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Monk to sing national anthem at Kan. NASCAR race

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Benedictine monk from northeast Kansas will be in the national spotlight when he sings “The Star-Spangled Banner” Screen Shot 2014-05-09 at 3.28.03 PMbefore a NASCAR race Saturday night.

KAIR-AM reports Father Meinrad Miller caught the attention of Kansas Speedway president Pat Warren after singing the national anthem for a military ball.

Warren contacted Miller a few days later, and the monk will perform ahead of Saturday night’s Sprint Cup 5-Hour Energy 400 at the track in Kansas City, Kansas.

Miller lives at St. Benedict’s Abbey in Atchison and teaches theology at Benedictine College. He says he’s a bit nervous about singing before more than 75,000 spectators and a national TV audience, but is looking forward to the opportunity.

Law enforcement officers place safety of others above their own

Every day, law enforcement officers risk their lives to protect the citizens and communities of Kansas. I want to take this occasion to recognize them for their service and sacrifice, and to remember the officers who were injured or killed in the line of duty.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom
U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom

There are more than 900,000 law enforcement officers serving in communities across the United States. Each year, nearly 60,000 assaults against law enforcement officers resulting in approximately 16,000 injuries are reported. Since the first recorded death in 1791, more than 20,000 law enforcement officers in the United States have made the ultimate sacrifice and been killed in the line of duty.

Law enforcement office fatalities have dropped for the second year in a row to the lowest level in six decades and the number of officers killed in firearms-related incidents this year was the fewest since the 1800s. In 2011, officer fatalities spiked, which led to a number of new initiatives aimed at promoting law enforcement safety. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Kansas took part in the U.S. Justice Department’s programs to urge law enforcement agencies to require officers to wear bullet-resistant vests. The Justice Department also formed the National Officer Safety and Wellness Group and the VALOR program, which provides training to help prevent violence against officers and to help officers survive violent encounters when they do occur.

I want to thank the men and women of the law enforcement community who are doing great work every day in our neighborhoods and communities of Kansas. It is a privilege to travel the state and to meet these outstanding individuals in the police departments, sheriff’s offices and courthouses across Kansas. I am inspired and humbled by their honor, integrity and heroism.

Barry Grissom is U.S. Attorney for the District of Kansas. May 10 through May 16 is National Police Week.

Lawrence man convicted of raping KU student

CourtLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence man has been convicted of raping a University of Kansas student 17 years ago.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports Douglas County jury returned the verdict Friday afternoon against 41-year-old Robert E. Grey.

Grey had been convicted once previously in the case and given a 26-year sentence. But the Kansas Court of Appeals overturned the 2009 conviction, finding that prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair trial.

The crime occurred on May 11, 1997. Grey was accused of driving the student from a campus parking lot and raping her in a secluded area near Lawrence High School.

District Judge Michael Malone scheduled sentencing for June 20. Grey’s attorney indicated she would file motions before then.

 

Chrysler recalls minivans

Chrysler(AP)  Chrysler Group is recalling 780,000 minivans to replace window switches that can short-circuit and overheat if exposed to moisture.

The company said Friday that it knows of 36 incidents related to the faulty switches, but is unaware of any related injuries or accidents.

Chrysler says the switches, located on the driver-side door, can short circuit due to moisture from rain, snow or when the car is washed, as well as from beverages spilled on the switch.

The company will pay to replace the switch. Consumers can have it disconnected in the meantime and are asked to call 1-800-853-1403.

Chrysler says the recall involves certain 2010 through 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan and Chrysler Town & Country minivans.

 

Details released in fatal Wednesday accident

Screen Shot 2014-05-06 at 7.08.59 AMWILLIAMSBURG, Kan–Law enforcement officials today released the name of the victim and additional details in Wednesday’s fatal Franklin County crash.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Lexus driven by Robert Michael McAuliffe, 48, Urbandale, IA, was southbound on I-35 at 10:30 a.m.

The vehicle left the roadway, crossed the median and northbound lanes, entered the south ditch, went through a barbed wire fence and struck a tree.

