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Compromise Seen On Kansas Hunting, Fishing Fees

A compromise may be in the works on a plan to start making older Kansans pay for hunting and fishing licenses.

The annual licenses cost $20.50 each. Kansas adopted a license exemption for people 70 and older in 1937, then dropped the age to 65 in 1971.

Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Secretary Robin Jennison says the exemption will cost his department more than $1 million in the coming years as the population ages. He has proposed ending the exemption – an idea that lawmakers say is highly unpopular.

But at a Senate committee hearing last week, Jennison said he’s open to alternatives, such as raising the age for free passes to 75 or creating a half-price license for senior citizens.

Repealing the exemptions requires legislative action.

Kansas Doctor Faces Sentencing For Bogus Research

A Topeka doctor who conspired to falsify data in a 2010 clinical trial of an allergy pill on human subjects has asked a judge to spare him from prison.

Wayne Spencer, 73, faces sentencing Monday in federal court in Topeka after pleading guilty last year to conspiracy to defraud and failing to maintain records in a clinical trial as required by the Food and Drug Administration. Sentencing for Olathe nurse Lisa Sharp is March 23.

Both defendants worked for Lee Research Institute, which was paid by Schering-Plough to conduct the clinical trial on the allergy medication. Spencer was the principal investigator and Sharp was the lead research coordinator.

A presentence report recommends Spencer receive 18 to 24 months in prison, but his attorney this week filed an unopposed request for probation. The government in its plea deal has agreed to recommend probation.

Defense attorney Jason Hoffman argued in a court filing that his client did not personally gain anything from the $36,046 paid to Lee Research Institute for the clinical trial. He contended that the loss figure, which is used to calculate sentencing guidelines, disproportionately punishes the doctor.

His attorney also argued that Spencer was not the “lead actor” in the case, blaming Sharp for enrolling the inappropriate clinical trial participants. He contends it wasn’t until the study was under way that it came to Spencer’s attention that “something was afoot.”

“He was presented with the proverbial Catch-22: allow the study to continue in violation of the study protocol or blow the whistle,” Hoffman wrote. “The second option was, of course, the ‘correct’ one, but the likely fallout would have been to put all the nonphysician employees of Lee Research Institute out in the street.”

That is how Sharp presented it to his client, he said.

“In the end, Dr. Spencer chose what he viewed to be the lesser of 2 evils,” according to the filing. “The difficult position Ms. Sharp put him in in no way lessens Dr. Spencer’s culpability in this case. It does, however, provide a framework from which to analyze how someone of Dr. Spencer’s character and background could find himself staring down the barrel of a prison sentence at this stage in his life.”

His attorney also argued that Spencer has been an otherwise law-abiding citizen.

Spencer voluntarily surrendered his medical license in December.

Tigers Come Up Short Against Washburn In MIAA Semifinals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Will McNeill scored 23 points and grabbed six rebounds to lead No. 1 seed Washburn to a 67-54 victory over No. 5 seed Fort Hays State in the semifinals of the MIAA Centennial Men’s Basketball Championship Saturday evening at Municipal Auditorium.

As has been the theme for much of the tournament, neither team could get much separation in the first half. Washburn’s biggest lead in the opening half was six points, while Fort Hays State led by as many as five.

Washburn held a slight edge of 31-29 as the teams went into the locker room at halftime.

The Ichabods came out firing in the second half, opening up with a 17-4 run to take a 48-33 lead with 11:44 to play in the game. Fort Hays State was unable to make a run to close the gap the rest of the way, as Washburn extended the lead to as many as 18 points before winning by the final 13-point margin.

Zack Riggins pitched in 10 points for Washburn, while Bobby Chipman pulled down seven rebounds.

Fort Hays State was led by Kendrick Morse with 13 points, and Markus Yarbrough added 10 points for the Tigers.

Fort Hays State closes the season with a 19-9 overall record.

– MIAA –

Game Highlights
fhsu game highlights

Media Room Post Game Comments
fhsu post game comments

Ness City and Oakley win 2A Ellis Sub-State

Both championship games from the class 2A sub-state in Ellis featured the number one seed versus number two. In the girl’s game it was a NWKL matchup between the Oakley lady Plainsmen and the Rawlins County Lady Buffaloes.

