25-year-old Manhattan man has pleaded no contest to killing a former Army combat medic and raping a female jogger who was training for a marathon. Justin Taylor entered the pleas yesterday (TUE) in Riley County District Court under an agreement with prosecutors. Taylor pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter in the death of 31-year-old Kevin Cockrum, who was beaten with a heavy flashlight last August in Manhattan's Aggieville district. Police said Cockrum had objected to comments about a female friend. While Taylor awaited trial in Cockrum's death, authorities used DNA to tie him to the June 2010 rape of a 57-year-old woman attacked while jogging in Manhattan. Taylor, a former Kansas State University student, will be sentenced in May -- the same month he would have graduated.===================================== State Testing Postponed at Some Lawrence Schools Due to NCAA Championship LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas Jayhawks trumped state testing at some Lawrence schools this week. Several Lawrence schools postponed state assessment testing scheduled for Tuesday out of concern that students would be tired or absent after watching Monday's NCAA championship game between Kansas and Kentucky. The Lawrence Journal-World reports schools can take the assessments between February 15 and April 20. Many Lawrence schools scheduled the tests this week, which is the week after spring break. But New York School principal Nancy DeGarmo said she knew many of the school's students and teachers would be up late Monday because the game didn't tip off until 8:30 pm. The school moved the testing to Friday. Other principals said they were concerned many students would miss school Tuesday.================================ Kansas Man Seeks Reversal of 1974 Murder ConvictionOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A former school janitor who is serving a life sentence for the 1974 killing of a 13-year-old Johnson County girl is asking a judge to reverse his conviction. John Henry Horton was in court Tuesday to ask a judge to throw out his conviction for the killing of Lizabeth Wilson. She disappeared while walking to her Prairie Village from a swimming pool. Her remains were found six months later in a Lenexa field. The Kansas Supreme Court last year ordered the hearing so the Johnson County Court can determine if "prejudicial error" was committed during his second trial in 2008. The Kansas City Star reports that the judge will rule after a second hearing is held in May. The second hearing was needed because some witnesses could not attend Tuesday's hearing.==================================Voters Approve Construction of New Cloud County Jail CONCORDIA, Kan. (AP) _ Voters in Cloud County have approved a proposal to build an 80-bed jail and detention center. Unofficial results from yesterday's (TUE) vote showed the measure passed by a vote of 1,218 to 567...more than a two-to-one margin. Supporters of the plan said before the election that the jail, which will cost an estimated $5.7 million, could raise revenue for the county by housing prisoners from other counties.==================================KU Jayhawks Return to Warm Reception in LawrenceLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) _ University of Kansas basketball players and coaches took a curtain call before adoring fans in Lawrence last (TUE) night. More than 5,000 fans filled Allen Fieldhouse as the Jayhawks returned from New Orleans, following Monday night's loss in the NCAA championship game. Fans say that despite the loss, the team exceeded expectations all season.========================================Roaming Zebra Returned to Kansas RancherTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Oh give me a home, where the — zebras roam? Not for long, they don't...at least not when the Kansas Highway Patrol is around. The patrol says one of its troopers came across a zebra Tuesday grazing beside an Interstate 70 ramp west of Topeka. The striped animal turned out to be an escapee from a nearby ranch, whose owner came to the scene and coaxed it back into a fenced area with treats. Authorities didn't specify the kind of treat that would persuade a zebra to give up its freedom.====================================Civil Rights Symposium Scheduled at JCCCOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A researcher who investigates hate groups for the Southern Poverty Law Center will be the featured speaker at a June civil rights symposium in Kansas. Michelle Bramblett is information manager for the group's Intelligence Project. Bramblett is expected to talk about the center's work tracking and exposing the activities of hate groups. Bramblett will be among several speakers June 8 at the daylong event sponsored by the U.S. attorney's office on federal civil rights enforcement in Kansas. Other topics will include human trafficking, civil rights for returning veterans and the rights guaranteed under the Americans With Disabilities Act. The symposium takes place at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park. It's free and open to the public, but registration is required.=======================================Analyst Testifies About Texts Sent by Accused Killer of Kansas TeenGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors have begun showing jurors text messages outlining a Kansas man's obsession with a slain cheerleader whose badly burned body was found at the asphalt plant where he worked. The evidence came during the fifth day of testimony in the capital murder trial of 38-year-old Adam Longoria. The Great Bend man is accused in the August 2010 death of 14-year-old Alicia DeBolt. Analyst Stephanie Smith of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation on Wednesday discussed the texts as they were projected on a screen in the courtroom. The texting began the morning after Longoria met the girl at a party. In them, Longoria calls the teen "miss shy" and "hot stuff." When she asks his age, the then 36-year-old man told her he was 25.