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Kan. Farm Bureau Insight: Etiquette for the modern world

By JACKIE MUNDT
Pratt County farmer and rancher

I have never been able to bring myself to wear jeans to church. It might seem antiquated but putting on a nice dress before heading to Sunday service makes me feel like my grandmother is smiling down on me. I understand God does not care what you wear, and “Sunday Best” is no longer in fashion. This choice of wardrobe is my own way of showing respect and humility to God and His church.

As our culture evolves, so do the rules of what is acceptable, proper etiquette. Many rules of how to be proper or polite were cemented during previous generations. They are no longer expected or required.
However, good manners will never be completely forgotten. Etiquette continues to have a place in the modern world. It is just no longer expected. What were once rules have become a choice we make, a way to show respect, deference, humility, kindness and any number of other positive regards.

When I reflect on my choice to conform to proper etiquette, it is part of my character, my brand and my style. Etiquette is not a set of rules that leave me in a constant state of fear of making a mistake. I see it as a set of reminders to be kind, not to make a scene and try to make others feel comfortable.

The Collegiate Farm Bureau Chapter at our local community college has a tradition of hosting an etiquette dinner at the start of finals week for sophomores graduating from the agriculture department. I serve as the hostess for the evening’s three-course, narrated meal. During the meal, I share the rules of etiquette – how to recognize the proper fork, eat a dinner roll properly, when it is appropriate to put your elbows on the table, and to pass the salt and pepper together because they are “married.”

None of these are vital rules but they all have a purpose. They make the meal move smoothly, help participants feel more comfortable or keep the focus on good conversation. Understanding the guidelines helps turn situations that are often met with trepidation or unease into a fun and enjoyable events.

Etiquette is not meant to be a scoreboard to track who is breaking the rules. It is a way to conduct yourself, so people enjoy your company. We all can benefit from that reminder.

If you find yourself lamenting a rule of etiquette that seems to have been dismissed as a relic, ask yourself: Do you miss it because it was drilled into your head that it is proper behavior or is it something that brings value to your actions?

If there is value in the practice, be a trendsetter. Take pride in the knowledge you are living by a standard that is slightly more than what is expected. People will always notice when you are kinder than you need to be, more respectful than is deserved and humbler than you should be.

Good manners and proper etiquette will never go out of style. Don’t worry about what is proper or what other people are doing. Make the conscious choice to do what is kind, gracious or respectful to the world around you and you can be confident you have nailed etiquette in the modern world.

“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.

Air Supply to perform at the Stiefel Theatre in Salina

Air Supply is coming to Salina. Photo courtesy Stiefel Theatre

SALINA — The legendary Australian band Air Supply is coming to the Stiefel Theatre this fall.

Jane Gates, executive director of the Stiefel Theatre announced Wednesday morning that the band, known for such hits as All Out of Love and Making Love Out Of Nothing At All, is scheduled for 8 p.m. October 12.

Tickets start at $62 and go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday. Buy tickets direct from the Stiefel in person or by calling 785-827-1998. Box office open Monday through Friday, noon-5 p.m. or three hours before the show on weekend show-days. Buy online through ticketmaster or at stiefeltheatre.org.

About the artists

Graham Russell and Russell Hitchcock met on May 12, 1975, the first day of rehearsals for Jesus Christ Superstar in Sydney, Australia. They became instant friends with their common love for The Beatles and, of course, singing.

After the show’s performances, at 10:30, they would play pizza parlors, coffee bars and night clubs with just one guitar and two voices. They quickly gained a reputation for great harmonies and for original songs that Graham was constantly writing. They made a demo on a cassette of two songs, Love and Other Bruises and If You Knew Me and took it to every record company in Sydney. Everyone turned it down but one — CBS Records — who admired their unique style. They made a single in one afternoon and it shot to number one on the national charts.

Air Supply was born!

That same year, they opened for Rod Stewart across Australia and then throughout the U.S. and Canada, playing all of the famous huge venues before Stewart would take the stage. They found new fans, but did not break the U.S. market.

