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Mo. teen hospitalized after car overturns

mhp khp emergencyCHILLICOTHE- A Missouri teen was injured in an accident just after 7 p.m. on Sunday in Livingston County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Pontiac Grand AM driven by Courtney A. Reith,17, Utica, was southbound on LIV 235 one mile south of Chillicothe. The driver lost control of the vehicle and it slid off the west side of the road into a bean field and overturned.

Reith was transported to Hedrick Medical Center.
The MSHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Missouri voter turnout forecast at 40 percent

voteJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri’s local election authorities are expecting about 40 percent of registered voters to cast ballots in Tuesday’s elections.

The voter turnout predictions are compiled by the secretary of state’s office from figures submitted by local clerks and election officials. They are based on rolls showing more than 4 million registered voters in Missouri.

The predictions range from a low of about 15 percent in some counties to more than 60 percent in other counties.

Persimmons have forecasting abilities in folklore

MU Extension  Missouri ExtensionSPRINGFIELD (AP) – Move over Punxsutawney Phil. Missouri has its own way to predict the weather.

Folklore holds that the shape of the seedling inside a persimmon seed can predict upcoming winter conditions.

University of Missouri Extension horticulture specialist Patrick Byers says there’s no research that backs up the folklore. But that didn’t stop him from collecting fruit from persimmon trees in Lawrence, Newton, Webster and McDonald counties.

His evaluation of 102 seeds suggests this coming winter in the Ozarks is going to be colder than average, with below average snowfall and a few warm spells.

Persimmons grow on trees and look like orange tomatoes. The Extension Service says Native Americans taught settlers that the fruit should be left on the trees well into October when it becomes ripe enough to eat.

US approved Ferguson no-fly area to keep press out

Screen Shot 2014-11-03 at 5.00.55 AMWASHINGTON (AP) – The U.S. government allowed police in Ferguson, Missouri, to restrict more than 37 square miles of airspace for nearly two weeks in August for safety reasons. But audio recordings show instead that local authorities wanted to keep news helicopters away during violent street protests.

Amid demonstrations following the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, Federal Aviation Administration managers struggled to redefine an earlier flight ban so police helicopters and commercial flights at nearby Lambert-St. Louis International Airport could fly through the area – but not others.

FAA officials say a main reason was to keep the media out. The conversations contradict claims by the St. Louis County police, who said the restrictions had nothing to do with limiting the press.

Sheriff: Man found dead in Topeka residence

Police Body found MurderTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the death of a man found shot inside a Topeka home.

Sheriff Herman Jones tells The Topeka Capital-Journal authorities were working to obtain a search warrant for the home on Sunday night. He says dispatchers received a 911 call on Sunday evening and deputies found the man dead with gunshot wounds.

Jones says authorities are treating the death as suspicious.

It’s unclear how many times he was shot. His identity hasn’t been released.

 

Griffon soccer earns No. 6 seed, will face Fort Hays in MIAA Tournament

riggertMissouriWesternThe Missouri Western women’s soccer team will travel to Fort Hays State for its first ever appearance in the MIAA Women’s Soccer Tournament on Wednesday, November 5 at 6 p.m.

The Griffons enter the tournament as the six seed and have a chance for redemption against the third seeded Tigers. Fort Hays snapped the Griffons, record, five game winning streak with a 1-0 win on Oct. 19 in Hays, Kansas. The Griffons held Fort Hays to just two shots on goal, but the first goal Sarah Lyle had allowed since September, was all the Tigers needed to win.

Should Missouri Western win Wednesday, they would face the winner of Emporia State (7) at Southwest Baptist (2) on Friday at the College Boulevard Activities Complex in Olathe, Kansas at 7 p.m. The Griffons claimed 1-0 victories over both squads during their five-game win streak earlier this season.

Along with winning more matches than any other Griffon Soccer squad, the team suffered the fewest losses, got off to the program’s best ever start, set a new mark for shutouts in a season, had the longest winning streak ever and head coach Chad Edwards became the program’s winningest coach on Oct. 10, among other records set this season.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014 (at higher seed)
Game 1: #8 Northeastern State at #1 Central Missouri     7 p.m.
Game 2: #5 Lindenwood at #4 Central Oklahoma             3 p.m.
Game 3: #7 Emporia State at #2 Southwest Baptist          2 p.m.
Game 4: #6 Missouri Western at #3 Fort Hays State         6 p.m.

Friday, November 7, 2014 (at College Boulevard Activities Complex)
Game 5: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2    4 p.m.
Game 6: Winner Game 3 vs. Winner Game 4    7 p.m.

Sunday, November 9, 2014 (at College Boulevard Activities Complex)
Championship: Winner Game 5 vs. Winner Game 6     11 a.m.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Chiefs send Jets to eighth straight loss

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Alex Smith insisted he was looking for Dwayne Bowe in the end zone, a rarity considering the Chiefs quarterback has yet to throw a touchdown pass to a wide receiver this season.

What happened next in their 24-10 victory over the Jets on Sunday was even rarer.

The pass was batted at the line of scrimmage by Jets linebacker Calvin Pace. It bounced right into the hands of tight end Anthony Fasano, who had been blocked to the ground, and he rolled over across the goal-line for a touchdown that extended the Chiefs’ lead to two scores.

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“I don’t know what to say,” Smith said, smiling. “A freaky play.”

Just the kind of play that’s been going Kansas City’s way during a three-game win streak — and the kind that has been going against New York during its eight-game skid.