====================================Cloud County Community College to Adjust Height of Wind Turbines CONCORDIA, Kan. (AP) _ A north-central Kansas community college plans to lower three wind turbines that have been deemed too tall by the Federal Aviation Administration so the school doesn't lose about $1 million in federal grants. The Salina Journal reports that Cloud County Community College officials have decided to pay for the roughly $150,000 project rather than lose the grants. The windmills are 110 feet tall and sit on a hill south of campus. A year ago the FAA told the college the windmills are in Blosser Municipal Airport's airspace but were not considered a hazard. But sometime later the turbines were deemed a "presumed hazard,'' which prompted the FAA to adjust flight patterns to and from the airport. Community college officials say the turbines will be lowered 20 to 30 feet each.====================================Manning Joins Impressive Tulsa Coaching Lineage TULSA, Okla. (AP) — It didn't take long for Danny Manning to realize the lineage he was joining when he got hired as Tulsa's new basketball coach. In the coaches' locker room that he'll now occupy, the former NBA All-Star noticed the pictures of Nolan Richardson, Tubby Smith and Bill Self — three coaches who all went on to win national championships after their time coaching the Golden Hurricane. Manning was formally introduced as Tulsa's new coach Wednesday, two days after wrapping up his tenure as a University of Kansas assistant coach when the Jayhawks lost to Kentucky in the national championship game. Manning says he plans for the Golden Hurricane to play up-tempo, with a motion offense and pressure man-to-man defense that shouldn't give up easy baskets.=====================================Kansas Woman Charged in Toddler's Death Prosecutors have charged a southeastern Kansas woman with first-degree murder in the death of her 18-month-old daughter. KAKE-TV reports that 23-year-old Alyssa Haag made a first appearance Wednesday in Butler County District Court. The El Dorado woman remains held on $500,000 bond, with a preliminary hearing scheduled May 9. The charge stems from what investigators believe was the abuse death of Jayla Haag. The toddler died last week at a Wichita hospital, where she was treated for injuries the mother said were caused when the girl fell down stairs. ====================================Review of Disputed Meetings Won't Conclude Until End of April TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ A spokesman says a northeast Kansas prosecutor's investigation into private meetings of Republican legislators with Governor Sam Brownback won't be finished until the end of the month. Lee McGowan, chief of staff to Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor, said Tuesday that staff still must interview a few lawmakers and members of the governor's staff. McGowan said interviews won't be completed until the Legislature returns from a break April 25. Brownback, a Republican, had seven meetings in January with GOP members of 13 legislative committees. Taylor, a Democrat, began his investigation in February. Brownback spokeswoman Sherriene Jones-Sontag says the governor is confident the gatherings didn't violate the Kansas Open Meetings Act. Many lawmakers who attended the events said they were social gatherings, not business meetings.=====================================KS Mega Millions Winner Still Keeping Mum TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Kansas officials still haven't heard from anyone claiming to hold a Mega Millions ticket for a share of a $656 million jackpot. Kansas Lottery spokeswoman Cara Sloan-Ramos said Tuesday the winner may wait weeks to come forward. Kansas law allows up to a year to claim a lottery prize. The ticket was for Friday's drawing in the multistate game, and state lottery officials have said only that it was purchased at a store in northeast Kansas. Winning tickets also were sold in Illinois and Maryland, making the Kansas ticket holder's share about $218 million. Sloan-Ramos said the ticket holder is likely seeking lots of advice and considering whether to take advantage of a Kansas law allowing winners to remain anonymous.=====================================Hawker Beechcraft Facing Debt, LossesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Hawker Beechcraft says it anticipates losses of about $482 million for 2011. The company will file its annual report this month and says it will include a statement from an independent accounting firm expressing what it calls "substantial doubt" about the company's ability to continue as a going concern.====================================Witness: DNA from KS Teen, Suspect Found in SUVGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) _ A forensic scientist has testified that DNA from a 14-year-old Great Bend girl was found in the vehicle of the man accused in her death. James Newman of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation took the stand for the state Tuesday in the trial of 38-year-old Adam Longoria. Newman testified about testing body fluids found in the driver's side floor mat of Longoria's vehicle. He said the test showed a mixture of DNA from both Longoria and Alicia DeBolt. Longoria is being tried on a charge of capital murder in Alicia's August 2010 death. Newman said a tiny amount of DNA from an unknown male was found in a sample taken from the dead girl's mouth. But he said that sample may have been contaminated. He returns to the stand Wednesday for cross-examination.====================================Oil Sought on State Land in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ The state of Kansas will join with private companies and the city of Wichita in searching for oil in Sedgwick County. The Wichita Eagle reports that the Kansas revenue department will open bids this month for five-year oil and gas lease rights on state-owned land along the Arkansas River. The 125-acre site is the second drawing attention from mineral explorers along the Arkansas in Sedgwick County. County recorder of deeds Bill Meek tells The Eagle the number of mineral leases recorded in his office has been surging. Meek says there's been more filing of lease-related documents in the past year than in the past decade.================================================Leads Tapering Off in KC Baby DisappearanceKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police say tips have tapered off in the disappearance of a baby reported missing from her Kansas City home six months ago. Lisa Irwin was 10-months old when she was reported missing October 4. Lisa's parents, Deborah Bradley and Jeremy Irwin, have said they believe a stranger broke into their house and kidnapped their daughter as Bradley slept. Police Captain Steve Young told The Kansas City Star that the case remains classified as a missing or abducted child but that tips in the case have dwindled. A $100,000 reward is still available to anyone with information that returns the child. Young also said detectives last met with the parents on February 2 before they taped a national television interview, but he said police didn't learn anything significant. ==================================UPDATE: Kansas Driver's License Processing Remains on HoldTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Division of Motor Vehicles remains unable to issue new driver's licenses or non-driver identification cards because of persistent computer problems. Spokeswoman Jeannine Koranda says Wednesday that problems with a vendor's server brought down the system at all 111 driver's license offices statewide. She says the state will continue to issue 15-day extension slips for licenses and ID cards set to expire between March 30 and April 6. The offices receive about 13,000 visitors a week. The division is in the midst of a $40 million computer upgrade that will integrate driver's license records with vehicle title and registration data. Koranda said technicians were still working on repairs to the malfunctioning computer server. ============================================Computer Glitch Continues to Sideline KS Driver's License System TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ The state Division of Vehicles offices won't immediately be able to issue new driver's licenses or non-driver identification cards when they open today (WED). A server problem yesterday (TUE) took down the license-issuing system statewide. In the meantime, the offices are issuing paper slips extending licenses or ID cards for 15 days. The division is in the midst of a $40 million computer upgrade. **this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • Court: Democrats Don't Need Kansas Senate NomineeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas court has ruled that Democrats can go without a U.S. Senate candidate after their nominee dropped out of the race against three-term Republican Senator Pat Roberts. The ruling Wednesday is a blow to the GOP in a key race in the national battle over Senate control. A panel of three Shawnee County District Court judges said a state election law does not require Democrats to fill the candidate vacancy. The judges also said the disgruntled voter who filed a lawsuit to force Democrats to act didn't prove his case because he failed to show up for a Monday hearing. Some Democrats pushed their nominee out of the race because they saw independent candidate Greg Orman as the stronger rival for Roberts and didn't want to split the anti-Roberts vote.===============================Kansas Tax Collections $21M Short in SeptemberTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas says its tax collections fell $21 million short of expectations in September. The lower-than-anticipated collections were disclosed Tuesday in the state Department of Revenue's monthly preliminary revenue report. The development could cause a short-term increase in the state's predicted budget shortfall of $238 million by July 2016. The department emphasized that even with overall taxes falling short, the state saw higher-than-expected corporate income tax collections. The state anticipated collecting $542 million in taxes in September and instead took in $521 million, a difference of 4 percent. Since the fiscal year began in July, the state has collected about $1.35 billion in taxes, against expectations of $1.37 billion. The difference there is $23 million, or 1.7 percent. The biggest shortfall is in personal income tax collections.===============================Amazon Closing Distribution Plant in KansasWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Amazon.com plans to close a distribution center in southeast Kansas in February, but it isn't clear how many employees the move will affect. Coffeyville Chamber of Commerce executive director Stacia Meek said Wednesday that Amazon informed her of the closure in an email Tuesday evening. The Seattle-based online retailer did not immediately return email and phone messages seeking comment. Meek says Amazon told her the closure is part of a move to have its distribution centers closer to the bulk of its customers. Coffeyville is a rural town about 70 miles north of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Amazon is one of the area's largest employers, though its workforce fluctuates widely. The Parsons Sun first reported the closure plans and noted the company recently celebrated its 15-year anniversary in Coffeyville.==============================Kobach: No Correspondence in Kansas Senate DisputeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach's office says it had no written or email correspondence with national Republican groups or U.S. Senator Pat Roberts's re-election campaign as a legal dispute over the contest unfolded. Kobach's office responded this week to an open records request from The Associated Press. The request sought copies of written and email correspondence from August 25 through September 19 between Kobach and top aides with two national GOP groups, Roberts and his top campaign aides. The legal dispute stems from Democrat Chad Taylor's withdrawal from the Senate race. A three-judge panel in Shawnee County District Court ruled today (WED) that Kansas Democrats are not obligated to name a new nominee. Taylor's move is seen as helping independent candidate Greg Orman's chances of defeating Roberts.==============================Royals Beat Oakland 9-8 in AL Wild-Card ThrillerKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals had waited 29 years to reach the postseason and they weren't going down without a fight. Salvador Perez singled home the winning run with two outs in the 12th inning, capping two late comebacks that gave Kansas City a thrilling 9-8 victory over the Oakland Athletics. Royals Hall of Famer George Brett watched as the Royals won their first postseason game since Brett led the team to victory in the 1985 World Series. The game was so riveting that the Kansas City Police Department sent out a Twitter message with a request for people across the city "We really need everyone to not commit crimes and drive safely right now. We'd like to hear the Royals clinch." The Royals now advance to a best-of-five Division Series against the AL West champions, the Los Angeles Angels. That series starts on Thursday in Anaheim.===============================KU Fraternity Placed on Interim SuspensionLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A University of Kansas fraternity is on interim suspension after the school received reports of sexual assault during a party during the weekend. University Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little said in a news release Wednesday that "disturbing and serious" behavior was reported at the Kappa Sigma fraternity. She did not elaborate. The Lawrence Police Department and the Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access are investigating the allegations. The suspension comes as the university faces increasing criticism for its handling of previous allegations of rape on the Lawrence campus. Kansas is one of 76 schools nationwide being investigated by the federal government for their handling of sexual abuse cases. In response to the criticism, Gray-Little appointed a task force to review the school's policies and procedures and to recommend improvements.===============================High Court Disbars Former KBI Deputy DirectorTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A former Kansas Bureau of Investigation administrator has been disbarred by the state Supreme Court after pleading guilty earlier this year to sexual exploitation of a child. Former KBI deputy director Kyle G. Smith was the third-highest ranking member of the bureau last November when an agency secretary found a photo of a teenage girl engaged in sexually explicit conduct that was traced to Smith's email account. Smith pleaded guilty earlier this year and was sentenced to 32 months in prison, which was suspended and he was placed on probation for three years. He also must register as a sex offender for 25 years. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the Kansas Supreme Court issued its disbarment order Friday. Smith had surrendered his Kansas law license September 17.===============================Feds, Kansas Bitcoin Company NegotiatingLEAWOOD, Kan. (AP) - Federal attorneys and a Kansas-based bitcoin company are negotiating over whether the company could resume some of its operations. The Federal Trade Commission has sued Butterfly Labs, based in Leawood, claiming the company defrauded consumers out of between $20 million to $50 million. Butterfly Labs is under temporary control of a federally appointed receiver. The Kansas City Star reports that after a hearing Monday, the temporary order was extended and attorneys began negotiations. The FTC alleges Butterfly Labs did not deliver machines or sent worthless equipment that could not produce bitcoins. Butterfly Labs has denied wrongdoing and called the FTC action "heavy-handed." Bitcoins are virtual currency that is becoming popular as a way to buy and sell some goods and services without using government-issued money.===============================Report: Kansas Wheat Production Lowest Since 1989WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report says this year's winter wheat production in Kansas is at the lowest level since 1989. The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Tuesday winter wheat production is estimated at 246 million bushels, down 23 percent from a year ago. Kansas farmers planted 9.6 million acres for the 2014 wheat crop. That was about 1 percent more wheat acreage than a year earlier, but production was still down in part because farmers actually harvested just 8.8 million acres. Also affecting production were lower yields averaging 28 bushels an acre — 10 bushels an acre below last year. The report also estimates this year's Kansas oat production at 840,000 bushels, about the same as last year. Barley production is estimated at 350,000, down 32 percent from a year ago.