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Shamet, Frankamp lead No. 5 Wichita State over Tulsa

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Landry Shamet and backcourt mate Conner Frankamp each scored 16 points and No. 5 Wichita State held off Tulsa 72-69 Saturday.

Shamet made the first of two free throws with 8 seconds left for a three-point edge.

After Shamet missed his second foul shot, the Shockers fouled Sterling Taplin. He missed the front end of a one-and-one with 4.9 seconds left, Junior Etou rebounded and passed back to Taplin, whose 3-point try at the buzzer rimmed out.

Taplin scored 26 points. Corey Henderson missed a 3 with 10 seconds left that would have put Tulsa ahead by one.

Markis McDuffie added 10 points and nine rebounds for Wichita State (14-2, 5-0 American Athletic Conference).

Henderson had 14 points and Etou had 12 points and seven rebounds for Tulsa (10-8, 3-3).

Three days after losing 104-71 at Houston, Tulsa jumped on the Shockers early and held a 30-20 lead, helped by a trio of 3-pointers by Taplin. Wichita State rallied with a 12-0 run and held Tulsa to one basket in the final 7:50 to take a 36-32 lead at the break.

The Shockers extended the lead to 45-34 early in the second half on a four-point play by Shamet before Tulsa broke out of its shooting funk with a trio of 3-pointers to pull within 45-43.

BIG PICTURE

Wichita State: The Shockers now have a 66-61 lead in the long-running series between the former Missouri Valley Conference rivals. The sellout crowd of 8,355 was fairly evenly divided between Tulsa and WSU fans who made the three-hour drive.

Tulsa: In its three-game conference losing streak, leading scorer Junior Etou has been held to 12, 2 and 12 points. The 6-foot-8 senior came in averaging 16.2.

UP NEXT

Wichita State: The Shockers return home Wednesday to play SMU.

Tulsa: Plays at Temple on Wednesday.

Kansas man sentenced for killing his wife

Fleshman- photo Jackson Co.

HOLTON, Kan. (AP) — A Holton man has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison for killing his wife.

Jackson County authorities say 67-year-old George Fleshman Jr. was sentenced Friday to 9 years and 9 months for second-degree murder.

He was found guilty last month of killing his wife of 25 years, Elizabeth Jane Fleshman, in October 2015.

She died the day after her husband called 911 and said he found her unresponsive at the couple’s home. She was taken to a Topeka hospital where she later died.

Hot shooting second half carries Tigers to win over UNK

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan. – Hadley Gillum scored 23 points and grabbed nine rebounds, redshirt-freshman Jared Vitztum added a career-high 15 and Fort Hays State shot 74-percent from the floor in the second half and 58-percent for the game in a 78-69 victory over Nebraska-Kearney Saturday at Gross Coliseum.

Vitztum his all six of his field goal attempts including three 3-pointers to reach double-figures for the second time in three games. Brady Werth added 14 points and Marcus Cooper 11.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Jared Vitztum Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

The Fort Hays State defense set the tone in the first half, holding the Lopers (6-10, 2-5 MIAA) without a field goal for over nine minutes during a 15-1 run.

The Tigers (11-5, 4-3 MIAA) scored the first eight points of the second half and pushed their lead to 17.

UNK, who missed their first 14 three-point attempts, hit four of the final eight to pull within eight with 2:55 to play following a 15-6 run.

Trey O’Neil hit a layup and Hadley Gillum and Grant Holmes both a pair of free throws to hold the Lopers at bay.

Trey Lansman, who averaged over 30 points in his three prior games at Gross Coliseum, led the Lopers with 27 points and 10 rebounds.

Investigation: How did officials mistakenly warn of inbound missile

HONOLULU (AP) — A false alarm that warned of a ballistic missile headed for Hawaii sent the islands into a panic Saturday, with people abandoning cars in a highway and preparing to flee their homes until officials said the cellphone alert was a mistake.

It wasn’t clear exactly what happened — House Speaker Scott Saiki said someone pushed the wrong button, and the White House said the episode was “purely a state exercise.”

But for nearly 40 minutes, it seemed like the world was about to end in Hawaii, an island paradise already jittery over the threat of nuclear-tipped missiles from North Korea.

