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  • KS Panel Considers Cutting Funds for Remedial Course WorkTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas House committee is considering legislation that would eliminate state funding for remedial courses at state universities and community colleges. Testimony on the bill is scheduled tomorrow (WED) before the House Appropriations Committee. The measure would prohibit Board of Regents colleges and universities from using state funds to teach language arts or math courses designed to give students basic skills before they take formal college courses. Universities and community colleges could still offer such courses, but funding would have to come from private or endowment sources. The bill would also reduce to 5 percent from the current 10 percent the proportion of each freshman class at state institutions that could be exempted from entrance standards.==============================Will Charges be Filed in Case of Illegal Fireworks at KS Statehouse?TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas prosecutor hasn't decided whether to file criminal charges against a man who parked a pickup truck carrying homemade fireworks near the Statehouse. Lee McGowan, chief of staff to Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor, says Capitol Police are still wrapping up their investigation of the February 15 incident. The Capitol Police initially described the devices found in the pickup as improvised explosive devices or homemade bombs, but later said they were illegal fireworks. The truck's owner parked the vehicle in a lot at the Kansas Judicial Center, across the street from the Capitol. Officers detained the man in an underground tunnel connecting the Statehouse with an office building, but he was released.===============================KS GOP Leader Questions Pace of Meetings ReviewTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A spokesman for a northeast Kansas district attorney says his office plans to begin setting up interviews this week with legislators who had private meetings with Governor Sam Brownback at his official residence. Chief of staff Lee McGowan says that Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor's office has not started interviews because of its caseload. Taylor, a Democrat, is investigating the legality of seven meetings that the Republican governor had in January with GOP members of 13 legislative committees. Brownback spokeswoman Sherriene Jones-Sontag said the governor remains confident the meetings were legal. Legislators described them as informal dinners. Senate Majority Leader Jay Emler, a Lindsborg Republican, said if Taylor thought the investigation was important, he should have started interviews while lawmakers' memories were fresh.==============================Body in Creek Identified as Missing Kansas City ManINDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — Independence police say a body found in a creek over the weekend is that of a Kansas City man missing for more than month. The Examiner reports the man has been identified as 35-year-old Eric W. Hedrick. Hedrick was reported missing from Kansas City on January 19. A cause of death is still unknown, but the medical examiner's office says there was no obvious sign of foul play. Police were called to the creek in north-central Independence on Saturday after someone discovered the body.================================KS Toddler Tumbles Unnoticed from Mother's CarWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Police in Wichita say a 2-year-old boy suffered scrapes, cuts and a swollen lip after unbuckling a seat belt and tumbling unnoticed from his mother's moving car. Residents spotted the toddler running down the street in a quiet neighborhood Sunday afternoon, crying and bleeding from his nose and lip. The Wichita Eagle reports the boy fell out the back seat of his mother's car after unbuckling a seat belt and opening the door. The 22-year-old mother didn't notice the toddler missing until after she arrived home, more than a mile away. She retraced the route and found a woman comforting the little boy. Police say the mother has been questioned but not arrested.==============================Hearing Focuses on Whether ATF Targeted Blacks in Firearms BustWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge in Kansas is expected to hear evidence on claims that a federal firearms sting in Wichita was racially motivated. At least 43 of 51 people facing federal charges from the months-long operation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are black. Lawyers for some of the defendants contend the operation targeted black males because the ATF's bogus pawn shop was located in a neighborhood with one of the city's highest concentrations of African-Americans. U.S. District Judge Monti Belot scheduled an evidentiary hearing in the case this (TUE) afternoon. The government argues the claim of a racially motivated prosecution is baseless.===============================Group Says State Law Preventing Rally in Hutchinson HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Organizers of a large motor home gathering say they won't hold their event in Hutchinson because of a state law that prohibits out-of-state dealers from selling recreational vehicles in Kansas. The Family Motor Coach Association told the Kansas State Fair manager Monday that it will not bring its event to Hutchinson this year or next. The Hutchinson News reports that when the event was held in 2002, about 5,000 motor coaches camped at the fairgrounds, bringing an estimated $24.4 million economic boost to Reno County and another $7.2 million to the state. The law that prohibits out-of-state recreational vehicle and auto dealers from selling products in Kansas is designed to protect in-state motor home businesses.===============================Kansan Sentenced to Prison over Social Security FraudDENVER (AP) — A Kansas woman has been sentenced to prison for Social Security fraud. Federal prosecutors say 61-year-old Kimberly Ann Stenerson, of Mankato, has been sentenced to a year and a day in prison for making a false statement to the Social Security Administration. The former Steamboat Springs, Colorado resident was accused of accepting benefits for a mentally disadvantaged aunt whom she had placed in a nursing home in Mexico, while telling Social Security officials the aunt lived in California and that she checked on her regularly. She must pay restitution.==============================KCP&L Seeking Rate Increase for Missouri and KansasKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Power & Light is asking for a rate increase of its Missouri customers, and plans to ask for higher rates in Kansas later this year. The company announced that it's asking for an average 15 percent increase in Missouri. That's about $180 a year for an average residential customer. The rate of increase will vary in KCP&L's three service areas. Utility officials said in a news release that the increase was needed to offset the increasing costs of transmission lines and other system upgrades, as well as alternative energy projects. It also cited a lack of wholesale power sales. The Kansas City Star reports that the utility plans to file a rate case later this year affecting Kansas customers.==============================Lawrence Retirement Center Wants Lawsuit DismissedLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Attorneys for a Lawrence retirement center are asking a Douglas County judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the family of a former resident who alleged she was sexually assaulted at the center. The family of Jean S. Allen sued Brandon Woods at Alvamar in January. They alleged that a nursing aide sexually assaulted Allen in October 2010 and staff covered up the crime. The family moved Allen to a different center, where she died in November 2010. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that an attorney for Brandon Woods says in a court filing that Allen was well cared for and notes that no one was ever prosecuted in the case. Douglas County prosecutors said in January there was no longer an active criminal investigation in the case.==============================KS Doctor Claims He Got Poor Legal AdviceWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas doctor serving a two-year prison sentence says he felt coerced and pressured when he pleaded guilty to unlawfully prescribing painkillers to a woman he never met. Lawrence Simons testified in federal court yesterday (MON) on his claim that his previous attorney provided ineffective counsel. U.S. District Judge Monti Belot heard more than three hours of testimony but did not immediately rule. Simons, of Goddard, is scheduled to complete his prison term March 7. He wants the judge to remove a prohibition barring him from practicing medicine during his supervised release. He contends he is innocent and claims his trial attorney led him to believe he would get probation if he pleaded guilty. But under cross-examination, Simons acknowledged admitting his guilt under oath at his plea hearing and sentencing in 2010.==============================AP Source: Gingrich Group Gets "Substantial" FundsCHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) — A billionaire casino owner has given another "substantial" contribution to an independent group supporting Republican Newt Gingrich. The group is launching new TV ads in seven states this week. A person familiar with the contribution says the super PAC Winning Our Future received a substantial donation from billionaire Sheldon Adelson that is similar to two separate $5 million donations Adelson and his family gave previously. The person was not authorized to discuss the donations publicly and requested anonymity. The committee will air TV ads in Georgia, Ohio, Oklahoma and Tennessee -- four Super Tuesday states voting March 6 and considered key to Gingrich's campaign. The super PAC will also start airing ads soon in Kanas, Mississippi and Alabama. The Washington Post first reported the donation and ads.==============================City of Lawrence Won't Allow Chicken Slaughter for ArtLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Chickens that were to be publicly slaughtered as part of an art project in Lawrence have been spared. City officials told artist Amber Hansen that the slaughter would violate animal cruelty ordinances. Hansen originally planned to display coops of chickens at various locations around Lawrence. The chickens were to be publicly slaughtered and served as a meal. She says the intention is to draw attention to the process of slaughtering animals. Assistant City Attorney Chad Sublet told Hansen a public slaughtering of chickens would violate city codes. And even keeping the chickens on private land would require her to meet other city codes on animal care. Hansen told the Lawrence Journal-World that she'll change the public art event, rather than fight the city's decision.================================Man Ordered to Trial in Death of Wife's CaretakerOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — An Olathe man will stand trial for first-degree murder in the death of his wife's live-in caretaker. Fifty-nine-year-old Stephen M. Collier has been ordered to stand trial in the December death of 54-year-old Susanne Goslin. Collier pleaded not guilty. His next court appearance is scheduled for April 6. Goslin, a registered nurse, died from a gunshot wound to the head. She had been hired to care for Collier's wife at their home in Olathe. The Kansas City Star reports that Collier's wife found Goslin's body December 28. She testified at the preliminary hearing that she saw her husband with a gun in his hand that day and that he fired a shot into the floor. Collier did not testify during the hearing. Collier is being held on $750,000 bond.