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Cardinals hit three home runs to top Reds, move closer to playoffs

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — It didn’t take Tony Cruz long to consider all of his home runs and rank his latest.

He’s only had three in his 100-game career and the first two came on the road.

Cruz hit a three-run homer and the St. Louis Cardinals connected three times, beating the Cincinnati Reds 8-4 on Saturday night and moving closer to their fourth straight playoff berth.

“It was a really good feeling,” said Cruz, who also had the first curtain call of his career. “The first one of the year is always a really good feeling and my first one at home. You know you hear the crowd. It’s amazing.”

Milwaukee beat second-place Pittsburgh 1-0 on Saturday to give the St. Louis a 3½-game lead in the NL Central. The Cardinals cut their magic number to one for clinching a postseason berth, and five for their second NL Central title in a row.

Kolten Wong and Randal Grichuk also homered as St. Louis won for the seventh time in eight games.

The Cardinals have hit five homers in the past two games, but have just 104 for the season — among the lowest total in the majors. Their lack of power has provided an ongoing issue manager Mike Matheny has had to address.

“I like the home runs,” Matheny said in his postgame interview. “You guys always accuse me of not liking them, but especially those three-runners that Tony did. We know we have the kind of team that can do that and it’s nice to see them.”

Cincinnati’s four runs were as many as it scored in the previous five games. The Reds have lost six in row and has been outscored 30-8 in that stretch.

They are 20-40 since the All-Star break.

“You’re seeing us having to go out there and really struggle so mightily to try to find a way to win a ball game,” manager Bryan Price said. “Certainly nobody’s enjoying this current portion of our schedule. The way we’ve played for the last 60 games has been miserable.”

Jason Motte (1-0) needed just three pitches and one out to earn the win. He came in relief of starter Michael Wacha and got Todd Frazier to foul out to right.

Wacha didn’t qualify for the win because he lasted just 4 2/3 innings. He was seeking his first win since June 17 before going on the disabled list with a shoulder injury.

Wacha gave up two runs and six hits on 78 pitches, the most since returning at the start of the month.

“I felt a lot better, today,” he said. “More secondary stuff was working for me. My command was a little bit better. I felt it was a step in the right direction.”

Mike Leake (11-13) allowed six runs in five innings. He also walked two and hit a batter, all of whom scored. He gave up two homers and has surrendered 22 this season.

Cruz hit his first homer in more than a year, connecting in the second. His last home run was Aug. 4, 2013, at Cincinnati.

Wong hit his 12th, a two-run shot in the third. Grichuck added a pinch-hit homer in the sixth — it was his third of the season and his second in two nights.

Grichuck later added an RBI bloop double.

Zack Cozart homered for the Reds and Kris Negron doubled twice.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 1B Matt Adams and 3B Matt Carpenter both were out of the starting lineup with a stomach virus. Matheny said they were “quarantined,” though it wasn’t clear if they were at Busch Stadium and available or sent home. … Star C Yadier Molina got his first start of the season at first base.

Reds: C Devin Mesoraco was pulled in the sixth inning because of a stomach bug. Price said Mesoraco could have continued but the manager didn’t think it was worth it.

UP NEXT

Reds: RHP Alfredo Simon (14-10, 3.35) has given up five hits in seven innings during each of his past two starts, including in a 4-2 win against St. Louis on Sept. 10. The Cardinals have batted .228 in 101 at-bats against Simon over 22 2/3 innings.

Cardinals: RHP Lance Lynn (15-9, 2.68) has given up two runs over his past 15 innings and went 0-1 in those games, including a 1-0 loss at Cincinnati on Sept. 11. He has a 2.00 ERA this month over four starts and goes after his fourth win against the Reds. He is 3-1 with a 3.12 ERA in four games against them division rivals this season.

— Associated Press —

Cozart leads Kansas past Central Michigan

riggertKULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Montell Cozart threw a 60-yard touchdown pass to Justin McCay to break a fourth-quarter tie, and Kansas pulled away for a 24-10 victory over Central Michigan on Saturday.