The emergency alert, which was sent to cellphones statewide just before 8:10 a.m., said: “BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII. SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL.”

On the H-3, a major highway north of Honolulu, vehicles sat empty after drivers left them to run to a nearby tunnel after the alert showed up, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported. Workers at a golf club huddled in a kitchen fearing the worst.

Professional golfer Colt Knost, staying at Waikiki Beach during a PGA Tour event, said “everyone was panicking” in the lobby of his hotel.

“Everyone was running around like, ‘What do we do?'” he said.

Richard Ing, a Honolulu attorney, was doing a construction project at home when his wife told him about the alert. His wife and children prepared to evacuate while he tried to figure out what was happening.

Cherese Carlson, in Honolulu for a class and away from her children, said she called to make sure they were inside after getting the alert.

“I thought, ‘Oh my god, this is it. Something bad’s about to happen and I could die,'” she said.

The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency tweeted there was no threat about 10 minutes after the initial alert, but that didn’t reach people who aren’t on the social media platform. A revised alert informing of the “false alarm” didn’t reach cellphones until 38 minutes later, according to the time stamp on images people shared on social media.

The incident prompted defense agencies including the Pentagon and the U.S. Pacific Command to issue the same statement, that they had “detected no ballistic missile threat to Hawaii.”

The White House said President Donald Trump, at his private club in Florida, was briefed on the false alert. White House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters said it “was purely a state exercise.”

Saiki, the House speaker, said the system Hawaii residents have been told to rely on failed miserably. He also took emergency management officials to task for taking 30 minutes to issue a correction, prolonging panic.

“Clearly, government agencies are not prepared and lack the capacity to deal with emergency situations,” he said in a statement.

The alert caused a tizzy on the islands and across social media.

At the PGA Tour’s Sony Open on Oahu, Waialae Country Club was largely empty and players were still a few hours from arriving when the alert showed up. Workers streamed into the clubhouse trying to seek cover in the locker room, which was filled with the players’ golf bags, but instead went into the kitchen.

Several players took to Twitter. Justin Thomas, the PGA Tour player of the year, tweeted, “To all that just received the warning along with me this morning … apparently it was a ‘mistake’?? hell of a mistake!! Haha glad to know we’ll all be safe.”

In Honolulu, hair salon owner Jaime Malapit texted his clients that he was cancelling their appointments and was closing his shop for the day.

“I woke up and saw a missile warning and thought ‘no way.’ I thought ‘No, this is not happening today,'” Malapit said.

Brian Naeole, who was visiting Honolulu from Molokai, said he wasn’t worried since he didn’t hear sirens and neither TV nor radio stations issued alerts.

“I thought it was either a hoax or a false alarm,” he said.

Ing, the Honolulu lawyer, tried to find some humor in the situation.

“I thought to myself, it must be someone’s last day at work or someone got extremely upset at a superior and basically did this as a practical joke,’ he said. “But I think it’s a very serious problem if it wasn’t that, or even it was, it shows that we have problems in the system that can cause major disruption and panic and anxiety among people in Hawaii.”

Others were outraged. Hawaii U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz tweeted the false alarm was “totally inexcusable” and was caused by human error.

“There needs to be tough and quick accountability and a fixed process,” he wrote.

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said on social media the panel would launch an investigation.

Tiger wrestlers upset No. 7 CSU-Pueblo, No. 19 Maryville at Midwest Duals

KEARNEY, Neb. – The Fort Hays State wrestling team upset two D2WCA Top 25 teams on their way to a 3-1 day at the Midwest Duals on Saturday (Jan. 13). The Tigers were defeated by #17 Western State Colorado University in the first match of the day. They went on to upset #7 Colorado State-Pueblo, defeating Chadron State and finishing the day upsetting #19 Maryville University.

#17 Western State Colorado University 25 • Fort Hays State 18
The Tigers began the day taking on the Mountaineers in the first dual of the event. WSCU opened the dual with a forfeit victory to take a 6-0 lead after the first bout. Dy’Juan Carney was next in the 133-pound weight class and pinned Colby Duncan in 1:06 within the first period to even the match at 6-6. Third-ranked Brandon Ball did not let Jody Sandoval II score a point in a 12-0 major decision victory in the 141-pound weight class to give the Tigers their first lead of the match, 12-6.

