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  • Here are the area headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • Here's today's summary of AP headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR staffers. This summary is made possible by KPR listener-members. You can become a listener-member too! Make a pledge by calling (888) 577-5268 - and THANKS!
  • =========================================Kansas House Approves Bipartisan Redistricting BillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas House has approved a bipartisan bill redrawing members' districts so power shifts in the chamber from rural areas to the Kansas City region. The measure, approved on a 109-14 vote today, had the support of Speaker Mike O'Neal, a Hutchinson Republican, and Minority Leader Paul Davis, a Lawrence Democrat. The bill would go to the Senate. But by tradition one chamber doesn't revise the other chamber's plan for its own members' districts. The legislation eliminates one district each in southeast, southwest and central Kansas and adds three districts to the Kansas City area. Lawmakers must redraw political boundaries to reflect changes in population. The job was made easier because three Republican lawmakers thrown into districts with GOP incumbents are running for state Senate seats.============================================Kansas to Receive $50M from Mortgage SettlementTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Attorney General Derek Schmidt says Kansas residents will share about $50 million of a $25 billion settlement reached between the federal government, states and several mortgage lenders. The deal announced Thursday is the largest industry settlement since the 1998 multistate tobacco settlement. Schmidt said the state's share of the settlement would be direct payments to some homeowners who lost their homes to foreclosure. Under the agreement, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial will reduce loans for about 1 million households. They will also send checks of $2,000 to about 750,000 Americans, including about 4,000 Kansas residents, who were improperly foreclosed upon. The banks will have three years to fulfill the terms of the deal.============================================KS House Takes Up Bill to Change Abortion ProceduresTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A House committee is hearing testimony on a bill that would make several changes to laws surrounding abortion. The hearings began Wednesday on the "No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act." The bill would, among other things, require physicians to tell women that abortion increases the risks of premature birth and breast cancer. It also would require medical providers to try to locate the fetal heartbeat and give the woman the chance to hear it before she undergoes an abortion. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the bill also would eliminate tax credits for drugs used for abortions and some credits for medical institutions that perform abortions. Abortion-rights groups called the bill intrusive and that it will risk women's lives. Supporters say the bill would protect babies and parents.=================================Kansas House Chair Trims Teacher Rating MeasureTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A proposal from Governor Sam Brownback to post teacher evaluations on school district websites has been trimmed from a House education bill. The Topeka Capital Journal reported that Republican House Education Committee Chairman Clay Aurand decided to take the action after a hearing Thursday. Under the proposal, the formula for the rankings would be based 50 percent on student achievement growth, 40 percent on input from supervisors, peers, parents and students and 10 percent on the teachers' contributions to the profession. The State Board of Education would define the exact criteria. Teachers rated ineffective two years in a row would not be allowed to teach and schools could fire them if professional development opportunities had been provided. The proposal would also offer $5,000 bonuses for some highly rated teachers.===============================Kansas Democrats Offer School Funding AlternativeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Democrats are offering an alternative to Governor Sam Brownback's plan for rewriting the state's school funding formula. Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley of Topeka shared his proposal Thursday with the Senate Education Committee to increase school funding by $180 million over the next three years. The plan would add $45 million to K-12 budgets in each of the next two years and $90 million in the third. It also includes a companion bill to give cities and counties some $45 million in property tax relief. Earlier this week the committee began taking testimony on Brownback's plan, which would rewrite the funding formula, giving local districts more authority and responsibility for raising education dollars locally through property taxes. Brownback's plan also makes changes to teacher evaluation systems and technical education.===============================Kansas House Approves Junction City Debt MeasureTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House members have given final approval to a bill that will give Junction City more time to pay down debt related to growth at Fort Riley. The bill passed 98-25 on final action today. It gives the city an additional three years to reduce the ratio of outstanding debt to its total property valuation. The limit would remain at 37 percent under the bill through June 30, 2016. Approval by the House sends the bill to the Senate. Junction City issued the bonds in the past decade to make improvements related to the return of the 1st Infantry Division to Fort Riley. City officials and supporters of the debt extension said the anticipated growth didn't occur to the level expected, leaving the city in financial difficulty.===============================Former KS Congressman Dennis Moore Has Alzheimer'sKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Former Congressman Dennis Moore, who represented Kansas for 12 years in the U.S. House, has announced he has Alzheimer's. Moore, a Democrat from Kansas' 3rd District, says in a statement that he is in the "early phases of Alzheimer's disease" and that he received the final diagnosis in June 2011. The 66-year-old said he hopes to help "others in the same situation" by making his illness public. Moore, who did not seek re-election in 2010 after holding the seat since 1998, said he wanted to help draw attention to Alzheimer's and early onset dementia. He and his wife, Stephene, plan to work with a local chapter of the Alzheimer's Association. Stephene Moore sought to replace her husband in Congress in 2010, but was defeated by Republican Representative Kevin Yoder.==============================Four More Pupils Accuse KC Area Teacher of MolestationGRAIN VALLEY, Mo. (AP) — Four more young children have come forward to say a suburban Kansas City second-grade teacher touched them inappropriately in his classroom, raising the number of alleged victims to eight. Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker announced new charges Wednesday against 33-year-old Matthew Nelson, a teacher at a Grain Valley elementary school and former "Teacher of the Year." Nelson now is facing five felony counts of first-degree child molestation and three felony counts of first-degree statutory sodomy. Prosecutors say all of the charges involve boys. They say the new victims came forward after Nelson was first charged in January with abusing four others.===============================KS House Panel Endorses Kobach Citizenship BillTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas House committee has endorsed Secretary of State Kris Kobach's proposal to require some potential Kansas voters to prove their U.S. citizenship ahead of this year's presidential election. The Elections Committee approved a bill to impose the proof-of-citizenship requirement starting June 15th for people registering to vote in Kansas for the first time. The state enacted the rule last year, but it isn't scheduled to take effect until January 1st, 2013. The committee's endorsement of the bill allows a debate in the House. Kobach has said he wants to impose the proof-of-citizenship rule ahead of schedule because voter registration peaks once every four years in the months before a presidential election. But critics say the bill will hurt voter participation.===============================Brownback, GOP Press Need for KS Tax ChangesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback, fellow Republicans and business groups are stepping up their pressure on legislators to make changes to the Kansas income tax code. During a news conference Wednesday outside his office, Brownback said the state needs to get its income rates down to stimulate job creation and create more personal income for all residents. The governor wants to reduce the number of income tax brackets from three to two and lower overall rates. His plan targets small businesses and eliminates a number of credits and exemptions. House Taxation Committee Chairman Richard Carlson, a Saint Marys Republican, says a bill is being introduced that will contain the details of the House tax plan. Carlson declined to give details until they are finished, perhaps by Friday.==============================KS Senate Passes Congress Map Derided by State GOPTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate has passed a congressional redistricting bill that has bipartisan support but has drawn criticism from the state Republican Party. The bill, approved on a 23-17 vote, creates a slightly more Democratic district for Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins, the senior member of the state's all-GOP U.S. House delegation. The proposal split the 32 Republicans in the 40-member Senate, with 15 of them supporting it. All eight Democrats voted yes before the bill went to the House. The proposal expands the 1st District of western and central Kansas to include Manhattan, home of Kansas State University. Local officials want to stay in Jenkins' 2nd District of eastern Kansas. Supporters said they didn't have politics in mind in redrawing lines to account for population changes over the past decade.=====================================Kansas Teachers Deliver Pension Petitions to CapitolTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Teachers from Kansas City-area school districts have delivered petitions on pension issues signed by more than 6,400 school employees to the Statehouse. The signers are protesting the Legislature's consideration of a proposal to start a 401(k)-style pension plan for new teachers and government workers. The teachers represented five school districts in Johnson County and presented the petitions Thursday to their legislators and Governor Sam Brownback's office. Brownback supports proposal as a way to rein in the long-term costs facing the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System. KPERS faces a projected $8.3 billion funding shortfall through 2033. Its plans guarantee benefits up front, based on a worker's salary and years of service. A 401(k)-style plan would tie benefits to investment earnings. A Senate committee planned hearings on the proposal.=====================================House Appropriations Nixes Public Broadcasting FundsThe Kansas House Appropriations Committee has rejected an augmented funding request for public broadcasting. Governor Sam Brownback included $600,000 in funding for public broadcasting in his budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1st. A budget subcommittee had recommended adding $800,000 to that funding. Today's action by the Appropriations Committee removes that recommendation. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Republican state Representative Anthony Brown of Eudora said voting against the funding was "one of the tough decisions legislators had to make to be 'real fiscal conservatives.'" State Representative Peggy Mast of Emporia said that legislators needed to re-prioritize given all the funding needs on state and national levels. Several western Kansas legislators spoke in favor of the recommendation, saying their constituents depend on public radio and television broadcasts. The motion to remove the $800,000 funding recommendation was deadlocked at a vote of 10-10. Appropriations Chairman Marc Rhoades of Newton broke the tie and voted to kill the additional funds. Today's vote will have no effect on the Governor's original $600,000 proposal.