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UN contracts with Kansas company for typhoon help

Screen Shot 2013-12-15 at 11.15.25 AM(AP) — The United Nations has contracted with a Wichita company that turns shipping containers into medical clinics to send an OB-GYN hospital to the Philippines to help with the aftermath of the Nov. 8 typhoon.

Clinic in a Can will provide the hospital. It will include a C-section and delivery suite, sterilization room, bathroom, two patient recovery rooms, a storage room and an office. All will have air conditioning.

The United Nations Population Fund says about 900 women affected by Typhoon Haiyan are giving birth each day. About 15 percent of them are having possible life-threatening complications.

Clinic in a Can spokesman Daniel White says the project’s total aid package is worth nearly $1 million and includes the clinics, shipping, medical equipment and other donations.

 

Kansas justices have 4 ‘Hard 50’ cases to decide

Kansas-Supreme-Court(AP) — Justices of the Kansas Supreme Court now have four cases related to the state’s “Hard 50” prison sentence to digest in the coming months, with about a dozen others still in the legal pipeline.

While each case has its specific set of circumstances, the justices honed in on other issues about the convictions and sentences, rather than whether changes made to the state’s “Hard 50” law this fall can be applied retroactively like legislators want.

The four cases involve defendants who have been sentenced to life in prison with eligibility for parole after 50 years.

The justices gave no indication how quickly they would rule on the cases. Their decisions could still leave the question of retroactivity unresolved if the facts of the convictions are upheld.

Commentary: The war on Christmas animals

by Dan Murphy

 Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator
Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator

An animal rights activist in northern Australia is vowing to protest a mega-church’s Christmas show. Why? Because the church offers young kids attending services with their families the chance to visit a popular little animal farm, according to a report from the Noosa News website.

A group calling itself the Vegan Warriors has threatened the Lifepointe Baptist Church, which is located in Queensland’s famed Sunshine Coast resort area, with protests and picketing unless its “live animal exhibit” is removed from the church’s Christmas Lights Spectacular, a show that annually attracts thousands of visitors.

Having spent some serious vacation time in the company of my Aussie in-laws on the Sunshine Coast, I recommend visiting in the “off-season” (June, July, and September), when temperatures remain in the 70s but the beaches are virtually empty. Let me help those unfamiliar with the location of the Lifepointe Baptist Church: It’s about 20 kilometers north of Mooloolaba and 10 kilomotors south and east of Diddillibah, right in the heart of Maroochydore.

Got it?

The Vegan Warriors email stated that the group would protest what is essentially a petting zoo, even if the mini-animal farm is operating within legal guidelines and has the endorsement of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which it does.

Phil Greenbury, the church’s senior pastor, told the media that was the first complaint against the church’s animal farm in the nine years it has been operating as part of the Lights Spectacular show.

“All care, consideration and concern is always taken for all our animals, and we outsource our farm to a company that specializes in small animal farms,” Greenbury said. He noted that Vivienne White, who runs Viv’s Farm Animals, runs the petting zoo and has more than 20 years’ experience in children’s farm displays.

“During the last Christmas show, there were no injuries, no deaths, no vets needed and no medication for any of the animals,” White said. “They were all very healthy. There is also a designated area so the animals can be rotated and rested from the [attention of] general public.”

One-woman ‘group’

A little background here.

The Vegan Warriors appears to be a one-woman show. Its website states that the group “was started by Jaylene Musgrave, who is passionate about animal rights and decided to start Vegan Warriors to use her skills as a publicist to stand up for the rights of our precious animals.”

On the site, she lists “supporters” of her (alleged) group, but it’s merely a list of self-proclaimed vegetarians, including rock singer Joan Jett, Paul McCartney and his ex-wife Heather Mills.

Doubtful if any of them are actual supporters of the Vegan Warriors.

