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Another young girl shot and killed in Kansas City

police lights

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas, police are investigating the death of a 10-year-old girl in a drive-by shooting.

Police say in a news release that the girl died Sunday evening while she was inside a home that was sprayed by bullets from a passing vehicle.

Police on Monday identified the victim as Machole J. Stewart. Investigators have not said how often she was shot. She died at the scene.

No one else inside the home was injured.

It was the second time in about a week that a young girl died in a drive-by shooting in the Kansas City area. Six-year-old Angel Marie Hooper was shot to death Oct. 17 at a convenience store in Kansas City, Missouri. Police have not arrested a suspect in that case.

 

Singer Aaron Lewis stumbles in World Series national anthem

Aaron Lewis prior to Sunday's game 5- courtesy photo
Aaron Lewis prior to Sunday’s game – courtesy photo

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — There was an error at Game 5 of the World Series even before the first pitch.

Country singer Aaron Lewis stumbled early on during his rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” on Sunday night.

After starting with “O say can you see by the dawn’s early light, what so proudly we hailed,” Lewis diverted from the lyrics. Instead of singing “at the twilight’s last gleaming” he sang ” were so gallantly streaming,” words that appear later in the national anthem.

On Facebook Lewis apologized, “All I can say is I’m sorry and ask for the Nation’s forgiveness. My nerves got the best of me and I am completely torn up about what happened. America is the greatest country in the world. The Star-Spangled Banner means so much to so many, including myself. I hope everyone can understand the intensity of the situation and my true intent of this performance. I hope that the Nation, Major League Baseball and the many fans of our national pastime can forgive me.”

State board of ed wants to hear from you on student learning goals

Education Missouri department of edJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The State Board of Education is taking public comment on a review of Missouri’s education standards for elementary and secondary schools.

The board scheduled a public hearing Monday to gather opinions on the work of parent and educator groups that are revising the standards.

 Missouri currently uses the national Common Core benchmarks for what students should learn in each grade.

Lawmakers passed legislation in May requiring a review of what they call shoddy standards created without local input. The hope was to eventually eliminate Common Core.

But some work group members appointed by public officials both for and against Common Core have struggled to reach a compromise in outlining learning goals.

Bison added to NW Missouri nature preserve

Dunn Ranch Prairie -courtesy photo
Dunn Ranch Prairie -courtesy photo

BETHANY, Mo. (AP) — A northwest Missouri nature preserve has added 30 bison to its existing herd of more than 70 that helps keep the native prairie healthy.

The Nature Conservancy’s Dunn Ranch Prairie is about 90 minutes north of Kansas City. Bison and prescribed fires are used to manage grassland at the 4,200-acre ranch, which has more than 300 native wildflower species. It’s also a nesting ground for greater prairie chickens and other birds.

The ranch is a research hub for scientists from a variety of fields and is open to the public for hiking and bird-watching.

The bison released there last week came from Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota and have never been crossbred with cattle.
The Conservancy has been managing bison for more than 25 years.

Prospects dim on settlement for all wheat claims

court WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Prospects are dimming for a settlement on remaining claims in lawsuits over the May 2013 discovery of genetically engineered Monsanto wheat in an Oregon field.

A joint status report submitted Friday in U.S. District Court in Kansas said no agreement has been reached in the lawsuits filed by non-soft white wheat plaintiffs against St. Louis-based Monsanto Co. The lawsuits from across the country have been consolidated in Kansas.

Growers of soft white wheat who sued apparently have reached a tentative deal with the company.

The report said the remaining parties will continue to discuss an amicable resolution, but do not believe any agreement will be reached soon.

The parties suggested the court vacate its earlier order staying proceedings. Monsanto has filed several pending motions seeking to dismiss the cases.

Medical pot dilemma: Where to get the first seeds?

medical marijuanaCARLA K. JOHNSON, AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — As more states legalize medical marijuana, there’s one stage in the process nobody wants to talk about: the part where people still have to break the law.

While marijuana may not be hard to find, getting the first seeds for medical operations often involves either descending into the underground market or crossing state lines — a violation of state and federal laws.

The situation is known as the “immaculate conception” or the “first seed” problem. Those involved see it as an absurd consequence of the nation’s patchwork of laws, with 23 states allowing medical marijuana sales, Colorado and Washington state allowing recreational use and a federal prohibition in place. Most state laws are silent on the issue, forcing officials into a “don’t ask, don’t tell” stance.

Teacher union ups spending against Missouri ballot measure

Screen Shot 2014-10-27 at 6.02.29 AMJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A teachers’ union has poured an additional $500,000 into a campaign to defeat a Missouri ballot measure that seeks to link teachers’ jobs to student performance.

Missouri Ethics Commission records show the National Education Association and its Missouri affiliate each contributed $250,000 during the past week to the campaign committee opposing Constitutional Amendment 3 on the November ballot.

Those donations are on top of more than $1 million already given by the teachers union to the Committee in Support of Public Education. Other public education groups also have been financing the opposition campaign, although to a lesser extent.

The ballot proposal would require evaluations for school personnel to be based largely on student performance data.

A group sponsoring the measure has stopped campaigning for it.

Hospital: Teen wounded in school shooting dies

policeMANUEL VALDES, Associated Press
MARTHA BELLISLE, Associated Press

MARYSVILLE, Wash. (AP) — One of the teenagers wounded in a Washington state high school shooting has died, raising the number of fatalities from when a student opened fire in a cafeteria to three.

Officials at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett said 14-year-old Gia Soriano died Sunday night. Another girl was killed during the shooting Friday by a popular freshman at Marysville-Pilchuck High School north of Seattle. The shooter, Jaylen Fryberg, died of a self-inflicted wound.

Three other students remain hospitalized, two in critical condition and one in serious condition.

