Watch the Special Olympics opening ceremonies live from FHSU’s Gross Memorial Coliseum. The event is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Friday.
Month: March 2019
HHS softball scores 32 runs in season opening sweep of Goodland
GOODLAND, Kan. – The High High softball team opened their season with a pair of blowout wins in Goodland Thursday afternoon. The Indians Jaysa Wichers and Kaitlyn Brown combined on a two-hitter in the Indians 14-0 victory in the opener. Madelyn Waddell went 3-for-3 with homer and five RBIs. Wichers also had three hits and drove in three.
Wichers and Brown combined to allow five hits in an 18-2 win in game two. Macee Altman doubled and tripled and drove in three. Cassidy Prough also had three RBIs.
Lawson carries Kansas over Northeastern in NCAA opener
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Kansas, with all its ups and downs this season, was a popular pick to be one of the NCAA Tournament’s first big upsets.
As higher seeds like Auburn and Michigan had tense moments in their openers, the Jayhawks soared into the next round.
Dedric Lawson had 25 points and 11 rebounds, and Kansas dominated inside for an 87-54 rout over Northeastern Thursday in the Midwest Region
“I thought our guys were as locked in as they’ve been all year,” Kansas coach Bill Self said.
The fourth-seeded Jayhawks (26-9) had a notable size advantage inside and used it, outscoring the Huskies 50-16 in the paint while grabbing 17 more rebounds.
Devon Dotson controlled the offense and scored 18 points, while Dedric’s brother, K.J., chipped in 13 points.
Kansas shot 56 percent and advanced to Saturday’s second round against fifth-seeded Auburn.
“We were settling for 3s early in the game,” K.J. Lawson said. “Once we settled in, everybody was in attack mode and had a great performance today.”
The best shot for the 13th-seeded Huskies (23-11) was to make their 3-point tries.
They didn’t.
The Colonial Athletic Association champions went 6 for 28 from the arc after finishing the regular season 17th in Division I at 38.6 percent. Sharpshooter Vasa Pusica had a hard time getting separation from the Jayhawks’ athletic guards, finishing with seven points on 2-of-11 shooting.
Jordan Roland had 12 points to lead the Huskies, who shot 28 percent overall.
“They took us out of our own identity,” Northeastern coach Bill Coen said. “If you were dialing up a blueprint for an upset, you have to have a great shooting night. Unfortunately, we didn’t have that.”
The Jayhawks had a regular season like few others in their storied history.
Kansas made the NCAA Tournament. That was no shock. This was its 30th straight year in the bracket.
But the Jayhawks were a No. 4 seed when they’re usually a 1 or 2.
Kansas played all season without Silvio De Souza after he was connected to the federal probe into college basketball corruption. Center Udoke Azubukie was lost for the season in January to a wrist injury. Senior guard Lagerald Vick left the team for personal reasons in February.
Self navigated the attrition the best he could, piecing together a lineup with four freshmen and a lineup no one could have predicted at the season’s start.
The result: Kansas had its 14-year reign as Big 12 champions come to an end and was a trendy upset pick against the 3-shooting Huskies in the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas gave them little chance.
Northeastern was no match for Lawson inside and had a hard time stopping the Kansas guards off the dribble from the get-go. Lawson had 16 points by halftime and the Jayhawks led 37-25.
The Huskies also needed to make 3-pointers to keep Kansas in reach and didn’t, going 5 for 17 in the first half.
The trend continued to start the second half. Lawson hit a 3, scored inside and Kansas used a 16-2 run to go up 53-32.
“We missed our first few shots and I don’t know if we got flustered,” Northeastern’s Bolden Brace, who had seven points and nine rebounds. “We kind of relied on the 3-point shot and when that kind of didn’t work out, other parts of our game kind of fell apart a little bit.”
BIG PICTURE
Northeastern got over a hump by bouncing back from a big disappointment in last year’s CAA tournament, but didn’t have the size or athleticism to keep up with the Jayhawks.
Kansas did what it normally does as a high seed in the NCAA Tournament, stretching its opening-game winning streak to 13 games.
THE LAWSON MATCH-UP
Dedric Lawson was a preseason All-American and a matchup problem for teams all season.
Pack it in and he’ll shoot outside. Leave him 1-on-1 in the post, he’ll wear his defender out.
Northeastern, with one regular over 6-foot-8, certainly had no one who could contain him. Lawson made 9 of 16 shots, 3 of 5 from the 3-point arc and all four of his free throws.
“We didn’t really have a matchup for him,” Coen said. “It was a very difficult matchup for us going in. We were hoping to do a better job on him.”
