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Bearcats rally from 19 down to defeat Washburn

NWMSUThe Northwest Missouri State men’s basketball team came back from a 19 point deficit to defeat Washburn, 83-76, on Saturday evening at Lee Arena in Topeka, Kan. Northwest moved to 10-5 on the year and 5-1 in MIAA play. Washburn falls to 11-3 on the year and 4-3 in conference action.

Conner Crooker had a team-high 19 points on 6-for-15 shooting. DeShaun Cooper shook off a rough start to finish with 16 points and six rebounds. Bryston Williams and Grant Cozad each had 10 points. Kyle Schlake had 10 rebounds for Northwest and added eight points.

Washburn pulled out to a 42-28 halftime lead after connecting on six three pointers. Down by double-digits throughout most of the second half, Northwest was able to pull it back to within nine, 63-54, with 7:11 remaining.

The Bearcats would score the next 12 points to take a 66-63 lead with 4:00 remaining in regulation. Washburn would pull it back to within one but Cooper answered with a three pointer, pushing the lead to 69-65.

With the game tied, 73-73, with 58 seconds remaining, Cooper hit another clutch layup and the Bearcats would hit seven free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.

Northwest will host Northeastern State on Monday, Jan. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at Bearcat Arena. That contest was originally scheduled for Jan. 6 but was postponed due to weather.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Western women fall short at Pittsburg State, 74-69

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s basketball team battled once again but lost at Pittsburg State 74-69 on Saturday afternoon. The Griffons were led by Kyrsten Crawford as she scored a career high 15 points making 5-of-8 shots and 3-of-5 long range shots.

In a back and forth first half a three pointer at the buzzer by Tanner Tripp gave the Griffons women a 35-34 lead heading into the half. the Griffons jumped out to a 10-5 lead in the first five minutes of the half after two three’s one by Kyrsten Crawford and another by Sharniece Lewis. The Griffons kept up the pressure building its early lead to as many as seven at 18-11 and 21-14 midway through the frame.

The Gorillas battled back using a 11-4 run taking its first lead of the game at 25-24 after a layup by Antqunita Reed with 7:31 to play. The rest of the half was close with the Griffons outscoring the Gorillas 11-9 taking the one point lead into the locker room.

The Griffons had eight players score in double figures with Sharniece Lewis leading the way with 10 points. Quenisha Lockett, Tiffanie Abrams and Tiara Hall each had five points. The Griffons made 11-of-27 shots with five three pointers. The Griffons also outrebounded the Gorillas 16-14.

The Gorillas made 9-of-18 shots which included 2-of-3 from long range and 14-of-20 from the free throw line. Lizzy Jeronimus led the Gorillas with 13 points making 4-of-5 field goals and 5-of-6 free throws.

The Griffon women had a slow opening to the second half as the Gorillas outscored the Griffons 20-8 in the first 11 minutes of the half opening up their biggest lead of the game at 54-43 with 9:15 to play after two Alex Muff free throws.

The Griffons used the next six minutes to chip away at the Gorilla lead. They got as close as 67-63 after a S. Lewis jumper with 3:01 to play in the game. The rest of the game would be back and forth but the Gorillas came up with the 74-69 victory. The Gorillas improve to 11-4 overall adn 4-1 in the MIAA while the Griffons fall to 5-8 overall and 1-6 in MIAA play.

The Griffons shot better making 45.1-percent (23-51) from the field and 41.2-percent (7-17) from long range. The also made 16-of-24 free throws and outrebounded the Gorillas 31-27. Ten Griffons scored with S. Lewis finishing with 14 points while Lockett and Hall each had nine. Hall finished with eight boards for the Griffons.

The Gorillas made 50-percent (18-36) of their shots and 4-of-7 from the three point line. They also made 34-of-48 free throws. The Gorillas had three players in double figures with Jeronimus leading the way with 26 points making 16-of-18 free throws.

The Griffons return to road action on Wednesday, January 15 when they take on the 6th ranked Jennies of Central Missouri at 5:30 pm in Warrensburg, Mo.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Ross helps No. 21 Missouri avoid upset in return to Auburn

MUAUBURN, Ala. (AP) — Earnest Ross made himself right at home in his old arena.

The former Auburn player hit four free throws down the stretch and Jordan Clarkson scored 20 points to lead No. 21 Missouri to a 70-68 victory at Auburn Arena on Saturday.

”You heard the boos,” Clarkson said. ”I think he quieted them down when he hit those free throws. It was a big win for him.

”He was more focused. You could see it in his eyes that he was ready to play on the defensive and offensive end. He finished the game out for us.”

