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Kan. farm-to-preschool program seeks more funding

Healthy Sprouts(AP) — A northeast Kansas county’s program that pairs farmers and preschoolers to teach the children about healthy food is looking for more funding.

Douglas County’s farm-to-preschool “Healthy Sprouts” program has been funded mainly by grants that expire this year.

Officials of the three-year-old program put out the word in November that Healthy Sprouts was in danger of shutting down. Donors including the Kansas Health Foundation have given about $37,000, but program coordinator Emily Hampton says at least $50,000 is needed to operate through August.

Healthy Sprouts works with about 1,000 preschool children a year at 30 in-home day cares and eight day care centers. Activities include planting vegetable gardens, cooking with kids and teaching childcare providers about locally grown food.

 

Missouri football standout’s arrest tied to drugs

Green Beckham(AP) — University of Missouri wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham has been arrested and released in an incident police say is tied to illegal drugs.

Springfield, Mo., police representative Anthony Cunis says Green-Beckham was arrested early Saturday on “suspicion of drug activity.” Cunis says the investigation is ongoing and declined to provide more information regarding the arrest or whether charges had been filed. He says the department will release more information on the case Monday.

An official with the Greene County Jail confirms that Green-Beckham was booked there Saturday and later released.

Green-Beckham was charged in October 2012 with marijuana possession after he and two teammates were reportedly smoking pot in a campus parking lot near Memorial Stadium. All three later pleaded guilty to second-degree trespassing in the case.

Pregnancy Resource Clinic Picks New Director

Brandy Meeks
Brandy Meeks

Brandy Meeks will be the new executive director for the Pregnancy Reource Clinic in Saint Joseph. She moves to the PRC from InterServ, where she was Director of Healthy Partnerships.

PRC board president Robert Den Ouden says her experience in grant writing, fundraising, and not-for-profit management will be a real asset to the PRC mission of eliminating abortion in our region through effective, Christ-like service to at-risk pregnant women by transforming their fears into confidence.

Meeks is a graduate of Missouri Western State University. She’ll begin work at the Pregnancy Resource Clinic on January 13.

Northwest, MCC celebrate partnership, opening of new KC Center

MCC Chancellor Mark James, Northwest President Dr. John Jasinski and Sen. Brad Lager converse during a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the relocation of Northwest's Kansas City Center at the MCC-Maple Woods campus.
MCC Chancellor Mark James, Northwest President Dr. John Jasinski and Sen. Brad Lager converse during a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the relocation of Northwest’s Kansas City Center at the MCC-Maple Woods campus.

Representatives of Northwest Missouri State University and Metropolitan Community College (MCC) gathered Thursday, Jan. 9, to mark their collaboration and the relocation of Northwest’s Kansas City Center to the MCC-Maple Woods campus.
Northwest classes at the new location begin in conjunction with the start of the University’s spring trimester Monday, Jan. 13. Northwest is using six classrooms and office space on the MCC-Maple Woods campus, located at 2601 NE Barry Road in Kansas City. The Northwest office and its classrooms are located on the lower level of the campus’ computing and business building.
Prior to the event’s ceremonial ribbon-cutting, Northwest President Dr. John Jasinski thanked MCC-Maple Woods for its partnership and said the Kansas City Center’s move provides multiple advantages and opportunities for MCC-Maple Woods students as well as individuals interested in continuing their education in the Kansas City metropolitan area.
“We’re bringing that quality education from Maryville and Northwest Missouri State University down to join what you do each and every day here,” Jasinski told MCC-Maple Woods leaders. “That quality instruction helps students go out and do what they need to do to better our communities and better the workforce.”
MCC-Maple Woods President Dr. Utpal Goswami, who began serving the college last July, echoed Jasinski’s statements. During his 30 years in higher education as a faculty member and administrator, Goswami has witnessed on multiple occasions the positive impact of partnerships involving two-year and four-year institutions. Thus, he is pleased to have such a partnership in place at MCC-Maple Woods.
“Our mission is very simple and straightforward: preparing students, serving communities and creating opportunities,” Goswami said. “This partnership is going to advance our mission. We will find ways to serve the community in ways that we have not been able to serve before.”
In addition to faculty and staff members representing both institutions, Sen. Brad Lager and Rep. Mike Thomson were in attendance for the ceremony as well as Gladstone City Manager Kirk Davis, several local school superintendents and board members, and Gladstone and Northland chamber of commerce representatives.
Lager praised Northwest and MCC-Maple Woods for partnering to enhance postsecondary education as well as the regional workforce, noting both institutions’ success in achieving state performance benchmarks.
“We have two of the top-performing schools in our state that made a strategic decision to partner together to advance the workforce,” Lager said. “If that doesn’t articulate where we need to go in this state, I don’t know what does.”
The Northwest Kansas City Center offers 20 graduate degree and certificate programs, including master’s, education specialist and a cooperative education doctorate with the University of Missouri-Columbia, in addition to a Master of Business Administration degree.
Since the 1980s, Northwest has partnered with remote institutions to offer its coursework. In 2000, Northwest began offering courses in Kansas City through a partnership with the North Kansas City School District but eventually outgrew that space, leading Northwest to establish a partnership with the Liberty School District in 2006.
Northwest Outreach Director Dr. Terry Barmann said the University’s partnership with MCC-Maple Woods is the next step in efforts to provide Kansas City-area residents access to Northwest’s quality instruction.
“It’s a new look. It’s a new site. But it’s the same vision,” Barmann said. “We will continue at the Kansas City Center to focus on student success – every student, every day. We do this by offering quality academic programs with the help of professors from our campus who teach about 80 percent of our classes. The other 20 percent are taught by highly qualified adjuncts who are in the K-12 arena every day.”
Additionally, Northwest operates a St. Joseph Center at the Historic Green Acres Building, located at 3500 North Village Drive in St. Joseph, near the city’s Belt Highway.

