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Brownback moving ahead on 50-year water vision

Water visionTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The administration of Gov. Sam Brownback is moving forward on a plan for the state’s long-term water supply.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the more ambitious parts of the plan include dredging state lakes and possibly building an aqueduct from the Missouri River to western Kansas. They would require large amounts of new revenue, as well as cooperation from other states.

During a meeting of the governor’s Council of Economic Advisers last week, Agriculture Secretary Jackie McClaskey asked for help forming a panel to come up with options for long-term funding of the plan.

In western Kansas, farm irrigation is depleting the underground Ogallala Aquifer. In some counties, irrigation has been forced to halt entirely.

Officials investigate ‘hazardous’ device found in Springfield

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Authorities are calling a suspicious device found in downtown Springfield “hazardous.”

The Springfield News-Leader reports that Springfield Fire Marshals are investigating how the device ended up on Park Central Square. Officials say passers-by noticed a “suspicious looking object” around 9 p.m. Saturday.

PolicePolice summoned the bomb squad. A news release says bomb technicians used a robot to take the device to a vacant area and “rendered safe.”

Authorities are using surveillance footage from the area to help determine the identity of the responsible person.

Chiefs drop third straight game as they fall short at Arizona

riggertChiefsGLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Kerwynn Williams went from pretending to be Jamaal Charles on the Arizona scout team this week to outgaining Charles in the Cardinals’ 17-14 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

“That’s storybook stuff,” teammate Larry Fitzgerald said.

With starting tailback Andre Ellington out for the season, the Cardinals turned to a guy who had been called up two days earlier from the practice squad. Williams delivered, rushing for 100 yards, 9 more than Charles.

“That’s who we are,” Arizona coach Bruce Arians said. “A team is what it takes. That’s what we’ve built this thing on.”

The NFC West-leading Cardinals (10-3) took the lead when Drew Stanton threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Jaron Brown on third-and-18 in the third quarter.

The Cardinals’ seven wins are the most at home for the franchise since the Chicago Cardinals won 11 of 13 in 1925.

Arizona held on after winning a crucial reversal. Kansas City was driving with five minutes remaining when Arians challenged that tight end Travis Kelce fumbled after a 19-yard reception to the Arizona 22. The officials ruled that Kelce lost the ball before he rolled on his back and got to his feet. Kelce grabbed the ball back, but apparently not soon enough.

“He tried to maintain possession,” referee Craig Wrolstad told a pool reporter, “but he did not, did not regain possession.”

Kelce said he was “shocked” by the ruling.

“I thought I regained control of the ball,” he said. “But you can’t go back in time. I fumbled the ball. It was called as a fumble and I’m just going to have to live with that.”

Coach Andy Reid said “from my vision, I thought he regained possession of the ball, but I’m not making the call.”

Justin Bethel recovered at the Arizona 15, ending the last serious Kansas City threat.

The Chiefs (7-6) are tied with four other AFC wild-card hopefuls looking up at San Diego, Pittsburgh and Baltimore. The Cardinals have a one-game lead over Seattle, and the Seahawks travel to Arizona in two weeks.

Charles scored two first-half touchdowns on a 63-yard run and 18-yard pass from Alex Smith, but the Chiefs were shut out in the second half.

Reid said after the game that Charles had a slight ankle sprain and back spasms.

An offensive pass interference penalty against Anthony Fasano negated a Kansas City touchdown. Two plays later, Alex Okafor intercepted Smith.

The Cardinals drove to the Chiefs 26, and on third-and-18 Stanton threw over the middle to hit Brown in stride for the winning score. The 2-point conversion pass to John Carlson was good and, for the first time in the game, Arizona had the lead, 17-14.

Arizona rookie Chandler Catanzaro kicked three field goals but missed two, the first off the right upright, the second off the left with 1:09 to play.

That gave Kansas City a chance, but the Chiefs never got to midfield before turning it over on downs.