Efe Osaghae continued the Tigers run with a 7-5 decision over Justin Chenoweth in the 149-pound weight class, extending the Tiger lead to 15-6. Western State began to come back in this one after Shawn Beiriger defeated Tiger Brody Lewis with a 13-5 major decision in the 157-pound weight class. Marty Verhaeghe was defeated by Michael Thelen in the 165-pound weight class by way of an 8-2 decision, giving the Mountaineers some life cutting into the Tigers lead as the dual was 15-13 in favor of FHSU after six bouts.

Micquille Robinson (5-2) and Micah Felton (6-4) dropped their matches by decision giving the Mountaineers their first lead since the opening bout as they lead the Tigers 19-15 after eight matches. Rakim Dean fell to sixth-ranked Konnor Schmidt in 6:43 in the 197-pound weight class. Dakota Gulley then used a 17-0 technical fall victory over Samuel DeSeriere in the last bout of the dual.

Fort Hays State 28 • #7 Colorado State University-Pueblo 18
In the second dual of the day, the Tigers faced the ThunderWolves of CSU-Pueblo. Conrad Cole and Dy’Juan Carney pinned their opponents to give the Tigers a quick 12-0 lead over the ThunderWolves. Third-ranked Brandon Ball dropped his third match of the season in a 10-8 sudden victory for Clay Archer, giving the ThunderWolves points on the board as the Tiger lead was diminished to 12-3 after the first three bouts.

Efe Osaghae picked up a 5-3 decision over Gavin Melendez in the 149-pound weight class and Brody Lewis was pinned by ninth-ranked Kyle Fantin in 1:53 into the 157-pound weight class bout. The ThunderWolves picked up another fall over the Tigers as second-ranked JaCobi Jones pinned Marty Verhaeghe in the third period. CSU-Pueblo tied the Tigers 15-15 after six matches.

The Tigers used a 14-6 major decision from Micquille Robinson, a pin from Micah Felton in 2:46 and an 8-1 decision from Rakim Dean to give them the lead for good. Cody Johnson of CSU-Pueblo defeated Dakota Gulley in the 285-pound bout with an 8-6 decision.

Fort Hays State 27 • Chadron State 9
The Tigers took a 15-0 lead right out of the gates in their third dual of the day against the Elmo Eagles after four bouts. Conrad Cole pinned Marcus Hutcherson in the second period. Dy’Juan Carney defeated Chance Karst with an 11-9 decision in the 133-pound bout. Third-ranked Brandon Ball rebounded from his earlier loss with an 8-4 decision over Brock Thumm in the 141-pound bout and Efe Osaghae used a 5-1 decision over Caleb Haskell in the 149-pound bout. Chadron State was able to get on the board by winning the next three weight classes (157, 165 & 174) by decisions to cut the Tiger lead to 15-9 after seven matches.

Micah Felton used a 6-4 decision over Devin Stork in the 184-pound bout to extend the Tigers lead to 18-9. Rakim Dean won via forfeiture in the 197-pound weight class. Dakota Gulley wrapped up the dual in the 285-pound bout with a 3-1 decision over Alexander Mai.

Fort Hays State 29 • Maryville University 12
The Tigers began their fourth and final dual of the day with a bang as they won the first three matches over the Saints. Conrad Cole pinned Kolby Smith in 3:33. Dy’Juan Carney used a 15-11 decision over Taylor Jokerst in the 133-pound bout. In the 141-pound weight class, third-ranked Brandon Ball defeated Michael Cook with an 8-2 decision. The Tigers 12-0 lead was short-lived as the Saints took the next four bouts to tie the match up 12-12. Micah Felton defeated Mladen Vasilev with a 15-0 technical fall in the 184-pound bout to give the Tigers the lead for good. Rakim Dean pinned Dustin Politte in 2:53 and Dakota Gulley won via forfeiture in the 285-pound bout.

The Tigers are back in action next Friday (Jan. 19) as they host #12 Nebraska-Kearney for a home MIAA dual with the Lopers in Gross Memorial Coliseum. The dual is set to begin at 7 p.m.

