Month: September 2019
20 persons apply for Supreme Court vacancy
Twenty persons are candidates for a vacancy on the Kansas Supreme Court created by the Sept. 8 retirement of Justice Lee Johnson, according to a news release from the Kansas courts.
One of the applicants is Kansas Court of Appeals Judge Thomas E. Malone of Topeka.
The list includes Wyandotte County District Court Judge Daniel Cahill of Kansas City, Kansas.
The other applicants include Kristafer R. Ailslieger, lawyer, Topeka; Angela D. Coble, lawyer, Salina; Dennis D. Depew, lawyer, Neodesha; Randall L. Hodgkinson, lawyer, Topeka; Michael P. Joyce, judge, Leawood; Russell J. Keller, lawyer, Fairway; Rhonda K. Mason, judge, Olathe; Lumen N. Mulligan, lawyer, Lawrence; Steven J. Obermeier, lawyer, Olathe; David J. Rempel, lawyer, Overland Park; Melissa T. Standridge, judge, Leawood; Lyndon W. Vix, lawyer, Maize; Christina M. Wahl, lawyer, Kansas City, Missouri; Keynen J. Wall, lawyer, Lawrence; Brenda S. Watkins, lawyer, Olathe; Kristen D. Wheeler, lawyer, Wichita; Evelyn Z. Wilson, judge, Topeka; and Marcia A. Wood, lawyer, Wichita.
The full interview schedule and brief biographical information about each applicant will be posted to the Kansas judicial branch website at www.kscourts.org under the heading “What’s New.”
After interviewing applicants, the Supreme Court Nominating Commission will decide which three to recommend to the governor to fill the position. The governor will then choose which one to appoint to fill the Supreme Court vacancy.
The Supreme Court Nominating Commission is an independent body created by the Kansas Constitution. Four of its members are appointed by the governor from each of the state’s four congressional districts. These appointees are not attorneys. Four other members are attorneys
elected by attorneys in each of the state’s congressional districts. The commission chair is an attorney elected by attorneys in a statewide vote.
Members of the commission are: Mikel L. Stout, Chair, Wichita; Gerald O. Schultz, Garden City; Linda B. Weis, Manhattan; Terrence J. Campbell, Lawrence; Frances Gorman Graves, Bartlett; Lenin V. Guerra, Olathe; Robert Hayworth, Stilwell; Gloria Farha Flentje, Wichita; and Dennis
Hedke, Wichita.
No. 4 Butler women escape KCKCC with 5.9 seconds left in overtime
by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC
As losses go, Kansas City Kansas Community College’s 3-2 overtime loss to nationally ranked Butler County Wednesday night was as painful as they come.
Butler came into the contest ranked No. 4 by the U.S. Soccer Coaches Association and No. 5 by the NJCAA but it was the underdog Lady Blue Devils who led much of the game.
Butler’s tying goal came with just 12:51 remaining on a 45-yard free kick that hit off the hands of KCKCC goalkeeper Jaidyn Takaishi and bounced behind her to Sandra Thiman, who had an open net for the score. Then to add insult to injury, the Grizzlies won it with 5.9 seconds remaining in the first extra period on a 35-yard missile from Maizi Garwood, a freshman from Brentwood, England.
“We were very fortunate to score the second goal,” Butler coach Adam Hunter said. “I think 99 times out of 100 the goalkeeper is not dropping that ball. In overtime, Maizi picked up a ball and took a smart, sensible shot on goal and man – what a shot! She hit a pill. Give KCK a lot of credit to make us fight that hard for the win.”
The loss was the first in three starts for the Blue Devils, who resume Jayhawk Conference action Saturday in a 5 p.m. doubleheader against Neosho County in Chanute. The win was the fourth in a row for Butler (6-1).
Despite the disappointing loss, KCKCC coach Shawn Uhlenhake was pleased with the Blue Devils’ effort.
“I think this proved we’re a competitive team; we led the majority of the game and really played well,” Uhlenhake said. “Good teams make you pay for your mistakes. We made them pay for some mistakes but unfortunately they capitalized on one more mistake than we did. We just have to build off what we learned tonight.”
The Blue Devils took a 1-0 lead when freshman Kayley Pedersen hit Corrine Hughes crossing into the box with a perfect pass that Hughes blasted into the net with 29:42 left in the first half.
“A great goal,” Uhlenhake said. The lead held up until the 9:14 mark when the Grizzlies’ Acsa Reyes headed in a shot from just in front of the goal on a corner kick.
KCKCC went back ahead 29 minutes into the second half when freshman Madison Broeker took a pass from Melissa Siegel and beat goalkeeper Lexi Winkle with a left-foot blast into the right corner of the goal. Fired up by the goal, the Blue Devils controlled the ball much of the next 15 minutes before the Grizzlies avoided what would have been the Jayhawk Conference’s biggest upset of the season.
“Our entire backline really played well,” Uhlenhake said. “Alex Schemmel and Paige Liston were out on an island on the outside and did really well. This was by far the most entertaining game we’ve played on our field.”
Defensively, Takaishi was credited with five saves on Butler’s 10 shots while the Blue Devils got off nine shots. One of Butler’s saves came on a breakaway in the final three minutes by KCKCC’s Kayla Deaver, who had her shot deflected out of bounds by Winkle.