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Take that! Wildcats punish Mizzou on their home floor.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)—Forget any talk of Kansas State as a team teetering on the NCAA Tournament bubble. After yet another convincing win over a Top 20 team, the Wildcats’ bubble has burst—and coach Frank Martin couldn’t be happier.

Rodney McGruder scored 24 points as Kansas State upset No. 3 Missouri 78-68 Tuesday night, the Wildcats’ second win this season over the Tigers and their first at Mizzou Arena since 2007. It’s also the second straight win over a Big 12 bruiser and national power, following a one-point weekend win over No. 13 Baylor in Waco, Texas.

“A week ago, I was trying to find a building that’s more than six stories height-wise so I could jump,” Martin joked after the game, though he wasn’t smiling. “And these guys, they gave me energy to come in and coach them in practice because they were so positive even though we had just lost two tough games at Texas and (against) Kansas. They’ve been awesome and I couldn’t be happier that they’ve been rewarded these last two games.”

Kansas State (19-8, 8-7 Big 12) led 40-30 at halftime and by 16 points with 12:32 left in the second half after a twisting McGruder layup before a late run by Missouri (25-3, 12-3) got the Tigers within 63-60 with six minutes remaining.

Missouri trailed by four after two free throws by Michael Dixon with 2:21 left, but Jordan Henriquez answered with an alley-oop dunk following a Tiger timeout. The Wildcats extended the lead on two free throws by Henriquez.

Thomas Gipson added 13 points for Kansas State, which connected on 53.8 percent of its field goals.

The Wildcats were even better in the second half, converting 14 of 24 for 58.3 percent.

Dixon scored 21 and Marcus Denmon added 19 for Missouri. The Tigers made just 38.3 percent of their field goal attempts after entering the game hitting more than 50 percent, tops in the Big 12 and third-best nationally. Missouri was 8-of-26 from 3-point range, while Kansas State made six treys but took 17 fewer attempts than their opponents.

The K-State loss was Missouri’s first home defeat of the season and just the fourth career loss at Mizzou Arena for the Tigers’ five-man senior class. It also kept Missouri from standing alone with the best start in school history. Missouri started 25-2 in 1990 and 1994.

“We had a lot of confidence,” McGruder said. “And we felt like, `Why not come in here and get a victory?”’

Kansas State had already throttled Missouri 75-59 in Manhattan in early January, one of the few blemishes on an otherwise charmed season for Missouri and first-year coach Frank Haith. And while Tuesday night’s game remained in doubt until late, the Wildcats and Martin again relied on physical defense and a deeper roster to prevail.

Missouri led by six points early in the first half but soon struggled to both make shots and defend Kansas State. The 10-point halftime deficit was their second-largest of the season. Their biggest? Falling behind 44-25 in the first meeting in Manhattan. Missouri made 10 of 29 shots in the first half on Tuesday.

In one uncharacteristically out-of-sync sequence, Henriquez swatted Phil Pressey’s driving layup attempt out of bounds. Ricardo Ratliffe then missed an open 10-foot jumper off the in-bounds play, and after a K-State miss, Denmon bobbled the ball out of bounds on a fast-break. Minutes later, the ball again glanced off his hands on a similar pass by Pressey for another Tiger turnover. In between, English missed two consecutive free throws.

English was also hit with a technical foul late in the first half for slamming the ball to the court in frustration, which sent him to the bench with his third personal foul. He would later foul out and was held to nine points. He averages 14.2 points, second on the team in scoring.

“We didn’t punch back early,” English said of the Tiger’s first-half struggles. “When you do that and play good teams, it’s an uphill battle all the way.”

“We didn’t defend the way we usually defend, the way we need to defend,” he added. “That will be fixed. That won’t happen again.”

Jamar Samuels added nine points and 11 rebounds for Kansas State. With his four blocks, all in the first half, Henriquez set a school record for career rejections with 125.

Ratliffe scored nine points and grabbed 14 rebounds for Missouri but made just 3 of 7 field goals after entering the game making 72.6 percent of his shots, which leads the nation.

The Tigers travel to No. 4 Kansas on Saturday in what could be the final regular season match-up in the historic rivalry. With the K-State loss, Missouri trails the Jayhawks by a half-game in the conference. A win over Kansas, which plays at Texas A&M on Wednesday, could elevate Missouri back in contention for the Big 12 regular season title and a potential No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.

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Marilyn May Phemister

Larned

Marilyn May Phemister, 78, died January 19, 2012, at Hutchinson Regional Medical Center, Hutchinson.

She was born May 23, 1933 at Aledo, Illinois the daughter of Paul E. and Margaret Litzenberger Black.  A longtime resident of Larned, she was a retired Elementary School Teacher. 

On February 18, 1974, she married Charles L. Phemister in California.  He survives.

