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4 facing attempted murder charge after SW Kan. chase

LIBERAL- Law enforcement authorities in Seward County are investigating a reported residential shooting just after 7p.m. on Friday in the 400 Block of Cornell Avenue in Liberal, according to a media release.

Police say officers were dispatched to a report of gunshots. A citizen reported seeing men shooting at a residence and fleeing the area in a vehicle.

No injuries were reported in connection with the shooting.

Within minutes, responding officers located the suspect vehicle. They refused to stop and a high-speed chase ensued through Liberal and into rural Beaver County, Oklahoma.

The chase came to an end when the suspect vehicle encountered a mechanical failure. The vehicle was occupied by three men ages 27, 21, 20 and a 17-year-old. The Beaver County Sheriff has not released their names. No injuries were reported.

They are being held in the Beaver County Jail. Affidavits will be filed with the Seward County Attorney seeking several charges including attempted murder, according to police.

KFIX Rock News: Hollywood Vampires Members Alice Cooper, Joe Perry Fit Brazilians With Hearing Aids

Hollywood_Vampires_album_coverUNDATED (AP) – Alice Cooper and Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry are making good for all the hearing they’ve blown out over the years.

Cooper and Perry, along with Johnny Depp, helped fit customized hearing devices for 218 residents of Rio de Janeiro at the Rock in Rio music festival on Thursday.

Perry says the impact on the lives of the children who now can hear is “astounding.”

Cooper jokes maybe the people who can now hear should start listening to music that’s a little lighter and work up to his music.

The Starkey Hearing Foundation sponsored the hearing devices.

Cooper, Perry and Depp performed as Hollywood Vampires at Rock in Rio.

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Images courtesy Republic Records – UMe

Motorist sets lighter to spider at gas station, burns pump

spiderCENTER LINE, Mich. (AP) — A man with an apparent case of arachnophobia caused a fire at a suburban Detroit gas pump by putting a lighter to what he says was a spider near his fuel door.

WJBK-TV reported Saturday that he escaped injury and his vehicle suffered little damage, but the gas pump was destroyed. A clerk shut off the pump from indoors and called the fire department.

The motorist can be heard on the surveillance video at the Center Line station asking: “Is that a spider in there?” The video then shows flames erupting along the car’s side, the pump and the pavement.

The man darts to safety and later uses a fire extinguisher to put out the flames. A spider is not seen.

The clerk says he apologized the next day.

Report: Kan. voter list purge affects young, unaffiliated most

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Published report says young and politically unaffiliated Kansas residents are most likely to be affected by the state’s plans to purge the names of people with incomplete registrations from its voter lists.

The Wichita Eagle reports  more than half of the prospective voters with incomplete registrations list no party affiliation.

The Eagle also said more than 40 percent are under 30.

The newspaper analyzed a list of nearly 36,700 suspended registrations obtained from Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s office.

The Republican secretary of state has enacted a new administrative rule removing the names of any prospective voters whose registrations have been incomplete for more than 90 days. It takes effect Friday.

Most incomplete registrations are for voters who haven’t met a requirement to document their U.S. citizenship.

NASA: Water found on Mars

These dark, narrow, 100 meter-long streaks called recurring slope lineae flowing downhill on Mars are inferred to have been formed by contemporary flowing water. Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Scientists are reporting that Mars appears to have not only frozen water but flowing streams of salty water, at least in the summertime.

They say their latest observations “strongly support” the longtime theory that salt water flows down certain Martian slopes each summer.

These dark, narrow streaks tend to appear and grow during the warmest Martian months, and fade the rest of the year. Salt lowers the freezing point of water, and scientists say that would explain these seasonal briny flows.

Because water is essential to life, Monday’s findings could have major implications.

The researchers say further exploration is warranted to determine whether any microscopic life might exist at modern-day Mars. They based their findings on data from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has been circling Mars since 2006.

Glen F. Staats

Glen F. Staats, age 84, passed away on Saturday, September 19, 2015 at his home in Cimarron, Kansas. He was born on May 12, 1931 in Copeland, Kansas, the son of Perry V. And Lula Belle Clements Staats. He was a rancher and farmer in Logan County, Kansas from 1958 until he retired in 1996. A Scott City resident from 2001 to 2011 when he moved to Cimarron, Kansas.

On August 6, 1949 he married Marjy L. Standley in Hutchinson, Kansas. She passed away on October 21, 2010 in Wichita, Kansas.

Survivors include her One Son – Ron Staats of Cimarron, Kansas, One Daughter – Glenda Staats of Kansas City, Missouri, Three Sisters – Elsie Trahern of Cimarron, Kansas, Emma Bateman of Washington State, Neva June Bright of Florala, Alabama, Six Grandchildren and Seven Great Grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his Parents, One Son – Danny Staats, Three Brothers, Five Sisters and One Grandson.

