Understanding The Fight Over HyVee

Priceless Take One T HURSDAY VOLUME 16, N UMBER 60 T HURSDAY, J ANUARY 24, 2008 W INNER OF THE K ANSAS G AS S ERVICE E XCELLENCE I N E DITORIAL W R...
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Priceless Take One

T HURSDAY

VOLUME 16, N UMBER 60 T HURSDAY, J ANUARY 24, 2008

W INNER OF THE K ANSAS G AS S ERVICE E XCELLENCE I N E DITORIAL W RITING

2006 K ANSAS P ROFESSIONAL C OMMUNICATORS P HOTO E SSAY AWARD

2006 K ANSAS P ROFESSIONAL C OMMUNICATORS E DITORIAL AWARD

Understanding The Fight Over HyVee

By Jon A. Brake

That’s The Brake’s Give Her A Break Two weeks ago Friday was just like any other day at the Brake home. I was in the office working on the paper and Linda was working on the house. (She) has been remodeling the stone A-frame house in our hometown of Blue Rapids for the past year-and-a-half. Linda came into the office talking about air coming in around the front door and she had plans of fixing the problem. A few minutes later I heard a loud crash. I could feel the pain just from her screams. When I got to her she was completely in control, although deep in pain, she said she could not move her feet or legs and that her left wrist was broken. I cannot describe what happened next. Let’s just say she was gone and not responding to me. I called 911, between trying to wake Linda from the dead and talking to the dispatcher it did not come out too clear. The dispatcher put two and two together and said she was sending an ambulance. I then called Linda’s sister Virginia, who lives down the street. And did the same thing. She didn’t know who it was or what was going on. Three minutes later I called back and very slowly I said “Virginia, this is Jon, Linda has fallen, come up” and they did. I was holding Linda’s head and taking control like a manly-man when Linda said, “stop that, I’m going to be alright.” She then told me that she wanted to go to the Manhattan Hospital and wanted Dr. Hinkin. And she wanted to go to Manhattan by ambulance not by air. And then she said, “I’ll never get this house done.” It wasn’t my finest hour or five minutes but it is all that I could do. By the time that Virginia, Harold and the ambulance got there Linda was able to move her feet but did not try to move her back because she knew it was bad. When Linda fell she broke her back and her left wrist. We are very, very lucky. The break was on the inside of “T12”, they are hoping it will grow back together on it’s own. It is next to the spinal cord and cannot be free to move around. Now she is home but not liking the fact that she needs help to do almost everything. Linda has a walker and is improving every day. The Doctor said Linda would need to wear her plastic body armor for three months. Today, we go in to see Dr. Jones (Hinkin was not on call that day) and we hope to chuck the walker for a cane. I have purchased Linda an old kitchen chair that is in the window in the living room. It has no legs. The idea is if we need to get on a chair we are to use that one. The next time you need to fix something, go to the basement and get the stepladder. I know we will. Please, no flowers but you can contact Linda at: [email protected]

Editorial By Jon A. Brake Yes, it is over. The large lady with the spear came out on stage and hit the high note. Why did so many people came to the fight? Why were they so passionate? Here is what the City staff said about the first meeting on Downtown Redevelopment: “The first public meeting was held October 30, 2003, for the Downtown Redevelopment Master Planning process. The developer and design team presented storyboards to the community at a participatory workshop. Citizens, stakeholders, Downtown Redevelopment Steering Committee members, and property owners participated in the workshop by placing green dots on the photos within the storyboards they preferred in the following categories: housing, streetscapes, awnings, and storefronts.” The Free Press attended most of the Steering Committee meetings for the next three months. Over and over committee members voiced their concerns about a “big box” store being the anchor for the redevelopment. Over and over City Staff and consultants agreed “No Big Box Stores.” As late as August 2006 Canyon Research Southwest, Inc. used this table at right to show the buildings and the Retail Square Footage. This report was given to the City Commission and sent to the State of Kansas to get the $50 million in STAR Bonds. The two largest stores in the table are Building

A with 30,000 sq. ft. and Building L with 34,000 sq. ft. In mid-2007 things changed when it was thought that Kohl's Department Store was coming to the project. The Free Press notes taken in a phone interview with City Staff shows the Kohl's Store with 60,000 sq. ft. All of the contracts between the City and Dial Realty were finished in February 2007. Even at that date it was clear that Dial was having problems in securing the leases needed to finish the project. Agreements were changed without City Commission approval. Dial had purchased the Steel and Pipe land and that was to be their contribution to the North Development. Other agreements were change with City Commission approval. Staff had projected that Dial was taking all of the risk but then it was changed to where the City was to take the risk. Dial was to purchase the properties in the South District but the Commissioners were told that Dial could not finance the South end and the City had to take over. That is when HyVee came in to save the day for the City Staff and Dial but they wanted or need more than 60,000 sq. ft. That is why people fought City Hall knowing they would not win. Well, not until the next City election.

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Retail Space Conference Hotel Parking Housing Sq. Ft. Space Rooms Spaces Units

Project Component North Area Building A – Junior Anchor Building B – Out Parcel (Restaurant) Building C – Out Parcel (Restaurant) Building D – Small Shops Building E – Out Parcel (Restaurant) Building F – Junior Anchor Building G – Junior Anchor Building H – Junior Anchor Building I - Small Shops Building J – Junior Anchor Building K – Junior Anchor Building L - Junior Anchor Building M – Out Parcel (Restaurant) Building N - Small Shops Building O - Out Parcel (Restaurant) Residential North District Totals

30,000 5,900 6,500 4,800 6,400 23,000 12,000 19,000 9,000 18,000 18,000 34,000 7,000 12,000 6,000 200 200

211,600

South Area Flint Hills Discovery Center Hotel Conference Center Movie Theatre Restaurants Retail Shops Parking Structure Residential South District Totals Grand Totals

13,000

120 30,000

40,000 12,000 12,000 400 77,000

30,000

120

400

24 24

288,600

30,000

120

400

224

City To Close On South Redevelopment District Properties January 31 The City of Manhattan will purchase all of the land in the South Development District from the people and companies listed below on January 31. The City owns four properties that were taken by eminent domain. Two properties that were condemned and are now owned by the City but the amounts awarded by the District Court are being appealed. Art Craft Printers were awarded $166,260 and Manhattan Ice and Cold Storage, Inc. received $3,200,000 but have appealed. Two other properties received the District Court Award and then the City made a settlement with them rather than go back into court for the appeal. Dean Conkwright was awarded $331,250 and then settled for $475,000. Bernard Garibay received $150,000 from the Court Order but settled for $249,125.75. Kansas Big Brothers Big Sisters, Inc., f/k/a/ Big Brothers-Big Sisters of Manhattan, Inc., The Manhattan Optimist Foundation, Inc. and Boys & Girls Club of Manhattan, Inc. 3/26/2007 301/305 S. 4th Street Norman R. Michal and Charlotte A. Michal, husband and wife 5/15/2007 315 S. 4th Street Duane A. Miller, Jr. and Deborah J. Miller, husband and wife 12/6/2006 331 S. 4th Street

Richard M. Haynie and Bella Haynie, husband and wife and R.M. Haynie and Associates 2/20/2007 308 Yuma

$ 265,000

Fraternal Investors, L.L.C. 3/14/2007 221 Colorado Street

$ 1,071,000

Ronald Harrison a/k/a Ronald Keith Harrison, a single person 11/29/2006 301/309 Yuma Street

$ 585,000

$ 568,750

Bobbie Jean Neugent, a single person 3/5/2007 315 Yuma Street

$ 185,000

$ 272,500

Alfred M. Umscheid and Patricia A. Umscheid, husband and wife 2/21/2007 323 Yuma Street

$ 399,000

$ 102,500

Lyle D. Shepard and Jerilyn R. Shepard, husband and wife 2/20/2007 325 Yuma Street

$ 155,000

Michael L. LaFebere, a single person 2/20/2007 511 S. 4th Street

$ 125,000

D & R Rentals 3/28/2007 $ 449,338 214 Colorado Street Laramie Partnership 2/8/2007315 S. 3rd Street

$ 300,000

All Kansas Property, L.L.C. f/k/a Manhattan Real Estate, L.L.C. 3/12/2007 230 Colorado Street

$ 284,500

Patrick J. Keating, Independent Special trustee of the Manuel G. Navarro andMarie C. Navarro Charitable Remainder Unitrust No. 1, dated May 25, 1993 2/11/2007 335 Colorado Street Davis L. McManis and Arlia J. McManis, husband and wife 12/6/2006 343 and 347 Colorado Street

O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. 2/9/2008 324 Fort Riley Boulevard

$ 7,425,588 proposed $ 1,750,000

SUB TOTAL $ 310,500

$ 407,500

G. M. Stunkel, a single person 2/23/2007 311, 315, 319, 323, 327 and 331 Colorado Street $ 985,000 Keystone Development Company 2/20/2007 411 S. 4th Street

SUB TOTAL

$ 9,175,588

Condemnation Properties Dean Conkwright 301 Colorado Awarded by District Court $331,250 Settlement

$475,000

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard M. Garibay 211 Colorado Awarded by District Court $150,000 Settlement

$249,125.75

$ 150,000 Art Craft Printers & Design, Inc. 339 Colorado Awarded by District Court $166,260

Manhattan Building Corp 11/29/2006 320 Yuma Street

$ 407,500

Robert R. Swenson and Telva M. Swenson, husband and wife 6/19/2007 300 Yuma Street

Manhattan Ice and Cold Storage, Inc. 207 Yuma Awarded by District Court $3,200,000 $ 402,500

TOTAL

$ 13,265,973

Kansas Profile - Now That’s Rural - Ken McCauley By Ron Wilson, director, Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University. The President is giving his State of the Union speech. He speaks about the importance of ethanol and his vision for renewable fuels. One of the people listening in the Old Executive Office Building near the White House helped shape those words, and he has helped shape our nation´s policy on ethanol, energy, and farm policy. He´s the president of the National Corn Growers Association and he comes from rural Kansas. It´s another in our series on national ag leaders from Kansas. Ken McCauley is a corn farmer in northeast Kansas and the 2006-2007 National Corn Growers Association president. Ken farms in the very northeast corner of Kansas, near the town of White Cloud along the Missouri River. He grew up

near the Doniphan County town of Leona, population 88 people. Now, that´s rural. After attending K-State, Ken came back to farm with his dad and brothers. Ken´s family has deep roots in this part of rural Kansas. Today, he lives in a remodeled version of the house which his great-grandfather built. In fact, his mother was born in the room which is now Ken´s office. Ken and his wife Mary and their son Brad now farm around 4,000 acres of which three-fourths is corn. Ken first got involved in corn policy through the Kansas corn checkoff for research and promotion and, in 1996, got more involved at the national level. Another Kansan, Roger Pine from Lawrence, was president of the National Corn Growers Association in 1998. Ken says, "I really respected the way he did things." So Ken got involved in NCGA and got

elected to the board. Board members serve on various committees dealing with key topics. Ken says, "I served as a committee vice-chair and was going for chair, but instead I got switched to a different committee. At the time, I thought that was a bad thing, but it ended up being very helpful. I was vice-chair of three different committees." On October 1, 2006, Ken became president of the National Corn Growers Association and then chairman of the organization. It was an exciting time to be in the national leadership of NCGA, with farm and energy bills pending in Washington. At one point, Ken was in the nation´s capital right before the President´s State of the Union address and he had the opportunity to sit in on a preview of the speech. Ken listened to the text of the speech on renewable fuels and gave the

speechwriter some input on the importance of giving a commitment to ethanol which would build credibility among corn farmers. The speechwriter listened and adjusted the speech. On the following day, Ken heard the President voice his commitment to ethanol. The growth of ethanol production has been a significant factor in boosting corn prices. It´s worked so well in fact, that some consumer groups have voiced concern about a food versus fuel conflict. Ken says, "It´s not food versus fuel, it´s food and fuel. Corn has doubled in price but that only added 2 percent to the price of food. And corn acreage has gone from 74 million acres to 93 million acres." Ken also points out the importance of renewable fuels for the nation´s economy and the environment. Ken says, "When you pump a barrel of crude oil, it´s gone.