And here’s the ironic part of Musgrave’s passion: She calls the late Steve Irwin “her hero and inspiration.” As most Americans know from his show “The Crocodile Hunter,” Irwin was deeply involved in wildlife protection and habitat preservation. What many people don’t know, however, is that he founded and his widow continues to operate one of the largest zoos in the country, the Australia Zoo. The zoo, which has giant murals of Irwin in his trademark khaki shorts plastered on virtually every available space, offers all the traditional exhibits and shows: An elephant feeding station, a water show featuring “trained” crocodiles and a Big Cat amphitheater where tigers and leopards climb trees, jump across a small creek and otherwise perform for an audience safely seated on bleachers located behind a giant glass wall.

But while Musgrave is busy lauding Irwin, an Australia Zoo tiger handler named Dave Styles was attacked by a six-year-old Bengal tiger during a Big Cat show last month in front of dozens of shocked families. He survived, but spent 10 days in intensive care, endured multiple surgeries and only emerged from a life-threatening coma two days ago.

Yet she wants to shut down a church’s little kids’ animal display.

Could the hypocrisy be layered on any thicker?

Musgrave said she wants to “dialogue” with Lifepointe Baptist Church in hopes that “they may acknowledge this cruelty inflicted on animals.”

Only one problem with her plan: She admitted to the newspaper that she’s never attended any of the Christmas shows.

“I never go to church,” she said.

If she decides to re-think her ridiculous campaign, maybe that might be a good place to start.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator.

Ellis, Embiid lead No. 13 Kansas past New Mexico

Photo courtesy University of Kansas
Photo courtesy University of Kansas

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Joel Embiid had just picked up his second foul, and like so many other games this season, he knew he was going to be spending the rest of the first half sitting on the Kansas bench.

The 7-foot freshman vowed to make up for it in the second half.

Embiid scored 16 of his career-high 18 points over the final 20 minutes, leading the No. 13 Jayhawks to an 80-63 victory over New Mexico on Saturday night that ended a two-game skid.

”I was frustrated, even though I didn’t think the second one was a foul,” said Embiid, a native of Cameroon who’s only been playing basketball for a few years. ”Yeah, I wanted it bad, and they wanted to throw me the ball and let me score, and that’s what I needed to do.”

Perry Ellis scored 21 points and Andrew Wiggins, despite dealing with foul trouble all night, added 11 for the Jayhawks (7-3), who led 39-38 at halftime before using two big runs to put it away.

It was the Jayhawks’ ninth straight win at the Sprint Center, including their run to last year’s Big 12 tournament title. After dropping games at Colorado and Florida, the win also kept Kansas from losing three straight non-conference games for the first time since the 1982-83 season.

”We knew we had to hit them first,” said the Jayhawks’ Wayne Selden, who finished with 10 points. ”That was our main goal, be the first one on the floor and be the most aggressive.”

Cameron Bairstow and Kendall Williams had 24 points apiece for New Mexico (7-2), but that was about it for the Lobos. Alex Kirk, who came into the game averaging 18.6 points, was held to just five on 2-for-8 shooting before fouling out with 2:53 remaining in the game.

New Mexico was just 2 of 14 from beyond the arc.

”We played really well in the first half, but I thought Kansas played really good. I thought that was the best offensive game Kansas has played all year,” New Mexico coach Craig Neal said. ”We got into some foul trouble and did some things we weren’t used to doing, and we have to improve on that.”

The Jayhawks likewise struggled with foul trouble in the first half, depriving coach Bill Self of Ellis, Embiid and Jamari Traylor for long periods of time. That allowed the 6-foot-9 Bairstow to go to work inside, scoring on an array of putbacks and spin moves.

The senior from Brisbane, Australia, had 16 points at the break.

”We wanted to put them in a position to really feel pressure,” Bairstow said.

The Lobos got within one at halftime on a buzzer-beating basket by Arthur Edwards, but Kansas quickly seized control with a 16-4 run to start the second half.

Embiid had nine points and Ellis the other seven during the spurt, but it was really fueled by the Jayhawks’ defense, which finally slowed down Bairstow and Williams on the other end.