Ross, who spent two seasons at Auburn before transferring in 2011, scored 16 points for Missouri (13-2, 1-1 Southeastern Conference). He made four straight free throws in the final 1:34.

”Coach told me to just knock the free throws down and to be calm and patient,” Ross said. ”That was what I did. I just took my time, believed in myself and knocked them down.”

The game went down to the final moments.

Unable to get off a tying 3-pointer, Chris Denson missed a layup with 5 seconds left but drew the foul for Auburn (8-5, 0-2). He made one free throw then Torren Jones stepped on the baseline after rebounding the missed second attempt.

Wes Clark batted away Tahj Shamsid-Deen’s long inbounds pass to end the game and Jabari Brown collected the ball just before time ran out.

Brown added 15 points on 4-of-13 shooting. Ross had seven rebounds and was perfect on eight attempts from the line.

Missouri dominated in rebounds with a 44-28 advantage and bounced back from an overtime loss to Georgia that snapped a nation’s-best 26-game home winning streak.

”We got crushed on the backboard,” Auburn coach Tony Barbee said. ”I thought that was where the game was won and lost, in the trenches. I thought defensively we played a great game. I thought offensively we executed fairly well, shooting almost 54 percent in the second half.

”But when it matters most, in those key moments, your execution has got to be at its highest. And in those key moments, those last three or four possessions, our execution was at its lowest in this game.”

Shamsid-Deen had 13 points and six assists for Auburn. Denson had 11 points despite a 3-of-10 performance in free throws.

Missouri shot 32.7 percent (17 of 52) from the floor but also made 31 of 41 free throws. Jones had 11 rebounds.

”I thought we showed great toughness,” Missouri coach Frank Haith said. ”We didn’t shoot the ball well but we rebounded well. That’s an area we struggled with the other night against Georgia.”

Auburn fared much better from the field, hitting 23 of 53 shots (43.4 percent). But Auburn also made barely over half from the line, 14 of 26.

Denson’s drive gave Auburn a 67-66 lead with 1:51 left. Missouri reclaimed the lead with two free throws by Ross.

Ross then blocked Harrell’s shot on the other end. He was Auburn’s leading scorer and rebounder in his final season before leaving, and shook off a steady stream of heckling from students.

”To come out and play my old school on the road, it was a great feeling,” Ross said. ”I’m glad we got the win.”

Auburn walk-on Alex Thompson, who had eight points, drew a charge against Clarkson with just over a minute remaining. But Denson missed his shot and Ross made two free throws with 29 seconds left to set up the final sequence with Auburn needing three points.

Thompson had scored just one point in five appearances this season. He played an increased role with starter Allen Payne limited to two minutes with a hamstring injury.

Before the game, Barbee also announced the indefinite suspension of reserve forward Chris Griffin for violating an undisclosed school policy.

Clarkson had hit three of four free throws after Auburn’s Matthew Atewe fouled out and was called for a technical, giving Missouri a 56-51 lead with 8:12 left.

Brown’s long 3-pointer with 7 seconds left had given Missouri a 33-30 halftime lead and capped a closing 8-0 run.

It was Missouri’s first visit to Auburn and only the teams’ second meeting.

— Associated Press —

Northwest women drop second straight on the road at Washburn

NWMSUThe Northwest Missouri State women’s basketball team dropped a Saturday evening contest to Washburn at Lee Arena, 73-55. The loss moves Northwest to 4-9 on the season and 1-5 in MIAA play. Washburn improved to 9-5 overall and 4-3 in conference action.

Junior Ariel Easton had a team-high 15 points. She also had five rebounds and three steals. Ashleigh Nelson added nine points and Annie Mathews had a team-best nine rebounds to go along with eight points.

After trailing by nine at the half, 35-26, Northwest would pull back to within six with 12:20 remaining in the contest, 43-37 on a pair of Nelson free throws. But Washburn would go on a 10-0 run to pull away late.

Northwest will host Northeastern State on Monday, Jan. 13, at 5:30 p.m. at Bearcat Arena. That contest was originally scheduled for Jan. 6 but was postponed due to weather.

— Northwest Sports Information —

Freshmen lead Kansas to blow out win over K-State

KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Andrew Wiggins is from Canada, Wayne Selden from Massachusetts and Joel Embiid from the African nation of Cameroon. None of them grew up around the Kansas basketball program.

None of them grew up around the Jayhawks’ rivalry with Kansas State.

So all week, the trio of freshmen – along with the rest of the Jayhawks – were subjected to videos on the rivalry. Kansas coach Bill Self wanted to drive home the importance that those games against the Wildcats have taken on over the years.

The message must have come through quite clearly.