But when you use ethanol, you know it comes from a domestic, renewable source." He also foresees more products being made from corn-based, earth-friendly bioplastics in the future, further reducing our dependence on foreign oil. The President´s State of the Union address has ended and Ken McCauley joins those applauding his commitment to ethanol and renewable fuels generally. As National Corn Growers Association president, Ken has made a difference by representing this industry so effectively. Ken says, "I´ve been lucky, because so many other people have worked so hard to get us to this point." I´m glad to see him as a leader among all the states in the union. And there´s more. We´ll meet another national ag leader from rural Kansas next week.

LOCAL NEWS

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MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

K-State Drop Iowa State 80-49 MANHATTAN, Kan. - Marlies Gipson recorded her fifth doubledouble of the season and Kimberly Dietz scored a team-high 16 points as Kansas State ran past Iowa State, 80-49, Wednesday evening at Bramlage Coliseum. With the win, Kansas State (13-5, 5-0 Big 12) extended its winning streak to eight games, the longest since a nine-game streak last season and advanced to 5-0 in the Big 12 for the first time since the 2002-03 season. Gipson had 13 points and 12 rebounds for her first double-double since Dec. 29 at Loyla-Marymount. Shalee Lehning notched her fourth double-double of the season, scoring 12 points and dishing out 10 assists. K-State shot 49.2 percent (31-of63), including a blistering 12-for-21 (57.1 percent) from three-point range. It was the Cats best performance from long distance since shooting 61.9 percent against Rice on Dec. 29, 2006.

Kelsey Bolte led all scorers with 17 points to lead Iowa State (12-6, 14 Big 12), who only managed to shoot 36 percent (18-of-50) on the night, including going just 4-of-13 from three-point range. Kansas State came out firing from behind three-point range from the beginning, hitting five of its first eight shots from behind the arc to build a 19-4 lead with 11:43 left in the first half. Not only were the Wildcats hitting on all cylinders on offense, but the K-State defense was just as good on the other end of the floor as it held Iowa State scoreless for five minutes and didn’t allow a Cyclone field goal for nearly seven minutes to push away from ISU early in the first half and go into the lockerrom with a 42-20 advantage. K-State led by as many as 23 in the first 20 minutes as it shot 48.4 percent (15-for-31) from the field, including an impressive 60-percent clip (6-of-10) from three. Iowa State only hit 9-of-29 shots in the first half

(31.0 percent) and went just 1-for-7 from behind the arc. The Wildcats didn’t miss a beat as they came out of the lockerrom to go on a 17-0 run in the first six minutes and held Iowa State scoreless in the second half until a Shellie Mosman three-pointer at the 14:02 mark. The Cats led by as many as 37 in the second half and and backed up its stellar shooting in the first half by nailing on 50 percent (16-of-32) of their shots in the second frame. The Wildcats forced 17 Cyclone turnovers and scored 24 points off those miscues. The Cats also dominated in bench points, holding a 3214 margin, as all 11 players saw action and scored. Kansas State will hit the Big 12 road to face yet another ranked opponent as it takes on No. 14 Oklahoma State on Sunday, Jan. 27, in Stillwater, Okla. The game, which is set to be televised nationally on FSN, will tip at 1:30 p.m. from GallagherIba Arena.

Cats Get Second Big 12 Road Win BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Michael Beasley scored 26 of his game-high 29 points in the second half and had 13 rebounds, leading Kansas State to a 7256 victory over Colorado Wednesday night. Beasley was 9-for-15 shooting in the second half. Bill Walker added 18 points for Kansas State (13-4, 3-0 Big 12) which won for the fourth straight time. The Wildcats beat Colorado for the fourth consecutive time. They hadn't started out 3-0 in conference play since

the 1987-88 season. Richard Roby matched a season high with 27 points. Cory Higgins had 10 for Colorado (9-9, 1-3), which hurt itself by hitting only 17-of-31 free throws. The Buffaloes got within 34-30 after scoring the first six points of the second half. But Beasley gave Kansas State some breathing room, 37-30, with his first field goal of the game on a two-fisted jam off a steal with 16:20 remaining. The Wildcats led 45-33 after baskets by Walker and Beasley and 53-38 after

Beasley's two free throws. Higgins' layup and a 3-pointer by Xavier Silas cut it to 53-43 with 8:08 to play, but Kansas State went up 64-47 as Beasley scored nine of his team's next 11 points. Foul trouble limited Beasley to 10 minutes and three points in the first half, but he contributed three free throws in a 15-0 run that put Kansas State up 27-13 with 8:54 left. Roby had eight points the rest of the half as Colorado reduced the gap to 34-26 at halftime.

K-State’s Shalee Lehning can also play defense. (Photo by Ben Brake)

KSU Theatre Presents Pulitzeer Prize Drama Theatre will present Paul Zindel’s Pulitzer Prize winning play, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, February 7-9 and February 13-16 at 7:30 p.m. in Nichols Theatre. Winner of the 1971 Pulitzer Prize, this realistic portrayal of the struggles of young adults still resonates with today’s audiences. A bitter and acid-tongued widow, Beatrice Hunsdorfer wreaks a petty vengeance on everybody around her including her teenaged children. One

daughter, Ruth, is a pretty but highly strung girl subject to convulsions; while her younger daughter, Tillie, plain and shy, has an intuitive gift for science. Encouraged by her teacher, Tillie undertakes a gamma ray experiment with marigolds that wins a prize at her high school. Proud and yet jealous, too filled with her own hurts to accept her daughter’s success, Beatrice can only maim when she needs to love and deride when she wants to praise. Called “one of the lucky blooms; it survives, and is beauti-

ful” by the NY Times. Charlotte MacFarland, associate professor of theatre, will direct the KSU production with scenic design by Kathy Voecks, assistant professor of theatre. Costumes will be designed by Chad Armstrong, junior in theatre, with lighting design by Eric Voecks, senior in theatre. This production is co-sponsored by McAlister’s Deli and Pizza Hut.

  

          ! "

Obituaries Reva Stratton Wamego- Reva Lavern Stratton, 93, lifetime resident of Louisville, Kansas passed away Thursday morning January 17, 2008 at Valley Vista Good Samaritan Center in Wamego. Born on May 23, 1914 in Louisville, she was the daughter of Clifford and Leita (Richey) Taylor. She attended Louisville schools and graduated from Louisville High School in 1931. On April 28, 1934, she married Owen Charles Stratton in Wamego, he survives of the home. Reva was a member of the Lilly Rebekah Lodge 77 of Louisville, the Louisville L.A.L. Club, a 4-H Leader for many years and was a member of Louisville Methodist Church.

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She is survived by: her husband Owen of Wamego, KS; her daughters, Carolyn Lonsinger and her husband Ellis of Osborne, KS, and Donna Eaton and her husband Roger of Albuquerque, NM; her son, Raymond Stratton and wife Joyce of Peoria, IL; her five grandchildren, and five great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her brother Kenneth Taylor. Funeral Services for Reva was 10:30 a.m. Monday January 21, at Stewart Funeral Home of Wamego with burial following in Louisville Cemetery. Memorials have been designated for the Louisville Methodist Church. Contributions may be left in care of Stewart Funeral Home, P.O. Box 48, Wamego, 66547. Online condolences may be left for the family at

Tickets for the play are available at the McCain Box Office 11a.m. to 5 p.m. and also at the K-State Union Little Theatre Box Office from 11:30 am to 1:30 pm weekdays. To order by phone at (785) 532-6428 during box office hours, or online at www.ksu.edu/theatre. Tickets are $8 for student/child, $11 for military and $13 for the public. Group discounts are available. Call 532-6878

                  

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HISTORY

Reviewed hedge. Threw over the fence the remaining wood pile. Mr. Kroutz Sawed wood (1.00). Made cages for birds nests. Cleaned out Cellar. Sawed keg for flowers. Leach at dinner. Beautiful day!

The Goodnow Diary gives a glimpse into the life of Isaac Goodnow, a leader in the free-state movement and one of the founders of the town of Manhattan. He later established the college which became Kansas State University. A prominent farmer and successful businessman, Goodnow and his wife, Ellen, built a unique stone farmhouse in the 1860s. Isaac's and Ellen's interest in education and nature is reflected in the hundreds of objects they collected. Visiting Goodnow House Location: 2309 Claflin Road in Manhattan, Kansas Hours: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Tuesday - Friday 2 - 5 p.m. Saturday - Sunday. Subject to staff availability.