Back in Australia, they had to start again and made a record called Life Support. On this record were some treasures of songs, including Lost in Love which went Top 10 in Australia and somehow found its way to music industry executive Clive Davis in New York. Davis immediately signed Air Supply to Arista Records and in 1980, Lost in Love became the fastest selling single in the world, leaping to the top of all of the charts. Now Air Supply was on its way.

The second single was All Out of Love, and that went up the charts even quicker. Seven top-five singles later, Air Supply at that time had equaled The Beatles’ run of consecutive top five singles. The albums Lost in Love, The One That You Love, Now & Forever, and The Greatest Hits sold in excess of 20 million copies.

Lost in Love was named Song of the Year in 1980, and, with the other singles, sold more than 10 million copies.

The trademark sound of Russell Hitchcock’s soaring tenor voice and Graham Russell’s simple yet majestic songs created a unique sound that would forever be known as Air Supply. However, it is the live shows that always hold audiences captive around the world. They were the first Western group to tour China, Taiwan, and countless other countries that before would not allow pop music across their borders.

In 1983, they recorded Making Love Out Of Nothing At All by Jim Steinman which solidified the group as a permanent force in modern music. This song was released on The Greatest Hits album which soared past 7 million copies.

Lost in Love, All Out of Love, The One That You Love, Sweet Dreams, and Making Love Out Of Nothing At All have each achieved multi-million plays on the radio.

In 1986 the group’s music was still playing endlessly on radio. That same year, Graham was married to actress Jodi Varble from Rochelle, Illinois, who also was his leading lady in the video for Making Love Out Of Nothing At All.

Air Supply began to tour with lavish productions in places that no one had been before. In South America and Asia they became a part of everyone’s life. In 1988, Air Supply was asked to participate in Australia’s bicentennial celebration and to play for HRH Prince Charles and HRH Princess Diana, where they learned both were already ardent fans. This engagement would be one of their most treasured moments in their career.

In 1989, they recorded The Earth Is album selling over a million copies outside of the U.S. This album was followed by The Vanishing Race CD and, with the singles Goodbye and It’s Never Too Late, again saw multi-platinum success. The following albums, News from Nowhere, Yours Truly, and Across the Concrete Sky all gave their second greatest hits album multi-platinum status as they traveled the world each and every year.

In 2000, a new production company was founded to be devoted to Air Supply’s entire future product, called A Nice Pear, which gave them complete creative control. In July 2005, their live DVD, It Was 30 Years Ago Today, celebrated 30 years of success around the world and in that same month, Air Supply smashed attendance records when, in Cuba, at one show they played to 175,000 people. Also 2005 saw the release of The Singer and the Song, an acoustic album of many of their big hits which received critical acclaim.

In May 2010, the long-awaited album, Mumbo Jumbo –- also the duo’s first studio recording in eight years — was released. Recorded at Graham Russell’s home studio near Park City, Utah, and at Odds On’s state of the art facilities in Las Vegas with top session musicians and an orchestra, Mumbo Jumbo was produced by Russell and engineered by Odds On’s Sean O’Dwyer, whose credits include Pink Floyd, Randy Newman and Blink-182. Among the 14-tracks, released by Odds On’s label, was the first single Dance With Me, which earned Air Supply a prominent feature article in Billboard Magazine titled Still Supplying The Hits After 35 Years.

Just weeks after composer and vocalist Graham Russell was honored with a BMI Million-Air Certificate recognizing 3 million performances of the duo’s hit All Out Of Love, Air Supply’s new song was the No. 1 most added track on the FMQB AC40 Chart, and also one of the most added on the R&R (Radio and Records) AC Chart and the Media base AC chart.

In 2013, the duo was inducted into the Australian Recording Industry Association’s Hall of Fame. Air Supply celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2015 and continue to delight audiences all over the world.


Information about the artists provided by the Stiefel Theatre.

Sheriff identifies mother, 2 children who died in Kansas crash

FRANKLIN COUNTY — Three people died in an accident just before 8a.m. Tuesday in Franklin County.

First responders on the scene of Tuesday’s fatal Franklin County crash -photo courtesy Fox4KansasCity

A passenger vehicle driven by Brieyori McGowan, 25, was northbound on Interstate 35 four miles north of the Williamsburg exit, according to the Franklin County Sheriff’s Department.

