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SASF awards three scholarships to Atlantic Seniors

News

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Senior Alumni Scholarship Foundation (SASF) scholarship recipients were announced during the KJAN AHS Senior Class Night streaming event held May 21st. Atlantic High School seniors McKenzie Waters, Ethan Pross, and Emma Templeton were each awarded $2,500.

SASF honors the school and community that provided SASF alumni an excellent educational start through an endowment that has been funded by generous donations from Atlantic High School graduates. For more information about SASF see: https://atlanticsasf.org/

Iowa State’s Brock Purdy expects more progress

Sports

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy expects the Cyclone program to make more progress. Purdy is getting ready for his junior season as the Cyclones will be in search of a fourth straight winning season and bowl trip.

Players have been away from campus since March and are preparing for a return in June.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 5/29/20

News, Podcasts

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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(UPDATED with full interview) Speer looking forward to opportunity at Griswold

Sports

May 29th, 2020 by admin

New Griswold head boys basketball coach Jake Speer is eager to be given the opportunity to coach early in his career. Speer was not looking to coach at the high school level right away coming out of college, but the opportunity to become an assistant early was too big to pass up. Speer said his confidence built as he got more years of experience.

In game coaching at the junior varsity level has really benefited Speer early in his career. Speer praised his old high school basketball coach, Darrell Burmeister, on how he coached in the past and wants to implement some of his philosophies in the future

Speer envisions some long term goals are to have all coaches throughout each level in the school district on the same page, while trying to maintain a good number of kids out for basketball. Getting more kids out for basketball and playing all year around is a good start said Speer.

Coach Speer will be coming into the head job looking to rejuvenate the program. The last two seasons the Tigers have a combined seven wins and the last time they had a winning season was back in 2014. The full length interview with Coach Speer will be available on this story later today.

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Heartbeat Today 5-29-2020

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

May 29th, 2020 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Cass County Public Health Director Beth Olsen about the latest on COVID-19 and the process of testing, quarantine and contact tracing.

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Authorities digging in Waterloo area, in connection w/ an Arizona murder case

News

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Authorities spent yesterday (Thursday) digging in a Waterloo suburb, apparently looking for evidence in the month-long search for a missing Arizona man and his step-daughter, who are believed to have been murdered. The property being searched is at the end of Timber Oak Road, a cul-de-sac, in a quiet Evansdale neighborhood. Officials dressed in white hazmat suits carrying shovels and digging equipment could be seen near a chicken coop on the undeveloped property. The FBI and officers from several local agencies were involved in the search. Late Thursday afternoon, police in Chino Valley, Arizona, confirmed the digging was connected to the disappearance of 45-year-old David Batten and 28-year-old Elissa Landry, who have been missing since April 19th.

Landry’s boyfriend, 24-year-old Mitchell Mincks, formerly of Waterloo, is a person of interest in the Arizona homicide case. On April 28th, he was arrested on unrelated charges at rural Waterloo home. Authorities say two pets belonging to Landry were found in Waterloo last month and her missing vehicle is also believed to be in the Waterloo area.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 5/29/20

Podcasts, Sports

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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1 arrest, 1 vehicle keyed, in Creston

News

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports 31-year old Lance Keaton Wood, of Lexington, MO., was arrested Thursday morning in Creston, on a warrant for Failure to Appear April 30th, on a prior charge of Public Intoxication. Wood was seen by the Union County Magistrate, plead guilty and was released. Police said also, a man residing in the 800 block of N. Spruce Street, reported Wednesday, that someone had keyed the passenger side of his 2014 Toyota Tundra pickup. The damage was estimated at $200.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 5/29/20

News, Podcasts

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:05-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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UI study finds pollen can hang in the air 11 hours after rain storms

News

May 29th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A University of Iowa study finds tiny tree pollen particles can hang in the air for a long time after a rain shower, causing grief for allergy and asthma sufferers. U-I chemistry professor Betsy Stone is the study’s author who led a team into the rainy outdoors of Iowa City on 28 separate days early last year. Rain events ranged from light showers to thunderstorms and even severe weather that spun off a tornado — and all brought down pollen.  “We logged many different rain events in the spring of 2019 and we found that they stuck around two-and-a-half to 11 hours after the rain ended,” Stone says.

The research found the harder the rainfall, the longer the pollen fragments would remain suspended in the air. She notes there’s a difference between pollen and pollen fragments, as the smaller granules can make their way deep into the lungs and worsen a person’s allergic reactions.  “Pollens are relatively large atmospheric particles. They’re 20 to 100 micrometers in size. With that size, they have a little bit more weight and that causes them to settle out of the atmosphere due to gravity,” Stone says. “Pollen fragments are about 100 times smaller than an intact pollen and they can actually stay in the atmosphere much longer.”

A weather phenomenon that’s sometimes seen during thunderstorms can send pollen far up into the sky. “An updraft will take particles from near the surface up into the upper atmosphere where they’re going to be exposed to higher humidity,” Stone says. “Under those very humid conditions, a pollen grain can rupture, releasing hundreds of tiny particle fragments and those fragments can come back down to the earth’s surface when it rains.” People who suffer from allergies or asthma should take note, she says, and do their best to stay indoors when the raindrops are falling — and immediately afterwards. “The highest concentrations of pollen fragments, and the highest potential for human exposure, would be when it’s raining, especially when it’s raining very, very hard,” Stone says. “So, if people are able to avoid the very strong rainfall and the period of time right after the storm, usually an hour or two, the pollen fragment levels drop down considerably.”

The study was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and was published online in the journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters.