We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Comedian Drew Carey offers reward in cruel bucket prank

BAY VILLAGE, Ohio (AP) — Comedian Drew Carey is offering to help police find those involved in dumping a bucket of urine and feces on a special-needs teen in Ohio who was reportedly told the prank was part of the “Ice Bucket Challenge.”

The Cleveland native posted on his Twitter account Saturday that he’s willing to donate $10,000 if police in suburban Bay Village want to start a reward fund.

The 14-year-old boy’s mother found a cellphone video of teenagers dumping the bucket on her autistic son.

Bay Village High School organized a vigil for the teen before a football game on Friday and school officials have condemned the prank.

Carey is the host of the popular game show “The Price is Right” and starred in the comedy “The Drew Carey Show.”

Second suspect arrested in death of Topeka officer

Randy Ridens and Ross Lane
Randy Ridens and Ross Lane

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Two men are now jailed in connection with the shooting death of a Topeka police officer.

The Shawnee County Sheriff’s Department announced that Randy Ridens, 30, Topeka, was arrested early Monday near a home in Linwood. Police said he might have information to help the investigation of the shooting of police Cpl. Jason Harwood on Sunday afternoon.

Another suspect in Harwood’s shooting, Ross Lane, turned himself in to authorities in Lawrence Sunday night.

The sheriff’s department says Harwood was shot when he stopped a vehicle in east Topeka and at least one person in the car fired a weapon before the car drove away.

Gov. Sam Brownback on Monday ordered that all flags be flown at half-staff from sunup to sundown on Monday and Tuesday to honor Harwood, a 15-year police veteran.

College officials want more uniform reporting on assessments

Moran
Moran

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas higher education officials have sought an annual assessment of student learning, but a first attempt by schools produced a wide-variety of assessment systems.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports Kansas universities used six different assessment systems, while community and technical colleges used eight.

State higher education officials want the assessment to determine how much students are learning at schools.

Kansas Board of Regents member Robba Moran says it makes sense for schools to use different assessments. Moran says the schools have different missions and student bodies. But she says it would be helpful to have more uniformity so policymakers can understand more of how much students are learning.

She hopes this first report will start discussion on how to improve future reports.

Fire kills 1 man in Overland Park

fireOVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Investigators are trying to determine the cause of a fire that killed a man at an Overland Park apartment building.

The fire department said in a news release that the fire early Monday at the Deveraux Apartments led to the death of an adult male who lived in the apartment where the fire started. He was found dead when firefighters searched the apartment.

No other injuries were reported in the eight-unit apartment complex. The fire department said the blaze was contained to one apartment, although adjacent units suffered some smoke and water damage.

The victim’s name has not been released.

High Plains Barbershop Chorus donates to elementary school

10524239_10202572820474381_2071899730552804617_o
Pictured, from left, Bill Scott of the chorus, Cindy Roths from Sacred Heart and school Principal Debbie Hagans.

High Plains Barbershop Chorus

NESS CITY — The Hays High Plains Barbershop Chorus has lent a helping hand to Ness City’s Sacred Heart Elementary School to help fund music programs.

The chorus has long been a supporter of music education throughout the area. With that in mind, the chorus recently donated $500 to the Ness City elementary school to help support music programs. acred Heart music evolves every student in some way, performing several times each year.

“Cindy Roths has developed a fine music program that will create a lifetime desire for music,either vocally or instrumentally or just appreciating music,” the chorus said.

Kan. School for the Deaf will have Hays information session

kan school for the deaf

The Kansas School for the Deaf will have an information session in Hays for parents of children with hearing loss.

The session is scheduled for 9 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday at Rose Garden Dining Room, 230 E. Eighth. Free coffee and pastries will be provided.

Parents are invited to meet other parents of children with hearing loss, share resources, and chat about life with a child with a hearing loss.

To register, visit www.ksdeaf.org or call (913) 210-8149.

Recent FHSU grad selected for a prestigious prize opportunity

FHSU University Relations

Michaela Valli Groeblacher, Lindsborg, a recent Fort Hays State University graduate, has been selected to compete for the Zanesville, Ohio, Ceramics Arts award.