MARSHALL: Doctor’s Note Jan. 13

Friend,

As many of you are preparing to enjoy the long weekend and looking forward to spending time with your families, I am looking forward to being back on the road in the communities that I represent to hear your concerns and answer your questions face-to-face. Being out in the District and meeting you in person is so important to me, and when I finish up my Listening Tour on Monday, I will have held a town hall in every-one of the 63 counties in Kansas’ 1st District!

Kansans have always been and will remain my top priority, take a look at my list of listening tour dates and locations (shown below) to see where I will be this weekend – If you already missed me, rest assured I will take every opportunity possible to revisit an area near you in the close future!

On Video

Click to watch my CSPAN segment on the future of Healthcare and Immigration Policy!

In the House

The Low Dose Radiation Research Act of 2017 passes out of Committee!

I am proud to be able to say that this week my legislation, The Low Dose Radiation Research Act of 2017 passed through the markup process of the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology.

Every day our citizens are exposed to low-dose radiation. Throughout history, radiation has provided vital tools to physicians, from x-rays and CT scans to cutting-edge cancer treatments. Yet we have a limited understanding of the health risks associated with this exposure. As a doctor, I understand the critical value of verified-research that helps physicians ensure the best medical outcomes for patients.

I am proud that my colleagues voted with bipartisan support for H.R. 4675. It is no surprise that my friends on both sides of the aisle are supporting a plan that will help doctors and patients across the country give and receive the best medical care possible. I hope we can take swift action to pass this through the House.

Dr. Roger Marshall, R-Great Bend, is the First District Kansas Congressman.

K94Heros!

This week I took to the floor to discuss the success and importance of one of Kansas’ very own organizations, K94Heros. Every day America loses 22 veterans to suicide – that is a rate 19% higher than the general public. This makes clear the fact that many veterans bring home wounds invisible to the naked eye, but powerful enough to affect the rest of their lives.

Founded by my friend, John Lipscomb, K94Heros provides therapy dogs to our veterans who are struggling the most. Our four-legged friends have a powerful way of helping our service men and women’s emotional and physical recovery. This organization shows that sometimes it takes man’s best friend to help heal the man.

Check out the organization here: http://k9s4heroes.org/donations/.

2018 Kansas Birding Big Year contest

KDWPT

PRATT – The 2018 Kansas Birding Big Year, hosted by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT), is underway and you’re invited to participate in the fun. Unlike other big year competitions that span the U.S. in a calendar year, participants in the 2018 Kansas Birding Big Year try to observe as many species of birds as they can within the borders of Kansas from Jan. 1 – Dec. 31.

Participants of all skill levels may compete in one of three age groups: youth (17 and under), adult (18-64), and senior (65 and up). The winners from each category will receive prizes to be awarded next January. See guidelines below.

Participation Guidelines

1. Participants must register via email with the event coordinator Mike Rader at KDWPT: [email protected] on or before April 1 to be part of the program for 2018.

2. Participants must read and abide by the set of rules governing the competition (available at ksoutdoors.com/Services/Wildlife-Diversity/2018-Kansas-Birding-Big-Year). These rules are adapted from the American Birding Association Recording Rules and Interpretations and include the Code of Birding Ethics. Breaking or disregard for these rules will disqualify the participant from the competition.

3. Participants are required to log their data into the online service, eBird, available on the Cornell University website, www.ebird.org. Each participant will need to create an individual profile, with sign-in and password to begin the submission of sightings.

4. Participants will need to submit a running total list of observed species quarterly to the coordinator of the program. This is to help track progress and provide quality control. The program coordinator and competition committee have final say on list totals. Dates for 2018 submission will be: June 30, September 30 and December 31.

5. Winners of the competition in each category will be determined by a committee selected by the program coordinator. Winners will be recognized and prizes will be awarded in mid-January of the following calendar year. Categories are defined as:

Youth – 16 and under

Adult – 17-64 (3 skill levels: Novice, Intermediate and Advanced)

Senior – 65 and up

6. Prizes will be awarded based on availability and appropriateness per division, as determined by program coordinator and competition committee.