==============================Man Pleads Guilty in Crash Death of WSU StudentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 37-year-old Wichita man will be sentenced April 12 for driving drunk and causing an accident that killed a Wichita State University student and injured two others. Thirty-seven-year-old Tommie Lee Cameron Jr. pleaded guilty yesterday (MON) to involuntary manslaughter while driving under the influence. Cameron had been charged with second-degree murder in the July 2010 death of 21-year-old Kari Rinehart. She died when Cameron's car crashed nearly head-on into Rinehart's car. Cameron also pleaded guilty to two counts of aggravated battery for injuring Rinehart's identical twin, Kati Rinehart, and friend, Reva Sams in the crash.==============================First Black MLB Coach - Buck O'Neil - Honored at Missouri CapitolJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Major League Baseball's first black coach has been inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians. The late Buck O'Neil, who played first base for the Kansas City Monarchs and went on to become a leading ambassador for Negro Leagues Baseball, was praised by former Kansas City Royals player Frank White and others during a ceremony yesterday (MON). A bronze bust of O'Neil will now be included in a display at the Capitol. O'Neil died in 2006 at the age of 94. He played 11 seasons with the Monarchs and was later hired as a scout by the Chicago Cubs, who made him the first black major league coach in 1962. He became a scout for the Royals in the late 1980s and raised money for the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.==============================Catcher Salvador Perez Signs $7 Million Deal with KC RoyalsSURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals have signed catcher Salvador Perez to a five-year contract worth $7 million. The team announced the deal yesterday (MON). The contract includes club options for three more years that could keep Perez with the Royals through the 2019. If Perez reached all the performance bonuses and incentives, the contract could be worth $26.75 million over eight years. The 21-year-old Perez made his major league debut last August 10 and hit .331 with eight doubles, two triples, three home runs and 21 RBIs in 39 games. He has been chosen as the best defensive catcher in the Royals' organization the past three years. Perez, who is from Venezuela, was signed by the Royals as a non-drafted free agent on September 27, 2006.==============================Former KU Star Marcus Morris Cited after Kansas-Missouri GameLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Houston Rockets rookie reserve Marcus Morris faces a misdemeanor battery citation over a reported Lawrence bar incident several hours after his former Kansas teammates beat Missouri on Saturday. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Supervising City Prosecutor Jerry Little has confirmed the citation. The citation stems from a 2:37am Sunday police call to a Lawrence bar. Police spokeswoman Kim Murphree says a male employee was punched twice and that two men received citations. Little says those citations show that Marcus Morris is scheduled to appear March 20 in Lawrence Municipal Court. Morris had attended the Missouri-Kansas game with his twin brother, Markieff, a former Jayhawk who now plays for the Phoenix Suns. Markieff wasn't implicated. A message left for the Rockets wasn't immediately returned. ==============================Police Crack-Down on Those Who Illegally Park in Handicapped ZonesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — People who park illegally in handicapped parking zones in Wichita might have a harder time getting away with it. The Wichita police department is asking for volunteers to help it enforce handicapped parking regulations. The department is accepting applications for volunteers this week through March 13. Lt. Doug Nolte says the volunteers will be trained by police to take pictures of violations, fill out forms and report the violations to police. Volunteers must be at least 21 years old have a valid Kansas driver's license.==============================Air Force Investigating Disputed Plane ContractWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The U.S. Air Force is setting aside a disputed $354 million contract for a light air support plane and opening an investigation into the award. The Air Force said in an emailed statement Tuesday that it advised the Department of Justice it will take corrective action on the contract. Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley says the Air Force senior acquisition executive wasn't satisfied with documentation supporting the award decision. The contract was awarded to Nevada-based Sierra Nevada Corp. in December. Wichita-based Hawker Beechcraft filed a lawsuit alleging its own aircraft was wrongly excluded from the selection process. The Air Force halted work on the contract last month after Hawker Beechcraft sued but said at the time it was confident in the merits of the award decision.==============================Kan. woman sentenced in baby's hair dryer deathHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman who left a hair dryer running to warm her infant daughter on a freezing night has been sentenced to three years' probation for the baby'sdeath from hyperthermia. KWBW-AM reports that Brigit (BRIHJ'-eht) Hippen of Hutchinson could go to prison if she violates terms of the community correction sentence she received Tuesday in Reno County District Court. Hippen pleaded no contest last month to involuntary manslaughter in the February 2010 death of her 2-month-old daughter, Karina Perez. Hippen had been charged with second-degree murder. Hippen told investigators she placed a running hair dryer near Karina's bassinet to warm thebaby, then fell asleep. Doctors have said Karina's temperature was 108 when she died.
  • Kansas Teachers' Union Challenges New Changes to TenureTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The largest teachers' union in Kansas has filed a lawsuit against a new state law that ended guaranteed tenure for public school teachers. The Kansas National Education Association argued Monday that the law violated the state constitution for the anti-tenure policy to be added to a larger education funding measure. The lawsuit filed in Shawnee County District Court alleges the Republican-dominated Legislature violated a provision of the state constitution requiring most bills to contain only one subject. However, the 23,000-member union is asking a judge block only the anti-tenure provision. The measure approved by legislators in April boosted state aid to poor school districts by $129 million for the new school year. Conservative GOP legislators insisted on tying the new funding to other policy provisions, including the one on tenure.====================Brownback Decries Kansas Teachers' Union LawsuitTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Governor Sam Brownback says he's worried that a lawsuit by the state's largest teachers union challenging an anti-tenure measure could endanger additional funds for poor school districts. Brownback said Monday that the lawsuit filed by the Kansas National Education Association in Shawnee County District Court was, in his words, an exercise in labor-union politics. The KNEA contends that legislators this year violated the Kansas Constitution by tying additional funding for poor public schools to a measure ending guaranteed tenure for public school teachers. The union said the combination violated the state constitution's requirement that most legislation have only one subject. The group wants to block only the anti-tenure measure. But Brownback said he's concerned that the education money also could be jeopardized.====================Feds Charge Kansas with Fraud over Public PensionsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Federal authorities have filed securities fraud charges against Kansas accusing the state of misleading investors about the financial health of its underfunded public employee pension system. The Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday that the state has consented to its cease-and-desist order to settle the case. The state has since adopted policies and procedures to help ensure disclosures about pension liabilities are made in its bond offerings. No monetary sanctions were imposed. The SEC says Kansas has implemented remedial actions and agreed to settle the charges for its prior incomplete disclosure. Governor Sam Brownback says in a statement that since taking office he has made restoring the health of the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System a priority. He says Kansas has made significant strides.====================Kansas Health Care Finance Director to Keep JobTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Physician and former state Representative Susan Mosier is staying on as director of the division of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment overseeing programs that provide health care coverage for the state's residents. The department says Mosier was promoted last week from acting director to director of the Division of Health Care Finance. She'd been acting director since May, when Kari Bruffett left to become secretary of the Department for Aging and Disability Services. Mosier was a Manhattan doctor elected to the Kansas House as a Republican in 2010. She gave up her seat in 2012 to become director of the state's Medicaid program, which provides health coverage to the needy and disabled. The Medicaid program falls under the division Mosier now leads.====================Orman Releases 'Reform' Plan in Kansas Senate RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas businessman running for U.S. Senate as an independent candidate says he supports term limits and ending pensions for members of Congress. Greg Orman outlined a plan Monday for reforming Congress. It includes term limits and ending members' pensions, as well as a lifetime ban on lobbying by former lawmakers and barring political action committees controlled by congressional leaders. Orman said he wants to change an environment in Washington that encourages lawmakers to become career politicians. He's discussing the plan during an 18-stop, eight-day bus tour. Orman hopes to unseat Republican Senator Pat Roberts. The Democratic challenger is Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor. Roberts spokesman Leroy Towns called Orman's plan stale. Taylor spokesman Brandon Naylor said problems in Congress can be solved by voting out long-term incumbents.====================Body Recovered from Northeast Kansas LakeKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Investigators are trying to identify a man found dead in a northeast Kansas lake. KCTV reports police in Kansas City, Kansas, were called to Big Eleven Lake shortly after 10 am Monday on a report of a body in the water. Wyandotte County Sheriff's Lieutenant Kelli Bailiff says the man's age and race were not immediately determined. It's also unclear how the man died and how long he had been in the lake.====================Authorities Identify Man Killed in Skydiving AccidentOTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — Franklin County authorities say a 54-year-old Wichita man died in this weekend's skydiving accident. The sheriff's office says the body of Brad Giffin was discovered Saturday evening in a field about a mile where he was supposed to land outside of Ottawa. Giffin was an experienced skydiver who had more than 500 jumps. Firefighters from Lincoln-Ottawa-Harrison Fire Department and representatives from a skydiving company began searching for Giffin when he didn't land in the designated drop zone. The Federal Aviation Administration is helping with the investigation.