=====================================Kansas Judge Sets Trial Date in Abortion Threat CaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has set a trial date in the government's lawsuit against an abortion opponent accused of sending a threatening letter to a Wichita doctor training to offer abortions. U.S. Magistrate Judge Kenneth Gale scheduled the trial against anti-abortion activist Angel Dillard for February 5, 2013. His order on Thursday also sets a timeline for the parties to try to settle the case. The Valley Center woman told Dr. Mila Means in January that she would have to check under her car every day because someone might place an explosive under it. No abortions have been openly done in Wichita since Dr. George Tiller was shot and killed by an abortion opponent in 2009.====================================Kansas Grocer Faces Sentencing in Food Stamp Scam WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The owner of a Kansas grocery store is pleading with a federal judge to spare him from prison for his role in a scheme that targeted people willing to sell their food stamps for cash. Ahmed Ajami Al-Maleki asked the judge in a letter for mercy so he can return to his family and live an honest life. His letter was part of a filing Wednesday by his attorney, Kurt Kerns, who is seeking a probationary sentence below the federal sentencing guidelines. Kerns said his client was a conduit for the food stamp scheme rather than a leader of the conspiracy. Today, prosecutors sought a continuance for next week's scheduled sentencing so they could prepare a response. Al-Maleki pleaded guilty to conspiracy, wire fraud and food stamp fraud.==============================KC Police Officer Charged with Drunken DrivingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An off-duty Kansas City officer has been charged with drunken driving, resisting arrest and assaulting other officers after being pulled over on the city's north side. Megan Laffoon was on North Oak Trafficway around 3am Wednesday when an officer saw her driving eratically. Police say the 29-year-old Laffoon became enraged after failing field sobriety tests and being told she was under arrest. Prosecutors say she scratched the officer's neck and continued to fight after being pepper sprayed. She also is accused of head-butting a police office as he attempted to strap her into the back of a police wagon. Laffoon was scheduled to make a court appearance today (THUR).===============================Missing Kingman Man Found DeadKINGMAN, Kan. (AP) — Police say an 89-year-old Kingman man who was the subject of a Silver Alert has been found dead. The search for Wallace "Gene" Fairchild ended after his body was found late Tuesday. His body was found at Calvary Cemetery south of Danville in eastern Harper County, which is south of Kingman. Fairchild, who suffered from dementia, was last seen about noon Tuesday driving on U.S. 54 near Kingman. Family members contacted police after he didn't show up at either of two daily visits with family members.=======================================Kansas Woman Delivers Baby after Hit-and-Run CrashGARDNER, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas woman injured after a hit-and-run crash involving a tractor-trailer has delivered a healthy baby girl. The Kansas City Star reported that 33-year-old Nikki McClure is in critical but stable condition following Wednesday's collision on Interstate 35 near Gardner. The Kansas Highway Patrol reported that McClure had to be extricated from her car after rear-ending the slow-moving tractor-trailer. After the crash, the rig's driver drove off with the hood of her car impaled on the back of the trailer. As of today, the truck and its driver hadn't been found. McClure's husband calls the baby a "little miracle."============================== Audit Clears State Department in Keystone ReviewWASHINGTON (AP) _ The State Department's internal watchdog has cleared the agency of any impropriety in its review of a permit for a controversial pipeline that that would carry Canadian oil across the continental United States. In a report released to Congress on Thursday, the department's inspector general's office said it found no evidence that State Department employees were improperly influenced by proponents of the Keystone XL pipeline, including the applicant TransCanada. Opponents of the pipeline, which was ultimately rejected, had alleged that TransCanada had an inappropriately cozy relationship with some State Department employees conducting the review. They suggested that this affected an environmental impact statement. The report said the department incorporated relevant concerns from other federal agencies in the review but expressed concern that its limited resources and expertise affected the process.==============================Survey: Most Think Suspect Guilty in Great Bend Teen's DeathGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — Attorneys for a man accused of killing a 14-year-old Great Bend girl say their client can't get a fair trial in Barton County because most residents already think he's guilty. There was no decision on Wednesday's request in Barton County District Court to move the trial of 37-year-old Adam Longoria. He is scheduled to go on trial March 26 on charges of capital murder and sex crimes for the August 2010 death of Alicia DeBolt. KWCH-TV reports Judge Hannelore Kitts said she would rule on Monday. A survey of 400 Barton County residents conducted through Pittsburg State University found all were familiar with the case and 94 percent thought Longoria was guilty. Prosecutors say the survey is not representative and argue Longoria could still get a fair trial.===============================KS Senate Considers Bill to Require Certification of Abuse ProgramsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Senate is considering a bill that would require certification of programs that treat domestic violence offenders. Under the bill, the attorney general's office would certify and regulate the batterer intervention programs. Advocates say many current domestic violence programs are cursory, drop-in efforts that don't take domestic violence seriously. Assistant Attorney General Travis Harrod said the proposed legislation follows up on a 2010 bill that established tracking of domestic violence convictions and sent offenders to batterer intervention programs. He says if batterers are not going to be sent to jail, the state needs to ensure that treatment programs are beneficial. Harrod said the bill would set uniform standards for the programs and ensure the same level of service across Kansas.===============================Two Men Will Stand Trial for Death of Hutchinson WomanHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Two men will stand trial for allegedly gunning down a Hutchinson woman in what apparently was a case of mistaken identity. A Reno County judge Wednesday ordered Billy Joe Craig Jr. and Charles Christopher Logsdon to stand trial for the June, 2011, killing of 27-year-old Jennifer Heckel. Craig and Logsdon face first-degree murder and several other charges in the death of Heckel, who was shot at her home while her 5-year-old son was nearby. The Hutchinson News reports testimony during the hearing indicated the men intended to rob a drug dealer but went to the wrong home. The men's attorneys argued no DNA evidence or alleged murder weapon connected their clients to the homicide. And they argued that many of the prosecution's witnesses weren't credible.==============================Flags Will Fly at Half-Staff Saturday for Federal JudgeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback has ordered flags at state buildings to be flown at half-staff Saturday to honor a Kansan who had been the oldest sitting federal judge in U.S. history. Judge Wesley Brown died January 23 at an assisted living center in Wichita at age 104. A memorial service for Brown is scheduled for 11am Saturday, and Brownback ordered flags to remain lowered from sunrise to sunset. Brown was appointed as a federal district judge in 1962 by then-President John F. Kennedy. In 1979, Brown officially took senior status, a type of semiretirement that allows federal judges to work with a full or reduced case level. But he continued to carry a full workload for decades.============================Sumner County Tops State in Wheat Production & AcreageWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service says Sumner County was tops in Kansas for winter wheat production and acreage last year.The agency's report on wheat county estimates released Thursday shows Sumner County led the state in production with 10.5 million bushels. McPherson County was second with 8.9 million bushels, followed by Sherman County with 7.4 million bushels. Sumner County also led the state in harvested acres with 329,000 total acres. Harper came in second with 225,000 and Reno was third with 218,000 acres. However, the best yields came out of Miami County where growers were getting average yields of 57.6 bushels per acre. The worst average yields were in Morton County with 16.3 bushels per acre. Statewide, Kansas produced 276.5 million bushels of wheat last year, down 23 percent from 2010.============================ Kansas City's Union Station Reports 2nd Year of Operating SurplusKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The once financially troubled Union Station in Kansas City has brought in more money than it spent for the second straight year. The Kansas City Star reported that the attraction recorded a net operating surplus of $3.25 million in 2011 before depreciation. Figures presented Wednesday show revenues were ahead of budget in every area except for the KC Rail Experience museum. Much of the success is attributed to the popularity of the Princess Diana exhibit. The station also received a boost from rent-paying tenants such as the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce and the Internal Revenue Service. The station management's business model calls for aggressively containing costs, outsourcing services and not staging money-losing exhibits or programs. An exhibit focusing on the Titanic promises to be one of the venue's highlights in 2012.==============================Kansas Star Ahead of Schedule on Building Permanent CasinoWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Construction of the Kansas Star Casino's permanent facility is running ahead of schedule, thanks to the mild winter weather. The Wichita Eagle reports the permanent casino is scheduled to open by the end of the year. Its temporary casino opened in December. The permanent casino will be more than 180,000 square feet. That is much more space than the 100,000 square feet it now has in the arena facility, with its 53,000 square feet of casino space. It will offer expanded gaming, including a poker room, as well an events center, five restaurants and a 150-room hotel. The final phase in early 2014 will double the number of hotel rooms and include the opening of an equestrian center.===============================KS Lawmakers Likely to Give Junction City More Time to Pay DebtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas House members are expected to give final approval to a bill that will give Junction City more time to pay down its debt related to growth at Fort Riley. The bill on final action today (THUR) would give the city an additional three years to reduce the ratio of outstanding debt to its total property valuation. The limit would remain at 37 percent under the bill through June 30, 2016. Approval by the House sends the bill to the Senate. Junction City issued the bonds in the past decade to make improvements related to the return of the 1st Infantry Division to Fort Riley. City officials and supporters of the debt extension said the anticipated growth didn't occur to the level expected, leaving the city in financial difficulty.
