We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Romney, Dole campaigning with Kansas Sen. Roberts

Roberts and Dole at a campaign stop earlier this month
Roberts and Dole at a campaign stop earlier this month

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney is joining fellow ex-nominee Bob Dole in the GOP’s efforts in Kansas to rescue U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts’ re-election.

Both Romney and Dole were joining Roberts on Monday at an Overland Park restaurant and banquet hall for a campaign rally. Kansas is a GOP-leaning state, but the race between Roberts and independent candidate Greg Orman appears to be a toss-up.

They’re appearing in Johnson County, the state’s most populous county and home to 22 percent of the state’s 1.74 million voters. It’s normally a Republican stronghold, but Orman is an Olathe businessman and expects to do well there.

Romney captured 58 percent of the vote in the county when he ran for president in 2012. Dole did, too, when he ran in 1996.

 

Cardinals OF Taveras dies in car accident in DR

FatalSANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Authorities say St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Oscar Taveras has died in a car accident in the Dominican Republic.

National police spokesman Jacobo Mateo Moquete confirmed Taveras’ death on his Twitter account. Taveras’ agent and the Cardinals’ representative in the Caribbean country also said Sunday that the outfielder had died.

The 22-year-old Taveras made his major league debut this year. The promising slugger hit .239 with three homers and 22 RBIs in 80 games.

Missouri Western soccer defeats Lindenwood in double OT

MWSUThe Missouri Western women’s soccer team outlasted Lindenwood on Sunday at Spratt Stadium as they defeated Lindenwood in double overtime 2-1.  The Griffons improve their record to 9-6-1 overall and 6-5-1 in conference.

In the first half, Lindenwood was able to get a quick strike in the ninth minute of the game with a goal coming from Becky Roberts just outside the box.  She capitalized on a deflected ball to put her seventh goal of the season in the back of the net. The Griffons were held in check for the half only creating two shots on goal. Sydney Cluck and K.C. Ramsell each tallied one.

Missouri Western was able to create opportunities early in the second half with two Sydney Andrews’s free kicks. Andrews hit the crossbar on one shot and sent the other just wide of the goal. The Griffons found the back of the net in the 68th minute of the game when freshman Ashlyn Powers scored her first goal of the season and career.

In overtime, Sydney Andrew made the most of her free kick opportunity striking a laser from the 45 yard mark over the goalkeepers head. The goal was Andrews’s second of the year.

Sarah Lyle recorded two saves on the day to help the Griffons secure the victory.

The Griffons will play their final regular season home game against Northwest Missouri State this Friday 7:00 p.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Chiefs score 34 unanswered points in rout of Rams

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jamaal Charles shredded the Rams on a pair of touchdown runs. Knile Davis returned a kickoff 99 yards for another score. The Chiefs sacked St. Louis quarterback Austin Davis seven times.

If there was a fourth phase to football, Kansas City probably would have dominated that, too.

After spotting their cross-state rivals the first touchdown, the Chiefs turned up the pressure in every way Sunday. The result was a 34-7 victory, their sixth straight in the series dating to Sept. 24, 1994, when the Rams were still based in Los Angeles.

“Any time you play good in all three facets, you’re going to win a lot of games,” said Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith, “and it felt like we did that.”

Charles, who last week became the Chiefs’ career rushing leader, powered over the left side of the line for a touchdown in the first quarter. He added a 36-yard score early in the fourth, dodging a defender at the line of scrimmage and then accelerating past the Rams’ defense.

Cairo Santos added a pair of field goals for Kansas City (4-3), including a career-best 53-yarder right before halftime. Smith was 24 of 28 for 226 yards, and Davis capped the string of 34 unanswered points with a short touchdown run in the fourth quarter.

By that point, the banged-up Rams (2-5) were just trying to survive.

“It’s disappointing,” said coach Jeff Fisher, whose team was coming off a victory over Seattle. “We had a great week, a short-lived bit of momentum, and we weren’t able to put it all together.”

Austin Davis finished 15 of 25 for 160 yards with a touchdown and an interception, three of his sacks coming at the hands of Justin Houston. It didn’t help that left tackle Jake Long, right guard Rodger Saffold and center Scott Wells sustained injuries during the game.

The Rams were also playing with an injury-depleted defensive backfield.

“You looked at the injuries they had today, they had three or four rookies starting for them on the defensive side,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “That’s tough.”

The Rams’ running back by committee proved to be a bust, too. Benny Cunningham, Zac Stacy and Tre Mason were bottled up all game, and St. Louis managed just 84 yards on 19 carries.

“They took some things away and when that happens you’ve got to find a way to get some momentum offensively,” Davis said, “and we weren’t able to do that. But my hat really goes off to them. They did a really good job and made a lot of good plays.”

The Rams jumped to a 7-0 lead on a pass from Davis to tight end Lance Kendricks on the opening series, but everything went the Chiefs’ way the rest of the game.

Special teams had a lot to do with it.

One week after the Rams used two long returns and an audacious punt fake to beat Seattle, they watched as Greg Zuerlein missed a 38-yard field goal in the second quarter to keep the game 7-7.

Santos hit his 53-yarder for a 10-7 lead right before halftime.

The Chiefs got the ball back to start the third quarter. Knile Davis fielded the kickoff on a bounce, veered to his right and picked up a key block from James-Michael Johnson before going the rest of the way for his second career TD return.