The driver reversed the vehicle, went back into the ditch and got stuck in a barbed wire fence.

The driver then reversed again and struck another small tree and became stuck.

The vehicle exhaust caught the grass on fire causing the vehicle to catch fire and the driver burned to death.

McAuliffe was transported to Frontier Forensics.

The KHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

On-campus burglary report simply a case of being locked out

Little Apple Post

MANHATTAN — Reports of a burglary in process on the campus of Manhattan Christian College on Friday quickly were found to be a case of being locked out without a key.

IMG_20140509_130204606-300x168

The Riley County Police Department and Kansas Highway Patrol responded a college dormitory just before 1 p.m. Friday after a motorist reported seeing a man climb through a dorm window.

“She observed a black male climb into the lower window the MCC apartments,” said Capt. Kurt Moldrup said. “She saw him take a window out and heard him say ‘stick ‘em up,’ which obviously led her to believe some sort of crime was occurring.”

Police responded, found evidence the window was tapered with and quickly blocked off areas of the college. Dorm management, however, quickly helped locate the individual, who was a resident of the dorm.

“He didn’t have a key to his place and simply went through his friend’s window,” Moldrup said.

“MCC did a great job of basically locking people in place so we didn’t have too many people around. We asked them to hold people in place in case of a dangerous situation,” he added. “Everything worked how it was supposed to.”

Crews respond to Dickinson Co. grass fire

 Screen Shot 2014-05-09 at 11.35.49 AMABILENE — Fire crews from the city of Abilene and Grant Township responded to a Friday morning grass fire just west of the Russell Stover Outlet, Interstate 70 and exit 270 in Dickinson County.

According to the Abilene Fire Department this fire started as a controlled burn.

It got out of control and into some wheat stubble and was quickly extinguished.

There were no injuries.

One hospitalized after Russell County accident (UPDATE)

KHP

UPDATE  RUSSELL–One person was injured in Friday afternoon accident in Russell County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1989 Chevy Tahoe driven by  Sheena M. Andrade was westbound on I-70 one half mile west of Highway 281. The Tahoe struck the back of a westbound 2011 Hino truck driven by Marnie L. Gifford, 43, Wichita.

Both drivers lost control and entered the median.

The Tahoe rolled onto the driver’s side in the median. The truck rolled onto the passenger side in the eastbound lanes.

Andrade was transported to Russell Regional Hospital. Gifford was not injured.

The KHP reported both drivers were properly restrained.

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UPDATE: Interstate 70 was reopened at approximately 2:30 p.m. after law enforcement and emergency responders cleared the scene of the accident.

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RUSSELL–The Kansas Highway Patrol is working an accident in the eastbound lanes of Interstate 70 just west of Russell. Traffic was temporarily blocked.

Russell County Dispatch had few additional details. Officers were on the scene detouring motorists.

Check Hays Post for more information as it becomes available.

KHAZ Country Music News: The Summer Concert Lineup on Good Morning America

khaz luke bryan 20130227NEW YORK (AP) – Lady Antebellum will kick off “Good Morning America’s” summer concert series. “GMA” will air a live concert every Friday starting with Lady A on May 23. Others who will perform throughout the summer include 50 Cent, Paramore, Jennifer Lopez, Jason Derulo, Keith Urban, Kings of Leon, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, Robin Thicke and Brad Paisley.

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

11 Kansas sites nominated for placement on National Register

Kansas Historical Society

TOPEKA — At its regular quarterly meeting held at the Kansas Historical Society in Topeka on Saturday, the Historic Sites Board of Review voted to forward 11 nominations to the office of the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places in Washington to be evaluated by its professional staff. If staff members concur with the board’s findings, the properties will be included in the National Register. The board also voted to amend the Historic Resources of Lawrence, Douglas County National Register multiple property nomination. In other action, the board voted to list one property in the Register of Historic Kansas Places.