==============================Kansas Woman Sentenced in Daughter's DeathELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) - An Ellsworth woman was sentenced to two years and eight months in prison after her 13-month-old daughter ingested morphine. Michele Suppes was sentenced Tuesday after entering an Alford plea to involuntary manslaughter in the June 2010 death of Bailiegh Kay Suppes. Prosecutor Amy Hanley said Suppes put the morphine in her daughter's bottle so the child would stay asleep while her boyfriend was at her home. Before her sentencing, Suppes told the court she thought Bailiegh picked up one of her mother's pills that had dropped on the kitchen floor.===============================Johnson County Officials Warn of Phone ScamOLATHE, Kan. (AP) - Kansas authorities are warning residents to beware of a new scam that's using the names of judges in an attempt to solicit money. The Johnson County Sheriff's Office says a person has been calling people claiming to be a command officer from a fictitious Federal Warrants Division at the Johnson County Courthouse. The caller tells potential victims they have a federal warrant and will be arrested if they don't pay the fine. The sheriff's office says the scammer names an actual judge and claims the judge is angry so they need to pay with a prepaid debit card. The office says the procedure for contacting people with warrants does not include demanding immediate bond payment.================================Police: Kansas Woman Sexually Assaulted in TaxiOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) - Overland Park police are looking for a taxi driver after a woman told them he sexually assaulted her in his cab. Spokesman Gary Mason tells KCTV-TVthe woman in her early 20s took the cab Tuesday after drinking with friends. The woman sat in the front seat and says the driver sexually assaulted her on her way home. Mason says authorities are concerned the driver could have harmed others. Police haven't released information about the suspect.===============================Year's 9th Kansas Honor Flight Ready for TakeoffWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The year's ninth Kansas Honor Flight is getting ready to carrying 10 World War II veterans, 16 Korean War veterans and one Vietnam War veteran to Washington to see the nation's war monuments. The flight leaving from Wichita Mid-Continent Airport at 10 am Wednesday also will carry the veterans' guardians to the Washington for a two-night stay before coming home on Friday. The group will visit the World War II Memorial, Korean War Memorial and several others commemorating the nation's biggest military conflicts. The trip has been organized by Kansas Honor Flight Inc. and is provided at no cost to the veteran. Guardians who accompany each veteran pay their own way.================================Hutchinson Woman Injured in Accident RecoveringHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) - A Hutchinson woman who was critically injured in May while helping another driver at an accident scene near Kansas City is ready to return to her former life. Lacey Deardoff of Hutchinson spent 50 days in hospitals and weeks of rehabilitation in Hutchinson since she was injured on a freeway in Overland Park. She had stopped to at the accident scene when another driver swerved to avoid debris and hit her and the other driver. The Hutchinson News reports that Deardoff, the daughter of Hutchinson's city manager, was unconscious for two weeks before waking up. She returned to Hutchinson in July to continue her rehabilitation. Deardoff says she plans to move back to the Kansas City area Wednesday and return to work in about a month.===============================7 Children Suffer Minor Injuries in Bus AccidentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Seven students suffered minor injuries after a school bus accident in west Wichita. Sedgwick County Sheriff's Lieutenant Lin Dehning says when a bus from Goddard ran off a road early Wednesday, the driver over-corrected and the bus rolled over. The bus was on its way to Amelia Earhart Elementary School. The Wichita Eagle reports that the 32 children on board ranged from kindergartners to fourth graders. Emergency personnel on the scene waited for parents to arrive to decide whether to take children to the hospital. The accident remains under investigation.=================================Judge Refuses to Move Cheatham Murder TrialTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge has refused to move the capital murder trial of a man whose two murder convictions were thrown out earlier this year because of incompetent counsel. Shawnee County District Judge Richardson on Tuesday denied a motion for a change of venue for Phillip Cheatham Jr. His attorney had argued that news stories about the case and Cheatham's earlier defense attorney, Dennis Hawver, warranted a move to Wyandotte County. Hawver has faced a lengthy disciplinary action tied to his handling of Cheatham's first trial. Cheatham was found guilty in 2005 of killing two women and severely wounding a third in 2003. The Kansas Supreme Court overturned Cheatham's conviction in January after determining that Hawver wasn't prepared to handle a death penalty case.=============================2 Small Earthquakes Reported in Southern Kansas HARPER, Kan. (AP) — A southern Kansas county was shaking after a pair of earthquakes were reported within hours of each other but apparently didn't cause any damage. The U.S. Geological Survey reports the first earthquake to hit Harper County was at 7:30 am Tuesday and was measured 3.3 on the Richter scale. The second temblor that hit the county was at 9:55 am and measured 4.1 on the Richter scale. The second earthquake happened about two miles east of the first quake. Wichita media outlets say calls about the second quake came from as far north as Manhattan, Kansas.