UP NEXT
Kansas faces No. 5 Auburn in Saturday’s second round.
Northeastern’s season is over.
Kansas celebrates water in observance of World Water Day
TOPEKA – Today the Kansas Water Office (KWO) along with the Kansas Department of Agriculture, Kansas Department of Health and Environment and Kansas Department of Wildlife Parks and Tourism as cohosts celebrated Kansas Water Day at the state capitol in Topeka in observance of World Water Day on March 22.
A proclamation was signed declaring today as Kansas Water Day. Agencies and partners shared with legislators and others in the capitol information about the different water resources and management of it throughout the state. Additional sponsors of the event included WaterOne and Burns & McDonnell.
While Kansas depends on both ground and surface water supplies, the future of Kansas’ growth and prosperity depends on this vital resource. Kansans all across the state were instrumental in developing the Long-Term Vision for the Future of Water in Kansas, and we encourage everyone to continue to act on a shared commitment to have the water resources necessary to support the state’s social, economic and natural resource needs for current and future generations.
As the state’s water office, KWO conducts water planning, policy coordination and water marketing as well as facilitates public input throughout the state.
The agency prepares the KANSAS WATER PLAN, a plan for water resources development, management and conservation.
TMP-Marian baseball swept by Garden City
GARDEN CITY, Kan. – The TMP-Marian baseball team dropped both ends of their doubleheader to Garden City Thursday afternoon. The Buffaloes rallied for three runs in the bottom of the seventh to take the opener 6-4. The Monarchs were held to two hits and lost 4-0 in game two.
Brady Kreutzer allowed four runs on five hits in two innings of relief and took the loss in the first game. Tyson Dinkel had three hits and Carson Jacobs drove in two.
Colby Dreiling allowed two earned runs over four innings for the loss in the second game.
Kansas City-area student charged for alleged ‘upskirt’ photos
KANSAS CITY (AP) — A Kansas City-area high school student has been charged after allegedly taking photos and videos up other students’ shorts.
The Platte County prosecutor charged 17-year-old Jared A. Scott with six counts of misdemeanor invasion of privacy Tuesday.
Scott’s attorney didn’t immediately return an Associated Press request for comment Thursday.
Two girls recently told Park Hill South High School administrators that Scott used a cellphone to shoot video up of one student’s shorts. Another said that also happened to her last year, although she didn’t report it then.
According to court records, Scott denied using his cellphone to take those photos after being confronted.
Authorities identified a third possible victim after reviewing surveillance footage from the school. Investigators also say they found photos of six possible victims.
ACLU seeks probe after black man detained moving into his Kan. home
By ROXANA HEGEMAN
The Kansas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on Thursday asked state officials to investigate after a black man was detained by police while moving into his home, then allegedly harassed for weeks and blocked by the police chief from filing a racial bias complaint with the department.
Karle Robinson, a 61-year-old Marine veteran, was held at gunpoint and handcuffed in August as he was carrying a television out of a rented moving van into the home he had bought a month earlier in Tonganoxie, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) west of Kansas City.
“I’d like to see those cops and that chief lose their jobs because this was uncalled for — this is strictly racial profiling,” Robinson told The Associated Press in an interview Thursday.
He added that if he were white “we wouldn’t even be having this conversation right now.”
The ACLU of Kansas said in a news release that it was a case of “moving while black” and that the organization asked Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt to investigate the matter or refer the group’s complaint to the Kansas Commission on Peace Officers’ Standards and Training. The attorney general’s office said in an emailed statement that it has reviewed the ACLU’s letter and forwarded it to the commission in accordance with Kansas law.
“Mr. Robinson believes his detention was motivated by his race rather than a reasonable suspicion that he was committing a burglary,” Lauren Bonds, legal director of the ACLU of Kansas, said in the group’s release. “It also appears that the Chief of Police prevented Mr. Robinson from filing a credible, legitimate complaint and that is not in compliance with reporting and intake standards. He must not interfere with citizens registering complaints.”
The incident involving Robinson is one of the latest examples of situations in which law enforcement officers have had encounters or confrontations with African-Americans over their own belongings. In the Chicago suburb of Evanston, Illinois, city officials approved a $1.25 million settlement with a black man who sued after police tackled him and arrested him for stealing a car that turned out to be his own.
Tonganoxie Police Chief Greg Lawson said in an emailed statement that the department has fully cooperated with Robinson and the ACLU regarding inquiries into the incident.
“We believe that the ACLU’s correspondence to the Attorney General’s Office contains multiple accusations that are inaccurate,” Lawson said, without elaborating. He added that the department will cooperate with the attorney general or commission “if an investigation is deemed warranted.”
