Kentucky
Kentucky hosts MAC member Akron in final non-league warm up before beginning SEC play
Akron (1-1) at Kentucky (2-0), Saturday, 7:30 p.m. (ESPNU)
Line: Kentucky by 25 1/2, according to FanDuel.com Sportsbook.
Series: Kentucky leads 1-0.
WHAT’S AT STAKE
Kentucky had to rally past neighboring FCS foe Eastern Kentucky 28-17 and seeks a strong effort in its final non-conference game before opening SEC play at Vanderbilt. Akron is coming off a 24-21 win against Morgan State and begins a two-game stretch against Power 5 schools before starting Mid-American Conference play against Buffalo.
KEY MATCHUP
Kentucky’s offense vs. Akron’s defense. Last week’s victory showed the Wildcats are capable of stringing together touchdown drives, which allowed them to escape a lower-division upset. They’d now like to score more regularly and climb out of the SEC basement with just seven offensive TDs thus far. Akron features the No. 39 defense in FBS, allowing 292 yards per contest. The Zips were opportunistic against Morgan State with 14 points off three takeaways, including Devonte Golden-Nelson’s two interceptions. Their final turnover set up Bryan McCoy’s 13-yard fumble return for the game-winning TD with 52 seconds remaining.
PLAYERS TO WATCH
Akron junior linebacker CJ Nunnally keyed the Zips’ victory over Morgan State by forcing that last-minute fumble that McCoy returned for the game-winning score. He opened with consecutive sacks and finished with three tackles for loss among four stops. He was named this week’s Mid-American Conference East Division top defensive player.
Kentucky quarterback Devin Leary overcame an early interception to deliver his best outing in just his second game with the Wildcats. He rallied the team with touchdown passes on four consecutive possessions and completed 24 of 38 attempts for 299 yards. It marked the ninth time the North Carolina State transfer has thrown for four TDs and tied a career high.
FACTS AND FIGURES
Akron’s Devonte Golden-Nelson scored his first career TD on a 50-yard interception return, one of two against the Bears. … The Zips visit Big Ten foe Indiana next week. … Kentucky received five votes in this week’s AP Top 25 poll. … The Wildcats will celebrate Kroger Field’s 50th anniversary opening during the contest. … Offensive coordinator Liam Coen will be with the team on Saturday after a medical episode on Sunday required overnight hospitalization.
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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll
Kentucky
Duncan Hines Days brings in millions in spending for South Central Kentucky
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO) – Duncan Hines Days brought the fun and the funds, allocating $2.96 million in spending, according to a press release.
“It’s just one more, you know, one more feather in Bowling Green’s cap, as far as things that you can do and attracting people from the outside area,” Employee at Moris Jewelry Jim Sears said.
Over 17,000 people attended, coming from 18 different states, based on zip codes tracked through admissions and ticketing.
“These people were getting hotel rooms, they were paying for gas, they were paying for ticketed events, or they were going to stores or bars or restaurants or all of those things,” Downtown Development Coordinator Telia Butler said.
To support the community’s efforts Conagra Foods, which owns the Duncan Hines brand, donated 6,000 boxes of baking mixes to give to the community throughout the week.
Sears says that events such as Duncan Hines Days help bring more business to local entities.
“We might not get an initial pop that day, but two weeks later they’ll say, ‘Hey, we saw you at the Duncan Hines days, and I’ve got a ring here. Can you fix it?’ So, we kind of get an ancillary benefit from it in a lot of ways and we like being a part of it,” Sears said.
The week of Duncan Hines Day local businesses joined in on the fun, adding their own twist on the event.
“We had more downtown businesses this year participate than we did last year. Bars and restaurants offered themed Duncan Hines like cake mix or brownies or strawberry like drinks and special flavors and their desserts and things like that that were new compared to last years as well,” Butler said. “It gave more of the community the chance to embrace it and kind of make it its own.”
Any requests for events or ideas for next year’s Duncan Hines Days can be submitted by filling out a form labeled “contact us” on their website.
Copyright 2024 WBKO. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Decomposed remains of an infant found in Kentucky are likely missing 8-month-old girl, police say
REYNOLDS STATION, Ky. — Kentucky State Police detectives found the decomposed body of a baby Friday that they believe is an 8-month-old girl who has been missing for weeks.
State police found “an infant’s body consistent with Miya Rudd” in an Ohio County residence in western Kentucky. The body was “hidden in a concealed manner,” state police said.
The body will be taken to the Kentucky Medical Examiner’s Office in Louisville for an autopsy.
Police began searching for the baby more than a week ago. Relatives said they hadn’t seen Miya since late April. Investigators found her parents, Tesla Tucker, 29, and 30-year-old Cage Rudd, at a hotel without the child. Tucker and Rudd, along with Miya’s paternal grandparents, were arrested and charged earlier this month with child abuse, abandonment and several drug offenses.
A call to Tucker and Rudd’s attorney was not returned Friday evening.
The child’s maternal grandparents were arrested on Wednesday on outstanding warrants. Another man charged with several drug offenses on Thursday was formerly living at the Rudd home, according to state police.
Police had used cadaver dogs to search a church, cemetery and a wooded area behind the family’s home and later brought in sonar equipment and a forensic examiner team.