The vehicle traveled off the right side of the road and the driver overcorrected. The vehicle crossed through the median and entered the southbound lanes. A southbound vehicle struck the northbound vehicle.

McGowan and her two children, Kamarria Williams, 7, and Nahajza Jackson, 6, of Texas were pronounced dead at the scene, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

The driver of the southbound vehicle was transported to an area hospital. The sheriff’s department did not release the driver’s name or additional details early Wednesday.

This was the second fatality crash in Franklin County Tuesday. Just after 5:30a.m., a pickup driven by John Brian Yaple, 47, Harrisonville, Missouri, when he drove into a tractor-trailer that jackknifed after hitting a deer, according to the KHP.

Head of Newman University to retire after decade-long tenure

NOREEN M. CARROCCI-photo courtesy Newman University

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The president of Newman University is stepping down at the end of the calendar year from the Catholic school in Wichita.

Noreen Carrocci’s retirement was announced Tuesday. Board of Trustees chairwoman Teresa Hall Bartels said in a news release that Carrocci “put Newman University of the map” after she was named president in 2007. The release says that under Carrocci’s leadership, the four-year graduation rate improved by 30 percent. The university has also added more degree programs, including a seminary program, and built a new bio-science facility for its nursing and allied health programs.

Carrocci says that her “time at Newman has been a blessing both professionally and personally.”

The university plans to immediately begin a nationwide search for its next president.

New liver transplant rules begin amid fight over fairness

WASHINGTON (AP) — Wilnelia Cruz-Ulloa spent the last months of her life in a New York City hospital, waiting for a donated liver that never came. Doctors had urged the 38-year-old to move to another state that has more organs to go around. But she couldn’t afford to.

Physicians at the University of Kansas Hospital perform surgery. KU is one of 14 transplant centers challenging a new policy on liver allocation.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HEALTH SYSTEM

Where you live makes a difference in how sick you have to be to get a transplant, or if you’ll die waiting. Now the nation’s transplant system is aiming to make the wait for livers, and eventually all organs, less dependent on your ZIP code. New rules mandating wider sharing of donated livers went into effect Tuesday despite a fierce and ongoing hospital turf war in federal court.

“Whoever’s sickest should have the greatest opportunity” for an organ, said Dr. Sander Florman, a transplant surgeon at New York’s Mount Sinai Medical Center who helped care for Cruz-Ulloa and pushed for the change. “This woman would be alive if the new rules were in place, or if she’d lived somewhere else.”

But more than a dozen hospitals in parts of the Midwest and South sued to block the change, arguing it will endanger their patients, especially in rural areas, if livers must be shipped further to areas with fewer donations. Late Monday, a judge in Atlanta denied their request to put the rules on hold until the legal challenge is decided. The next day, those hospitals appealed, still seeking to halt the rules after they began.

At a hearing last week, U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg made clear the debate weighs heavily: “Transplant issues have this life-and-death and emotional dimension that carries over to everyone who is involved.”

More than 13,000 people are awaiting a new liver, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing, which runs the nation’s transplant system. Just 8,250 got transplants last year, the vast majority from deceased donors. On average, three people die every day waiting.

That’s just livers. Overall, UNOS’ registry shows nearly 114,000 people are waiting for an organ transplant.

WHY DOES GEOGRAPHY MATTER?

Some parts of the country, especially the Midwest, have more donated organs than other areas, such as New York and California, where the organ shortage is most severe.

And for decades, transplant policy has been “local first” — meaning organs typically are offered first to the sickest patients in the same general area as the donation, even if someone sicker outside the local boundary is a good match. The nation’s 11 transplant regions are subdivided into local areas with individual waiting lists, with wide variations in organ availability both within and between regions.

Some patients seek shorter waiting lists far from home, like the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who lived in California but in 2009 received a liver transplant in Tennessee, which at the time had one of the shortest waits.

For New York’s Cruz-Ulloa, a dental assistant on Medicaid, that wasn’t a choice. After a years-long wait, she died in October.

“They told us, ‘In Florida you could get the liver faster,'” recalled Wendy Gomez, Cruz-Ulloa’s wife. “I’m like, ‘But how are we going to move to Florida and leave everything behind?'”