The chief said the safety of people who live in the town and those visiting it is important to the department, and the officers and other staff have all “pledged to serve the community with honor and the highest degree of professionalism.”
The town of 5,400 in northeastern Kansas is 97 percent white, census figures show.
In a letter dated Thursday to the attorney general’s office, the ACLU said police had also stopped Robinson hours earlier while he was driving to the home and gave him a warning citation. Robinson and the ACLU say it was for not having the rental van’s headlights turned on.
According to the letter, Robinson arrived at the home shortly after midnight on Aug. 19 and made numerous trips in and out of the house carrying items from the moving van parked outside. Robinson contends an officer passed his house five or six times over the course of two hours.
Around 2:30 a.m. as he was carrying in his TV, the last item out of the moving van, Robinson was approached by an officer who pulled into the driveway. During the incident, which was captured on police body camera, the officer drew his gun and told Robinson to put down the TV.
“I just bought this house,” said Robinson, who followed the officer’s order about the TV.
“You just bought this house and you’re moving in at 4 in the morning?” the officer said.
Robinson told the officer he had paperwork inside the home that would prove he was the owner.
The officer asked Robinson to walk toward the house and put his hands on his head. He then handcuffed Robinson.
Once backup arrived, the officer and a second officer entered the home, brought out the paperwork and took the handcuffs off Robinson. The officers helped Robinson carry the TV in the house after he asked them to.
Police told Robinson there had been a string of burglaries in the area. An officer can be heard on the body camera video apologizing to Robinson and saying, “If you look at the situation, I think, I think you get it.” The officers thanked Robinson for his cooperation.
Robinson, who is retired and volunteers as a radio DJ at a Kansas City radio station, told the AP on Thursday that he considered it “a half-hearted apology.”
“But I mean, that is not the point. It shouldn’t have happened in the first place,” he said.
The ACLU contends that public records show no reported burglaries in the area. And for weeks after the incident, according to Robinson, Tonganoxie police frequently patrolled around his block, parked their squad cars directly across the street almost every evening and on one occasion followed him from his home for more than 7 miles (11 kilometers) until he reached the highway. He claimed that Lawson, the police chief, also stopped him in October from filing a racial bias complaint about the Aug. 19 incident and the police presence afterward, which Robinson said amounted to surveillance.
He said the harassment stopped after he complained to The Kansas City Star.
“Each of these incidents would be concerning had they been alleged independently,” the ACLU said in the letter to the attorney general’s office. “Together, they suggest a pervasive culture of racial bias and systemic process failure within the Tonganoxie Police Department.”
Family of slain Kansas deputy to receive $300K in settlement
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The family of a Kansas sheriff’s deputy who was killed in the line of duty will get $300,000 in a worker’s compensation settlement over his death in September.

The Sedgwick County Commission approved settlement payouts to Deputy Robert Kunze’s widow and young daughter on Wednesday.
Kunze was fatally shot on Sept. 16 when attempting to handcuff a man on suspicion of vehicle theft about 20 miles west of downtown Wichita. The sheriff’s department says Kunze killed his attacker , 29-year-old Robert Greeson, and likely saved the lives of two witnesses before he died from a gunshot wound. Greeson had a history of drug convictions.
The commission’s chairman, David Dennis, called Kunze a hero who “touched the lives of all the folks here in Sedgwick County.”
Kansas commerce chief under fire from Republican lawmakers
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s top economic development official might have trouble keeping his job after a committee recommended that the Kansas Senate reject his appointment.

A two-day Senate Commerce Committee confirmation hearing for Acting Commerce Secretary David Toland turned bitter and partisan. Some Republicans questioned his credentials and criticized him over social media posts and comments during a Statehouse rally last year for Medicaid expansion.
The committee voted 6-5 against him Thursday.
Toland is from Iola and served as the unpaid treasurer for Kelly’s campaign for governor last year. He also earned national praise in 11 years as executive director of the economic development group Thrive Allen County.
The Senate’s rules require the full chamber to vote on confirming Toland despite the committee’s vote. Kelly is standing by him.
Tigers comeback bid falls short in series opener with RiverHawks
TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Fort Hays State baseball dropped their series opener with Northeastern State on Thursday (March 21), 4-3. The Tigers dipped to 2-19 overall and 2-11 in MIAA play as the RiverHawks moved to 5-21 on the season and 3-10 in conference action.
Landon Erway produced three hits in the contest for the Tigers, as his first came in the opening frame on a single up the middle. Erway wrapped around to third base after Kyler Cox delivered a sacrifice bunt and a RiverHawk wild pitch. The Tigers stranded him at third and couldn’t capitalize. Northeastern State scored in the first on an RBI single to left center, taking a 1-0 lead after one frame.
