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Manning, Broncos headed back to Super Bowl

Broncos logoDENVER (AP) – The Denver Broncos captured the AFC championship game as Peyton Manning threw a pair of TD passes to Owen Daniels while in the first half of a 20-18 win over the New England Patriots. Manning completed 17 of his 32 passes for 176 yards and no interceptions.

Brian McManus hit two field goals, a 52-yarder with 33 seconds remaining in the first half and a 31-yard kick that gave Denver a 20-12 lead with about 10 minutes left. C.J. Anderson had 72 yards on 16 carries for the Broncos, who have tied Pittsburgh, Dallas and New England for most Super Bowl appearances.

It was the fifth time Manning and Tom Brady have locked horns in the AFC title game. Manning now has a 3-2 edge in those battles.

The Broncos’ defense hounded Brady all afternoon, recording four sacks and knocking him down 14 times. Denver linebacker Von Miller was one of the stars of the game, recording 2 1/2 sacks and one interception.

Brady completed fewer than 50 percent of his passes, hitting on 27 of 56 for 310 yards, one TD and two interceptions.

However, Brady converted a pair of fourth-down plays on the Patriots’ final drive, including a four-yard TD pass to Rob Gronkowski on fourth-and-goal with 12 seconds left. The Patriots would have tied the game with a successful two-point conversion, but Brady’s pass was tipped by Aqib Talib (ah-KEEB tah-LEEB’) and intercepted by Bradley Roby. The Pats had to go for two after Stephen Gostkowski missed an extra-point try following Steven Jackson’s one-yard touchdown run in the first quarter.

Trial to begin for men accused of wounding Kansas deputy

KIng- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
KIng- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Jury selection is scheduled to get underway in the trial of two men charged with trying to kill a Wyandotte County deputy.

Deputy Scott Wood was shot seven times last March when three armed men tried to rob a convenience store where he had stopped after work.

The Kansas City Star reports jury selection is scheduled to begin Monday in the trial of 25-year-old Dyron M. King, and 36-year-old Cecil D. Meggerson, who are charged with attempted capital murder of a law enforcement officer.

A third defendant, 19-year-old Charles Bowser, faces the same charge, but his trial’s delayed.

The sheriff’s office says Wood is still recovering from gunshot wounds to the jaw, shoulder, abdomen and lower chest.

Kansas bill aims to ban discrimination against gun dealers

Senator Jacob LaTurner
Senator Jacob LaTurner

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas Senate panel will consider a measure aimed at banning discrimination against gun dealers and manufacturers.

The measure would function like laws that prevent religious or racial discrimination and allow gun dealers to sue when they feel discriminated against.

The Wichita Eagle reports (https://bit.ly/1JvEUnq ) the bill will be heard Thursday by a Senate committee.

Sen. Jacob LaTurner says the measure was in response to a 2013 federal initiative aimed at preventing fraudulent businesses from using the banking system.

The National Rifle Association and others have said that initiative has encouraged banks to sever ties with businesses deemed high risk by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

But a recent FDIC audit found no instances where the FDIC pressured banks to decline services to a firearms or ammunition dealer.

Efforts to repeal Kansas death penalty may be stalled

courtesy image
courtesy image

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Some lawmakers say efforts to repeal the Kansas death penalty may be stymied by the U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding three Kansas death sentences.

A bill repealing the death penalty in Kansas was introduced Friday in the House. The Lawrence Journal-World reports  the measure would prohibit death sentences for any crimes committed after July 1.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday reversed a Kansas Supreme Court ruling and upheld the death sentences of three convicted Kansas murderers, including Jonathan and Reginald Carr, who killed five people in 2000. A third death sentence was also upheld.

Co-sponsors of the repeal say it may be hard for some to vote for repeal without appearing like they’re letting the Carr brothers off the hook. The measure, however, wouldn’t apply to the Carrs.

KSU professor’s performance nominated for Grammy Awards

Pinkall- photo KSU
Pinkall- photo KSU

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas State University professor has been nominated for two Grammy awards for his solo performance on an album with the Kansas City Chorale.

Bryan Pinkall, assistant professor of music, and the Kansas City Chorale were nominated in the categories of Best Choral Performance and Best Engineered Album for their album “Rachmaninoff: All-Night Vigil.”