1877 Thursday, April 12, 1877 Worked on hen house. Wrote Gen. Chase & wrote Chapman station. Went to Junction City, stopping at Pacific House. Friday, April 13, 1877 Went to Manhattan, Dinner at Prof. Mudge. Meeting of Stockholders, 1st Nat[‘]l[.] Bank. Voted to close up & organize a State Bank & Riley Co./ Bank. 485 Shares voted. New officer to be the same as old ones. Ret[‘]d[.] to Junction with Prof. Mudge. Wrote R.W. Randall, G[—-?] Saturday, April 14, 1877 Up at 4 A.M. Cars for N. Falls. Breakfast at Emporia Junction. Home at 10 ¼ A.M. with B.F. Mudge to spend the Sabbath. Call upon Goss. Worked on Hen House. Col. Goss at tea &c. Sunday, April 15, 1877 A.M. Sermon by Rev. Irwin. Read in Soldiers letters, &c. & talk with Prof. B. Mudge. Beautiful day. Universalist Preaching. Did not go. Monday, April 16, 1877 Prof. Mudge left this Morn. Worked on wood with Gorbet. Mrs. Cooper at dinner. Wrote Ritchie,

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MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

Crowder, Sommers, Fairchild (4 Coupons), J.P. Gulliver. Mrs. Cooper at dinner. Got my hooded Buff Cochin Chinas House from Capt. Houghanant. Tuesday, April 17, 1877 Worked on gate & hen House, A.M. Very Windy! P.M. visit from Rev. McAnulty & Lefter & wines. Wednesday, April 18, 1877 Called on Gorbet. Engaged garden to Mr. Lefter to Cuhoate at 2/8 or ¾ of Products, Damp Morning. Funeral of Mr. Sharitts, A.E. 67 yrs., Paralysis. Also Mrs. Harper. Rainy evening. Thursday, April 19, 1877 Wrote Emma Allyn, Mr. Clifton, Geneology of Denison family. Rev. Mitchell at Dinner on his way to Quarterly Meeting, Yates Centre. Fixed up wooden buttons on cellar window, Bas’n door, &c. R.C.H. Ritchie, V.P. Wilson. Brought home 2 half-breed hens, Buff Cochin China! Friday, April 20, 1877 Burned up rubbish in Barnyard. Worked on Walk in garden. Cleaned out the Stables. P.C. S.H. Fairfield. Saturday, April 21, 1877 Cut up fruit Shrubs in garden.

Saturday, April 28, 1877 Therm. 40°. Sent W.B. Meeker & Co. Draft on C.B. (Nat[‘]l[.]) N.Y. for $148.50 for 9 Coupons. Papers to H.C. Gardner. Split wood.

Painted new gate. Visit with Emma. Not quite as well as usual. Pleasant day. Good news from Bank; Bonds Sold 111 5/8. Read to change to State Bank. Rain during the night.

Sunday, April 22, 1877 A.M. Sermon Rev McAnulty on John’s Baptism. Eve—on Temperance. Both good! Read Herald Globe Nationalist. Wrote J.M. Howe.

Sunday, April 29, 1877 A.M. Sermon by Rev. Phillips. Home the rest of the day. Read paper & in Life of E.T. Taylor. White Frost last night. Think it did not injure the fruit. Clear & Cool; prospect of frost to night.

Sunday, May 6, 1877 A.M. Sermon on Christian Baptism- Rev. McAnulty; EveningTemperance Meeting VS License! Speakers McAnulty, Phillips-

Monday, April 23, 1877 Garden ploughed by Dr. Lefler. Trimmed tree Some & fixed up a little. P. Carols, L.R. Elliot, I. Marcy, C.P. Green. Wrote Geo. S. Chase, J. Guthrie, S.J. Gilmore, A.S. Johnson. Went to Emporia & Stopped at Frank’s. Lizzie better, intend to go home to Pittsburg.

Monday, April 30, 1877 Wrote Ann R. French. Papers to W.A. Miller, Mary Wade, H.C. Gardner, Hattie to Mary Weeks, Ellen to W. Clift. P.C. to W.H. Demotte. Papers to C.P. Green. Wrote S.M. Hassler, A. Reynolds. Set 2 gate Posts. Read in Father Taylor’s life.

Tuesday, April 24, 1877 Met Sommers & Ritchie on University Land business! Got Pass for Crowder &c. Dinner at Junction. Emporia, Took Special Car of Sup[‘]t[.] Garner to N. Falls. Lieu[‘]t[.]Gov. Salzer, Sec’y Kavanaugh, Auditor Bonebrake, Att[‘]y[.] Gen[‘]l[.] Davis, Prentice, Sheldon Hiphl______, Mc Rawsie, Sommers & others aboard. Pleasant time. P.C. Crowder.

Tuesday, May 1, 1877 Made a gate to hedge-front of house. Mr. Lefter planted peas, Melons, & potatoes. Shook Carpets & cleaned out Stove pipe, &c. Read in E.T. Taylor’s life & Prescott.

Wednesday, April 25, 1877 Wrote Crowder & Sent Pass to Beulah, Kan. Also L.B. Dennis, & S.H. Fairfield, Sending 3 Coup[‘]s[.] 3823 & 3825, 3826 = $76.50. Sent Em. N. B. check on Boston 214 Corbin B-g. Co. & Sent for N.Y. Draft $148.50. Call from P.T. Rhodes; pd. Him $50 on Subs for 1876. Eve-prayer meeting. Thursday, April 26, 1877 Made 2 hoops, improved Henhouse, hewed 2 posts (gate). Planted row of early potatoes. Hattie cleaned her room. Wrote C.D. Trimble, S. Silverstone, H.S. Willard. Damp day with a little rain. Friday, April 27, 1877 Shook Carpets & fixed up library. Wrote Solomon Whitney & Sent L.H. Whitney’s letter. Wrote Sommers. Crowder went up the Road. Read Father Taylor in the evening instead of going to meeting. Cold & blowing.

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Wednesday, May 2, 1877 Shower in the night. Sent S.H. Fairfield 4 Coupons No.s 2203, 3034, 3082, 3742. Wrote Ritchie, S.J. Giliure. W.F. Gue cash $2. for stamps. Called at Mr. Philo’s & Smith’s. Getting ready to go to Gen[‘]l[.] Clapp’s tomorrow. Eve[.] read Prescott’s Review of Irving’s Conquest of Granada.

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Thursday, May 3, 1877 Wrote L.B. Dennis. Damp & Cloudy morning Gave up our visit today[.] Wrote Sawyer, P.B. Plumb, Lizzie, & M.R. Bateman, & Frank for Peas. Tramps along. Hoed in garden. Eve. Called on Goss. Land argument. Friday, May 4, 1877 Philo sick! Put off our visit to Clapp’s. P.C. to him. Wrote J.L. Kuhle – Clark, Dodge & Co. Cloudy morning. Went to Parsons to meet Emma Allyn. Called on Mrs. Wilson, Thomas & Wilson, Mathewson. Returned to N.F.at 5 ½ P.M. with Emma. Rhodes at Parsons.

Mowry. Read Lions Herald & Globe Democrat. Took a good bath.

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Saturday, May 5, 1877 Hoed Maple trees. Set a half breed Buff [Co]Chin China hen, 13.E.

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EDITORIAL Thoughts From The Prairie That’s All She Wrote Yogi says, “It ain’t over till it’s over.” But I think he’s never been to Manhattan. Folks, downtown redevelopment is all but over, and the thing will progress as planned without regard to reason or listening to the folks around town. I’ve been pondering the similarities of the original plans for this project and comparing them with what appears is going to happen to see if there is a difference. I have concluded that what I thought I heard is not what they said or as Yogi would say, “Our similarities are different.” I had promised myself I was through making comments about the project and hope for the best. However, during a friendly visit this past weekend I casually asked what they thought of the final decision by the Commission. Howdy! You would have thought I had made a nasty comment about one of their grandkids! Its not that I haven’t heard words like that before, but I can’t repeat them here. So, one more time... Two weeks ago the city commission approved Dial’s request for an amended planned unit development (PUD) for the north. The vote was 32, with commissioners Jim Sherow and Bob Strawn voting against the amendment. That means we’ll have a new Hy-Vee grocery anchoring that part of the development; a store that

Dick Miller will take sales tax dollars from the city treasury to pay off development bonds. The resulting hole in the treasury will have to be filled, most likely with higher property taxes. Last Tuesday the commission authorized $20 million in temporary financing to purchase property for the south development. The vote was 5-0, as Sherow and Strawn obviously believe the City is morally obligated to buy that property after those folks negotiated contracts with Dial under threat of eminent domain. Now here is a real fence buster. Seems that Dial will only be paying $2 million for the north property and $700 thousand for their 60% piece of the south. That’s the price the City negotiated for the properties some time ago. But get this - the City will have paid between $20-30 million to

Ann Coulter The Elephant In The Room Unluckily for McCain, snowstorms in Michigan suppressed the turnout among Democratic "Independents" who planned to screw up the Republican primary by voting for our worst candidate. Democrats are notoriously unreliable voters in bad weather. Instead of putting on galoshes and going to the polls, they sit on their porches waiting for FEMA to rescue them. In contrast to Michigan's foul weather, New Hampshire was balmy on primary day, allowing McCain's base -- Democrats -- to come out and vote for him. Assuming any actual Republicans are voting for McCain -- or for liberals' new favorite candidate for us, Mike Huckabee -- this column is for you. I've been casually taking swipes at Mitt Romney for the past year based on the assumption that, in the end, Republicans would choose him as our nominee. My thinking was that Romney would be our nominee because he is manifestly the best candidate. I had no idea that Republican voters in Iowa and New Hampshire planned to do absolutely zero research on the candidates and vote on the basis of random impulses. Dear Republicans: Please do onetenth as much research before casting a vote in a presidential election as you do before buying a new car. One clue that Romney is our strongest candidate is the fact that Democrats keep viciously attacking him while expressing their deep respect for Mike Huckabee and John McCain. This point was already extensively covered in Chapter 1 of How to Talk to a Liberal (If You Must): Never take advice from your political ene-

Manhattan Free Press

Reporting The

Truth as we see it.