The Lobos chipped away at their 55-42 deficit, most of the surge coming from the foul line. By the time Williams converted a four-point play, New Mexico had managed to scrap and claw to 63-58 with 8:03 left, and briefly silence a crowd heavily in favor of Kansas.

That’s when the Jayhawks turned to Ellis and Embiid again.

Embiid answered Williams with a pair of foul shots, Ellis added a free throw moments later, and Embiid threw down a dunk as the crowd roared. Ellis added a dunk of his own moments later, forcing New Mexico to burn a timeout that didn’t do a whole lot of good.

”Our bigs were really good,” Self said. ”Perry was the most consistent one and he scored the most points, but there was a stretch in the second half where Joel looked pretty good.”

Williams missed after the timeout and Embiid scored again at the other end, pushing the Jayhawks’ lead to 74-59 with 4 1/2 minutes remaining in the game.

”We felt really good after halftime, really fought them off. It really boiled down to their second-half run,” Williams said. ”That was really the story.”

Kansas merely coasted from there, wrapping up the victory in the first meeting between the schools since the 1964-65 season and ending nearly a month spent playing games away from Allen Fieldhouse.

”We came out a lackadaisical to start the second half and they took advantage of it,” Neal said. ”Kansas came out really aggressive in the second half and that cost us.”

— Associated Press —

Those admitted to college with exceptions struggle

FHSU Campus Sheridan 1(AP) — A new report says students who enter Kansas public colleges with exceptions to minimum admissions standards often struggle to stay in school.

The report says students admitted with exceptions have lower retention, graduation and course completion rates than students who meet the standards.

The  findings will be presented to the Board of Regents this coming week. The report was sought in 2012 by state lawmakers who were concerned about remedial courses at public universities.

The report found that from 2010 through 2012, retention rates for freshmen admitted as exceptions ranged from 50.6 percent to 57.1 percent. The rate was 80 percent for those who met the standards.

 

WWII veteran receives diploma on 90th birthday

University of Kansas campus(AP) — A World War II veteran from southwest Kansas has received a diploma for a degree he didn’t know he had earned.

Warren Spikes of Hugoton was half a semester away from earning his bachelor’s degree at the University of Kansas when he was drafted. He didn’t return to school after the war and thought he hadn’t completed the degree.

But his family did some digging and discovered he had the right credits all along, just not in the right places. An unusual feat of the registrar’s office and Spikes’ relatives pulled them together.

Spikes got a special surprise from his family when he turned 90 this month: a framed diploma. Spikes says he’s honored and “certainly glad to have it.”

 

Secret Santa gives gold coins to 3 Kansas charities

Screen Shot 2013-12-15 at 5.56.39 AMWICHITA (AP) — A Secret Santa has given gold coins to three Wichita charities.

The Wichita Eagle reported Shelly Prichard from the Wichita Community Foundation helped distribute the coins. They went to the Lord’s Diner, the Center of Hope and the Guadalupe Clinic. The foundation said each coin is worth $1,400.

The Center of Hope works to prevent homelessness, the Lord’s Diner feeds the poor, and the clinic gives health care to the poor.

The Secret Santa has made the anonymous donations of gold coins a Christmas tradition.

Quick Start Carries Tigers to Big Home Win

https://www.horizonappliance.com/
Carson Konrade hit five three-pointers and led the Fort Hays State Tigers (8-2) with 19 points as the Tigers snapped their two-game skid with a 95-50 rout of Central Christian Saturday afternoon at Gross Coliseum.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Marty Wendel Postgame Interview

The Tigers raced out to an early 14-2 lead, holding Central Christian without a field goal for over six minutes to start the game. The Tigers had runs of 22-0, 13-0, 10-0 and 8-0 in building a 28-point lead at halftime and were up as many as 52 in the second half.

Game Highlights

Fort Hays State shot a season-high 60-percent for the game including 9-for-23 from beyond the arc while holding Central Christian to 26-percent from the field.