  • Schmidt Wants to Present State's Argument in Ballot DisputeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Republican Attorney General Derek Schmidt wants a chance to argue in court that Kansas Democrats are legally obligated to pick a new nominee for U.S. Senate. Schmidt's office Thursday asked a three-judge panel in Shawnee County District Court for permission to file friend-of-the-court arguments in a disgruntled voter's lawsuit. A hearing in the case is set for Monday. Democratic nominee Chad Taylor dropped out of the race against Republican Senator Pat Roberts. The move was seen as helping independent candidate Greg Orman and hurting Roberts's re-election prospects. David Orel of Kansas City, Kansas, sued last week after the Kansas Supreme Court allowed Taylor's name to be removed from the November 4 ballot. Orel is a longtime registered Democrat, though his son works on Republican Governor Sam Brownback's re-election campaign. County election officials say, if the case is settled by October 1, they will still have time to get the ballots to the printer and mailed out on schedule by October 15th.==============================Fort Riley Soldiers Deploying to Middle EastFORT RILEY, Kan. (AP) - The Defense Department says about 200 soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division at Fort Riley will deploy to Iraq to advise Iraqi forces confronting Islamic State militants. The soldiers are among about 500 members of the division's Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion being deployed to the U.S. Central Command's area of operations. Thursday's announcement did not specify where the other 300 will be stationed, but a Pentagon spokesman in Washington said there were no immediate plans for them to go into Iraq. President Barack Obama said earlier this month he would send 475 U.S. troops to Iraq to advise and assist the Iraqi military. The U.S. teams are not authorized to go out with Iraqi units for direct ground combat with Islamic State group militants.==============================Democrats Back Republican Brownback's Re-ElectionKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A group of Wyandotte County Democrats is supporting Republican Governor Sam Brownback's re-election campaign. Nearly two dozen people attended the announcement Friday at a new public library in Kansas City, Kansas. Brownback is being challenged in his bid for a second term by Democrat Paul Davis, who has been endorsed more than 100 current and former Republican officials. The pro-Brownback Democratic group is co-chaired by Nathan Barnes, a former commissioner of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas. Barnes said he's "impressed" with the governor, and he praised Brownback's support of small businesses. Speaking at the event, Brownback said he has plans for urban opportunity zones to help high-poverty areas. He said governing is "not about Democrats and Republicans. It's about making things better for the people."==============================Candidates for Kansas Insurance Post to Hold ForumTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - The candidates for Kansas insurance commissioner are having a forum next month in Wichita. The event is October 17 at the Wichita Marriott hotel and is sponsored by the Kansas Association of Insurance Agents. The forum is part of an annual conference. Republican nominee Ken Selzer and Democratic candidate Dennis Anderson are running to replace retiring three-term GOP incumbent Sandy Praeger. Praeger has been unusual among prominent Republicans for publicly defending the federal health care overhaul championed by Democratic President Barack Obama. She's also broken with her party to endorse Anderson. The Democrat is from Overland Park and operates a family business providing educational services to insurance and financial services firms. Selzer is as a certified public accountant and a global reinsurance company executive. He is from Leawood.===============================KS Budget Chief Identifies $101 Million in SavingsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Kansas Governor Sam Brownback's top budget adviser says the administration has identified $101 million in savings to help the state reduce a $238 million budget shortfall predicted for July 2016. Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said Thursday the savings are in addition to efforts by seven major state agencies to review programs to find efficiencies. Sullivan said the state is standardizing computer systems and lowering prescription drug costs in various programs. It also has lower-than-expected costs in state employees' health plan, is refinancing Statehouse renovation bonds and is working with federal officials to collect debts.=============================== Kansas Guard Unit to Be Sliced by Nearly 30 PercentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — As a result of ongoing federal cuts to defense spending, a Kansas Air National Guard official says a Wichita unit could see almost a third of its full-time positions eliminated. The 184th Intelligence Wing stationed at the McConnell Air Force Base is expected to lose nearly 30 percent of its full-time positions by the end of the next fiscal year. The Wing's commander tells the Wichita Eagle that Kansas is shouldering a heavier load of the Air National Guard cuts than other states. If all of the 184th's cuts are made as expected, the Wing will account for almost half of the total reduction for all Air National Guard units. He says that was driven by the types of missions carried out by some of the 184th's units and not because Kansas was singled out specifically.==============================Mail Stolen from Lawrence Municipal CourtLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Officials in Lawrence are investigating the theft of two days' worth of mail addressed to the Municipal Court. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the mail was taken Tuesday and Wednesday from a secure post office box in the downtown post office. Municipal Court administrator Vicki Stanwix urged anyone who had sent mail to the court to call and determine if their mailings were received. People who sent checks for parking tickets, speeding violations and other fines are also encouraged to watch their bank accounts. Lawrence police and the U.S. Postal Service are investigating how the mail was taken from the court's secure box. Stanwix said postal officials are taking additional steps to secure the court's mail.===============================US Agency Cites Missouri Company in Cell Tower DeathsWASHINGTON (AP) — A federal safety enforcement agency is citing a Missouri-based communications company for "willful" and "serious" safety violations in the death of two workers in the collapse in March of a cell tower they were dismantling in Blaine, Kansas. The Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, issued the citations against Wireless Horizon, Inc., of Saint Peters, Missouri. Dr. David Michaels, the assistant secretary of labor who heads OSHA, said in a statement that the nation's growing need for telecommunications should not cost workers' lives. OSHA proposed penalties of $134,400 for the company. Two tower technicians, ages 25 and 38, were killed when a cell tower they were trying to dismantle collapsed on top of them. OSHA says so far this year, 11 workers have died in such mishaps.===============================BTK's Daughter Breaks Silence to Criticize MovieWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The daughter of the BTK serial killer is criticizing writer Stephen King for making a movie partly inspired by the Wichita case. In the first public comments from a member of the killer's family, Kerri Rawson says King is exploiting Dennis Rader's 10 victims and their families. Rawson told the Wichita Eagle that King had been one of her favorite writers, but says she won't read another of his novels now. Rawson said her father was also a huge King fan, and she fears his books might have influenced some of the things Rader did in his later murders. King has said in media interviews that the upcoming movie, "A Good Marriage," was inspired by Rader and his family.===============================Stephen King Responds to Movie CriticismWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Writer Stephen King says the daughter of the BTK serial killer does not have to worry about her father being flattered by his portrayal in an upcoming movie inspired by the Wichita case. King said in an emailed statement Friday that the character depicting Dennis Rader in his film "A Good Marriage" is a banal little man. King says the story isn't about the killer husband, but about a brave and determined woman. King was responding to criticism from Kerri Rawson that he was exploiting her father's victims. Rawson says that King's upcoming movie inspired her to break a self-imposed nine-year silence. But the author says the drive to understand is the basis of art, and that is what he strove for in the novella and movie.==============================Kansas Woman Awarded $1 Million from Radio Station KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A federal jury has awarded $1 million to a suburban Kansas City woman falsely described by a radio station as a porn star. The Kansas City Star reports that Ashley Patton of Olathe sued the owner of 96.5 The Buzz after a DJ identified her on an April 2012 morning show as a porn star. A week-long federal trial ended Friday with jurors awarding Patton $250,000 in actual damages and $750,000 in punitive damages. Her lawyer says the company agreed while the jury was deliberating that the verdict won't be appealed. Patton had been added to a list of names the station posted on its website, which also had a link to the podcast of the show. Both sides agreed that Patton was never involved in the pornography industry.==============================Emporia Woman Sentenced for Elder AbuseEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — An Emporia woman convicted of using her elderly mother-in-law's money to make expensive purchases for herself has been sentenced to more than seven years in prison. The Kansas attorney general's office says 56-year-old Dalene Miller was sentenced Friday in Lyon County District Court. Miller was convicted in July of mistreating and conspiring to mistreat a dependent adult. The state began investigating in 2011 after a complaint to Adult Protective Services. Prosecutors said Miller was a trustee for her 93-year-old mother-in-law but failed to pay her expenses while buying herself a house, a farm, a truck and other items. Miller's husband is also charged in the case and is scheduled for trial in November.===============================Emporia State's Counseling Department Gets GrantEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — The counselor education department at Emporia State University has received a nearly $1 million grant to increase training for human services paraprofessionals. The university said in a news release that the five-year U.S. Department of Education Grant will be used to provide online master's degree curriculum to address a critical shortage of qualified counseling personnel in rural Kansas and Nebraska. Twenty people from rural Kansas and Nebraska can apply for a 48-credit hour rehabilitation counseling course. After completing the program the rehabilitation counselors will be placed across the central U.S. Selected applicants will receive tuition and related support for their studies.==============================KCK Chemical Company Fined For Improper Waste StorageKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) - A Kansas chemical company has been fined $1.5 million after pleading guilty to storing hazardous waste without a permit required by federal law. Harcros Chemicals, of Kansas City, Kansas, entered the plea Thursday in federal court. Harcros makes industrial chemicals including surfactants and antifoaming agents. The company admitted in its plea that it stored waste chemicals from May 2006 through January 2009 without a permit to store them for more than 90 days. The says the chemicals were kept in cabinets and storage areas for potential future use and were never released into the environment. Harcros also said the chemicals were properly disposed of shortly after a regulatory inspection that took place in 2008.