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  • Louisiana has two problems: an eroding coastline and limited glass recycling. Engineer Franziska Trautmann is solving both by turning bottles into beach sand.
  • Sudan's president has been charged with genocide by the International Criminal Court's prosecutor after an investigation into atrocities in the country's western Darfur province. Judges in The Hague are expected to take months to study the evidence against Omar Hassan al-Bashir.
  • Probation has been given to a Wichita man who struck and killed a landscape worker with his car. The man's attorney said his client was under the influence of prescribed pain medication but had also smoked marijuana the night before the accident.
  • Here's a look at area news headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by the KPR News Team.
  • A small town Kansas hospital is closing... school districts push for more spending on special education... the Silver Haired Legislature wants Medicaid expansion and legalized medical marijuana... and a massive practice manhunt is underway near Junction City. Those headlines and more, inside.
  • Rain Helps Some, but Kansas Crops Mostly in Poor ShapeWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The latest government snapshot of Kansas crops shows slight improvement with limited rains, but major crops across the state continue to fare poorly. In its weekly update Tuesday, Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service said only producers in extreme eastern Kansas got any rain while the rest of the state remained hot and dry. The agency says that 71 percent of the Kansas corn crop, 73 percent of the soybean crop and 68 percent of the sorghum crop are in poor to very poor condition. Range and pasture conditions improved only slightly, with 89 percent still in poor to very poor shape. The agency says that although the grass had greened up a little, cattle producers continued to feed hay and forage while culling their herds.=================== Report: Kansas Wheat Quality Down Slightly in 2012WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Grain inspectors say the quality of the 2012 Kansas winter wheat crop was down slightly, with lower protein levels and test weights. The annual report issued Wednesday by the Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service and the Kansas Grain Inspection Service reflects data from 11,200 samples from 46 counties. This year's crop had an average test weight of 61.1 pounds per bushel. That compares with 61.2 pounds last year. The 10-year average is 60.5 pounds per bushel. Protein content averaged 12.4 percent, down from the 12.8 percent last year but a bit higher than the 12.3 percent average. About 83 percent of the samples graded as No. 1 wheat, with 16 percent graded as No. 2 and only 1 percent graded No. 3 or below.===================Legislative Panel Recommends Raise for Some Kansas Public EmployeesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A committee overseeing state employee pay is recommending about $11.4 million in raises for underpaid state workers, with corrections officers at Kansas prisons among the groups benefiting most. The Joint Committee on Employee Pay Plan Oversight on Tuesday recommended 7.5 percent raises for more than a thousand corrections officers. The funds were appropriated during the 2012 legislative session. Corrections Secretary Ray Roberts told the committee that the increases would bring officers who haven't had a pay raise since 2009 closer to the market rate. The Topeka Capital-Journal reported the pay raises are part of a state program to raise the pay of certain state employees closer to similar private sector employees. The pay increases range from 5 percent to 12.5 percent and will go to 4,296 state employees.===================Kansas Agency Finds Increase in Job VacanciesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Labor says the number of job vacancies increased during the second quarter of 2012 when compared with a year earlier. The report released Wednesday found an estimated 36,000 vacancies from April to June, a 17.3 percent increase over the second quarter of 2011. During the quarter, Kansas averaged 88,739 unemployed workers. That meant about 2.5 workers for every job vacancy, which was an improvement from 2011, when there were 3.2 unemployed workers for every job opening. Labor Secretary Karin Brownlee said the survey shows positive movement for unemployed workers who are looking for work. The most vacancies were in the education and health services, followed by leisure and hospitality.=================== Education Secretary Duncan to Visit Topeka Historic SiteTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan will stop in Topeka this month as part of a national bus tour. Duncan will visit the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site on September 18. He'll be joined by members of the Kansas State Board of Education, Topeka city officials and students from the area. Topeka's former Monroe School was designated in 1992 as a national historic site honoring the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 decision that declared segregated schools unconstitutional. Duncan will discuss recent education successes in Kansas and nationwide. His tour will also take him to Emporia and to Kansas City, Missouri.