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Flooding: Body of missing country singer recovered from lake

PONCA CITY, Okla. (AP) — The Oklahoma Highway Patrol says the body of a missing country singer from Arkansas who disappeared during a severe storm has been recovered from an Oklahoma lake.

 

The patrol says its Marine Enforcement Division recovered the body of 29-year-old Craig M. Strickland Monday morning in Kaw Lake, located 8 miles east of Ponca City just south of the Oklahoma-Kansas state line.

Strickland and a friend, Chase R. Morland, were reported missing on Dec. 27 during a duck hunting trip on the Kay County lake. The pair’s capsized boat was found the same day. Morland’s body was recovered from the lake a day later.

Strickland is the lead singer of the Arkansas-based country-rock band Backroad Anthem. The patrol says Strickland’s body was recovered within an area known as Bear Creek Cove.

1 suspect in robberies that locked down KSU campus reaches plea deal

Early morning of Sept. 4 on the KSU campus
Early morning of Sept. 4 on the KSU campus

MANHATTAN -One of the suspects in the aggravated robberies that occurred near and prompted the temporary lockdown of the KSU Campus on September 4, has entered into a plea agreement in Riley County District Court.

Johnathan Elliott, 20, Manhattan, appeared in court Monday in front of Judge Stutzman along with his attorney Brenda Jordan.

Elliott plead no contest to one count of aggravated robbery. Additional counts including Robbery, Contributing to a Child’s Misconduct and Theft were dropped in accordance with the plea deal.

According to the State if the case had gone to trial they would have presented evidence to show that Elliott participated in the holdup of two Manhattan men in the early morning hours of September 4.

Elliott will be sentenced on February 8.

Leaders want shorter, quieter Kan. legislative session

capitol KansasTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Top Republicans are hoping the Kansas Legislature can close a projected state budget deficit quickly this year and avoid the infighting that made last year’s session the longest ever.

Education funding is also an issue. But leaders of the two chambers’ GOP majorities aren’t sure how far they’ll get in drafting a new formula for distributing more than $4 billion in state aid to public schools.

Lawmakers are waiting for the Kansas Supreme Court to rule in an education funding lawsuit against the state from four school districts.

The Legislature convenes Jan. 11, and its agenda is packed with issues. But Republican leaders said their goal is to wrap up the year’s legislating in less than the traditionally scheduled 90 days after last year’s session lasted a record 114 days.

2016 Kansas Shrine Bowl rosters announced

Three area high school seniors have been selected to play in the 2016 Kansas Shrine Bowl.

Phillipsburg’s Donovan Lumpkin, Gavin Lively of Norton and Great Bend’s Alex Deist were named to the 43rd annual all-star football game benefitting Shriners hospitals in Kansas.

Phillipsburg head coach J.B. Covington was also named to the West coaching staff on Monday.

Former Hays High and current Holcomb head coach Kent Teeter is also a member of the West coaching staff.

The game will be held Sat. July, 30 at Welch Stadium on Emporia State Campus.

Kickoff will be at 7:00 pm. Tickets and additional information are available at www.kansasshrinebowl.com or by calling 800-530-5524.

East

Cole Baird………….. Silver Lake High

Mason Barta……………… Holton High

Orion Battaglia…St. Marys-Colgan High

Carson Becker……. Rock Creek High

Alex Blake…. Blue Valley North High

Anthony Brown…… Mill Valley High

Connor Byers… Bonner Springs High

Austin Cook…………. Fort Scott High

Dawson Downing… Bishop Miege High

Grant Elston……………… Eudora High

Riley England……. Osawatomie High

Wykeen Gill…………… Atchison High

Jared Green… Shawnee Mission West High

Jeff Gurley…………. Blue Valley High

Paul Holt……………. Burlingame High

Tucker Horak…………. Rossville High

Teven Jenkins……………. Topeka High

Will Jones……. Washburn Rural High

Tom Killilea… St. Thomas Aquinas High

Nick Kirmer……………. Emporia High

Jace McDown……….. Columbus High

Will Mengarelli……….. Pittsburg High

Ryan Menghini……… Frontenac High

Winston Meyer… Nemaha Central High

Jordan Newby….. Topeka West High

Brooks Peavler…………. Hayden High

Zach Schwalm…….. Uniontown High

Patrick Shuler… Mission Valley High

Isaiah Simmons…. Olathe North High

Brady Snider……….. Cherryvale High

Bryce Torneden… Lawrence Free State High

Anders Vance……….. Louisburg High

Chris Winkel………………… Troy High

JD Woods…………….. Lawrence High

Coaches:

Blake Pierce (head)… Topeka Seaman High

Max Cordova…. Lawrence Free State

Travis Thurston… St. Thomas Aquinas High

Dan Grundy…………. Columbus High

Derick Hammes………. Rossville High

Derek Jasper…………………. Troy High

Certified Athletic Trainers:

Curt Sudbeck…………….. St. Benedict

Kaylin Voss………………….. Lawrence

 

West

Jaden Abernathy………… Buhler High

Jeff Ast……………………. Andale High

Nathan Burgoyne… Wichita Collegiate High

Chase Crawford… Valley Center High

Alex Deist………….. Great Bend High

Cortland Enriquez… Salina Central High

Austin Fletcher……. Hutchinson High

Cooper Griffith…….. Scott City High

Harley Hazlett………….. Abilene High

Brent Huelsmann… Goddard Eisenhower High

Colter Hulling… Kapaum Mt. Carmel High

Noah Johnson…. Bishop Carroll High

Kash Larrabee……………. Meade High

Gavin Lively… Norton Community High

Isaiahh Loudermilk…. West Elk High

Jeremy Luck……… Maize South High

Donovan Lumpkin… Phillipsburg High

Eli McKee……………… Halstead High

Rodney Murphy… Wichita Heights High

Jonah Nowak……. Garden Plain High

Darraja Parnell… Andover Central High

Konnor Penning… Washington County High

Nalen Rincones….. Garden City High

Garrett Roth……………. Hesston High

Ian Rudzik……………….. Ulysses High

Brady Rust………………… Derby High

Noah Schomacker…….. Cheney High

Trey Teeter…………….. Holcomb High

Jake Tiernan……………. Solomon High

Duall Watson… Wichita Northwest High

Logan Weakley……….. Augusta High

Blake Wilson………….. Mulvane High

Raye Wilson…….. Junction City High

Jason Zook……………. Chapman High

Coaches:

Randall Zimmerman (head) Junction City High

Doug Davis……… Junction City High

Marc Marinelli…Goddard Eisenhower High

Kent Teeter……………. Holcomb High

Jason Grider…………… Halstead High

J.B. Covington……. Phillipsburg High


Certified Athletic Trainer:

Morgan Sommers……………. Andover

Teen suspect arrested in two Salina shooting incidents

Blake
Blake

SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a teenager in connection with a pair of shooting incidents.

Joshua T.M. Blake, 18, Salina, was arrested early New Year’s morning in connection with shots fired New Year’s Eve. He is also facing charges in connection with shots fired near a west Salina bank on December 4th.

Blake is alleged to have fired shots from a pickup New Year’s Eve in the area of University Place and Phillips Street, near Hageman and Saturn Avenue, and in the 400 block of South 12th Street where three bullets from a small caliber gun hit a home, according to Salina Police. No one was injured.

Blake was driving a white Nissan pickup. Witnesses described this as the vehicle driven as the shots were fire.

Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester said investigators have been able to link Blake to a case where shots were fired in the area of 1st Bank Kansas, 1333 W. Crawford on December 4, where a traffic sign was hit by a bullet.

Blake was booked into the Saline County Jail on several requested charges including criminal discharge of a firearm, unlawful discharge of a firearm, and criminal damage to property.
A passenger in the pickup, 32-year-old Joseph W. Allen of Salina was arrested on drug charges.

Two other occupants in the pickup were not arrested.
Captain Forrester said a gun has not been recovered and another arrest is possible in the case.

SCHLAGECK: This two-room schoolhouse in northwest Kansas

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

One of the misfortunes of progress in education is the demise of the small country school. As I look back on all the attributes of attending a two-room school during the first eight years of my life, I wonder if we may have lost something we can never replace.

The small school I attended was located in western Sheridan County. The name of the community was Seguin. Our little German Catholic community boasted 50 hardy souls.

While mostly made of wood, our two-room school sported a stucco coating on the exterior. No bell tower adorned the top of Seguin Grade School. Instead, students took turns calling us to class, announcing recess and signaling the end of the school day by ringing a large, brass bell fitted with a black wooden handle.

The Sisters of St. Joseph provided us with a solid, top-notch foundation during my early years or education – nearly 55 years ago.

The main subjects included reading, writing, arithmetic and English. The last subject I enjoy even to this day. I especially liked to diagram sentences on the black board and they were black back in those days. I wrote as neatly as I could with a piece of long, white chalk.

Because we lived in the sparsely populated western part of Kansas, we looked forward to school every day. It was fun to be with other kids. More importantly, we enjoyed learning.

After attending mass at St. Martin of Tours, we walked approximately a quarter mile across native buffalo grass to our school located at the northwestern corner of our small prairie town.