====================University Seeks Honor for Kansan Who Wrote GI Bill of RightsA Lenexa-based online university is working to get the nation's highest civilian honor for a Topeka attorney who crafted the GI Bill of Rights. Joseph McGrath, president of Grantham University, wants the late Harry W. Colmery awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for writing the GI Bill of Rights. The bill, signed into law in 1944, has helped millions of veterans and their dependents pursue higher education. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Colmery, a World War One veteran who became the national commander of the American Legion, wrote the first draft of the Serviceman's Readjustment Act of 1944, commonly known as the GI Bill of Rights. McGrath and other Grantham University officials have started a grassroots campaign to nominate Colmery for the medal. The campaign includes an informational website, www.AwardforFreedom.com====================After Several Good Years, Farmers Take Hit in 2014WICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ A poor wheat crop and falling prices for corn and soybeans have Kansas farmers preparing for a sharp drop in their incomes after several prosperous years. The state's wheat harvest is down by 26 percent from last year, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics. Abundant rain and cool temperatures in June and July have put the nation on track for the second-biggest corn crop ever and the biggest soybean crop. But the glut has driven corn prices down more than $1 a bushel in the last month. Kansas livestock producers could benefit from low crop prices that have made feed cheaper for their animals. And with the state's ranchers rebuilding their herds, fewer head of cattle are going to market, and profits are rising.====================Analysis: Roberts Favored in KS Senate RaceTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Although Kansas Senator Pat Roberts looked vulnerable after winning his Republican primary race last week with only 48 percent of the vote, he still has an easier path to victory in November than his remaining opponents. Democrat Chad Taylor must hold his party's smaller base and build on it with GOP moderates and unaffiliated voters. Independent candidate Greg Orman must supplant Taylor as Roberts' main rival and capture the support of centrists of all stripes. Both are trying to tap the same frustration with Washington and an anti-incumbent mood. Roberts' simpler task is to unify the GOP enough to keep his percentage of the vote in the low-to-mid 40s _ and 44 percent of the state's registered voters are Republicans. ====================Despite University's Efforts, Sexual Assaults PersistLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A University of Kansas survey shows that one in 10 students has been a victim of sexual harassment, including sexual assault. The Lawrence Journal-World reports a University of Kansas official says about 30 reported incidents over a two-year span involved men raping or sexually assaulting woman who were drunk. KU created the Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access about two and a half years ago. It investigates sexual assaults reported to the university. The office's executive director, Jane McQueeny, says the university investigates all sexual assault complaints. McQueeny says the college also conducts confidential surveys and provides many ways to report sexual assault claims. According to a 2012 CDC report, nearly 20 percent of undergraduate female students have been victims of sexual assault or attempted sexual assault.====================Small Kansas Colleges Have $980 Million ImpactTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new study says small, private colleges might not be well known but they are having a big impact on the state's economy. The study, commissioned by the Kansas Independent College Association, says the 18 colleges contribute more than $980 million a year to Kansas' economy. Matt Lindsey, president of the association, says the study was commissioned in part to raise the profile of the colleges, which generally aren't well known except by their graduates. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports colleges included in the study are Baker University, Friends University, Benedictine College, Bethel College, Central Christian College, Donnelly College, Hesston College, Kansas Wesleyan, Manhattan Christian College, McPherson College, MidAmerica Nazarene University, Newman University, Ottawa University, Southwestern College, Sterling College, Tabor College and University of St. Mary.====================Police: Kansas Teen Critically Injured in Car FallWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police say a teenager has been critically injured after falling off of a moving car. Police say the 19-year-old man was with a group of people at the Side Pockets sports bar and billiards parlor Sunday morning. They say the teenager jumped onto the back of a moving car as the group the left. He fell and hit his head on the pavement. The car left the scene. The teenager was taken to an area hospital with critical injuries. Police say it's unclear if he had been drinking or knew the driver.====================Military Appeals Court to Hear Kansas HIV AppealWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The nation's highest military court has agreed to review the evidence used to convict a Kansas airman of assault by exposing multiple sex partners to HIV at swinger parties in Wichita. The attorney for David Gutierrez said Monday his case could potentially remap HIV testing and prosecution in the U.S. military. The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces is expected to hear arguments this year. Attorney Kevin McDermott says existing case law reflects attitudes from the mid-1990s, and the hope is that the case will get the military up to speed on current issues with HIV. Gutierrez was a sergeant at McConnell Air Force Base when he was sentenced in 2011 to eight years in prison and stripped of his rank for aggravated assault.====================1 Killed, 2 Hurt by Gunfire in KC While Waiting at IntersectionKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ Gunmen fired into a car at an Kansas City intersection, killing one person and injuring two others. The Kansas City Star reports the triple shooting occurred early yesterday (SUN) in Kansas City's Crossroads District when the victims were inside a car stopped at an intersection.====================Police Name Couple Found Dead in Kansas Home KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Police have released the names of an elderly couple found dead in the northeast Kansas home over the weekend. Officers were called to the home in Kansas City, Kansas, on Sunday and found the man and woman dead in a car inside their garage. They were identified Monday as 88-year-old Gerald Lorfing and his 86-year-old wife, Mary Lorfing. Authorities have not released any details on how the couple died. The police department's Major Case Squad asked to hear from anyone with information about the deaths.====================Wichita Toddler Burned in Home AccidentWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Hairspray and a candle are blamed for a fire that left a 2-year-old Wichita boy with second-degree burns. KAKE-TV reports that the accident happened Monday afternoon in the western part of the city. Police say a 12-year-old and an 8-year-old were watching their younger siblings while their parents were at work. The older children left the toddler on a bathroom counter after brushing their teeth. The 2-year-old knocked over a plastic bottle containing a flammable liquid thought to be hairspray, and a candle ignited the liquid. Police said the 12-year-old carried the toddler to the home of a neighbor, who called for help. The 2-year-old was hospitalized with burns on his upper body. No criminal charges are expected.====================Man Dies in Johnson County Detention FacilityOLATHE, Kan. (AP) _ Authorities are investigating after a 30-year-old Overland Park man died while serving a two-day sentence in Johnson County. Matthew Worsham was found August 3rd in his cell at Johnson County's Olathe Central Booking facility. He had been scheduled for release later that morning. The Johnson County Sheriff's Office says Worsham was serving a 48-hour sentence for driving under the influence. The death is under investigation. ====================Kansas City Man Sentenced for Child PornographyKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man has been sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for attempting to distribute child pornography over the Internet. The U.S. Attorney's office says 32-year-old James A. Rhea won't be eligible for parole under the sentence he received Monday in federal court. Rhea pleaded guilty to the crime last November. Investigators said a technician at a Best Buy store alerted police in August 2010 after finding child porn on a computer Rhea had brought in for repairs. Police found more than 400 images and more than 40 videos of child pornography on the laptop. Detectives said Rhea admitted receiving child porn through email and Web chats. After he was questioned and his laptop was confiscated, police said, Rhea resumed downloading such material on his cellphone.====================Police: KS Pizza Delivery Driver Attacked, RobbedWICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Wichita police say robbers made off with about $50 and a pizza after attacking a delivery driver. Police say the 22-year-old Pizza Hut employee was robbed early Sunday in the northeastern part of the city. They say he was delivering a pizza to a home when he was attacked. Police say the delivery driver had approached a woman on the porch when two men circled around him. The men knocked him down, beat him and took his pizza. Police say the trio also robbed the driver of all his cash before walking off.====================No Jobless Pay for Co-Pilot Who Didn't Lower Landing GearDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A co-pilot who didn't lower a plane's landing gear has lost his appeal for Iowa unemployment benefits. The Des Moines Register says that 49-year-old Donald Scarsella was co-pilot on a SeaPort Airlines plane February 14 as it attempted to land at Salina Regional Airport in Kansas. Records say Scarsella and the pilot didn't lower the gear, so the plane crash-landed on its belly. The two weren't injured, and there were no passengers aboard. The airline soon fired both. Scarsella filed for unemployment in Iowa. He lived in Iowa at the time. The Iowa benefits were granted, but SeaPort appealed. Last week the Iowa Employment Appeal Board denied the benefits, saying Scarsella disregarded steps required to safely fly an airplane. Scarsella declined to comment.====================Royals Continue Winning Streak; Beat Giants 7-to-4KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _ The Kansas City Royals are still on a roll! The Royals beat the San Francisco Giants 7-to-4 yesterday (SUN) in Kansas City to extend their winning streak to seven games. The Royals have put together two winning streaks of seven or more games this season for the first time since 1985. The Royals' seven steals were one shy of the club record set in 1998.====================Sporting KC, Peterson Joseph Agree to End ContractKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Sporting Kansas City has terminated the contract of Peterson Joseph in what the club calls a mutual decision. The 24-year-old midfielder from Haiti has been on the disabled list since the start of the season following an unknown medical issue that arose during last year's playoff push. Joseph has not played in a match for the MLS Cup champions since last October. Joseph appeared in 36 matches during his Sporting KC career, including three matches in the CONCACAF Champions League and three U.S. Open Cup victories. The move opens an international roster spot for the team.