Other survivors include, one brother, Ronald Black, Snohomish, Washington, nephews, Brad Tew, William Black and Robert Black.                                                 

Memorial Service will be at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, February 26, 2012, at Morell Funeral Home.  Burial was in the Mennonite Cemetery, Hanston.

Memorial donations may be sent to Muscular Dystrophy Association in care of Morell Funeral Home, P.O. Box 124, Larned, Kansas 67550-0124. 

Personal condolences may be left at www.morellfuneralhomellc.com

Companion of Murder Victim Damon Galyardt Appears in Arraignment Hearing

32-year-old Michelle Detrich of Great Bend was in Rice County Court last week for an arraignment hearing. Detrich is allegedly one of the last people seen with murder victim Damon Galyardt on November 11th, 2011. Galyardt’s body was found in Barton County the day after both Galyardt and Detrich were allegedly being sought after by Lyons Police in connection to a counterfeit money case in Lyons. Detrich was arrested in Lyons, just hours before Galyardt’s body was found in Barton County. She was charged on multiple counts on December 6th. Scott McPherson is the Rice County Attorney.

MCPHERSON-COMMERCIAL SURETY BOND by Matt Unruh

An arrest was made last week in the murder case of Damon Galyardt. Jeffery Chapman was charged in the 1st degree murder of Galyardt on Monday, February 13th. Chapman has been in custody since November 15th, when he was arrested on separate charges, but he was a person of interest in the case at that time.

Ruby D. Pinkston

St. John – Ruby D. Pinkston, 81, died February 18, 2012 at her home.

She was born June 30, 1930 in Artesian, South Dakota. The daughter of Walter and Dorthy Gus May; she was a homemaker.

She was a member of the Radium Rangers Senior Citizens Club.

On December 20, 1952 she married Milton D (Bud). Pinkston at Pensacola, Florida. He survives.

Other survivors include; a son Chris and wife Pennie, St. John, three daughters, Robyn Hall and husband Matt, Garfield, Julie Wilson and husband Tim, Prineville, Oregon and Kellie Begler and husband Robert,
Ellis. A sister, Eleanor Shoemaker and husband Dick, Bennett, Colorado, four grandchildren, Randi Turner, Kiley Hamor, Tiffany Dick and Jason Pinkston, and eight great grandchildren, Micah Dick, Kaitlyn Dick, Jaidyn
Pinkston, Grady Pinkston, Keirsten Pinkston, Leah Pinkston, Hayden Turner and Landyn Nichols.

Funeral will be 10:00 a.m. Friday at the Beckwith Mortuary Chapel, Larned with Rev. Jerry Hodges presiding. Friends may sign the register from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the Mortuary.
The casket will remain closed. Burial will be in the Point View Cemetery, Radium with Military Graveside Rites provided by the United States Navy.

In Lieu of flowers memorials may be given to the Southwind Hospice in care of the Beckwith Mortuary, P.O. Box 477, Larned, KS 67550.

Personal condolences may be left at www.beckwithmortuary.com.