4

MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

Ann Coulter mies. Turn on any cable news show right now, and you will see Democratic pundits attacking Romney, calling him a "flip-flopper," and heaping praise on McCain and Huckleberry - almost as if they were reading some sort of "talking points." Doesn't that raise the tiniest suspicions in any of you? Are you too busy boning up on Consumer Reports' reviews of microwave ovens to spend one day thinking about who should be the next leader of the free world? Are you familiar with our "no exchange/no return" policy on presidential candidates? Voting for McCain because he was a POW a quarter-century ago or Huckabee because he was a Baptist preacher is like buying a new car because you like the color. The candidate Republicans should be clamoring for is the one liberals are feverishly denouncing. That is Mitt Romney by a landslide. New York Times columnist Frank Rich says Romney "is trying to sell himself as a leader," but he "is actually a follower and a panderer, as confirmed by his flip-flops on nearly every issue." But Rich is in a swoon over Huckabee. I haven't seen Rich this excited since they announced "Hairspray" was coming to Broadway. Rich has continued to hyperventilate over "populist" charmer Huckabee even after it came to light that Huckabee had called homosexuality an "abomination." Normally, any aspersions on sodomy or any favorable mentions of Christianity would lead to at least a dozen hysterical columns by Frank Rich. Rich treated Mel Gibson's movie "The Passion of the Christ" as if it were a Leni Riefenstahl Nazi propaganda film. (On a whim, I checked to see if Rich had actually compared Gibson to Riefenstahl in one of his many "Passion" reviews and yes, of course he had.) Curiously, however, Huckabee's Christianity doesn't bother Rich. In column after column, Rich hails Huckabee as the only legitimate leader of the Republican Party. This is like a girl in high school who hates you telling you your hair looks great. Liberals claim to be enraged at

acquire that same land! What am I missing here? So who makes up the difference? I guess we do as taxpayers. All the developments’ property taxes and sales taxes (both state and local) will eventually go to pay off development debt. If that’s not enough to cover it, look for your property taxes to really take a hike. Yikes! With all the fuss we’ve heard from liberals and conservatives alike over the Hy-Vee PUD, you wonder who is ramrodding this outfit. Can’t be the League of Women Voters or Downtown Manhattan, Inc. or the town’s historical interests or my linguistic friends. They fought like the dickens against Hy-Vee. Definitely not Sherow or Strawn. Maybe a gander at who went to the Chamber’s Leaders’ Retreat this past week in Kansas City would shed some light on who are the power brokers. Seems “The Retreat” earlier generated the questionable Quality of Life bond and the current economic development sales tax we pay on everything from food to fertilizer to be spent on what? I’m not sure. And at a previous “Retreat” was where the idea of downtown redevelopment was hatched and got us in the pickle we’re in today. So my take is that the balance of power is skewed in favor of the Chamber who exercises too much influence on city hall and 3 of the 5 city commissioners. So if we want more sanity in city government, we need to equalize the distribution of power by electing some truly “independent” city commissioners who will listen to the people. Like Dr. Deming said, “Organizations never change from the inside.”

Romney for being a "flip-flopper." I've looked and looked, and the only issue I can find that Romney has "flipped" on is abortion. When running for office in Massachusetts -- or, for short, "the Soviet Union" -Romney said that Massachusetts was a pro-choice state and that he would not seek to change laws on abortion. Romney's first race was against Sen. Teddy Kennedy -- whom he came closer to beating than any Republican ever had. If Romney needed to quote "The Communist Manifesto" to take out that corpulent drunk, all men of good will would owe him a debt of gratitude. Even when Romney was claiming to support Roe v. Wade, he won the endorsement of Massachusetts Citizens for Life -- a group I trust more than the editorial board of The New York Times. Romney's Democratic opponents always won the endorsements of the very same pro-choice groups now attacking him as a "flip-flopper." After his term as governor, NARAL Pro-Choice America assailed Romney, saying: "(A)s governor he initially expressed prochoice beliefs but had a generally anti-choice record. His position on choice has changed. His position is now anti-choice." Pro-abortion groups like the Republican Majority for Choice -the evil doppelganger to my own group, Democratic Majority for Life -- are now running videos attacking Romney for "flip-flopping" on abortion. Of all the Republican candidates for president, Romney and Rudy Giuliani are the only ones who had to be elected in pro-choice districts. Romney governed as a pro-lifer and has been viciously attacked by proabortion groups. By contrast, Giuliani cleverly avoids the heinous "flip-flopper" label by continuing to embrace babykilling. (Rudy flip-flops only on trivial matters like illegal immigration and his own marital vows.) And, of course, Romney is a Mormon. Even a loser Mormon like Sen. Harry Reid claims to be prolife. So having a candidate with a wacky religion isn't all bad. At worst, Romney will turn out to be a moderate Republican -- a highIQ, articulate, moral, wildly successful, moderate Republican. Of the top five Republican candidates for president, Romney is the only one who hasn't dumped his first wife (as well as the second, in the case of Giuliani) -- except Huckabee. And unlike Huckabee, Romney doesn't have a son who hanged a dog at summer camp. So there won't be any intern issues and there won't be any Billy Carter issues. It's also possible that Romney will turn out to be a conservative Republican -- at least more conservative than he was as governor of Massachusetts. Whatever problems Romney's Mormonism gives voters, remember: Bill Clinton came in third in heavily Mormon Utah in 1992. COPYRIGHT 2008 ANN COULTER

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T HURSDAY

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VOLUME 15, N UMBER 60 T HURSDAY, J A NUARY 24, 2008

W INNER OF THE K ANSAS G AS S ERVICE E XCELLENCE I N E DITORIAL W RITING

2006 K ANSAS P ROFESSIONAL C OMMUNICATORS P HOTO E SSAY AWARD

2006 K ANSAS P ROFESSIONAL C OMMUNICATORS E DITORIAL AWARD

Kansas State Wins - Kansas State Wins MANHATTAN, Kan. – With their seventh-straight win, the Kansas State Wildcats continued their stronghold on the Big 12 lead with a 67-60 win over No. 25 Colorado Saturday night. Four Wildcats notched double-digit points while Kimberly Dietz led all with 18. KState improves to 4-0 in the conference and 12-5 overall, as the Buffaloes drop to 12-5 overall, 1-3 Big 12. Senior guard Dietz finished the night going 6-for-13 from the field while providing nine points in three pointers. Shalee Lehning earned her eighth career double-double and third of the season as she put together an 11-point, 11-rebound effort. The junior from Sublette, Kan., controlled the defensive boards with nine rebounds and dished out eight assists for Cat offense. Marlies Gipson and Ashley Sweat added 14 and 12 points, respectively, for the Cats that finished with 45.6 percent shooting. The quick hands of K-State grabbed 12 steals, tying the season high. Defensively, Colorado owned the boards as the Buffs held a 40-27 rebound advantage on the Wildcats. The Buffs stormed to an early 12-6 lead in the first 5:30 of the matchup, but a three-point basket from Kari Kincaid keyed a shift in momentum. For the next 4:36, the Wildcats’ defense held Colorado without a single point and forced a pair of turnovers and two fouls. In that time, the Cats’ offense went on an 11-0 run to put K-State on top 17-12. A back-and-forth battle ensued the remainder of the first half as the Cats and

Buffaloes were tied three times and changed leads on seven occasions. KState went to the lockerroom with the 3531 lead and had five individuals with five or more points including seven from each Lehning and Dietz. Colorado was able to return to the

court to score the first four points of the second half and bring the game to a tie. Down 45-41 with 12:44 on the clock, KState took control after putting together three-consecutive shots from behind the three-point arc. With two threes from Dietz and one from Sweat, K-State forced a Buff timeout with a 50-45 lead at 10:57. KSU was able to feed off of the energy established from the run and maintained an advantage over the visiting team. The Wildcats captured their largest

lead of the game at 13 with 4:05 remaining. The Cats will close out their threegame homestand with a battle against Iowa State on Wed., Jan. 23. Tipoff from Bramlage Coliseum is scheduled for 7 p.m.

Walker Receives Honors

Marlies Gipson (51) get two points. (Photo by Carolyn Griffitt)

Nelson In Senior Bowl MOBILE, Ala. – Kansas State’s AllAmerican receiver Jordy Nelson is among the 100 top senior NFL draft prospects participating in the 2008 Under Armour Senior Bowl this week in Mobile, Alabama. Nelson reported to Mobile this past weekend and had his first practice session on Monday afternoon. He will play on the Under Armour Senior Bowl’s North squad, which is being coached by Oakland Raiders head coach Lane Kiffin and his staff. The players will have one practice per day during Senior Bowl Week, capped off by the 59th annual Under Armour Senior Bowl game on Saturday, January 26. Kickoff is set for 3:00 p.m. in Mobile’s Ladd-Peebles Stadium and the contest will be nationally-televised by the NFL Network. Fans will also be able to follow the players’ progress through the NFL Network’s extensive coverage of this year’s Senior Bowl practices, as over 21 hours of Senior Bowl content will air during the week and one game day. NFL Network telecasts will air on Monday through Thursday of the week, including live practice coverage and nightly recap shows in primetime. All times are central, and a complete NFL Network Senior Bowl broadcast schedule is listed at the bottom of this story. Under Armour brings its expertise in performance apparel and rich history on the gridiron to the Senior Bowl athletes in what is essentially the first game of these players' potential NFL careers. With access to the most technologically advanced apparel on the market, participants will be able to perform at optimum levels in the week-long practices and game that are the key tools used by NFL coaches, scouts and training staffs to judge the best talent in the country as

W INNER OF THE K ANSAS P RESS A SSOCIATION A DVERTISING AWARD

they prepare for the draft. The Under Armour Senior Bowl is the nation’s most unique football game and football’s premier pre-draft event, annually featuring the country’s best senior NFL draft prospects on teams representing the North and South that are coached by the entire coaching staffs from two National Football League teams. The Senior Bowl is also attended by over 800 NFL coaches, scouts and other front office personnel each year. Over 575 former Senior Bowl players are currently active in the NFL, and the 2008 NFL Pro Bowl rosters features 25 former Senior Bowl players. A total of 90 players from the 2007 Under Armour Senior Bowl were selected in the 2007 NFL Draft, including 12 first-round picks. The South squad is being coached by San Francisco 49ers head coach Mike Nolan and his staff. Last year, the Senior Bowl produced

12 first-round picks in the NFL Draft, 90 total selections and a top five choice for the seventh consecutive year. 2007 Senior Bowl participant Patrick Willis was named the 2007 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year by the Associated Press and is one of 25 former Senior Bowl participants to be named to the 2008 Pro Bowl. Over 575 former Senior Bowl players were on active rosters in the NFL in 2007, that group included the NFL’s leading rusher, LaDainian Tomlinson of the Chargers, its leading receiver in Reggie Wayne of the Colts, its leading tackler in rookie Willis of the 49ers, and the Eagles’ Brian Westbrook, who led the NFL in total yards from scrimmage. The Senior Bowl is also a non-profit, charitable event that has donated over $4.2 million through the Food WorldSenior Bowl Charitable Partnership over the last ten years.