=============================== NTSB: Kansas Tracks Reopened After Train CollisionGALVA, Kan. (AP) — Federal regulators say a Union Pacific line has reopened a day after two trains collided in central Kansas. The line was reopened early Friday after the railroad replaced 400 feet of track on the main line and 300 feet on a side line. The accident occurred in McPherson County between Galva and Canton. National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Eric Weiss says the agency has recovered the evidence and video recorders from the locomotives and downloaded information from train signals. Investigators will be onsite for three to five days recovering perishable evidence and interviewing the crew. Hutchpost.com reports investigators are also looking into whether the accident could have been prevented by technology called positive train control that has the ability to stop a train before a collision.==============================Ford Adds 1,200 Jobs to KC Auto PlantCLAYCOMO, Mo. (AP) _ Ford Motor Company is adding 1,200 workers and another shift to a Kansas City area plant because of surging demand for the company’s new Transit van. Ford says Transit van sales have grown every month since it was introduced. Ford officials say the workers have already been hired and are expected to start in November at the plant in Claycomo.==============================Settlement Deal Reached in Traffic Camera LawsuitsJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Hundreds of thousands of people who got tickets when their vehicles were photographed running red lights in Missouri could be in line to get some money back. Attorneys for ticketed drivers and camera supplier American Traffic Solutions said Friday they have agreed to a proposed settlement of several class-action lawsuits. They said the deal calls for 20 percent refunds to be paid on up to 800,000 tickets issued in 27 Missouri cities served by ATS cameras. At an average ticket of $100, the settlement could amount to as much as $16 million. The cities include Kansas City, St. Joseph, St. Louis and numerous suburbs of St. Louis. The lawsuits claimed the traffic camera ordinances violated people's due process rights and state law. The settlement includes no admission of wrongdoing.==============================Man Gets 10 Years for Pushing Wife off Maine CliffROCKLAND, Maine (AP) - A man convicted of pushing his then-wife off a cliff in a state park in Maine is going to prison for 10 years. A judge on Thursday handed down the sentence for 71-year-old Charles Black, who was convicted of attempted murder in July. The judge imposed a 25-year sentence but suspended most of it. The retired teacher from Kansas was convicted of hitting then-wife Lisa Zahn on the head with a rock before pushing her off an 800-foot cliff in Camden Hills State Park in 2011. Both ended up tumbling down the mountainside and were hospitalized. Black later moved to Utah. Prosecutors said the couple, who had retired to Maine, had been in a dispute about Black's online affair, and his spending some of Zahn's $4 million inheritance without her permission==============================Bond Set at $1M for Topeka Homicide SuspectTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Bond has been set at $1 million for a man who police say was running around bloodied, naked and screaming outside the Topeka home where his girlfriend's body was found. The suspect in the death of 22-year-old Lacie Atchison appeared Thursday in Shawnee County Circuit Court. Judge Steve Ebberts told a prosecutor the district attorney's office would have until Monday afternoon to file charges. For now, the suspect is being held on suspicion of premeditated first-degree murder, child endangerment, misdemeanor battery and criminal restraint. After neighbors called Wednesday to report the nude man, police used a stun gun to subdue the suspect and then found Atchison's body. Officers also took an uninjured child from the home and placed her in protective custody.==============================Kansas Motorcyclist Dies in Perry WreckPERRY, Kan. (AP) - A motorcyclist in northeast Kansas has died after a pickup truck pulled in front of him. The Kansas Highway Patrol says 49-year-old Kurt Lucas was killed Thursday near Perry-Lecompton High School. They say the 49-year-old truck driver didn't yield to Lucas while making a turn. Lucas tried to avoid the collision but hit the back of the truck. He wasn't wearing a helmet. The truck driver wasn't injured. No charges have been reported.==============================Missouri Couple Pleads Guilty to Bank FraudKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A northwest Missouri couple pleaded guilty to a $567,000 bank fraud scheme involving construction projects in a Lee's Summit subdivision. Federal prosecutors say 51-year-old Dennis Key and his 49-year-old wife, Michal Ann Key, of Kingsville pleaded guilty Thursday in separate appearances. Dennis Key owned DM & Associates, a land surveying and engineering consulting business. His wife did clerical work for the business. Prosecutors say Dennis Key and his wife conducted different schemes to hide fees and increase his payments for work at the subdivision. The Keys each face a sentence of up to 30 years in federal prison without parole, plus a fine up to $1 million and an order of restitution. Sentencing hearings have not been scheduled.===============================Father, Son Convicted in Synthetic Marijuana CaseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - A northeast Kansas father and son have been convicted of manufacturing and selling synthetic marijuana through a worldwide network. The U.S. Attorney's office says a federal jury on Thursday found 55-year-old Clark Sloan and 33-year-old Jonathan Sloan guilty on 20 counts each. They were acquitted on five other counts. Clark Sloan lives in Tonganoxie. His son lives in Lawrence, where he was co-owner of a shop where the synthetic marijuana business began. Prosecutors said the Sloans' operation involved the manufacture of K2, a substance treated with the active ingredient in marijuana and marketed as an all-natural herbal product. The enterprise grew to include suppliers, vendors and others throughout the U.S. and in countries around the world. Investigators said the defendants made at least $3.3 million from selling the drugs.==============================Salina Driver Arrested After Police ChaseSALINA, Kan. (AP) - Salina police arrested a 21-year-old man who they say led police on a chase after they caught him drag racing. Police tell the Salina Journal the man was arrested Wednesday and that he had a 15-year-old girl in the car during the attempted escape in a 2003 Acura. He faces charges including endangering a child, racing on highways and reckless driving. Police say he original eluded police but that a witness later saw him on the highway. They say he abandoned the car and ran before he was caught.==============================Washburn Receives $1 Million Gift for Recital HallTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Washburn University in Topeka says it will use a $1 million gift to start planning for a new recital hall. University president Jerry Farley says the school will hire an architect for a hall that will be designed to provide a more intimate setting than White Concert Hall. The new hall would seat 250 to 350 people, compared with White Concert Hall's capacity of 1,200. He says the new hall will have a full-size stage and excellent acoustics. Farley said he couldn't disclose the benefactor's name at this time. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the smaller hall would also resolve scheduling conflicts when more than one stage is needed and provide a space for the Topeka Symphony Orchestra's rehearsals.==============================Newton Police Looking for 5 Missing GirlsNEWTON, Kan. (AP) - Kansas authorities are looking for five girls who left a youth care facility in Newton. Newton Police Chief Jim Daily says the girls left the facility late Wednesday and early Thursday. The girls are considered endangered but police refused to give any more details about the escape or why they are endangered. Police say three of the girls are 16, one is 17 and the other is 14. The Wichita/Sedgwick County Exploited and Missing Child Unit is helping with the search and investigation.==============================$750,000 in Unclaimed Property Returned at State FairTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - State Treasurer Ron Estes says the Kansas Cash booth at this year's state fair resulted in more than $750,000 in unclaimed property being returned to its rightful owners. The treasurer says the number of people stopping at the booth and searching for missing money in a computerized database this year was far greater than in recent years. More than 2,400 claims were filed, with the largest being for more than $93,000. Estes says the unclaimed assets come from forgotten bank accounts, stocks, bonds, insurance premium overpayments, refunds and other sources. Those who didn't check for property at the fair can do so online at www.kansascash.com or by calling 1-800-432-0386.===============================Brownback, Kobach Launch Kansas Business WebsiteTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback and Secretary of State Kris Kobach have launched a new online Kansas Business Center to help owners of existing firms and people forming new ones. The two officials had a news conference Friday to publicize the center's new website. They said the project took 18 months and required the cooperation of multiple agencies. The secretary of state's office is where businesses file articles of incorporation and annual reports. They said the site allows business owners a single point of access to state agencies and information about forming businesses and writing business plans. Both officials are conservative Republicans locked in tough re-election races ahead of the November 4 election. Brownback's Democratic challenger is Kansas House Minority Leader Paul Davis, while Kobach faces former state Senator Jean Schodorf.==============================Flint Hills Family Lends Ranch to UniversityWICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A Flint Hills family is offering access to its 4,600-acre ranch to Wichita State University for research. A university official tells the Wichita Eagle on Thursday that the gift will help researchers in biology, geology, grassland studies, anthropology and other fields. The land is located about an hour southeast of Wichita. The estate of Earl and Terri Youngmeyer will retain ownership and the land won't be open to the public. The official says much of the undisturbed grassland is only accessible by ATVs or horses. He says the size of the land dwarfs the university's other prairie research sites.==============================Playoff Berth in Sight as Royals Beat White Sox 6-3CHICAGO (AP) — The Kansas City Royals put themselves on the verge of a playoff spot with a 6-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Thursday night. One more win for Kansas City, or a loss by Seattle, will send the Royals to the postseason for the first time since George Brett led them to a championship in 1985. Kansas City remained two games behind Detroit in the AL Central and moved one up on Oakland in the wild card standings. The Royals will play the final 3 games of the regular season over the weekend in Chicago.===============================Chiefs' McKnight Ruptures Achilles TendonKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Running back Joe McKnight has ruptured his Achilles tendon, becoming the third Chiefs player to sustain the season-ending injury already this season. McKnight sustained the injury in practice Thursday. Defensive tackle Mike DeVito and linebacker Derrick Johnson sustained the same injury in a Week 1 loss to Tennessee. Kansas City is scheduled to play the New England Patriots on Monday night. McKnight has been plagued by injuries dating to his days at Southern California, and he never could stay healthy with the New York Jets. He spent last season out of the NFL entirely. He seemed to be making the most of a second chance in Kansas City, though. McKnight caught six passes for 64 yards and a pair of touchdowns in a 34-15 win last Sunday in Miami.