Rawlins County jumped out to an early 6-2 lead behind Hillary Chavatal who scored the first six points for Rawlins County. Oakley answered back with a 5-0 run of their own and took a 7-5 lead. With the game tied at nine Oakley went on a 6-2 run and built their lead to 16-15 after the first quarter . Oakley’s Laura Dennis had six first quarter points and Rawlins County’s Hillary Chavatal scored 12 of her game-high 24 in the first quarter. Oakley ended first and began the second quarter on a 10-4 run and built a 26-19 lead behind four from both Brooke Hemmert and Carrie Pilkington and led 26-21 at halftime.

Rawlins County got three-pointers from Keisha Green and Abbey Wolters and began the second half on a 10-4 and tied the game at 31. Marlee Rath hit a three-pointer and helped Oakley answer back with a 9-2 run and lead 40-33. Rawlins County cut the lead to 43-39 after three quarters and that would be the closest the Lady Buffs would get. Oakley closed out the fourth quarter outscoring Rawlins County 10-2 and picked up the 53-41 win.

Rawlins County’s Hillary Chavatal led all scorers with 24 . Oakley’s Laura Dennis scored a team-high 16 points, Brooke Hemmert added 14 and Carrie Pilkington had 10. Oakley improved to 18-5 and will play at the 2A state tournament in Manhattan next week while Rawlins County finished their season 16-7.

The boys championship game would come down to the final shot between the Plainville Cardinals and the Ness City Eagles. The top seed Cardinals started the game on a 9-2 run behind four points from Jameson Klein who scored seven in the first quarter. Ness City would hang around because of the play of Collin Foos. Foos had nine points in the first quarter and Plainville led 14-12 after the first quarter.

Ness City scored the first five points of the second quarter and took a 15-14 lead. Ness City extended their lead to 22-18 before Plainville forced back-to-back turnovers that led to Kyle Becker layups that kicked off a 6-0 run that gave the Cards a 24-22 lead. After four lead changes to close out the first half Ness City led 30-28.

Ness City began the third quarter on a 12-2 run sparked by a Dalton Gantz three-pointer, he hit three in the game and finished with nine points, as the Eagles lead grew to their largest lead of the game at 12. Plainville closed the quarter on a 6-0 run, four coming from Hadley Gillum, and the Cards trailed 42-36. After Ness City went back up by six, at 44-36 to begin the fourth quarter Plainville stormed back and took a 45-44 lead as Hadley Gillum scored six in the fourth quarter to finish with 12 points. Ness City answered with a Collin Foos layup and a Drew Clarke three-pointer to take a 50-45 lead. Plainville regained the lead with a 6-0 run to lead 51-50. Collin Foos then gave Ness City the lead with a pair of free throws, at 52-51. Ness City’s lead grew to 54-51 in the closing minutes of the fourth quarter before Plainville’s Jameson Klein complete on a three-point lead to close within one at 54-53. Plainville sent Ness City’s Koltyn Ratliff to the line for a one-and-one and he missed the front end. Plainville’s Kyle Becker rushed down the floor and put up a shot as time expired that came up short giving Ness City the 54-53 win.

Ness City’s Collin Foos led all scorers with 24 and Drew Clarke added 16 points. Plainville’s Andrew Casey had a team-high 14 points before fouling out early in the fourth quarter, Hadley Gillum added 12 and Jameson Klein finished with 10.

The Ness City Eagles improved to 19-3 with the win and will play at the 2A state tournament in Manhattan next week. The Plainville Cardinals finished the season 21-2. Plainville has a 40-4 over the past two years.

Girls Highlights
GOTW Girls Highlights 3-3

Boys Highlights
GOTW Boys Highlights 3-3

Hays High Lady Indians Fall to Newton, End Season

The Hays High Lady Indians season comes to an end Saturday night in the Newton 5A Sub-State finals, losing to the host Railers 51-43.