For more information, visit ksoutdoors.com/Services/Wildlife-Diversity/2018-Kansas-Birding-Big-Year.

Hot shooting Lopers snap long losing streak to FHSU women

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan. – Nebraska-Kearney hit 11 3-pointers and shot 55-percent from the floor and beat the Fort Hays State women 78-64 Saturday afternoon to snap a 14-game losing streak to FHSU and a six-game Gross Coliseum losing streak.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

After a back and forth first quarter which saw five ties and six lead changes, UNK (12-3, 4-3 MIAA) went on a 9-0 run early in the second quarter to build the lead to 11 at halftime. A 12-2 run spanning the second and third quarters pushed the lead to 17.

The Tigers (12-4, 3-4 MIAA) closed the cap to seven with 1:32 to play after an 11-1 run but the Lopers responded with an 11-2 run to put the game away.

Tatyane Legett scored 16 of her team-high 20 points in the second half. Carly Heim added 10 points, five rebounds and five assists.

McKenzie Brown scored a career-high 29 to lead UNK. Brown hit 10 of her 15 shots including 6-for-6 from beyond the arc.

No. 12 Kansas holds on to beat Kansas State

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Devonte Graham had 23 points, Malik Newman hit the go-ahead foul shots with 15 seconds left and No. 12 Kansas held on to beat Kansas State 73-72 in a back-and-forth affair on Saturday.

Udoka Azubuike added 18 points and eight rebounds for the Jayhawks (14-3, 4-1 Big 12), who beat their Interstate 70 rival for the sixth straight time and 12th in a row at Allen Fieldhouse.

Kansas State (12-5, 2-3) led 67-64 with 3 minutes left when Lagerald Vick knocked down a 3-pointer in front of the Jayhawks’ bench and Newman scored on a put-back to give Kansas the lead.

It was the first of five lead changes in the final 2:18.

Xavier Sneed gave the Wildcats the lead with 30.2 seconds left when he made two free throws, but Newman got to the line at the other end and the 86-percent foul shooter converted both. That gave Kansas State the last shot, but Barry Brown’s rushed 3-pointer from well beyond the arc was no good.

Dean Wade had 22 points to lead the Wildcats. Cartier Diarra added a career-high 18 while Brown finished with 12 points, six assists and five rebounds.

The Jayhawks raced to a 13-4 lead before the Wildcats ratcheted up the defensive intensity. Kansas struggled to get the ball inside and eventually went nearly 10 minutes with just one field goal.

The Wildcats slowly pulled ahead during a 14-3 run, but back-to-back 3s by Svi Mykhailiuk — the last from about 25 feet at the buzzer — knotted the game 34-all at the break.

That’s when Azubuike and Graham went to work.

The big fella scored the first two baskets of the second half, then Graham knocked down a 3, as the pair got an inside-outside game going. They combined for all the Jayhawks’ points during a 15-2 run that turned a 36-34 deficit into a 49-38 lead with about 13 minutes left in the game.

Diarra clawed the Wildcats back once more, at one point scoring 11 straight for them, and the game was tied at 64 at the under-4 media timeout to set up a frantic race to the finish.

DE SOUZA CLEARED

Silvio De Souza, a 6-foot-9 forward from Angola, was cleared by the NCAA before tip to play for Kansas. The five-star prospect graduated from high school last month and has been practicing while waiting for his paperwork to be confirmed. He debuted midway through the first half and played 4 minutes. “I know it’s a big relief to Silvio, who has been very patient throughout this process,” Kansas coach Bill Self.

PRESTON STILL WAITS

Another five-star prospect, Billy Preston, remains sidelined while Kansas looks into the ownership of a car he was driving during an accident last fall. The freshman has not played this season.

STOKES IN A BOOT

Kansas State guard Kamau Stokes, the Wildcats’ third-leading scorer, missed his second straight game with a left foot injury. He was wearing a walking boot and it remains unclear when he will be back.

BIG PICTURE

Kansas State has lost nail-biters in its last two trips to the Phog. Last year, it was a missed traveling call on the Jayhawks’ Mykhailiuk that cost them a win over the Wildcats’ biggest rival.

Kansas has followed a league-opening loss to Texas Tech with three Big 12 wins by a combined 10 points. That ability to close games has been a hallmark ever since Self took over the program.

