Articles

Calling the shots

The entrances are already decorated with white and blue NCAA tournament posters, and trash cans with fresh bags line the hallway. The advertisements that are usually on display are being covered, per NCAA tournament rules. Shouts of “Mine!” mix with the squeaking of sneakers, the thudding sound of the ball making contact with arms and hands and the soft electrical hum of the lighting.

‘Lip’ helps Missouri with team chemistry

Alyssa Hollins’ initiation to the Missouri women’s basketball team came in the form of stitches.

Eminent domain limits outlined

JEFFERSON CITY — The state no longer would be able to take private land for economic purposes, under a new proposal by the governor’s task force on eminent domain.

Report: District college enrollment rate high

The percentage of Columbia students who graduated from public high schools last year is slightly lower than the state average, according to the 2004-2005 School Accountability Report Card released Thursday.

Six fans sentenced in rushing of Faurot

Six of the 21 people charged with second-degree trespassing for illegally entering Faurot Field after the Oct. 22 MU-Nebraska football game were sentenced Thursday in municipal court to fines of $250 or 10 hours of community service plus $22.50 in court costs.

Missouri's source of intensity

The Missouri volleyball team must match Missouri State’s intensity to win tonight in the first round of the NCAA Tournament according to Tigers senior Lindsey Hunter.

Parallels in coaches’ careers leave both at a crossroads

At Arkansas and Missouri, the basketball resumés look awfully similar these days: NCAA tournament absence and middle-of-the-pack conference finishes.

MU group pays homage to Parks

A crowd of roughly 30 students gathered at MU’s Gaines/Oldham Black Culture Center on Thursday, the 50th anniversary of the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott, to say thank you to Rosa Parks and other civil rights leaders who took up the struggle for equality.

Curators tackle enrollment, tuition issues

KANSAS CITY — The top 10 percent of Missouri high school graduates will automatically be eligible to enroll at any of the four UM campuses after a vote by the University of Missouri System’s Board of Curators on Thursday.

Cox races to big victory

Just call Drae Cox, “Corvette.”

Judge denies motion from Tribune writer

A motion by Columbia Daily Tribune columnist Tony Messenger was overruled Wednesday, indicating he might have to answer a defense attorney’s questions about an interview he conducted with an accused killer.

Painting a colorful world

For African painter Ibiyinka Olufemi Alao, art and diplomacy go together as well as the steamed rice and spicy tomato stew of his native Nigeria.

State’s first female circuit judge to retire

The first woman to serve as a circuit judge in Missouri and the only woman to serve as a circuit judge in Missouri’s 13th Judicial Circuit announced Thursday that she will retire after her term expires Dec. 31.

Charges against KU fan dropped

City Prosecutor Rose Wibbenmeyer deferred prosecution against one of the University of Kansas students involved in an altercation last spring at an MU men’s basketball game, effectively dismissing the case.

Energy prices threaten business profits

John Schopflin, the owner of U.S. Cleaners, says his gas bills have increased by hundreds of dollars during the last four months. His year-round Columbia dry cleaning business relies on a water boiler that runs on natural gas.

Leaves cited as cause of fire

An early morning fire caused $600,000 in damage to a house in southern Boone County on Thursday, according to Boone County Fire Protection District Capt. Gale Blomenkamp. The fire appeared to have been caused by leaf embers blown against the garage after a shift in wind direction.

Steinhaus to lead housing authority

Phil Steinhaus will be the new chief executive officer of the Columbia Housing Authority.

Frat members admit to stealing Maneaters

Seven members of an MU fraternity turned themselves into campus police Thursday for stealing more than 1,500 copies of a student newspaper earlier this week.

Burghard seeks Ninth District seat

Local businessman and Democrat Duane Burghard on Friday morning formally announced his candidacy for the Ninth Congressional District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Vigil marks 1000th execution

Flanked by a quilt with the head shots of Missourians executed on death row, Jeff Stack led members of the Mid-Missouri Fellowship for Reconciliation in an effort to raise awareness of the frequent use of the death penalty in the United States.

The Quad
advertisements