An Overland Park man was charged Tuesday in connection with an attempted robbery and a shooting that injured a teenager in Lawrence last year. Mary Maroon, 73, of Overlands Park, Kansas, who died Tuesday, was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps and Kansas State Police. A woman in her 40s was killed in the early hours of Tuesday morning in an exchange of gunfire at her home.
She graduated with honors from Lawrence High School in 2007 and served with the U.S. Marine Corps and Kansas State Police in 2009. She graduated with distinction from KSU College of Public Health and Human Services in Lawrence, Kansas, in 2006 and graduated in 2008.
In 1966 she was awarded a doctorate in veterinary medicine and received the prize for small animal practitioners during her school visit. She then attended Kansas State University College of Public Health and Human Services in Lawrence, Kansas, received a PhD in veterinary medicine and received her PhD in veterinary medicine from the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri, in May 2009. He attended the Kansas University School of Veterinary Medicine in Overland Park, Canton St. Gallen, in 1991, earned his doctorate in animal health in February 1992 and attended the KSU School of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine in Topeka, Kans. In May 2018, he graduated from KU in Wichita, KS with a PhD in Medical Sciences.
He left Plano in 1991 to open his practice in Highland Village and has stayed there ever since. He has held various leadership positions in USAR since graduating from the Army Veterinary Corps in Kansas State as a DVM.
Dr. McCullough earned a PhD in osteopathic medicine from Ohio University and then graduated from the prestigious Taos Trusted Orthopedic Surgery, which serves Houston, Texas. He graduated from the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston and has since received a fellowship at Texas A & M University Medical Center in Dallas. He has been connected to Menorah Medical Center since his first visit. His connections include internships in the Dallas / Fort Worth area, Dallas, Texas and Houston, as well as connections with the US Department of Health and Human Services.
Dr. Kerling earned a bachelor's degree in biology from Iowa State University before graduating from Kansas State in 2005. He graduated in 2007 and has since attended the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston and Texas A & M University Medical Center. Dr. Pelfrey attended Kansas State University and earned his bachelor's degree in animal science and industry in 1987 and his master's degree in veterinary medicine in 1990.

He is currently a member of the Board of Trustees of Kansas State University Veterinary Medical Center and served on the Board of Directors of the University of Kansas College of Veterinary Medicine. He was also an assistant professor of veterinary medicine at Kansas University's Department of Animal Sciences.
He is a member of the American Veterinary Medical Association and has a special professional interest in veterinary medicine. Dr. Kerling has been awarded numerous prizes for his services to veterinary medicine. He is active in a number of professional organizations, including the Kansas Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Kansas Veterinary Society and Kansas State University Veterinary Medicine Center, is the founder and president of the Veterinary Research and Education Center at KSU and an active board member of the Kansas University College of Animal Sciences.
Dr. Otte is a member of the Kansas Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Kansas Veterinary Society and Kansas State University Veterinary Medicine Center, an associate professor at the Kansas City Zoo and an active board member of the American Veterinary Medical Association. He has been a visiting veterinarian at the University of California, San Diego and the National Institutes of Health, researched Total Hip Replacement and Stifle Diseases, given a lecture on kidney disease, and participated in research at Cornell University on total hip replacement surgery and its effects on animal health. Dr. Greg Dvm, DVM, M.D., Professor of Veterinary Medicine at KSU, has been awarded the Faculty Award for Excellence in Veterinary Surgery and the Veterinary Research and Education Center Award by the Kansas State Faculty of Medicine for his understanding and knowledge of medicine and surgery.
Kansas State University Veterinary Medicine Center at State Line Animal Hospital serves as the Board - a certified specialist hospital with 14 staff members overseeing the care of the animals presented to it by the Kansas Department of Health and Human Services (KDHS) and the State of Kansas.

Dr. Unser is a family-oriented office where we take the time to get to know each and every one of you. At Lahey Hospital Medical Center, you can rely on us to provide you with competent, personalized and compassionate care. University orthopedic surgeons offer a whole range of approaches to orthopedic care that combine quality and compassionate attention to the needs of the patient. As one of the most important surgeons in Houston, we treat patients who want the highest level of care for their physical, mental and emotional health.