UP NEXT

Kansas State faces No. 9 Oklahoma on Tuesday night.

Kansas visits No. 2 West Virginia on Monday night.

Woman arrested in Kan. sentenced for theft from Navy base game room

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Filipino woman arrested last year in Kansas has been sentenced to prison for stealing nearly $100,000 from a U.S. Naval base in Japan.

Federal prosecutors say 60-year-old Cynthia Lopez Creseni was sentenced Friday to two years in prison. She will be returned to the Philippines after her incarceration.

Creseni pleaded guilty in August to theft of public money. She took money from a safe at the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center on the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan, where she was a cashier of the game/slot room.

She spent the money on plane tickets, a home in Japan, and her family in the Philippines.

Creseni fled Japan in 2015 after being interviewed by federal investigators. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas, for overstaying her visa.

Earth’s magnetic shift to cost one Kansas airport

Eisenhower National Airport google image

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Wichita Eisenhower Nation airport will have to renumber its runways due to the slow but constant shift in the Earth’s magnetic poles that’s altered pilots’ compass headings.

Airport officials told members of the Wichita Airport Advisory Board this week that the compass headings of the airport’s three runways have shifted six degrees because of magnetic variation. The change has prompted the airport to plan to renumber its two primary and one crosswind runways for the first time in its nearly 64-year history.

Every five years, the Federal Aviation Administration tests magnetic variation and assigns the values that’ll be used in designating runways. A magnetic variation shift greater than 3 degrees prompts the administration to make changes to published airport approaches, and to advise airports to make changes on their property.

Several airports across the country have had to renumber their runways in recent years, including in Oakland, California; Las Vegas; and Tampa, Florida.

Wichita airport officials said the changes will likely cost the airport hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“Most of the physical costs would be airfield directional signage,” said Brad Christopher, assistant director of airports for the airport authority. “Almost all of those would have to be replaced.”

Christopher said the airport expects to pay for the costs with a grant from the administration. The runways will likely be physically renumbered in 2019.

Murrell chosen to direct Great Plains Nature Center

Marc Murrell
KDWPT

PRATT – The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism’s (KDWPT) Marc Murrell has been appointed to director of the Great Plains Nature Center (GPNC) in Wichita. The GPNC Steering Committee selected Murrell to take over after former director Jim Mason retired in December.

Murrell has served as the GPNC building manager since the facility opened in 1996. He has worked for KDWPT since 1989, when he served as a public information officer out of the southcentral regional office in Valley Center. Murrell, who is from Topeka, has a bachelor’s degree in fisheries from Kansas State University and worked as a biologist in North Carolina before moving back to Kansas.

The GPNC, located on the southeast corner of Chisholm Creek Park, 6232 E 29th St. N, is the successful result of a unique collaboration of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the City of Wichita’s Park and Recreation Department, and KDWPT. This one-of-a-kind facility provides free access to nature education and outdoor experiences in an urban setting. In addition to City, USFWS, and KDWPT staff on the nature center side, the facility also houses KDWPT’s Region 3 office, providing offices for Law Enforcement, Wildlife and Parks division administrative staff and public access to information and license sales.

Another unique aspect of the GPNC – and one reason it has been so successful – is its friends group. The Friends of GPNC is now a consignatory in the memorandum of agreement and administers the employment of three full-time naturalists. Friends group members also operate the gift shop and assist with reception and programs at the nature center, making the facility a truly collaborative effort.

Murrell is just the fourth director of the GPNC since it opened in 1996. City naturalist and renowned wildlife photographer Bob Gress was the first and served until retiring in 2012. The USFWS’s Lorrie Beck took over until she retired in 2015 and the City’s Mason manned the helm until this year.

“I know I have big shoes to fill and have nothing but admiration for what Jim, Lorrie and Bob accomplished here,” Murrell said. “My goals are to carry on this great tradition of providing quality nature education by working with our amazing partners and staff.”

Throughout his career, Murrell has been dedicated to passing on Kansas’ outdoor heritage to generations of young Kansans. This passion, along with his education, experience and love of the outdoors will serve him well as he carries on the nature education tradition of the GPNC.

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