The Lady Indians kept it close, but suffered two, four-minute scoring droughts at key points in the game.

The Railers used a 12-0 run to lead by 11 at halftime.  The Lady Indians tried to play catch-up for the remainder of the game, but just couldn’t get enough going to come away with the victory.

 

Game Highlights:
girlsHL3-3-12

Maska Post Game Interview:
maskapost3-3-12

A Loss in the Sub-State Title Game Ends the Season for TMP Girls

The Thomas More Prep – Marian girls’ basketball team was denied a third-straight trip to the Class 3A State Tournament on Saturday night when they lost to Beloit 52-40.

The Lady Monarchs were the #1 seed in the Lyons Sub-State but the Lady Trojans earned their trip to Hutchinson by outscoring TMP 31-13 in the second half of the sub-state championship game.

Beloit, the #3 seed in the bracket, started the game with a 7-2 lead before TMP started to take control of the first half. With the help of 12 first half points from Rachel Jacobs, the Lady Monarchs took a 27-21 lead into halftime. Jacobs finished the night with 20 points and ended her career at TMP-Marian with 1,468 points (school record).

TMP’s second-leading scorer, Jenna Lang, battled with foul trouble for the second straight night. The Lady Monarchs struggled to keep afloat against Beloit (17-6) in the second half with her on the bench.

TMP held a two-point lead at the end of the third quarter but Beloit attacked inside at the beginning of the final period. Beloit went on to score the first 10 points of the fourth quarter to seize control of the game.

The Lady Trojans’ Olivia Marozas scored nine of her 19 points in the final eight minutes. TMP had no answer for Marozas and Cami Engelbert in the paint in the second half. Englebert ended the night going 7-for-7 from the free throw line and had 14 points.

Lang and Heather Ruder who both average 12.5 points per game were held in check on Saturday. Lang had seven points while Ruder added just six.

TMP’s 12-game winning streak comes to an end with the loss as does the prep careers for Jacobs, Lang, Allison Marsell, and Rebecca Pray.

Alan Billinger’s Post-game Interview
Billinger Postgame 3-3

Highlights

Highlights

 

 

Eleven Arrested At Active Meth Lab In Hutchinson

By Fred Gough ~ Hutch Post

The Reno County Drug Enforcement Unit executed a search warrant at 429 East 7th Avenue in Hutchinson on Thursday leading to eleven arrests.

Once inside, officials reportedly discovered an active methamphetamine lab and three tanks that had previously contained ammonia.

  • Arrested for possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia was 49-year-old Frankie L. Roberts, of that address.
  • Arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia was 20-year-old Candyce D. Christopher, also of 429 East 7th, 20-year-old Ashley L. Anderson 1401 East 24th Apt 104, 35-year-old Graham R. Taylor of 429 East 7th and 24-year-old Jabari N. Lamar of 116 East 10th, Apt 5.
  • Arrested for possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia was 22-year-old Elisha L. Bozarth of 506 East 7th.
  • Arrested for possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia was 22-year-old Samantha J. Klinkerman of 116 East 10th Apt 5.
  • Arrested for out of county warrants was 30-year-old Nathaniel Hulett of 515 North Baker.
  • Arrested for fail to appear and parole violation was 24-year-old Jody Logsdon of 926 East 16th
  • Arrested for probation violation 42-year-old David Wegele of 323 South Lucy, in McPherson, and Lacy D. Nelson of 108 North Town St.

Officials say the house was very active with individuals still arriving as officers were conducting the search.

So far, no one has been charged with the manufacture of methamphetamine, with the investigation into the case continuing.

Great Bend Man Dies In North Dakota Head-On Crash

The North Dakota Highway Patrol says a one man was killed and three others were injured in a head-on collision in western North Dakota.

The patrol says 21-year-old Dustin Buess of Great Bend, Kan., was killed in the crash Thursday night, north of Belfield.

Troopers say Buess was a passenger in a pickup driven by 29-year-old Jerry Newbold of Chickasha, Okla.

The patrol says Newbold was driving north on Highway 85 and lost control of the pickup on the snow-covered road. The vehicle collided with a pickup driven by 28-year-old Michael Maresh of Dickinson.