===================Chicken Theft Raises Livestock Identification QuestionsOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — A major theft at an eastern Kansas farm has authorities wondering just how to track down some stolen livestock. After all, says Franklin County Sheriff Jeffry Curry, chickens aren't tagged or branded. KCTV reports that 100 chickens were taken over the weekend from a farm in a rural part of the county. The thief or thieves also took a $1,000 mower and a four-wheel ATV. Curry estimates the chickens' value at $600. The farm is owned by Bo Tran, who lives about 40 miles away in the Kansas City suburb of Leawood and works the property on weekends. Since the chickens aren't marked, the sheriff says he's not sure how they'll be identified. But he says detectives will do what they can to figure out who stole them.===================Kansas Doctor, Wife Attack Prosecutor in AppealWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas doctor and his wife convicted in a moneymaking conspiracy linked to 68 overdose deaths are attacking a federal prosecutor's changing position now that the case has reached the appeals court. In a filing with the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, new lawyers for Stephen and Linda Schneider say the prosecutor is "debasing" justice by now claiming the couple had conflict-free attorneys at trial. The same prosecutor aggressively pursued the opposite stance in the lower court. At issue is the involvement of a national patient advocate in the case. The Haysville couple was convicted in 2010 of unlawfully prescribing drugs, health care fraud and money laundering. The U.S. attorney's office says it's reviewing the filings and would respond in court.=================== Group Files Petition Seeking Grand Jury for Statue DisputeOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A group that believes a statue in a northeast Kansas arboretum is obscene has filed a petition to empanel a grand jury to consider whether the statue should be moved. The American Family Association of Kansas and Missouri filed the petition in Johnson County Court Tuesday. The group contends a statue at the Overland Park Arboretum that shows a woman with her breasts exposed violates a state law against promoting obscenity to children. The director of the group, Phillip Cosby, says members collected 4,700 signatures. The Kansas City Star reports the group needs just under 3,700 valid signatures. If enough signatures are verified, a grand jury would have to be empaneled within 60 days. Overland Park officials have said they do not intend to remove or relocate the sculpture.=================== Salina Police to Pursue 'No Refusal' on DUI CasesSALINA, Kan. (AP) — Salina police and Saline County sheriff's deputies plan to try a new "no refusal" policy during a saturation patrol Friday aimed at drunken drivers. Salina police Lieutenant Russ Lamer said if a driver refuses a breath or blood test after being stopped on suspicion of driving under the influence, the officer will seek a search warrant to collect a sample of the driver's blood. He says new equipment will allow officers to ask for a search warrant electronically. Lamer says a representative of the county attorney's office and a judge will be able to sign the warrant electronically. The process should take about 30 minutes. The Salina Journal reports the goal is to use the new procedure in the future whenever a DUI test is refused.=================Alligator Puts Kansas School District on EdgeCALDWELL, Kan. (AP) — Officials in a southern Kansas school district are taking no chances with student safety while a 4-foot-long alligator remains at large. KAKE-TV reports children at the elementary school in Caldwell were kept indoors during recess Wednesday. The district also cancelled afternoon football practice as a precaution. Superintendent Alan Jamison says the pet alligator escaped from a home about a block from the elementary school. It's been spotted a couple of times near the building, but no one has been hurt. Anyone with information on the animal's whereabouts is asked to call Sumner County authorities. Caldwell is located about 40 miles south of Wichita.=================Theater Shooting Suspect Withdrew Application to Attend KUDENVER (AP) — The man suspected of opening fire in a Colorado movie theater had applied to the University of Kansas graduate school but withdrew his application before the school decided whether to admit him. The university released James Eagan Holmes's application on Wednesday in response to open records requests filed by The Associated Press and other news outlets. Holmes applied to neuroscience programs at a half-dozen graduate schools and ended up at the University of Colorado, Denver. He withdrew at the end of his first year, about six weeks before the shootings. Many parts of Holmes's application to Kansas appear to be similar to his applications released by other schools. The July 20 shootings killed 12 and wounded 58. Holmes is charged with murder and attempted murder. He hasn't entered a plea.=================Wichita Police Officer Fires at SuspectWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita police officer is on administrative leave after firing at a man who appeared to aim a weapon at him. No one was injured in the shooting overnight Tuesday. Police say the officer was completing paperwork in a parking lot when he saw someone looking around the corner of a nearby building. The man went away and returned a few minutes later. Police say the officer got out of the car and began firing after it appeared that the man aimed a rifle at him. The man ran away and police say it's not clear if he was hit by any of the officer's shots. No one has been arrested.