IRVING, Texas – Freshman forward Bill Walker earned Phillips 66 Big 12 Rookie of the Week honors for the second time on Monday after scoring 19 points in helping the Wildcats topple a top-10 opponent for the first time since 2004. Walker earned his first Big 12 Rookie of the Week honor on Dec. 10 after averaging 22.0 points and 8.0 rebounds in games against Notre Dame and California. He is also the second Kansas State player to earn Big 12 Rookie of the Week honors twice this season after fellow freshman Michael Beasley was honored on Nov. 19 and Dec. 26, 2007. In all, either Beasley or Walker has captured Player or Rookie of the Week honors six times this season. In the Wildcats’ lone game of the week, Walker posted 19 points on 6-of14 shooting, including 5-of-10 from 3point range, in helping Kansas State earn a 75-54 win over No. 10 Texas A&M on Saturday. He also added four rebounds, three assists, two blocks and two steals in 31 minutes of action. His five 3-point field goals were a career-high, surpassing the three against Wagner on Dec. 29, 2007. It was the first win over a top-10 opponent since the Wildcats topped No. 7 Texas, 58-48, on March 4, 2004, while the 21-point margin was the largest over a top-10 opponent in school history. The 19-point effort continued Walker’s impressive play of late, as he has been averaging 19.5 points on 50 percent shooting (51-of-102), including 47.1 percent (16-of-34) from 3-point range, with 6.4 rebounds per game in the last eight games. The former high school All-American

is finally healthy after playing in just six games as a true freshman in 2006-07 before going down with a season-ending ACL injury against Texas A&M in the first Big 12 contest. He is second to Beasley in scoring (16.0 ppg.) and rebounding (6.3 rpg.), while he is averaging 1.9 assists, 1.4 steals and 1.0 blocks per game in 26.2 minutes per game. He has now scored in double figures in 15 of his 20 career games, including 11 of 14 games this season. Off to its best conference start in more than 15 seasons, Kansas State (12-4, 2-0 Big 12) hits the road for Boulder, Colo., to play Colorado (9-8, 1-2 Big 12) on Wednesday. Tip is set for 8 p.m. CST and will be broadcast on ESPNU with Dave Armstrong and Doug Gottlieb on the call.

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KANSAS STATE SCHEDULE Men's Basketball - 2007-08 Season Schedule/Results 12 - 4 Date Opponent KSU Rank Sat, Nov 03 Fort Hays State (EX) 25 Fri, Nov 09 Sacramento State 25 Sun, Nov 11 Pittsburg State 25 Old Spice Classic Thu, Nov 22 George Mason 18 Fri, Nov 23 UCF 18 Sun, Nov 25 Rider 18 Big 12/Pac-10 Hardwood Series Thu, Nov 29 Oregon 25 Jimmy V Basketball Classic Tue, Dec 04 Notre Dame Sun, Dec 09 California -

Location Manhattan, Kan. Manhattan, Kan. Manhattan, Kan.

Mon, Dec 17

Time (CST) 5 p.m. 7 p.m. 3 p.m.

Results Media 95 - 59 (W) 94 - 63 (W) 76 - 66 (W)

at Lake Buena Vista, Fla. at Lake Buena Vista, Fla. at Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

77 - 87 (L) 73 - 71 (W) OT 82 - 69 (W)

Manhattan, Kan.

77 - 80 (L)

at New York City, N.Y. Manhattan, Kan.

59 - 68 (L) 82 - 75 (W)

Florida A&M

at Kansas City, Mo.

87 - 60 (W)

Sat, Dec 22 Sat, Dec 29 Mon, Dec 31 Mon, Jan 07

Winston-Salem State Wagner Xavier (Ohio) Savannah State

Manhattan, Kan. Manhattan, Kan. at Cincinnati, Ohio Manhattan, Kan.

1 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m.

90 - 48 (W) 101 - 59 (W) 77 - 103 (L) 85 - 25 (W)

Sat, Jan 12

Oklahoma *

at Norman, Okla.

5 p.m.

84 - 82 (W)

Sat, Jan 19

Texas A&M *

Manhattan, Kan.

3 p.m.

75 - 54 (W)

Wed, Jan 23

Colorado *

at Boulder, Colo.

8 p.m.

ESPNU

Sat, Jan 26

Iowa State *-

Manhattan, Kan.

5 p.m.

FSN Midwest

Wed, Jan 30

Kansas *

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m.

ESPN Plus

Sat, Feb 02

Missouri *

at Columbia, Mo.

12:30 p.m. ESPN Plus

Wed, Feb 06

Nebraska *

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m.

FSN Midwest

Sat, Feb 09

Oklahoma State *

Manhattan, Kan.

5 p.m.

ESPN

Wed, Feb 13

Texas Tech *

at Lubbock, Texas

8 p.m.

ESPN2

Sat, Feb 16

Missouri *

Manhattan, Kan.

5 p.m.

ESPN Plus

Wed, Feb 20

Nebraska *

at Lincoln, Neb.

p.m.

ESPN2

Sat, Feb 23

Baylor *

at Waco, Texas

7 p.m.

FSN Midwest

Mon, Feb 25

Texas *

Manhattan, Kan.

8 p.m.

ESPN

Sat, Mar 01

Kansas *

at Lawrence, Kan.

8 p.m.

ESPN

Tue, Mar 04

Colorado *

Manhattan, Kan.

8 p.m.

ESPN Plus

Sat, Mar 08

Iowa State *

at Ames, Iowa

3 p.m.

ESPN Plus

at Kansas City, Mo.

Big 12 Big 12Games Kansas Baylor Kansas State Texas Iowa State Texas A&M Oklahoma Missouri Texas Tech Colorado Okla State Nebraska

2007-08 BIG 12 MEN'S BASKETBALL CONFERENCE BASKETBALL STATISTICS

All Games 3-0 3-0 2-0 2-1 2-1 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-3 0-3

(Through January 22) (Conference games only)

18 - 0 15 - 2 12 - 4 15 - 3 12 - 6 15 - 3 13 - 5 11 - 7 10 - 7 9-8 10 - 8 11 - 5

Big 12 Conference Schedule Date Game

TV

Arena Time

Sat., Jan. 26 Nebraska at Kansas* ESPN Plus AF 12:30 p.m. Missouri at Colorado* ESPN Plus CEC2:00 p.m. Oklahoma at Baylor* ESPN Plus FC 3:00 p.m. Iowa State at Kansas State* FSNMW 5:00 p.m. Texas A&M at Okla State* ESPNU GIA7:00 p.m. Texas Tech at Texas* ESPN Plus EC 7:00 p.m.

Tue., Jan. 29 Colorado at Iowa State* FSNRM/CTN 7:00 p.m. Wed., Jan. 30 Kansas at Kansas State* ESPN Plus 7:00 p.m. Nebraska at Missouri* FSNMW/MSN 7:00 p.m. Texas at Texas A&M* ESPN2 RA 8:00 p.m. Sat., Feb. 2 Baylor at Texas* ESPN Plus EC 12:30 p.m. Kansas State at Missouri* ESPN Plus 12:30 p.m. Oklahoma State at Texas Tech* ESPN 1:00 p.m. Kansas at Colorado* ABC CEC 1:30 p.m. Iowa State at Nebraska* ESPN Plus 3:00 p.m. Oklahoma at Texas A&M* ESPN Plus 3:00 p.m. Mon., Feb. 4 Missouri at Kansas*

TBA

ESPN

AF

8:00 p.m.

Tue., Feb. 5 Texas A&M at Iowa State* ESPN Plus 7:00 p.m. Wed., Feb. 6 Texas at Oklahoma*

ESPN2 LNC

SCORING OFFENSE Team

G W-L Pts Avg/G

1.Kansas.............. 2.Kansas State........ 3.Missouri............ 4.Baylor.............. 5.Texas............... 6.Iowa State.......... 7.Oklahoma State...... 8.Oklahoma............ 9.Texas A&M........... 10.Colorado............ 11.Texas Tech.......... 12.Nebraska............

3 2 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3

SCORING DEFENSE Team

G Pts Avg/G

1.Kansas.............. 2.Texas Tech.......... 3.Oklahoma State...... 4.Kansas State........ 5.Colorado............ Nebraska............ 7.Iowa State.......... 8.Baylor.............. 9.Texas A&M........... 10.Texas............... 11.Oklahoma............ 12.Missouri............

3 3 4 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3

3-0 2-0 1-2 3-0 2-1 2-1 1-3 1-2 1-2 1-2 1-2 0-3

183 190 270 136 206 206 207 208 212 225 230 232

240 159 234 225 216 212 272 200 193 191 184 179

80.0 79.5 78.0 75.0 72.0 70.7 68.0 66.7 64.3 63.7 61.3 59.7

61.0 63.3 67.5 68.0 68.7 68.7 69.0 69.3 70.7 75.0 76.7 77.3

2007-08 BIG 12 MEN'S BASKETBALL INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL STATISTICS (Through January 22) (Conference games only) To be ranked, a player must appear in at least 75.0% of their team's games.

Mon., Jan. 28 Oklahoma State at Oklahoma* ESPN 8:00 p.m.

Phillips 66 Big 12 Championship Thu, Mar 13 TBA ESPN Plus * Conference Games

6

MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

SCORING Player-Team

Cl G FG 3FG FT Pts Avg/G

1.Beasley, Michael-KSU..... 2.Augustin, D.J.-UT........ 3.Brackins, Craig-ISU...... 4.Walker, Bill-KSU......... 5.Dugat, Henry-BU.......... 6.Longar, Longar-OU........ Johnson, Wesley-ISU...... 8.Maric, Aleks-NU.......... Hannah, Stefhon-MU....... 10.Rush, Brandon-KU......... 11.Zeno, Martin-TTU......... 12.Chalmers, Mario-KU....... James, Damion-UT......... 14.Roby, Richard-CU......... Abrams, A.J.-UT.......... 16.Harris, Terrel-OSU....... Hubalek, Jiri-ISU........ 18.Jackson, Darnell-KU...... Crocker, Tony-OU......... 20.Dove, Marcus-OSU.........

