Missouri
Parents’ drive for better life inspires University of Missouri President Mun Choi – ABC17NEWS
COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)
A survey accomplished in 2016 reveals Asian Individuals make up solely 2% of America’s faculty and college presidents.
That very same yr, the College of Missouri made historical past and employed its first Asian American President, Mun Choi.
Choi instructed ABC 17’s Deborah Kendrick that he attributes a lot of his success to his dad and mom’ dedication to present him and his siblings a greater life.
Choi’s dad and mom have been born within the late Thirties when Korea was one nation, underneath Japanese management. His mom would ultimately land a scholarship with a nursing program hosted by a Mennonite missionary. Choi’s mom met Elizabeth Klippenstein by way of this system. Klippenstein would develop into a really shut household pal to the household.
“The small and enormous acts of kindness that she shared with my mom, and my mom’s buddies throughout my mom’s teenage years in Korea actually resonated with me,” Choi stated. “There have been people from America who left behind a really profitable profession and to return to a rustic that was desperately in want.”
A nursing scarcity within the U.S. allowed Choi’s mother a possibility to be a nurse in America and achieve everlasting residency.
On July 4, 1973, their American dream began. Choi was 9 years previous when his household moved to Akron Ohio.
Quick ahead to post-college, training was nonetheless his ardour. Choi grew to become an affiliate professor on the College of Illinois at Chicago (1994-2000), division head of mechanical engineering and mechanics at Drexel College (2000-2008), then dean of engineering on the College of Connecticut (2008-2012). Later, he took on the position of provost and govt vice chairman at UConn (2012-2017).
Choi was named the College of Missouri’s twenty fourth system president in 2016. It was additionally the primary time an Asian American held the place. He formally began his position in March 2017. He was later appointed chancellor of the Columbia campus.
“I do hear from some college students, they are saying that it is nice to see an Asian American as a task mannequin,” Choi stated. “I feel illustration is critically necessary, however past that, it is what the people accomplish with that illustration, to convey that various perspective.”
This yr MU was the positioning of a satellite tv for pc polling location for the South Korean presidential election.
Sang Kim, director of the MU Asian Affairs Heart and Missouri Worldwide Coaching Institute, stated a number of elements went into Columbia being chosen however does level out Choi’s connections.
“The Korean consulate in Chicago, they know President Choi very nicely, he is from the Chicago space,” Kim stated. “The previous consulate normal visited the MU campus a number of occasions and met with President Choi. In order that they know the Korean group is right here.”
Kim has been working the MU Asian Affairs Heart since September 2004. He stated it has been useful to have Asian American management and illustration on the college degree.
“I feel we get much more recognition in the neighborhood and likewise from Korean and Asian companions,” Kim stated. “They are saying ‘wow, you will have an Asian American president, that is not so widespread and they’re pleasantly shocked and share the pleasure.”
Kim stated having that recognition can entice extra worldwide college students, which may profit everyone.
“All of the residents right here have a possibility to understand that the world is right here, as an alternative of you realize, simply touring to completely different cultures and nations,” Kim stated. “They’ll begin the method of studying worldwide cultures and that helps them perceive who we’re and what now we have.”
Kim and Choi say worldwide college students are necessary to the College.
“I need to present that sort of setting for every scholar that involves our College. It is necessary for me as a frontrunner of this college to verify they know that they’re welcome, that now we have a secure area for them to discover new concepts,” Choi stated.
When requested about his legacy, Choi stated he at all times thinks of 1 individual.
“In my very own method, I need to have the ability to replicate what Mrs. Klippenstein did, to have the ability to pay it ahead as she did,” he stated. “The position she had, in my mom’s growth, actually, actually, touches me.”
Missouri
Mizzou takes down No. 5 Florida
Mizzou takes down No. 5 Florida
Everything that could have gone right, went right for the Tigers in the first half.
And almost everything that could have gone wrong, went wrong for Missouri in the second half.
Almost.
But not quite everything as the Tigers hung on tight to an 83-82 win against the No. 5 Florida Gators in Gainesville on Tuesday, claiming the first Missouri road win since beating Pittsburgh on Nov. 28, 2023 and starting 3-1 in SEC play for the first time in program history.