==================Canadian Firm Proposes New Keystone Oil Pipeline RouteOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The company that wants to build a pipeline to transport crude oil from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries has revised its new route to avoid environmentally sensitive areas in Nebraska. TransCanada said Wednesday that the new Keystone XL route minimizes the potential impact on the Sandhills region and avoids two small city well fields. This is TransCanada's second proposed new route through Nebraska. State regulators said the last proposal, submitted in April, still ran too close to sensitive areas. Jane Kleeb, the executive director of pipeline opposition group Bold Nebraska, says state and federal officials should reject the proposed route if it would still cross the Sandhills and the Ogallala aquifer. TransCanada officials and state regulators did not immediately return calls Wednesday morning.================== Kansas Man Flees after Sentencing on Drug ChargeWINFIELD, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a south-central Kansas man is facing fresh charges after running from a courthouse where he'd just been sentenced to prison. The Arkansas City Traveler reports 30-year-old Chang Lee Saulsberry, of Winfield, was arrested Tuesday after driving into a ditch in Oklahoma's Kay County. The car burst into flames, but Saulsberry was unhurt. Saulsberry had just received a 20-month sentence in Cowley County District Court for possessing a chemical used to make methamphetamine. Cowley County Attorney Chris Smith says that Saulsberry bolted outside, then led officers on a 25-mile, high-speed chase from Winfield down U.S. 77 into Oklahoma. He was being held Tuesday night in Kay County, Oklahoma. Authorities say they're studying the possibility of filing charges against him in both states.==================Motive Still Unclear in Deadly Wichita Shooting WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police say two suspects are jailed as the investigation continues into a shooting that killed an 8-year-old girl with a stray bullet. The shooting Tuesday morning in south Wichita killed Kimbra Moore as she slept with her two siblings. A 46-year-old woman suffered a minor wound when she was hit by a stray bullet. Police say the shooting began with an argument between a man in a stolen car and four other people. One of the four people shot at the car as it drove away. The stolen car was found Wednesday but the driver has not been located. A 24-year-old man and a 28-year-old man were arrested Tuesday evening. Two others who were detained were later released. Police say it's still unclear what led to the shooting.================== Photographer Pleads Guilty to Child Porn ChargeKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — An eastern Kansas man who set up a nude photo shoot with a 14-year-old girl has pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography. The U.S. Attorney's office says 30-year-old Kristopher Hausback, of Spring Hill, entered the plea Tuesday. He'll be sentenced in December. Prosecutors say the girl went to a Johnson County hotel in August 2011 to be photographed by Hausback and texted the hotel name and room number to her brother. Leawood police went to the hotel after Hausback reported his camera had been stolen. In fact, prosecutors said, the girl's stepfather showed up at the hotel and took the camera in a scuffle with Hausback. Investigators examined Hausback's camera and computer and also found photos he took of a 16-year-old girl.================== Judge to Hear Case Against KC Bishop, Diocese KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The criminal case against the highest-ranking Catholic official in the U.S. to be charged with shielding an abusive priest is poised to reach a surprisingly swift end. Jackson County, Missouri prosecutors and attorneys for Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn have agreed to have a judge hear their case on Thursday, weeks ahead of a scheduled jury trial date. Finn and the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph are each charged with a misdemeanor count of failing to report suspected child abuse. The judge will hear the case Thursday afternoon and is expected to reach a verdict later that day. The charges stem from the Reverend Shawn Ratigan's child porn case, in which church officials knew about photos on the priest's computer but didn't turn him in for six months.==================Video Shows Violent Boat Incident at Missouri LakeKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A video camera mounted at the front of a boat on Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks captures a frightening accident that left seven people hurt but nobody killed. Brett Tintera is a cameraman for Lake TV, a cable and Internet station. He was filming events leading up to weekend boat races when he hitched a ride on a power boat August 24. He says the boat took off at high speed before being smacked by waves. The video shows the craft and everyone aboard bouncing violently. Tintera says his injuries included broken bones and cuts. Five people on board were taken to a hospital. Two others refused treatment.==================California Candidate Drops Out of Alabama Search; KS Candidate Still in RunningMONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — One of the three finalists to be Alabama's two-year college chancellor has withdrawn his name. Gregory Gray announced that he has decided to stay in California as chancellor of the Riverside Community College District. His decision came after district board members and others asked him to stay.A spokeswoman for Alabama's two-year college system says the State Board of Education will go ahead with plans to interview the other two finalists on September 13 in Montgomery. They are Mark Heinrich, president of Shelton State Community College in Tuscaloosa, and Blake Flanders, vice president of workforce development for the Kansas Board of Regents. The school board is looking for a replacement for Freida Hill, who stepped down in March under pressure from some board members.
