TRENTON- Two people were injured in an accident just after 7 p.m. on Saturday in Grundy County.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported the accident occurred as a 2010 Ford F 250 driven by Mark A. Thompson, 53, Princeton, was northbound on U.S. 65 six miles north of Trenton.
The truck crested a hill and the driver observed a slow moving poorly lit farm tractor also northbound.
The driver swerved into the southbound lane to avoid the tractor, lost control, overcorrected, travelled off the west side of the roadway and overturned.
Thompson and a passenger Julie E. Thompson, 50, Princeton, were transported to Wright Memorial Hospital.
The MSHP reported they were properly restrained at the time of the accident.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Kansas City Royals manager Ned Yost has lost the first instant replay challenge in the World Series under expanded rules this season.
In the sixth inning of Game 4 on Saturday night, San Francisco’s Joaquin Arias was ruled safe at second on a pickoff attempt by Royals catcher Salvador Perez.
Yost hustled out of the dugout to challenge the call, which was upheld after a replay review that took 1 minute, 47 seconds. Crew chief Jeff Kellogg, the second base umpire, signaled safe.
Fans in the sellout crowd chanted “Safe! Safe!” and signaled so.
Umpire Jerry Meals worked the replay booth in New York after serving as the plate umpire for Game 1.
Arias wound up being thrown out at the plate trying to score the go-ahead run later in the inning.
The Series is tied at two games apiece after the San Francisco Giants turned an early 4-1 deficit into an 11-4 pounding of the
Kansas City Royals. Pablo Sandoval singled home a pair to snap a 4-4 tie and spark a three-run sixth. Joe Panik added a two-run
double while the Giants scored four times in the seventh to go ahead 11-4.
LAWRENCE- Four people were injured in an accident just before 6 p.m. on Saturday in Douglas County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol Reported a Peterbilt semi driven by Martin D. Carter, 37, Onaga, was eastbound on N 1000 Road five miles southeast of Lawrence, failed to stop for a posted stop sign and struck a 2013 Chevy Impala driven by Anthony W. McClintock, 31, Eudora.
The collision caused the Impala to strike a 1989 Ford Ranger driven by Austin D. Trumble, 24, Lawrence. The semi continued eastbound, entered the ditch and rolled onto its side.
McClintock and passengers in the Chevy Stella J. McClintock and two children all of Eudora were transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Carter and Trumble were not injured.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.
BY MATTHEW ERICKSON
October. The month of the fall classic. The time of year Cubs fans say “wait until next year,” an 86-year old curse is broken or a mid-market team overcomes the odds — America’s favorite pastime in October is such a treat to watch.
Baseball and modern agriculture share some common ground, in fact, as agriculture’s fast-paced technological advancements are getting the industry in the game of leveraging data. Take, for example, the movie “Moneyball,” the story of the Oakland Athletics (A’s) baseball team and general manager Billy Beane.
The central premise of “Moneyball” is that the collected wisdom of baseball insiders over the past century is subjective. Statistics such as stolen bases, runs batted in and batting average, which are typically used to gauge players, are relics of a 20th-century view of the game. Instead, on-base percentages and slugging percentages are better indicators of offensive success, according to rigorous statistical analysis.
As it plays out in the movie, by re-evaluating the strategies and variables that produce wins on the field, the 2002 A’s, with just a relatively paltry $40 million-plus in salary, were competitive with larger market teams such as the New York Yankees, who spent more than $125 million in payroll that same season. This analytical approach brought the A’s to the playoffs in 2002 and 2003.
Leveraging data in agriculture can be thought about similarly. In agriculture, collecting data is nothing new. Statistics such as yield, acreage and price, typically used to gauge profitability, are carryovers from a 20th century view of agriculture. However, identifying site-specific variables on a farmer’s field such as planting population, the type of seed hybrid planted, soil topography and fertilizer usage, on top of old metrics, provide better indicators to develop a “prescription” for farmers to use on their individual crop ground to determine what to grow, how to grow it and when to harvest. Through the use of rigorous statistical analysis, that prescription usually enhances the farm’s overall profitability. In fact, farmers responding to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s data privacy survey indicated that the use of precision technologies have reduced their input costs by an average of 15 percent, while increasing their crop yields by an average of 13 percent.