=============================Lawrence Woman Pleads Guilty to EmbezzlementLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence woman faces up to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to embezzling between $750,000 and $1 million from her employer. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom announced in a news release Tuesday that 58-year-old Sharon Ann Holladay pleaded guilty to one count of embezzlement from Westheffer Company, which manufactures and sells agricultural chemical spray equipment. Holladay was office manager and transferred money from the operations account to a petty cash fund she controlled. She also gave herself unauthorized bonuses and commissions and made unauthorized purchases with the company's credit card. Sentencing has not been scheduled.=============================Oklahoma Troopers Find Truck Sought in Fatal CrashOKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Oklahoma Highway Patrol says a pickup truck that was sought in connection with a fatal crash in Carter County has been found. The OHP said Tuesday that the Chevrolet single-cab pickup was spotted by a witness who contacted Healdton police and that police found the vehicle, then notified the highway patrol. The patrol has said witnesses reported that the pickup was northbound Sunday afternoon on Interstate 35 near Ardmore when the driver made a U-turn through the median and headed southbound on I-35. A vehicle behind the pickup swerved to avoid the truck and crashed — killing 29-year-old Christopher Partee of Lawrence, Kansas. The OHP says the owner of the truck has been interviewed, but no arrests were announced.===============================Kansas Teen Admits Fatally Shooting His FatherOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A 16-year-old Kansas boy has pleaded guilty to killing his father last year during a routine custody exchange when he was 14. WDAF-TV reports the Bonner Springs teen entered into a plea deal Tuesday that could prevent him from spending time in an adult prison. The teen admitted shooting his 46-year-old father in July 2013 at a Shawnee auction service where the Kansas City, Kansas, man was picking the boy up. The teen's attorney says the boy was a victim of abuse at the hands of his father. He wasn't tried as an adult as a result. The Associated Press is not naming the father because his son's case was handled in juvenile court. The teen's lawyer will argue for 36 months in juvenile custody during sentencing in October.=============================Fire That Killed Woman, Toddler Ruled as ArsonGRANDVIEW, Mo. (AP) — A suburban Kansas City fire that killed a woman and young girl say the blaze has been ruled an arson. The Kansas City Star reports that the adult victim of the early Monday morning in Grandview has been identified as 37-year-old Anika M. Hobley of Kansas City. The fire also killed an unidentified 14-month-old girl who lived in the home. Another adult was taken to a hospital with critical injuries. Firefighters responded just after 3 am to the home and found Hobley's body in the basement. Two girls, ages 6 and 10, leaped from a window about 10 feet above the ground to escape the flames and knocked on the door of a neighbor, who called 911. The Missouri State Fire Marshal's Office is helping with the investigation.==============================='Home on the Range' Cabin Rededication SetATHOL, Kan. (AP) — After three years of fundraising and labor, the cabin in northern Kansas where the lyrics for "Home on the Range" were written will be officially rededicated this weekend. The cabin in Smith County was the home of Brewster Higley in the 1870s. While living there, he wrote a poem called "My Western Home," which became the lyrics for "Home on the Range." That later became the official song of Kansas. The Wichita Eagle reports the cabin was crumbling three years ago, when Kansas was celebrating its 150th anniversary. A grassroots effort raised $133,000 in donations and the cabin was restored, along with construction of nature walks, footbridges and handicapped accessible efforts. A weekend of activities is planned, with the rededication ceremony on Sunday.===============================Report: Kansas Wheat Production Lowest Since 1989WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A new government report says this year's winter wheat production in Kansas is at the lowest level since 1989. The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Tuesday winter wheat production is estimated at 246 million bushels, down 23 percent from a year ago. Kansas farmers planted 9.6 million acres for the 2014 wheat crop. That was about 1 percent more wheat acreage than a year earlier, but production was still down in part because farmers actually harvested just 8.8 million acres. Also affecting production were lower yields averaging 28 bushels an acre. That's 10 bushels an acre below last year. The report also estimates this year's Kansas oat production at 840,000 bushels, about the same as last year. Barley production is estimated at 350,000, down 32 percent from a year ago.===============================Kansas State University to Lead Food ProjectMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas university says it's leading a five-year food project that includes other schools and developing countries in examining ways small farms can increase production. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Kansas State University recently announced that it received a $50 million grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development. Vara Prasad, who will be the project's director, says part of the issue is also reducing the amount of spoiled food. The project will also look at the nutritional needs of people farming the land. The school will coordinate studies in Ghana, Senegal, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Bangladesh and Myanmar. The grant will fund one or two projects proposed by colleges and nonprofits in each country.