  • Here's a summary of Kansas news headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by KPR staff.
  • UPDATE: Bodies on Kansas Farm Identified as Missing Mom, 2 Residents OTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified the woman and two men who were found slain on an eastern Kansas farm earlier this week. Franklin County Sheriff Jeffrey Richards said at a news conference Wednesday that the two men lived at the farm in Ottawa, a community about 50 miles southwest of Kansas City. They were 30-year-old Andrew A. Stout and 31-year-old Steven E. White. He says the other victim was 21-year-old Kaylie Bailey, an Olathe woman who was last seen with her 18-month-old daughter at the farm May 1. Friends have said Bailey and Stout were dating. Authorities haven't said how the victims died. Richards says investigators are still trying to find Bailey's daughter, Lana. Authorities found Bailey's vehicle in Emporia on Tuesday and have been questioning a man they picked up there.==============Kansas Tax Talks in Hands of Governor, Top GOP LeadersTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Governor Sam Brownback and the Kansas Legislature's top GOP leaders are negotiating over additional cuts in income taxes and changes in the state's sales tax. Brownback confirmed Wednesday that he's been talking directly to Senate President Susan Wagle of Wichita and House Speaker Ray Merrick of Stilwell about taxes. The Legislature reconvened Wednesday after a monthlong spring break to wrap up its business for the year. Brownback and GOP leaders hope to follow up on income tax cuts enacted last year while also stabilizing the budget. The Senate endorsed Brownback's plan for more income tax cuts and his proposal to cancel a decrease in the sales tax scheduled by law for July. The House wants to allow the sales tax to drop and enact less-aggressive income tax cuts. ============Kansas Senate Panel Approves $202M in NBAF Bonds TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas Senate committee has approved a bill authorizing an additional $202 million in bonds for a national biodefense lab after adding limits designed to address some conservative Republicans' concerns. The Ways and Means Committee's voice vote Wednesday sends the measure to the full Senate for debate, possibly as early as Friday. Kansas has authorized $105 million in bonds for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility at Kansas State University. Republican Governor Sam Brownback has said the new bonds are necessary to fulfill the state's promise to cover part of the construction costs. The $1.2 billion facility will research dangerous animal diseases. Some conservative GOP senators questioned authorizing new bonds. The bill says they can't be issued until the federal government signs a contract with a construction contractor.==============Topeka Police Investigate Death of 5-Month-OldTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka police say they are investigating the death of a 5-month-old child. Officers went to an apartment in central Topeka Tuesday evening to check on the child's welfare. Police say in a news release the child was found in a bedroom and was declared dead. The name and gender of the child have not been released. Authorities have made no arrests as the investigation continues.============== Advocates for Disabled Rally Against KanCare InclusionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — More than 1,000 advocates for the developmentally disabled are rallying at the Kansas Statehouse to urge officials to maintain the current system for providing services. Many of those gathered Wednesday wrote messages on a 65-foot canvass banner addressed to Republican Governor Sam Brownback. They argue that folding services for the developmentally disabled into the state's KanCare Medicaid system will hurt families, clients and care givers. The state began the KanCare system in January for most medical services for the poor and disabled, except those with developmental disabilities. That is supposed to change in 2014 when the services would be provided through three private health insurance companies that operate the KanCare system.============== 3 Suspects Charged in Wichita Football Player's DeathWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Three people are charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of former Wichita South High football player Jordan Turner. Twenty-one-year-old Ebony Nguyen, 20-year-old Kristofer Wright and 21-year-old Eric Jackson were charged Tuesday in their first court appearance. Preliminary hearings for Nguyen, Wright and Jackson are set May 21. Each is being held in Sedgwick County Jail in lieu of $1 million bond. The defendants indicated Tuesday either they would hire attorneys or seek public defenders. A farmer discovered Turner's body May 1 southeast of Wichita. He had been shot to death. A fourth suspect, an 18-year-old woman, did not appear in court. District attorney spokesman Dan Dillon said as of Tuesday the three charged are the only people with active cases relating to Turner's death.