“Hard-fought game,” Missouri coach Dennis Gates said. “I thought our guys played with a level of focus from the very beginning to the very end.”
The Tigers led for nearly all 40 minutes, with Florida’s final advantage coming at 5-3 with 18:58 left in the first half, but though Missouri had as much as a 19-point lead, the Gators made sure it came down to the wire.
Before halftime, the Tigers hit shot after shot as Caleb Grill hit his first four attempts from beyond the arc to help the Tigers build an early 30-17 lead.
“That was one of the more resilient victories I’ve ever been a part of,” Grill said. “And everyone knows I’ve been in college forever.”
Then Jacob Crews got into the action with a 3 to make it 33-18 and Anthony Robinson put his shoulder into his defender to create space for a fadeaway jumper to make it 42-23 for the biggest lead of the night with 7:22 left to play.
Florida chipped away to get back within 10, but as has been the case in the past two Missouri games, every time their opponent makes a run, the Tigers respond.
Mark Mitchell turned a Crews steal into a layup, Robinson hit a free throw and Tony Perkins grabbed Robinson’s miss on the second attempt and connected on an and-1 layup on tippin to extend Missouri’s lead back to 50-34 with 1:02 left before halftime.
The Tigers took the 16-point lead into the break after arguably the best single-half performance of the Gates era, with Missouri connecting on 17-of-31 (54.8 percent) from the field, 7-of-14 (50 percent) from 3 and 9-of-11 (81.8 percent) from the free-throw line while committing only three turnovers, which were all in the final three minutes, and forcing eight Florida turnovers.
“These are wins you’ve got to try to get and we were lucky enough to get it,” Gates said.
Then came the insanity.
Missouri missed its first eight attempts from the field in the second half, but collected four offensive rebounds in the span, allowing Florida only a 5-0 run to start.
Grill broke the run with a catch-and-shoot 3 from the top of the key, then he fed Trent Pierce for a vicious two-handed dunk to create a 55-41 margin with 16:20 left to play.
Florida cut the lead to 58-53 with 12:20 left, but a Mitchell dunk ended a 7-0 Gator run and Grill drove the baseline for a layup through contact to create a 62-53 advantage.
To add to the insanity, Perkins hit the first of two free throw attempts, leading to a Crews offensive board, a missed Grill 3, a Perkins offensive rebound and a defensive foul on Florida setting up an inbounds play for Missouri.
The Tigers inbounded to Perkins, who attempt a clear-out elbow move, but connected with his defender’s crotch, ending in a flagrant 2 and an ejection for Perkins.
The Tigers were forced to bring Robinson back on the floor with four fouls and 9 minutes to play.
The Gators used the free throws and ensuing possession to cut the lead to 7, then Grill was called for a flagrant 1 on a hook-and-hold, giving the Gators another two free throws and possession.
The Tiger lead went from 11 with 9:05 left to three with 7:56 remaining.
But one of the unlikeliest Tigers, Josh Gray, extended the lead at the free-throw line as he made both attempts when he was sent to the line. He missed his initial try, but a lane violation gave him another try on a one-and-one, leading to his two makes as the sub-40 percent free-throw shooter made his first four attempts at the line on Tuesday.
The Tigers extended back to a 6-point lead when Pierce poked a pass into the Florida backcourt, then Tamar Bates won a battle for possession and tossed it ahead to Pierce for a transition dunk.
But Walter Clayton, who ended with 28 to lead the game for Florida, answered with a 3 before Pierce took a Bates drive-and-kick pass for a right-corner 3 right after to make it 75-69.
Grill pump faked and side-stepped into a 3 from the right wing to give the Tigers a 78-71 advantage with 2:23 left, the last time the lead would be three possessions.
Clayton made a layup to cut it to 5, then Mitchell hit just one of two free throws to keep the game within two scores.
Alijah Martin hit two free throws for Florida. Then after an empty Missouri offensive possession, the Tiger defense forced Florida into a missed 3. But the rebound attempt went out of bounds allowing Florida to regain possession, which turned into a Martin layup thrown toward the hoop in desperation to cut the lead to 79-77 with 38 seconds left.