Troopers say 34-year-old Don McHugh of Chikaska was a passenger in Newbold’s vehicle and was injured.

Western Kansas Woman Sentenced For Murder Of 3-Month-Old Son

By Steve Webster ~ Great Bend Post

A western Kansas woman is going to prison for the abuse death of her 3-month-old son.

28-year-old Marilyn Fay Hoffman of Scott City was sentenced Friday to nearly 15 years for second-degree intentional murder and one count of child abuse. Hoffman has been jailed since her arrest in July 2010 after the infant, Xavier Hoffman, died at a Wichita hospital where he was being treated for extensive injuries.

Hoffman was initially charged with first-degree murder, but pleaded guilty to the lesser charge last July in Scott County District Court.

General Wesley Clark To Speak In Phillipsburg

General Wesley Clark will be the guest speaker at this year’s Prairie Horizon Agri-Energy Annual Meeting Thursday, March 22, 2012. He will meet privately with investors, employees and other guests of Prairie Horizon Agri-Energy.

Following the private meeting on March 22, the public is invited to hear General Wesley Clark speak at the Huck Boyd Center located at 860 Park Street in Phillipsburg at 7:00 p.m. He will be speaking about the importance of ethanol in reducing our nation’s dependence on foreign oil.

General Wesley Clark is a retired general of the United States Army. He spent 34 years in the Army and the Department of Defense, receiving many military decorations, several honorary knighthoods, and a Presidential Medal of Freedom. Clark currently serves as the co-chairman of Growth Energy, an ethanol lobbying group, and on the board of directors of BNK Petroleum.

Forsyth Library One Of Six Nationally Participating In Digital Research Study

Fort Hays State University’s Forsyth Library is one of six libraries in the nation that will participate in a year-long research study conducted by the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC).

The research focuses on improving the access to print, electronic and digital resources. Forsyth Library will provide collection data, circulation data and information about the library to OCLC. In turn, OCLC will register and provide access to Forsyth Library through WorldCat — the world’s largest library catalog and a global network of library content and services — and syndicate the library’s collections and services through partners such as Google Books.

The research project’s purpose is to test and increase the discoverability and access of collections on the World Wide Web, measure the efforts of library staff and increase the usage of the library and its collections.

OCLC has cited the Forsyth Library Digital Collections website as a model site for digital collections based on its ease of access and quantity of diverse collections. Collections include the Digital Repository or Space Exploration, the Stafford County Historical Museum Collection, the Johnson Collection, the George Sternberg Photo Albums and Negatives Collection, and the FHSU Art Collection as well as digital copies of academic journals and past editions of The Reveille, the FHSU yearbook. The Forsyth digital collections website can be found at https://contentcat.fhsu.edu/cdm/.

“Our work with OCLC is a distinctive honor for the library and the university,” said John Ross, Forsyth Library director. “The staff and I are very pleased to have this opportunity and are excited about the benefits that this research will provide for our students and faculty.”

“We believe the results of the study will be useful to all members of the OCLC cooperative,” said OCLC’s Bill Carney.

The OCLC is a nonprofit, membership, computer library service and research organization dedicated to the public purposes of furthering access to the world’s information and reducing information costs. OCLC and its member libraries cooperatively produce and maintain WorldCat. OCLC research is one of the world’s leading centers devoted to exploration, innovation and community building on behalf of libraries, archives and museums.

Violent Storms Across Midwest And South Kill 29, Death Toll Could Rise

A string of violent storms scratched away small towns in Indiana and cut off rural communities in Kentucky as an early-season tornado outbreak killed nearly 30 people, and authorities feared the already ugly death toll would rise as daylight broke on Saturday’s search for survivors.

Massive thunderstorms, predicted by forecasters for days, threw off dozens of tornadoes as they raced Friday from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes. Twisters that crushed entire blocks of homes knocked out cellphones and landlines alike, ripped power lines from broken poles and tossed cars, school buses and tractor-trailers onto roadways made impassable by debris.