THE CHANGE

Cruz-Ulloa was part of a lawsuit filed last summer that argued liver distribution maps violate federal law. For example, a liver could be shipped nearly 400 miles from Englewood, New Jersey, to Pittsburgh before it’s offered to nearby New York City. The government told UNOS to find a solution.

The new policy: Patients near death within 500 nautical miles (575 miles) from a donor hospital will be offered a liver first. If there are no takers, it will be offered next to progressively less sick patients at different distances within that circle. Like today, doctors will use a score based on medical tests that predicts patients’ risk of death over the next few months to rank those waiting.

UNOS predicts broader liver sharing will save more than 100 lives as year as people with the worst scores get a shot at transplant ahead of those whose scores suggest they can wait a little longer.

Similar sharing of lung transplants began last year; changes for other organs are in the works.

SOME HOSPITALS FIGHT BACK

Hospitals that countersued say the new policy is unfair, too. They point to people in more rural regions who already face inequities such as less access to health care that leave them at greater risk of death from a variety of diseases.

If all organ banks recruited as many donors as the Midwest, there’d be 1,000 more liver transplants a year, said Dr. Sean Kumer of the University of Kansas Hospital, one of the plaintiffs. “We’ve been successful in doing this, and now people are coming to our area of the country to take organs.”

Costs will rise as transplant teams travel farther to procure organs, added a recent report from Washington University in St. Louis that examined the first months of broader lung distribution. Specialists cited one time when a team from St. Louis and another from Chicago were flying to each other’s city at about the same time to retrieve lungs for similarly sick recipients.

UNOS pledged Tuesday to evaluate if the new liver rules have the intended effect, acknowledging “this has been a challenging time” of strife between transplant centers.

The bigger issue: “I don’t think we can solve the fairness problem until the supply of organs exceeds the demand,” Kevin O’Connor, president of LifeCenter Northwest, an organ procurement organization, who also heads a UNOS geography committee, cautioned before the latest court fight.

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Illinois newspaper editor resigns to spare layoffs

By JOHN O’CONNOR
AP Political Writer

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Illinois’ capital-city newspaper, a 188-year-old institution tied intimately to Abraham Lincoln, is without a news chief after its editor resigned in hopes of sparing more layoffs, according to a staff writer.

Angie Muhs served notice of her resignation on Friday from The State Journal-Register in Springfield, owned by one of the nation’s largest publishers, GateHouse Media. When the newspaper’s general manager escorted Muhs from the building on Monday, the newsroom emptied as editorial employees accompanied her “as a show of respect and support,” staff writer Dean Olsen said.

Newspaper circulation in the U.S. has declined every year for three decades, while advertising revenue has nosedived since 2006, according to the Pew Research Center. In the face of those economic challenges, many newsrooms have shrunk, through layoffs and attrition. This month’s sale of The Times-Picayune of New Orleans and its planned merger with The Advocate of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, is the latest example of industry uncertainty.

According to Olsen, Muhs explained that her departure was in part “to save money on salaries in the hopes that GateHouse would not attempt more reductions in the newsroom.”

Others have interrupted careers for similar reasons. Shortly after GateHouse acquired The Standard-Times of New Bedford, Massachusetts , in December 2014, its editor stepped down to spare additional layoffs. The executive editor of the Gannett-owned El Paso Times bowed out in September 2017 after being ordered to cut newsroom staff.

Muhs, who arrived in Springfield in 2014 from Maine and became president of the Associated Press Media Editors late last year, declined to comment when contacted Tuesday. State Journal-Register general manager Eugene Jackson and GateHouse did not respond to requests for comment for this story. But GateHouse in the past has rejected the notion that its motivations are strictly financial and has pointed to measures it’s taken to keep news flowing at newspapers across the U.S.

“She was always advocating for good stories, not basing stories on the number of clicks (generated by readers) on the web, but what is good public service in the community and we appreciate all that she tried to do,” said Olsen, a long-time health writer for the paper and chairman of the Springfield unit of the United Media Guild. “It’s sad she felt she had to do this because GateHouse says its focus is local news. We’re waiting for them to show us how they’re going to fulfill that mission.”