FEBRUARY 21, 2012

S&S Reel Welding & Fabrication
 

Download Trading Post Classified Form CLICK HERE

Studio Line 9AM – 10AM:  620-792-2479

FOR SALE: WOMEN’S JEANS SIZE 16. 793-4287

FOR SALE: TWIN MATTRESS & BOX SPRINGS. 796-2013

FOR SALE: 1990 GMC 1/2 TON PU FOR PARTS, 1971 CHEVY FOR PARTS. 785-650-1175

FOR SALE: TABLE & 5 CHAIRS, BED, DRESSER W/MIRROR, CHEST OF DRAWERS. 617-5136

FOR SALE: 2 CHAIN SAWS, FRONT TRACTOR TIRE. 640-7432

FOR SALE: 2 SHIATSU PUPPIES. 282-1216

FOR SALE: KENMORE REFRIGERATOR, PROPANE GRILL. 793-6379

FOR SALE: 1996 DODGE 3/4 TON PU W/FLATBED. 617-4700

WANTED: SMALL TO MID-SIZE CAR. FREE: PUPPIES COLLIE/PIT MIX. 282-7767

FOR SALE: APPLE COMPUTER. 793-8907

FOR SALE: 1996 CHEVY LUMINA. 804-2330

FOR SALE: 1980 KAWASAKI 440 LTD MOTORCYCLE. (ALWAYS COVERED). 525-1941

FOR SALE: 3 WHEEL HANDICAP SCOOTER. WANTED: 3 WHEEL WALKER W/BRAKES. 793-8835

WANTED: 2 TICKETS TO THE KSU VS IOWA ST THIS SATURDAY. 793-2826

FOR SALE: XL GROCERY CART, FOLDING CART. 923-1006

FOR SALE: 5 DRUM SET CASES, 8′ FOLDING TABLES. 804-0061

FOR SALE: MOSSBERG 12 GUAGE SHOTGUN, 2 MID-80 CAMARO’S. 282-0724

FOR SALE: UNIQUE LOG RACK. 793-5197

FOR SALE: LARGE METAL DESK, FREE: SLEEPER SOFA. 793-7390

FOR SALE: 50 HAY BALES (NATIVE GRASS), 1999 DODGE CARAVAN SPORT. 785-735-4686

FOR SALE: 2 PR. OF FIRE RESISTANT BIB OVERALLS, SIZE XXL SHORT, GOLD’S GYM TREADMILL. 653-7552

FOR SALE: ROTISSERIE OVEN, CHILD’S DESK & CHAIR. 603-3247

FOR SALE: NRA COOKBOOK. 793-8692

FOR SALE: 5 PITBULL PUPPIES. 797-2688

FOR SALE: POWER CHAIR W/PORTABLE RAMP. 617-3581

FOR SALE: HEDGEPOST. 785-472-1065

FREE: LAB/GERMAN SHEPARD MIX W/CHIP. 285-9092

WANTED: MODULE FOR A 1988 BUICK PARK AVENUE, HEARING AIDS. 792-5387

FOR SALE: HIDE-A-BED 672-5210

WANTED: SUV OR A PU. 659-3544

FOR SALE: OAK ENTERTAINMENT CENTER W/32″ TV, SET OF GOLF CLUBS W/BAG. 257-8471

FOR SALE: SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR, JOHN DEERE RIDING MOWER W/ATTACHMENTS. 792-5209

FOR SALE: 2 SETS OF TIRES 285/55/20. 603-3416

WANTED: BEDCOVER FOR A 2008 PU. 617-8728

WANTED: 3 – 4 BEDROOM HOME IN GREAT BEND AREA. 617-8617

FREE: CALICO CAT. 785-483-2837

FOR SALE: FRONT BUMPER FOR A 2006 CHEVY PU, PARTS FOR A GOLD WING MOTORCYCLE. 257-3242

TRADING POST CLASSIFIED:

FOR SALE: 4 COOPER TIRES, THE SIZE LT265/75/R16 WITH 4/32NDS TREAD. $20.00 EACH, 4 COOPER TIRES, THE SIZE IS: P265/75/R16 WITH 4/32NDS TREAD. $20.00 EACH. 4 GOODYEAR TIRES, THE SIZE IS: P225/65/R18 WITH 7/32NDS TREAD. $65.00 EACH. AND THE SELLER IS GIVING AWAY A 15FT. TRAMPOLINE THAT IS STILL ASSEMBLED. CALL 797-7257 AFTER 5:00PM.

LOST DOG: MALE HUSKY/MALAMUTE MIX, ALL WHITE WITH LONG HAIR. LAST SEEN WEARING A FADED RED COLLAR AND TAG. MISSING FROM AN AREA WEST OF GREAT BEND. A REWARD IS BEING OFFERED. 617-3261

HAVE A GOOD WEEK.

Kansas House panel postpones vote on abortion bill

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – A Kansas House committee has postponed its vote on a bill aimed at preventing the state from subsidizing abortions even indirectly through tax credits or deductions.

Chairman Steve Brunk said he cancelled Monday’s meeting of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee to give members more time to draft possible amendments.

Brunk, a Bel Aire Republican, expects a vote next week. The committee’s approval would send the bill to the full House.

The bill also rewrites the state’s informed consent law, requiring doctors to provide certain information before terminating a woman’s pregnancy. It would require doctors to allow patients to hear a fetal heartbeat.

The measure also would prohibit schools from incorporating materials from groups that provide abortions into classes on human sexuality or sexually transmitted diseases.

Kansas House panel approves income tax bill

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – A Kansas House committee has approved a plan for cutting individual income taxes, reducing taxes for business owners and keeping a promise to cut the state sales tax next year.

The measure endorsed Monday by the House Taxation Committee is an alternative to a tax plan proposed by Republican Gov. Sam Brownback. The committee’s voice vote sends the measure to the House for debate.

The committee modified a plan drafted by Republican leaders in the House.

The plan would reduce individual income tax rates for 2013, but not as aggressively as Brownback had proposed. It would also scale back an income tax credit for poor workers by more than House GOP leaders had sought.

The sales tax would drop to 5.7 percent from 6.3 percent in July 2013, as scheduled.

Kansas House panel endorses veterans’ tuition bill

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – A Kansas House committee has approved a bill allowing all military veterans to pay the lower tuition rates at state universities normally reserved for Kansas residents.

The tuition break already applies to veterans who live in Kansas for two years during their military service and establish a home in the state within 30 days of leaving the military. Veterans save about $4 million in tuition costs a year.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports  that the measure endorsed Monday by the House Education Budget Committee extends the in-state tuition break to all veterans.

The bill goes next to the House Appropriations Committee for review.

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