  • Governor: No State-Federal Health Care PartnershipTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says he won't support an application from Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger to establish a state-federal health insurance marketplace. The decision announced Thursday illustrates the divide over the federal health care law between the conservative Republican Brownback and moderate Republican Praeger. States have until November 16 to inform the federal government if they plan to create their own health insurance exchanges, partner with the federal government or leave the exchange to the federal agencies to run. Praeger, who is an elected commissioner, had been working on a grant application to seek a state-federal partnership to manage the exchange in Kansas. Brownback had to sign a letter of support before the application could be filed with federal officials.===================UPDATE: County Officials Told Not to Identify Voters for Mah Inquiry TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach's office is telling Shawnee County voting officials that they shouldn't release names of voters casting provisional ballots. The advice from Kobach's office Thursday came as Democratic Representative Ann Mah of Topeka is seeking a list of such voters so that she can contact them before their ballots are reviewed. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the memo from Kobach's office from a county clerk who received it. Mah is a vocal critic of the Republican secretary of state. She trailed her GOP challenger from Tuesday's election by 27 votes out of nearly 11,000 cast. She said she wants to help voters correct problems affecting their ballots, so their votes will count. In the memo, Kobach's office said releasing voter names would violate federal law.===================Democrats' Fates Differ in Comeback Bids for Kansas HouseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A former Democratic leader will return to the Kansas House following this week's election, but former State Treasurer Dennis McKinney has failed in his attempt at a legislative comeback. Former House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer defeated GOP freshman Representative Benny Boman in the 95th District in Wichita. Sawyer served 12 years in the House, leaving in 1998 to run for unsuccessfully for governor. He later was Kansas Democratic Party chairman, won back his House seat in 2002 and stepped down again in 2009 for a Kansas Parole Board seat. McKinney served 16 years in the House and was minority leader before being appointed treasurer in 2008. The Greensburg Democrat lost the treasurer's race in 2010. He was defeated in the 117th District this year by Republican John Ewy of Jetmore.=================== Western Kansas Now Sending Only 1 Democratic Representative to StatehouseHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Democrat state representatives are becoming an endangered species in western Kansas. Tuesday's elections left Democratic State Representative Jan Pauls of Hutchinson as the only member of her party from the western half of the state. Three incumbent Democrats from the region lost: Senator Allen Schmidt of Hays, and Representatives Eber Phelps of Hays, and Vincent Wetta of Wellington. Democrats will have about the same number of seats at the statehouse next year as in the previous session: eight in the Senate and 32 to 34 seats in the House, depending on the outcome of some close races that have yet to be called. The Hutchinson News reports western Kansas Democrats believe their numbers have declined largely because the focus in elections has shifted from local to national issues.=================== Kobach Wants to Make Pictures of Ballot IllegalTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach says he wants to make it illegal for people to take photographs of completed election ballots. The Wichita Eagle reports current state law prohibits election workers from taking pictures of ballots but there is no law concerning individuals shooting photos of their own ballots. The practice has become more widespread because people want to post their ballots on social media sites. Kobach says social media and photo-altering software have made the issue much more complicated but he plans to introduce legislation in the next session to make such pictures illegal. He says in the past, people took pictures of their ballots to prove how they voted in return for payment or favors.=================== Democrats Worried About Topeka Polling ProblemsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Democrats in the Topeka area say they're worried that dozens of people may have been directed to the wrong polling places in this week's elections. Attorney Richard Benson says Shawnee County's Democratic Party received multiple complaints of problems. Benson filed an Election Day lawsuit on behalf of a poll watcher and a voter who initially was turned away from voting at the Topeka Bible Church in central Topeka. But County Counselor Rich Eckert said Democrats have identified only one affected voter. In an affidavit, the voter said the election office told her by mail that the church was her polling place. But Benson said she was not listed in the poll book. Court records show that District Judge Larry Hendricks had a hearing but declined to intervene because the voter ultimately cast a provisional ballot.===================Missing ESU Student Found in GermanyEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) _ A missing Kansas college student has been found in Germany nearly three weeks after traveling there without telling her friends or family. Twenty-year-old Emilee Irsik, a junior at Emporia State University, was with German authorities when she called her family around noon Thursday. Her mother, Sherry Irsik, of La Grange, North Carolina, told The Associated Press she is "thrilled beyond measure'' and looking forward to being reunited with her daughter. But she said she didn't speak long with her daughter and had "zero information'' about what happened. Emilee Irsik had been studying German at Emporia State. She left October 19 during the school's fall break and landed the next day in Hamburg. Her roommates notified the school when Irsik didn't show up for classes October 22. According to the Wichita Eagle, authorities were tipped off by a British Airways employee who reported that Irsik turned up at the Hamburg airport on Thursday afternoon to purchase a ticket home. Irsik reportedly told police that she had been traveling around Germany and did not realize she had been reported missing. ===================Topeka Man Convicted in Attack at TV StationTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 49-year-old Topeka man has been convicted of attacking employees at a TV station after he was told it would not report a story he wanted covered. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Ray Anthony Miles was found guilty Thursday of multiple charges stemming from the May 23 incident at the offices of WIBW-TV. Miles went to the station to request coverage of a problem he was having with the Department of Veterans Affairs. He left the building, but then forced his way into the locked lobby and shoved the news director before being subdued by other employees. The employees were punched, kicked and stabbed before they managed to take a knife away from their attacker. Miles was arrested the same day and has remained in jail since then.=================== KCK Man Pleads Guilty to Illegal M-80 SalesKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City, Kansas man has pleaded guilty to selling M-80s and other explosives without a federal license. The U.S. Attorney's office says 41-year-old Joseph Quinn admitted in his plea Tuesday that he sold illegal, homemade explosive devices to a Fourth of July fireworks stand in Kansas City, Kansas. A city fire inspector received a tip on July 4, 2010, that a fireworks stand was selling illegal fireworks. He found a sack of 70 M-80s at the stand, whose operator said he bought them from someone he knew as "Pyro Jo." Investigators found Quinn at a building in Kansas City where they recovered more than 4,700 M-80s and various other explosive devices. As part of a plea deal, Quinn will be sentenced to a year of home confinement.===================Missouri Water Company Cited in Wake of Worker's DeathJOPLIN, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri utility has been cited for two willful safety violations after a Kansas man was killed earlier this year by a chain saw that kicked back and cut him. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration on Thursday announced the citation and proposed penalties of $140,000 against Missouri-American Water Company. The case involves the May 16 death of 40-year-old Robert W. Clark of Baxter Springs, who was helping reroute underground water lines as part of Joplin's rebuilding effort. OSHA cited Missouri-American for failing to provide support in accordance with manufacturers' instructions and lack of training on pipe-cutting operations. Mid-American president Frank Kartmann says the company does not agree with the contents of the citation and plans to meet with OSHA to discuss the matter.=================== Hawker Beechcraft to Close 3 Facilities, Cut JobsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita-based airplane maker Hawker Beechcraft says it's closing facilities in three states and laying off more workers in Kansas. The company said Wednesday that 240 employees will lose their jobs with the closing of Hawker Beechcraft Services facilities in Little Rock, Arkansas; Mesa, Arizona; and San Antonio, Texas. It also plans to cut a total of 170 jobs at its Wichita headquarters and at its completion center in Little Rock. Hawker Beechcraft says the moves are in line with plans to emerge from bankruptcy as a standalone company. It says the closures and layoffs will help with its plan to focus on turboprop, piston and military aircraft and on its parts and maintenance business. Affected employees in Wichita will be notified Friday. The others will be told next week.=================== Kansas GOP Right Wing Foresees Less Spending, More Tax CutsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Conservative Republicans anticipate trimming the Kansas budget and even considering additional tax cuts after cementing large majorities in the Legislature. The GOP appeared poised to maintain its majorities of 32-8 in the Senate and 92-33 in the House following Tuesday's election. Some races remained very close Wednesday. Conservatives within the Republican Party are now on track to hold a supermajority of 27 in the 40-member Senate. They also could have as many as 75 seats in the 125-member House. Massive income tax cuts enacted this year have left the state facing a budget gap, and Governor Sam Brownback would need the newly constituted Legislature's approval for spending cuts or other measures. Conservatives see the problem as manageable and are still in favor of eliminating state income taxes altogether.=================== Kansas Officials Ponder Next Health Care StepTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas officials are pondering their next steps for implementation of the federal health care law now that the presidential election has been decided and deadlines are looming. The state has until November 16th to tell the federal government whether it wants to be a partner in creating an online health insurance marketplace. Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger's office is preparing a partnership application and will seek grant money to implement the exchange. Praeger, a moderate Republican, must get a letter of support for the state's partnership from Governor Sam Brownback, a conservative Republican who is opposed to the federal health care law. A Brownback spokeswoman said Wednesday the two officials are expected to meet later this week. Brownback delayed decisions on implementing the health care law until after Tuesday's election.