
The BaconFest King and Queen were selected at a contest held at St Joseph Harley Davidson on Saturday, September 20 during St Joe Harley’s Big Whole Hog Roast and Party.
The BaconFest King and Queen were selected at a contest held at St Joseph Harley Davidson on Saturday, September 20 during St Joe Harley’s Big Whole Hog Roast and Party.
United Cerebral Palsy of Northwest Missouri has expanded its preschool classroom to better facilitate students attending its Children’s Program.
Children’s program director Heather Weddle said the space was not big enough to accommodate the needs that UCP had.
“We saw a need for more space in our preschool classroom for our 3-year-olds and our 4-year-olds, the space was not allowing us to move around and offer all sorts of activities for children in our classroom and all the children that we serve.”
UCP lead Preschool teacher, Kimberly Cordonnier said she enjoys the bigger space.
“Before we shared a classroom with another classroom and we did not have, it was about half this size so we didn’t have room for all the kids to sit in a circle, and we didn’t have the space for cubbys and we added an extra center.”
UCP serves more than 400 families with adults or children with disabilities each year. Families come to UCP from Buchnanan, Andrew, DeKalb counties and the surrounding areas. Cordonnier says the lessons children learn at UCP have a huge impact on their future, and the extra space is needed to help facilitate that growth.
“If you don’t have the space you have people touching each other, bumping into each other and they don’t have the space to really move around and get the entire experience of the entire classroom,” said Cordonnier.
Children and adults with disabilities who are served by UCP or Northwest Missouri have a range of abilities and diagnoses including autism, down syndrome, hearing and visual impairments, physical or communication delays and intellectual or speech delays.
NEVADA, Mo. (AP) — Republicans will be meeting in rural western Missouri to select a new candidate for the state House following the death of the incumbent, Randy Pike.
Members of the 126th House District Committee are to meet Tuesday to choose a replacement candidate for Pike, who died Saturday.
Committee Chairman Jerry Wadel said several people have expressed interest.
Under Missouri law, local party committees are responsible for selecting new candidates when the incumbent or the original nominee dies with more than a month to go before an election.
Pike was 60 years old. He was a Republican from Butler who had served in the House since 2013 and previously was the Bates County northern commissioner. He was to face Democrat Sam Foursha and Constitution Party candidate William Gilmore in the November election.
The performance includes an interpreter who shares facts about Chinese culture and customs as you watch foot juggling, plate spinning, Chinese yo-yo and group acrobatics.
The event is sponsored by the Center for Multicultural Education and the Office of International Student Services
FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Residents have rebuilt a memorial just hours after it burned down at the site where a Missouri police officer fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown.
The memorial was destroyed when a fire broke out before dawn Tuesday on Canfield Drive, the street where Ferguson officer Darren Wilson shot Brown. The blaze angered many people who live near the scene. One man said it was like a grave being desecrated.
Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson says the cause is under investigation. He says the first officer to arrive tried to extinguish the blaze but couldn’t. The Fire Department eventually put it out.
Brown’s Aug. 9 death led to unrest in the St. Louis suburb. Investigations into the shooting by a state grand jury and the U.S. Department of Justice are ongoing.
————–
FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — A fire has destroyed one of two memorials at the site where 18-year-old Michael Brown was killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.
Ferguson resident Meldon Moffitt said the fire started around 6:30 a.m. Tuesday on Canfield Drive, the street where Brown was fatally shot Aug. 9 by Ferguson police office Darren Wilson.
About two dozen residents gathered at the site Tuesday morning, many of them angry. One man said it was like a grave being desecrated.
Ferguson police spokesman Devin James says the cause of the fire is under investigation.
