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Chain of accidents on Missouri highway 44 sends 11 to the hospital

snowROLLA, Mo. (AP) — Police say a tractor-trailer crashed into the rear of a Greyhound bus in snowy weather on Interstate 44 in Missouri, setting off a chain of accidents involving dozens of vehicles. At least 11 people were sent to a hospital with minor to moderate injuries.

Sgt. Cody Fulkerson, a spokesman for the Missouri State Police, says no one was killed when between 25 and 35 vehicles crashed into each other Saturday. Police closed the westbound interstate near Rolla, Missouri. A hazardous materials team was cleaning up a small leak of a flammable liquid from a tractor-trailer.

Fulkerson says police have been working on well over 100 accidents because of the weather. Earlier in the day, two people were killed in a multiple vehicle crash further south in Laclede County.

3 hospitalized after Jaguar hit by semi near Cameron

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPCAMERON- Three people were injured in an accident just before 6 p.m. on Saturday in Caldwell County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1998 Jaguar X8L driven by Logan B. Glasco, 26, Alma, was eastbound on U.S. 36 three miles east of Cameron.

The driver lost control on the snow-covered road and began to slide.

The front of an eastbound semi struck the driver’s side of the Jaguar. The Jaguar traveled off the east side of the road.

Glasco and passengers Deanda J. Glasco, 49, and Lyrissa J. Glasco, 9, both of Alma were transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center.

The semi driver was not injured.

The MSHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Here’s to the Next Chapter

Farm BureauBY REBECCA FRENCH SMITH

When you’re young, birthdays are for presents, but as you get older, they become more about reflection. Even so, there are always aspects to get excited about. Celebrating its 100th birthday this month, Missouri Farm Bureau (MFB) has much on which to reflect but even more to look forward to with great anticipation.

A century is a significant milestone for a company given most fall by the wayside in considerably less time. In fact, over the last five decades, the longevity of an S&P 500 company has dwindled from an average of 60 years to about 18, according to the Harvard Business Review. MFB has endured.

On March 24, 1915, 10 Missouri county Farm Bureaus, among the first in the nation, met and organized the very first state Farm Bureau in the country. Since it began, MFB has addressed important issues of the day. From supporting funding for badly needed road improvements in the early 1920s to the passage of Constitutional Amendment #1 last year, MFB keeps a watchful eye on issues that affect members and takes action to effect positive change.

We have garnered electricity for rural residents, lobbied for the building of rural hospitals, advocated for property tax reform and voter-approved tax increases, stood up for landowners in a variety of eminent domain and property rights issues and more. In 2015, we’re telling the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers “That’s enough!” They need to abandon the proposed “Waters of the U.S.” rule.

Whew! We’ve been busy!

Endurance, however, is not complicated nor is it chaotic as the long list of issues and benefits we’ve targeted might suggest. It’s actually pretty simple: Stay focused on what’s important and adapt to change. What has been important to MFB for the last century is our members, farmers and rural Missourians. That focus has guided MFB and kept it strong. That focus has benefitted Missourians beyond the farm, and it continues to inspire members to tackle new issues and changes that arise with ingenuity and integrity.

Suffice it to say, we’re just getting started. It hasn’t always been easy, but as any farmer would tell you, it’s always been worth it. Here’s to the next chapter in our story.

Rebecca French Smith, of Columbia, Mo., is a multimedia specialist for the Missouri Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization.

Hanaway halts campaign following Schweich death

HanawayJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri’s former House Speaker Catherine Hanaway has put her campaign for governor on hold following the death of state auditor Tom Schweich, who also was seeking the GOP nomination for governor.

Hanaway’s spokesman said Friday that she’s canceled appearances scheduled for the weekend in Joplin and in Stoddard and McDonald counties.

Spokesman Nick Maddux says the events have been cancelled out of respect for the auditor’s life and for his family.

He says there is no time frame for when events will resume as that has not yet been discussed.

Hanaway and Schweich traded barbs after the auditor launched his campaign in late January.

Schweich fatally shot himself Thursday in what police say was an apparent suicide.

A funeral for Schweich is scheduled for Tuesday.

3 hospitalized after vehicle overturns in the snow

KHP  Kansas Highway PatrolOSKALOOSA – Three people were injured in an accident just before 2 p.m. on Saturday in Jefferson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Chevy Monte Carlo driven by Brian Busenbarrick, 38, Atchison, was northbound on U.S. 59 five miles south of Oskaloosa.