Tony Pierson ran 74 yards for a touchdown on the game’s opening play, and Cozart added a 30-yard touchdown pass to Corey Avery with about 2 minutes remaining to seal the win.

Cozart finished with 226 yards passing for the Jayhawks (2-1), a big part coming on the toss to McCay with 13:23 remaining. The third-down throw was caught underneath the coverage, and McCay slipped the grasp of safety Dennis Nalor and scooted untouched the rest of the way.

Martez Walker had 56 yards rushing and a touchdown for the Chippewas (2-2), who were trying to start 2-0 on the road for the first time since 1985. They won at Purdue on Sept. 6.

Cooper Rush added 178 yards passing, but he was unable to march Central Michigan downfield when the outcome was still in the question. After Kansas had regained the lead, Rush was sacked on third down to end one drive and threw short of the first-down marker to end the next two.

JaCorey Shepherd picked Rush off in the final minutes, allowing Kansas to run out the clock.

The victory may have been a crucial one for embattled Kansas coach Charlie Weis. The Jayhawks were routed 41-3 by Duke last week, and Weis is trying to prove he’s made enough progress in two-plus years in charge to warrant the rest of his five-year contract.

It was just Weis’s third win over a Football Bowl Subdivision school.

After failing to reach the end zone last week, the Jayhawks needed all of 18 seconds to accomplish the feat Saturday. Pierson took a handoff out of the shotgun, glided to his left and hit a crease, running untouched the rest of the way for the score.

It was the first touchdown for Kansas since the 10:17 mark of the third quarter of its opener against Southeast Missouri State, and only the fifth scored in the Jayhawks’ first 10 quarters this season.

After that, the Jayhawks managed 95 yards on 33 plays the rest of the first half.

Playing without its top running back, Thomas Rawls, due to a suspension, Central Michigan fared little better with the ball. Rush was under constant pressure, a quartet of runners found no room to move and punter Ron Coluzzi started to wear out his foot.

The Chippewas’ Brian Eavey hit a 37-yard field goal to make it 7-3 at halftime, and Matt Wyman connected from 27 yards for Kansas early in the second half.

Walker, who did not have a carry in the first half, finally sparked Central Michigan early in the third quarter. The sophomore carried six times on a tying touchdown drive, barreling over All-Big 12 linebacker Ben Heeney on the way to the end zone.

Kansas buckled down on defense, though. And when Cozart hit McCay to regain the lead, a sparse crowd, made sparser by a 27-minute weather delay, finally exhaled.

— Associated Press —

Getaway driver nets 5 years in deadly robbery

jail prisonOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A getaway driver in a deadly northeast Kansas liquor store robbery has been sentenced to five years in prison.

The Kansas City Star reports that 34-year-old Larry Marshall Jr. received the sentence Friday after testifying last month at the Johnson County trial of his cousin, Bruce Ashley Jr. The trial ended with jurors convicting Ashley of first-degree murder and attempted aggravated robbery in killing of 61-year-old Gerry Grovenburg. Ashley is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

Marshall also had initially faced a murder charge but was allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges of conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery and aiding a felon.

Grovenburg had owned Mr. G’s Liquor Store in Shawnee for 35 years when he was killed in a May 2010 robbery attempt.

 

Northwest Missouri State University honors Hubbard, legacy of innovation with naming of CIE

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Photo courtesy Northwest Missouri State University

Northwest Missouri State University paid tribute to its ninth president, Dr. Dean Hubbard, and former first lady Aleta Hubbard Saturday morning with a ceremony to mark the renaming of its Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship in their honor.

Hubbard led the University from 1984 until his retirement in 2009 and helped place Northwest as a leader in Missouri higher education, in addition to leading the University to national recognition for its “Culture of Quality” initiative, which fostered continuous improvement in all aspects of University operations. During Hubbard’s presidency, Northwest won the Missouri Quality Award four consecutive times – in 1997, 2001, 2005 and 2008 – and is the only educational institution in the state to have done so.

But it was Hubbard’s vision to provide unparalleled learning and research opportunities for Northwest students and faculty in a wide range of disciplines that led to the development of the Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship.