Arizona’s injury-riddled team got another when cornerback Antonio Cromartie left in the fourth quarter with what the Cardinals first termed an Achilles tendon injury, although Arians later said the Achilles was “stable.”

Ellington is out for the season with what Arians said after the game is some sort of hernia. He also had lingering hip and foot problems.

That led Arizona to bring up Williams for the second time this season. He had been released from the San Diego practice squad and never had carried the ball from scrimmage in an NFL game until Sunday.

Williams said the plan was for it to be “running back by committee.”

But there was no doubt who was the main man as the afternoon wore on.

The seventh-round draft pick of Indianapolis in 2013 revved up what has been a sluggish Arizona running game. He carried 19 times, averaging 5.3 yards per carry. The Cardinals had rushed for 99 yards in the past two games combined. They got 141 on Sunday.

In the first half, Smith completed 12 of 13 passes for 109 yards and a score. In the second half, he was 11-of-23 for 182 yards and an interception.

Charles gained 91 on 10 carries, 63 of them in one attempt.

Game notes

Chiefs still don’t have a touchdown completion to a wide receiver this season. … Arizona’s lone remaining regular-season home game is Dec. 21 against Seattle. … Cardinals are 7-0 at home, 13-2 since Arians became coach. … Fitzgerald played after missing two games with a sprained knee.

— Associated Press —

Missouri accepts invitation to Citrus Bowl against Minnesota

riggertMizzouThe University of Missouri has accepted an invitation for its football team to play in the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl, as announced today. The bowl game, which began in 1947 as the Tangerine Bowl, will pit the 10-3 and 16th-ranked (CFP) Tigers against the 25th-ranked Minnesota Golden Gophers (8-4) in a January 1, 2015 matchup in Orlando, Fla. Kickoff is set for Noon (central time) with the game broadcast on ABC.

Mizzou is fresh off earning its second-straight SEC Eastern Division championship, which marked MU’s fifth divisional title since 2007 (tied for most in the nation during that stretch, along with Alabama and Florida State). This will mark Mizzou’s 10th bowl game appearance under Head Coach Gary Pinkel (112-66 in 14 years at Mizzou, 185-103-1 overall in 24 seasons), including nine in the last 10 years. Mizzou claimed the 2014 Cotton Bowl trophy with a 41-31 win over Oklahoma State to cap a 12-2 season a year ago.

This will be Mizzou’s second appearance in the Citrus Bowl, as the Tigers claimed a 19-17 win on Dec. 19, 1981 over Southern Mississippi, when the bowl was named the Tangerine Bowl. Additionally, Head Coach Gary Pinkel will be making a return trip himself, as he played in the game for Kent State on Dec. 29, 1972, with Tampa taking a 21-18 win.

Football Season ticket holders and Tiger Scholarship Fund donors have an extended priority deadline of tomorrow (Monday) at Noon to place orders for the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl.

Priority requests can be placed through the Mizzou Ticket Office by logging in at www.mutigers.com/myaccount and selecting ‘Buy Packages/Tickets’ on the home screen. Individuals can then choose the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl and select the number of seats they wish to request. Requests will then be allocated by TSF donor level and priority points prior to the general public sale, which will begin Monday afternoon at 1 p.m.

Series Information

1943 – Minnesota 26, Mizzou 13 in Minneapolis
1944 – Minnesota 39, Mizzou 27 in Minneapolis
1945 – Minnesota 34, Mizzou 0 in Minneapolis
1961 – Mizzou 6, Minnesota 0 in Minneapolis
1962 – Tie, 0-0, in Minneapolis
1965 – Mizzou 17, Minnesota 6 in Minneapolis
1966 – Mizzou 24, Minnesota 0 in Columbia
1970 – Mizzou 34, Minnesota 12 in Columbia

— MU Sports Information —

Huskers lose to Creighton for fourth consecutive year

NebraskariggertLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — So much for Nebraska ending three years of frustration against in-state rival Creighton.

