THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING
Randy D. Rodgers, a wildlife biologist for the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, knelt in a field of native grass in Ness City that he says has attracted wildlife back to the prairie, including the lesser and greater prairie chicken.

Farmers could get crop change

A call for fuel may bring cut in grassy fields

By John Donnelly
Globe Staff / October 2, 2006

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NESS CITY, Kan. -- For as far as Randy D. Rodgers could see, prairie grasses waved in the wind. (Full article: 971 words)

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