Recalling that vision Saturday, Hubbard said the University set three goals.

“One was to provide a place where students could be introduced to the latest innovations in science, mainly nanotechnology, working with matter at the sub-atomic, sub-molecular level,” Hubbard said. “The second goal was to provide an opportunity for faculty to do research in these areas and to innovate. The third one was to provide a space where companies could take those innovations and develop products that would improve the human condition. So that’s what we set out to do, and I am very pleased with watching the progress of the center.”

In December 2013, Northwest’s Board of Regents approved the renaming of the facility to the Dean L. Hubbard Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. The University chose Saturday, as part of its Family Weekend activities, to make the renaming official. Hubbard’s family and several friends were in attendance as well as a number of current and former faculty and staff members, including members of Hubbard’s cabinet.

“Our family will be forever grateful and honored that you’ve chosen to put our names on this facility,” Hubbard said. “We all bleed green, and Northwest is part of our conversation all the time.”

Hubbard’s presidency also involved making Northwest the first comprehensive electronic campus in the United States in 1987, and he supported the expansion of Northwest’s pioneering alternative fuels program. The alternative fuels program transforms recycled cardboard, paper and agricultural wastes into energy to heat and cool the campus, and it saved the University more than $10 million dollars during Hubbard’s tenure compared to the cost of purchasing natural gas.

Hubbard’s successor and current Northwest President Dr. John Jasinski called Saturday “a momentous day” and acknowledged the many contributions – known and unknown – Dean and Aleta Hubbard provided to Northwest through their leadership and actions.

“Your service, your spirit, your passion, understanding of all that is good with higher education and certainly understand the challenges as well,” Jasinski said. “Dean and Aleta had an undying thirst for making Northwest better – across all fronts – and that truly is the legacy build – something that is carrying on.”

Northwest alumnus Melvin Booth spoke of his friendship with Dr. Hubbard and their shared vision to enhance Northwest’s business programs and international enrollment to compete on a global level. Booth commended Hubbard for his leadership and his focus on doing what was best for students.

“Dr. Hubbard’s commitment to quality is beyond anyone that I’ve ever met in my whole career,” Booth said. “He’s internationally recognized for his work in the field of quality management, for the culture of quality. He had an initiative that really fostered and continued to improve all aspects of the University’s operations.”

The CIE opened in 2009, and today it stands among the top business incubators at universities worldwide. In June, the University Business Incubator (UBI) Index ranked the Northwest CIE at No. 21 globally, and it is one of just three business incubators in the United States to be ranked among the top 25. The CIE also was awarded designation as a Missouri Innovation Center by the Missouri Technology Corporation.

Located on the north edge of the Northwest campus, the 46,679 square-foot CIE is a mixed-use incubator with emphasis on technology-based, start-up companies. It also provides assistance to existing small businesses and encourages development of new small businesses. It includes three lab analysis research areas, a shared scientific instrument room and 9,000 square feet of tenant office space, while the academic wing contains more than 16,000 square feet of highly specialized teaching and research labs and offices.

The facility is positioned within a two-hour driving radius of Kansas City, Des Moines and Omaha to provide companies with access to more than 1.5 million people. At the same time companies located at the CIE enjoy the benefits of a consistently strong work-ethic and business friendly environment in a smaller rural setting.

Mo. man sentenced for embezzling $4.9 million

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — A southwest Missouri man is going to prison for embezzling more than $4.9 million from his employer and spending the money on gambling, a tractor and other personal expenses.

Sixty-one-year-old David VanWinkle, of Neosho, pleaded guilty in February to multiple charges in the theft from Frontier Leasing Inc., a Joplin company where he worked as the comptroller.

The U.S. Attorney’s office says VanWinkle was sentenced Friday to five years and 10 months in federal prison without parole. He was also ordered to forfeit the $4.9 million, the tractor and other items to the government.

VanWinkle admitted stealing from Frontier Leasing from June 2008 to December 2013. Prosecutors said the embezzlement put a financial strain on the company, whose employees took voluntary pay cuts to keep the business going.