We entered school through double doors on the east side of the building and climbed up the stairs to our classroom. Huge, double-hung windows covered nearly every inch of the west side of each classroom. These rooms were located on the second floor of the building so we could see for miles. Some days we could see the Colby elevators 24 miles to the west.

Each room contained approximately 20 ink-stained wooden desks. Each had a hole in the upper right-hand corner to hold a bottle of black ink.

A large American flag stood in the right corner in the front of our school.  The black board stretched the entire length of the front wall and a portrait of George Washington hung in solitary splendor on the left side.

Every day we began the day with the Pledge of Allegiance. We included the phrase, “One nation, under God” and each one of us stood at attention with our right hand covering our heart.

I’ll always remember my first day at school. Once I found my desk, I promptly began to whistle. I’d grown up listening to Mom whistle while she worked around our house, so I just naturally began whistling at school.

This conduct resulted in a visit to the cloakroom where we hung our coats and stored our lunch boxes. Here the door was closed behind me and I spent the next few minutes crying aloud.

How was I to know a happy student wasn’t to whistle while he worked?
Well, that unhappy experience hardly proved a bump in the school highway. I loved reading, listening and learning and most of all my teachers.

Throughout my eight years in Seguin, enrollment at my two-room school never exceeded 35 students. I spent all three years with two classmates, Dorothy Meier and Virginia Wegman. I can’t remember a class with more than five children.

With such a small enrollment, each room combined classes. First and second grade studied the same subjects while third and fourth did likewise. Because we were in the same room, I could listen to and learn from both classes. Something I did with gusto.

As a youngster and throughout my 18 years of education, I have always been a sponge – absorbing everything I could sink my teeth into. Learning and listening has always come naturally for me. Although I don’t think it hurt that our teachers, the Sisters of St. Joseph, were strict. In fact, talking in class resulted in an automatic ticket to the cloakroom, or time spent at the chalkboard after school.

One of my favorite periods throughout grade school occurred immediately following lunch. That’s when students read aloud. Books came from our extensive library.

The first book I chose to read during my 5th year in Seguin was Lorna Doone by R.D. Blackmore. I couldn’t put this book down and I wanted to share this story with my classmates.

Lorna Doone is a simple tale about the outlaw Doone family who lived and pillaged deep in the depths of Bagworthy Forest, the blackest and the loneliest place of all that kept the sun out.  Here the beautiful maiden Lorna Doone lives and weds John Ridds, whose father was killed by the Doones on his way home from market.

Quite a read, if you haven’t already.

And who can forget all the games we enjoyed during recess?

We played circle, pom pom pull away, fox and geese, Annie Annie Over and of course every one of us turned into a monkey on the steel playground equipment.

What a wonderful time. What a wonderful place. What a wonderful experience.

John Schlageck, a Sheridan County native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

KFIX Rock News: Concert Film of Mötley Crüe’s Final Show to Be Released in 2016

crue discsMötley Crüe closed the book on their long career together Thursday in Los Angeles with their final concert ever.

In case you couldn’t make it out to the Staples Center, you’ll still be able to witness the Crüe’s farewell in a full-length concert film, which will be released in 2016.

The film will capture the spectacle of the band’s Final Tour, such as the “Cruecifly” drum rollercoaster, which brings drummer Tommy Lee out over the audience about 200 feet in the air to the back of the each venue.

Also included within the film will be a documentary portion that will feature exclusive interviews with Mötley Crüe, as well as behind-the-scenes footage from the last week of the tour.

Christian Lamb, who directed concert films for Incubus, Slightly Stoopid and Madonna, will direct the concert segment of the Mötley Crüe film, while Jackass director Jeff Tremaine will helm the documentary portion.

The film will premiere in theaters in 2016, and also will be made available as a pay-per-view event.

Mötley Crüe’s final show took place December 31 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The Struts were the opening band.

Copyright © 2015, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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Lawmakers Consider Controversial Changes To Lower KanCare Drug Costs

By JIM MCLEAN

Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican, says taxpayers shouldn't have to pay for hepatitis C drugs for KanCare recipients who don't follow treatment requirements.
Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican, says taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay for hepatitis C drugs for KanCare recipients who don’t follow treatment requirements.

A legislative oversight committee has approved a controversial set of draft recommendations aimed at reducing the cost of drugs provided to Kansas Medicaid recipients.

The joint committee that oversees the state’s privatized Medicaid program known as KanCare this week tentatively approved recommendations that direct the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to develop policies aimed at slowing a steady increase in the $3 billion program’s pharmacy costs.

The most controversial of the recommendations calls for withholding expensive hepatitis C drugs from KanCare recipients who don’t follow treatment requirements, such as patients who fail to take all their pills or consume nonprescription drugs or alcohol during treatment.

Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican, said Kansas taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay for repeated treatments when patients knowingly engage in behaviors that undermine the effectiveness of their medications.

“I know it is pretty strong language,” Denning said. “But if we have patients that are abusing an $80,000 drug, then there have to be consequences.”

Hepatitis C is a liver infection caused by a virus spread through the exchange of blood or other bodily fluids.

The wholesale cost of a standard 12-week treatment for hepatitis C can range from $84,000 to $94,000 depending on the drug. Through the first four months of the fiscal year, KanCare has spent approximately $3.1 million on hepatitis C treatments, according KDHE documents.

Democrats on the committee objected to Denning’s proposal, saying it would be tantamount to imposing death sentences on noncompliant patients.

“It just seems like we’re making life and death decisions, and I’m just very uncomfortable with that,” said Sen. Laura Kelly of Topeka, the ranking Democrat on the committee.

Republicans who control the committee disagreed, saying the state has a responsibility to both KanCare recipients and taxpayers.

“We’re not sentencing people to death,” said Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Shawnee Republican and chairwoman of the oversight committee. “If a patient is noncompliant, they are making a decision.”

Members voted 5-2 to include the proposal in a set of draft recommendations that the committee is expected to finalize at the start of the 2016 legislative session in January.

Panel members also endorsed a proposal to allow the three private insurance companies that manage KanCare to implement step therapy protocols. If lawmakers approve the change, the insurers could restrict providers’ ability to prescribe expensive drugs to patients in the general KanCare population unless cheaper alternatives had been tried and proven ineffective.

The committee also asked KDHE officials to compile a report on the extent to which certain behavioral health drugs are being overprescribed. Legislators are concerned about reports that powerful antipsychotic drugs are being inappropriately prescribed to children and used for the “off label” purpose of controlling the behavior of dementia patients in nursing homes.

A law passed earlier this year allows the state and the KanCare companies to establish a preferred drug list for mental health drugs. State officials are working with a stakeholder advisory committee to implement the change.

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

KHP: 60 rescued from I-70 tour bus fire in Thomas Co.

photo Kansas Highway Patrol
photo Kansas Highway Patrol

THOMAS COUNTY- Law enforcement and fire officials are investigating the cause of a charter bus fire just before 9a.m. on Monday in Thomas County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported the charter bus was traveling on Interstate 70 just east of Brewster.

The 60 occupants from Purdue University on ski trip are safe.

A bus from Brewster transported them to the Brewster high school. There were 4 buses in the group.

Check Hays Post for additional details as they become available.

Pentagon: Each year, hundreds of military kids sexually abused

Maj. Gen. Paul Funk II, Commanding General of the 1st Infantry Division, took a tour of the Sexual Assault Response and Prevention Center located at Fort Riley centralizes the services available to victims of sexual assault and harassment.
Maj. Gen. Paul Funk II,  former Commanding General of the 1st Infantry Division, on a tour of the Sexual Assault Response and Prevention Center located at Fort Riley.

RICHARD LARDNER, EILEEN SULLIVAN & MEGHAN HOYER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Department data show hundreds of incidents each year of the children of military service members being victims of sexual assault.

The abuse of military dependents is committed most often by male enlisted troops, according to the data provided exclusively to The Associated Press.

The figures offer greater insight into the sexual abuse of children committed by service members, a problem of uncertain scale due to a lack of transparency in the military’s legal proceedings. With more than 1 million military dependents, the number of cases appears statistically small. But for a profession that prides itself on honor and discipline, any episodes of abuse cast a pall.

Letter: Better Sooner Than Later!

It is unfortunate the Oklahoma Sooners lost their semi-final football game to the Clemson Tigers on New Years’ Eve. The Stoops brothers have consistently recruited wonderful talent into Norman, and molded them into Top Ten teams year after year.

However, bowing out early may give the Sooner marching band extra time to learn to play something besides their fight song during the game. They played it before the game. They played it after the game. They played it when they scored a touchdown. They played it when they didn’t score a touchdown. They played it when Clemson scored a touchdown. They played it when Clemson didn’t score a touchdown. They played it when a fan went to get popcorn. They played it when a fan didn’t go to get popcorn — a total of 39 times by my count. (God and the fans only know what they did during commercials, but you can imagine).

It’s understood at every school that playing a fight song is part of the tradition of the institution they represent. It’s just a good thing no one else beats it to death like the Oklahoma Sooner marching band. Da Ta Da Dahhhh, Da Ta Da Dahhhh, Da Ta Da Dahhh, Dah Ta Dahhhh! If you aren’t familiar with it, please don’t look it up. It will be in your ear for days.

Happy New Year!

Tim Schumacher, Hays

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