  • KS Judge Rejects Challenge to Anti-Abortion LawTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge has refused to quickly strike down a sweeping anti-abortion law enacted this year by the Legislature. Shawnee County District Judge Rebecca Crotty this week rejected arguments that lawmakers violated a provision in the Kansas Constitution requiring most legislation to address only one subject. Crotty's ruling did not resolve other issues in the lawsuit filed in June by Dr. Herbert Hodes and his daughter, Dr. Traci Nauser. Their lawyer, Rene Netherton, said Friday that challenges to individual provisions in the law will move forward. The state and the anti-abortion group Kansans for Life saw the ruling as a victory. The law blocks tax breaks for abortion providers and prohibits them from furnishing instructors or materials for public school courses on sexuality.================Shawnee County DA Exploring Run for US SenateTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas prosecutor says he's considering a run for the U.S. Senate next year as a Democrat. Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor confirmed Friday to The Associated Press that he plans to form a committee to explore a bid for the seat held by veteran Republican Pat Roberts. WIBW-AM in Topeka reported earlier Friday that sources close to Taylor had said he would form the committee. Taylor plans to make a formal announcement on his 40th birthday Monday. He declined to discuss details until then, except to say the announcement stops short of declaring his candidacy. Taylor is the first Democrat to publicly announce an interest in the race. He was elected district attorney in 2008 and re-elected without opposition in 2012. Roberts has held the Senate seat since 1997. He faces opposition in the August 2014 GOP primary from Leawood radiologist Milton Wolf.================KS Appeals Court: Air Rifle Not a FirearmLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A panel of the Kansas Court of Appeals has ruled that an air rifle is not a firearm as defined by the state's criminal laws. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the court ruled Friday in the 2011 case of a man accused of pointing an air rifle at two people and threatening to shoot them. Lawrence resident Timothy Craddick was convicted of two counts of attempted aggravated assault. A Douglas County judge found that Craddick had committed the crime with a firearm, which meant a presumptive prison term. The judge ordered him to serve 11 months. But the appeals court ruled Craddick's pellet rifle was not a firearm under Kansas law because it shoots bullets by air or gas instead of an explosion or combustion. Craddick will be resentenced.================Kansas Revenues Short $18M in OctoberTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Revenue says the state collected nearly $18 million less in taxes than anticipated in October. Figures released Thursday also show tax collections have been $27 million short of expectations since the fiscal year began in July. The biggest reason is a shortfall in individual income tax collections. For the month, Kansas collected $445 million in taxes, but officials had expected $463 million. Kansas has collected $1.81 billion in revenue for the fiscal year to date, instead of the $1.84 billion expected. The state anticipated $220 million in individual income collections in October but instead took in $187 million, missing the mark by 15 percent. Kansas enacted massive income tax cuts in 2012 that have contributed to the revenue declines.=============== KS Consumer Advocacy Group Opposes KCC Meetings Policies TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A consumer advocacy agency's top attorney says he'll petition the Kansas Corporation Commission to rethink new policies that would let it continue holding some discussions in private. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that David Springe of the Citizens' Utility Ratepayers Board says the new KCC policies wouldn't comply with the Kansas Open Meetings Act. CURB is a state agency that represents small businesses and residential customers before the KCC, which regulates utilities. KCC officials declined to respond to Springe's criticism. Springe objects to the new policies because the commission still could have private discussions, although any official action would have to take place in public. The commission rewrote its policies after scrutiny of a practice in which members meet individually to approve rate increases without holding a public hearing.================Washburn Makes Progress on New KBI LaboratoryTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new Kansas Bureau of Investigation laboratory on the Washburn University campus is a step closer to construction. Washburn's Board of Regents on Thursday approved a plan to partner with the Topeka Public Building Commission to construct the laboratory. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the main obstacle to constructing the $40 million building was funding. The building commission has agreed to borrow the money to finance the construction, which the Legislature would pay back through appropriations. Washburn will eventually own the laboratory and sublease it to the KBI. University administrators hope KBI scientists will eventually teach Washburn classes and faculty members could work as consultants for the agency.================ KUMed Prof Sues, Alleging Misuse of Grant FundsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A professor at the University of Kansas School of Medicine has sued the school, claiming it retaliated against him for complaining about misappropriation of research grants. Curtis Klaassen contends in a lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court in Kansas that the school stripped him of his position as principal investigator on research projects and placed him on administrative leave. The suit contends the school also fired most of his research assistants and killed important laboratory animals. Klaassen said Friday that the university ruined his reputation and interfered with the education of his students. In addition to the University of Kansas, the lawsuit also names the Kansas Board of Regents and several university officials. Board of Regents and university officials did not immediately respond to phone and email messages.=============== KS School Bus Topples into CreekDOUGLASS, Kan. (AP) — Ten children and a school bus driver have been rescued after the bus they were in toppled into a southern Kansas creek swollen by heavy rain. Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet says the children climbed through a roof hatch to await rescue Thursday afternoon as the bus lay on its side, half-submerged. County 911 director Chris Davis said the Douglass School District bus apparently went off a bridge about 4 pm Thursday. Herzet said the oldest children were 13 and helped the younger ones through the hatch. Rescuers used a line to help them to safety. The driver was taken to a hospital to be checked for hypothermia. One child was seen being put inside an ambulance, but the sheriff says all 10 were turned over to their parents.================ 1 Arrested After Shooting Death in EurekaEUREKA, Kan. (AP) — Greenwood County officials say a person is dead and another is in custody after an overnight shooting in Eureka. Sheriff's deputies responded to a call about a shooting early Friday. They found 25-year-old Michael L. Mefford dead at a Eureka home. A suspect was taken into custody a short time later. No other details have been released.===============Federal Prison Inmate Charged in Kansas SlayingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A federal prison inmate has been charged with killing a Kansas man whose partial remains were found by a mushroom hunter south of Topeka. WIBW-TV reports the Osage and Shawnee county prosecutors announced the first-degree murder charge Thursday against James P. Harris. Harris is accused of killing 50-year-old James Gerety, who was reported missing in March 2011 by a law firm that handled his personal affairs. One year later, a woman hunting mushrooms discovered remains near Carbondale in Osage County. DNA tests recently confirmed the remains as those of Gerety. Details about Harris and the killing were not disclosed Thursday. Harris is being held in a federal prison in Texas on an unrelated crime and will be brought to Kansas in December.=============== Workshops in KS Teach Grain Dust SafetyEFFINGHAM, Kan. (AP) — Safety workshops were held this week in Kansas for people who work around combustible grain dust. The workshops in Effingham were sponsored by the Kansas City chapter of the Grain Elevator and Processing Society. More than 60 grain industry employees from the region attended the sessions. The St. Joseph News-Press reports that the classes were conducted around the second anniversary of an explosion at a Bartlett Grain facility that killed six people. A moment of silence was held in honor of the victims. Kingsly Ambrose, assistant professor in milling/grain processing at Kansas State university, said the workshops are intended to increase awareness of grain dust and its explosiveness. He says it takes the dispersal of billions of fine dust particles to create the devastating explosions.