KU pathologist welcomes federal initiative to fight antibiotic resistance

health doctor insuranceBy Bryan Thompson
Kansas Public Radio

WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Obama on Thursday issued an executive order directing the federal government to step up the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

It’s a fight with enormous consequences, according to Rebecca Horvat, who oversees infectious disease testing at the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kan. In that role, Horvat is familiar with bacteria that are impervious to front-line antibiotics.

“Half of them are very antibiotic-resistant,” she said. “You only have a few drugs left to treat them. I see it every day.”

The day is coming when disease-causing bacteria will develop resistance to all current antibiotics, Horvat said.
We’ll go back to the pre-antibiotic age, where mothers will see half their children die from infections. That’s really what used to happen,” she said. “A lot of your parents will die earlier, because as they get older they get sicker, and there’s no antibiotics left. I don’t mean to make it seem scary, but that is where we’re going.”

Horvat doesn’t know how soon that scenario might play out. She said one simple step we all can take is to wash our hands to reduce the spread of bacteria.

In conjunction with Thursday’s executive order, a science advisory council released a report to the president on how to combat antibiotic resistance. Among other steps, it calls for reducing overuse of antibiotics in humans and livestock, increasing incentives to spur development of new antibiotics, and improving the monitoring of the development and spread of drug-resistant bacteria.

In addition to the scientific report and the president’s executive order, the White House released a National Strategy for Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria. It also announced a $20 million prize sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, and the Food and Drug Administration to spur the development of a rapid diagnostic test to allow health care providers to identify highly resistant bacterial infections at the point of patient care.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antibiotic-resistant infections are associated with 23,000 deaths and 2 million illnesses in the United States each year. The annual impact on the national economy is estimated at $20 billion in excess direct health care costs, and as much as $35 billion in lost productivity from hospitalizations and sick days.

Chrysler recalling nearly 189,000 SUVs

ChryslerTOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writer

DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler is recalling nearly 189,000 Jeep Grand Cherokees and Dodge Durangos in the U.S. to fix a fuel pump problem that can cause the SUVs to stall.

The recall covers some 2011 models with 3.6-liter V6 or 5.7-liter V8 engines. Chrysler says a relay can fail, increasing the risk of a crash.

Chrysler traced the problem to a spring that can deform because of heat.

The vehicles also might not start, and the fuel pump could keep working even when the engine is shut off. The company says that as of Aug. 25 it’s not aware of any crashes or injuries from the problem.

Dealers will replace the fuel pump relay for free starting Oct. 24.

 

Tracing shift from everyday American to jihadis

police lights

NANCY BENAC, Associated Press
DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — A college dropout from Florida.

A nurse’s aide from Denver.

The owner of a pizza-and-wings joint from upstate New York.

Except for their embrace of Islam, there’s no common profile for the 100-plus Americans who have traveled to Syria to join Islamic fighters or are accused of supporting them from the United States.

Some seek adventure and camaraderie. Others feel a call to fight perceived injustice.

But a shared strain of disaffection, a search for meaning, seems to emerge, at times stronger than any motivation tied to religious devotion.

U.S. officials are putting new energy into trying to understand what radicalizes people far removed from the fight, and into trying to prod countries to do a better job of keeping them from joining up.

A year of green fields

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

This year, Kansas has green fields, kissed by the sun. There are blue skies with white clouds high above. There are even valleys where rivers run. Heck, there’s even water standing in terrace channels.

It’s been at least five years since the pastures have been this green in the eastern half of the state and even in some of the drier areas of western Kansas the grass is showing signs of life.

If you’ve traveled anywhere in the state this summer, you can see what a little moisture can do, especially with the nurturing hands of our Kansas farmers.

Corn crops tower above the ground. Ten-feet tall is not unusual. Some farmers say some of their crops are 11 and 12-foot tall.

In Decatur County, far northwestern Kansas, farmers are hoping to harvest 90 to 100 bushel dry-land corn.

Grain sorghum fields sport huge heads nine, 10 and even 12 inches long. These heads are heavy filled with plump red and green berries.

Soybean leaves are the size of footballs. Pods weigh down the plants.