Groeblacher’s piece “Kim” is in the running for the $20,000 first-place award or a piece of $10,000 in additional prize money. The awards will be announced on Oct. 10. Groeblacher is one of only 100 ceramic artists worldwide to be given the opportunity to win the 2014 Zanesville prize.

“I love the use of clay as an artistic medium” said Groeblacher. Unlike much of her other work that features the elderly in life-like detail, “Kim” depicts a middle-aged woman, pondering life.

“Modeling people has been thrilling, being that I can show them to the world and to themselves,” she said.

Groeblacher has received several awards, and her art has been purchased and presented throughout the United States, Germany and in her birthplace, Austria.

Groeblacher graduated from FHSU this year with a Master of Fine Arts degree and is currently an assistant professor of art at McPherson College.

“As a former physical therapist, I never thought that I’d be a teacher,” she said, “One day I was asked to teach a class for grown ups, and I had a wonderful time and fell in love with it.”

Groeblacher has exhibited her art in many galleries in Kansas and throughout the United States. In the last couple of years, her work was selected to be part of the two most prestigious ceramics exhibits in the United States – the NCECA Biennial in Denver, Colo., and the San Angelo Ceramics Competition at the Museum of Fine Arts in San Angelo, Texas.

“Ever since I started graduate school at FHSU, my professional and artistic experiences have been fulfilling beyond my expectations,” said Groeblacher.

Orman taking the simpler approach to Senate campaign

You almost have to wonder whether those two appropriately dressed debaters at the Kansas State Fair at Hutchinson are dividing Kansas voters into two separate groups — those who are intimately familiar with the operation of Congress, and those who aren’t.

martin hawver line art

That debate, of course, was between Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts and independent candidate Greg Orman. They both wore sport coats with open-collar shirts, while at the earlier debate, Republican Gov. Sam Brownback was one of the only people in Hutchinson wearing a coat and tie on Saturday morning, and Democrat House Minority Leader Paul Davis apparently couldn’t find his coat and was dressed like most of the hamburger vendors.

But this Senate race debate: It was Roberts campaigning against Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, on the presumption that independent Orman would line up Reid if elected—rather than at least having the option to side with whatever is the powerful majority party in the Senate on behalf of Kansans.

Still gotta wonder whether most Kansans are looking that far into the race.

But Roberts is apparently convinced that Kansans are indeed looking that far into the politics of the Senate campaign on the Washington level, essentially looking beyond the candidate himself and at the institution of the Senate where he lives.

To Kansans, well, it’s going to take several Republican wins for the Senate to move to Republican-tilted from its current Democrat-tilted, and most of those decisions aren’t something Kansans can vote on.

Orman, who maintains he has been a Republican and a Democrat and didn’t care much for either in terms of getting federal government business done, says he’ll look over the rest of the Senate and decide whether he’ll line up with either party to get things moving. Or…he could just remain an independent, a potentially game-changing position from which he can issue-by-issue vote with whichever party he believes will solve problems—or maybe advantage Kansas in federal legislation.

That sounds pretty advantageous—unless Republicans take control of the Senate, and Orman’s independent status means to new leadership that he’s a fair-weather friend that the chamber isn’t likely to spend much time figuring out how to pander to. And it’s not just pandering to independent Orman; it’s pandering to Kansas’ specific interests…

Orman continues to talk about a do-nothing Congress—where Roberts has worked for much of his life—and which Roberts asserts that with the right votes in Kansas and several other states, he knows how to get moving. Roberts maintains that if Harry Reid can just be moved to the back row of seats, Orman’s big issue dissolves.

Starting to sound like more insider politics than most Kansans have the time, or maybe the inclination, to puzzle out?

Might be, might not be, but that’s where Roberts is taking his campaign, while Orman is talking about working with whatever crew is on salary next January and seeing what he can do for Kansas.

That’s where this campaign is taking a fairly interesting tack.

It is not just electing the guy you like, the guy who says what you want to hear about health care, immigration, the budget, the economy and such. Based on the themes at the debate, it is a more complicated voter understanding of the operation of Congress if Roberts has his way or maybe a less complicated view if Orman gets the bus ticket to Washington in November.