The Jets’ losing streak is their longest since 1996, when they went 1-15 in their final year under Rich Kotite. The franchise has never lost nine in a row, an embarrassment embattled coach Rex Ryan and his troops will try to avoid next Sunday against Pittsburgh.

“I thought it was typical of how this season’s gone for us,” Ryan said of the bizarre bounce that led to Fasano’s touchdown. “That’s what I thought.”

Smith finished with 199 yards and two touchdowns passing, and Jamaal Charles ran for another score for the Chiefs (5-3), who won for the fifth time in six games on the same day that former running back Priest Holmes was inducted into their ring of honor.

Starting his first game with the Jets (1-8) in place of Geno Smith, Michael Vick threw for 196 yards and a touchdown. He briefly left early in the fourth quarter after taking a massive hit from the Chiefs’ Josh Mauga and walking unsteadily off the field, but returned to finish.

Smith was inactive with a shoulder injury, so Matt Simms had to play one series.

“My head hit the ground, but it was cool,” Vick said. “Initially, I was dinged for a minute. But I respect the NFL rules and the concussion protocol. I went through it. I took all the appropriate steps and I passed all the tests and I came back.”

New York actually moved the ball well through gusty conditions, utilizing Percy Harvin in the running and passing games. But the Jets kept misfiring deep in Chiefs territory, settling for a field goal just before halftime and then turning it over on downs at the Kansas City 3 early in the fourth quarter — Vick was injured on that fourth-down play.

In all, the Jets were stopped on fourth down three times in the fourth quarter.

“We had some opportunities and we didn’t capitalize on them,” said Vick, who will start next Sunday against Pittsburgh. “Whenever that happens, and the other team does capitalize on theirs, you don’t finding yourself winning the game.”

The Chiefs set the tempo from the opening drive, moving 81 yards in relative ease. Charles was the workhorse, carrying six times and capping the drive with a 1-yard TD plunge.

After the Chiefs forced three-and-out, it took them just seven more plays to score again — this time on a play that encapsulated the way everything has been going right for Kansas City, and the way everything has been going wrong for New York.

With first-and-goal at the 2-yard line, Smith’s pass was knocked down by Pace. But the nice defensive play sent the ball right to Fasano, who caught the inadvertent pass on his rump, rolled over the goal line and gave the Chiefs a stunning — if not humorous — touchdown for a 14-0 lead.

Meanwhile, the Chiefs’ defense was getting after Vick every time he dropped to pass.

Justin Houston, who had 4 1/2 sacks of Vick when he faced the Eagles a year ago, had two more on the elusive quarterback Sunday. Defensive tackle Dontari Poe also tracked Vick down for a sack, all before Mauga knocked him from the game with his crushing blow in the fourth quarter.

The only bright spot for the Jets was the play of Harvin, who caught 11 passes for 129 yards in his second game since getting traded from Seattle. Harvin showed the speed and shiftiness that the Jets were hoping he would provide when they made the deal.

It was just far too little in a game dominated by Kansas City’s defense.

“When we were 0-2, nobody really believed in us. We’re 5-3 right now, and pretty sure nobody believes in us,” Chiefs linebacker Tamba Hali said. “Our goal is to continue to believe in what we’re doing and win games. That’s all that matters around here.”

— Associated Press —

MWSU women’s soccer falls to Central Missouri in regular season finale

MWSU
The greatest regular season in Missouri Western women’s soccer history came to an end Sunday with a 4-0 loss to No. 9 Central Missouri.

The Griffons end their season with the most wins (9) in school history and fewest losses (8) in program history. They now await their pairing in the team’s first ever appearance in the MIAA tournament.

Western used the wind to their advantage in the first half against the Jennies, going to the break in a 0-0 tie and even in shots with the MIAA leading squad. Central Missouri took advantage of the second period wind at their backs, scoring four goals including an own goal off a Griffon defender to cap off the victory.

Missouri Western takes a 9-8-1 overall record and 6-7-1 MIAA mark into the first round of the conference tournament scheduled to begin on Wednesday, Nov. 5.

— Associated Press —

Deputy killed in Sunday morning Mo. shootout

PoliceEL DORADO SPRINGS (AP) – Authorities say a southwest Missouri deputy and a passenger in a fleeing car have been killed in a shootout.

KYTV reports that the chase started just before 12:30 a.m. Sunday when Cedar County Deputy Matthew Chism tried to pull over a driver for having no headlights. The driver sped off and the 25-year-old deputy chased the car through the town of El Dorado Springs.

Missouri Highway Patrol Spokesman Jason Pace says a foot chase ensued when a passenger in the fleeing car jumped out. Gunfire erupted, killing Chism and the 28-year-old passenger, identified as William A. Collins of El Dorado Springs. The driver, also 28, was arrested at a nearby home, but his name wasn’t immediately released.

The Cedar County sheriff asked the patrol to lead the investigation.

Roberts, Orman scrap for moderate Republicans

Screen Shot 2014-10-14 at 2.26.34 PMTHOMAS BEAUMONT, The Associated Press

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Republican Sen. Pat Roberts and independent challenger Greg Orman are traversing eastern Kansas to rally moderates, a demographic that’s suddenly the key to the election in this typically Republican state.

Roberts met with veterans Sunday in Johnson County, the most populous and politically diverse.

Former Sen. Bob Dole was with him again and urged voters in Overland Park to look carefully at Orman’s background. The wealthy Olathe businessman has voted for and contributed to both Republicans and Democrats.

Orman, who state polls show holds a slight lead, was rallied voters in Wichita and planned a final gathering at a park in Prairie Village in the Kansas City suburbs.

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