The Cornhuskers, with almost everybody back from their NCAA tournament team and a rocking full house at Pinnacle Bank Arena, figured this was their time to beat a Creighton team that’s still breaking in four new starters.

Well, there’s always next year.

Austin Chatman scored 16 points, Isiah Zierden hit three big 3-pointers in the second half and Creighton defeated the Huskers 65-55 Sunday night.

The fans wearing red started heading for the exits a minute before the Bluejays (7-2) finished their fourth straight double-digit win over the Huskers (5-2) and became the second team to win on Nebraska’s home court in 21 games.

“We emptied our own gym. That’s the first time that’s happened. That’s a low point for any coach,” third-year Huskers coach Tim Miles said.

Zierden had all 13 of his points in the second half, and Chatman added seven rebounds and six assists.

“It’s always significant when you beat Nebraska because they are our rival,” Creighton coach Greg McDermott said. “I think it is the one game that all fans mark on their calendar. So that makes it fun.

“We hadn’t found a way to get a win against a quality opponent on the road, and we needed to check that off our list. I think there is something in the belief that you can actually do it. And had we lost a close game after how we played defensively, that would have been a tough pill to swallow.”

Terran Petteway had 21 points to lead Nebraska, which shot 37.7 percent.

Creighton, down by 10 points late in the first half, was within 28-27 at half and then hit 3 of 4 3-pointers in the middle of the second half to go ahead.

Zierden’s 3 from in front of his bench broke a 39-39 tie, and the Bluejays were up five when Will Artino, after having a shot blocked by Tarin Smith, got the ball right back and flipped it in with his left hand.

Petteway’s fast-break dunk off Benny Parker’s pass got the Huskers within 51-49, but another Zierden 3 and Artino’s scoop shot gave the Bluejays a seven-point lead with under 3 minutes left.

Chatman said winning in front of a large and noisy crowd made the accomplishment all the better.

“It felt like my freshman year when we played at San Diego State,” he said. “Everybody was jumping around, the floor was shaking a little bit, it was loud. We couldn’t really hear Mac trying to call plays as much. It was a pretty tough environment.”

TIP INS

Creighton: Creighton has played the Huskers every year since 1977, making it by far the Bluejays’ longest-running non-conference series. … The Bluejays, who shot 47.1 percent, came in shooting just 42.3 percent in their previous three games.

Nebraska: Shavon Shields, averaging 20 points a game, was held scoreless until his layups on two straight possessions early in the second half. He finished with seven points.

SENIORS MOMENT

Creighton’s three seniors finished 4-0 against the Huskers. “I am really proud of them given what we lost last year,” McDermott said. “This is their team now, and our preparation this week was really, really good.”

Likewise, the three seniors who have been at Nebraska for their entire careers never beat the team from Omaha.

“It’s bad,” David Rivers said. “We didn’t execute well offensively or defensively. They made all the right plays. It’s unfortunate. We have to learn from this and get better.”

UP NEXT

Creighton hosts South Dakota on Tuesday.

Nebraska hosts Incarnate Word on Wednesday.

— Associated Press —

No. 11 K-State to Face No. 14 UCLA in Valero Alamo Bowl

riggertKStateK-State Nation is heading to San Antonio for the first time in 16 years as Kansas State Athletics Director John Currie announced today that the 11th-ranked Wildcats have accepted an invitation to play No. 14 UCLA in the 2015 Valero Alamo Bowl on January 2.

The game, one of the most widely watched and attended of all bowl games, will be played inside San Antonio’s Alamodome at 5:45 p.m. CT, with a nationwide television audience watching on ESPN. For the first time in Alamo Bowl history, two Top-15 teams will square off against one another.