FR SO FR FR JR SR SO SR SR JR SR JR SO SR JR JR SR SR SO SR

2 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 4

20 21 20 14 19 20 18 18 19 12 14 12 18 17 17 15 11 16 15 19

2 7 9 7 9 0 3 0 8 9 0 5 4 3 7 4 1 0 5 2

11 19 13 6 10 15 16 18 8 15 18 16 5 7 3 18 16 6 3 10

53 26.5 68 22.7 62 20.7 41 20.5 57 19.0 55 18.3 55 18.3 54 18.0 54 18.0 48 16.0 46 15.3 45 15.0 45 15.0 44 14.7 44 14.7 52 13.0 39 13.0 38 12.7 38 12.7 50 12.5

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SPORTS NEWS

7

MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

Kansas State Blows By No. 9 Texas A&M MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) -Kansas State's first home victory over a Top 10 opponent in almost four years may have gone a long way toward answering the question of whether Frank Martin can coach. Sensational freshman Michael Beasley was in early foul trouble against No. 10 Texas A&M on Saturday and the first impulse of the Wildcats' rookie boss was to bench him for the rest of the first half. Instead, he subbed the 6-foot-10 phenom in and out expertly, depending on whether Kansas State was on offense or defense, and Beasley finished with 21

points in a 75-54 victory in front of a roaring sellout crowd. ``He's a smart man,'' said Beasley, who had nine points in 9 minutes in the first half. ``I didn't need any more fouls. I picked up two stupid fouls and the way he was playing me in and out, I didn't want to get any more fouls but I didn't want to sit there and get stiff so I wouldn't be helping in the second half. I thought that was a really smart move by Coach Martin.'' Freshman Bill Walker also got his third foul shortly after halftime but scored 19 points and led an impressive

defensive charge that gave the Wildcats (12-4, 2-0 Big 12) their first 2-0 start to a conference season in 15 years. It was the second road loss this week for the Aggies (15-3, 1-2), who made only two of their first 15 shots in the second half. ``They were quicker to the ball,'' Texas A&M coach Mark Turgeon said. ``We looked like quicksand compared to them. (Beasley) was in foul trouble all night and never lost his rhythm, and he draws fouls better than anybody that I've been around.'' Martin, who had never been a college

head coach until getting an emergency promotion last spring when Bob Huggins unexpectedly bolted for West Virginia, said his response was ``part of my growth.'' ``Throughout my whole high school career, if somebody picked up two fouls in the first half they were done. That's just the way I've always done it, and I did that early (this season) against George Mason,'' he said. ``We were up 20-15 when (Beasley) picked up his second foul and I was stubborn because that's the way I've always done it, so I didn't play him again and we ended up getting down

Groves, Sellers Receive Big 12 Honors MANHATTAN, Kan. – After finishing the weekend with automatic qualifications to the 2008 NCAA Indoor Championships, juniors Loren Groves and Scott Sellers were named the Big 12 Athletes of the Week as announced by the conference office Tuesday. The honors are the first for K-State track and field athletes during the 2008 indoor season. Groves earned her first automatic bid during Saturday’s Wildcat

Invitational after tossing a schoolrecord 69-11.50 in the women’s weight throw. She broke the 10-yearold KSU record set by Renetta Seiler at the 1998 NCAA Indoor Championships by nine inches. Groves’ previous season best was a provisional mark of 66-10.00 on December 8th at the KSU AllComers, while the top throw of her career was 68-03.75 at the KSU Open on Feb. 15, 2007. The award marks the second for Groves during

her Wildcat career, as she was the Women’s Athlete of the Week the final week of the 2007 season. Sellers receives the Big 12 Men’s Athlete of the Week accolade for the first time in his K-State career, after he took second during Friday’s portion of the Wildcat Invitational. The junior from Katy, Texas, reached his second NCAA automatic height of 704.25 during the short 2008 season. Sellers competed in the high jump invitational that brought in six addi-

tional competitors that have each cleared 7-00.00 in their indoor career, including three Division I and two Division II All-Americans. Sellers finished second in a jumpoff with Jesse Williams, former USC jumper and 2007 USA Indoor runner-up. Each cleared the 7-04.25 bar, while Williams passed over the 705.75 height on the fourth attempt to take first.

Sports Potpourri By Mac Stevenson Kansas is going to be 20-0 when they head down I-70 on January 30 to play Kansas State in Bramlage Coliseum. KU’s unbeaten record and lofty national ranking should be savored by the Jayhawk fans, but all that matters in the end is the NCAA Tournament. It’s been too long since KU won it all. All the national publicity about the unbeaten record and high national ranking is beneficial, but the Jayhawks need to remain focused on the ultimate goal—winning the national championship. After the MU game, Coach Self said, “It was great to play poorly and win. If you have a pretty good team and you play well, you should usually win. The key to having a good season is winning when you don’t play your best. That’s going to happen about ten times a year. You have to figure out how to go 7-3 or 8-2 in those types of games.” If KU shoots as poorly as they did against MU, a good team will take them out of the tournament. And KState could end the long winless

drought at home against KU. But it’s easier to talk about beating the Jayhawks than it is to do it. Self has his team playing winning basketball and by no means have they peaked. Brandon Rush had a poor shooting night against MU, but his knee is nearly healed. And Sherron Collins is coming strong. Self’s teams usually peak late in the season, and this year looks the same. Freshman center Cole Aldrich (6-11, 240) could give the Jayhawks a huge late-season boost. Aldrich could move ahead of Sasha Kaun in the rotation. The KU-K-State game on Wednesday will be wild and crazy. But KU will play better in Manhattan than they did in Columbia. It’s a different kind of rivalry: MU and KU is like the Civil War; KU and K-State is like two brothers getting in a fist fight. This time the younger brother might win. Kansas State’s 75-54 rout of Texas A&M last Saturday erased any doubt that the Wildcats are going to play a major role in the Big 12 race. Barring a big upset, K-State will be 4-0 in league play prior to the KU

by nine at one point.'' Walker helped Kansas State to a twopoint halftime lead, and after Joseph Jones hit two free throws to bring the Aggies within 41-39, Beasley returned from the bench and hit a quick basket. Clent Stewart scored five points on consecutive possessions, Walker then scored five straight points and Jacob Pullen, another member of Kansas State's impressive freshman class, tossed in a runner to give Kansas State a 54-42 lead. Jones scored inside and converted it into a three-point play on the first field goal in almost 11 minutes for A&M. Then Beasley heated up, drilling two 15footers in a 10-point spurt. Josh Carter had 13 points for the Aggies, who shot only 37.8 percent, while Jones had 12 and Donald Sloan 10. Stewart had 10 points for Kansas State, which outrebounded the taller vis-

itors 32-29. Texas A&M came in with a nation-leading rebounding margin of 11.5 and had not been outrebounded all year. ``We have a lot of guys not playing very well right now,'' said Turgeon. While showing critics he can adjust on the fly, Martin also proved the Wildcats can win without a full-time Beasley. ``I'm not in to trying to prove people wrong or right. I'm into coaching our kids and trying to make the right decisions for what's best for our team,'' Martin said. ``If you get wrapped up with what people are saying, then it's impossible to grow because you're worried about what everyone's saying except the people in the locker room. Our guys have bonded. We've got just an unbelievable group of kids for as young as we are, that they've bonded the way they have.''

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Expires Feb. 15, 2008 EXP:03-31-07 game in Manhattan. The buildup for that one will rival the old days. Coach Frank Martin handled Michael Beasley’s early foul problems against A&M to perfection. Martin subbed Beasley for offensive possessions and got him out when the Cats were on defense. After the game, Martin said, “It’s part of my growth, my trust in our players. More importantly, it’s a credit to Mike that he continued to play at a high level and not commit any stupid or silly fouls.” K-State has come a long way in a short time under Martin’s coaching. It doesn’t look like anyone is going to be able to stop Beasley from scoring; Texas A&M has a huge and deep frontline and they couldn’t do it. And Bill Walker is playing better every time out. Blake Young competes hard every game and he’s playing great. Clent Stewart is hitting shots and taking care of the basketball. Darren Kent also played well in his reserve role against A&M. Martin’s young team is maturing. If the Wildcats can stay healthy, they will finish in the top five in the Big 12 and gain an NCAA bid. There’s good news for KC Royals baseball fans; Fox Sports Midwest is going to televise 140 of the Royals games. Kansas City should have an entertaining and improved team in 2008 because of experience and enhanced talent. The early depth chart looks promising: Catchers are John Buck and Miguel Olivo. First base will be taken by either Ross Gload or Billy Butler. Or Ron Shealy could make a comeback and claim this important position, freeing Butler for DH. Mark Grudzielanek is a fixture at second base. Tony Pena is the shortstop. Alex Gordon is an emerging star at third base. The outfield has Mark Teahen in right, David DeJesus in center, and newcomer Jose Guillen in left. DeJesus is just average, with both the bat and glove. The starting pitching looks promising with Gil Meche, Brian Bannister, Zack Greinke, Kyle

Davies, Jorge De La Rosa, and Luke Hochever. One or two youngsters could break into the rotation. Joakim Soria was exceptional last season and has the potential to be one of the best closers in either league. The rest of the all-important bullpen appears to be well-stocked. GM Dayton Moore has resurrected the hopes of KC fans for competitive and entertaining baseball. With a new manager, Trey Hillman, adding to the excitement, 2008 could be a breakthrough season.

  

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KANSAS STATE SCHEDULE Opponent

Opp Rank

Location

Time (CST)

Manhattan, Kan.

76 - 39 (W)

Sat, Nov 10

Washington

-

Manhattan, Kan.

88 - 61 (W)

Mon, Nov 12

Southern Utah -

Manhattan, Kan.

87 - 38 (W)

Thu, Nov 15

Wyoming

at Laramie, Wyo.

44 - 56 (L)

at Cancun, Mexico

57 - 60 (L)

at Cancun, Mexico

65 - 68 (L)

Caribbean Challenge Wed, Nov 21 Tulane Thu, Nov 22

Michigan State

18/19

KSU Commerce Bank Classic Fri, Nov 30 UTEP vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff Fri, Nov 30

Lipscomb

Sat, Dec 01

UTEP - Kansas State

Wed, Dec 05

Wisconsin-Green Bay

Sun, Dec 16 t Tue, Dec 18

Texas State Creighton

-

-

at Manhattan, Kan. Manhattan, Kan.

92 - 50 (W)

at Manhattan, Kan.

66 - 58 (W)

at Green Bay, Wis.

56 - 68 (L)

-

Manhattan, Kan.

90 - 61 (W)

-

at Omaha, Neb.

62 - 69 (L)

at Los Angeles, Calif.

52 - 40 (W)

Sat, Dec 29

Loyola Marymount/Cal State Bakersfield at Los Angeles, Calif.

70 - 47 (W)

Wed, Jan 02

Western Illinois

68 - 53 (W)

Wed, Jan 09

Texas A&M *

-

at College Station, Texas 7 p.m. 67 - 54 (W)

Sun, Jan 13

Texas * FSN

-

at Austin, Texas

1 p.m. 77 - 74 (W)

Wed, Jan 16

Texas Tech *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m. 71 -45 (W)

Sat, Jan 19

Colorado *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m. 67 - 60 (W)

Wed, Jan 23

Iowa State *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m.

Sun, Jan 27

Oklahoma State *

at Stillwater, Okla.

1:30 p.m.

Wed, Jan 30

Nebraska *

-

at Lincoln, Neb.

7:05 p.m.

Sat, Feb 02

Baylor *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

12 p.m.

Sat, Feb 09

Kansas *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

1 p.m.

Wed, Feb 13

Iowa State *

-

at Ames, Iowa

Sun, Feb 17

Missouri *

-

at Columbia, Mo.

Wed, Feb 20

Oklahoma *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m.

Sat, Feb 23

Colorado *

-

at Boulder, Colo.

7 p.m. (MT)

Wed, Feb 27

Nebraska *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

7 p.m. FSN Midwest

Sat, Mar 01

Missouri *

-

Manhattan, Kan.

2 p.m.

Wed, Mar 05

Kansas *

-

at Lawrence, Kan.

-

LMU/Hilton LAX Holiday Tournament Fri, Dec 28 Arkansas-Little Rock -

-

Manhattan, Kan.