Davis, who also had a franchise-long 108-yard kickoff return touchdown as a rookie in 2013, is the fifth player in history with a kickoff-return touchdown of at least 99 yards in each of his first two NFL seasons.

Santos added his second field-goal and Charles punctuated a big day for the offense when he took a carry up the middle, left a defender grasping for air and outran the entire secondary for his second score of the game.

Davis added a 3-yard touchdown plunge in the final minutes as chants of “Let’s Go Royals” filled Arrowhead Stadium.

“We clearly got outplayed in the second half of this game in all three phases,” Fisher said. “It wasn’t a good effort and we’ve got our work cut out for us.”

— Associated Press —

Suspects arrested in Mo. shooting investigation

arrestPOPLAR BLUFF (AP) – Authorities have arrested several people while investigating a southwest Missouri shooting death.

The Daily American Republic reports that a break in the case came while authorities were investigating a car that was reported stolen Thursday from a Poplar Bluff dealership. Authorities attempted to stop the stolen vehicle and a pursuit ensued.

The pursuit ended with the arrest of the car’s drive and another man suspected in the shooting death of 48-year-old Salvador Ruiz Ramirez. Ramirez’s body was found Wednesday submerged at the end of the boat ramp on the Black River at the Dan River access.

The man suspected of killing Ramirez faces charges that include burglary. Others have been arrested on suspicion of hindering prosecution.

New poll says Kan. governor’s race a toss-up, senate race close

Brownback and Davis
Brownback and Davis

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new poll suggests the Kansas governor’s race is a toss-up and the race for senate is very close.

The poll released Sunday by NBC News and Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York, showed Democratic challenger Paul Davis as the choice of 45 percent of the likely voters surveyed.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback was the choice of 44 percent.

Libertarian candidate Keen Umbehr was chosen by 5 percent and 6 percent were undecided.

More of those surveyed viewed Brownback unfavorably than favorably — 50 percent to 42 percent.

Forty-three percent of those surveyed viewed Davis favorably and 34 percent viewed him unfavorably.

But 19 percent were unsure of their impressions of Davis, compared to 8 percent for Brownback.

The poll also released Sunday showed independent candidate Greg Orman as the choice of 45 percent of the likely voters surveyed.

Republican Sen. Pat Roberts was the choice of 44 percent.

Roberts and Orman
Roberts and Orman

Libertarian candidate Randall Batson was chosen by 4 percent and 7 percent of those surveyed were undecided.

Both polls surveyed 757 likely voters from Oct. 18 through Oct. 22. The margin of error was 3.6 percent.

More of those surveyed viewed Roberts unfavorably than favorably — 46 percent to 43 percent, with 11 percent unsure.

Forty-two percent of those surveyed viewed Orman favorably and 37 percent viewed him unfavorably. Another 18 percent were unsure.

Patient in ambulance dies in Mo. head-on crash

Fatal accidentMARSHALL (AP) – A patient in an ambulance has been killed in a nearly head-on collision with a dump truck in thick fog in Saline County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol identified the victim as 77-year-old Gary L. Page of Slater. He died Saturday morning when the ambulance collided with a dump truck that was stopped in traffic on Missouri 240 while the driver was waiting to turn onto Missouri 41.

The ambulance’s driver sustained moderate injuries and a 70-year-old passenger was seriously injured. Both were transported to University Hospital in Columbia.

MHP Records: Trooper provided little water based training before drowning

mhpKANSAS CITY (AP) – Missouri State Highway Patrol records raise questions about the training that a trooper received before a suspect drowned while in custody.

Twenty-year-old Brandon Ellingson went into the water May 31 as Trooper Anthony Piercy was transporting him from the Lake of the Ozarks on suspicion of boating while intoxicated. Witnesses have said that Piercy placed Ellingson in a life jacket but that the suspect’s arms weren’t in the arm holes. The device came off when Ellingson went into the water.

The Missouri Water Patrol merged with the Highway Patrol in 2011. Afterward, troopers like Piercy, who primarily patrol Missouri’s roadways, began working the lake during peak boating season.

The Kansas City Star reports that they received a fraction of the water-based training they would have received before the merger.

GOP veto-proof majority in Mo. voters’ hands

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri voters in November will decide how Republican the Legislature will be next year.

Republicans are likely to retain majorities in both chambers. But they’re pushing for another session with a two-thirds majority – the threshold needed to override vetoes by Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon.

Democrats are pouring money into campaigns in hopes of chipping away at Republican control.

Two more years of a Republican supermajority could mean a repeat of this year’s veto session. The GOP pushed through one of the country’s longest abortion waiting periods and created a special training program for teachers to carry guns in classrooms.

Even without the supermajority, retired Northwest Missouri State University political science professor Richard Fulton says Republicans likely will butt heads with Nixon as they prepare for the 2016 governor’s race.

Victims’ families seek to remake top Kansas court

kansas supreme courtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A small group of victims’ family members are waging a campaign to remake the Kansas Supreme Court after it overturned the death sentences of two brothers convicted of notorious multiple murders.

The state Republican Party’s chairman and GOP Gov. Sam Brownback last week endorsed the efforts.

The new group is Kansans for Justice. Justices Lee Johnson and Eric Rosen are on the ballot in the Nov. 4 election, and the group is hoping voters refuse to retain them on the court.

The issue is rulings in the cases of Jonathan and Reginald Carr.

The brothers were sentenced to die over the shootings of four people in a Wichita field in December 2000. The court in July ordered new sentencing trials for them, saying their joint sentencing trial was improper.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File