Dwayne Brunson scored 14, James Fleming 12 and Marty Wendel 10.

Wichita terror arrest part of sting operation

By ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press

WICHITA — The arrest of a Kansas man accused of trying to bring what he thought was a car bomb into a Wichita airport marked the culmination of a months-long undercover sting in what has become a successful and widely used domestic counterterrorism tactic.

Court documents detail Terry Lee Loewen’s alleged conversations with undercover FBI agents over six months. The discussions began with vague sentiments about his desire to commit “violent jihad” against the U.S. before turning into a detailed, concrete plot in which the agents recruited him to use his airport access to plant a bomb in a martyrdom operation.

Loewen, a 58-year-old avionics technician who worked at the airport for Hawker Beechcraft, was arrested Friday on charges including providing support to al-Qaida and attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction. He remains jailed, and prosecutors expect to take their case to a grand jury Wednesday.

The case resembles a string of investigations conducted by the FBI since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that have prompted controversy over whether law enforcement’s tactics involve entrapment and violate civil liberties.

One such case involved an undercover agent pretending to be a terrorist who provided a teenager with a phony car bomb, then watched him plant it in downtown Chicago. In Boston, a man was sentenced to 17 years in prison for plotting with undercover agents to fly remote-controlled planes packed with explosives into the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol.

The FBI insists the stings are a vital, legal tool for averting potentially deadly terrorist attacks — and juries have returned tough sentences.

Dan Monnat, a prominent Kansas defense attorney who isn’t representing Loewen, said the 21-page criminal complaint against Loewen doesn’t contain enough information to find his guilt or evidence of FBI entrapment. But he questioned the FBI’s tactics.

“If the fragile mental state of an otherwise upstanding individual is exploited to commit a crime that the individual otherwise would not have taken steps to commit, how does that make us safe and why spend taxpayer money on prosecution?” Monnat said Saturday.

“If that is what happened here, we have to ask ourselves is grooming terrorists the best use of our taxpayer money for security if the person otherwise would never have taken further steps in furtherance of terrorism. What is the point?”

But entrapment defenses have failed in various cases. In a 2009 case in New York, a federal judge said she was not proud of the government’s role in nurturing an alleged conspiracy in which four men were convicted in a plot to bomb synagogues and shoot down military planes with missiles. The men were each sentenced to 25 years in prison.

In an unsuccessful appeal, the defense argued the men were harmless dupes led astray by an FBI informant who infiltrated a mosque. With the encouragement of the informant, one of the men hatched the scheme to blow up the synagogues in the Bronx and to shoot down military cargo planes with missiles.

The appeals court found the government’s tactics didn’t rise to the level of “outrageous misconduct.”

Court documents don’t specify what initially led investigators to Loewen, though he allegedly told an undercover agent during one online exchange: “hey I read Inspire magazine; I believe in staying informed.” Inspire, an English-language online magazine, is produced by al-Qaida affiliates. It includes such things as bomb-making instructions and endorsements of lone-wolf terror attacks.

He also allegedly told the undercover agent he’d downloaded tens of thousands of pages about jihad, martyrdom operations and Sharia law, and printed out an al-Qaida manual — online activity that often draws law enforcement’s attention.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom declined to discuss the case Saturday. But in May, he told students during an event at Wichita State University that authorities monitor extremists groups’ websites, including Inspire magazine.

“Do not go to this website,” Grissom said. “You will be on our list.”

In Loewen’s case, court documents paint an undercover operation in which Loewen and two FBI agents posing as conspirators ultimately hatched a plot to place a vehicle full of explosives at the Wichita airport. He allegedly timed it to cause “maximum carnage” and death, according to an FBI affidavit.

In early October, one undercover agent told Loewen he’d just returned from overseas after meeting with individuals connected with al-Qaida, and that the “brothers” were excited to hear about his access to the airport. When the agent asked if he’d be willing to plant a bomb, Loewen allegedly told him the plans were “like a dream come true for me, and I never expect things this good to occur in my life.”

