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Job Opening: Used Inventory Manager – LDI

LDI
Used Inventory Manager

The Used Inventory Manager is responsible for managing all used wholegoods inventory across the 12 LDI locations. This person must understand the used farm equipment market with the ability to make accurate appraisals, monitor and approve the trade-in values on equipment sales. Manage the mix and total dollar value of the used equipment inventory across LDI. He or she will be responsible for managing the online used equipment listings utilized to remarket the used equipment.

An Associates or Bachelor’s Degree in Business Management is required, or appropriate experience may be substituted.

Must be computer literate and have excellent organizational and time management skills, with the ability to prioritize according to importance and urgency.

Send your resume to [email protected]. An application can be filled out online at www.langdieselinc.com.

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Kansas high court hears offender registry case

Offender types

JOHN HANNA, Associated Press
ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The attorney representing a convicted child molester has urged the Kansas Supreme Court to take a fresh look at the state’s criminal offender registry because social media has made the Internet the new town square for public shaming.

Attorney Chris Joseph said during oral arguments Thursday that the world has changed dramatically since 2003, when the U.S. Supreme Court found criminal offender registration was not punitive.

But Assistant Attorney General Christopher Grunewald argued that justices should overturn a Kansas judge’s finding that removed a Lenexa man’s name from the offender registry. The state contends the case seeks to end the dissemination of public information to third-party websites.

The outcome of the case has implications for people whose listing requirements were retroactively lengthened when the state changed its law in 2011.

 

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ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Thursday on whether to uphold a judge’s ruling that removed a convicted child molester’s name from the state’s offender registry.

The outcome could affect hundreds, if not thousands, of people whose registry requirements were retroactively lengthened when the Kansas Offender Registration Act was amended in 2011.

The appeal hinges on whether justices agree with Shawnee County Judge Larry Hendricks’ finding that its retroactive application violates the “ex post facto” clause of the U.S. Constitution. The court must decide whether the registry law is an unconstitutional punishment or a permissible tool to protect public safety.

If the court concludes it is punitive, then the registration law at the time of a person’s conviction controls how long they have to stay on the registry.

 

FBI probes attempt to firebomb congressman’s office in Kansas City

Rep. Cleaver
Rep. Cleaver

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Federal investigators are looking into what appears to have been an attempt to firebomb a U.S. congressman’s office in Missouri.

Kansas City police were called to U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver’s office in Kansas City around 2:50 a.m. Thursday after an alarm sounded at the building.

Police Sgt. Kari Thompson says two alcohol bottles — one rum and one Jagermeister — were found shattered on the ground below a broken window inside the office.

Thompson says paper towels were sticking out of the necks of the bottles and it appeared they had been ignited but were extinguished during flight.

Cleaver was in Washington, D.C., and there were no staff members in the building at the time.

FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton says the agency is investigating the incident.

Oil tank explosion victim identified by authorities

Ellis Co SheriffThe identity of the 57-year-old man injured Wednesday afternoon in a oil storage tank explosion and fire north of Catharine has been released by authorities.

Paul Dorrance Rozean, rural Hays, is listed in critical but stable condition at a Wichita hospital, according to a mid-morning news release from the Ellis County Sheriff’s Office.

Rozean, an employee of American Tank Service of Hays, was injured while cleaning a crude oil storage tank near the intersection of Emmeram Road and Toulon Avenue.

He was airlifted from the scene to Wichita.

Emergency responders determined that crews were cleaning the inside of the storage tank when a hose from the truck apparently came in contact with a heating element inside the tank, which caused the explosion.

Rozean was standing on top of the tank when the explosion occurred and was engulfed in flames.

KSU restricts travel to African countries

Screen Shot 2014-09-11 at 10.09.50 AMMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State University is restricting travel of university-sponsored students, faculty and staff to several African countries affected by the Ebola virus.

The university said in a letter Wednesday to the Kansas State community that it will deny university-sponsored travel to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, which have been placed on a federal travel alert list. Travel requests to nearby Nigeria and the Congo will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

The university also said that anyone who has traveled to those countries in the last four weeks needs to be screened at the Lafene Health Center on the Manhattan campus.

The Manhattan Mercury reports that as of Wednesday, 16 people who were screened were found to be not at risk of contracting Ebola.

GOP wants Davis’ appointee removed from school task force

John Vratil,
John Vratil

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback and some Republican state senators say a man appointed by Democratic gubernatorial candidate Paul Davis to a school efficiency task force should be removed because of comments he made in 2011 about school consolidation.

Davis appointed John Vratil, a Republican who is a former vice president of the Kansas Senate, to the task force. The panel is studying ways for schools to use more of their state funding for classroom instruction and less on other expenses.

Majority Leader Terry Bruce, a Hutchinson Republican, says Vratil said in a 2011 interview with the Topeka Capital-Journal that rural school districts should accept that they will have to consolidate.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports Brownback brought up the issue during a debate Saturday at the Kansas State Fair.

DAVE SAYS: Avoid interest on loan?

Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey

Dear Dave,
In an attempt to improve my bad credit I recently bought a new car, which I financed at 17.9 percent for 72 months. If I make the minimum payment of $468 a month, I’ll end up paying about $13,000 in interest alone.