The Tigers fell victim to another RiverHawk run in the second after allowing an RBI double to right center, trailing Northeastern State 2-0 after two innings. NSU put up another two runs in the fourth to take a 4-0 lead into the fifth.
Erway then roped a double to right center, plating Garrett Francis from first and putting the Tigers on the scoreboard. FHSU trailed NSU 4-1 after six innings.
FHSU was able to get two runs back in the top of the seventh after Ryan Grasser earned a spot on first when he was beaned with a pitch. Jared Haynes delivered a pinch hit single to right field, pushing Grasser to second. Both runners moved up a base after a wild pitch from RiverHawk starter Jonathan Smithey. Garrett Francis then placed a 2 RBI single into right field, scoring Grasser and Haynes to cut the RiverHawk lead to one, 4-3.
Tiger reliever Ryan Brown shut down the RiverHawks in the eighth, setting up a potential comeback bid in the ninth. In the top of the ninth, Grasser earned his second walk of the contest and advanced to second on a wild pitch. However, Grasser was clipped at third on a steal attempt leaving the bases empty. Jared Maneth then walked and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt from Francis. Erway stranded Maneth at second after ending the game with a strikeout.
Ryan Ruder (1-4) was charged with the loss for the Tigers after allowing four runs (three earned) on nine hits across six innings of work. Ruder earned six strikeouts on the day. Brown came on in relief and tossed two scoreless frames, only allowing one hit.
The Tigers and RiverHawks will lace them up again for game two on Friday (March 22) with first pitch at 2 p.m. from Thomas C. Rousey field.
Registration underway for ‘Roll Out the Rain Barrel’
Update: Former employee arrested for alleged arson fire at Kan. tattoo parlor
SEDGWICK COUNTY—Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with a Thursday morning business fire.


Just before 4a.m., fire crews were dispatched to the fire at the Idle Hand Tattoo Parlor in the 900 Block of West Douglas, according to Lt. Jose Ocadiz of the Wichita Fire Department.
Upon arrival, fire crews found heavy fire in the rear of the building. Fire attack teams were deployed to prevent the fire from spreading to the second floor. The Wichita fire investigation unit and officials from the Kansas State Fire Marshal determined the fire was intentionally set, according to Ocadiz.
Police were notified of a suspect fleeing the area at the time of the fire, according to officer Charley Davidson. With the help of witnesses, police located 36-year-old Cassie Grover at a nearby convenience store and arrested without incident. She is being held on requested charges of burglary, theft and aggravated arson, according to Davidson. Grover is a former employee at the business, according to Davidson.
The majority of the fire damage was in the Tattoo Parlor, according to Ocadiz. The estimated damage loss is approximately $80,000 to the structure and $150,000 to contents.
Former Cap-Journal business editor joins Saint Francis Ministries

SALINA — Former Topeka Capital-Journal Business Editor Morgan Chilson Rothenberger has joined Saint Francis Ministries as director of communications, tasked with leading the internationally renowned social service organization’s strategic approach to internal and external communications.
“Morgan is an award-winning journalist with a strong belief in public service journalism,” said Tom Blythe, COO of Saint Francis Ministries. “She has a knack for breaking complex issues into relatable, compelling stories that impact lives and communities. We’re extremely excited to have her join our team. She’ll be a tremendous voice for Saint Francis, helping us spread the word about our mission and the life-changing services we provide for children and families in the U.S. and across the globe.”
A career journalist and freelance writer, Rothenberger spent a total of eight years with the Topeka Capital-Journal, coordinating business and healthcare coverage that earned more than 20 Kansas Press Association and KC Press Club awards for excellence. Her editorial and management skills earned her positions as business editor of the paper, and most recently, a part in managing the newsroom.
A graduate of Kansas State University with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communication, Rothenberger has also worked as a freelance writer/reporter for national and regional publications, including the New York Times, Kansas City Business Journal and Kansas magazines. She has edited and designed books, including non-fiction medical books.
“My love of journalism runs deep, but my connection to family services runs even deeper, having grown up with a parent who spent her career as a Kansas foster care social worker,” Rothenberger said. “My mother taught me that protecting children and keeping families together is hard – and sometimes heartbreaking – work. But I know that when communities, schools, law enforcement, legislators and organizations like Saint Francis work together to find solutions, amazing, positive outcomes are possible. I’m eager to be part of the Saint Francis team in building stronger families and communities, and sharing those stories with others.”