Wiggins scored 22 points, Selden added 20 and the No. 18 Jayhawks routed the 25th-ranked Wildcats 86-60 on Saturday for their sixth straight win in the series.

”We wanted to put them in a mindset of the energy and the type of emotion this game has been played with in the past,” Self said. ”It might have helped. I don’t know.”

It sure seemed as if it helped. Embiid contributed 11 points and nine rebounds, and Perry Ellis scored 12 as Kansas (11-4, 2-0 Big 12) shot 56 percent and committed just seven turnovers.

”It just shows we’re the dominant team in Kansas,” Wiggins said.

The Wildcats (12-4, 2-1), who had won their last 10 games, lost their seventh straight at Allen Fieldhouse and for the 48th time in the last 51 meetings.

Nino Williams had 12 points and Thomas Gipson scored 10 to lead Kansas State, but top scorer Marcus Foster was held to just seven points on 3-of-12 shooting.

They have great depth. They’ve got so many weapons,” Wildcats coach Bruce Weber said. ”You try to take away something and you have to give something, and they made shots.”

Just about the only thing that didn’t go right for Kansas came late in the game, when Embiid threw an elbow that clipped Williams in the face. Embiid got a technical foul and was ejected, but a Big 12 official said he would not be suspended for Monday night’s game at Iowa State.

”Regardless of what took prior, you have to be tough enough to think, ‘Next play,”’ Self said. ”That’s frustrating to me that it would happen, even if it was a situation where it was retaliatory, and I have no idea if it was.”

Kansas State actually hung tough through the first 10 minutes of the game, finding a basket every time the frenzied crowd inside Allen Fieldhouse reached a throaty roar. But a couple of foul shots by Selden and a 3-pointer by Conner Frankamp set the Jayhawks off and running.

Tarik Black’s basket in the paint finished off a 9-2 surge, and a put-back by Ellis off his own miss a few minutes later wrapped up another 9-2 run and gave Kansas a 33-18 lead.

Selden, coming off a career-best 24 points at Oklahoma, knocked down a 3-pointer just before the halftime buzzer to send the Jayhawks into the locker room with a 45-28 cushion.

Suddenly, the 278th meeting between the schools looked like so many before it.

How impressive was the first half for Kansas? The Wildcats had been holding opponents to just 53 points per game during their 10-game win streak, yet allowed the Jayhawks to pile up 14 assists without a turnover and shoot 65.5 percent from the field.

As if things weren’t going perfectly enough for Kansas, Embiid knocked down a 3 from the top of the key to open the second half – he’d missed the first two tries of his career.

The Jayhawks partied hard the rest of the game.

There was the alley-oop dunk by Wiggins off a feed from Selden, and a nimble post move by Embiid that resulted in another dunk. And even when Wiggins threw the ball away for the Jayhawks’ first turnover, he atoned for it with back-to-back 3-pointers for a 58-34 lead.

Then came Wiggins’ biggest highlight, a one-handed slam that went through the rim with such force that the ball bounced the entire length of the floor the other direction.

In a sign of just how badly things were going for the Wildcats, they were hit with three charging fouls in a span of just a few minutes in the second half. It’s become rare enough to see one offensive foul in a game the way such calls are being made this season.

”It was an offensive game and we’re not an offensive team yet,” Williams said. ”We’re a defensive team and we let the offense dictate the game.”

— Associated Press —

Cheerios and GMOs

Farm Bureauby Blake Hurst

I like Cheerios. I guess a farmer really ought to start his day with bacon, eggs, pancakes, biscuits, and gravy, but Cheerios are what I eat. Not every morning, but often enough.

Normally, this wouldn’t be interesting, but now, as a farmer who plants GMO corn and soybeans and thinks genetically modifying seeds are safe and beneficial, I’ve got a decision to make. General Mills has announced that they will no longer use genetically modified ingredients in Cheerios and will label them as GMO-free.

As the company readily admits, this won’t change much, since Cheerios are made from oats, which are not genetically modified. There are small amounts of cornstarch and sugar used in the making of my favorite breakfast, and General Mills will source those ingredients in non-GMO form. The company goes on to say that they believe genetically modified grains are perfectly safe, but that they are simply responding to consumer demand.

There you have it. No reason at all to change the way General Mills makes Cheerios, except to pander to some small number of consumers who have an irrational fear of a perfectly safe technology. Now, critics of GMOs might point out that more than 50 percent of consumers express concern about genetic engineering in surveys. Well, of course they do—when they’re asked if they’re worried about GMOs. If you ask me if I’m worried about the fiscal crisis in Finland, I’m quite likely to answer that those Finns need to get their house in order, even if I’ve never spent a second pondering the Finnish budget deficit and have absolutely no idea about their financial situation. On the other hand, if you just ask me what I’m worried about, I wouldn’t mention Finland at all. The same goes for surveys about GMOs. And yes, the technology is perfectly safe.