=================== Kansas Approves Measure for Lowering Boat TaxesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas voters have approved a change in the state constitution aimed at lowering property taxes on boats. The measure was supported by about 54 percent of voters in Tuesday's election. It allows the Legislature to set up a new system for taxing watercraft. Kansas boat owners now pay property taxes on 30 percent of their boats' appraised value, tied largely to levies that are set by cities, counties and school districts. Critics of the current system say the Kansas taxes are significantly higher than those in other states. The measure was backed by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism. The agency hoped it would encourage more residents to purchase and register boats in the state, offsetting any potential loss in tax revenues.===================KHP, Wildlife Agency to Conduct CheckpointTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Two state agencies will conduct a joint checkpoint in north-central Kansas to see if drivers are obeying state laws and if they're transporting wildlife. The stops will be made Sunday afternoon in Ottawa County, north of Salina, by the Highway Patrol and the Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism. Highway Patrol troopers will make the initial stops, checking all drivers for valid licenses. If a driver or passenger possesses wildlife such as waterfowl or game animals, the vehicle will be sent to a second checkpoint. A natural resources officer will then check for hunting licenses and permits and count the number of birds or animals. The two agencies say delays for both checks are expected to be minimal.=================== Advisory Group to Focus on Kansas Aviation IndustryWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Governor's Council of Economic Advisors will be in Wichita next week for a conference on the global competiveness of the state's aviation industry. Governor Sam Brownback will join other state officials and council members for Tuesday's meeting at Spirit AeroSystems for the event. Jeremy Hill, director of Wichita State University's Center for Economic and Business, will discuss competition in the aerospace industry. He will be joined by John Tomblin, the executive director of the National Institute for Aviation Research who will address that entity's role and industry collaboration. Also expected to speak is Tony Kinkel, president of the Wichita Area Technical College, on the role of the National Center for Aviation Training.=================== Child Rapist from Manhattan Sentenced to 2 Life Terms in PrisonMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Manhattan man convicted of 21 sex offenses against two minor girls has been sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison. Forty-three-year-old John Goodpasture Jr. was sentenced Wednesday to two consecutive life terms. He was convicted in August of rape, aggravated indecent liberties and criminal sodomy against two girls, ages 10- and 13. The crimes happened in 2010 and 2011. KMAN reports Goodpasture told the court he plans to appeal his sentence.=================== Convicted Murderer Told to Pay Crime Victim FundSALINA, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas man in prison for killing his wife and trying to kill his sister-in-law has been ordered to pay thousands of dollars in legal bills when he is released. On Wednesday, a Saline County judge ruled Michael Paulson will be responsible for more than $8,200 to the Board of Indigent Defense Services, more than $18,000 to the Crime Victim Fund and nearly $9,000 for court costs. Paulson was convicted in July of second-degree murder in the 2010 stabbing death of Valerie Paulson. He also was convicted of attempted second-degree murder for injuring his sister-in-law, Jessie Putman. The restitution includes money for Putman's medical expenses. The Salina Journal reports Paulson's attorney plans to appeal the restitution order. Paulson is also appealing his conviction.=================== Dodge City Finally Will Have Fireworks DisplayDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — It's a few months late, but Dodge City residents will finally be able to shoot off fireworks this Sunday. The city banned fireworks in July because of dry conditions from the summer drought. City officials say residents can use any fireworks they've been saving since July on Sunday, which is Veterans Day. Fireworks will be allowed within city limits from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. City spokeswoman Jane Longmeyer says the city is strongly encouraging people to use the fireworks they might have been storing for five months. The Dodge City Daily Globe reports police will still confiscate fireworks from anyone not using them properly. Fireworks will not be allowed on public property but the city will have its yearly fireworks show Sunday evening.=================== Drought Tracker: Dryness Worsens in Kansas and OklahomaST. LOUIS (AP) — The nation's worst drought in decades has worsened in parts of the nation's midsection, further frustrating ranchers and growers of winter wheat in Kansas and Oklahoma. The U.S. Drought Monitor's weekly update posted Thursday shows that 60 percent of the land in the lower 48 states is experiencing some degree of drought as of Tuesday. That's down less than a percentage point from the previous week. But the nation's worst drought in decades intensified in Kansas, the top U.S. producer of winter wheat. Thursday's update shows that the expanse of that state in extreme or exceptional drought — the two worst classifications — rose roughly 6 percentage points, to 83.8 percent. Nearly 76 percent of Oklahoma is mired in the two highest forms of drought, up 8 percentage points.===================KC District to Provide Help for Needy FamiliesKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Needy families will be getting some help from the Kansas City school district. For the second year, the district is putting on an event called "A Day of Giving." It's planned for November 17 in the Anderson Gymnasium. Once signed in, families will have a chance to get free coats, winter gear, school uniforms, hygiene products, school supplies and books. The items will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis. The district doesn't require identification or proof that families live in the district or send their children to district schools. Last year, more than 1,400 people received free items.===================KC's Union Station Seeks Tax CreditsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Officials with Kansas City's Union Station are seeking $5 million in state tax credits for improvements at the historic depot. The Kansas City Star reports that Union Station officials unveiled the station's plans, which include improving Science City, on Wednesday. Union Station Chief Executive George Guastello and lawyer Jerry Riffel told a City Council committee they hoped to accomplish the improvements with the help of $5 million in Missouri tax credits. Those credits will be used to leverage $10.7 million in private investment. They say Union Station has already received pledges from potential donors if the state tax credits are approved. The program allows contributors to deduct 50 percent of their donations to approved projects from their state taxes. The city has to approve the tax credit application.=================== 91-Year-Old Navajo Code Talker to Receive KU DegreeLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 91-year-old man who was a Navajo Code Talker in World War II will receive his degree next week. Chester Nez will receive his University of Kansas degree on Monday. He was one of the original 29 Code Talkers in an all-Navajo Marine platoon who created a secret code based on their language used by troops in World War II. Nez had to leave the university in 1952 after three years because his GI Bill funds ran out. No one at the time knew he was a Code Talker. The Lawrence Journal-World reports Kansas First Lady Mary Brownback will attend the ceremony. Nez also will receive gifts from the city of Lawrence, the KU Alumni Association, Haskell Indian Nations University and the Native Faculty and Staff Council at Kansas.=====================Number 3-Ranked K-State Football Team Boasts 111-0 Edge in Points Off TurnoversMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — In the one statistical category all coaches respect, the Kansas State University football team has an undeniable advantage. The Wildcats' four turnovers through their first eight games are the fewest among any team in the Bowl Championship Series and the 24 that they've forced are fifth-most in the country. The result is a plus-20 turnover margin that's more than triple that of any other Big 12 team. The result? Kansas State has outscored opponents 111-0 off turnovers. Yes, that's not a misprint — 111-0 in points off turnovers. Kansas State (9-0, 6-0 Big 12) will try to build on that edge when the Wildcats play TCU on Saturday.==================== Weis Looks to Showcase KU Football Seniors Down StretchLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Facing the prospect of a 1-11 record in his first year at the University of Kansas, Charlie Weis is now forced to balance respect for the seniors he inherited from former coaches against a desire to start rebuilding his program. In three weeks, the seniors, who have endured three coaching changes and have only 11 victories in four years, will finish their tumultuous careers. Weis is making a final push for the seniors by showing them off to NFL scouts, but he also has turned to younger players and given them the chance to fight for a starting spot as he searches for at least one more victory. He has dedicated Sundays to this purpose, releasing the seniors early and giving the underclassmen a chance to shine.====================McLemore, Traylor Ready to Go for Number 7-Ranked Jayhawks LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Ben McLemore and Jamari Traylor have been waiting for this moment for more than a year. The talented freshmen were deemed partial qualifiers by the NCAA last season, so they were forced to watch as the University of Kansas men's basketball team made another remarkable run to the Final Four. They weren't allowed to practice with the Jayhawks until the second semester and couldn't play in games. Now, they are finally getting their chance. The seventh-ranked Jayhawks open the regular season Friday night against Southeast Missouri, the only tuneup they have before a high-profile game against Michigan State next week. Already, coach Bill Self has said McLemore and Traylor will be vital to any success Kansas has this season.==================== Houston Advances Past Sporting KC to MLS Eastern Conference FinalsKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The Houston Dynamo held off Sporting Kansas City after Seth Sinovic scored his first career goal in the second half, falling 1-0 on Wednesday night but advancing to the Eastern Conference finals with a 2-1 aggregate-goal result. The Dynamo won the opening leg Sunday behind goals from Adam Moffat and Will Bruin, and then did enough on defense — just barely — to advance to its second straight conference title game. Houston defeated Sporting KC last year to reach the MLS Cup finals. The Dynamo will open the conference finals on the road against D.C. United or the New York Red Bells in another two-game, aggregate goal series scheduled to begin Sunday.===================Democrats Hope to Rescue Kansas House IncumbentTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka-area Democrats plan to go door to door to find individual voters whose ballots face review in hopes of saving a Kansas House member who is narrowly losing her race for re-election. Four-term incumbent Ann Mah, of Topeka, was still not conceding defeat Thursday to Republican challenger Ken Corbet in the 54th House District. Unofficial results had Corbet leading by 27 votes out of nearly 11,000 cast. The count does not include provisional ballots, which are cast when election workers aren't sure someone is eligible to vote at a particular polling place. The Shawnee County Commission will decide whether to count such ballots. Mah and other Democrats say they want to identify the voters and then contact them to document their eligibility to cast their ballots.**More developments in this story have been occurring throughout the day. Please scroll to the top of these regional headlines for the latest information.