But after the Tigers had multiple empty trips to the free-throw line, two misses from Gray and two misses from Grill, 61.7 percent free-throw shooter Mitchell went to the line and hit both to create an 81-77 lead.
The 80-point mark has been the magic number for Missouri this year as the Tigers are now 11-0 when reaching the mark.
Florida cut the lead again, but Grill was sent back to the line and hit both, creating an 83-79 margin.
“I knew if we made them both, it would seal the deal,” Grill said. “Missed two earlier and I couldn’t believe I missed them.”
Florida hit a 3 with a second left, but was unable to make up the difference as Missouri beat its second top-5 opponent this season, marking the first time the Tigers have done that since 2008-09, and the Tigers first top-5 road win since 2012.
The Tigers celebrated Gates’ birthday with the win as they get to 14-3, 3-1 SEC and will come home to face Arkansas at 5 p.m. Saturday.
“Great birthday gift from our players to me,” Gates said.
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Missouri
Here’s why you might be seeing sports betting ads in Missouri even though it’s not yet operational
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KFVS) – Some ads populating on social media and television are raising eyebrows in Missouri.
A DraftKings campaign advertising a deal that’s “now live in Missouri” could seem confusing upon first look. Although voters passed Amendment Two legalizing sports betting, the Missouri Gaming Commission has not yet awarded any licenses. However, Draftkings is not doing anything wrong.
Although it appears to be a sports betting commercial, DraftKings is advertising a fantasy game, and betting on fantasy sports is legal and regulated in Missouri. The Missouri Gaming Commission regulates fantasy sports, but it’s still going to be several months until the infrastructure is set up for sports betting.
“We’ve got that small intense group of people led by our executive director to make sure that we’re not missing anything,” said Missouri Gaming Commissioner Jan Zimmerman.
Betting on fantasy sports is not new. Companies like DraftKings can use this as an avenue to make money in states where sports betting is not legal, or in Missouri’s case, not yet operational.
When looking at the map of where the DraftKings pick-six deal is available, and comparing it to the map from the American Gaming Association of states where sports betting is legal, you’ll notice eight states where you can get this DraftKings deal but sports betting is not legal; that’s without including Missouri.
Betting money on fantasy sports is legal because of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, which designates fantasy sports as a game of skill *not a game of chance, like sports betting. Because of this, betting on fantasy sports is not considered gambling.
The Missouri Gaming Commission said it hopes to have sports betting operational later this year. In the meantime, avid sports fans and gamblers will have to stick to fantasy sports.
“We are still very hopeful that we’ll be ready to go by mid to late summer,” Zimmerman said.
The Missouri Gaming Commission’s regular meeting is scheduled for tomorrow to continue its work toward getting sports betting set up.
In Missouri, there were more than 11 million attempts to place a sports bet just during the first half of the 2024 football season, according to data from GeoComply.
There will be a 10% tax on that gambling revenue. The auditor’s office is estimating up to $29 million in tax revenue coming from sports betting.
That revenue is allocated first to cover any of the “reasonable expenses” incurred by the Gaming Commission that were not covered by revenue from fees.
After those expenses are covered, 10% of the remaining wagering tax revenue or $5 million, whichever is greater, would be allocated to the state’s Compulsive Gaming Prevention Fund. Finally, whatever revenue is remaining is legally required to be spent on “institutions of elementary, secondary, and higher education” in Missouri.
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Missouri
Missouri senators hope to resume discussions on key issues from this past year
The 2025 regular legislative session enters into its first full week.
For some Missouri senators, there is unfinished business.
This past session, Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman of Arnold sponsored a measure relating to initiative petitions in our state, which she spoke about shortly before the end of the 2024 session…
“Senate leadership was getting a lot of feedback from some people about not going to initiative petition reform. These policies are too important to play procedural games with.”
It is common for certain issues to become annual items for lawmakers.
By the same token, Sen. Tracy McCreery of St. Louis County says she remains concerned about women’s health issues…
“This debate is more pertinent than ever because as we have been in session this week, we saw the Florida Supreme Court upheld that state’s abortion ban.”
Next up for lawmakers will be committee assignments and committee hearings, which could happen before the month ends.
Missouri senators will also soon hear the governor’s budget outline.
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