Brown’s death led to several days of protests and unrest in Ferguson, a St. Louis suburb. Investigations into the shooting by a state grand jury and the U.S. Department of Justice are ongoing.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran issued the following statement regarding the U.S. response to the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS):
“I believe ISIS is a real threat to the safety and security of Americans, and the U.S. response and policy toward ISIS deserves more than a few sentences in a $1 trillion stopgap spending bill passed moments before adjournment for the mid-term elections. The Administration has portrayed that we are taking action to reduce the viability of ISIS, while it is more likely we are arming and training rebels that will ultimately use the weapons against our allies. There must be a discussion about the safeguards needed to ensure we aren’t arming the next Taliban or Al Qaeda 10 years down the road. These weapons could also quickly fall into the arms of ISIS – one must only look to the terrorists’ success overrunning Iraqi troops to gauge the likelihood of these weapons being used against us.
“While I believe forceful and effective action must be taken to successfully confront ISIS, our course of action deserves a full and open debate by Congress for the benefit of the American people. Too many Presidents have begun a battle trying to convince Americans that not much will be required for victory – in this case, by arming rebels in Syria – and that we can have success without sacrifice. The fight against ISIS must be well planned and thought out in order to earn the support of the American people.”
The St. Joseph Police Department is reporting is has taken 3 people into custody for investigation of vehicle theft and destruction of property overnight Monday.
Captain Jeff Wilson said a 31-year-old St. Joseph man, a 26-year-old St. Joseph man, and a 22-year-old St. Joseph woman are being held in connection with the theft and destruction of two vehicles.
Wilson said police began investigating the theft of a vehicle stolen near the Speedy’s gas station off of Riverside Road Monday evening. The vehicle was later located in a ditch on fire.
A second vehicle was stolen near the 2200 block of Riverside. That vehicle was also found in flames in a ditch just north of the location it was stolen from.
Wilson said police were able to use video footage taken from the Speedy’s Convenience store to identify the individuals who stole the vehicles and made those arrests early Tuesday morning.
SPRINGFIELD (AP) – A second supervisor at the U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners has admitted that he urged a prisoner not to report an assault by a guard.
The U.S. attorney’s office said Monday that 39-year-old Justin K. Flowers of Ozark pleaded guilty to persuading the inmate not to report a possible federal crime. Another supervisor, 42-year-old James C. Myrick of Nixa pleaded guilty last week to the same charge.
Prosecutors say the two men offered inmate Shawn Springer a better cell if he didn’t report being hit by a guard in December 2012. Springer had a confrontation with the guard’s wife, a prison nurse.
The Springfield News-Leader reports after the assault was discovered when Springer discussed it with a psychologist, the two men at first said his injuries were pre-existing.
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors say a Kansas Supreme Court ruling could lead to the early release of more than 200 dangerous inmates.
The ruling, first issued in May and clarified on Friday, concerns whether a defendant’s prior felony convictions are classified as “crimes against persons” or “nonperson” crimes under state guidelines in place since July 1, 1993. Nonperson crimes such as forgery or theft generally bring shorter sentences.
The Kansas City Star reports the court ruled in May that all felony convictions from other states before July 1, 1993, should be considered nonperson crimes for sentencing purposes. It clarified Friday that the ruling pertained only to out-of-state convictions.
Scott Schultz, executive director of the Kansas Sentencing Commission, says an estimated 235 inmates could have their sentences reduced because of the ruling.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says the participation of five Arab nations in airstrikes against militants in Syria “makes it clear to the world this is not America’s fight alone.”
Obama says the joint fight against the Islamic State will take time but is vital to the security of the United States, the Mideast and the world.
The U.S.-Arab airstrikes Monday night targeted the group’s headquarters in eastern Syria.
Obama say the U.S. is “proud to stand shoulder-to-shoulder” with Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates in conducting the strikes.
———————
WASHINGTON (AP) — There were two groups of air strikes in Syria overnight. The U.S. and five Arab countries launched airstrikes on Islamic State group targets in eastern Syria, which were followed by a unilateral U.S. attack on what Washington calls an al-Qaida affiliate. Syrian activists say the air strikes caused casualties among Islamic State group militants and some civilians.