Kansas State historical society

The National Register of Historic Places is the country’s official list of historically significant properties. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archeological resources. Eligible properties must be significant for one or more of the four criteria for evaluation. Properties can be eligible if they are associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. They can be eligible if they are associated with the lives of persons significant in our past. Distinctive construction can qualify properties for the National Register if they embody the characteristic of a type, period, or method of construction, or represent the work of a master, or possess high artistic values, or represent a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction. Lastly, properties may be eligible for the National Register if they have yielded or may be likely to yield information important in prehistory or history. The National Register recognizes properties of local, statewide, and national significance.

The Register of Historic Kansas Places is our state’s official list of historically significant properties. Properties included in the National Register are automatically listed in the State Register. However, not all properties listed in the State Register are included in the National Register. The same general criteria are used to assess the eligibility of a property for inclusion in the state register, but more flexibility is allowed in the interpretation of the criteria for eligibility.

Below are summaries of the nominations:

Baxter Springs High School – 1520 Cleveland Avenue, Baxter Springs, Cherokee County

Baxter Springs High School was constructed in three separate building campaigns from 1918 to 1964, and it documents the evolving educational and design philosophies that characterized Kansas public schools during each period of construction. The original block is an example of a Progressive Era city high school that was augmented with the addition of a New Deal-era auditorium/gymnasium in 1939 and construction of a support structure for industrial arts education in 1964. The nominated resource was the first purpose-built secondary school in Baxter Springs. It continued to serve an educational function until 2013. It was nominated as part of the Historic Public Schools of Kansas multiple property nomination for its significance in the areas of education and architecture.

Town House Hotel – 1021 N. 7th Street Trafficway, Kansas City, Wyandotte County
Constructed in 1951 in the heart of downtown Kansas City, Kansas, the Town House Hotel illustrates the community’s intense desire for a convention hotel, which was believed to be a key component of a thriving metropolis. City officials, businessmen, and local citizens were involved in the decades-long pursuit of this hotel that was finally realized with the building’s completion in August 1951. Architect Eugene John Stern began designing the hotel in 1929 with a wide array of amenities and luxurious decorative materials, modifying the drawings when construction actually began more than a decade later. It reflects the Modern Movement design aesthetic popular at the time of construction, particularly the use of corner windows, although the massing, streamlined façade and interior ornament evoke the grand high-rise hotels of the 1920s and 1930s. The fifteen-story building was designed with all of the amenities commonly provided in a city hotel of this status, including a grand lobby, numerous ballrooms and gathering spaces, and double-loaded corridors lined with guest rooms (now apartment units). The building operated as Kansas City’s largest downtown hotel from 1951 until it was converted to residential apartments in 1978. It was nominated for its local significance in the areas of commerce and architecture.

First Presbyterian Church of De Graff – 1145 N.W. 108th Street, De Graff, Butler County
Constructed circa 1903, the former First Presbyterian Church of De Graff was built during the community’s heyday as an agricultural and livestock shipping point along the Florence, El Dorado and Walnut Valley Railway, a spur of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. The church is one of the few remaining buildings that made up this once-thriving community It reflects a vernacular interpretation of the Gothic Revival style executed in wood materials, commonly referred to as Carpenter Gothic. The building features a cross-gable plan with a corner tower entrance and decorative window and gable ornament somewhat common in rural church architecture of this period. These features also are reflective of the Queen Anne architectural style that was popular in the late 19th century romantic movement. An addition was added to the east side of the building in 1956. The church closed in 2006 and reopened as De Graff Community Church in 2009. It was nominated for its local significance in the area of architecture.

Lincoln School, District 2 – 410 N. 9th Street, Elwood, Doniphan County
Elwood’s Lincoln School was the last building in Doniphan County to be used for racially segregated education. It replaced McKinley School, which burned in 1934. The school served African American students in the Elwood area from 1935 until it closed in 1955 as a result of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka U.S. Supreme Court decision that outlawed racially segregated educational facilities. The building is one of the community’s few older buildings, as this area is prone to major floods associated with the nearby Missouri River. In the years after its closure, it served as a community building and library. It was nominated as part of the Historic Public Schools of Kansas multiple property nomination for its local significance in the areas of education and African American heritage.