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports (https://bit.ly/1PsCesQ ) the album was released last March and debuted at No. 1 on the Classical and Traditional Classical Billboard charts.

Pinkall previously served as manager of performance operations and direction for the Emmy-winning 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games Opening Ceremony. He also managed the production of Pope Francis’ Mass in Philadelphia in 2015.

Man drowns in private Kansas lake

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Sedgwick County authorities say a man has drowned after a boating accident on a private lake near Wichita.

Sedgwick County law enforcement and emergency personnel were called Sunday morning to the private lake in western Sedgwick County on a report that a small boat had capsized. The Wichita Eagle reports (https://bit.ly/1KyuvSC ) that two men were duck hunting in the boat when it capsized.

One of the men swam to shore of the private lake, which is a few miles south of Cheney Reservoir.

Emergency rescue crews located the second person, who had drowned.

 

 

Kan. woman seeks release after sentence for enslaving mentally ill at group home

department of justiceWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman serving a federal sentence for enslaving mentally ill residents at a Newton group home is seeking an early release from a federal medical center.

Linda Kaufman and her husband, Arlan Kaufman, were convicted about a decade ago of forcing residents to work naked at their farm and perform sexual acts over a 15-year period, while billing their families and the government for “nude therapy” sessions.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Prison Warden Jody Upton has extended to victims an opportunity to comment on a request submitted by Linda Kaufman for “compassionate release” from Carswell Federal Medical Center in Fort Worth, Texas.

Linda Kaufman’s served about a decade and otherwise won’t be out of prison until 2018.

Her husband lost a 2012 appeal of his 30-year sentence

Wichita State battles bed bugs in residence hall

WSU map
WSU map

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita State University and a dormitory resident whose room is infested with bed bugs are at odds over who should pay an exterminator for a second round of treatments

Freshman Londyn Bobbitt says she first found bed bugs in November in her room at Fairmount Towers.

KAKE-TV reports that her room was treated, but that she found the bugs again last week. The school began treating her room again Thursday but says she’s responsible for the $800 bill.

Wichita State housing director Scott Jensen says the pest control company is “very confident” that the bugs were eradicated.

Bobbitt insists there’s no way she brought the bed bugs out or back into her room. For now, Bobbitt says she’ll continue sleeping on her desk while fighting the university. Bed bugs live on blood.

Kan. lawmakers seek answers on computer system delays

Rep. Stephanie Clayton
Rep. Stephanie Clayton

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Lawmakers seeking assurances about the computerized system that determines eligibility for social service and Medicaid programs were told it’s unclear when the system will begin working.

A recent audit showed the Kansas Eligibility Enforcement System is more than two years behind schedule and set to exceed its original budget by at least $46 million.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports (https://bit.ly/1PsCrMT ) lawmakers focused on the social services budget met recently to evaluate an audit of the system.

Rep. Stephanie Clayton asked Glen Yancey, chief information officer at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, how long it will take for the KEES system to come online. Yancey said he didn’t know but he could provide an estimate in three months.

Yancey has cited changing federal requirements as a partial explanation for delays.

Regents balance interests in Kansas guns-on-campus debate

concealed and carryJIM SUHR, Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — As head of the governing board of Kansas’ state university system, Shane Bangerter figured the panel was in a no-win situation last week when faced with the need to adopt guidelines for how gun owners will be able to carry concealed firearms onto campuses and into some buildings next year.

Opposition to the law permitting concealed carry has been fierce on the system’s six campuses, largely on public safety grounds. That disapproval is counterbalanced by a Legislature that holds strong gun rights majorities in both the House and Senate, controls the universities’ purse strings and has pushed to let gun owners carry their weapons as many places as possible.

Wednesday’s action by the board of regents drew approval from both sides. But the divide over guns at college is likely to continue simmering through July 2017, when the law passed in 2013 takes effect.

“Obviously not everybody’s going to be happy,” Bangerter said. “But it is what it is, and we’re doing our best to follow the law.”

Over time, he said, the unease will blow over. But a faculty adviser to an anti-gun student club, worried that guns on campus could spawn violence during intense classroom discussions or suicides among despondent students, thinks Bangerter is mistaken.

“That just implies it’s no big deal,” said Allan Hanson, a University of Kansas anthropology professor who counseled KU’s “Keep Guns Off Campus” group. “What I hope will blow over will be this law.

