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Mo. company recalls chicken salad

USDA (AP) — A North Kansas City company is recalling about 2,200 pounds of chicken salads whose labels failed to include soy protein concentrate, which is an allergen.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture says there have been no reports of illness from the salads made by Walker’s Food Products Inc.

The products are:

— Five-pound tubs of “Walker’s All White Chunky Chicken Salad” packaged between June 6, 2013, and Jan. 23 with use-by or sell-by dates between July 26, 2013, and March 14, 2014; sold to wholesalers in Illinois, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.

— One-pound tubs of “Walker’s All White Chunky Chicken Salad” with the same dates; sold to retailers in Illinois, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.

— Five-pound tubs of “Walker’s White Chicken Salad Florentine” packaged between June 6, 2013, and Jan. 27 with use-by or sell-by dates between July 14, 2013, and March 6, 2014; sold for distribution in Kansas and Missouri.

 

Commentary: Deadly dry and holding

 Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator
Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator

As California faces what experts are calling the state’s worst drought in its entire history, some scientists are cautioning that the impact may be a harbinger for agriculture nationwide.

Gov. Jerry Brown raised the issue of causation in his State of the State address last week, according to theAssociated Press, stating that, “We do not know how much our current problem derives from the build-up of heat-trapping gasses, but we can take this drought as a stark warning of things to come.”

Brown asked businesses and homeowners to voluntarily reduce water usage by 20 percent to mitigate the effects of the drought and conserve water needed to fight brush fires and forest fires.

The more than 13 months of severely reduced precipitation has already had an immediate impact in terms of localized shortages and mandatory rationing. But the more serious longer-term damage is to agricultural productivity, according to a story in the Christian Science Monitor.

Agriculture and energy generation account for 80 percent of the nation’s entire water usage, Prof. David Dzombak, head of Carnegie Mellon University’s Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, told the magazine. Food and electricity, obviously, are two commodities modern society cannot do without.

A drought as severe as the current crisis in California needs to be a catalyst for renewed attention to how we manage a limited resource, Dzombak said.

“At the state, regional and federal levels, people are just starting to come to grips with the fact that our climate is not stationary,” Dzombak said. “We are in a dynamic, changing climate situation that will affect all parts of the country in different ways.”

Perhaps worst of all, according to climatologists, it does not appear that the atmospheric conditions causing this prolonged drought will be disappearing anytime soon.

The unseasonably dry weather is the result of an equally unprecedented high-pressure ridge stalled offshore in the Pacific Ocean, which is blocking the advance of the typical winter storms needed to generate precipitation along the West Coast, according to Brian Fuchs, a climatologist with the National Drought Mitigation Center in Lincoln, Neb. Unfortunately, Fuchs told the CSM, the ridge has persisted for more than a year, and the longer it remains, the less likely it is to dissipate.

“This high-pressure ridge system is feeding on itself, creating a sort of perfect environment for perpetuating dry conditions,” he said.

The ripple effect

Across virtually all of the Southwest, precipitation is as much as 20 percent below normal, according to the National Weather Service, with river flows at historic lows, high-altitude snow packs needed to fill downstream reservoirs severely depleted and out-of-season wildfires already hitting several states.

As a result of dried-up reservoirs, the drought will increase pressure on over-utilized aquifers, as farmers and orchard growers are forced to pump more water from underground sources to replace unavailable irrigation water.

If there is any upside to this drought — and even contemplating something “good” about the damage done to agriculture is a stretch — it’s this: For decades, despite previous Western droughts, severe Midwestern flooding and Florida cold snaps that destroy entire citrus crops, about the only real fallout affecting consumers is higher prices at the grocery store. Like high prices for any other essential commodity, we complain, but we pay the price and move on. Few of us bother to spend much time thinking through the causes or the implications of farm- and food-related natural disasters.

We just assume that no matter what, there will always be stocked-up shelves and filled-up freezers at the local supermarket.

That’s a dangerous delusion, one closely related to the equally insidious fantasy that all of the challenges associated with food productivity — resources depletion, soil erosion, energy constraints — could be solved just by going vegetarian.

Believing that a record-breaking, economy-wrecking drought is merely a blip on the Accu-Weather radar is a close cousin to the belief that switching to soy-based analogs and out-of-season fruits and vegetables will resolve the challenges of global food availability and affordability.

For all the diehard activists out there: California happens to be not only a leading producer of food crops, it is THE most important state in terms of fruit, vegetable and tree nut production. In fact, California produces 70 percent of the total U.S. production of green beans, sweet corn, tomatoes, carrots, onions and lettuce — all those healthy alternatives veggie activists insist we should choose to replace animal foods.

If California’s farm production dries up due to the drought, the impact will be devastating, and not just for the vegan fringe but for all Americans.

The current water crisis is only one piece of a larger set of challenges affecting food production in the 21st century, and none of them are going away anytime soon.

Even if that stubborn high-pressure ridge dissipates tomorrow.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Dan Murphy, a veteran food-industry journalist and commentator.

Two Kansas signees named McDonald’s All-Americans

KUKansas men’s basketball signees Cliff Alexander and Kelly Oubre will participate in the McDonald’s All-America game on April 2 at the United Center in Chicago.

Alexander, from Curie High School in Chicago, is currently listed the No. 4 overall recruit according to rivals.com and averaging 27 points, 17 rebounds and five blocked shots per game this season. Oubre, from Findley Prep in Henderson, Nev., is ranked No. 12 by rivals.com and scoring 23 points per game. Oubre grew up in New Orleans and moved to Houston following Hurricane Katrina before moving the Nevada to finish his high school career.