  • Most Kansas Senate Committees to Convene Under New ChairmenTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Most committees of the Kansas Senate will have new leaders when conservative Republicans take control of the chamber in January. A GOP leadership committee on Tuesday appointed chairmen for the Senate's 13 standing committees. Eleven will be new after conservatives ousted moderate Republican leaders in this year's GOP primaries. All committees are chaired by Republicans, who outnumber Democrats in the chamber 32-8. The chairmen will assume their jobs when the 2013 session convenes in January. The newcomers include Ty Masterson, of Andover, who will lead the budget-writing Ways and Means Committee, and Steve Abrams, of Arkansas City, who will chair the Senate Education Committee. The holdovers are Les Donovan, who chairs the Assessment and Taxation Committee, and Pat Apple, of Louisburg, who heads the Utilities Committee.===================KS Revenues Could Get a Boost from "Fiscal Cliff" Negotiations Failure TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas officials acknowledge that the state could gain some revenues if the federal government goes over the "fiscal cliff" but they say the boost isn't likely to come close to offsetting any potential problems. The state's income tax codes are largely tied to the federal tax codes. If President Obama and Congress can't reach an agreement to avoid automatic tax increases and spending cuts, some tax changes will result in Kansans paying more in taxes to the state. Republican Governor Sam Brownback's administration had no firm revenue estimates as of Tuesday. Spokesperson Sherriene Jones-Sontag said the administration is not preparing for a boost in tax revenues. State Senator and Topeka Democrat Laura Kelly said economic problems caused by going off the fiscal cliff outweigh any revenue boost.===================Kansas Governor Will Seek to Merge Juvenile, Adult CorrectionsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Governor Sam Brownback says he wants to merge the state's troubled juvenile justice agency with the Kansas Department of Corrections. Brownback said Monday he'll issue an executive order for the merger after the legislative session begins in January. Unless lawmakers reject it within 60 days, the order will take effect July 1st. Brownback says taking a social-services approach to juvenile justice has failed Kansas for decades. He fired the top two officials of the Juvenile Justice Authority in March. Two legislative audits issued since July criticized the agency, suggesting it doesn't do enough to keep offenders and staff safe. Brownback praised acting Juvenile Justice Commissioner Terri Williams for making improvements but said the audits demonstrate the need for change.===================Dept. of Defense OKs Funds for Fort Riley Middle SchoolFORT RILEY, Kan. (AP) — The Geary County school district will receive $35.2 million in federal funds to build a new middle school at the Army's Fort Riley. The Department of Defense said Tuesday the new building will replace an existing school on the northeast Kansas Army post. The new school will have room for up to 720 students in grades six through eight. An additional $6.7 million in non-federal funds will be used for the project. Groundbreaking is scheduled for January and the school is expected to be ready for classes in 2014. The Geary County school district, located in adjacent Junction City, has seen an influx of students over the past decade with the arrival of thousands of soldiers and families assigned to the Army's 1st Infantry Division.===================Judge: Boeing Division Sale Lawsuit Will Go to TrialWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has ruled a trial is necessary to decide claims brought in a lawsuit by two unions arising from Boeing's 2005 sale of its commercial aircraft operations in Kansas and Oklahoma. The lawsuit was brought by the International Association of Machinists and the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace. In a 49-page decision Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Monti Belot rejected requests by both sides for summary judgment, although he did side with Boeing on some minor claims. Among issues to be decided is the meaning of "layoffs" as it relates to early retirement and retiree health care benefits stemming from the sale. Belot ruled that the question of whether Boeing breached its collective bargaining agreements should be decided through trial.===================Kansas 7th in Nation for Agricultural ExportsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A new government report shows Kansas ranked seventh in the nation last year as an exporter of agricultural products to other countries. Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service on Tuesday cited a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture pegging the total value of the state's 2011 farm exports at $5.3 billion. That's up 7 percent from the previous year. Wheat was the top Kansas export, accounting for 29 percent of the state's total farm exports and 14 percent of the nation's wheat exports. The value of exports increased for wheat, corn, pork, beef and veal, hides and skins. It declined for other categories. Kansas was second in the nation for wheat exports and third for beef exports.===================UPDATE: Kansas Schools to Continue Individual Decisions on JROTC CreditsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas schools will continue to decide individually whether to allow students to knock out a physical education requirement by participating in junior ROTC. On Tuesday, the Kansas Board of Education rejected a new rule that would have given students one PE credit for completing two years of junior ROTC. Kansas students are required to earn one physical education credit to graduate. Material provided to the board says 20 Kansas schools offer junior ROTC. But some give no physical education credit for the program, while others offer JROTC students a half or full PE credit. Advocates said the change would have made it easier for students to fit JROTC into schedules already packed with required classes. Opponents argued physical education and junior ROTC have different goals.=================== KCK Police Seek Help in Identifying BodyKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Police in Kansas City, Kansas are asking for the public's help in identifying a man found dead in burning vehicle over the weekend. Firefighters made the discovery around 11 pm Saturday while extinguishing the flames. Police said Monday the man's death is now being investigated as a homicide. The victim is believed to have been 40 to 60 years old, with a full set of upper dentures and partial lowers. The vehicle is described as a red, 2012 Lincoln MKT crossover registered to Avis rentals. The cause of death has not been released.================== Carbon Monoxide Cited in Hotel IncidentGREENSBURG, Kan. (AP) — A south-central Kansas hotel has reopened after carbon monoxide exposure sent more than 30 people to a hospital where they were treated and released. Sunday's incident caused a brief evacuation of the Best Western Inn and Suites in Greensburg. Kiowa County Sheriff Kendal Lothman said Monday that several children had got out of the hotel swimming pool with dilated eyes and difficulty breathing. Lothman says the children had been exposed to high levels of carbon monoxide believed to result from a water heater failing to vent properly. Guests were allowed back in their rooms later Sunday, but the pool area remains closed until the problem is fixed. Hotel manager Ron Wright said Monday he was thankful nobody was seriously hurt.================== Push Continues for Statewide School Anti-Bullying PolicyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A group of activists is planning to renew efforts to lobby the Kansas Legislature to expand the definition of bullying and cyberbullying because of ongoing problems in a south central Kansas school district. The Wichita Eagle reports that parents from the Wichita area and State Board of Education member Walt Chappell are pushing the issue to modify a bullying law passed in 2007. The law requires districts to implement anti-bullying plans but doesn't dictate how districts should handle or track reports of bullying. Calls for the legislation were prompted by bullying incidents in the Haysville district. Parents say they want districts to make sure students are safe. Critics say the bullying proposal would increase the paperwork and burden for schools as they deal with bullying incidents.================== Reminder: Texting Whereabouts of Deer Illegal in KansasPRATT, Kan. (AP) — Kansas wildlife officials are reminding hunters that it's against the law to exchange text messages on the whereabouts of deer and other game that might be headed their way. The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism says the law has been around in various forms for years. Officials say hunters are probably aware that they can't use two-way radios to give other hunters a heads-up about the location of a game animal moving in their direction. But that law, which prohibits the use of a radio or other mechanical device, includes cellphones. The department says a text is the same as a phone call under the law, so don't do it.================== KU Seeks $30M for New Medical BuildingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is asking the state for millions of dollars to help construct a $75 million medical building at its Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Steve Stites, a medical center official, plans to meet with Governor Sam Brownback to discuss the proposed education and training facility. The university is asking the state to provide $30 million in bonds over 10 years. It also wants the state to release $26 million of a federal refund related to payroll taxes. The university's budget request also includes nearly $3 million for improvements at the School of Medicine's Wichita campus. Last month, Brownback said a general increase in funding for higher education is unlikely but additional dollars for specific projects at the universities could be available.================== Burglaries Rise in Dodge CityDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Dodge City police say the western Kansas city is seeing a big increase in burglaries. Police responded to 52 burglaries at homes, businesses and vehicles in November. That's a 60 percent increase over November of last year. Police Chief Craig Mellecker says the crimes are happening across the city. He says it's not clear what is prompting the increase but he added that such crimes increase around the holidays. The Dodge City Daily Globe reports that Mellecker also says drugs often play a part in property crimes.================== Garden City Officials: Recent Fires May Be RelatedGARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Garden City law enforcement and fire officials are working to determine if five fires in the last month are connected. The Garden City Telegram says that the fires have all been reported since November 9. No one has been injured in any of the fires. Two of the fires were at vacant mobile homes. Garden City police Sergeant Michael Reagle says an 8- and 11-year-old are considered suspects in those cases but no arrests have been made. The other three fires involved fires being set to trees, grass and fences. Reagle says it's unclear if those fires are related to the other two incidents. Police have no leads or suspects in those fires.================== McPherson Will Continue Police Chaplain ProgramMCPHERSON, Kan. (AP) — McPherson city officials say they plan to continue a police chaplaincy program despite a complaint from a national group that it violates the constitutional requirement for separation of church and state. Mayor Thomas Brown said Monday that discussions with the city's attorney led him to believe the program is constitutional. The city was contacted last week by the Freedom From Religion Foundation. The Wisconsin-based group said a McPherson resident complained about the program. McPherson officials say chaplains will be allowed to offer counseling to officers and be present when families are notified of tragedies. The Hutchinson News reports that the program has not yet begun. Brown says the city will consider some of the issues raised by the foundation to be sure it complies with the law.