2 from Mo. on short list for Mars

Screen Shot 2014-01-11 at 8.39.39 AM— Human settlement on Mars is a long way away, but two Missouri residents are on the short list to be among the first settlers of the Red Planet.

Twenty-nine year old Maggie Duckworth of Bridgeton and 26-year-old Tim Gowan of University City are among the 1,058 initial candidates chosen from a pool of 200,000 who applied for a one-way trip to Mars as part of the privately funded Mars One mission.

The odds are still slim for both. Just four people will be on the initial launch slated for 2024. Four more people would be sent every two years after that. Duckworth and Gowan would both have to pass a rigorous selection process, and the Mars One project itself faces numerous hurdles.\

The Mars One program list the following as key characteristics they want in an astronaut.

Characteristic Practical Applications
Resiliency
  • Your thought processes are persistent.
  • You persevere and remain productive.
  • You see the connection between your internal and external self.
  • You are at your best when things are at their worst.
  • You have indomitable spirit.
  • You understand the purpose of actions may not be clear in the moment, but there is good reason—you trust those who guide you.
  • You have a “Can do!” attitude.
Adaptability
  • You adapt to situations and individuals, while taking into account the context of the situation.
  • You know your boundaries, and how/when to extend them.
  • You are open and tolerant of ideas and approaches different from your own.
  • You draw from the unique nature of individual cultural backgrounds.
Curiosity
  • You ask questions to understand, not to simply get answers.
  • You are transferring knowledge to others, not simply showcasing what you know or what others do not.
Ability to Trust
  • You trust in yourself and maintain trust in others.
  • Your trust is built upon good judgment.
  • You have self-informed trust.
  • Your reflection on previous experiences helps to inform the exchange of trust.
Creativity / Resourcefulness
  • You are flexible in how an issue / problem / situation is approached.
  • You are not constrained by the way you were initially taught when seeking solutions.
  • Your humor is a creative resource, used appropriately as an emerging contextual response.
  • You have a good sense of play and spirit of playfulness.
  • You are aware of different forms of creativity.

Age

The astronaut selection program will be open for applicants who are 18 years or older. This is the age by which children become legal adults in most countries in the world. Mars One believes it is important that applicants who enter the astronaut selection program are capable of entering into a legal contract without the supervision of others.

There is not an upper age limit to apply for the astronaut selection program. If the applicant enjoys good health and he or she has all the other characteristics needed for the mission he or she has what it takes to apply.

Medical and Physical Requirements

In general, normal medical and physiological health standards will be used. These standards are derived from evidence-based medicine, verified from clinical studies.

  • The applicant must be free from any disease, any dependency on drugs, alcohol or tobacco;
  • Normal range of motion and functionality in all joints;
  • Visual acuity in both eyes of 100% (20/20) either uncorrected or corrected with lenses or contact lenses;
  • Free from any psychiatric disorders;
  • It is important to be healthy, with an age- and gender-adequate fitness level;
  • Blood pressure should not exceed 140/90 measured in a sitting position;
  • The standing height must be between 157 and 190 cm.

Country of Origin & Language

Mars One accepts applicants from any country in the world.

The official language, will be English. It is possible however, to enter the selection program without an extensive knowledge of English. Applicants can apply in one of the 11 most used languages on Internet: English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, Russian, Arabic, Chinese Mandarin, Korean, Indonesian, Japanese.  As applicants progress through the selection procedure, requirements on their English skills will increase. For the second round of the selection program, selected applicants will meet a Mars One selection committee for an interview. For this interview, A2 English level (elementary) will be essential.

