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Slippers that brought Dorothy back to Kansas need your help

WASHINGTON (AP) — The ruby slippers that whisked Dorothy back to Kansas in three clicks are looking a little down at the heels, prompting the Smithsonian to launch a $300,000 online campaign to conserve them.

Museum officials started a Kickstarter fundraising drive Monday to repair the iconic slippers from 1939’s “The Wizard of Oz” and create a new state-of-the-art display case for them at the National Museum of American History.  See more here.

The sequined shoes were crafted almost 80 years ago by the MGM Studios prop department and have grown fragile over time. The fundraising page says the color has faded and some threads affixing sequins have snapped.

The campaign, dubbed “#KeepThemRuby,” offers donor rewards ranging from T-shirts and tote bags to replica slippers and behind-the-scenes tours.

This isn’t the Smithsonian’s first Kickstarter drive. In 2015, it raised $700,000 to conserve Neil Armstrong’s spacesuit.

2 Kansas women, man arrested after deputies find stolen property

Rachael Quesenbury
Rachael Quesenbury

BARTON COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating 3 suspects for burglary.

Just after 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, the Barton County Sheriff’s office executed search warrants in the 5900 Block of Eisenhower Court in the City of Great Bend in an effort to recover stolen property, according to a media release.

Deputies recovered a substantial amount of stolen property including tools and equipment from recent burglaries.

Keaton Krom
Keaton Krom

Later that afternoon deputies also executed a search warrant in the 1700 block of Harrison Street and arrested three in connection with the burglaries.

Keaton Krom, 24,Great Bend was arrested for three counts of burglary, three counts of theft, and one count of possession of stolen property.

Julia Ellis age 24, Great Bend was arrested for one count of possession of stolen property. Rachael Quesenbury- Graves, 37 Great Bend was also arrested and

Julia Ellis
Julia Ellis

booked on one count of possession of stolen property.

Great Bend approves ordinance on Sunday liquor sales

LiquorGREAT BEND– Sunday liquor sales in Great Bend will finally be allowed starting October 23.

The city council approved an ordinance at Monday’s meeting to allow Sunday sales of cereal malt beverages and alcoholic liquor within city limits.

The ordinance also allow Great Bend liquor stores are to stay open until 11 p.m. daily while Sunday hours will be noon to 8p.m.

The council agenda item passed easily after much of the debate on the issue already finished during a meeting on August 1.

“The city completed a 61 day protest period and received a certificate of no protest from the county, according to City Attorney Bob Suelter.”

Liquor storeowners in Great Bend wanted to keep pace with businesses in other parts of Barton County that were allowed to sell liquor on Sundays and stay open later.

Police ask for help to identify Kansas burglary suspects

photos courtesy Andover Police
photos courtesy Andover Police

BUTLER COUNTY –Law enforcement authorities in Butler County are investigating a series of vehicle burglaries and asking the public for help to identify suspects.

The suspect’s vehicle is identified as red 2000’s model Chevy 1500, with tool box in back driven by a white male, approx. 6 ft, 170lbs. wearing a Texas Longhorns hat, Puma shoes, a hoodie and jeans, according to Andover Police.

There was also a white female in the passenger seat. Police released no details on her.

screen-shot-2016-10-18-at-10-07-08-amAnyone with information is asked to please contact police at 316-733-5177, extension 0.

Charges filed in Kansas man’s drug overdose death

Bickley-photo Johnson County
Bickley-photo Johnson County

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A 24-year-old man has been charged in the drug overdose death of a suburban Kansas City man.

The Kansas City Star reports that Michael Christopher Bickley of Kansas City, Kansas, made his first court appearance Monday in Johnson County District Court. He said he planned to hire his own attorney.

Bickley is charged with the distribution of drugs resulting in the death in February of a 27-year-old Overland Park man. Bickley also is charged with possession of heroin, possession of oxycodone and possession of Xanax.

He is jailed on $250,000 bond. No attorney is listed for him in online court records.

His next court appearance is scheduled for Oct. 27.

Another tiny increase for Social Security recipients

Social Security AdministrationWASHINGTON (AP) — Millions of Social Security recipients and federal retirees will get a monthly increase in benefits of just 0.3 percent next year, the fifth year in a row that older Americans will have to settle for historically low raises.

There was no increase this year. Next year’s benefit hike will be small because inflation is low, driven in part by lower fuel prices.

The federal government announced the cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, Tuesday morning. By law, the COLA is based on a government measure of consumer prices.

The average monthly Social Security payment is $1,238. That translates into a monthly increase of less than $4 a month.

The COLA affects more than 70 million people — about 1 in 5 Americans.

Kansas prison guard sentenced after taking bribes for tobacco

jail prisonKANSAS CITY – A former guard at the U.S. Penitentiary in Leavenworth was sentenced to two years on probation Monday for taking bribes, according to acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

In addition, he was ordered to serve six months home confinement and pay $4,800 in fines.

Michael Harston, 53, Kansas City, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to accept bribes and one count of accepting bribes. In his plea, he admitted accepting bribes to provide inmates with tobacco, which is contraband. Inmates coordinated with their families and friends outside prison to pay Harston. They paid Harston as much as $1,000 for one six-ounce can of Bugler loose tobacco.