Precision technologies and the data generated are agriculture’s version of the analysis used in “Moneyball.” Simply put, the use of data can lead to better decisions and more dollars in a farmer’s pocket, if used correctly. Ultimately the use of data can provide a competitive advantage to farmers who use it versus farmers who don’t. It simply makes farmers better farmers by taking deficiencies and turning them into efficiencies.
But whether it’s baseball or agriculture does the data itself have any value? The value is not in the numbers themselves as opposed to the results of the analysis of the data. The Oakland A’s front office used individual player performance data together with analytical methods to field a team that could better compete against richer baseball teams. In contrast, agricultural technology providers turn farmer’s data into a service or a product that will help a farmer make different decisions. But some are asking if all that farm-level data, when aggregated, will create a competitive advantage in commodity markets or lead to a potential moral hazard.
That concern is real in the countryside. Over 75 percent of farmers responding to AFBF’s recent survey on big data expressed concern that their farm data could be used by a company or third party for market-sensitive commercial activities. A company having access to vast amounts of real-time data could develop near instant commodity reports, tilting the playing field between large and small companies. In addition, more than 77 percent of farmers were concerned that their data could get in the hands of another entity altogether and be used for regulatory purposes. So how are companies using farmers’ data? More than 82 percent of farmers were unsure of the various directions agriculture technology providers intended to go with their farm data.
Ensuring that farmers are aware of how a company intends to use their data is paramount. The 21st century view of the world is changing through the use of data analytics and real-time information to satiate an information-hungry society.
With less land to farm and more mouths to feed around the world, doing more with less has to be the focal point in agriculture. The use of data and innovative technologies will be one of the tools to help us achieve the goal of feeding 9 billion people by 2050. Yet, we cannot lose sight of the critical need to responsibly manage data and recognize it as the powerful aid, resource and asset that it is. If data and innovation are the drivers in feeding a growing world by 2050, transparency from companies to farmers must be accomplished in order for agriculture to win this ever-important World Series.
Matthew Erickson is an economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation.
On most days, Jon Smith takes a lunchtime walk on a route from his data-supervisor job in Overland Park. The 23-year-old Lenexa man maintains an active lifestyle to stay fit as opposed to a running regimen where he logged as many as 20 miles a day during his struggles with an eating disorder.- photo by Mike Sherry
Hale Center for Journalism
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — At one point when he was a student at Kansas State University, Jon Smith would jog as many as 20 miles a day.
“If I wasn’t in the library and not in class,” he said, “I was running.”
But Smith was far from healthy.
His over-the-top regimen was a manifestation of an eating disorder known as purge-type anorexia, hints of which first surfaced when weight gain from migraine medication made Smith a pudgy fifth-grader. His training obsession began two years later during preparations for the Junior Olympics.
Born and raised in Lenexa, Kan., the 23-year-old now lives in his hometown and works as a data entry supervisor at a company that processes employee drug screenings for the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Smith graduated from Saint Thomas Aquinas High School in Overland Park in 2009 and earned a psychology degree from Kansas State University with a minor in English literature. He is now applying to medical school, thinking of pursuing a specialty in which he can use his unique insights to help eating disorder patients.
Smith’s experience makes clear that eating disorders are not just an issue for women.
Some researchers suggest that men make up a third of the 30 million Americans who battle clinically significant eating disorders. The National Association for Males with Eating Disorders, citing other research, said males make up anywhere from 25 percent to 40 percent of those suffering from eating disorders.
The association said that media objectification of men is just as rampant as it is for women and that males in treatment for eating disorders are more likely than women to exhibit co-occurring conditions such as excessive exercise.
Researchers suspect eating disorders might be under-reported among males who fear the stigma of suffering from a “women’s problem,” a view that contributed to Smith’s embarrassment over his struggles.