“Following our 13th nine-win regular season under Coach Snyder, we are excited to showcase our football program, Kansas State University and our national alumni and fan base in the Alamo Bowl, and I am pleased to accept the invitation on behalf of President Kirk Schulz, Coach Snyder and our entire institution,” said Currie. “I know our fans, including our 12,400 Texas-based alumni, are excited to turn San Antonio purple, while a week at the Alamo Bowl will be a first-class experience for our entire football program.”

The Wildcats (9-3) will be playing in their 18th bowl game in school history and 16th under Bill Snyder as the Cats are 7-8 all-time in bowls under the legendary head coach. Following 11 straight bowls from 1993-2003 under Snyder, the Cats have now gone bowling in each of the last five seasons and are coming off a win over Michigan in the 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. K-State has appeared in the Alamo Bowl one other time in program history (1998).

“The selection to the Valero Alamo Bowl provides a fitting end to a very successful season for our football team,” said Schulz. “We are confident the K-State family will follow tradition and bring the purple to San Antonio. Congratulations to Coach Snyder, his staff and our hard-working student-athletes for this postseason honor.”

The Wildcats’ nine regular season victories in 2014 included home wins over Texas, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech and road wins at No. 11 Oklahoma and West Virginia. K-State also kept the Governor’s Cup trophy in Manhattan for the sixth straight season under Snyder with a 51-13 win over in-state rival Kansas.

In addition to a school-record and Big 12-leading 29 selections to the Academic All-Big 12 team and national academic accolades by Tyler Lockett (NFF National Scholar Athlete) and Curry Sexton (Academic All-American), excitement in Wildcat football was also evidenced by seven sellout crowds at Bill Snyder Family Stadium this season which ran K-State’s consecutive sellout streak to 20 games.

“We are proud of the young men in our program and very pleased to represent the Big 12 Conference in the Valero Alamo Bowl,” said Snyder. “Our team still has a chance to accomplish something special this season and finish the year with 10 victories. The Alamo Bowl is a first-class bowl organization and we appreciate Derrick Fox and the entire bowl staff for their efforts and support of college football.”

The Bruins (9-3) finished the season ranked 14th and with a 6-3 record in conference play.

K-State has faced UCLA two times heading into this bowl matchup. The Wildcats are 1-1 against the Bruins with UCLA winning a 2009 matchup in Pasadena, while K-State answered with a win in Manhattan the following season.

— KSU Sports Information —

Nebraska, USC to meet in National University Holiday Bowl

NebraskariggertNebraska has been selected to take on USC in the National University Holiday Bowl in San Diego on Saturday, Dec. 27. The matchup will take place at Qualcomm Stadium, the home of the San Diego Chargers. The game will kick off at 7 p.m. CT with ESPN providing television coverage of the matchup.

The Huskers will head to the West Coast with a 9-3 overall record, including a 5-3 mark in Big Ten Conference play. Nebraska capped the regular season with a 37-34 overtime victory at Iowa on the day after Thanksgiving. Nebraska is ranked 22nd in the USA Today Coaches Poll and No. 25 in the Associated Press Poll heading to San Diego.

Mike Riley was named Nebraska’s head coach on Dec. 4, but will not coach the Huskers in the bowl game, with Interim Coach Barney Cotton leading the Huskers in San Diego.

“We look forward to the opportunity to take on USC in the Holiday Bowl, and the opportunity to finish our season with a trip to San Diego,” Cotton said. “Our goal as a coaching staff is to provide a great bowl experience and put this team in position for success in the Holiday Bowl. This team has outstanding character and leadership, and we would like nothing more than to send our seniors out with a second straight bowl victory and a 10-win season.”

Nebraska’s appearance in the Holiday Bowl will mark its fourth trip to the San Diego game, including three in the past six years. Nebraska is 1-2 in the Holiday Bowl, defeating Arizona in the 2009 game, while losing to Arizona in the 1998 Holiday Bowl and to Washington in 2010.

The trip to the Holiday Bowl is Nebraska’s 51st all-time bowl appearance, the third-most bowl appearances of any school in the country. The 2014 season marks the seventh straight season with a bowl trip for Nebraska.