===============================Hearing Delayed for Man in 18-Month-Old's DeathEL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — A 31-year-old southern Kansas man will have to wait until next month to learn if there is enough evidence to try him on a first-degree murder charge in the 2012 death of his girlfriend's 18-month-old daughter. The Wichita Eagle reports the preliminary hearing for Justin Edwards of El Dorado was scheduled for Wednesday but was continued to November 12. Edwards is charged with first-degree murder in the March 2012 death of Jayla Haag, whose injuries included a broken jaw, missing teeth that had been forcibly removed, severe head injuries and multiple bruises. She also was suffering from malnourishment and tested positive for methamphetamine. Her mother, Alyssa Haag, pleaded guilty in May 2013 to involuntary manslaughter. Edwards had been in prison since early 2013 on drug convictions.===============================A Decade After Welcoming Wind Power, Some States ReconsiderCALUMET, Okla. (AP) — A decade ago, states offered wind-energy developers an open-armed embrace and envisioned a bright future with cheap electricity, new jobs and steady income for landowners. But now that wind turbines stand tall across many parts of the nation's windy heartland, some leaders in Oklahoma and other states fear their efforts succeeded too well. The industry is gobbling up huge subsidies in many states, drawing frequent complaints and using its powerful lobby to resist reforms. Many of the same political leaders who initially welcomed the wind industry now want to regulate it more tightly, even in especially conservative states like Oklahoma. The change of heart is happening as wind farms creep closer to more heavily populated areas. Opposition is also mounting about the loss of scenic views and environmental impacts.===============================Economic Index Falls in Midwest Region but Rises in KansasOMAHA, Neb. (AP) - A monthly economic survey index for nine Midwestern and Plains dropped in September, suggesting slowing economic growth in the months ahead. Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, says a drop in grain prices over the past year has led to a pullback in economic activity for the heavily agrarian region. The survey results from supply managers are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers say any score above 50 suggests economic growth, while a score below that suggests decline. The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota. In Kansas, the overall index expanded to a regional high of 69.7, from 63.8 in August. "Growth among nondurable goods producers and value added services firms in the state more than offset weaker numbers from durable goods manufacturers," Goss said. Meanwhile in Missouri, the overall index declined to 57.7 from August's 59.2. "Durable manufacturers, especially vehicle producers, and nondurable goods manufacturers, except for food processors, reported very healthy expansions for the month," Goss said. Goss said the survey indicates wage growth will be healthy for the last quarter of 2014.==============================Cable Company to Drop Channels in Pricing DisputeST. LOUIS (AP) — A Missouri-based cable TV provider that serves 16 states plans to drop nearly two dozen channels owned by Viacom Inc. in a dispute over a proposed fee increase. Suddenlink Communications says it will pull Comedy Central, MTV, BET, Nickelodeon and other channels from its lineup on Wednesday if it can't reach a deal with Viacom. A Viacom spokesman did not immediately respond to an Associated Press request for comment. A company statement provided to Multichannel News, which covers the cable television industry, called the requested increase "fair." Suddenlink serves more than 1 million cable subscribers in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.===============================Extra Innings Boost Audience for AL Wild-Card GameATLANTA (AP) — Extra innings boosted viewership for the American League wild-card game. The Kansas City Royals' comeback 9-8 win in 12 innings over the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday averaged more than 5.2 million viewers on TBS. The network said Wednesday that's up 14 percent from the nearly 4.6 million for last year's NL game between Cincinnati and Pittsburgh to open the postseason, a 6-2 Pirates win. On Tuesday, the Royals trailed 7-3 after seven innings, but they scored three times in the eighth, tied the game in the bottom of the ninth, then rallied again from down a run in the 12th. Viewership peaked at 6.5 million from 11:30-11:45 pm EDT during the ninth inning.===============================Obama Salutes 2013 MLS Champs, Sporting KCWASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama has saluted the 2013 Major League Soccer champions Sporting Kansas City. He credits the "dedicated fans" of Kansas City for helping the sport grow in the United States. Obama paid tribute to the team Wednesday for winning the MLS trophy 10 months ago in a freezing penalty kick shootout. Obama singled out Kansas City defender Matt Besler and midfielder Graham Zusi, who were on the U.S. Men's National Team for this summer's World Cup in Brazil. The president also noted that Kansas City was enjoying a banner athletic week. The Kansas City Royals won the American League wild card game Tuesday and the NFL Kansas City Chiefs defeated the New England Patriots Monday. Obama said: "Clearly something is going on in Kansas City."