================== Kansas Education Officials to Provide Cursive Instruction UpdateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Cursive handwriting is on the agenda again during this month's Kansas Board of Education meeting. On Wednesday, the Kansas Department of Education will provide the board with a range of possible recommendations on the issue of teaching cursive. Last month, the board heard a report that interest in teaching the subject has begun to wane. A survey found 90 percent of state school districts are teaching cursive writing, generally beginning in third grade. Teachers typically spend from 15 minutes to an hour a day instructing students on cursive script. But nearly 23 percent of districts responding said teaching handwriting is not a high priority, and about 6 percent said they anticipate eventually reducing the amount of class time spent on it.==================Newspaper: Beef Tenderizing Method Has RisksKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A newspaper report says the beef industry has been using a mechanical meat tenderizing process that may increase the risk of E. coli exposure. The Kansas City Star said in a series of articles published this week that the newspaper spent a year investigating various aspects of the U.S. beef industry, looking at the largest beef packers, as well as feedlots and animal drug companies. The tenderizing method, which results in so-called "bladed" or "needled" beef, has been around for decades and involves injecting marinades into meat. The industry says the practice is safe, but food safety advocates say it can drive pathogens like E. coli deeper into the meat, requiring more cooking to destroy the E. coli. Beef industry officials respond that E. coli illnesses have declined recently.==================Kansas Supreme Court to Honor Washburn Law ProfessorTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is giving its highest award to a Washburn University law professor who formerly served as the law school's dean and has a long history of helping write legal codes. James Concannon will receive the court's Justice Award for service to the judiciary and the legal profession during a special session Friday afternoon in Topeka. Concannon has been on the Washburn law school faculty since 1973 and served as its dean from 1988 to 2001. Among other things, he serves on committees that review and revise standard instructions for juries and procedures for civil lawsuits. The Supreme Court bestows the award when it feels it has a worthy candidate in a given year.================== Graduation Looms for Fort Leavenworth OfficersFORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Military officials are preparing to graduate the latest class of officers studying at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College in northeast Kansas. Nearly 335 officers and government employees, including 46 officers from other countries, will receive their degrees Thursday at Fort Leavenworth's Lewis and Clark Center. The officers began their instruction in February. General David Rodriguez, commanding general of the Army's Forces Command, will be the guest speaker. The 10-month course teaches leadership skills to perform in a variety of military operations. Fort Leavenworth has been educating international officers alongside U.S. officers since 1894.==================Texas Judge Halts Oil Pipeline WorkHOUSTON (AP) — A Texas court has ordered TransCanada to temporarily halt work on a private property where it is constructing part of an oil pipeline designed to carry tar sands oil from Canada to the Gulf Coast. The pipeline crosses portions of Kansas. Texas County Court at Law Judge Jack Sinz signed a temporary restraining order and injunction Friday. The injunction went into effect Tuesday after Michael Bishop, the landowner, posted bond. TransCanada says this will not delay its project. Bishop argued the Canadian company defrauded him by taking his land in Nacogdoches County for a pipeline it said would carry crude oil. He argues that tar sands oil is not crude oil and that the company's claims that it is are fraudulent. The judge says there's sufficient cause to halt the project until a hearing December 19.================== 2 Arrested in Unrelated Wichita HomicidesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police are sorting out the details in a pair of weekend homicides that occurred just a few hours apart. The first took place around 9 pm Saturday, when 23-year-old George Vasquez was shot in the head after answering a knock at the front door of a home. A 28-year-old man was arrested after police found him outside arguing with two men who live at the house. Police said Monday they were seeking a motive. A suspect is also in custody the fatally stabbing of a 27-year-old man around 1 am Sunday, after a fight broke out at a party. Police say Tan Nguyen died in surgery at a Wichita hospital. Investigators say the victim was involved in a long-running feud with a brother of the 29-year-old suspect.================== Man Pleads Guilty to Beating Death in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man will be sentenced in January after pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter in a beating death after a dispute over ownership of a dog. Nelson R. Glover pleaded guilty Monday in the death of 47-year-old John Tolliver in his home in July. Glover also will be sentenced January 24 for robbery and aggravated battery. Police say Glover and another man beat Tolliver because of dispute between Tolliver and his ex-girlfriend over possession of a dog. The Wichita Eagle reports that the second defendant in the case, Samuel J. Sims, also has pleaded guilty. He will be sentenced January 16.================== Missouri Man Sentenced to Life for Drug TraffickingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man convicted in a cocaine trafficking operation has been sentenced as a career offender to life in prison without parole. The U.S. Attorney's office says the sentence imposed Monday on 31-year-old Theodore Wiggins was mandatory because of his prior felony convictions for drug offenses. Prosecutors said two of those convictions involved carjackings, including one in which he shot at pursuing officers. Wiggins was found guilty in June of participating in a drug-trafficking conspiracy and selling cocaine to an undercover officer. Prosecutors say the conspiracy involved distribution of large amounts of powder and crack cocaine in the metro area. Twenty-four people have pleaded guilty to charges related to the operation, including a Raytown man who bought cocaine by the kilogram from suppliers in Kansas City, Kansas.================== Deer Loses Hound Pal to ShelterKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The unlikely companionship that developed at a Kansas City cemetery between a stray dog and a motherless doe has ended. The doe, named Ella, and the dog have been at each other's sides in the 43-acre Elmwood Cemetery for the last few months. Cemetery officials said that although it appeared the two had a bond, they were concerned that the dog wouldn't make it through the winter. The Kansas City Star reports that crews from a local animal shelter set up a humane trap with treats and caught the dog Saturday. When people from the shelter arrived to get the dog, Ella the deer was right by the trap that held her pal. Cemetery officials say the shelter will work to get the dog adopted.==================US 71 South of KC to Be Renamed I-49KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The director of a coalition pushing for creation of a nonstop highway from New Orleans to the Canada border say Missouri's completion of its portion of the project should build momentum for Arkansas and Louisiana to finish theirs. A 180-mile stretch of U.S. 71 from Kansas City to Joplin will be officially renamed U.S. 49 at noon Wednesday, marking completion of all but about five miles of Missouri's segment. Interstate 49 International Coalition executive director Gard Wayt of Shreveport, Louisiana says his state will be finishing a portion connecting to the Arkansas border in the next six to seven months. In Arkansas, voters approved a half-cent sales tax in November to pay for continued construction of four-lane highways, including a portion of the I-49 project.================== Holiday Train Making Its Way Back to Kansas CityKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A train bringing holiday cheer is winding up its journey through the South and Midwest. The Kansas City Southern Holiday Express Train began its trip November 23 in Texas. It's already made stops in Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Final stops were scheduled this week in Joplin, Missouri on Tuesday; Pittsburg, Kansas on Wednesday; and Drexel, Missouri on Thursday. The trip ends Friday at Kansas City's Union Station, where the train will be on display through Sunday. The train features a specially decorated engine dubbed "Rudy," a gingerbread boxcar, a flatcar carrying Santa's sleigh, plus reindeer and a miniature village. There's also a snow-covered stall filled with model train displays, the elves' workshop and even a little red caboose. Guests get to visit Santa and tour the train.================== NY Services Held for NFL Player in Murder-SuicideDIX HILLS, N.Y. (AP) — Hundreds of mourners attended a wake in New York State for Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher, who killed his girlfriend and himself. The 25-year-old Long Island native was in an open casket in an auditorium-sized room at the Upper Room Christian World Center church in Dix Hills, 30 miles east of New York City. Police say the West Babylon, New York native shot 22-year-old Kasandra Perkins and then shot himself on December 1. The couple had a 3-month-old daughter, Zoey. Belcher's mother, Cheryl Shepherd, declined to speak with a reporter when contacted by telephone on Tuesday. Belcher's casket was surrounded by floral arrangements. Poster boards filled with family snapshots also were displayed. Teammates and coaches attended a service for Belcher last week in Kansas City. Belcher's funeral is scheduled for Wednesday. ==================January Hearing Set for Former Independence TeacherINDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — Authorities will make their case next month for trying a suburban Kansas City band teacher on charges of having sexual contact with a 14-year-old student, sometimes at school. During a court appearance Tuesday, a judge set a January 30 preliminary hearing date for 27-year-old James N. Owens. He is free on bond after being charged last month with one count each of child enticement and child molestation. His attorney, Eric Vernon, declined to comment. Court documents allege that Owens exchanged more than 100 phone calls and more than 1,500 text messages with the girl.================== Kansas Board to Consider PE Credit for JROTCTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas students could knock out a physical education requirement by participating in junior ROTC, under a proposal before the State Board of Education. If approved during Tuesday's board meeting in Topeka, the new rule would give students one PE credit for completing two years of junior ROTC. Kansas students are required to earn one physical education credit to graduate. Generally, a credit takes two semesters to earn. Material provided to the board says 20 Kansas schools offer junior ROTC. But some give no physical education credit for the program, while others offer JROTC students a half or full PE credit. Advocates say the change would make it easier for students to fit JROTC into schedules already packed with required classes. Opponents say physical education and junior ROTC have different goals.**this story has been updated. Please see above for the latest developments.
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