Beall commended the FBI, the Justice Department’s Office of Inspector General Special, USP Leavenworth SIS and Assistant U.S. Attorney Leena Ramana for their work on the case.

NWS: History making hot weather in Kansas

DODGE CITY- At 2:39 p.m. on Monday it was100 degrees in Dodge City. It was the first ever recorded 100-degree temperature in October since 1874, according to the National Weather Service.

At 3 p.m. on Monday the temperature in Salina was 91 degrees. It was 93 in Russell. Both are new record high temperatures for October 17, according to the National Weather Service. The high temperature of 91 at Wichita on Monday tied for the 2nd warmest reading on October 17. The record warmest is 92F on October 20, 1979.

UPDATE: Police ask for help to find suspect in Kansas grocery store robbery

photo Hutchinson Police
photo Hutchinson Police

RENO COUNTY –Law enforcement authorities in Reno County are investigating a robbery and asking the public for help to find the suspect.

At 9:43 a.m. on Monday, the Dillon’s store located at 1321 North Main Street in Hutchinson was robbed.

The suspect wore dark clothing and a devil’s Halloween mask when he entered the store and demanded money.

The suspect fled the store on a bicycle but abandoned it in the alley directly behind the store.

Police need help in identifying the owner of the pictured bicycle.

If you know who owns this bicycle or have any other information in regards to this crime please call Crime Stoppers of Reno

Bicycle allegedly used in Monday's grocery store robbery in Hutchinson
Bicycle allegedly used in Monday’s grocery store robbery in Hutchinson

County at 1-800-222-TIPS or Detective Loepp at 620-694-2829. Please associate your tip with case #2016-26254.

————

HUTCHINSON— Law enforcement authorities in Reno County are investigating a robbery at the Dillon’s Store, 1321 North Mail in Hutchinson on Monday morning.

Just after 10a.m. on Monday a man walked into the store and confronted the clerk at the service counter, according to police.

The suspect was wearing a mask, a hoodie and sweats according to initial reports.

Police believe the suspect tried to escape on a bicycle, which was located in the alleyway behind the store.

It is the second time the store has been robbed this year.

A Goddard man Austan Kinnaird, 25, is accused in that case. He faces a federal trial scheduled to begin in December.

Last of 5 men sentenced in shooting death of Salina teen

Forbes,
Forbes,

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — The last of five young men involved in the shooting death of a 17-year-old Salina girl has been sentenced to prison.

Twenty-year-old Jerome Forbes was sentenced Friday to five years and eight months in prison for his role in the May 2015 death of Allie Saum.

Prosecutors say the men were seeking revenge after an earlier confrontation. Saum was shot as she rode in her boyfriend’s pickup, which was similar to one the men were seeking. Saum and her boyfriend had nothing to do with the earlier confrontation.

Forbes expressed regret for his role in the shooting and hopes to do something in the future to make amends.

Former SW Kan. bank president enters plea to laundering Mexican drug money

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former bank president has admitted he failed to report suspicious activity at a small southwest Kansas bank prosecutors say a Mexican cartel was using to launder drug money.

Court documents show former Plains State Bank President James Kirk Friend entered a guilty plea Monday under a deal with prosecutors that would spare him from prison. The binding plea agreement calling for 12 months of probation is contingent on the judge’s approval.

Prosecutors contend Friend helped bank customers George and Agatha Enns of Meade launder more than $6.8 million between 2011 and 2014.

The Mexican cartel is suspected of laundering drug proceeds in Kansas to avoid tighter restrictions on U.S. currency in its home country.

His sentencing is set for Jan. 9.

Koch brothers’ network focusing on GOP Senate, not Trump

JULIE BYKOWICZ, Associated Press

FAIRLESS HILLS, Pa. (AP) — One of the largest conservative groups in the country isn’t promoting the presidential candidacy of Donald Trump as its activists go door to door interacting with voters.

Americans for Prosperity — the best-known group financed by conservative billionaires Charles and David Koch — has more than 1,200 employees spread across the country.

Four years ago, that group spent heavily in an effort to prevent President Barack Obama’s second term.

This time they’re spending about $250 million on policy and politics in the two years leading to Election Day. But they’re focusing on saving the Republican-led Senate.

The brothers and many of their wealthy donor friends who fund the political and policy groups known as “the Koch network” have no interest in backing Trump.

Obama: High school graduation rate reaches new high

President delivering  remarks on education Monday in DC
President delivering remarks on education Monday in DC

KEVIN FREKING, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says changes made to demand more from teachers and students are paying off as high school graduation rates have reached a record high of 83.2 percent.

On Monday, Obama spoke at Benjamin Banneker Academic High School in Washington, D.C., where graduation rates jumped the highest in the country for the 2014-2015 school year.

Obama told students they can accomplish whatever they want in their lives, but he’s also emphasizing that a high school education isn’t enough. He says the students are going to have to find jobs in a global economy and that they will be competing against students from China and India for jobs.

The increasing graduation rates, however, come against a backdrop of decreasing test scores for students on national math and reading tests.

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