In March, the newspaper’s sports editor was laid off. The veteran, award-winning photo editor was cut this month. Olsen said the newspaper had about 35 reporters when the union formed in 2012. Today, the newspaper has 15 editorial staffers, including part-timers, and three managers, he said. The City Hall, crime and courts, and education beats do not have reporters devoted to them full time, Olsen said.

Staking claim on its masthead to being “the oldest newspaper in Illinois,” the daily in this city of 115,000 about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southwest of Chicago traces its roots to 1831. The Sangamo Journal evolved into the Illinois State Journal, a Whig and later Republican Party mouthpiece that Abraham Lincoln once used to promote his political fortunes. He was in the Journal’s office in May 1860 when a telegram from Chicago arrived announcing his nomination for president.

Copley Press bought the Illinois State Journal in 1927 and the Democratic rival Illinois State Register in 1942 and operated them as morning and afternoon papers until merging them into The State Journal-Register in 1974. The paper was part of GateHouse’s $380 million purchase of Copley’s Midwest holdings in 2007.

The newspaper has circulation of 18,191 on weekdays and 22,028 on Sundays, according to the March 2019 Alliance for Audited Media quarterly report. That was less than half its September 2010 circulation.
WMAY radio news and program director Jim Leach worked with Muhs repeatedly on joint projects such as political debates. He called her a “top notch journalist” and “a very strong advocate for local journalism.”

“The people there (at the paper) do a tremendous job every day providing community coverage. But it takes people, it takes manpower, to give a community the insight it needs to understand what’s going on around it,” Leach said. “I’m afraid people won’t recognize that until it’s not as readily available to them.”

Police work to identify rider who intentionally struck Kan. officer with motorcycle

LEAVENWORTH COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a hit and run incident that injured a police officer.

photos courtesy Bonner Springs PD

Just before 3p.m. Tuesday, a Bonner Springs Police Officer attempted to conduct a traffic stop on a black sport bike (2008 or newer Honda CBR1000rr, red/black wheels and accents, stickers on side of bearing) for a traffic violation, according to a media release.

The motorcycle took a turn too fast and drove down into an embankment. The officer exited his patrol vehicle in an attempt to contact the driver and the driver drove directly at the officer and intentionally struck the officer causing injury to the officer.

The white male driver then fled northbound onto Kansas 7 Highway into Leavenworth County and pursuing officers lost sight.

If you can identify this motorcycle or driver, please contact Detective Haney [email protected]

Police: Kansas boy critically injured after hit by a car

TOPEKA, Kan. –Law enforcement authorities are investigating an accident that critically injured a boy on Tuesday.

Scene of Tuesday evening’s investigation photo courtesy WIBW TV

Just before 7p.m.,  police responded to a report of an injury accident at the intersection of SW 4th and Taylor in Topeka, according to Lt. John Trimble.

At the scene, it was discovered that a vehicle struck a boy on a bicycle.

The child was transported to a local hospital with what was determined to be life threatening injuries. The driver of the vehicle was not injured.

Members of the TPD Accident Reconstruction Team responded to the scene investigating the incident. Police have not released the names of those involved or the boy’s age.

Advanced tornado research underway in central Kansas

By TIM UNRUH
Salina Airport Authority

Tiny anemometer propellers turned in a gentle indoor breeze Tuesday while curious humans milled about several peculiarly outfitted vehicles.