At least the choice, from the initial debate, appears to be between two candidates who know how to appropriately dress for the occasion.

Syndicated by Hawver News Co. of Topeka, Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report. To learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit www.hawvernews.com.

Gove County will offer Market Place beginning Sept. 20

Gove County Economic Development Office

GRAINFIELD — Beginning Sept. 20, you will have the opportunity to spend every first and third Saturday of the month enjoying “A Little Bit of Country” as you sample homemade goodies, get a great snack, buy gifts, try out new small business ideas, buy fresh fruits and vegetables, look for a special collectible, find a unique gift or browse flea market style booths.

Gove County will open the Gove County 4-H Building, 757 W. Third, Grainfield, for a fun shopping and eating experience called market Place. As the new project grows, organizers hope to include such items as homemade baked goods, fresh-grown “Farmer’s Market” produce, gadgets, jewelry, collectibles, great snacks and foods, antiques, small garage sale items and more. There also will be a Holiday Fest, beginning Nov. 1. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Vendors, nonprofits, schools, 4-H clubs or other agencies are invited to have booths at the events, and help is being offered with marketing and other business issues.

Gove County Economic Development is sponsoring the first three dates, and there will be no booth fee for Sept. 20, Oct. 4 and Oct. 18.

Exhibitor packets can be picked up at the Gove County Economic Development Office in Quinter, the county Extension office in Gove. They also can be emailed. For more information, contact Jodie at (785) 754-2214 or [email protected] or Jen at (785) 938-4480.

DA studies justification for 2012 police shooting

police shootingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Two years after Wichita police shot and killed two men in separate confrontations, the Sedgwick County District Attorney is still considering whether the shootings were justified.

Troy Lanning Jr. and Timothy Collins were shot to death two weeks apart in April 2012. Police say they were both involved in crimes when they were shot.

The Wichita Eagle reports that determinations of whether police shootings were justified have routinely taken several months in Sedgwick County.

Spokeswoman Georgia Cole said District Attorney Marc Bennett is waiting for a piece of information before making a determination in Lanning’s death. Bennett said no ruling will be announced in the Collins case because charges were filed against three other people and any comment by him might affect the court proceedings.

Summer break over, must-do tasks await Congress

House of Rep  CongressANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress is returning for a short September session in between its summer break and the November elections. The must-do list includes preventing a government shutdown and extending a freeze on taxing access to the Internet.

Lawmakers also will find time for votes conveying political messages primed for fall campaigning.

Republicans who run the House may have lousy approval ratings, but they are poised to increase their majority and are determined to avoid mistakes like last year’s partial government shutdown.

Now, the GOP is pressing for drama-free passage of a temporary spending bill to prevent a federal shutdown at month’s end and fund government agencies past the Nov. 4 election into mid-December. The Senate is sure to go along if that measure is kept free of objectionable add-ons.

KFIX Rock News: Ringo Starr Angry Over Islamic Militants Being Named After Beatles Members

ringoin2As Ringo Starr’s fans know, the former Beatles drummer is all about promoting “peace and love,” so it’s not surprising that he’d be upset over reports that some murderous British-born Islamic militants have been given nicknames by their fellow jihadists corresponding to those of Fab Four members.

Among the militants is one that reportedly goes by the name of “Jihadi John,” who is suspected being the man seen beheading two U.S. journalists in separate gruesome videos released by the Islamic militant group ISIS in recent weeks.

Speaking Thursday with the London Evening Standard, Starr fumed, “It’s bull.  What they are doing out there is against everything The Beatles stood for.”

Ringo added that he feels helpless about the monikers of his old band’s members being used by such a violent group of people.

“If we stood for anything we never stood for that,” the 74-year-old rock legend declared.  “The four of us absolutely stood for peace and love.  But we are not in control.”

A former ISIS hostage revealed that three British militants guarding hostages in Syria had been labeled with the nicknames John, Paul and Ringo because of their accents.

Copyright 2014 ABC News Radio

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File