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KDA seeks participants for Petfood Forum Asia

petfood forum asiaMANHATTAN – The Kansas Department of Agriculture (KDA) is seeking individuals to participate in Petfood Forum Asia in Bangkok, Thailand, from March 29–April 1, 2016.

In an effort to help Kansas small businesses in the pet food and pet care market, this conference will allow the representatives to explore export opportunities, conduct market research and begin to establish a network of contacts.

KDA plans to take a group of five representatives of Kansas companies within the pet food industry. Interested individuals should complete the application forms available on the KDA website at bit.ly/KDAInternationalMarketing. Pet food related companies meeting the Small Business Administration’s definition of a small or medium-sized business are invited to apply to participate. Applications are due by January 29, 2016.

The dog and cat food sector contributes approximately $2.53 billion annually to the Kansas economy, and supports more than 1,900 jobs in Kansas. “The pet food industry is a priority area of economic growth for Kansas agriculture,” said Kansas Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey. “There is great potential in opportunities available internationally and we are pleased to help small businesses in Kansas explore the export market by providing programs that encourage growth.”

Petfood Forum Asia is a premier networking and educational conference for global pet food manufacturing industry professionals held in conjunction with Victam Asia/FIAAP Asia Pacific (Feed Ingredient and Additives), one of the largest agri-feed trade shows in the world. Participants will meet with the industry’s leading suppliers of equipment and ingredients, and observe exhibitions displaying the latest technology available that is used in the manufacture and processing of feeds for animals, pets, and aquatics.

Attendance at Petfood Forum Asia is supported by a State Trade and Export Program (STEP) grant, funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration, which helps Kansas non-exporters get started and existing exporters to export more. Since the grant’s inception in 2012, more than 30 Kansas small businesses have participated and achieved $9.2 million in actual export sales.

For more information, contact KDA Agribusiness Development Director Lynne Hinrichsen at [email protected] or (785) 564-6757.

Youth identifies 225 bird species in Kansas

birdersKDWPT

PRATT–Cardinals, sparrows, bluejays and doves might be the extent of your bird identification knowledge, and that’s okay, but wouldn’t it be neat to know what kind of bird is plucking those bugs off your bumper? Or what kind of bird is building a nest in your favorite tree out back? For birders, keeping a running tally of the species they identify is an ongoing challenge. And for Sam Schermerhorn, Wamego, who competed in the youth category of the 2015 Kansas Birding Big Year contest, that tally was 225 species observed during the year. Schermerhorn won his category, comparing respectably to the overall winner, Andrew Burnett, who observed 317 species, an outstanding total for the state.

For three years running, the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism has hosted a Birding Big Year contest where participants join in a friendly competition to see who can identify the most bird species in a calendar year. The competition is divided into three age categories: youth (17 and under), adult (18-64), and senior (65+), with the adult category being broken down into three skill levels.

The results for 2015 were spectacular:

ADULT DIVISION

Advanced

1st – Matt Gearheart, 288

2nd – Pete Janzen, 262

3rd – E.J. Raynor, 259

4th – Brett Sandercock, 256

5th – Carol Morgan, 231

Intermediate

1st – Andrew Burnett, 317

2nd – Sue Newland, 283

3rd – Malcom Gold, 277

4th – Nick Varvel, 275

5th – Tom Ewert, 245

Novice

1st – Don Merz, 287

2nd – Jennifer Hammett, 252

3rd – Todd Becker, 172

YOUTH DIVISION

1st – Sam Schermerhorn, 225

2nd – Ella Burnett, 194

3rd – Joshua Keating, 142

4th – Jacob Keating, 137

5th – Emma Littich, 91

SENIOR DIVISION

1st – Mick McHugh, 267

2nd – Dan Larson, 241

3rd – John Row, 208

OVERALL WINNERS

1st – Andrew Burnett (Erie) – Adult, Intermediate, 317 species

2nd – Matt Gearheart (Lenexa) – Adult, Advanced, 288 species

3rd – Don Merz (Horton) – Adult, Novice, 287 species

4th – Sue Newland (Wakarusa) – Adult, Intermediate, 283 species

5th – Malcom Gold (Overland Park) – Adult, Intermediate, 277 species

Apart from bragging rights, winners of the 2015 contest will receive prizes donated from several sponsors, including Bass Pro Shops, Cabela’s, The Coleman Company, Acorn Naturalists of Tustin, Calif., and the KDWPT Education Section.

The winners of each category will also each receive matted and framed original ink drawings of native Kansas bird species, drawn and donated by Dr. Robert Penner of Ellinwood, as well as a signed copy of Penner’ book, Birds of Cheyenne Bottoms. Dr. Penner is the land steward and avian projects coordinator for the Nature Conservancy at Cheyenne Bottoms.

If you’re interested in participating in the 2016 competition, visit https://ksoutdoors.com/Services/Wildlife-Diversity/2016-Kansas-Birding-Big-Year for details.

Whether it’s time spent outdoors, or time spent with the ones you love that will get you out the front door, consider making birding an item on your to-do list this year. And take a kid with you.

Partly cloudy, mild Sunday

FileLA warm front will lift into Kansas today with mild temperatures. An upper level disturbance will then bring a cold front across the Central Plains tonight into Monday with strong winds. There is a slight chance of rain and snow late Sunday night into Monday morning.

The rest of the week will see a warming trend as snow melts, with highs in the 40s and then in the 50s by the end of the week.

Today: Areas of freezing fog before 9am. Partly sunny, with a high near 46. Light and variable wind becoming south southeast 5 to 8 mph in the morning.

Tonight: A slight chance of rain and snow between 9pm and 11pm, then a slight chance of snow after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27. East northeast wind 7 to 17 mph becoming north northwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Monday: A 20 percent chance of snow before 8am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 40. Windy, with a north northwest wind 20 to 26 mph, with gusts as high as 36 mph.

Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 22. Blustery, with a northwest wind 15 to 20 mph decreasing to 9 to 14 mph after midnight.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 41. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph.

Closer Look at Court’s Decision: Kan. Constitution Provides Right to Abortion

The Kansas Court of Appeals ruled that the Kansas Constitution's Bill of Rights provides a right to abortion. JENNIFER MORROW / FLICKR--CC
The Kansas Court of Appeals ruled that the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights provides a right to abortion.
JENNIFER MORROW / FLICKR–CC

In a sweeping decision, the Kansas Court of Appeals on Friday ruled that the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights provides a right to abortion and blocked a Kansas law banning the second-trimester abortion method known as “dilation and evacuation.”

The ruling represents a major victory for abortion rights activists, who contended the ban increased the complexity and risk of second-trimester abortions. And it marks the first time a Kansas appellate court has found a right to abortion in the Kansas Constitution.

DOWNLOAD THE KANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DECISION HERE 

Signifying the importance of the case, all 14 judges on the court weighed in. The court split down the middle, with seven judges voting to uphold a lower court ruling temporarily blocking implementation of the Kansas ban and seven voting to reverse the lower court. When an appeals court is equally divided, the trial court’s ruling is upheld.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said the state would request immediate review by the Kansas Supreme Court.

Writing for the faction voting to strike down the ban, Judge Steve A. Leben said that “(t)he rights of Kansas women in 2016 are not limited to those specifically intended by the men who drafted our state’s constitution in 1859.”

Leben also noted that Kansas has banned what’s known as the intact D&E abortion procedure since 1998. “By combining that ban with a new one on the D&E abortion procedure,” he wrote, “Kansas has simply attempted to do in two statutes what the United States Supreme Court held Nebraska could not do in one—ban both D&E and intact D&E abortions.”

The case was brought last year by two Overland Park doctors, Herbert Hodes, and his daughter, Dr. Traci Nauser, who operate one of three abortion clinics in Kansas. The pair challenged the D&E ban, which the Legislature enacted last year.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback issued a statement saying he was “deeply disappointed in the court’s decision to allow dismemberment abortions of a living child to continue in the State of Kansas. The court’s failure to protect the basic human rights and dignity of the unborn is counter to Kansans’ sense of justice.”

“Seven judges have chosen to create law based upon their own preferences rather than apply the law justly and fairly,” the statement continued. “I support the Attorney General in his call on the Kansas Supreme Court for a swift decision protecting the unborn.”

Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, which represented Hodes and Nauser, said in a statement that the ruling was “a landmark victory for Kansas women, whose rights and health have been under siege for far too long.”

“The state Court of Appeals has rightly affirmed that Kansas women have the right to safely and legally end a pregnancy under their state constitution, free from political interference,” she said.

Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, which was not a party to the case but has been involved in other battles challenging Kansas abortion restrictions, issued a statement congratulating Hodes and Nauser.

“Their brave fight blocked enforcement of a medically dangerous ban on the safest, most commonly used form of second trimester abortion,” the statement said, calling the Kansas ban “an irresponsible attempt to restrict women’s access to safe, legal surgical abortions.”

D&E accounts for about 9 percent of all abortions in Kansas, although nearly all second-trimester abortions are performed using the procedure. Anti-abortion activists call it “dismemberment abortion” but it’s known medically as dilation and evacuation, or D&E.

The Kansas ban allowed D&E in only three situations: where it was necessary to preserve the life of the mother; where the pregnancy’s continuation would cause the mother “substantial and irreversible” physical harm; or where the fetus was already dead. Doctors found to violate the law were subject to criminal prosecution.

The law was based on model legislation from the National Right to Life Committee and was the first of its kind in the nation. Oklahoma passed an identical ban after Kansas, and other states, including Missouri, have considered similar bills.

The Oklahoma ban was also challenged and blocked by a lower court. The case is pending on appeal.

The challenge to the Kansas law was unusual in that it was based not on the U.S. Constitution and the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark abortion decision, Roe v. Wade, but on the first two sections of the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights.

Section 1 of the Kansas Bill of Rights provides, “All men are possessed of equal inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Section 2 provides, “All political power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are founded on their authority, and are instituted for their equal protection and benefit …”

In rooting the right to abortion in the Kansas Constitution, Leben said that the right to liberty “fits squarely within both the federal abortion-rights cases and the broader substantive-due process case law within which the federal constitutional right to abortion has taken form.”

In July, Shawnee County District Judge Larry D. Hendricks reached a similar conclusion when he issued a temporary injunction blocking the law from taking effect. Hendricks ruled that the Kansas Bill of Rights “independently protects the fundamental right to abortion.”

In his decision, Hendricks also determined that alternatives to D&E weren’t reasonable, “would force unwanted medical treatment on women, and in some instances would operate as a requirement that physicians experiment on women with known and unknown safety risks as a condition (of) accessing the fundamental right of abortion.”

The state appealed, arguing that the Kansas Constitution contains no reference to abortion and the Kansas Supreme Court has never recognized a state-law right to abortion. It also contended the law only banned one abortion method and other safe alternatives were available.

The full court of 14 judges heard oral arguments in December. Appeals are typically heard by a three-judge panel of the court.

Leben was joined in his opinion by five other judges. A sixth judge, G. Gordon Atcheson, wrote a separate concurring opinion.

Judge Tom Malone wrote a dissenting opinion joined by six other judges. In his dissent, Malone said that he would not find an independent state-law right to abortion in the Kansas Constitution.

“Based on this finding, and because the plaintiffs’ claims are brought solely under the Kansas Constitution, it follows that the plaintiffs have failed to establish a substantial likelihood of prevailing on the merits of their claims,” he wrote.

Dan Margolies, editor of the Heartland Health Monitor team, is based at KCUR. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.

What to do when the IRS calls looking for money

ScamANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Treasury Department has a message for taxpayers getting calls from the IRS demanding immediate payment: Hang up.

Those aggressive, threatening calls are coming from phone scammers. And they’re successful, too, costing more than 5,000 victims upward of $26.5 million since October 2013. About 900,000 scammer contacts were reported during that period.

Officials say the callers fraudulently claim to be with the IRS and demand that taxpayers immediately send them payment. They often have some personal information about the person they’re calling and threaten criminal charges unless immediate payment is made.

Meanwhile, tax filing season opened Tuesday, and the IRS says its systems are running smoothly.

Saturday’s high school basketball scores

BOYS’ BASKETBALL
Arkansas City 71, Chaparral 54
Clearwater 59, Belle Plaine 39
Mulvane 58, Kingman 56
Baldwin Tournament
KC Bishop Ward 51, Louisburg 44
Wellsville 54, Anderson County 49
Augusta 65, Baldwin 55
Bonner Springs 51, KC Harmon 40
Basehor Linwood Invitational
Ottawa 57, Benton, Mo. 46
Topeka Hayden 67, Park Hill, Mo. 53
Burlington Tournament
Independence 57, Labette County 47
Iola 71, Flint Hills Job Corps 62
Rock Creek 65, Paola 60
Sabetha 51, Burlington 24
Burrton Invitational Tournament
Burrton 42, Goessel 40
Berean Academy 51, Inman 43
Centre Tournament
Salina Sacred Heart 68, Marion 41
Solomon 40, Wakefield 26
Elyria Christian 68, Centre 66
Chanute Tournament
Chanute 61, Winfield 43
Shawnee Heights 62, Goddard 54
Andover Central 66, Emporia 50
Olathe North 62, SM South 49
Cherokee Southeast Tournament
Jayhawk Linn 57, Columbus 32
Erie 46, Southeast 35
Baxter Springs 64, St. Paul 48
Seneca, Mo. 49, Parsons 45
Coffeyville Tournament
Wichita Defenders 73, Wichita Life Prep 40
Owasso, Okla. 56, Coffeyville 37
Bishop Miege 60, Sand Springs, Okla. 50
Colby Classic Tournament
Palmer Ridge, Colo. 62, Colby 51
KC Schlagle 58, Pine Creek, Colo. 55
Scott City 51, McCook, Neb. 22
Scott City 48, Fountain-Fort Carson, Colo. 45
Dodge City Tournament
Leavenworth 48, Hutchinson 38
Hays 59, Dodge City 43
Manhattan 70, Maize 53
Wichita Heights 61, Wichita East 54
El Dorado Bluestem Classic
Circle 75, Great Bend 66
Wichita Collegiate 73, Newton 51
Wichita Campus 51, Wichita Trinity 45
Kapaun Mount Carmel 64, El Dorado 49
Flint Hills League Tournament
Northern Heights 66, Herington 47
Mission Valley 49, Chase County 47
Council Grove 71, West Franklin 60
Osage City 59, Lyndon 46
Frontenac Tournament
Prairie View 47, Southwest (Washburn), Mo. 38
Riverton 63, Frontenac 53, OT
Fort Scott 60, Nevada, Mo. 51
Pacific, Mo. 65, Wichita Independent 61
Halstead Tournament
Garden Plain 47, Rose Hill 34
Cheney 44, Douglass 19
Hi-Plains League Tournament
Sublette 46, Rolla 9
Meade 81, Wichita County 58
Cimarron 55, Johnson-Stanton County 39
Southwestern Hts. 51, Lakin 50
Hillsboro Tournament
Riley County 51, Clay Center 48
Hillsboro 49, Republic County 33
Wichita Sunrise 63, Bennington 52
Holcomb 67, Hesston 57
Hoisington Tournament
Otis-Bison 39, Ellsworth 29
Hoisington 39, Minneapolis 38
Immaculata Tournament
KC East Christian 70, Immaculata 37
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 50, Topeka Heritage Christian 33
McLouth Invitational Tournament
KC Christian 89, Veritas Christian 71
Bishop Seabury Academy 85, Riverside 49
McPherson Invitational Tournament
Wichita North 55, SM East 77
BV West 53, Derby 46
Wichita Bishop Carroll 58, Junction City 45
McPherson 63, Lawrence Free State 54
Mid Continent League Tournament
Hill City 49, Plainville 33
Smith Center 66, Trego 58
Phillipsburg 55, Ellis 45
Hays-TMP-Marian 50, Norton 36
Nemaha Central Tournament
Silver Lake, Neb. 61, Jackson Heights 53
Nemaha Central 44, Falls City, Neb. 41
Northwest Kansas League Tournament
Wallace County 68, St. Francis 49
Pleasanton Tournament
Marmaton Valley 42, Altoona-Midway 12
Heritage Christian 47, Pleasanton 42
Oswego 59, Uniontown 41
Humboldt 63, Central Heights 55, OT
Royal Valley Tournament
Royal Valley 47, Chapman 39
Wabaunsee 57, Santa Fe Trail 47
Salina Tournament
Buhler 68, Goodland 38
Liberal 58, Concordia 55
Abilene 60, Salina South 57
Salina Central 56, Andover 35
Skyline Tournament
South Barber 74, Stafford 35
Norwich 57, Cunningham 52
Kinsley 47, Medicine Lodge 46
Attica 42, Pratt Skyline 33
South Central Border League Tournament
Oxford 48, Udall 43
Argonia 54, Cedar Vale/Dexter 51
Caldwell 62, Flinthills 46
West Elk 61, Sedan 50
SPIAA Tournament
Hodgeman County 56, Pawnee Heights 36
Kiowa County 68, Bucklin 15
St Thomas Aquinas Tournament
SM Northwest 60, Wichita Life Prep 49
Barstow, Mo. 84, Washburn Rural 63
St. Thomas Aquinas 53, St. James Academy 45
Olathe East 59, Mill Valley 54
St. John Tournament
Ness City 65, Macksville 49
Pratt 67, Larned 62
Topeka West Tournament
Topeka West 55, Wichita Northwest 33
Wichita South 77, KC Washington 67
Topeka 57, Olathe South 52
Lawrence 62, Highland Park 61, OT
Twin Valley League Tournament
Clifton-Clyde 61, Wetmore 42
Onaga 60, BV Randolph 48
Axtell 64, Frankfort 56
Hanover 67, Doniphan West 60
Washington County 43, Centralia 39
Troy 67, Valley Heights 63
Valley Center Tournament
Garden City 68, Ulysses 54
Valley Center 50, KC Turner 47
Maize South 56, Olathe Northwest 44
Wichita Southeast 81, Topeka Seaman 45
Valley Falls Tournament
Oskaloosa 55, Atchison County 48
Cair Paravel 59, Cornerstone Family 58, OT
Rossville 61, Perry-Lecompton 39
Jefferson North 50, Valley Falls 36
Wilson County Classic
Girard 85, Fredonia 67

GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
Marion 55, Wakefield 40
Basehor Linwood Invitational
Ottawa 49, Olathe North 46
Park Hill, Mo. 63, Basehor-Linwood 49
Topeka Hayden 63, Holton 49
Benton, Mo. 55, Blue Valley Stillwell 37
Burlington Tournament
Cair Paravel 44, Rock Creek 37
Independence 60, Iola 48
Paola 71, Labette County 62
Sabetha 51, Burlington 24
Centre Tournament
Salina Sacred Heart 53, Rural Vista 21
Solomon 46, Peabody-Burns 40
Elyria Christian 46, Centre 26
Marion 55, Wakefield 40
Coffeyville Tournament
Coffeyville 57, Tulsa (Nathan) Hale, Okla. 30
Sand Springs, Okla. 51, Wichita Life Prep 49
Colby Tournament
McCook, Neb. 49, Scott City 43
Palmer Ridge, Colo. 52, Colby 39
Flint Hills LeagueTournament
Mission Valley 52, Lyndon 29
Herington 50, Osage City 35
Northern Heights 44, West Franklin 36
Council Grove 40, Chase County 33
Frontenac Tournament
Frontenac 70, Hogan Prep, Mo. 18
OKC Classen Adv., Okla. 45, Fort Scott 41
Blue Springs, Mo. 47, Prairie View 40
Blue Valley Southwest 73, Nevada, Mo. 34
Hi-Plains League Tournament
Johnson-Stanton County 41, Rolla 25
Sublette 55, Southwestern Hts. 44
Meade 59, Lakin 33
Hillsboro Tournament
Wichita Sunrise 58, Bennington 36
Republic County 45, Holcomb 29
Riley County 46, Hillsboro 34
Hesston 41, Clay Center 33
Hoisington Tournament
Victoria 42, Ellinwood 25
Otis-Bison 61, Ellsworth 50
LaCrosse 54, Russell 48
Immaculata Tournament
Immaculata 42, KC East Christian 37
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 39, Topeka Heritage Christian 24
McLouth Tournament
Veritas Christian 58, Maranatha Academy 28
Riverside 47, KC Christian 46
Mid Continent League Tournament
Norton 47, Smith Center 35
Phillipsburg 46, Stockton 33
Hays-TMP-Marian 57, Hill City 44
Northwest Kansas League Tournament
Quinter 56, Wallace County 36
Pittsburg Tournament
Atchison 42, Winnetonka, Mo. 35
Pittsburg 46, BV Northwest 40
Pleasanton Tournament
Marmaton Valley 48, Altoona-Midway 16
Uniontown 49, Pleasanton 46
Central Heights 38, Heritage Christian 36
Humboldt 58, Oswego 56
Royal Valley Tournament
Chapman 58, Royal Valley 47
Wabaunsee 46, Santa Fe Trail 33
Salina Invitational Tournament
Abilene 43, Liberal 35
Concordia 58, Goodland 54
Buhler 39, Salina South 36
Salina Central 67, Andover 47
South Central Border League Tournament
Udall 56, West Elk 50
Central Burden 35, Argonia 31
South Haven 50, Caldwell 33
Sedan 57, Flinthills 26
Southeast Cherokee Tournament
Baxter Springs 43, Parsons 36
St. Paul 61, Columbus 33
Twin Valley League Tournament
Linn 48, Doniphan West 35
Troy 49, BV Randolph 31
Washington County 51, Wetmore 42
Valley Heights 55, Clifton-Clyde 36
Axtell 65, Frankfort 36
Hanover 55, Centralia 48
High School Scoreboard WhitmoreWilson County Classic
Neodesha 78, Bluestem 45
Caney Valley 44, Cherryvale 35
Girard 53, Fredonia 47