-

7 p.m.

* Conference Games

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Phillips 66 Big 12 Women's Basketball Championship Tue, Mar 11 - Sat, Mar 15 TBA - at Kansas City, Mo.

TBA

Through games of Jan 20, 2008 (Conference games only)

Results

Washburn (Exhibition) -

-

2007-08 Big 12 Conference CONFERENCE BASKETBALL STATISTICS

Big 12

Women’s Basketball 12 - 5 Date Media Thu, Nov 01

Big 12 Baylor Okla State Kansas State Nebraska Oklahoma Texas Texas A&M Texas Tech Colorado Iowa State Kansas Missouri

All

4-0 4-0 4-0 3-1 2-2 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3

16 - 1 16 - 1 12 - 5 14 - 4 11 - 4 13 - 5 13 - 5 13 - 5 12 - 5 12 - 5 12 - 5 8-9

Big 12 Conference Sat., Jan. 26 Missouri at Texas* Austin, Texas Colorado at Texas Tech* FSN Texas A&M at Kansas* Nebraska at Baylor* Waco, Texas

1:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

Sun., Jan. 27 Kansas State at Oklahoma State* FSN 1:30 p.m. Georgia at Oklahoma ESPN2 4:00 p.m. Tue., Jan. 29 Missouri at Texas A&M*

TBA

Wed., Jan. 30 Colorado at Iowa State* Kansas at Oklahoma* SSN Texas at Baylor* Waco, Texas Kansas State at Nebraska* Lincoln,

7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:05 p.m.

Sat., Feb. 2 Baylor at Kansas State* FSN 12:00 p.m. Iowa State at Kansas* 7:00 p.m. Oklahoma State at Colorado* FSNRM 7:00 p.m. Texas A&M at Texas Tech* 7:00 p.m. Sun., Feb. 3 Oklahoma at Texas* Nebraska at Missouri*

ESPNU FSN

1:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m.

Tue., Feb. 5 Baylor at Oklahoma State*

7:00 p.m.

Wed., Feb. 6 Oklahoma at Missouri* MSN Texas Tech at Iowa State* Nebraska at Colorado* FSNRM

6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m.

Sat., Feb. 9 Texas at Texas A&M* FSN Kansas at Kansas State* Texas Tech at Baylor* FSN Colorado at Oklahoma* SSN Missouri at Iowa State*

11:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

SCORING OFFENSE Team

G W-L Pts Avg/G

1.Oklahoma............ 2.Kansas State........ 3.Nebraska............ 4.Oklahoma State...... 5.Iowa State.......... 6.Colorado............ 7.Baylor.............. 8.Texas Tech.......... 9.Texas A&M........... 10.Texas............... 11.Missouri............ 12.Kansas..............

4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

SCORING DEFENSE Team

G Pts Avg/G

1.Oklahoma State...... 2.Baylor.............. 3.Kansas State........ 4.Nebraska............ 5.Kansas.............. 6.Texas A&M........... 7.Texas............... 8.Texas Tech.......... 9.Missouri............ 10.Colorado............ 11.Iowa State.......... 12.Oklahoma............

4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

2-2 4-0 3-1 4-0 1-3 1-3 4-0 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3 1-3

216 231 233 248 249 255 259 269 271 281 285 302

283 282 281 278 276 275 274 241 240 236 227 206

70.8 70.5 70.2 69.5 69.0 68.8 68.5 60.2 60.0 59.0 56.8 51.5

54.0 57.8 58.2 62.0 62.2 63.8 64.8 67.2 67.8 70.2 71.2 75.5

2007-08 Big 12 Conference INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL STATISTICS Through games of Jan 20, 2008 (Conference games only) SCORING Player-Team Cl G FG 3FG FT Pts Avg/G 1.Riley, Andrea-OSU........ SO 4 39 12 29 119 29.8 2.McFarland, Jackie-CU..... SR 4 30 3 26 89 22.3 3.Bolte,Kelsey-ISU......... FR 4 31 11 11 84 21.0 4.Spears, Brittany-CU...... FR 4 26 7 13 72 18.0 Seals, Dominic-TTU....... JR 4 24 0 24 72 18.0 6.Paris,Courtney-OU........ JR 4 27 0 17 71 17.8 7.Robinson,Danielle-OU..... FR 4 29 0 12 70 17.5 Dietz, Kimberly-KSU...... SR 4 25 10 10 70 17.5 9.Tisdale, Angela-BU....... SR 4 19 8 23 69 17.3 10.Hollins, Alyssa-MU....... JR 4 26 14 2 68 17.0 11.Starks, Takia-TAMU....... JR 4 29 8 1 67 16.8 12.Sweat, Ashley-KSU........ SO 4 23 8 9 63 15.8 13.Lacey,Alison-ISU......... SO 4 20 11 8 59 14.8 14.Green, Danielle-OSU...... SR 4 22 2 11 57 14.3 Raven, Brittainey-UT..... SO 4 20 1 16 57 14.3 16.Gant, Danielle-TAMU...... JR 4 21 0 12 54 13.5 17.Allison, Rachel-BU....... JR 4 14 3 21 52 13.0 Player, Jhasmin-BU....... JR 4 21 4 6 52 13.0 19.Griffin, Kelsey-NU....... R 4 14 0 23 51 12.8 20.Gipson, Marlies-KSU...... JR 4 18 0 14 50 12.5 21.Thompson,Amanda-OU....... SO 4 19 2 8 48 12.0 22.Morrow, Jessica-BU....... JR 3 12 3 8 35 11.7 23.Montgomery, Cory-NU...... SO 4 20 2 3 45 11.3 24.McCray, Danielle-KU...... SO 4 16 4 8 44 11.0 Hanneman, Amanda-MU...... SO 4 16 6 6 44 11.0 Turner, Yvonne-NU........ SO 4 13 7 11 44 11.0

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MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

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NEWS BRIEFS Maine police seize winning lottery ticket they say was bought with drug sale proceeds ELLSWORTH, Maine (AP) _ His lottery ticket was a $1,000 winner, but police have seized it saying it was bought with proceeds from an illegal drug sale. Michael David, who had been staying at an Ellsworth motel, sold four 10-milligram methadone pills for $15 each last week, Police Chief John Deleo said. He then went to a convenience store and bought lottery tickets and other merchandise and went back to his motel room, where he was busted. ``I guess it will be up to a judge to decide, but it's in our possession right now as proceeds from a drug transaction,'' Deleo said of the winning ticket. David, 46, remained in custody Monday in the Hancock County Jail on drug trafficking charges. An offi-

cial at the jail said David was not available for comment. Former officer fined $1 after being found guilty of misconduct BEREA, Ky. (AP) _ A former central Kentucky police officer guilty of official misconduct has been hit with a not-so devastating fine by a Madison County jury. Former Berea Police Lt. Billy Beavers was fined $1 on Thursday after a jury ruled he broke the rules by not filing a use-of-force report following the arrest of a suspect last July. He was convicted on a misdemeanor charge of second-degree official misconduct. Prosecutors had argued that Beavers intentionally opted not to fill out a use-of-force report after assisting in the arrest of a suspect during a vehicle pursuit. The jury ruled Beavers did not intentionally forget to put the report together.

Beavers has plenty of time to get the money together to pay the $1 fine. He has up to a year to pay it or file an appeal. Barge hits sunken replica of 17th-century warship in the Mississippi, halting traffic DONALDSONVILLE, Louisiana (AP) _ A towboat ran into the sunken wreckage of a replica 17th-century warship in the Mississippi River, forcing the Coast Guard to shut down a 10-mile (16-kilometer) stretch of the river. The wreckage of Le Pelican punched a hole that pierced three fuel tanks on the towboat Senator Stennis on Saturday, spilling about 30 gallons (110 liters) of diesel fuel into the river, according to a Coast Guard statement. Nobody was hurt in the accident, but the river was closed for more than five hours before being opened

to one-way traffic, said Lt. Stephen Nutting of the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Office in New Orleans. He said the Coast Guard would decide Sunday whether two-way traffic could resume. The original Le Pelican, a warship commanded by Pierre Le Moyne, Sieur d'Iberville, sank in 1697 after first sinking two English vessels and running off a third during a battle for a trading post on Hudson Bay in Canada. Canadian philanthropist Stewart McDonald built the replica for a reported US$15 million _ a nine-year project that wasn't completed until 1992. The boat was a tourist attraction in Quebec in the early 1990s, but

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was sold as too expensive to maintain in the cold, harsh weather. A New Jersey businessman bought the ship and moved it to New Orleans in September 1995, hoping the warmer climate would make it work as a tourist attraction. It moved from shipyard to shipyard before the city of Donaldsonville bought it in 2002 for US$55,000. Its rotted planking and outrigging replaced, Le Pelican was docked at Donaldsonville, only to sink in November 2002 and again in March 2004. The accident is being investigated by the Coast Guard Marine Safety Unit in Baton Rouge.

Journeyman Lineman City of Holton, KS is accepting applications for the position of JourQH\PDQ/LQHPDQ$SSOLFDWLRQVZLOOEHDFFHSWHGXQWLOSRVLWLRQLVÀOOHG %HQHÀWVLQFOXGH%&%6KHDOWKLQVXUDQFHVLFNOHDYHYDFDWLRQOHDYHDQG .3(56UHWLUHPHQW4XDOLÀHGDSSOLFDQWVVKRXOGKDYHQROHVVWKDQIRXU years experience in line construction and maintenance. Pay range will EHWR'243OHDVHVHQGUHVXPHDQGWKUHHZRUNUHODWHG references along with application to City of Holton City Hall, DistribuWLRQ2SHQLQJ3HQQV\OYDQLD+ROWRQ.DQVDV$SSOLFDWLRQV FDQEHSLFNHGXSDW&LW\+DOORUGRZQORDGHGDWZZZKROWRQNVQHWFLW\ under forms. (EOE)

The City of Holton, Kansas

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Sydney Carlin

District 66 State Representative 1650 Sunnyslope Lane Manhattan, KS 66502 785.539.6612 [email protected]

What matters to you

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Should the Kansas Legislature enact tougher penalties for businesses who knowingly hire illegal immigrants? Do you support the decision of the Secretary of Kansas Department of Health and Environment to EDQWKHSURSRVHGFRDO¿UHGHOHFWULFSODQWVLQWKH+ROFRPEDUHD" Do you favor raising taxes on cigarettes to expand access to health care for more Kansans?

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Name: __________________________ E-mail: __________________________ 67th Tom Hawk for Representative Katha Hurt, Treasurer

TUES., JAN. 29 10 A.M.