Over the coming months, he allegedly conspired with the agents. Loewen, who once claimed to know nothing about explosives, assisted an undercover agent assemble a bomb — but with inert explosives — using components he took from his employer. Two days later, an undercover agent picked Loewen up at a local hotel, went to another location to get the fake bomb and drove to Wichita Mid-Continent Airport.

Loewen was arrested early Friday as he twice tried to use his badge to gain entry to the tarmac.

In a letter dated Wednesday that prosecutors say Loewen left for a family member, Loewen said he expected to be martyred for Allah by the time the letter was read. He wrote that his only explanation was that he believed in jihad for the sake of Allah and his Muslim brothers and sisters, though he said most Muslims in the U.S. would condemn him.

“I expect to be called a terrorist (which I am), a psychopath, and a homicidal maniac,” the letter said.

The Wichita Eagle newspaper, citing police, reported Saturday that Loewen has had at least one brush with the law, a concealed-carry violation at the airport in 2009.

Loewen has been described by a relative and a neighbor as a good person who largely kept to himself. His wife attended his initial court appearance Friday but refused to talk with reporters, as did his attorney.

No. 12 Wichita State beats Tennessee

Wichita State Logo 2WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – Tekele Cotton scored all 19 of his points in the second half and No. 12 Wichita State beat Tennessee 70-61 on Saturday as the Shockers got off to the best start in school history.

Darius Carter had 11 points and 14 rebounds and Cleanthony Early added 13 points for the Shockers (10-0).

Jordan McRae scored 26 points for Tennessee (6-3), which shot 16 of 47 (34 percent) over the final 35 minutes.

Trailing at halftime for the fifth time this season, WichitaState methodically worked its way to a 39-34 lead – the largest of the game for either team to that point – on Cotton’s tip-in with 15:06 remaining.

But WichitaState would not make another field goal for 5:57.

A 10-2 run by the Volunteers contained three dunks and Jarnell Stokes’ slam with 10:22 to play tied it 41-41.

Just 37 seconds later, Stokes dunked again while being fouled. He made the free throw for a 44-41 lead.

That is when Cotton took over.

He made two free throws. Then blocked two Tennessee shots, leading to a transition opportunity he finished with a runner while being fouled.

The crowd – attendance was 14,356 in the downtown Intrust Bank Arena – went crazy, and WichitaState would not trail again.

Cotton’s three-point play made it 46-44 with 9:09 remaining.

Four minutes later, a 3-pointer by Cotton started a 7-0 run that gave Wichita State a 58-49 lead with 4:47 remaining.

A 3 by Early beat the shot-clock buzzer and made it 63-51 with 2:43 to play, allowing WichitaState to milk the shot clock the rest of the way.

The anticipated grinding pace of the game was nowhere to be found at the beginning. WichitaState and Tennessee combined to make 13 of their first 20 field goal attempts, including all five 3-pointers. WichitaState led 17-16 at that point behind eight points from Fred VanVleet.

But the rest of the half was quite the opposite as the teams combined to go 7 of 29 over the final 12 minutes, 1 of 13 from behind the 3-point line.

Neither team led by more than three points in the half’s final 12 minutes and the Volunteers led 26-25 at halftime.

‘Innovative district’ applications raise eyebrows

By PETER HANCOCK
Lawrence Journal-World

LAWRENCE — Eight Kansas school districts have filed applications under a new state law to exempt themselves from many regulations governing K-12 education, and some of those are raising concerns within education circles.
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But superintendents of those districts say the waivers would allow them to address unique issues in their communities and better prepare students for college or the workforce.

The waivers are being made available under a new state law, the Coalition of Innovative Districts Act, which was passed by the 2013 Legislature on a largely party-line vote and signed into law by Gov. Sam Brownback. It allows up to 29 districts, or 10 percent of the state’s 286 school districts, to be exempt from most laws and regulations if they submit a plan showing how that flexibility will help student achievement.