The driver lost control due to snow packed roadway. The vehicle went into the west ditch, struck a rock embankment and overturned.

Busenbarrick and passengers Hedi Busenbarrick, 40, and a teenage passenger were transported to Atchison Hospital.

The KHP reported Hedi Busenbarrick was not wearing a seat belt.

Mo. GOP bristles at mandates, but sometimes uses them

MOGOPJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Republican lawmakers in Missouri’s Capitol often bristle at rules and requirements handed down from the federal government, saying they favor local authority in most matters.

However, several GOP-supported proposals this year aim to hand down similar mandates to cities and counties across the state.

Republican legislators say proposals that would block local authorities from pursuing business policies or banning plastic bags are essential to protecting conservative values and boosting the economy, even as critics line up to call such legislation disingenuous.

Sheriff releases names of 3 rural Missouri shooting victims

police crimeTYRONE, Mo. (AP) — A southern Missouri sheriff has identified the final three victims in a shooting rampage that left seven people dead before the gunman killed himself.

Texas County Sheriff James Sigman announced Saturday that 68-year-old Darrell Dean Shriver; his son, 46-year-old Carey Dean Shriver; and Carey’s wife, 44-year-old Valirea Love Shriver, died in the violence that began late Thursday night in the unincorporated town of Tyrone. The name of a 67-year-old woman who was injured was not released.

Authorities say the three victims identified Saturday and four others were killed by 36-year-old Joseph Jesse Aldridge in four different homes. The four other victims were Aldridge’s cousins and their spouses.

Aldridge was later found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in nearby Shannon County.

Authorities are still investigating a possible motive.

Springfield area coping with string of violent deaths

PoliceSPRINGFIELD (AP) – Springfield-area leaders are trying to respond to 12 violent or suspicious deaths in an eight-day span.

Authorities say at least seven of the deaths recorded starting Feb. 12 are linked to domestic violence. They include a murder-suicide in Willard Feb. 12, a double homicide in Springfield Feb. 13 and three bodies found Feb 20 in a burning house in Springfield.

The Springfield News-Leader reports city police responded to 2,701 domestic assaults in 2014, the highest rate per capita for any city the state.

A Family Violence Task Force has been working against domestic violence since 2013. Brandi Bartel, who leads a group that provides services to victims of violent or sexual crimes, says she hopes the recent deaths will raise awareness of the domestic violence issue with area residents.

Suspect in housemate’s death rejects plea agreement

McLinn
McLinn

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A woman charged with killing her housemate in Lawrence last year says rejected two plea agreements and will go to trial in March.

Attorney Carl Cornwell said during a hearing Friday that 20-year-old Sarah Gonzalez McLinn was offered plea deals on Wednesday and Friday but rejected them both.

She is charged with premeditated first-degree murder in the January 2014 death of 52-year-old Harold Sasko. Investigators say they found Sasko bound to a chair and nearly decapitated. Sasko owned Cici’s Pizza restaurants in Topeka and Lawrence and McLinn had worked for him.

McLinn was found more than a week later in Everglades National Park in Florida.

Cornwell plans to use a not guilty by mental disease or defect defense in the trial, which is scheduled to start March 16.

Three KC-Area Health Schools Team Up For Research On Muscle And Bone Disorders

KU Med  University of Kansas HospitalBy DAN MARGOLIES
Three local health sciences schools are partnering to do research on musculoskeletal disorders in what they described as the first collaborative effort of its kind among the three.

The Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences, the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the University of Kansas Medical Center said in a news release Thursday that the goal of the partnership is to focus on diseases of muscle and bone, “thereby accelerating the process of turning discoveries into clinical treatments while also improving research education opportunities for health sciences students.”

The consortium will be led by Lynda Bonewald, vice chancellor for translational and clinical research at UMKC; Jeffrey Joyce, vice president for research at KCU; and Richard Barohn, vice chancellor for research at the KU Medical Center.

“The goal of this consortium is to build powerful research teams of basic to clinical investigators from our three institutions to discover new treatments and cures,” Bonewald said in the release. “These research teams will give our students opportunities to work alongside these researchers to understand and optimally treat musculoskeletal disease.”

Editor’s Note: KCUR is licensed by UMKC.

Dan Margolies, editor of the Heartland Health Monitor team, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

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