Parents and students gathered in a gymnasium at the school Sunday afternoon for a community meeting, with speakers urging support and prayers and tribal members playing drums and singing songs. Fryberg was from a prominent Tulalip Indian family.

Mo. man avoids murder charge in bicyclist’s death

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — A Springfield man has been sentenced to seven years in prison in the death of a bicyclist who was hit by a car that was fleeing from him.

A plea agreement reached last week allowed 24-year-old Blake Basten to avoid a conviction for felony murder. Instead, he was given a seven-year sentence after pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter.

Police say 23-year-old Zachary Gibson died last November when he was hit by a car being driven by 32-year-old Shannon Smith, who was being chased by Basten. Smith pleaded guilty earlier this year to leaving the scene of an accident.

The Springfield News-Leader reports Smith told police she was speeding to get away from Basten, her ex-boyfriend. She said Basten had a gun and she was hoping police would stop her.

Royals get blanked by Bumgarner; trail World Series 3-2

riggertRoyalsSAN FRANCISCO (AP) — With every pitch, Madison Bumgarner etched his place among the World Series greats.

The long, tall lefty kept slinging away and put the San Francisco Giants just one win from yet another championship, throwing a four-hitter to beat the Kansas City Royals 5-0 Sunday night for a 3-2 Series edge.

Hardly menacing on the mound, Bumgarner was simply untouchable — again — as “MVP! MVP!” chants broke out in the late innings.

And by the time the 25-year-old from Hickory, North Carolina, closed out his second win in a week, he had evoked memories of Bob Gibson, Sandy Koufax, Curt Schilling and the top October aces of all time.

Joined them, and maybe even passed them.

Who else has gone 4-0 in four World Series starts with an 0.29 ERA? Throw in only 12 hits in 31 innings, along with 27 strikeouts, and that adds up to the very definition of Big-Game Pitcher.

“He’s so fun to watch. He’s always fun to watch,” teammate Brandon Crawford said. “In the postseason, you could look at him and he looks like he’s just pitching in the middle of June, like it’s no big deal. He takes the pressure off of everybody else. We just feed off of him.”

On this evening, he fanned eight without a walk and never was in trouble, becoming the first pitcher to toss a World Series shutout since Josh Beckett’s clinching gem for the Florida Marlins in 2003 at Yankee Stadium.

The Giants’ work isn’t done yet. To lock up their third crown in five years, they’ll need to win in Kansas City.

Jake Peavy gets the first chance to seal it for San Francisco when he starts Game 6 at Kauffman Stadium on Tuesday night against rookie Yordano Ventura.

If the Giants don’t win then, there was always this possibility: Bumgarner out of the bullpen in Game 7.

Hunter Pence once again was in the middle of things for the Giants. He singled off James Shields in the second and scored on a groundout by Crawford, who finished with three RBIs.

Later, the enigmatic Pence accidentally threw his bat past the mound while striking out, and seemed to apologize to Shields. Pence added another hit in a three-run eighth, making him 9-for-19 in the five games.

Postseason star Pablo Sandoval also singled twice. Juan Perez broke it open with a two-run double off the top of the center-field fence in the eighth off Wade Davis and scored on a single by Crawford.

Since trailing 4-1 in Game 4, the Giants have responded with 15 straight runs. San Francisco won that game, putting aside concern that Bumgarner should’ve been moved up to pitch on short rest.

Bumgarner won for the fourth time in this postseason, and this blanking bookended the four-hit shutout he threw at Pittsburgh in the NL wild-card game. Durable, he’s thrown 47⅔ innings this October, trailing just Schilling’s 48⅓⅓ in 2001 for the most in a single postseason.

Given an early lead, Bumgarner was in control. He surely didn’t need much of a cushion, and looked even better than he did in winning the opener in Kansas City.

And on the rare occasion when the 6-foot-5 Bumgarner made a mistake, failing to cover first base on a grounder to the right side, his defense bailed him out.

Toward the late innings, it appeared that only a lightning strike could rescue the Royals, perhaps a home run out of nowhere. Not happening — this was the third straight game without either team hitting a homer, the longest streak in the World Series since 1948 when the Boston Braves and Cleveland began with a three-game drought, STATS said.

Exactly why the man nicknamed MadBum is so dominant isn’t easily apparent. Royals cleanup man Eric Hosmer said before the game that Bumgarner’s “cross-body” delivery is tough to pick up.

Bumgarner definitely has an impressive whip, along with an imposing WHIP in the World Series. His walks-plus-hits ratio per inning is incredible.

Bumgarner certainly excels at keeping hitters swinging at shadows by changing speeds. Kansas City batters chased balls that bounced as well as high ones out of the strike zone.

After Salvador Perez led off the second with a single — he homered in Game 1 for the lone run off Bumgarner — the slow-walking lefty who never seems to be in a hurry made quick work of the Royals.

Bumgarner struck out the next three batters, all swinging. He was at his best against pesky Omar Infante on three pitches: a 76 mph curve, a fastball at 91 and a slider at 86.

About the only thing Bumgarner didn’t do was get a hit. He takes pride in his plate prowess and launched four home runs this season, including two grand slams. Bumgarner went 0-for-4, leaving him hitless in 22 postseason at-bats.

Yep, he’s still got some work to do.

UP NEXT

Royals: Ventura will become the fourth rookie to start twice in a Series since 2000, joining John Lackey, Justin Verlander and Michael Wacha.

Giants: Peavy started in the World Series last year for the champion Boston Red Sox. He took the loss last week in Game 2, and is 1-4 with a 7.05 ERA in eight career postseason starts.

STATS

Of the 41 previous instances the World Series was tied at 2 in the best-of-seven format, the Game 5 winner has won the title 27 times.

— Associated Press —

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