The eight school districts that submitted applications before the Dec. 1 deadline include: Santa Fe Trail in Osage County; Hugoton in southwest Kansas; Seaman in Shawnee County; McPherson in central Kansas; Concordia in north-central Kansas; Blue Valley in Johnson County; Sterling in south-central Kansas; and Kansas City, Kan.

Lawrence superintendent Rick Doll said after passage of the bill that the local district had no interest in applying for the exemptions.

Several of the districts are seeking waivers that would enable them to focus on preparing students for college and careers by helping them earn college credit and significant work experience even before they graduate from high school.

At the Santa Fe Trail school district in Osage County, for example, Superintendent Steve Pegram wants to offer multiple pathways for students to get a high school diploma, including one that would require only two full years of classroom work in core subjects of English, math, science and social studies.

The rest could be career training at a community college or technical school, followed by a year of on-the-job work experience that would involve only minimal supervision by the district to ensure the training program is meeting academic standards.

To do that, Santa Fe Trail, which has 1,050 students in K-12, is seeking a waiver from the state’s high school graduation requirements, which were raised in 2005 to require more courses in core subjects, a move that district officials think was unnecessary.

“My point of contention is we were trying to raise our test scores in the state more than what was best for the kids,” Pegram said. He said students can gain the additional skills and knowledge through job training and work experience as well as they can through classroom instruction.

But Karen Godfrey, president of the Kansas National Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union, said graduation requirements and other academic standards were not enacted lightly, and she’s troubled at the idea of waiving them in favor of sending students out to work.

“Job experience and internships can have a valuable role, but it has to have a connection to education,” Godfrey said. “When you loosen those rules, it’s very troubling. When they don’t even want to have oversight over the work the kids are doing, it does seem more like work than school.”

Like many of the districts applying, Santa Fe is also seeking a waiver from state teacher licensure requirements so that industry professionals, not to mention college instructors, can teach and supervise high school students without all of the formal teacher preparation that is normally required.

But in the tiny Hugoton school district — enrollment 1,179 — in the southwest corner of Kansas, Superintendent Mark Crawford said his district needs a waiver to help relieve a troubling shortage of teachers, especially in math and science.

Crawford said it’s hard for Hugoton to recruit fully licensed teachers to that area of the High Plains, even though the district offers a higher-than-average starting salary of more than $38,000. Many of Hugoton’s teachers come from Colorado and the Panhandle areas of Texas and Oklahoma, Crawford said, all of which have different licensing requirements from Kansas.

“We’ve always filled our positions, but not always with what is considered a ‘highly qualified’ teacher,” Crawford said, referring to the state requirement that teachers be fully licensed to teach the subjects and grade levels in which they’re assigned, or have a “plan of study” to become fully licensed within two years.

“We’ve spent an inordinate amount of money and time getting them coursework for what the licensure board considers plans of study,” Crawford said.

But Kansas Education Commissioner Diane DeBacker noted that the requirement for highly qualified teachers comes from federal legislation, and she’s concerned about the consequences if the state starts waiving that requirement.

“What happens if a parent complains that their kid isn’t being taught by a highly qualified teacher?” she asked. “Are we (the Department of Education) on the hook for that?”

DeBacker noted that under the new law, the Department of Education has no say in deciding whether to grant the waivers. The first two waivers will be decided by Gov. Brownback and the chairs of the House and Senate education committees. Later applications will be reviewed by a coalition board made up of the districts that have already received waivers.

The Department of Education opposed passage of the bill, and has since asked for an attorney general’s opinion about whether it is constitutional. Although Attorney General Derek Schmidt declined to issue an opinion, saying the issue is part of the pending school finance litigation, DeBacker said the agency plans to refile its request after the Kansas Supreme Court decides that case.

If approved, the waivers being sought this year would be effective in the 2014-2015 school year. Officials in Brownback’s office said it hasn’t been decided when he will meet with the legislative leaders to review those applications.

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