State police officials expressed frustration during the search with the lack of cooperation from Miya’s family. Trooper Corey King, a state police spokesperson, said investigators were shocked by the lack of assistance and information from Miya’s family, “the ones who should love and care the most.”
Kentucky
Controversial new rules for decision-making win final OK from University of Kentucky trustees • Kentucky Lantern
LEXINGTON — University of Kentucky trustees gave final approval Friday to a new internal governance structure that faculty say strips them of power over academic decisions.
The Board of Trustees reviewed the new shared governance proposal, backed by President Eli Capilouto, during its Friday meeting, voting 19-1 in favor of the changes.
The lone nay vote was from faculty trustee Hollie Swanson, who urged her fellow board members to consider voting against the measure until “more convincing data” is given.
But another faculty trustee, Hubie Ballard, said a “clear majority of the faculty” support the changes. He also agreed with Capilouto’s argument that the new shared governance model will help move the university forward and align it with Kentucky’s needs.
“It’s unfortunate that a few have taken this disagreement and turned it into discord,” Ballard said. “That is not what this campus is. They are supportive of this president and our mission to serve Kentucky,” said Ballard, an associate professor of pediatrics.
Swanson, a professor in the Department of Nutritional Sciences and Pharmacology, said she could not vote in favor of the changes without seeing more evidence to support them. She said they are based on a single report that may become public in response to an open records request after Friday’s meeting. She also added that the report was not available to board members.
UK hired Deloitte Consulting to do a benchmarking study. According to a UK Association of Emeriti Faculty response to the proposed changes, the report found that UK “should align its shared governance structure to be in greater alignment with institutional benchmarks and recognize the board’s ultimate control of university policymaking,” but it was not shared with the University Senate, nor were it’s officers consulted when developing the report.
Swanson said she expected to be outnumbered in voting against the shared governance changes.
“Voting no is by no means a vote against the president,” she said. “It is a vote for more clarity, and more information.”
‘Time to accelerate’
On Friday, Capilouto told the board the changes are necessary for the university’s future. Capilouto has previously said the changes will streamline decision making. The shared governance update is one of the first steps of “Project Accelerate,” a plan to align the university to better fit Kentucky’s education and workforce needs and to grow UK.
“They are our priorities because they are Kentucky’s problem,” Capilouto said. “Kentucky’s challenges are our responsibilities.”
Under the new model, UK’s University Senate is now abolished and a faculty senate will take its place. The University Senate included 94 faculty members as well as representatives from the Student Government Association (SGA), Staff Senate and the president and other administrators.
The university administration says the changes will strengthen the definition of “academic freedom,” faculty’s primacy over developing academic curriculum at the college level and the role of students and staff in decisions.
The board previously voted 19-1 in favor of the shared governance changes during its April meeting. Capilouto revised the proposal since then as a response to feedback from students, faculty and staff.
Members of the University Senate have warned that the changes would pave the way for faculty to lose decision-making power over academic decisions, such as admission standards for students. However, both the Staff Senate and Student Government Association have passed resolutions supporting Capilouto’s plan.
During its final meeting of the 2023-24 school year, the University Senate approved a resolution of no confidence against Capilouto over the shared governance changes in a vote of 58-24 with 11 abstaining. The senate also also received support from outside groups, such as the American Association of University Professors (AAUP).
Capilouto on Friday said examples of other recent steps to grow UK have been signing a transfer agreement with the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) and acquiring St. Claire Healthcare, a hospital in Morehead.
The board’s final approval of changes to UK’s shared governance model comes at a time when many stakeholders are away from campus, as the spring semester ended in May and most students and many faculty return to campus in late August.
“Project Accelerate” aims to direct the university to focus its resources and commitments on “accelerating efforts to advance Kentucky — its economy, the health and welfare of its citizens and its quality of life through a plan that ensures: more educated Kentuckians, more readiness, more partnerships, more employee recruitment and retention, more responsiveness.” Those later five points are the focus of workgroups that are studying each area in depth. Some presented reports in committee meetings ahead of Friday.
After the board gave its initial approval to the shared governance changes in April, Capilouto said in an update the changes “create a foundation for the continued work ahead, to review and revise the daily management rules — our Administrative Regulations — that operationalize our principles.”
Only one petitioner addressed the board on Friday — former University Senate Chair Katherine McCormick — and expressed support for Capilouto’s changes. Another petitioner, University of Southern Mississippi Faculty Senate President Joshua Bernstein, was granted permission to speak but declined. He previously wrote a letter to the board and Capilouto opposing the changes.
In his remarks to the board, Capilouto also addressed the criticism that the shared governance changes have been made too quickly. He said now is “not a time for glacier speed” but “time to accelerate” as the board has directed these changes for years.
However, Capilouto did concede to another point of criticism he has heard — that he is “obsessed.”
“I am obsessed. I’m obsessed with Kentucky and our future,” he said. “I believe that for Kentucky to grow, this community must grow.”
According to a copy of the new shared governance regulations, the University Senate has been abolished. Elections for the faculty senate will be held no later than Oct. 31, and senators will take office no later than Nov. 30. Executive committee elections will be held no later than Dec. 31.
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