TMP sweeps MCL Tournament Titles

By JEREMY McGUIRE

Girls:  TMP 57, Hill City 44

TMP never trailed in their 57-44 win over Hill City in the Mid Continent League Tournament Championship game on Saturday night at Plainville High School.  TMP was able to keep the Hill City shooters in check for most of the game. The Lady Monarchs led 19-12 after the first quarter and extended that lead to 32-17 at halftime.

The Lady Ringnecks were able slice the TMP lead to five by the end of the third quarter at 42-37.  Hill City made things very interesting with the first bucket of the fourth quarter to cut the TMP lead to three, as close as it had been since 6-4 early in the first quarter.  That is when the Lady Monarchs slammed the door shut with a seven-nothing run to push the lead back to double digits.

Hill City would not threaten again.  TMP has won their second straight MCL Tournament and will be off until Friday night when they travel to Abilene.

ROSE MCFARLAND INTERVIEW

GAME HIGHLIGHTS

Boys:  TMP 50, Norton 36

TMP and Norton slugged it out in Plainville on Saturday night in the Mid Continent League Tournament Championship game with the Monarchs coming out on top 50-36.  It was a tightly contested affair throughout the first half with TMP leading 25-23 at the break. Both teams went to the locker room feeling good about their chances.

The Monarchs methodically extended their lead to six after three quarters of play and then the final margin of 14 points.  Jared Vitztum paced TMP with 23 points, Jace Ruder led Norton with 14.  TMP has now won 10 games in a row as they are off until the travel to Abilene.

JOE HERTEL INTERVIEW

GAME HIGHLIGHTS

 

Kansas State tops Oklahoma State

By TATE STEINLAGE
Associated Press

MANHATTAN, Kansas (AP) – Kamau Stokes and Justin Edwards scored 13 points apiece, and Kansas State hit nine 3-pointers to help snap a two-game losing streak, topping Oklahoma State 89-73 on Saturday.

Dean Wade and Wesley Iwundu finished with 12 points apiece, and Stephen Hurt added 11 points and five rebounds.