Just outside of a big hangar at Salina Regional Airport, folks in blue jumpsuits stood watch on a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Lockheed WP-3 Orion, a large plane loaded with radars and other weather gear.
This was the calm that some 50 scientists, weather experts and students are not here to experience during the early stages of a two-year operation known as Project TORUS. The acronym stands for Targeted Observations by Radars and UAS of Supercells.
The TORUS goal from now through June 16, is to simply learn more, said Adam Houston, lead project investigator from the University of Nebraska at Lincoln.
“We hope to improve weather forecasting and improve our fundamental understanding (of storms),” he said.
Relating the “observable” with the “unobservable” with cutting-edge instrumentation, Houston said, TORUS aims to research the relationships between severe thunderstorms and tornado formation, according to information provided at the Tuesday legislative briefing, media day, and open house.
“To do that, we really do need to get close to the storms,” Houston said.
Using the WP-3 from high elevations, gathering information from ground level, and for the first time utilizing drones at elevations below 2,500 feet, team members can attack supercells from more angles.
“We can drive up to the storm, and into the storm if necessary,” Houston said, “to get unique observations, but also coordinated observations to see how these relate to each other.” The operation will continue in 2020.
What the average person knows about these immense, dangerous, and sometimes deadly storms, might be thanks only to Hollywood, according to some during opening remarks.
Anthony Bruna, assistant legal counsel for U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kansas, admitted his education came from the 1996 film, Twister.
“You guys are the real deal,” Bruna said to the Project TORUS crew after Tim Rogers, executive director of the Salina Airport Authority, spoke during the legislative briefing.
“Right now, we think of you as a bunch of crazy people who fly into storms, releasing sensors that resemble beer cans,” said Perry Wiggins, executive director of the Governor’s Military Council.
But he assured spectators that those associated with Project TORUS are dedicated professionals.
“I walked around and talked to to them. They have enough information to make your head explode,” Wiggins said. “It’s reassuring to know that we’ve got people like that on point to protect us, giving us time to basically get out of the elements.”
He resides in Chapman, in a house that was damaged by the 2008 tornado that ravaged the small eastern Dickinson county town, killing one and injuring many.
Wiggins wonders why people chase tornadoes.
“They wouldn’t drive toward gunfire, and sometimes these things are more dangerous than that,” he said.
Love of the weather excites Justin Kibbey, commander of the WP-3. His focus is completing missions.
“My main priority is us, to keep the plane safe and get the information to the scientists,” he said. “There’s a lot of expertise here, a lot of knowledge.”
Project TORUS “is going to be fabulous,” said Lisa Teachman KSN TV’s chief meteorologist in Wichita. She broadcast the weather forecast Tuesday at 5 and 6 p.m. from the airport.
Currently, she said, the lead time for an approaching tornado or severe storm is 13 to 14 minutes, and three out of four severe storms are not going to produce a tornado. Teachman aims to glean information from researchers that would add time and accuracy.
“This is like one of the real amazing scientific projects going on,” said Mark Robinson. He and Jaclyn Whittal, both storm chasers,  co-host a television show, “Storm Hunters” on The Weather Network, out of Toronto in southern Ontario, Canada.
They filmed interviews Tuesday, and plan on spending two weeks in Salina.
“What I want to learn is why one storm produces a tornado, and the other doesn’t,” Robinson said.
Displays in and out of the hangar Tuesday fascinated David Kraemer, professor of mathematics and computer studies at Kansas Wesleyan University, considering all of the coordination between government resources and universities.
UNL, the Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies at the University of Oklahoma, NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Okla., Texas Tech and Colorado University in Boulder, are involved. A small group of students from University of Michigan are on the Texas Tech team.
Moms and kids marvel at stickers on the WP-3 aircraft Tuesday during the Project TORUS open house at Salina Regional Airport. The flag stickers show where the airplane has visited and red stickers commemorate weather events where research was done. Photos courtesy Salina Airport Authority

“To make it all work right is quite amazing. It’s a really good experience for these young kids,” Kraemer said. “All of these vehicles taking so many measurements together is really wild. I don’t covet anybody’s job on that plane.”

It’s what James McFadden lives for. He has flown in and out of hurricanes 578 times in his long career, and owns the Guinness World Record for being the oldest to fly through one.
“I love to fly and I love meteorology,” said McFadden, 85. “It’s why I got a PhD in meteorology. My peers were stuck in the lab. I get to see everything unfold right in front of me.”
The big plane is also known as a NOAA WP-3 Hurricane Hunter, that will chase storms in the nation’s belly.
It will work in concert with drones at lower elevations and vehicles collecting data from ground level.
This is the first time that unmanned aerial vehicles will be used for the research.
“It’s a cheaper solution and you don’t have to risk people’s lives by sending them into the storm,” said Anders Olsen, a sophomore at the University of Colorado.
He enjoys to be “part of such an awesome group,” while still in college.
Drones will normally perform one flight for each storm, said Eric Frew, professor of aerospace engineering science at CU-Boulder.
He’s not yet concerned that wind gusts would cause problems for the unmanned aircraft.
“We’ve been in high winds before, and have not seen this happen,” Frew said.
The project will cover 367,000 square miles from North Dakota to Texas and Iowa to Wyoming and Colorado.
Monica and Avery Hoy thoroughly enjoyed their Tuesday tour. They were part of a group of home-schooled students from Hutchinson.
“The airplane is very neat, with all the hurricanes it’s flown through, and the equipment inside” said Monica, 11, who is considering a career in meteorology.
“It’s definitely a strong option,” she said. “Storms are very interesting and exciting.”
Avery, 9, was partial to the ground vehicles inside the hangar.
“I kinda like that weather vane over there,” he said. “It has a big camera on the front.”