============== Country Music Festival in Manhattan Through 2017MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — The music and camping festival called Country Stampede will stay in Manhattan at least through 2017. Wayne Rouse, president of Country Stampede, said Tuesday that the festival has signed a new five-year lease with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism. The Manhattan Mercury reports that the lease was signed months ago but Rouse publicized it Tuesday to dispel rumors that the festival was moving. He says festival organizers never considered holding the festival at another location. Country Stampede occurs the last full weekend of June at Tuttle Creek State Park. This year's Stampede is scheduled for June 27-30.==============DA: Shooting of Man Who Killed Officers JustifiedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor says law enforcement officers acted correctly when they shot and killed a man who killed two Topeka police officers. Taylor announced Wednesday that his investigation into the December 2012 shooting of 22-year-old David Tiscareno was closed. Tiscareno was shot by a Topeka police officer and two Kansas Bureau of Investigation officers on December 17 after a standoff at a house. That was a day after Tiscareno shot and killed Police Corporal David Gogian and Officer Jeff Atherly at a Topeka grocery store. WIBW reports that Taylor says his investigation did not reveal Tiscareno's motive for shooting the officers. But he says Tiscareno was high on methamphetamine and had earlier posted a challenge to police on his Facebook page and said he welcomed his death.============== KC Chef Named Best Chef of MidwestKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City chef has been named the 2013 best chef in the Midwest by the James Beard Foundation. Colby Garrelts, owner of Bluestem in Kansas City, was named best Midwest chef on Monday. The annual James Beard awards event was held Monday night in New York. Garrelts has been nominated for the award seven times. The Kansas City Star reports that Garrelts is the fourth Kansas City chef to bring home the coveted award. Debbie Gold, Michael Smith and Celina Tio each won the honor while executive chef at the American Restaurant. Garrelts and his wife, Megan, also own a second restaurant, Rye, in nearby Leawood. Other Midwest chef nominees this year included St. Louis restaurateur Gerard Craft of Niche.=============Canadian Who Took Kansas Girl Sentenced to 8 Years WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Canadian man will spend eight years in prison for taking a 12-year-old Kansas girl he met on the Internet. Stewart Kenneth Cody McGill, of Bewdley, Ontario, was sentenced Wednesday on one count of traveling with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct. The 21-year-old man pleaded guilty in February under a plea deal that spared him a minimum 10-year sentence had he been convicted at trial. His attorney, Roger Falk, cited his client's "low mental capacity." He said while there was a difference in chronological ages between him and the girl, their developmental ages were close. He says nothing more happened between them than touching her over her jeans. McGill traveled last year to El Dorado to meet the girl. They were found days later near Potterville, Michigan.============== Hutchinson Fireworks Show Apparently Cancelled This YearHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — It appears Hutchinson's July 4 festivities won't include a fireworks display this year but the annual Patriots Parade is still on. The board that organized the fireworks show and HutchFest celebration disbanded last year and new members have not come forward to help. The board's last member, Ron Williams, says plans for this year's celebration are off. Sponsors of the Patriots Parade say that event will continue. And a talent show also will be part of the Independence Day celebration. The Hutchinson News reports that the city has spent $10,000 a year to fund the fireworks show. Most of that money came from permits from vendors. But the city now prohibits aerial fireworks, meaning fewer vendors are expected to open in Hutchinson this year.============== Fireworks Now Legal in Arkansas CityARKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Arkansas City residents will be able to legally shoot off fireworks this year. The City Commission voted Tuesday to change municipal code to allow the use of fireworks within city limits and to set a permit fee for fireworks sales. The Arkansas City Traveler reports the changes take effect immediately, allowing fireworks vendors to set up in time for July 4. Fireworks could be used only 10 am to 10 pm July 1-3 and from 10 am to midnight July 4. A facility of 500 square feet or less would pay a base permit fee of $2,500. That would increase by $2 per square foot for any additional area, up to a maximum of $5,000.