=============== Cats, Dogs Seized from Kansas City No-Kill ShelterKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City and state officials seized 68 dogs and cats from a northern Kansas City no-kill animal shelter. City spokesman Chris Hernandez says the animals were taken Wednesday from Forever Friends Animal League after a member of the Humane Society investigated reports of sick animals being put up for adoption. The Kansas City Star reports that rescuers found the animals were being kept in dirty conditions. The animals, 37 dogs and 31 cats, were taken to the KC Pet Project, the city's shelter. That group's executive director says most of the animals were in fair condition but several had upper respiratory infections. The animals aren't currently up for adoption. Hernandez says the operators of Forever Friends have been cited for numerous animal control and municipal violations in the past.=============== Lyons Cancels Longtime Veterans Day ParadeLYONS, Kan. (AP) — The traditional Veterans Day parade won't happen this year in Lyons. The Hutchinson News reports that the parade scheduled for November 9 was canceled because of a lack of participation or people to coordinate the event. The parade was held in the central Kansas town for years, and was once even covered live by a radio station. After a few years off, the parade was revived in 2000 and had been held on the Saturday before November 11. Organizers say the military presence in the parade had diminished and fewer spectators attended the event in recent years. They hope to organize an indoor event to mark the day next year.=============== Elderly KS Man Killed in Farming AccidentMARION, Kan. (AP) — An 82-year-old man died after an apparent farming accident this week in east-central Kansas. Marion County authorities say Eldon Andres was working on a tractor Tuesday near Peabody when it moved forward, knocked him to the ground and stopped on top of him. KAKE-TV reports Marion County authorities had received a report that Andres was missing. While on their way to the scene, deputies learned the man's body had been found.================KC Man Charged in Deaths of 2 People Found in VanKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man has been charged in the September deaths of a man and woman whose burned bodies were found in Kansas in an abandoned van. Twenty-nine-year-old Christopher A. Canagan was charged Friday in Jackson County with two counts of first-degree murder and other charges. No attorney is listed for him in online court records. Canagan is accused of shooting 24-year-old Dennis Smith as he sat in the driver's seat. Williams and another person jumped out of the van, but Canagan is accused of forcing 22-year-old Linda Williams back into the vehicle and driving away. Court records say Canagan told police that he had sex with Williams before shooting her. Canagan then is accused of setting the van on fire in Kansas City, Kansas.================Fan Injured by Hotdog Promotion Suing KC RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Missouri Supreme Court is weighing whether a legal standard that protects sports teams from being sued over fan injuries caused by in-game events should also apply to those caused by mascots or other team personnel. The court's ruling on John Coomer's lawsuit against the Kansas City Royals could affect how major sports teams engage their fans during games. Coomer says he was hit in the eye by a foil-wrapped hotdog thrown by the Royals' mascot four years ago. The Kansas man says he's had to endure two eye surgeries and that his vision was permanently damaged. The team argues that it should be protected by the so-called "baseball rule." That legal standard holds that fans assume the risk of being struck by foul balls or stray pucks at games.===============Expert: Shutdown Hurt Midwest Business ConditionsOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A business conditions index for nine Midwest and Plains states has dropped after rising the previous two months. The overall Mid-America Business Conditions Index plunged to a growth neutral 50.0 in October from 54.8 in September. Creighton University economist Ernie Goss oversees the survey, and he says the partial government shutdown and slower business activity for firms tied to agriculture pushed overall economic conditions lower for the month. The survey results are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers say any score above 50 suggests growth, while a score below that suggests decline. The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.=============== KS National Guard to Add 3 to Hall of FameTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Three retired members of the Kansas National Guard will be inducted into its hall of fame at a ceremony Sunday in Topeka. The honorees are Lieutenant Colonel Robert K. Webb, Chief Warrant Officer 4 Cornelius Vandermotten and Command Sergeant Major Jana L. Harrison. Webb served 31 years in the military in active duty and with the Guard, retiring in 1987. Vandermotten is a native of Glasgow, Scotland, and spent more than 40 years in uniform, including two decades in the Kansas National Guard. Harrison was the Kansas National Guard's first female command sergeant major. She is retired but serves on a training team that prepares soldiers for overseas deployments.================Kiowa County Veterans Memorial to Be DedicatedMULLINVILLE, Kan. (AP) — A new memorial commemorating Kiowa County's military veterans dating back to the Civil War is scheduled to be dedicated this weekend. Crews have placed six large engraved granite markers containing the names of about 1,800 military veterans from the county on the new memorial in Mullinville, a town of about 250 residents located about 120 miles west of Wichita. The Hutchinson News reports that the memorial will be dedicated Saturday. A group consisting of residents of Mullinville and two other area towns started The Kiowa County Veterans' Memorial Foundation a few years ago and raised more than $60,000 for the project.===============Fort Larned Civil War Exhibit Has Midwestern FocusFORT LARNED, Kan. (AP) — A temporary Civil War exhibit highlighting the contributions of soldiers from the Midwest is now on display at Fort Larned Historic Site in Kansas. The three-part exhibit highlights the importance of the region's resources and waterways to both sides during the war. It also explores the impact of the guerrilla war between the Jayhawkers in Kansas and the Bushwhackers in Missouri. After January 1, the exhibit will move to William Howard Taft National Historic Site in Cincinnati. It is part of a National Park Service commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. Fort Larned National Historic Site is six miles west of Larned in central Kansas. Admission is free.=============== General Aviation Aircraft Shipments, Billings IncreaseWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The industry group for the nation's general aviation manufacturers says airplane shipments and billings rose worldwide in the first nine months of the year. The General Aviation Manufacturers Association on Thursday reported total airplane shipments rose 6.6 percent over the same period last year with 1,513 planes shipped. The group said total billings for general aviation planes reached $15.4 billion, an increase of 24.5 percent. But GAMA President Pete Bunce says in a news release that the industry still faces significant challenges, especially in the markets for small and mid-size jets. The association is working with the Federal Aviation Administration to clear the backlog of deliveries that developed during the government shutdown.================AR Woman Charged in Death of KS Pedestrian FORT SMITH, Ark. (AP) — A woman from Fort Smith, Arkansas has been charged with negligent homicide in the death of a Kansas man who was struck by the woman's pickup truck. Authorities say 51-year-old Vicki Lee Fielding was making a left-hand turn in the pickup shortly before 1 am Sunday when she struck and killed 20-year-old Nathanael DeJarnett of Wellington, Kansas in the center left-turn lane of a Fort Smith street. Fielding said she did not see DeJarnett until he walked into the path of her truck. The Times Record newspaper reports that the negligent homicide charge was filed Thursday after a preliminary autopsy report listed DeJarnett's cause of death as multiple blunt force injuries.===============KC-Based Hallmark Faces Backlash over Christmas Carol Lyric EditKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Greeting card giant Hallmark says it shouldn't have changed the lyrics to "Deck the Halls" on a new holiday ornament that's stirring customer backlash online. The company took heat Thursday after it began selling a miniaturized version of a tacky holiday sweater. The ornament alters the carol's lyrics by removing the word "gay" and emblazoning the sweater with: "Don we now our FUN apparel!" Critics took to social media, accusing Hallmark of making a political statement. The Kansas City, Missouri-based company says it was surprised by the reaction and now realizes it shouldn't have changed the wording.
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  • Mark your calendars for the next Virtual Cinema a Go-Go, presenting a Dino Double Feature at 7 p.m. on March 4! Screenings will include Unknown Island…
  • Muamba, who plays for Bolton in the English Premier League, was "in effect, dead" for 78 minutes after suffering a heart attack, his doctor says. But doctors kept working. Multiple defibrillator shocks got his heart beating on its own again.