Funeral Services will be held at Price & Sons Funeral Home of Scott City, Kansas 2:00 p.m. Saturday, September 26, 2015 with Steve Payne presiding.

Memorials may be given to the First Christian Church % Price & Sons Funeral Home.

Interment will be in the Scott County Cemetery in Scott City, Kansas.

Visitation will be from 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Friday and 10:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. Saturday at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas.

HAWVER: Resignations of Boehner, top Kansas Democrat ring similar tones

martin hawver line art

Maybe we should have learned something last month when Kansas Democratic Chairman Larry Meeker, Lake Quivira, resigned his job at the top of the party’s political hierarchy.

Then we could have gotten our bets down on the resignation of U.S. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

The link between Meeker’s and Boehner’s resignations, while politically different, is philosophically identical.

Meeker wasn’t “Democrat enough” and Boehner wasn’t “Republican enough.”

Meeker, who is to be succeeded Saturday in Salina by former Kansas Democrat Vice Chair Lee Kinch, Wichita, wasn’t “Democrat enough” for the party’s old-timers and donors and members who are more interested in the party name than in actually running state government.

Meeker, recall, suggested renaming the Kansas Democratic Party “Red State Democrats,” which is a pretty accurate perception of Democrats in the Republican (red) stronghold of Kansas.

Not Democrat enough, and many Democrats don’t like the term “red” as it refers to the state’s voter registration and history.

For Boehner, well, pretty much the same story: Working, when necessary, with Democrats to keep the U.S. House of Representatives moving and getting the basic nuts-and-bolts work of running Congress done. It required some leadership compromises, some accommodation to keep things moving, and that isn’t something that some of the most right-wing Republicans will stand for. (For example, U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., who like many farmers, won’t give up an inch on the fence line.)

Can’t tell if Meeker had suggested maybe not changing the century-old party name but maybe making Red State Democrats a nickname or casting it as a source of pride—that even in Red Kansas there are Democrats who are busy and active and politically engaged—that he would have remained chair.

But the Republican- or Democrat-enough issue is likely to play out during next year’s legislative elections where both parties need to explain to their members, and if not members maybe just voters, where the center of each party is and why the far edges of those parties aren’t going to run things.

That’s a tough one, and the central ideas of both parties in terms of taxes, education, health care for the poor and such actually aren’t that far apart. The way to those centrist party goals might be different, the catch phrases different and the reasons for those positions different, but if you squint, both parties want the state to run well and hospitably.

You’ll not have to worry about individual candidates saying where they are: They’re after votes and will be as conservative or moderate as Kansans will allow them to be on their doorsteps.

The real battle for those votes will be in the Republican Party in the House, where maybe seven or eight votes there are the difference between the “hard right” and the moderates, who often side with Democrats to move legislation. Figure that a handful of House members out of the GOP’s 97-seat majority will move things to the center.

In the Senate, with a dozen moderate Republican/Democrat votes and 28 conservative Republicans, well, it will take something dramatic to move that chamber toward the center of either party’s ideals.

So, we’re down to the campaign not just along party lines, but about Kansas values that will move into high gear.

Just waiting, though, to see whether pictures of any Republican standing next to Boehner or any Democrat standing next to Larry Meeker kills a campaign…

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.

KSU nuclear reactor control console getting a needed upgrade

By Mary Rankin

MANHATTAN — Kansas State University’s nuclear reactor control console in Ward Hall will be getting a much-needed upgrade, funded by a $1.5 million Nuclear Engineering University Partnerships grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

The entire reactor console will be replaced, including cabling and neutron detectors used to monitor reactor power. While the core and control rods will remain the same, plans include replacing some of the auxiliary monitoring equipment such as conductivity meters and radiation detectors to improve compatibility with the new console.

The existing control console in the mechanical and nuclear engineering departmentreactor facility was procured second hand from the U.S. Geographical Survey reactor facility following an upgrade to its console in the 1990s.

“Researchers and educators in the College of Engineering will be able to more easily access data from the reactor data loggers for use in lab experiments,” said Jeff Geuther, nuclear reactor facilities manager and principal investigator of the grant. “The reactor console will feature more redundancy with regard to required safety functions, which will improve safety and reliability.”

Many of the current console components are obsolete and difficult to repair, causing frequent reactor downtime due to console reliability issues. The vendor for the original console does not always have ready replacements for broken parts.

“Another reason to upgrade the console, aside from increased reliability,” Geuther said, “is that we will be able to improve the interface for operators by incorporating controls and indicators for auxiliary equipment into the main console. We also plan to increase the number of data outputs for classes and experiments.”