 

 

GM recalling pickups for fire risk

General Motors DETROIT (AP) — General Motors is recalling 370,000 Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups from the 2014 model year to fix software that could cause the exhaust components to overheat and start a fire.

The recall includes 303,000 trucks in the U.S. and 67,000 in Canada and Mexico. All of the trucks involved have 4.3-liter or 5.3-liter engines.

GM said eight fires have been reported, but no injuries. One garage was damaged, the company said. All of the incidents occurred in cold weather.

The company is asking customers not to leave their trucks idling unattended.

GM dealers will reprogram the software for free. The company will inform owners starting Jan. 16.

Head On Crash Kills Council Bluffs Woman

MSHP badge goldA Council Bluffs, Iowa woman was killed Friday afternoon near Craig, Missouri after a semi crossed the median on I-29 and rammed her minivan head on.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol identifies the victim as Lori J. Hartman, 59.

The accident happened at 4:35pm two miles south of Craig on I-29. According to a crash report, a truck driven by a Texas man veered off the northbound lanes of the interstate, across the median and into southbound traffic.

Both the truck and the minivan left the west side of the roadway, went down an ambankment and through a fence before coming to rest in a field.

The driver of the truck, 58-year-old Ronald VanCamp of Magnolia, Texas, and his passenger, Mary Curtis, 55 of Appleton, Wisconsin, were transported by ambulance to Fairfax Community Hospital. According to the patrol, both suffered moderate injuries.

Audit Criticizes Vacancies on Advisory and Regulatory Boards

Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich
Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich

(AP) – A new audit says Missouri has too many vacancies on several advisory and regulatory boards.

Friday’s report from State Auditor Tom Schweich says 27 percent of seats on boards overseen by the Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and Professional Registration were vacant as of June 2013. Vacancies are filled by the governor, an insurance department official or the board itself.

Five of the 37 boards examined lacked enough appointed members to make a quorum during meetings. The report also found 63 percent of the appointed board members served beyond their term expiration date.

In a response included with the audit, the department says it will continue to work at filling vacancies.

Overall, the department received a “fair” rating, the second lowest on the auditor’s four-part scale.

 

 

HAAC expands to 12 teams with additions of Grand View & William Penn

HAACThe Heart of America Athletic Conference (HAAC) Council of Presidents is pleased to announce that it has approved the applications of Grand View University of Des Moines, Iowa, and William Penn University of Oskaloosa, Iowa, for membership into the conference.

Currently members of the Midwest Collegiate Conference and Mid-States Football Midwest Conference, Grand View and William Penn will immediately join the conference to participate in administrative matters and strategic planning. Each institution will begin on-field competition in the conference during the 2015-16 academic year.

The HAAC will undergo an expansion from its current membership of 10 institutions to 12, marking the greatest number of schools to be a part of the conference during any point of its 43-year history. Peru State College was the most recent institution to join the conference, starting competition during the 2011-12 academic season. Baker University, Graceland University and Missouri Valley College have been members since the inception of the HAAC in 1971.

“I was instructed over the last four to five years to expand the conference and its geographic footprint,” said commissioner Larry Lady, who is serving in his 21st and final year in the role. “The addition of Grand View University and William Penn University are a great geographic addition and are both excellent institutions to join the HAAC, which we believe is one of the finest conferences in the NAIA.

Grand View and William Penn will raise the number of institutions who have held membership in the conference at any point during its history to 17. Both institutions will field teams that will compete in conference play in the following sports: men’s and women’s cross country, men’s and women’s soccer, volleyball, football, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s indoor track and field, baseball, softball, men’s and women’s outdoor track and field, and men’s and women’s golf.

“Grand View University is extremely excited about the opportunity to join the Heart of America Athletic Conference,” said Grand View Director of Athletics Troy Plummer. “As Grand View athletics has grown over the years and has added sports, we felt that it was necessary to look for a conference where all of our sports would have the opportunity to operate under the same umbrella. We feel the Heart of America Athletic Conference will allow us to enjoy the same quality competition and collegiality in which we have become accustomed to in the Midwest Collegiate Conference.”

“We are excited to be accepted into the Heart of America Athletic Conference,” said Greg Hafner, Athletics Director at William Penn. “This will provide us with stability and good competition for many years to come.”

The HAAC currently consists of the following institutions: Avila University (Kansas City, Mo.), Baker University (Baldwin City, Kan.), Benedictine College (Atchison, Kan.), Central Methodist University (Fayette, Mo.), Culver-Stockton College (Canton, Mo.), Evangel University (Springfield, Mo.), Graceland University (Lamoni, Iowa), MidAmerica Nazarene University (Olathe, Kan.), Missouri Valley College (Marshall, Mo.), and Peru State College (Peru, Neb.).

— HAAC Press Release —

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