  • UPDATE: Obama's Spot on Kansas Ballot Set as Challenge Ends TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — President Barack Obama's place on the November election ballot in Kansas is now secure. The all-Republican State Objections Board on Monday formally ended its review of whether the Democratic president should be listed as a candidate for re-election. The board's action came after Manhattan resident Joe Montgomery dropped his objection. Montgomery said Friday he was withdrawing his challenge because of what he called intimidation directed at him and people around him. But California lawyer and dentist Orly Taitz showed up at the meeting demanding to speak. She told board members they were ignoring evidence questioning Obama's citizenship. That brought an angry response from Topeka progressive activist T.J. Gaughan. He and a few other Obama supporters shouted at Taitz. A security officer ordered them outside.=================Council Approves Kansas Employee Pay RaisesTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Raises for thousands of Kansas state employees have cleared a final step. The increases were given formal approval Monday by the State Finance Council, made up of Governor Sam Brownback and top legislative leaders. Kansas lawmakers approved $11.2 million for the raises in May as part of the state budget for the fiscal year that began in July. Nearly 4,300 state employees will benefit, including some Highway Patrol troopers and corrections officers at state prisons and juvenile detention centers. This is the fourth round of annual raises under a plan approved by the Legislature to bring the salaries of state employees closer to those of private sector workers. The raises were suspended for one year in 2011 because of budget constraints.=================Former Lawmaker Named as Shawnee County Elections OfficialTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has named a former state House member as the top elections official in one of the state's most populous counties. The appointment of 43-year-old Andrew Howell as Shawnee County election commissioner was announced Monday. Howell replaces Elizabeth Ensley Deiter, who stepped down last week to become a magistrate judge for four northeast Kansas counties. Shawnee County is home to the city of Topeka and the state Capitol. Howell runs a small home-renovation company in the Topeka area. He served in the Kansas House from 1995 through 2004. He, like Kobach, is a Republican. Elections in most Kansas counties are run by elected clerks. But Kansas law requires the secretary of state to appoint election commissioners for the state's four most populous counties.=================Cool Temperatures, Scattered Rain Help Kansas CropsWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Cooler temperatures and scattered rainfall in Kansas over the past week helped improve the condition of row crops a bit. But the picture remained fairly dismal. The Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service said in its weekly update Monday that about 69 of the state's soybeans and 68 percent of the sorghum crop are in poor to very poor condition. The agency also said range and pasture conditions have improved somewhat, with 86 percent now rated poor to very poor. Meanwhile, the corn harvest is rapidly progressing. Fifty-one percent of the corn crop was harvested as of Sunday, about three weeks ahead of last year's pace. Kansas growers have begun planting winter wheat. Five percent of seeding is now complete.=================Copper Thieves Cause $750K in Damage in WichitaWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Copper thieves tore out electrical systems at a Wichita industrial park, causing about $750,000 in damage. The theft was reported Friday at Kamen Industrial Park in Wichita. Police said the vandals stole about 2,000 feet of copper wiring. The Wichita Eagle reports that police received the call Friday afternoon after someone with the company found a large pile of heavy-strand copper wire on the ground. The thieves hit the roof of the building tearing out electrical systems to get to the copper wiring. Sergeant Bart Brunscheen, a spokesman for the Wichita Police Department, says detectives are looking at a potential suspect.=================== Mission Mulls Ban on Drivers' Hand-Held PhonesMISSION, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City suburb has been considering a ban on the use of hand-held cellphones while driving. A proposed ordinance under consideration in the Johnson County suburb of Mission would allow people to talk on hands-free cellphones. But police would be able to pull over drivers who are holding phones within about 8 inches of their heads. The ordinance is before the Mission City Council's finance and administration committee and will come up for discussion, possibly in November. The Kansas City Star reports that the only city in Kansas to ban cellphone use by drivers is Manhattan. Mission Mayor Laura McConwell said the council recognizes the safety issues involved. But she says the ordinance may require workshops and public hearings, and other activities aimed at educating the public.=================== Lawrence to Utilize Effluent for IrrigationLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has recently approved a plan for Lawrence to use treated wastewater for irrigating city shrubbery and plots of land. Jeanette Klamm, utilities program manager for Lawrence, says this summer's drought influenced the city's decision to seek approval for the plan, which calls for integrating effluent — or treated wastewater — into the city's irrigation plan. The Lawrence Journal World reports that Lawrence will soon be getting water for trees, grass, flowers in medians, roundabouts and other plots of land from the wastewater treatment facility instead of from a fire hydrant. Wichita also pumps effluent water from Cowskin Creek Water Quality Reclamation Facility to recreational ponds. Many other towns across Kansas have been pumping effluent water to golf courses for years.=================== National Catholic Group Calls on KC Bishop to ResignKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A national Catholic organization is pushing for Bishop Robert Finn to resign after he became the highest-ranking U.S. church official convicted of a crime related to the child sexual abuse scandal. The Kansas City Star reported that the National Survivor Advocates Coalition made the demand during a news conference Sunday in downtown Kansas City. Coalition chairwoman Kristine Ward says a criminally convicted bishop "cannot lead." Finn leads the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. He was convicted earlier this month of one misdemeanor for failing to report child abuse suspicions. The charges stem from a case in which church officials knew about child porn photos on a priest's computer but didn't turn him in until six months later. A diocese spokesman says the bishop continues to focus on his work.===================Duncan Due in Kansas on TuesdayEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is getting a visit from U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan. Duncan is due in Emporia Tuesday for a town hall meeting at Emporia State University. He's also scheduled to visit Topeka, with a stop planned at the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic site. Duncan is on a 10-day national tour that ends Friday in Washington. In Emporia, he plans an afternoon town hall at Emporia State University as well as a visit to the National Teachers Hall of Fame, which is located on the Emporia campus.===================Lenexa Man Pleads No Contest in Wife's DeathOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A northeastern Kansas man has avoided a trial by pleading no contest in the killing of his wife earlier this year. Thirty-seven-year-old Dominic Camacho had been scheduled to go on trial Monday in Johnson County District Court on a charge of first-degree murder. The Kansas City Star reports the Lenexa man instead pleaded no contest to a charge of second-degree murder. Camacho's wife, 35-year-old Leslie Camacho, was found strangled March 13 in the couple's suburban Kansas City home. Police went to the home when relatives became worried after being unable to reach Leslie Camacho. The victim worked at the University of Kansas Hospital's Cancer Center, processing outpatient registrations in breast imaging. Sentencing for Dominic Camacho is scheduled for October 22.===================KCK Police ID Men Killed in Shooting, Suicide KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas police have released the name of a man killed in a shooting and the suspect who committed suicide during a police standoff. Police said Monday that 27-year-old Gabriel Valedivia was the person whose body was discovered Thursday outside a home. While responding to the homicide, police were told that a possible suspect was in a nearby home. After a more than seven hour standoff, police went inside the home and found the suspect dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. The suspect was identified as 31-year-old Michael Brothers. Both men were residents of Kansas City, Kansas.=================== Naturalization Ceremony Set for KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is scheduled to host a naturalization ceremony Monday at the Dole Institute of Politics. About 100 prospective U.S. citizens are expected to attend the event Monday afternoon. The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the ceremony is an annual event and will be presided over by U.S. Judge John Lungstrum. University of Kansas Provost Jeffrey Vitter and Kansas business school dean Neeli Bendapudi will also be on hand to greet the new citizens.===================New WSU President to Be Inaugurated Next MonthWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The public is invited to next month's inauguration of Wichita State University's new president. John Bardo succeeds Donald Beggs, who stepped down over the summer after 12 years in the job. Governor Sam Brownback is scheduled to speak at the ceremony the afternoon of October 12 in the Hughes Metropolitan Complex, about a mile north of the Wichita State campus. Bardo began his academic career at Wichita State. He chaired the sociology and social work department from 1978 to 1983. He later worked at the University of North Florida and Bridgewater State College in Massachusetts. More recently, Bardo served as chancellor of Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina from 1995 to 2011. He returned to the classroom last year as a professor of education.