“This is a really, really dangerous, uncalled for and stupid law.”

In Kansas, where gun owners can carry concealed without a license or training, public universities as of July 2017 must allow anyone 21 or older to have concealed firearms on campus in buildings without security measures including metal detectors — an option widely considered cost-prohibitive for the majority of campus buildings. The regents last week directed the universities to develop more detailed policies by the fall for the safe storage and handling of guns on campus, and to determine which buildings will see beefed-up security.

State Sen. Forrest Knox, a southeast Kansas Republican and a leading gun rights advocate, praised the regents’ handling of the matter.

“They’re complying with the law and being reasonable,” said Knox, from Altoona.

Kansas and at least seven other states allow carrying a concealed weapon on a college campus, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Missouri and 18 other states ban concealed carry on campus, but lawmakers in Missouri have proposed legislation to lift the ban. Two dozen states leave the decision to the college or university.

The Kansas law’s supporters argue gun-free zones attract mass shootings. But opposition on the affected campuses left the Kansas regents “serving two masters,” said Chapman Rackaway, a political science professor at Fort Hays State University, among the schools the regents oversee.

“When the two come into conflict, it’s a tough place for the regents to be in,” Rackaway said. He said the board made a good decision in letting each university draft concealed-carry policies unique to their campus.

At Fort Hays, the westernmost and most rural of the affected Kansas schools, Rackaway said reaction to the law has “ranged from disinterest and ambivalence to outright fear.”

“What nobody is saying is, ‘This is going to make our campus safer,'” he said.

At southeast Kansas’ Pittsburg State University, 21-year-old senior David Haag said he has felt unnerved by U.S. campus shootings in recent years and isn’t mollified by Kansas’ broadened concealed carry law, fearing that “shootings will increase.”

“I’m not a fan of it in any form. Not one bit,” said Haag, a senior communications major from Topeka. Before the law takes effect, “I’m trying to graduate.”

Knox, the lawmaker, countered that campus shootings have been more about the shooter’s “criminal behavior” than about concealed carry, insisting the Kansas law “just allows law-abiding citizens to provide for their own protection.”

One secret to composting? Worms.

vermicomposterFHSU University Relations and Marketing

What is one of the secrets to composting? Worms.

In a free presentation about using worms to recycle organic food waste, Dr. Jean Gleichsner, associate professor of agriculture at Fort Hays State University, will explain at the next Science Café how composting is simple and effective, beginning at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 26, at Gella’s Diner, 117 E. 11th.

“The benefit of using worms is that the worms will produce a high quality compost and fertilizing liquid,” said Gleichsner. “It saves water, energy and landfills, and helps rebuild the soil.”

Gleichsner’s presentation, “Vermiculture: Let Worms Eat Your Garbage,” is sponsored by the FHSU Science and Mathematics Education Institute and is open to the public.

Kan. jury: Man convicted in child sex case is a violent sexual predator

Smith
Smith

HUTCHINSON. – It only took an all female jury 30-minutes to find a Kansas man who served time in prison for child sex crimes was a violent sexual predator.

They got the case against Charles Smith, 29, after the defense rested Friday morning. The only evidence the defense presented to the court was the plea agreement that Smith signed in the case involving a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old in 2009.

District Attorney Keith Schroeder objected citing relevancy, but Defense Attorney Ben Fisher noted that the victim in the case considered them to be boyfriend and girlfriend.

Schroeder fired back that it was still a crime under Kansas’ law, since Smith was 22 and she was only 15 at the time.

Smith was originally charged with aggravated indecent liberties with a child, but the state dropped it to indecent liberties with a child as part of the plea agreement.

He also entered a plea to a second count of failing to register as a sex offender.

As part of the same agreement, the state dropped a second count of failing to register.

The state Thursday presented evidence that based on test given to Smith, he is considered a moderate to high risk of committing another sexual crime within the next five years.

He was involved in a rape case in North Carolina and also convicted of sexual battery in South Carolina.

The original Reno County case involved Smith bringing a 15-year-old with him from North Carolina and she was a runaway from Texas.

The two apparently had sex while living in Hutchinson but also while in North Carolina.

After the six-member jury came back with their decision, District Judge Trish Rose ordered Smith to Larned State Hospital where he’ll remain indefinitely while getting treatment as a sex predator.

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