“I did not think guys got eating disorders,” he said.
By the time he was running fanatically at K-State, Smith’s diet consisted mostly of carrots, broccoli and kale.
In the fall of his senior year, he coughed up blood on one of his runs. The doctor diagnosed it as a pinhole in his lung and directed him not to run for two weeks, an order Smith followed for two days.
Eventually, Smith started to worry that he couldn’t concentrate in class and that his running compulsion was overriding his school work. By then, he was down to around 100 pounds and ready to seek inpatient treatment for the second time. An earlier attempt in high school had not worked.
Around Thanksgiving of 2012, he started what became a three-month stay at the Eating Recovery Center in Denver. In December, he earned his degree from K-State.
Helping him recover, Smith said, has been the recognition of what he missed because of his disorder, including some amazing food served up during a study-abroad semester in Rome, and the extent to which it might stymie his dreams for the future.
In place of a fanatical running schedule, Smith said, he now walks during his lunch hour or plays with his nieces and nephews.
“I try to stay as active as I can,” he said.
Mike Sherry is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.
CENTERVILLE, Kan. – A Kansas woman died in an accident just before 2 p.m. on Saturday in Linn County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Ford Escape driven by Charlene Jo Conner, 64, Blue Mound, was northbound on 1077 Road, three miles south of Centerville. The vehicle left the roadway to the west, crossed a small creek, and struck several small trees, three fence posts and a large tree.
Conner was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Schneider Funeral Home in Pleasanton.
The KHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — The health care worker now quarantined at a New Jersey hospital because she had contact with Ebola patients in West Africa is sharply criticizing the way her case has been handled.
Kaci Hickox told the Dallas Morning News she stopped at Newark Liberty International and questioned over several hours after touching down Friday. She said none of those who questioned her would say what was going on or what would happen to her.
Hickox is a nurse who had been working with Doctors Without Borders in Sierra Leone. Officials say she was taken to a hospital after developing a fever, but Hickox says she was merely flushed because she was upset by the process.
Hickox tested negative for Ebola in a preliminary evaluation. Hospital officials would not say whether she would remain there for the entire 21-day state-ordered quarantine period.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The reward has risen to $21,000 for information about a drive-by shooting that killed a 6-year-old Kansas City girl.
The Kansas City Star says tips are coming in to a group called the Ad Hoc Group Against Crime. But Maj. Karl Oakman says police seeking to solve the killing of Angel Hooper need more leads and more people to call.
Angel died this month when shots were fired into the parking lot of a 7-Eleven where the girl and her father had just bought bubblegum.
Donations have come from the Carter Broadcast Group and 7-Eleven Stores, which operates the chain of convenience stores.
City Councilman Jermaine Reed is the interim executive director of Ad Hoc. He says he is “fed up” with the violence.
PINEVILLE, Mo. (AP) – Authorities have identified the person killed in a southwest Missouri home-invasion as a 35-year-old man.
The Joplin Globe reports that Rodney Frederick died Wednesday night when three people broke into a home near the town of Jane. The McDonald County Sheriff’s Department says a woman and a young boy were tied up before Frederick was shot. Witnesses said two of the suspects wore masks.
The sheriff’s department says a suspect had been taken into custody. But no charges had been filed in McDonald County Circuit Court in connection with the murder by the time the courthouse closed on Friday afternoon.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government is recognizing gay marriage in six more states, extending federal benefits to those couples.
Attorney General Eric Holder says the states are: Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, North Carolina, West Virginia and Wyoming.
Saturday’s announcement brings the total number of states with federal recognition of same-sex marriage to 32, plus the District of Columbia.
Couples married in these states will qualify for a range of federal benefits, including Social Security and veterans’ benefits.
Holder says the Justice Department also has determined that it can legally recognize gay marriages performed in Indiana and Wisconsin after federal courts declared state marriage bans unconstitutional. Subsequent developments created confusion about the status of those unions, but Holder says the federal government will recognize the marriages.