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VP Biden: Orman will be with us (AUDIO)

Screen-Shot-2014-10-14-at-2.26.34-PM.pngWASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Joe Biden predicts Democrats will lose seats in the Senate but retain a 52-48 majority.

He says he foresees Democratic victories in closely contested races in Alaska, North Carolina, New Hampshire and Georgia and a runoff election in Louisiana.


He did not mention Colorado and Iowa, two other neck-and-neck races. Biden indicated Kansas independent Greg Orman could beat Republican Sen. Pat Roberts. He says Orman “will be with us,” though Orman has not said whether he would join Republicans or Democrats in the Senate.

Biden spoke Tuesday on the “Chaz and AJ” radio show, airing on Connecticut stations WPLR, WDRC and WFOX.

Biden was pitching an Election Day get-out-the-vote message on talk radio in Connecticut, Pennsylvania and in the Quad Cities on the Iowa and Illinois border.

Nearly 230K Kansas voters cast ballots in advance

voteTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Nearly 230,000 Kansas voters had cast their ballots before the polls opened on Election Day.

The Kansas secretary of state’s office says that 114,690 mail-in ballots had been turned in by Tuesday morning, less than in 2010. Another 115,079 advance voters had gone to the polls, an increase from 2010.

Combined, 67,498 of the voters were Democrats, 834 were Libertarians, 125,561 were Republican and 35,876 were unaffiliated.

The secretary of state’s office couldn’t yet provide data about Tuesday’s turnout. But The Kansas City Star said voters who showed up Tuesday waited as long as 30 minutes to cast their ballots at some Johnson County polling locations.

Jessica White of the Johnson County Election Office said polling places were reporting a steady stream of voters on Tuesday.

St. Joseph music teacher to take home award for the arts

Frank Thomas and Mayor Bill Falkner.  Photo courtesy Allied Arts Council
Frank Thomas and Mayor Bill Falkner. Photo courtesy Allied Arts Council

A St. Joseph music teacher is taking home an award for the arts.

Frank D. Thomas is the choral music educator and director for the St. Joseph Community Chorus. He is being awarded the 2015 Missouri Arts Award.

According to the Allied Arts Council Thomas had worked hard to instill his love of music into the college students he has taught, volunteer singers he directs and the audience.

Thomas has spent 38-years as a director of Choral activities at Missouri Western State University.Frank D. Thomas received an Extraordinary Lifetime Achievement Award.

In 1980 Thomas founded the volunteer St. Joseph Community Chorus and directed the ensemble until he retired in 2009. As part of the chorus’s outreach, he directed the “History Alive Through Music” program at elementary schools. In 2013 his successor unexpectedly moved away, he came back to direct the chorus through 2015 until a replacement could be found.
He is an active member of Music Educators National Conference and the Missouri Music Educators Association, and has been vice president of the American Choral Directors Association. He has received many local and state awards, most recently the 2014 St. Joseph Allied Arts Council’s Mayor’s Award for Extraordinary Lifetime Achievement in the Arts.

Thomas will be presented with the 2015 Missouri Arts Award in the Capitol Rotunda in Jefferson City on February 11, 2015.

Kansas man pleads guilty to using skimmer on credit cards

Credit card - spendingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man has pleaded guilty to stealing credit card information while he worked at a Taco Bell in Belton, Missouri.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a news release that 32-year-old Yao Vignon Kpade, of Overland Park, Kansas, pleaded guilty Monday to electronic device fraud.

He admitted that he used a device called a credit card skimmer to obtain information from customers’ credit cards. He encoded the stolen information onto bank cards in his name and used the cards for personal purchases.

Kpade agreed to pay a total of $2,465 in restitution to two banks and to forfeit seized property including computers, electronic tablets and cell phones.

He will be sentenced March 2.

Study: Lack of understanding about insurance could lead to poor choices

Health insuranceBy Michelle Andrews
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — They know less than they think they know. That’s the finding of a recent study that evaluated people’s confidence about choosing and using health insurance compared with their actual knowledge and skills.
As people shop for health coverage this fall, the gap between perception and reality could lead them to choose plans that don’t meet their needs, the researchers suggest.

“There’s a concern that people who don’t have much experience with health insurance don’t protect themselves financially, and then something happens,” says Kathryn Paez, a principal researcher at the American Institutes for Research who co-authored the study. “So they’re learning through hard knocks.”

The nationally representative survey of 828 people aged 22 to 64 is part of a project to develop a standardized questionnaire that researchers, health plans and providers can use to assess people’s health insurance literacy.

The study found, for example, that while three-quarters of Americans say they’re confident they know how to use health insurance, only 20 percent could correctly calculate how much they would owe for a routine physician visit. Many people don’t understand commonly used terms such as “out-of-pocket costs,” “HMO” and “PPO,” according to the study.

The study also found that certain groups of people tended to have a tougher time using health insurance, including young people, minorities, those with lower income or educational levels and those who used health care services infrequently.

People who visit the doctor occasionally but have never been hospitalized or visited the emergency room may be overconfident they understand how health insurance works, says Paez. Likewise, people who belong to integrated health care systems where providers are generally on staff may not realize the potential complications of in-network and out-of-network coverage, among other things, she says.

More comprehensive education could help close the gap between what people think they know about health insurance and what they actually know. In the meantime, the issue brief about the study includes a consumer checklist to aid consumers in choosing a plan.

 

Michelle Andrews is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Mo. man hospitalized after cement truck overturns in Nodaway Co.

ambulance  mhpMARYVILLE- A Missouri man was injured in an accident just before 8 a.m. on Tuesday in Nodaway County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1995 International Cement Truck driven by Corey J. Hiles, 28, Maryville, was northbound on U.S. 71 three miles north of Maryville.