The objective in the replacement process is to select a bid by January 2016, followed by approximately 18 months for design and construction of the console. Completed installation is set for September 2018. A one-month reactor outage for console replacement is planned for summer 2018 to minimize interruption for classes that use the reactor.

Ellis Co. Commission will consider bids for Old U.S. 40 project

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

At Monday evening’s commission meeting, the Ellis County Commission will consider bids for construction on the Old U.S. 40 project from Yocemento to Ellis.

Earlier this year, BG Consultants sent a request for bids for construction on the west Old U.S. 40 project and received just one bid from Sporer Land Development of Oakley.

In August, the commission rejected Sporer’s bid of $1.09 million for Phase 1 of the project at the request BG because it was higher than the $661,000 estimate. The commission also instructed the engineer to rebid the project.

During the rebid process, BG received two bids. Sporer Land Development bid $609,995.70. APAC-Kansas submitted a bid of $636,920.75. The commission will choose between the two at Monday’s meeting.

Phase 1 of the project consists of additional guard fence and smaller box culverts in an effort to trim the cost of the project.

BG also received just one bid for Phase 2, hot mix asphalt surfacing, from APAC at $1.13 million. The engineer’s estimated cost was $1.2 million.

In other business, the commission will consider allowing the treasurer’s department to fill one full-time and one part-time position.

The commission will also discuss an educational grant application for Emergency Medical Services.

Monday night’s commission meeting is at 5 p.m. Monday at the Ellis County Administrative Center.

Bacteria-borne disease surges in Kansas City-area children

Shigella bacteria is responsible for a recent infectious disease outbreak in Kansas City children. CREDIT CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION PUBLIC HEALTH IMAGE LIBRARY
Shigella bacteria is responsible for a recent infectious disease outbreak in Kansas City children.
CREDIT CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION PUBLIC HEALTH IMAGE LIBRARY

By ALEX SMITH

An infectious disease that typically affects about 10 people in Kansas City annually has already spread to more than 14 times that number this year, health officials said Friday.

Shigella is spread by direct or indirect fecal-oral contact. Symptoms include diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever and vomiting, among other symptoms. It may also cause convulsions in young children.

The Kansas City Health Department has investigated more than 143 cases of the disease since the start of the year, officials said.

Twenty cases have been confirmed so far in the Wichita area this year, according to the KDHE.

When untreated, Shigella bacteria can remain in the body for four weeks or more. Anti-microbial treatment can reduce that to a few days.

The microbes appear to be unusually hardy.

“What is also concerning is that that we are seeing three different strains that are resistant to certain antibiotics,” Tiffany Wilkinson, a health department official, said in a statement.

To prevent further spreading of Shigella, health officials advise hand washing, correct diaper disposal and keeping sick adults and children away from swimming pools.

Alex Smith is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

‘Footloose’ kicks off FHSU theatre season

footloose-TWFHSU University Relations and Marketing

The first theatre performance of Fort Hays State University 2015-2016 season will be at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and Oct. 2. A matinee performance will be at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 4. All performances are in Felten-Start Theater in Malloy Hall.

Tomme Williams, instructor of theatre, is the theatrical director, and Dr. Terry Crull, associate professor of music, musical director. The cast is a mixture of music majors and theatre students, many of whom have participated for many years.

“Footloose” is the stage adaption of the hit movie by the same name about a boy who moves to a small town where dancing is banned. Williams said the musical is fresh and energetic, with great ’80s music.

“I think the audiences will really enjoy it,” she said.

Reserve your tickets here.

For more information contact Crull at (785) 628-4258 or [email protected] or Williams at (785) 628-4449 or [email protected].

Alpha Kappa Psi will host fundraiser Monday with Smokin’ Co. BBQ

alpha kappa psi logo

FHSU University Relations

The Zeta Pi chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi, the business professional fraternity at Fort Hays State University, will host a fundraiser with Smokin’ Company BBQ at 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 28, in front of the Comeau Catholic Campus Center, 506 W. Sixth.

Smokin Co. BBQ offers a variety of BBQ sandwiches, pulled pork nachos, homemade coleslaw, signature beans, mac and cheese, and other options. To view the full menu, click HERE.

Cash and credit cards will be accepted.

KSHSAA releases girls golf regional assignments

KSHSAA LogoTOPEKA, Kan. – The Kansas State High School Activities Association has announced regional sites for the upcoming regional golf tournaments. Hays High will be at Goodland’s Suger Hill Country Club for their 4A regional. TMP-Marian will compete at the Tamarisk Golf Course in Ulysses for their 3-2-1A regional.

Click on link below for complete list of regional sites

2015 KSHSAA Girls Golf Regional Assignments

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