Victor Court Apartments – 140 N. Hydraulic Avenue, Wichita, Sedgwick County
The Victor Court Apartments, built in 1935, are located approximately one mile east of downtown Wichita along North Hydraulic Avenue. The property originally included 12 apartments in three buildings – a two-story central building and two one-story buildings extended at an angle from either corner. The buildings reflect the Spanish Colonial Revival style of architecture, which was popular throughout the United States in the early and mid-20th century. Wichita oilman John Ellsworth Thorp developed the property in 1935, hiring Oliver J. Mourning to design and erect the buildings constructed of Dunbrick, an unpainted brick masonry coated with a water-resistant finish. The property was nominated as part of the Residential Resources of Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas multiple property nomination for its local significance in the areas of community planning and development and architecture.

First Congregational Church – 202 N. Bluff Avenue, Anthony, Harper County
The First Congregational Church was completed in 1910 on a corner lot near downtown Anthony. It was the congregation’s second house of worship, replacing an older wood church built in 1880. Reverend B. F. Buck came to the congregation in 1908 and led the worshippers through the process of erecting a new church. The church building committee visited churches in other communities for ideas and eventually settled on a tri-tower, Gothic Revival-style brick building featuring stained glass windows honoring Anthony’s founders. The building’s architect is not known. It was constructed during a prosperous period in Anthony that witnessed the formation of the Anthony Commercial Club, whose first president was Reverend Buck. It was nominated for its local significance in the area of architecture.

John Moyle Building – 605-607 N. State Street, Augusta, Butler County
The three-story Moyle building was completed in 1918 to house retail spaces and a hotel. The building was constructed during a time of rapid growth and development in Augusta, largely in response to the booming oil and gas industry in surrounding Butler County. During this period local oilman John Moyle served as secretary of Augusta’s Commercial Club and was president of the local Chamber of Commerce when he set into motion plans for the construction of this building in the downtown. Moyle hired Joseph R. Switzer to design and oversee the building’s construction by contractor A. H. Krause. The building originally was used as a hotel, with the office and other retail spaces occupying the first floor. Guest rooms occupied the second and third floors. The hotel does not appear to have been overly ornate or outfitted with the latest technological accommodations. Rather, it appears to have been a well-built, modest hotel with 32 small, individual rooms for guests. Though private, these rooms did not have kitchen or bath facilities or any built-in features. The shared bathrooms were located at the west end of each floor. It was nominated for its local significance in the area of commerce.

W.B. & Julia Washington House – 110 N. 3rd Street, Leoti, Wichita County
The William B. and Julia Washington House in Leoti was built in 1892 by Samuel A. Robison and his son Winfred (Fred) Robison of Wichita County. The Washington’s arrived in Leoti in 1886, prior to the violent county seat war of 1887 between residents of Leoti and Coronado. William served as the county attorney and established a law practice, where he worked until his death in 1934. His son Hershel continued the practice until his retirement in 1972. The Washington house, which was sold out of the family in 1943, is a late Victorian-era Queen Anne-style house with Free Classic elements. It is one of the best remaining examples of this style in Wichita County. The Wichita County Historical Society recently acquired the building and has rehabilitated it for tours and functions. It was nominated for its local significance in the area of architecture.

Brown’s Creek Tributary Masonry Arch Bridge – Glen Elder vicinity, Mitchell County
Antelope Creek Masonry Arch Bridge – Tipton vicinity, Mitchell County
North Rock Creek Masonry Arch Bridge – Hunter vicinity, Mitchell County
Three historic limestone bridges in Mitchell County were nominated for their local significance in the areas of government, social history, and engineering. They were constructed with locally quarried limestone between 1936 and 1940 as part of the Works Progress Administration (later named the Work Projects Administration), a federal New Deal-era work relief program that employed local residents. The Brown’s Creek Tributary Masonry Arch Bridge, a triple-arch limestone structure, is located on a rural county road northeast of Glen Elder in Mitchell County. The double-arch Antelope Creek Masonry Arch Bridge is located on a rural county road northeast of Tipton in Mitchell County. The North Rock Creek Masonry Arch Bridge, a double-arch structure is located on a rural county road northeast of Hunter in Mitchell County. The bridges were nominated as part of the New Deal-era Resources of Kansas and Masonry Arch Bridges of Kansas multiple property nominations.

