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Record Enrollment at Northwest

For the fourth consecutive year, Northwest Missouri State University’s enrollment has reached a record high. Northwest’s total student headcount reached 7,225 this fall, a 1.2 percent increase from last year.

Northwest Dean of Enrollment Management Bev Schenkel says that number includes a record freshman class, totaling 1,498 students, which is an 8 percent increase from last year. The enrollment total consists of 6,281 undergraduate students and 944 graduate students representing 48 states and 33 countries. 

FEMA Flood Grants Top $2 Million

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) – The Federal Emergency Management Agency says grants for families affected by this year’s floods in northwest Missouri have now topped $2 million.

The agency says the grants have been approved for hundreds of families in Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Lafayette and Platte counties. Those families registered with FEMA and had their damage inspected by the agency.

There’s still time for people affected by the spring and summer floods in northwest Missouri to apply for FEMA assistance. The agency recently extended the registration deadline to Nov. 10 at the request of Gov. Jay Nixon.

FEMA said Tuesday it still has disaster recovery centers open in St. Joseph and Mound City. The centers are open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

To register, go here.

School Board Candidate Petitioning Begins

 

Steve Huff, Assistant to the Superintendent

Two candidates so far have picked up petitions to run for the Saint Joseph Board of Education. Former school counselor Chris Danford and incumbent board member Dennis Sneathen have started gathering 750 signatures of registered voters to secure a place on the ballot.

 

Assistant to the Superintendent Steve Huff says petitions can be picked up from 8 to 5 Monday through Friday at the Superintendent’s Office. Voters will fill three seats on the seven-member school board in the April 3rd election.    

Gift To Benefit Laboratory School At Northwest

A $100,000 gift to the Northwest Foundation will benefit students and parents at Northwest Missouri State’s Horace Mann Laboratory School. Northwest alumni Dr. Richard “Dick” Leet and Phyllis (Combs) Leet, of Gainesville, Ga., established The Leet Endowment and will fund a partial remodeling of Everett W. Brown Education Hall.


According to a news release, the improved space will be renamed the Phyllis and Richard Leet Center for Children and Families. The remodeling project will result in the early care and kindergarten programs moving to the first floor space where the Horace Mann library is located, and the library will move to the basement space currently occupied by the early care program. Additionally, the remodeled area will feature a brass sculpture, “Girl with Cat ‘n Cradle,” donated by the Leets. The Leet Endowment will remain open to receive additional contributions.

“The laboratory center and school is a vital part of Northwest as a place where teachers can come to learn about the teaching profession,” Dr. Leet said. “We realize its value in teaching teachers.”

The Leets began their lives together at Northwest, having met in a chemistry lab course. Dr. Leet, who grew up in Maryville, attended kindergarten at the laboratory school when it was housed in the Administration Building during the early 1930s and completed his chemistry degree at Northwest in 1948. Mrs. Leet, a Princeton native, completed her education degree at Northwest in 1949 and then worked to put Dr. Leet through graduate school at The Ohio State University. Dr. Leet went on to build a successful career at Amoco Corporation and retired in 1991 as vice chairman and director.

The Leets have been steadfast in their commitment to Northwest and began investing in the University’s mission in the 1980s when Mrs. Leet gave funds for a capital project at Horace Mann that provided adequate space for the kindergarten program. In 1988, the Phyllis Combs Leet Scholarship Fund was created for entering freshmen in the family and consumer sciences program. Dr. Leet, with Northwest chemistry alumni, also helped establish a scholarship named for his mentor, J. Gordon Strong.

Additionally, Dr. Leet was volunteer chairman of Northwest’s successful inaugural capital campaign during the early 2000s. Both Dr. and Mrs. Leet served on the board of the Northwest Foundation, and, in 2005, Mrs. Leet led the creation of the unique centennial sculpture located in the east plaza of the J.W. Jones Student Union.

This fall, the ECELC is operating at capacity, serving 43 families. Additionally, the center is a training ground for 160 students who work directly with the children and their parents on a variety of assignments.

The Horace Mann Laboratory School, which is located in the same facility, serves 111 students in kindergarten through sixth grades. During the 2010-11 academic year, the laboratory school served about 800 Northwest students from 12 different academic departments.

Cash Grains: Tuesday, October 11th

St. Joseph
Yellow Corn 6.25
White Corn 6.90
Soybeans 11.70 – 11.80
LifeLine Foods
Yellow Corn 6.25
Atchison, Kansas
Yellow Cor6.30 6.30- 6.50
Soybeans 11.60
Hard Wheat 6.79
Soft Wheat no bid
Kansas City, Missouri Truck Bid
Yellow Corn 6.40
White Corn* 6.49 6.69
Soybeans 11.99
Hard Wheat 6.95
Soft Wheat 6.26 – 6.31
Sorghum 11.07
*this bid is only updated weekly from USDA and is a Kansas City rail bid. Call your grain merchandiser for the most current bid.


Future Prices
Grain futures from the Chicago and Kansas City Board of Trade and livestock futures from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
USDA Market News – Kansas City Truck Bids
For questions please contact 680 KFEQ Farm Department at aginfokfeq@gmail.com

Stolen Car Abandoned

Police are looking for two suspects who fled in a stolen car in midtown Saint Joseph early this morning. The vehicle and its occupants eluded officers at 2:45 am. A short time later the vehicle was found nearby, at 16th and Olive, abandoned.

Anyone with information about the suspects is asked to call the Tips Hotline at 238.TIPS.

Second Harvest Reports Fraudulent Solicitation for Backpack Buddies

A former volunteer for Second Harvest Community Food bank discovered a fraudulent solicitation for the backpack buddies program Monday.

Second Harvest officials say two women, both college aged, knocked on the former volunteers door near Stone Crest and Stone Crest Terrace. They were asking for donations but did not reference to Second Harvest. They reportedly had no brochure or information on the program either.

The former volunteer asked several question regarding the program and was certain they were not familiar with the backpack buddies program. The two were described as one heavy set and on slender and shorter females. The police department has been notified.

Cash Grains: Monday, October 10th

St. Joseph
Yellow Corn 6.00
White Corn 6.50
Soybeans 11.12 – 11.22
LifeLine Foods
Yellow Corn 5.90
Atchison, Kansas
Yellow Corn 5.90 – 6.08
Soybeans 11.05
Hard Wheat 6.36
Soft Wheat no bid
Kansas City, Missouri Truck Bid
Yellow Corn 6.00
White Corn* 6.49 6.69
Soybeans 11.38
Hard Wheat 6.51
Soft Wheat 5.77 – 5.82
Sorghum 10.27
*this bid is only updated weekly from USDA and is a Kansas City rail bid. Call your grain merchandiser for the most current bid.


Future Prices
Grain futures from the Chicago and Kansas City Board of Trade and livestock futures from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
USDA Market News – Kansas City Truck Bids
For questions please contact 680 KFEQ Farm Department at aginfokfeq@gmail.com
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