Calves graze in grass that nearly tickles their bellies. Even in the short-grass country of western Kansas, the buffalo grass is green and full of protein. Low spots and  buffalo wallows are filled with life sustaining water. It’s a stark contrast to so many years when the grass has already turned brown, parched by the sun.

The Sunflower State has been truly blessed with moisture during the summer of 2014. Rainfall has been plentiful in many areas of our state.

Timely rains keep falling. In some areas of Kansas, farmers have stopped irrigating and are anxious for their fall crops to dry down. They’re ready to harvest.

The May family has farmed and ranched in Decatur County since 1887. Roger and Susan May are fourth-generation producers and they’re thankful for the moisture in 2014.

“It’s been a great year,” Roger says. “The cattle are looking good and in great shape. It’s been several years since our grass has been this green this late in the (growing) season.”

Plenty of showers, moisture from 35 to 60 hundreds of an inch, have been sure and steady throughout the summer, the Decatur County farmer/rancher says. They’ve also enjoyed a couple of more abundant rainfall events that totaled a couple inches. So far this year, nearly nine inches of rain has fallen on their land.

On this early September morning, temperatures hovered in the low 70s. Barn swallows bobbed and weaved in the sky searching for insects. Many of the insects are pesky black flies that pester the cattle and calves.

These insects don’t like to fly on such cool, early mornings. As the cattle kick them up from the ground, the swallows snatch them from the sky, eat them or carry them home to feed their hungry offspring.

Looking out the pickup window at his herd, Roger says he’d rank them at near the top on a scale of one to five. The plentiful moisture, good grass and plenty of milk for the calves has been a real asset this summer.

“They’re in top condition – they’re fleshy and their coats are sleek and shiny,” Roger says. “With these cows in such fine shape, they’ll raise a better, healthier calf this coming winter.”

The Mays manage a 350 head cow/calf operation as part of their farm and ranch operaton. Most years they feed the calves out to finish.

The cornerstone of his livestock operation has always involved making sure they have good feed, good nutrition and the proper health care. He likened his cattle to his family.

Each and every day the Decatur County stockman drives out to look at their herd. Once in the pasture, he meanders slowly through his stock, checking carefully for any sick cows or calves. Roger also checks to see if the cattle have water, mineral and salt.

Another important part of this daily routine is to count the stock and make sure they’re all inside the fence. The Decatur County stockman likes to keep his stock in his pastures.

“If you can keep livestock in, off your neighbor’s property and off the road, that’s a real accomplishment,” May says. “Every cattleman must keep track of his fences – make sure they’re in top repair.”

Like the poem by Frost says, “good fences make good neighbors.”

Yes sir, out here on the May place cattle have always been a major part of their operation. The better they take care of their livestock, the better the cattle will take care of them.

That’s the way it was with his dad and his grandfather before him. As a matter of fact, that’s the way Roger believes it will always be.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

Kansas receives $3.5M grant to reduce infant mortality

KDHEBy KHI NEWS SERVICE
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has been awarded a $3.5 million, five-year Healthy Start grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The Healthy Start grants, awarded to 87 organizations in 33 states, will launch projects aimed at reducing infant mortality rates and improving the health of mothers and infants.

The Kansas grant will help support a Geary County project known as Delivering Change, which is designed to help eliminate disparities in perinatal health in rural Geary County.

Key partners in delivering these programs include the Geary Community Healthcare Foundation, Geary Community Hospital, Geary County Health Department, Flint Hills OBGYN, Kansas Breastfeeding Coalition Inc., Kansas Infant Death and SIDS Network, Kansas Children’s Service League, Unified School District 475 and March of Dimes.

“This Healthy Start initiative is an effective way to empower pregnant women by giving them the resources they need to improve their own health and the health of their babies,” said Dr. Robert Moser, KDHE secretary. “We are looking forward to working with a number of partners in Kansas so that Geary County children will benefit from these services.”

Delivering Change will expand on the work of the Geary County Perinatal Coalition and support these key project goals:

• Improve women’s health, with a focus on access to care.

• Promote quality services.

• Strengthen family resilience.

• Increase program accountability

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