Project TORUS has numerous partners with $2.4 million from the National Science Foundation and funding support from NOAA. The TORUS project is led by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Partner institutions include: NOAA NSSL, NOAA Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, University of Oklahoma Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, Texas Tech University, and the University of Colorado Boulder.

The above story was republished with permission from the Salina Airport Authority.

Suspect held on $1M bond for killing, dismembering Kan. man

LIBERTY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man has been charged with fatally shooting another man, dismembering his body and then setting the remains on fire.

Colton Stock photo Clay County

Thirty-year-old Colton Stock was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder and three other felonies in the death of 35-year-old Matthew Calkins, of Gardner, Kansas.

No attorney is listed for him in online court records. Bond is set at $1 million cash only.

Police arrested him May 5 while responding to report of gunfire at a home where Calkins’ remains were found. An autopsy determined that Calkins was shot twice before his body was dismembered and burned.

Charging documents say Stock told officers that the shooting happened during a “fight for my life.”  Stock previously was charged with assaulting and shooting at another man at the home.

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Kansas teen wounded in robbery faces 20-years in prison

KANSAS CITY, KAN. – A Kansas man pleaded guilty Monday to committing a liquor store robbery during which a clerk shot him in the leg, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Rayquan Hill photo Butler Co.

Rayquan Hill, 19, Wichita, pleaded guilty to one count of robbery. In his plea, he admitted he and a co-defendant robbed F & K Liquor at 902 S. Woodlawn in Wichita.

A store clerk shot Hill in the leg during the robbery. Hill was arrested at the scene. The co-defendant was arrested later that day at work.

Co-defendant Jamaryus Moore, 20, Wichita, Kan. is awaiting sentencing.

Hill is set for sentencing Aug. 5. He faces a penalty of up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

Kansas woman alive after being hit by train

HUTCHNSON, Kan. (AP) — A 22-year-old Hutchinson woman is alive despite being hit by a train as she walked home from work.

Hutchinson police Lt. Rob Rowe says Anais Saulters suffered deep cuts and a broken arm when she was hit Monday night — apparently by the train’s cow guard.

Saulters told police she heard the train behind her but didn’t realize how close she was to the tracks.

Rowe said the BNSF Railway train was traveling about 25 mph when Saulters was hit. She was knocked over by the collision and crawled under the train to go to a nearby business to call 911.

Rowe says Saulters didn’t appear to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol when she was hit. She could be charged with misdemeanor trespassing.

Kan. registered offender jailed for incident that prompted officer shooting

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas felon after an incident that led to an officer involved shooting.

Katie Evans has a previous conviction for felony aggravated battery, according to the KBI Offender Registry

Just after 11:30p.m. Monday, police were dispatched to report of a disturbance with a firearm in the area of Seneca and Harry, according to Lt. Jason Stephens.

As police arrived, they encountered a maroon SUV that matched a description of the suspect vehicle. When they approached the vehicle on foot, a woman occupant later identified as 30-year-old Katy Evans of Wichita pointed a gun at one of the officers. The officer responded by firing two shots at Evans. She was not wounded and was arrested without further incident.

Evans was booked on requested charges that include aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer and felon in possession of a firearm, according to Stephens.  She was also wanted for failure to appear and a violation of offender registration.

Police continue to investigate the original disturbance and are attempting to identify all the individuals involved, according to Stephens.

The officer is a 23-year police veteran and is on paid administrative leave, which is protocol for officer-involved shootings.

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