=================== PSU Named as Top-Tier Regional School by National MagazinePITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — Pittsburg State University has been recognized as a top tier regional university by U.S. News and World Report. The Pittsburg Morning Sun reports that the magazine has also ranked Pittsburg State highest among the state's three regional universities in its 2013 Best Midwest Regional Universities list. The 12-state Midwest region includes Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Missouri, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Wisconsin. Bill Ivy, associate vice president for enrollment management and student success at Pittsburg State, says it's the second year in a row that the university in southeast Kansas has been named a top-tier institution by U.S. News and World Report.===================No Driver's Licensure Changes Pending for Elderly Kansas DriversTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — More elderly drivers are on Kansas roads and the nation as a whole, as baby boomers age and continue to take to the highways. In Kansas, once residents reach age 65 they must renew their licenses every four years instead of six as they did when they were younger. The issue of older drivers and their competence has emerged again after a 100-year-old driver backed over a group of Los Angeles schoolchildren last month. An Associated Press review of state laws nationally shows a hodgepodge of rules, reflecting scientific uncertainty and public unease over when it's time to stop driving. Kansas doesn't have any pending changes to driving requirements, but programs exist to help keep older drivers current. Transit services are also growing, providing rides for those who've given up their keys.===================UPDATE: No Foul Play Suspected in Missouri Remains Case INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — Investigators say no foul play is suspected in the death of a man whose remains were found over the summer along the Little Blue River. The Jackson County Sheriff said at a news conference Monday that the remains were those of 28-year-old Christopher Porter. The Kansas City Star reported that the mentally disabled Independence man walked away from a hospital in February. Porter's phone was found on a bridge over the river. Authorities began investigating in June when kayakers came across bones from a hand while walking along the Little Blue River. Then eight days later, a shoe with a foot inside turned up about 10 miles downstream. The foot was taken to the county crime lab, and the hand was sent to the University of Texas for identification.=================== KS Family Among Those Honored at Reno Tragedy CommemorationRENO, Nev. (AP) — Spectators and racers paid tribute Sunday to 11 people who were killed when a plane crashed into box seats at last year's Reno National Championship Air Races. A moment of silence was held on the anniversary of the accident at Reno-Stead Airport for pilot Jimmy Leeward and 10 victims on the ground. The emotional ceremony before a crowd of tens of thousands also featured the release of white balloons and a flag presentation after each victim's name was read. Among the injured in attendance were members of a Kansas family. The crash killed 73-year-old Cherie Elvin, of Lenexa, Kansas. Her husband Chuck, two sons and daughter-in-law were injured. Leeward's P-51 Mustang fighter reached 530 miles per hour before pitching towards the sky, then slamming nose-first into box seats.=================== Fewer Butterflies at Monarch Watch's Kansas EventLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — There were fewer monarch butterflies found during an annual event aimed at tracking their migration through Kansas. Chip Taylor, director of the University of Kansas-based Monarch Watch conservation group, told The Lawrence Journal World that this summer's drought meant a much smaller population of monarchs at Saturday's event at the Baker Wetlands. Monarch Watch organizes the tagging to track migration through the U.S. and into Mexico for the winter. This is the group's 21st year of tagging, and it's been inviting the public to take part. Taylor says this year's monarch population was the smallest he'd seen in northeast Kansas. Consistently dry conditions led to fewer flowering plants and milkweed, which the butterflies need to survive. Taylor says, however, the nation's northeast coast population...which is normally smaller...is doing well.===================89-Year-Old Driver Hits 3, Killing Baby in KCKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An 89-year-old churchgoer speeding backward out of a handicapped parking spot struck and killed a baby and injured her grandparents. The Kansas City Star reports that the driver also slammed his car into another vehicle and overturned a fire hydrant Sunday morning outside First Baptist Church. The car traveled about 50 feet before coming to a stop. Witness Patty Reed says the elderly driver's vehicle shot out of the parking space "like a cannon." Her husband, Cec Reed, says one woman started CPR on the injured baby. But investigators said the baby died shortly after the accident at an area hospital. The conditions of the other two victims weren't available. Officials said the driver of the vehicle was cooperating with the investigation. The victims' identities haven't been released.=================== Kansas Couple Bequeath $474K for MWSU ScholarshipsST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Western State University has received a $474,000 gift from the estate of a northeast Kansas couple. The money from the late Earl and Elmyra "Susie" Euler of Blair, Kansas will be used to provide about $19,000 a year worth of scholarships. The money will benefit graduates of Central High School in St. Joseph. Missouri Western President Robert Vartabedian says the university is "extremely grateful." Susie Euler attended Central High School and later Missouri Western when it was still known as St. Joseph Junior College. She and Earl Euler wed in 1945. Besides running a farm, Earl Euler taught grade-schoolers, and Susie Euler worked for Doniphan County, Kansas Agriculture Conservation Services and a bank. Earl Euler died in 2011 at 88. Susie Euler was 81 when she died in 2008.======================Chiefs RB Charles Dings Reconstructed KneeKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles dinged up the same knee that needed reconstructive surgery last season during Sunday's 35-17 loss to the Buffalo Bills. Charles, who tore his left ACL in Week 2, carried only six times for three yards against the Bills. He could be seen riding a bike on the sideline and asking to play the rest of the game. Kansas City coach Romeo Crennel said Monday that the decision was made to rest Charles, who has yet to show the same burst that carried him to more than 1,400 yards rushing in 2010. Crennel said he expects Charles to be ready for Sunday's game at New Orleans, another team that is winless through its first two games.======================Big 12 Warm-Ups Draw to Close; Intraconference Rivals to Face OffThe Big 12's big bore is about to finally come to an end. The league that dominated headlines for a variety of reasons during the offseason, not the least of which was whether it would continue to exist, has been a blip on the national radar once games finally started against a dismal lineup of non-conference weaklings. That should change starting Saturday night. Sixth-ranked Oklahoma plays number 15 Kansas State in a game between two of the league's top teams, one that could go a long way toward determining who wins the conference title. It's a far cry from the likes of James Madison, Western Illinois and Grambling State that the league's programs have been beating up the past few weeks. ====================== Titanic Exhibit at KC's Union Station Exceeds GoalKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Titanic exhibit that coincided with the 100th anniversary of the ill-fated voyage drew nearly 123,000 people to Kansas City's Union Station. The Kansas City Star reports that it wasn't immediately known how much the exhibit netted. But the station's chief financial officer, Jerry Baber, says the break-even point was about 75,000 tickets. A 2001 version of the Titanic exhibit attracted about 280,000 people. Officials did not expect to match that with an encore show. They were hoping for 100,000 or more visitors. In October, Union Station will open its next traveling exhibit, "The Science of Rock 'n' Roll."======================Kansas Expects to End Challenge to Obama Ballot SpotTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas elections officials expect to formally close a challenge to President Barack Obama's listing on the state's November general election ballot. The State Objections Board had already scheduled its Monday meeting before the Manhattan resident who objected to Obama being on the ballot dropped his challenge last week. The board is the secretary of state, attorney general and lieutenant governor. The resident, Joe Montgomery, said Friday he was withdrawing his objection because of what he called animosity and intimidation directed at him and people around him. The all-Republican board had a hearing Thursday on Montgomery's objection, which questioned whether the Democratic president is eligible to hold the office. The board postponed a decision then, saying it wanted documents certifying the authenticity of Obama's birth certificate from Hawaii.**this story has been updated. Please see above. =================== Jackson County Sheriff to Announce Identification of RemainsINDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — The Jackson County Sheriff plans to hold a news conference Monday to reveal the identity of human remains found along a river. Authorities began investigating in June when hikers came across a decomposed human hand while walking along the Little Blue River. Then eight days later, a shoe with a human foot inside turned up about 10 miles downstream. The foot was taken to the county crime lab, and the hand was sent to the University of Texas for possible identification.**this story has been updated. Please see above.