============== Kansas City Toy Museum Begins Fundraising CampaignKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Toy & Miniature Museum of Kansas City is starting a public capital campaign to help its efforts to renovate and upgrade the 30-year-old building. Museum officials announced Tuesday that the public phase of the campaign will seek to raise $9.2 million. More than $8 million has already been raised. Plans are to upgrade the building's entrance, increase the museum's endowment, rearrange exhibits and fix the heating and cooling systems. The Kansas City Star reports that the museum's 80,000 pieces make it one of the largest toy and miniature collections in the country. Renovations are expected to begin next year but it is unclear when the work will be completed. When the work is done, the museum will be renamed the National Museum of Toys and Miniatures.==============Puppy Survives Nearly a Month in Impounded CarKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City animal shelter is caring for a puppy that authorities say survived in a locked car that was impounded for nearly a month in a city lot. The 12-week-old puppy, which has been named Kia, apparently survived by eating trash left in the car. The terrier and schnauzer mix didn't have access to water. Toni Fugate, a spokeswoman for the city's animal shelter, says the puppy was dehydrated and malnourished but is expected to survive. Records show that the car was towed to the lot April 8. A lot employee saw the dog Monday afternoon and called police, who broke into the car.==============Play About Brown v. Board Case to Be Performed in KCK KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A play that tells the real stories of people involved in the litigation that toppled segregated education is being performed this week in Kansas City, Kan. The Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site in Topeka says it has worked with the Kansas City Kansas Community College to put on a performance of playwright Marcia Cebulska' "Now Let Me Fly." Because the National Park Service is helping to offset the cost, tickets are free to Thursday and Friday performances at the campus theater. It's being performed by the theater production company "Say I Am Productions." The play was commissioned for the 50th anniversary of the May 17, 1954, U.S. Supreme Court ruling through a contribution from Washburn University. It's based on oral histories and personal interviews.============== President Clinton Receives Truman Good Neighbor AwardINDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — Former President Bill Clinton has been honored as the 2013 recipient of the Harry S Truman Good Neighbor Award. At a luncheon Wednesday in Kansas City, Clinton recalled Truman's ability to bring people together behind a common purpose. He also said being a good neighbor was the best policy. Good Neighbor Award Foundation president Karl Zobrist has said Clinton was chosen because of his record of public service. Clinton was president from 1993 to 2001. Previous recipients of the award include President Gerald R. Ford, Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, General H. Norman Schwarzkopf and news anchor Walter Cronkite.==============NASCAR Panel Reduces JGR PenaltiesCONCORD, N.C. (AP) — A three-member NASCAR appeals panel has dramatically reduced most of the penalties levied against Joe Gibbs Racing for an illegal part found in Matt Kenseth's race-winning engine at Kansas Speedway. The panel reduced the points deducted from Kenseth from 50 to 12, and reinstated his bonus points earned for the April 21 victory. The race will count toward the Chase and he moves from 11th in the Sprint Cup standings to fourth. The panel also reduced crew chief Jason Ratcliff's suspension from six races to one race, and eliminated the six-race suspension for owner Joe Gibbs. It let stand Ratcliff's $200,000 fine. NASCAR found one of eight connecting rods in Kenseth's engine was 3 grams too light. JGR appealed, saying Toyota was responsible for the engine part. ==============Car of Missing Kansas Mom Found; Man QuestionedOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities investigating the disappearance of a 22-year-old eastern Kansas woman and her 18-month-old daughter have recovered her car and taken a man in for questioning. The Franklin County Sheriff's Office said in a statement Wednesday that Kaylie Bailey's car and the man were found late Tuesday in Emporia. It didn't identify the man or say whether he had been driving the car, but it says he was wanted for questioning in the case. Emporia is about 50 miles from an Ottawa farm where Bailey was believed to be headed on the day last week when she and her daughter disappeared. The bodies of a woman and two men were found at the farm this week. Authorities are trying to identify them and still consider Bailey and her daughter missing. **this story has been updated. Please see above.
  • Krystal Anderson died in March after giving birth to a stillborn daughter. For Black women like her, the risk of dying of pregnancy-related causes is greater than for white women.
  • Here's a look at area news headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by the KPR News Team.
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