Lackluster shooting had plagued Kansas State (12-7, 2-5) in Big 12 play so far, but it was the 3-point ball that propelled the Wildcats to a second conference win. The Wildcats converted 9 of 17 3-point attempts, led by Stokes with four makes.

Even when the deep ball wasn’t connecting, Kansas State still found a way to score. D.J. Johnson rose above two Oklahoma State defenders to throw down an emphatic put-back dunk with 13:02 to play after Barry Brown missed a 3-point attempt.

Tyree Griffin led Oklahoma State (10-9, 2-5) with 18 points and five assists.

Kan. man enters plea in case of car explosion that injured his son

Schell- photo Shawnee County
Schell- photo Shawnee County

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man facing charges linked to an explosion in his car that injured his 4-year-old son has pleaded not guilty and waived his preliminary hearing.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that through his attorney, Jacob Daniel Schell entered not guilty pleas on Friday in Shawnee County court to charges, including aggravated battery of the child and criminal use of explosives.

Schell has been released on bond.

Schell’s son, Roman, who was 4 at the time, was injured July 5, 2015, when he was in a car with Schell and a sack containing explosives blew up in the child’s lap.

Rather than scheduling a jury trial Friday, attorneys asked the judge to schedule a status conference because they’re negotiating a non-trial resolution.

The status conference is March 11.

Kansas police officer to compete for Miss Kansas title

Conn- photo Miss Southwest Kansas Organization
Conn- photo Miss Southwest Kansas Organization

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — A Salina police officer says she hopes competing in this summer’s Miss Kansas pageant will help improve the image of law enforcement officers.

Katie Conn will compete in the June pageant after being one of two people chosen to advance in the Miss Santa Fe Trail pageant in Ulysses Jan. 9. The 23-year-old Conn became a Salina police officer in October 2014.

The Salina Journal reports Conn gave a 90-second monologue about her law enforcement career in the talent portion of the Miss Santa Fee contest.

Conn enjoys being a role model, both as a pageant title holder and as a police officer. She says the best part is talking to children about trying to achieve their dreams, no matter who they are.

3-pointers carry Northwest Missouri State past FHSU

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

MARYVILLE, Mo. – Northwest Missouri State hit 13 three-pointers as they roll past Fort Hays State 77-55 Saturday afternoon at Bearcat Arena. The Bearcats (13-5, 10-3 MIAA) hit as many shots from beyond the arc as they did inside as they win their third straight. The Tigers (13-6, 7-6 MIAA) were held to 36-percent shooting as they lose their second staight.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview


Game Highlights

 

Northwest scored the first five points and never trailed, leading by as many as 14 in the first half and 27 in the the second half. Zach Schneider, who hit six 3-pointers to set the NWMSU career record, led the Bearcats with a career-high 18 points.

Rob Davis led the Tigers with 13 points. Craig Nicholson added 11 and moves into seventh on the FHSU all-time scoring list with 1,292 for his career.

Rulings in Kansas cases revive conservatives’ push on courts

State Senator Jeff King
State Senator Jeff King

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his allies are trying to revive their push to remake Kansas’ courts by stoking public outrage after recent abortion and death penalty rulings.

Brownback has repeatedly advocated overhauling how Kansas Supreme Court justices are selected, potentially giving governors and legislators have more control. He and other prominent conservative Republicans renewed their calls for change over the past week.

The current system relies on a lawyer-led commission to screen Supreme Court applicants. The governor must appoint one of its three finalists. Lawmakers have no role.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Jeff King said rulings voters dislike can get their attention and focus them on possible changes. The Independence Republican favors overhauling the selection system.

Kansas Bar Association Executive Director Jordan Yochim called the push politically motivated.

Kansas woman hospitalized after driver runs stop sign

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMSALINE COUNTY – A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 2p.m. on Saturday in Saline County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Ford F150 driven by Richard B. Schaefer, 71, Wolf Lake, IL., was east bound on Kansas 4 just west of the city limits of Assaria.

The driver failed to stop at the stop sign at Old Highway 81 and collided with a northbound 2011 Ford Escape driven by Linda M. Rittel, 57, Salina.

Rittel was transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.
Schaefer and a passenger were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

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