The driver attempted to make a right turn onto Route FF. The vehicle was traveling too fast and overturned into the west ditch.

Hiles was transported by private vehicle to St. Francis Hospital. The MSHP reported he was wearing a seat belt at the time of the accident.

Parents of Ferguson police shooting victim to speak at UN

Screen Shot 2014-11-04 at 11.28.07 AMFERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — The parents of Ferguson police shooting victim Michael Brown are headed to Switzerland next week to speak at a United Nations human rights conference.

Michael Brown Sr. and Lesley McSpadden are scheduled to address the 53rd Session of the United Nations Committee Against Torture in Geneva on Nov. 12 and 13. A Saint Louis University law professor is helping to organize the trip and to solicit online
donations for the couple’s travel expenses.

The trip comes as a St. Louis County grand jury prepares to conclude its inquiry into the Aug. 9 shooting death of Brown by Ferguson officer Darren Wilson.
Family attorney Anthony Gray told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that Brown’s parents plan to leave on Nov. 10.

Don’t know where to vote? Here’s the Buchanan Co. Precinct list

2014 Buchanan County Precinct List

Click Here for Precinct List with Cross Streets for Directions

1 St Peter Lutheran Church, 3524 St. Joseph Ave 1st 10th Western  Ballot
2 Savannah Ave Baptist Church, 1825 Savannah Ave 1st 10th Western Ballot
3 Central Assembly of God, 1222 N 18th Street 1st 10th Western Ballot
4 St Joseph City Hall, 1100 Frederick Ave 2nd 10th Western Ballot
5 Wyatt Park Christian Church, 2623 Mitchell Ave 2nd 10th/11th Western Ballot 1, Ballot 2
6 Brookdale Student Ministry, 3015 Felix Street 1st/2nd/5th 10th East/West Ballot
7 Pony Express Museum, 914 Penn Street 2nd 10th Western Ballot
8 Copeland Baptist Church, 2009 Walnut Street 3rd 11th Western Ballot
9 Huffman United Methodist Church, 2802 Renick St 3rd/5th 10th/11th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2
10 The Connection at Hyde Valley, 202 W Hyde Park Ave 3rd 11th Western Ballot
11 The Keys Christian Fellowship, 6002 S 9th Street 3rd 11th Western Ballot
12 Faith United Church, 3025 Karnes Road 1st 9th/10th East/West Ballot 1, Ballot 2
13 Ashland United Methodist Church, 2711 Ashland Ave 1st/5th 9th/10th East/West Ballot 1, Ballot 2
14 Wesley United Methodist Church, 3409 Ajax Road 5th 11th Eastern Ballot
15 Bible Baptist Temple, 5401 Mitchell Ave 5th 9th/11th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2
16 Missouri National Guard, 301 N Woodbine Road 4th 9th Eastern Ballot
17 Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, 4503 Frederick Blvd 4th 9th/10th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2
18 Agency Methodist Church, 10740 SE State Route FF 9th/11th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2, Ballot 3, Ballot 4
19 DeKalb Community Center, 105 Locust St 11th Western Ballot
20 Willowbrook Community Center, 4020 SE State Route H 9th/11th Western Ballot 1, Ballot 2
21 Faucett Lions Club, 617 SE Grand DD 11th East/West Ballot
22 St Joseph Catholic Church, 109 N Shortridge St 9th Eastern Ballot
23 Frazier Baptist Church, 13601 SE State Route E 9th/11th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2
24 Rushville Masonic Lodge, 201 Market St 11th Western Ballot
25 Clair United Methodist Church, 2 SE 68th Road 9th Eastern Ballot
26 Grace Evangelical Church, 5103 S 50th Road 9th/11th Eastern Ballot 1, Ballot 2

 

Election Day Forecast

MVXHD - 11.Still007

Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 56. West northwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming southwest in the afternoon.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 35. Southwest wind 3 to 5 mph.

Wednesday Sunny, with a high near 66. South southwest wind 5 to 15 mph becoming west in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 22 mph.

Wednesday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 37. Northwest wind 8 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 51. Northwest wind 13 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph.

Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 29.

Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 54.

Friday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 40.

Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 50. Breezy.

Saturday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 28.

Sunday Mostly sunny, with a high near 51.

Sunday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 35.

Monday Mostly sunny, with a high near 55.

Northwest’s Davis elected to NCSSS Board of Directors

Neal Davis
Neal Davis

Neal Davis, director of student achievement at Northwest Missouri State University’s Missouri Academy of Science, Mathematics and Computing, has been elected to the National Consortium of Secondary STEM Schools’ (NCSSS) Board of Directors.

“Neal is a very intelligent leader who sees both the big picture and important details in any situation,” Missouri Academy Dean Dr. Cleo Samudzi said. “I have no doubt that the NCSSS, the Missouri Academy and Northwest will greatly benefit from Neal’s participation as an NCSSS board member.”

NCSSS is an alliance of specialized high schools in the United States that fosters, supports and promotes the efforts of STEM-focused schools to attract and academically prepare students for leadership in mathematics, science, engineering and technology. It supports unique professional development programs for STEM teachers and unique learning experiences for students.

Formerly known as the National Consortium for Specialized Secondary Schools of Mathematics, Science and Technology, NCSSS was established in 1988 to provide a forum for member schools to exchange information and program ideas and evolve alliances among them. More than 90 institutions, representing more than 40,000 students and 1,600 educators, are affiliated with NCSSS, of which the Missouri Academy joined in 2001.

Davis began his work as the Missouri Academy’s director of student achievement in 2011 and is responsible for monitoring the academic performance of all Missouri Academy students as well as advising them about the college application process.

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