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  • UPDATE: Harveyville Tornado Claims One Life A man who was critically injured by an EF-2 tornado that struck Harveyville Tuesday night has died at a Topeka hospital. Officials say53-year-old Richard D. Slade was airlifted to Stormont-Vail after being pulled from the wreckage of his home. He remained in critical condition and the decision was made to take him off life support. Slade died last (WED) night. ==============================KS Tornado Victims Clean-Up, Get Help Replacing DocumentsPeople across Kansas are cleaning up from this week's powerful storms that affected many counties in the eastern half of Kansas. Authorities say the EF-2 tornado that destroyed much of Harveyville, in northeast Kansas, had wind speeds of up to 130 miles per hour. Emergency officials are allowing volunteers into the town today (THUR) to begin the recovery effort. So far, only residents have been allowed into the small Wabaunseee County town. Emergency officials say anyone wanting to work in the town can check in at the Mission Valley School in Eskridge beginning today (THUR). The United Way says volunteers will need to sign liability release forms. They will receive wrist bands and hear a safety briefing before being taken to Harveyville. The United Ways also says no clothing donations are needed at this time.Meanwhile, the Kansas Department of Revenue is taking steps to help residents of tornado-stricken Wabaunsee County replace tax documents and state-issued licenses or identification. Governor Sam Brownback has declared a state of emergency for the county, where Tuesday night's tornado destroyed about half the buildings in Harveyville. Kansas Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan says the department will waive fees for replacing certain documents, such as driver's licenses, vehicle titles or state identification. Residents will need to prove they live in the Wabaunsee County to get new licenses. Those needing free replacement copies of their tax returns can call the Revenue Department (785) 368-8222.=============================Obama Calls Governors of States Hit by TwistersNEW YORK (AP) — President Barack Obama has called the governors of six states recovering from devastating tornados and said he was ready to assist with their needs. The White House says Obama called the governors of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky and Tennessee. Obama placed the calls while driving from Nashua, N.H., to the airport in Manchester, N.H. He then landed in New York, where he was attending four fundraisers. White House spokesman Jay Carney says Obama expressed his condolences to the governors and told them his thoughts and prayers were with the families of those affected by the violent twisters. ============================Bald Eagles Nesting in Kansas WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — More bald eagles appear to be nesting in Kansas. Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism says a survey found eight eagle nests with eggs in south-central Kansas. That's up from seven active nests last year in the area that stretches from Marion County to Kingman County. Charlie Cope, wildlife biologist at the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, told The Wichita Eagle that five active nests were found in Cowley County and one each in Sumner, Kingman and Sedgwick counties. The active Sedgwick County nest is near Derby on the Arkansas River. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says about 60 active eagle nests are expected to be found in Kansas this year. Kansas had about 50 nests last year.============================= First Lady to Attend Event in KCKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Michelle Obama will be in Kansas City next week for a Democratic Party event. Obama's office said Thursday the first lady is to speak Monday at a Democratic National Committee luncheon in Kansas City. No other details of those appearances were announced. The White House says Obama will greet National Guard members and military veterans when she arrives at Kansas City's airport.============================= Brown v. Board Visitors Site Spent $886KTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new report shows the nearly 18,000 people who visited the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site in 2010 spent $886,000 at the Topeka attraction and the surrounding area. The site is dedicated to telling the story of the historic U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned segregated education. The National Park Service estimates that the spending supported 14 jobs. Fifty-two percent of the spending and jobs are related to lodging and dining. Another 29 percent of the spending was on retail, 10 percent was for entertainment and amusements, 7 percent was for gas and transportation and 2 percent for groceries. Data about the Brown site is part of a broader visitor spending analysis conducted for the National Park Service by Michigan State University professor emeritus Daniel Stynes.==========================Shooting in Leavenworth County Leaves 2 Men DeadLANSING, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in northeastern Kansas have identified the man who opened fire in a murder-suicide as a 32-year-old Leavenworth resident. The shootings occurred around 8:30 p.m. Wednesday outside Lansing, in rural Leavenworth County. Undersheriff Ron Cranor said today (THUR) that Kenneth McClellan forced his way into the home of 66-year-old John O'Brien Jr., with whose daughter he had an estranged relationship. The undersheriff said McClellan shot and killed O'Brien, then left through a back door and fatally shot himself. The Kansas City Star reports that authorities initially thought O'Brien's daughter had also been shot, but doctors at a hospital determined she had been hit in the face with the gun. She was treated and released.==============================KC Police Looking for Pair Who Burned Boy with GasolineKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police are looking for two teenagers who a 13-year-old boy says followed him home from school and started a gasoline fire that burned his face and hair. Detective Stacey Taylor says the boy suffered first-degree burns but no permanent damage in the incident Tuesday afternoon. Taylor says one of the assailants picked up a gas can on the porch of the boy's home while the other kept the boy from going inside. Some of the gasoline spilled during a struggle, and the boy says one of the attackers said "this is what you get" before lighting the spilled fuel. Taylor says the case is not being treated as a hate crime.==============================State Tax Revenue Totals $29 Million More Than ExpectedTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A state agency says Kansas collected $29 million more in taxes than anticipated in February. The Department of Revenue says the state collected more than $261 million in February, about 12.6 percent more than the expected $232 million. Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan calls it a sign that the Kansas economy is recovering and more people are finding jobs. Kansas was coming off a January in which a surge of early income tax filings led to an increase in total tax refunds and left revenues nearly $31 million short of expectations. But since the fiscal year began in July the picture has been positive. Tax collections in the first eight months of the fiscal year total nearly $3.7 billion — about $32 million more than expected.==============================Funeral for Iraq War Veteran Who Died after Lawrence Bar BrawlCLARENCE, N.Y. (AP) — Funeral services are scheduled in suburban Buffalo for an Iraq war veteran who died after getting into a fight in the Kansas town where he was attending college. Buffalo media outlets report that 27-year-old Nicholas Sardina was found dead last Saturday in his apartment in Lawrence, where he was attending classes at the University of Kansas. Police say he had been in a fight at a house party several hours before at another home in Lawrence. Autopsy results are still pending. Authorities say no arrests have been made. Sardina joined the Army after graduating from Clarence High School and served several tours in Iraq before being honorably discharged in 2008. His funeral is being held Friday morning at a Catholic church in Clarence, just east of Buffalo.==============================KS Couple Sentenced in Welfare Fraud CaseLEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas couple will be sentenced in March after pleading no contest to defrauding the state's welfare system. The Leavenworth Times reports that 44-year-old Gregory Riley and 47-year-old Diana Riley entered the pleas this week to one count each of felony welfare fraud and perjury. The Rileys, who live in Bonner Springs, reached the plea agreement ahead of what was expected to be a lengthy preliminary hearing beginning today (THUR). Prosecutors said that from 2005 to 2009, the couple wrongfully obtained more than $22,000 in food stamp assistance and more than $60,000 in medical assistance. At one point, the county attorney says, the Rileys reported having a total of $75 in two bank accounts when they actually had nearly $10,000 in cash in five accounts plus a second home.==============================KS House Majority Leader Wants All-Faiths Chapel at StatehouseTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — House Majority Leader Arlen Siegfreid has introduced a bill to set aside space in the Kansas Statehouse for prayer, meditation and reflection. The Olathe Republican told the House Federal and State Affairs Committee that the U.S. Capitol and several other states have such chapels for use by all faiths. Siegfreid said the space would be paid for through private funds. He said Republican Governor Sam Brownback has offered to allow legislators to use a portion of the space allotted to his office on the second floor in the Statehouse for the chapel. Siegfreid said eventually the chapel would be located in the visitors' center scheduled to be built in the Statehouse. Siegfreid said Brownback has offered to help him raise money for the chapel project.==============================Proposed Settlement between Landowners and Telecom CompaniesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A proposed settlement of claims by thousands of Kansas landowners against three of the nation's largest telecommunications companies is expected to go before a federal judge for approval. U.S. Magistrate Judge Kenneth Gale scheduled a hearing today (THUR) on a deal to end the property rights dispute over installation of fiber-optic cable on railroad rights of way. The agreement comes in a lawsuit filed against Sprint Communications, Qwest and Level 3 Communications. The proposal would resolve claims affecting about 459 miles of rights of way throughout Kansas. The settlement is expected to be worth more than $4.2 million. Class members would get $2.98 million while attorneys would get $1 million. At issue was whether railroads have the right to allow telecommunications companies to lay the cable.===============================Salina Leases First Space in Former Hawker Beechcraft AreaSALINA, Kan. (AP) — Salina officials are hoping a new tenant at an industrial park that used to house Hawker Beechcraft will be the first of many attracted to the area. The Salina Airport Authority and city leaders have announced a lease agreement with Universal Forest Products to move into the Salina Airport Industrial Center. The company, which is based in Grand Rapids, Michigan, builds wood packaging crates for shipping products. It signed a three-year lease. The Salina Journal reports that Hawker Beechcraft has turned over the keys to 10 buildings at the industrial park. The Wichita airplane maker closed its Salina division in 2009, eliminating 238 jobs and an estimated $12 million in annual payroll.==============================Bald Eagles Nesting in Kansas WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — More bald eagles appear to be nesting in Kansas. The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism says a survey found eight eagle nests with eggs in south-central Kansas. That's up from seven active nests last year in the area that stretches from Marion County to Kingman County. Charlie Cope, wildlife biologist at the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, told The Wichita Eagle that five active nests were found in Cowley County and one each in Sumner, Kingman and Sedgwick counties. The active Sedgwick County nest is near Derby on the Arkansas River. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says about 60 active eagle nests are expected to be found in Kansas this year. Kansas had about 50 nests last year.=======================
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