Piper graduate named to President’s List

Patricia Telthorst of Kansas City, Kansas, has been named to the President’s List for the 2019 fall semester at Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa.

Students named to the President’s List achieved a 4.0 GPA for the semester.

Telthorst is a graduate of Piper High School.

Simpson College, founded in 1860, has about 1,300 full-time undergraduate students and 400 part-time students. Its main campus is located near Des Moines.

Kansas might let college athletes make money off their fame through endorsement deals

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Topeka, Kansas — If Kansas lawmakers pass a bill allowing student-athletes to make money off endorsements, you might see the next five-star KU or K-State basketball recruits selling cars, shoes or soda.

Dozens of states, including Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma, are thinking about changing the rules since the NCAA said in October that it will eventually allow student-athletes to be paid for their name, image and likeness. These bills are stopgaps, aimed at putting rules in place should there be a period of time before national rules are approved by the NCAA or Congress.

It’s a question that’s been problematic for the NCAA for years; in 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up an antitrust suit filed by a former UCLA basketball player. California took matters into its own hands last year with a law to let students profit off their likeness, though it doesn’t take effect until 2023.

Currently, student-athletes are ruled ineligible if they make money on endorsements. Missouri U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver has proposed a national rule that would have colleges directly pay athletes. The Kansas plan doesn’t go as far, instead allowing money from outside endorsement contracts.

Emporia State University President Allison Garrett urged Kansas lawmakers to approve the bill, but ultimately hopes it never has to take effect.

“This legislation in Kansas makes sense at this time,” Garrett said, “but the hope would be that there is that federal legislation.”

It’s a sort of begrudging endorsement from the schools. Kansas State University Athletic Director Gene Taylor wants to keep up the current system, in which student-athletes aren’t allowed outside endorsements deals.

“We would prefer no rules, honestly,” Taylor said. “Just let us continue that this scholarship is valuable enough. But that’s not the direction this is going, so we have to move forward.”

The colleges don’t want to be on the cutting edge, where they might run afoul of NCAA rules and trigger punishments from the league. But they also don’t want to be left behind if other states allow endorsement deals.

To walk that tightrope, Kansas’ bill includes a trigger: It would only legalize outside endorsement deals for student-athletes after 15 other states have similar laws.

For schools in Kansas, the concern is that recruiting won’t be easy if other states allow athletes to make money but Kansas doesn’t.

“I think it gets very tough,” University of Kansas Director of Athletics Jeff Long said. “Without this bill passing, we would be placed at a disadvantage.”

The discussion comes at a time when KU is being investigated for potential NCAA recruiting violations. It’s based on federal court testimony in which Adidas representatives said they made payments to recruits. The school didn’t address the allegations during a legislative hearing in Topeka, but told the NCAA that the agents weren’t working on behalf of KU.

Garrett wants to see enough controls in a Kansas law so the endorsement deals aren’t used as part of recruiting.

Lawmakers could take action on the bill later this session or continue work next year, according to Republican Sen. Julia Lynn, who chairs the Senate Commerce Committee.

Lynn said there are still a variety of details to work out, including how the endorsement deals would be taxed.

“Collegiate athletics is very complex. There are multiple layers there,” she said. “The money is really big in this issue.”

Republican Sen. Molly Baumgarnder wants to make sure there are enough protections in the bill, so athletes and their families know what they’re getting into with endorsement deals, especially when it comes to high school recruits.

“Agents are going to be flocking to high schools to try and enter into that contract,” Baumgarnder said. “How do the high school counselors, how do the high school coaches help that student that might be embarking on that next step?”

Smaller private schools, who aren’t major players in the recruiting game like KU, K-State and Wichita State are, are concerned about the types of endorsements that might be made available.

Some of the 20 schools in the Kansas Independent College Association have faith traditions that disapprove of alcohol and don’t allow it on campus.

But under the bill, the schools wouldn’t have any say in outside endorsement deals.

“A student-athlete could share his or her likeness with a beer company and the institution would have no power to limit such a contract,” KICA President Matt Lindsey told lawmakers.

Stephen Koranda is the Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/kansas-might-let-college-athletes-make-money-their-fame-through-endorsement-deals.

Pursuit ends in crash near 18th and Steele

A pursuit by Kansas City, Missouri, police into Kansas ended in a wreck near 18th and Steele Road at about 11:38 p.m. Monday, March 9, according to a social media post by the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department.

After the wreck, the occupants of the vehicle fled on foot, according to the police report.

A passenger was quickly located, police reported. Later, the suspect driver was located but refused to follow police commands, according to the report.

The suspect was bit by a K-9, was taken into custody and was taken to a hospital with minor injuries, along with a passenger, according to the report.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a crash at 18th and Steele about the same time.

The KHP report stated that a 2001 Honda Civic was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes of 18th Street Expressway when it hit a 2017 Nissan Rogue that was northbound on 18th Street.

The occupants of the Honda, from Kansas City, Kansas, fled the accident scene, the report stated. The occupants included the driver, a 26-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, man; and a passenger, a 29-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, woman.

The driver of the Nissan, a 59-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, man, had a possible injury or complaint of pain, according to the report.