Historic Resources of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas
Proposal to attach a fifth context entitled “Lawrence Modern, 1945-1975”

This proposal seeks to attach a fifth historic context entitled “Lawrence Modern, 1945-1975” to the 2001 multiple property documentation form (MPDF) Historic Resources of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas. The MPDF organizes information collected in historic resource surveys and research for future National Register listing and preservation planning purposes. The form facilitates the evaluation of individual properties by comparing them with resources that share similar physical characteristics and historical associations. Information common to the group of properties is presented in the historic context, while information specific to each individual building, site, district, structure, or object is placed in an individual registration form.

The document’s four original contexts, which are arranged chronologically, are “Settlement Period, 1854-1863”; “City-Building Period, 1864-1873”; “Agriculture and Manufacturing, Foundations of Stability, 1874-1899”; and “Quiet University Town, 1900-1945.” The original document identifies two property types – residences and commercial buildings of various architectural styles. The new context is intended to bring up-to-date the original document with discussion of residential, commercial, and public development in Lawrence in the three decades after World War II. Property types covered by this context include commercial buildings, education-related buildings, and residences exhibiting Minimal Traditional, Ranch, Split-level, and Contemporary styles. No properties were nominated as part of this proposal. This project was funded in partnership between the Kansas Historical Society and the City of Lawrence.

Seybold Building – 720-722 Main Street, Eudora, Douglas County
The Seybold Building, located in downtown Eudora, was built in stages during the 1880s. German immigrant John A. Seybold, a tinsmith by trade, acquired land in downtown Eudora in 1870 and built a stone building on the north side of the lot in 1883 that connected to a brick building on the south side. Seybold, whose story is indicative of other immigrant German families that settled the Eudora area in the mid-19th century, operated his hardware business from this building. He died in 1884, and his wife Bertha Seybold managed the property through the 1910s. The Eudora Post Office moved into the building in 1897, where it remained until 1916. Beginning in 1920, the Trefz family operated various businesses from the building, including Trefz Tin Shop and Trefz Plumbing, Heating, and Electric Store. The Eudora Area Historical Society recently acquired the building with the intent of housing its museum. It was nominated for its local significance in the area of commerce.

Body found in car in Maize identified

Sabri
Sabri

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a body found earlier this week in a car at a Maize apartment complex parking lot has been positively identified as that of a missing Wichita man.

Maize Police Chief Matt Jensby said Friday that the body was that of 54-year-old Adam Sabri, owner of the Timeout Sports Bar and Grill in McPherson. He says the identification was made using dental records.

Jensby said an autopsy did not determine the cause of death.

Sabri’s body was found Monday morning in a 2008 Saturn Aura at the Fieldstone Apartments complex. Officers found the body after a resident reported a strong smell around the car.

Sabri’s daughter reported him missing on Feb. 9 at Timeout Sports Bar and Grill.

Kansas wheat forecast to be smallest since 1996

Wheat in central Kansas
Wheat in central Kansas

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The government’s first forecast of season anticipates the smallest winter wheat crop in Kansas since 1996.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service estimated production this year at 260.4 million bushels, based on May 1 crop conditions. The report was done before this week’s searing temperatures descended on the already drought-stressed crop.

The production estimate is down 18 percent from last year.

Forecast average yields are forecast to be 31 bushels per acre, down seven bushels an acre from last year and also the lowest since 1996.

The official estimate is in line with last week’s prediction from the Wheat Quality Council Hard Winter Wheat Tour of 260 million bushels in Kansas.

Nationwide, wheat production is forecast at 1.4 billion bushels, down 9 percent from a year ago.

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