Sale will include appliances, automobiles, computers, electronics, furniture, houshold items, industrial merchandise, RI¿FHVXSSOLHVUHVWDXUDQW equipment, sporting goods, tools and more.

Additional Comments:

Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure Yes No Unsure

TUES., JAN. 29 6 P.M. Wichita residential real estate auction 3315 W. Marie Wichita, Kan.

WED., JAN. 30 10 A.M. Derby Internet only auction www.purplewave.com

WE’VE MOVED! Come and visit our new location at

825 Levee Drive Manhattan

below.

Paid for by: Sydney Carlin for House John E. Carlin, Treasurer

Auction includes art, electronics, furniture, home improvement merchandise, household items, industiral PHUFKDQGLVHRI¿FH supplies, restaurant equipment, tools and much more.

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Do you favor a statewide referendum to ban smoking?

Keep in touch!

Sale will include antiques, apparel, appliances, art, ATVs, automobiles, automotive, boats, coins, collectibles, computers, decor, electronics, farm equipment, ¿UHDUPVIXUQLWXUH go-karts, industrial merchandise, lawn and garden merchandise, motorcycles, music HTXLSPHQWRI¿FH supplies, personal transportation, powersports, retaurant equipment, retail displays, sporting goods, tools, toys, trailers and much more.

Multiple location Internet only auction www.purplewave.com

We want to know...

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Manhattan auction 825 Levee Drive Manhattan, Kan.

Multiple location Internet only auction www.purplewave.com

Tom Hawk

www.ezopinionsurvey.com/takeSurvey.htm?key=STCU5J2X

LIVE AND INTERNET ONLY

MON., JAN. 28 10 A.M.

Show Buildings: Western Stock Show Discount. One per location. Choose your size. Up to 50% off. Can erect. www.scg-grp.com. Source #C00Z. 866-609-4321.

To complete the survey electronically for Tom’s district, go to the following URL:

|

AUCTIONS UPCOMING

THURS., JAN. 24 5 P.M.

District 67 State Representative 3115 Harahey Ridge Manhattan, KS 66502 785.537.1225 [email protected]

Business Opportunity ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE. Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 30 Machines and Candy. All for $9995. 1-888-753-3441. Educational MISSOURI WELDING INSTITUTE, INC. Nevada, Missouri. Become a Certified Pipe and Structural Welder. Earn top pay in 18 weeks. Many companies seek our graduates. 1-800-667-5885.

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MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

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NEWS

10

MANHATTAN FREE PRESS - THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2008

Retreat Center For Troubled Teens Planned By STAN FINGER The Wichita Eagle WICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Whenever Kim Snapp becomes frustrated in her efforts to create a rural retreat to work with troubled teens and their families, she thinks of Megan Meier and Robert Hawkins. Megan was 13 when she hanged herself in her suburban St. Louis home in October 2006 after she received disparaging messages

through the social networking site MySpace. Hawkins, 19, killed eight people and then himself in a shooting rampage at an Omaha mall on Dec. 5. Snapp and counselor Karla Charboneau are working together to create a retreat center tentatively called Abba's House of Hope, a place where troubled teens can stay for six to 18 months while working through their struggles. She believes such a

Kansas, Missouri Brace For Casinos GALENA, Kan. (AP) _ Proposals for two casinos near here have some residents concerned about what will happen to the largely rural lifestyle of the area where Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma meet. ``This is going to turn out just like Las Vegas,'' said Rachel Baldwin, who lives in Netwon County, Mo., near Interstate 44, south of Galena. ``I don't approve of it. I'm dead-set against it. They (casinos) take people's money, and their kids go hungry,'' she said. The Quapaw Tribe of Oklahoma is building its $200 million Downstream Casino Resort just off the I-44 exit in Oklahoma, but the parking lot will be in Kansas. Plans for the casino, expected to open this summer, include a 70,000-squarefoot gambling floor. A 12-story hotel with 226 rooms is expected to open in the fall. Penn National Gaming, meanwhile, is seeking to build and operate a $295 million casino just north of there off of the only exit on I-44 in Kansas, in the southeast corner of Cherokee County. Penn National's plan, which has been submitted to the Kansas Lottery Commission, calls for a 375,000-square-foot casino and a 250-room, high-rise hotel. It's not clear when construction might begin on that resort casino. The state must first approve the plan, and a lawsuit is pending over the law that expanded gambling in Kansas to allow non-tribal casinos. Tribal officials and officials with Penn National Gaming have said they expect other retail development to follow the casino and hotel openings. Frank Hollis, 67, who has lived across the road from Baldwin for 40 years, said that worries him.

``I'm a country boy,'' Hollis said. ``I like the country. I realize you're not going to stop development.'' Richard Klemp, Penn National's vice president of government relations with Penn National, said the company works to be a good neighbor wherever it does business. He noted that 70 percent of Cherokee County voters cast ballots in favor of the Kansas casino in June. He also said the casino shouldn't alter the lifestyle of the area. ``It's a rural site, and there's a large buffer around our site,'' he said. ``We're not going to be butting up against anybody's backyard barbecue.'' John Berrey, business committee chairman for the Quapaw Tribe, promised the casino would celebrate the area's rural lifestyle. But he also noted that residents would benefit from improvements to infrastructure in the area. ``We're helping invigorate the economy,'' Berrey said. Some residents welcome the development. ``I don't see a problem with it, if it brings more jobs,'' said Ken Spence, who lives on his mother's property in Newton County near the casinos. ``Whatever it takes.'' The Rev. Dave Robinson of Tennessee Prairie Friends Church in Cherokee County is taking a waitand-see approach. ``You just have to kind of go with what's happening,'' Robinson said. ``Hopefully, it's all good for the community. From our standpoint, we already are trying to help people with gambling problems from casinos in Oklahoma. ``We're going to be good neighbors and represent Christ whatever happens.''

program will help cut down on teen crime. ``Our teens are so jacked up,'' Snapp said. ``We've got to get to them before they're killing themselves and killing each other.'' The retreat will be affiliated with the national House of Hope network, a Christian residential program for troubled teens. The Wichita branch has received a $25,000 grant from the national office for staff development. Snapp is looking for property, working on grants and recruiting financial support. The program would work with teens facing any number of issues, with the only clear exception being pregnancy, Snapp said. Nationally, the House of Hope chooses not to work with pregnant teens because the physical needs of pregnant teens, as well as future plans and goals can be very different than those of non-pregnant teens.

``We choose to do what we do well rather than to diversify to meet the needs of pregnant teens as well,'' Snapp said. ``I really want this to cross socioeconomic and racial boundaries and be available to anyone in the city,'' she said. Ideally, she would like to find 20 acres not far from Wichita _ a rural setting where participants can feel separated from their home environments, yet close enough that it's convenient for parents to come for sessions, Snapp said. ``This has the gestation of an elephant,'' Snapp said of her vision. ``It's taking a while, but it's going to be really big when it's born.'' Snapp worked as a doctor for more than 15 years at World Impact Village's Good Samaritan Clinic in Wichita before she felt it was time to find a new challenge. She found it when she went to a

Women of Faith conference a few years ago. ``I heard a teen speak for three minutes about how the House of Hope turned her life around and I sensed, `This is what you're supposed to do next,''' Snapp said. She spent three years learning about the program, traveling to conferences and laying groundwork. She took a part-time job at the Mid-Kansas Center for Wound Healing at Wesley Medical Center. ``That pays the bills,'' she said. ``This is my passion. ... It's a total leap of faith.'' Charboneau, a certified Christian counselor, said that element appealed to her as well. ``We're going to try and bring healing to the whole family, instead of just `managing' the child,'' Charboneau said. ``It's kind of like the difference between plucking the dandelion and getting the roots.'' Snapp wants to rely on grants and

donations to finance the nonprofit organization. The children could be referred any number of ways, including by families, court services, foster care or the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. Although Abba's House of Hope doesn't have a place to call its own yet, Charboneau has already begun to accept clients for outpatient counseling.

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Kansas Getting More Attention For This Years Caucuses WICHITA, Kan. (AP) _ Kansas usually is an afterthought when it comes to the presidential primaries. But this year, the candidates _ even the Democrats _ are paying more attention to the state. ``This time around it may be that we play a slightly more important role, but even then, our size kind of prevents us from being a focus of attention,'' said Joe Aistrup, head of the political science department at Kansas State University. Candidates in both parties are naming large steering committees,

Plan Would Give Kids Free Tuition For College KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) _ A local government official hopes a plan to provide free college scholarships to the city's children would encourage more people to move here. Pat Huggins Pettey, a commissioner with the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kan., is preparing a quarter-cent salestax initiative that would generate money to pay for the scholarship program. Pettey hopes to get the plan on the June ballot but first needs approval from the Unified Board of Commissioners. Under the program, students in Kansas City, Kan., who have graduated from an accredited high school there could receive up to $4,000 a year for four years to use on tuition and fees. The amount of the scholarship would be based on when the student entered Kansas City, Kan., schools. Pettey also said she would be open to ways of financing the scholarship program besides a sales tax. Pettey, a retired Turner School District teacher, said she thinks the program _ called Dotte Promise, using a nickname residents have given the county _ could attract new residents and help more people go to college. She said it could build on economic successes the city has had with Kansas Speedway and the nearby Village West entertainment district.

training caucus workers, planning rallies and making phone calls. And one of the leading Democrats, Barack Obama, set up an office in Kansas a couple of months ago, and his supporters have been going doorto-door. Republicans expect so many people to show up for their Feb. 9 caucus in Wichita that they have switched the site from the jury room of the Sedgwick County Courthouse to the Exhibition Hall at Century II. Democratic leaders also expect a large turnout for their caucus on Feb. 5, when 22 states will be holding caucuses or primaries. ``As it's turning out, this thing is going to be wide open going into that day,'' said Larry Gates, state chairman of the Democratic Party. ``We're getting a lot of attention, and we're going to get more attention.'' But Republicans wanted to separate the state from Super Tuesday. ``We took a calculated gamble,'' said Kris Kobach, state Republican Party chairman. ``We knew if we stayed with the 22-plus other states on Super Tuesday, Kansas would go completely unnoticed. ``If three or more candidates are all in contention real close to each other in delegate count out of Super Tuesday, Kansas is standing virtually alone on Saturday.'' Louisiana and Washington also have Republican caucuses or primaries that day, but those states are distributing their delegates proportionally. Kansas Republican's decision to use a winner-take-all caucus could draw candidates here, Kobach said. ``Even if they're not here in person, at least they'd send surrogates, advertise heavily and be devoting resources to Kansas,'' he said. Aistrup said the GOP caucus could matter more nationally than the Democratic one. ``It could be a total free-for-all among the Republicans, and if that happens, there's a better chance that Kansas could see a little bit of campaigning,'' he said.

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