After shamefully remaining silent in the face of years of slanderous fear-mongering on the part of anti-GMO activists, scientists are starting to speak up on the topic, and the consensus is clear and overwhelming. Every major international science body in the world has reviewed multiple independent studies—in some cases numbering in the hundreds—in coming to the consensus conclusion that GMO crops are as safe or safer than conventional or organic foods. But until now, the magnitude of the research on crop biotechnology has never been cataloged. In response to what they believed was an information gap, a team of Italian scientists summarized 1,783 studies about the safety and environmental impacts of GMO foods—a staggering number.

The researchers couldn’t find a single credible example demonstrating that GM foods pose any harm to humans or animals. “The scientific research conducted so far has not detected any significant hazards directly connected with the use of genetically engineered crops,” the scientists concluded.

Although they didn’t mention it in their announcement, there is every possibility that General Mills is planning on raising prices and margins by advertising Cheerios as GMO-free. That’s an accepted marketing strategy, although the company sells lots of cereals containing genetically modified ingredients. Perhaps the management and shareholders of the company may want to look past cheery prospects for short-term gains to ask whether the company has decreased the value of the rest of its cereal portfolio. For those of us concerned about the future and our ability to increase food production 70 percent by 2050 in order to meet increased demand, it’s hard to escape the conclusion that General Mills has just taken off the table a technology that is essential to meeting the world’s need for food.

One final note. Many critics of GM food are actively lobbying for mandatory labeling and have worked in at least 20 states to pass labeling laws. It’s hard to see why mandatory rules are necessary if consumers have access to voluntarily labeled foods, including organic foods and, now, Cheerios.

I mentioned a decision I had to make. Should I continue to eat Cheerios? After all, I wouldn’t want my breakfast choices to support what I think is a terrible decision. Well, it seems Apple Cinnamon Cheerios will remain the same. What the heck, I’ll just eat those.

 

Blake Hurst, of Westboro, Mo., is the president of Missouri Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization.


Former Mo. Scout Leader to Stand Trial for Exploitation

court(AP) – A jury trial has been scheduled in Boone County for a former Boy Scout camp leader accused of using a fake online identity to trick underage victims into sharing nude photos.

The Hannibal Courier-Post reports the trial for Ian Francis Burow is scheduled for Jan. 23 in Columbia.

Burow faces charges including sexual exploitation of a minor. The charges involve six victims and cover a period from December 2010 to August 2011. Another charge of producing child pornography involves a seventh minor.

Boone County investigators said Burow used a fake Facebook identity and sought his victims’ cooperation by offering nude photos of a girl.

Burow’s lawyer Christopher Slusher has said Burow has pleaded not guilty.

Mo. woman struck by train

railroad train(AP) Authorities have identified a woman who died after she was struck by a train in Cass County.

Cass County authorities say 42-year-old Mindi L. Smith of Lee’s Summit died in the accident.

Investigators haven’t determined why Smith was on the railroad tracks. Her body was found early Thursday.

Authorities say they don’t suspect foul play.

Graves on recent data breaches and Obamacare

Graves FacebookRepresentative Sam Graves commented on the recent data breaches when he wrote on his facebook page Friday.

“In light of major recent data breaches such as the one affecting 70 million Target customers, it is more than possible to think the same could happen to an #Obamacare website that is still not ready for primetime. That’s why I supported commonsense legislation in the House today that would require the Federal government to notify individuals within 48 hours if their personal information has been stolen or unlawfully accessed through an Obamacare exchange. The Health Exchange Security and Transparency Act passed on a bipartisan 291-122 vote, and will help protect Americans’ personal information.”

Consultant to Release School Proposal

Commissioner of Education, Dr. Chris L. Nicastro
Commissioner of Education, Dr. Chris L. Nicastro

(AP) – A private education reform group is preparing to release its recommendations for turning around Missouri’s unaccredited school systems, even as debate continues over whether the consultant was appropriately awarded the contract.

The Cities for Education Entrepreneurship Trust, or CEE-Trust, has been hired to come up with ideas that could be implemented in the Kansas City school district and potentially also in Normandy, Riverview Gardens or any other districts that become unaccredited. The Indianapolis firm will release its draft recommendations Monday to the State Board of Education.

Missouri Education Commissioner Chris Nicastro has been criticized by some teachers’ unions and Democratic lawmakers for the way the consulting contract was awarded. One of the main complaints is that CEE-Trust’s bid was nearly three times higher than the closest competitor.

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