Is there a formula I can use to avoid paying all this interest?
Marcus

Dear Marcus,
There sure is. Sell the stinking car!

Your credit rating and interest rate are lousy because you haven’t paid your bills. And you haven’t paid your bills because you’ve been buying a bunch of crap you couldn’t afford — like this new car at $468 a month.

Listen, you could have more than $5,500 in just 12 months if you just saved up all those car payments. That would get you a good little used vehicle that wouldn’t be an anchor around your neck for the next six years.

Stop believing the lie, Marcus. Going into debt doesn’t improve your life.
—Dave

Dave Ramsey is America’s trusted voice on money and business. He has authored five New York Times best-selling books: Financial Peace, More Than Enough, The Total Money Makeover, EntreLeadership and Smart Money Smart Kids. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 8 million listeners each week on more than 500 radio stations. Follow Dave on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

2 executives offer to pay for Kemper Arena destruction

Kemper ArenaKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Two executives are offering to pay for the demolition of Kemper Arena with their own money.

Neal Patterson, CEO of Cerner Corp., said Wednesday that he and Mariner Kemper, CEO of UMB Financial Corp., will pay for the demolition of the little-used Kansas City arena.

The two men are supporting a proposal to tear down the arena and replace it with a smaller building to be used for American Royal and other events.

Another developer is offering a second proposal to renovate the arena for a youth athletics center, with a smaller building at the site for the American Royal.

The Kansas City Star reports Patterson estimated demolition would cost $5 million. The city has estimated it would cost between $6 million and $6.5 million.

Moran’s statement on 9/11 anniversary

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., released the following statement today on the 13th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks:

“Thirteen years ago today, our nation was attacked by enemies of freedom. On the anniversary of September 11, 2001, we remember those who perished and honor all who stepped forth to defend America, seek justice, and help us recover and rebuild even after the most terrible of tragedies. It is clear the threat of violence from terrorism remains very real, and good people around the world remain at risk. Our mission also remains clear: the United States must stay vigilant and uphold the American values of freedom, equality and tolerance on which this country was founded.”

Ogallala Aquifer the focus of public forum at Kan. State Fair

Ogallala aquifer
Ogallala Aquifer

K-State News and Communications Services

HUTCHINSON — As wells in western Kansas run dry, the Institute for Civic Discourse and Democracy at Kansas State University is helping citizens decide how to keep the water flowing.

The institute will host discussions on managing the Ogallala Aquifer from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. The round-table discussions are free and open to the public. They will be at the Cottonwood Court building on the fairgrounds.

In small groups, participants will discuss frequently proposed solutions and strategies to sustain the scarce water resource. The goal is to understand the issues and options through a deliberative conversation. After the round-table discussion, attendees will be able to explain and compare approaches to managing the Ogallala Aquifer, said Myles Alexander, project coordinator for the Institute for Civic Discourse and Democracy.

“Strengthening democracy is the mission of Kansas State University’s Institute for Civic Discourse and Democracy,” Alexander said. “We hope people will continue the conversation at home and with their elected and appointed representatives.”

For more information on the forum, contact Alexander at (785) 532-6868 or [email protected]. More information on the institute is available at https://icdd.engg.ksu.edu.

Sheridan County highway reopens

Kansas Department of Transportation

HOXIE — A 19-mile section of Kansas 23 north of Hoxie is now open to traffic. The section had been closed since mid-March in order to rebuild the roadway.

KDOT awarded the construction contract – totaling $14.5 million – to Venture Corp. of Great Bend.

This project is funded by TWORKS, the transportation program passed by the Kansas Legislature in May 2010.

Mental exam for Kan. man in chase that killed girl

McGowan
McGowan

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — An Atchison man charged after a police chase ended in the death of a 5-year-old girl will undergo a mental competency evaluation.

A Leavenworth County District Judge on Wednesday approved the mental examination for 30-year-old Marcas McGowan, who is charged with first-degree felony murder and several other charges in the July 18 chase near Leavenworth.

Authorities allege McGowan abducted Cadence Harris from a home they shared with the girl’s mother in Atchison. Cadence was found dead from a gunshot in McGowan’s car after a police chase ended when McGowan was shot after he pointed a gun at officers.

The Leavenworth Times reports the competency evaluation will be done through The Guidance Center in Leavenworth.

A Sept. 24 hearing is scheduled to determine McGowan’s competency to stand trial.

 

2 plead not guilty in fatal fall of former Manhattan student

CourtPHOENIX (AP) — Two men accused of alcohol-related violations in connection with the fatal fall of an Arizona State University student have pleaded not guilty.

David Siegel and Matthew Farberov appeared Wednesday in Maricopa County Superior Court in the case of Naomi McClendon.

The 18-year-old woman from Manhattan, Kansas, plunged 10 floors to her death March 30 from an apartment complex near ASU’s campus.

Tempe police say McClendon initially attended an “all-you-can-drink” party thrown by ASU fraternity members and surveillance video shows her stumbling and intoxicated when she entered the residential building.

Siegal and Farberov, both 20, are charged with minor possession of liquor and failing to require identification.

Another defendant, 21-year-old Alex Kraus, faces the same charges but now lives in New Jersey. A judge reset his court appearance for Oct. 16.

McClendon was a 2013 Manhattan High School graduate.

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