  • The 57th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream Speech," is set for this Friday, Aug. 28. The Rev. Al Sharpton has dubbed this march as the "Get Your Knee Off Our Necks," a name generated from his eulogy at the funeral of slain civilian George Floyd.
  • As the school year draws to a close, is there a teacher who has inspired you? Share with us a poem showing your appreciation for educators who have inspired you.
  • Orman speaking at an event at the Kansas Statehouse. (Photo by Stephen Koranda)Olathe businessman Greg Orman says he has enough signatures to appear on the Kansas ballot as an independent candidate for the U.S. Senate. Orman says his campaign has collected more than 10,000 signatures. He says that number shows many Kansans are tired of the current political system.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7ceeb0000“Kansans are looking for an option, they’re looking for an alternative. They want people who are problem solvers, not just engaged in the old partisan fighting. They want problem solvers, and I think that's the message of our campaign,” says Orman. Orman says he will submit the signatures this week. The Kansas secretary of state’s office will need to verify that at least 5,000 of them are valid. No one running as an independent has ever been elected to the U.S. Senate from Kansas.==================== (VERSION TWO) An Olathe businessman says he has collected enough signatures to appear on the Kansas ballot as an independent candidate for the U.S. Senate. KPR’s Stephen Koranda reports on Greg Orman’s Senate run.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7ceeb0001(SCRIPT)Orman says his campaign has collected more than 10,000 signatures, including people from all 105 Kansas counties. He says that number shows many Kansans are looking for something different in a candidate.“That’s really validated what we thought from the beginning, which is Kansans are sick and tired of the partisanship, they're sick and tired of elected officials who are only interested in getting reelected, not interested in solving problems,” says Orman.Orman says he will submit the signatures this week. The Kansas secretary of state’s office will need to verify that at least 5,000 of them are valid and from registered Kansas voters. No one running as an independent has ever been elected to the U.S. Senate from Kansas. Also running for the seat are four Republican candidates, two Democrats and a Libertarian.The candidates for the Senate seat include:Republican Pat RobertsRepublican Milton WolfRepublican D.J. Smith Republican Alvin E. Zahnter Libertarian Randall Batson Democrat Patrick Wiesner Democrat Chad Taylor
  • Supporters of Senator Pat Roberts cheer after his victory in the primary. (Photo by Stephen Koranda)Officials in the Kansas Republican Party are now trying to heal divisions among GOP voters following this week’s primary election. Some races were marked by competition between conservative and more moderate Republicans. Clay Barker, state Republican Party executive director, says the party treats all candidates equally, so it’ll be working to mend fences.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7cfc80000“There’s always some factions that fight with each other, and we try to rise above it. And at times in the past the party hasn’t, the leadership will take one side or the other,” says Barker.Barker says that despite the high visibility of this year's primary races, this most recent election featured fewer Republican primary challenges than in some recent years.====================(VERSION TWO)High-ranking Republicans in Kansas will be working to eliminate divisions between some GOP voters. That comes after this week’s primary election, which featured some contentious races among Republicans. KPR’s Stephen Koranda reports.00000184-7fa7-d6f8-a1cf-7fa7cfc90000(SCRIPT)There were Republican primaries in Kansas for offices including the U.S. Senate, the U.S House and the state Legislature. Some of them were tough fights, but the state Republican Party’s executive director, Clay Barker, says they’re going to be sending a simple message now to Kansas Republicans.“Push the idea it’s one big team, everybody moves forward together,” says Barker.One of the most divisive primaries this year was between tea party-backed challenger Milton Wolf and Kansas Senator Pat Roberts. Just moments after being declared the winner, Roberts started laying the groundwork to pick up Milton Wolf voters.“Friends, we can't afford to waste scarce resources and energy tearing ourselves apart. We can’t afford a fractured party,” says Roberts.In the fall election, Roberts will be facing Democrat Chad Taylor, independent Greg Orman and Libertarian Randall Batson.
  • Voters in states including Kentucky and New York went to the polls for primaries Tuesday. Black Democrats appeared to have done well, including one likely upending a 30-year House committee chairman.
  • Taliban militants continue to grow in strength and influence in Pakistan, particularly in the country's northwest region. In the lead-up to parliamentary voting next week there have bombs and suicide attacks.
  • Authorities in the Russian republic of Chechnya will only allow music between 80 and 116 beats per minute, though it's unclear how the rule will be enforced.
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