The duo were two of the 10 selected to the Naismith Trophy High School Player of the Year Early-Season Watch List in December. Additionally, Alexander and Oubre were named to USA Basketball Junior National Select Team announced Jan. 20. The 2014 USA Junior National Select Team will take on a World Select Team in the 2014 Nike Hoop Summit on April 12 at the Moda Center in Portland, Ore.

Kansas currently has three McDonald’s All-Americans on its roster with sophomore F Perry Ellis, freshman G Wayne Selden, Jr., and freshman G Andrew Wiggins. Alexander and Oubre bring Kansas’ all-time McDonald’s All-Americans total to 36, including 15 that have played for current KU head coach Bill Self. The first McDonald’s All-America Team was named in 1977 and included KU great Darnell Valentine.

Kansas McDonald’s All-Americans
Darnell Valentine (1977)
Greg Dreiling (1981)
Danny Manning (1984)
Rick Calloway (1985)
Tony Guy (1985)
Mark Randall (1986)
Mike Maddox (1987)
Darrin Hancock (1990)
Ben Davis (1991)
Calvin Rayford (1991)
Jacque Vaughn (1993)
Raef LaFrentz (1994)
Paul Pierce (1995)
Ryan Robertson (1995)
Lester Earl (1996)
Eric Chenowith (1997)
Kenny Gregory (1997)
Jeff Boschee (1998)
Nick Collison (1999)
Aaron Miles (2001)
Wayne Simien (2001)
J.R. Giddens (2003)
David Padgett (2003)
Mario Chalmers (2005)
Micah Downs (2005)
Julian Wright (2005)
Darrell Arthur (2006)
Sherron Collins (2006)
Cole Aldrich (2007)
Xavier Henry (2009)
Josh Selby (2010)
Perry Ellis (2012)
Wayne Selden, Jr. (2013)
Andrew Wiggins (2013)
Cliff Alexander (2014)
Kelly Oubre (2014)

— KU Sports Information —

Mizzou WR Friends Take Blame for Pot Found in Car

Green Beckham(AP) – Two men arrested along with Missouri wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham have told police the pound of marijuana found in their car did not belong to the star football player.

Criminal charges have not been filed after the Springfield native and two friends were arrested in January on suspicion of felony drug distribution. Police say they found the pot and other drug paraphernalia in the trunk of a Jeep Cherokee driven by John McDaniel.

The Springfield News-Leader reports a probable cause statement shows that Patrick Prouty said he owned the pot but said it was for personal use. McDaniel said he had hidden one gram of marijuana in the car’s glove box.

Green-Beckham was charged in October 2012 with marijuana possession in Columbia and later pleaded guilty to second-degree trespassing.

Lawyers: Mo. moving too quickly on executions

 

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster
Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster

(AP) — By the time the U.S. Supreme Court refused a last-minute stay of execution for Herbert Smulls, the Missouri inmate was already dead. His attorneys say it was the third straight time a Missouri inmate has been executed with an appeal pending.

Late Wednesday, attorneys for Smulls made one last appeal to the Supreme Court. It had already ruled hours earlier that the execution could proceed.

Smulls’ attorney Joseph Luby says the stay was denied at 10:24 p.m., four minutes after Smulls was pronounced dead.

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster says in a statement that the Supreme Court has ruled that pending litigation is not sufficient to stop an execution. He says the state directly asked the high court if the execution should be stayed, and was told no.

 

Woman injured in icy Thursday morning crash

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPIcy roads contributed to a Thursday morning crash in Andrew County.

According to the Missouri Highway Patrol twenty-two year old Sarah E. Hall of St. Louis was driving a 2000 Ford Taurus north on US 71, 5 miles north of Savannah at 10 a.m. Thursday.

The vehicle slid off the east side of the road, struck a ditch, became airborne, hit the ground and came to rest on its wheels in a field.

Hall was transported to St. Francis Hospital in Maryville. She was wearing a seat belt.

Inmate Dies Behind Bars

Charles Moore (DOC)
Charles Moore (DOC)
An inmate has died of natural causes at the Crossroads Correctional Center in Cameron, Mo.

In a news release, the Missouri Department of Corrections announced that Charles Moore was pronounced dead at 2:35am Thursday, January 30, 2014.

Mr. Moore was a 75-year-old male serving a 40-year sentence for statutory sodomy 1st degree from Greene County. He was received into the Missouri Department of Corrections on Feb. 2, 2007.

New Mo. Health Director gets Senate confirmation

Gail Vasterling
Gail Vasterling

(AP) – The Missouri Senate has confirmed the director of the Department of Health and Senior Services.

Gail Vasterling had been serving as the agency’s acting director since December 2012, but needed Senate confirmation to remain the job. She took over for Margaret Donnelly, who left the post for a job teaching health law at Saint Louis University.

Vasterling also previously served as the agency’s deputy director and spent two years as a deputy counsel in the governor’s office.

She also spent one year as general counsel for the Department of Corrections during Nixon’s administration and was in the attorney general’s office from 1994 to 2008, when Nixon was attorney general.

Kansas study links exercise, education success

fitness (AP) — A new study of Kansas elementary and middle school students makes a link between physical fitness and better performance on math and reading exams.

The research was conducted through schools participating in the Kansas Fitness Information Tracking. The study followed the fitness of 13,000 students in the 2011-12 school year. It is part of the Healthy Schools Project funded by the Kansas Health Foundation.

The results released Thursday found that students who met one or none of the fitness standards scored 50.4 percent and 41.8 percent above the proficiency standards for math and reading.

For students who met the mark for all five fitness tests, scores jumped to 73.5 percent above the standard for reading and 70.3 percent above for math.

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