Weather that put millions of people at risk Friday killed 29, but both the scale of the devastation and the breadth of the storms made an immediate assessment of the havoc’s full extent all but impossible.

In Kentucky, the National Guard and state police headed out to search wreckage for an unknown number of missing. In Indiana, authorities searched dark county roads connecting rural communities that officials said “are completely gone.”

“We won’t know what’s going on before daybreak,” cautioned Sheriff’s Maj. Chuck Adams of the Clark County, Ind., where one person was known to have died in hard-hit Henryville. “Right now, we’re getting by through the night as best we can.”

For those still in the town of about 2,000 north of Louisville, Ky., the birthplace of Kentucky Fried Chicken founder Col. Harland Sanders, that meant walking down littered streets with shopping carts full of water and food, handing it out to anyone in need. Hundreds of firefighters and police zipped around a town where few recognizable structures remained; all of Henryville’s schools were destroyed.

“It’s all gone,” resident Andy Bell said as he guarded a friend’s demolished service garage, not far from where a school bus stuck out from the side of a restaurant and a parking lot where a small classroom chair jutted from a car window.

“It was beautiful,” he said, looking around. “And now it’s just gone. I mean, gone.”

Susie Renner, 54, said she saw two tornadoes barreling down on Henryville within minutes of each other. The first was brown from being filled with debris; the second was black.

“I’m a storm chaser,” Renner said, “and I have never been this frightened before.”

Friday’s outbreak came two days after an earlier round of storms killed 13 people in the Midwest and South, and forecasters at the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center had said the day would be one of a handful this year that warranted its highest risk level. By 10 p.m., the weather service had issued 269 tornado warnings. Only 189 warnings were issued in all of February.

“We knew this was coming. We were watching the weather like everyone else,” said Clark County, Ind., Sheriff Danny Rodden. “This was the worst case scenario. There’s no way you can prepare for something like this.”

A total of 14 people were reported killed in Indiana, including four in Chelsea, where a man, woman and their 4-year-old great-grandchild died in one house. Tony Williams, owner of the Chelsea General Store, said the child and mother were huddled in a basement when the storm hit and sucked the 4-year-old out her hands. The mother survived, but her 70-year-old grandparents were upstairs; both died.

“They found them in the field, back behind the house,” Williams said.

Two people also died further north in Holton, where it appeared a tornado cut a diagonal swath down the town’s tiny main drag, demolishing a cinderblock gas station in one spot and leaving a tiny white church intact down the road. Officials also confirmed three deaths in nearby Scott County and another four in Washington County further west.

“We are going to continue to hit every county road that we know of that there are homes on and search those homes,” said Indiana State Police Sgt. Jerry Goodin. “We have whole communities and whole neighborhoods that are completely gone. We’ve had a terrible, terrible tragedy here.”

The death toll stood at 12 in Kentucky, which sent both National Guard troops and Kentucky State Police troopers along with a rescue team into counties about an area an hour west of Lexington.

In West Liberty, Ky., Stephen Burt heard the twister coming and pulled his 23-year-old daughter to safety, just before the tornado destroyed the second story of the family’s home.

“I held onto her and made it to the center of the house, to a closet,” Burt said. “I pushed her into the closet, and I felt like I was getting sand-blasted on my back.”

Kentucky Emergency Management spokesman Buddy Rogers said officials were having difficulty getting into the area to confirm the damage.

“We can’t even get into some of these counties,” he said Friday night. “The power is out, phones are out, roads are blocked and now it’s dark, which complicates things.”

Tornadoes were reported in at least six Ohio cities and towns, including the village of Moscow, where a council member found dead in her home was one of at least three people killed in the state. Several dozen homes were damaged, some stripped down to their foundations, and the Clermont County commissioners called a state of emergency for the first time in 15 years.

Emergency officials in Lee County, Va., said damage from a possible tornado left at least a two-to three-mile path of destruction that may reach far into Tennessee, and damage reports were expected to increase come daylight.

“We don’t know. We can’t get down there,” said Emergency Management Director Jason Crabtree said of areas stretching south of the Virginia line. “This thing may be eight to 10 miles long.”

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