“We are excited to celebrate our 51st bowl appearance with a trip to San Diego for the Holiday Bowl,” University of Nebraska Director of Athletics Shawn Eichorst said. “The Holiday Bowl is a wonderful new partner for the Big Ten Conference, and our student-athletes, coaches, staff and fans are excited to travel to the West Coast. I know they will have a wonderful experience in San Diego. The University of Southern California is an outstanding institution, has an excellent football program and will be a great matchup for our team.”

The matchup with USC marks the fifth all-time meeting between two of college football’s most storied programs, and the first ever in a bowl game. USC holds a 3-0-1 all-time edge in the series, most recently defeating Nebraska in 2006 and 2007 in a home-and-home series. USC also defeated Nebraska in 1969, and the schools played to a tie in the 1970 season.

USC will enter the Holiday Bowl with an 8-4 overall record, including a 6-3 mark in Pac-12 Conference play. The Trojans are ranked 24th in the Associated Press Poll and the College Football Playoff rankings, and are just outside of the top 25 in the USA Today Coaches Poll. Three of USC’s four losses were by six or fewer points, and the Trojans are coming off a 49-14 win over Notre Dame in their regular-season finale.

Coach Steve Sarkisian is in his first season at the helm of the USC program, after running the Washington program prior to moving to Los Angeles. The 2014 Trojans feature an explosive passing offense, averaging nearly 300 yards per game to rank 15th in the nation. USC also ranks in the top 30 in total offense and scoring offense. Defensively, the Trojans are tough against the run, and also rank among the nation’s leaders in turnover margin.

— NU Sports Information —

Kansas hoops, football player arrested near campus

shutterstock_61558876LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas basketball player Jamari Traylor and football player Rodriguez Coleman were arrested about an hour apart early Sunday near campus.

Traylor, a junior forward and part-time starter, was arrested shortly after 2 a.m. for interfering with a police officer, according to the Douglas County Sherriff’s Office. He posted $100 bond and was released.

Kansas coach Bill Self said he was aware of the arrest and gathering information, and that “this will certainly be addressed.” Self did not say whether Traylor would travel for the No. 11 Jayhawks’ game Wednesday night at Georgetown.

Coleman, a wide receiver who just finished his senior season, was arrested shortly before 2 a.m. on suspicion of battery. He posted $100 bond and also was released.

Hospital research in Kansas City helping young people

Children's Mercy logoKANSAS CITY (AP) – Research at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City is helping parents understand their children with neurological and developmental disorders.

Hospital researchers published their findings on 119 such children this week. The Kansas City Star reports they mapped the children’s entire exome, the 1 to 2 percent of the human genome responsible for most genetic disorders.

The research shows that such mapping can identify rare disorders. That’s important because children with those disorders can sometimes go years without getting a definitive diagnosis.

Lead researcher Sarah Soden says the research can help parents understand their children’s illnesses, as well as saving them tens of thousands of dollars in testing. After receiving the definitive diagnoses, doctors can use new drug or dietary treatments for some of the children.

Missouri high court to hear felon gun-rights case

Missouri Supreme Court
Missouri Supreme Court

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A new constitutional amendment enhancing Missouri’s gun rights is being put to the test by a felon who is citing it as a reason why he shouldn’t be disqualified from carrying guns.

The Missouri Supreme Court is to hear arguments Wednesday on whether the provision subjecting gun-control laws to strict legal scrutiny means that Missouri can no longer bar nonviolent felons from possessing firearms.

Voters approved the amendment in August with greater than 60 percent support.

The court is considering whether a man convicted of a federal drug distribution felony in 1986 can face new charges under a state law barring felons from possessing firearms.

Sen. Kurt Schaefer, who sponsored the constitutional amendment, has filed a court brief saying it wasn’t meant to invalidate the felon gun-possession ban.

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