KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Iowa News Service/DES MOINES, Iowa) – An Iowa nurse says the recent deaths of two Hollywood celebrities in their 50s from stroke should be a wake-up call for those who think they’re too young to worry.
Victoria Borges with Methodist Medical Center said she became a champion for stroke prevention after her mother died of heart disease when she was 17 years old. In her practice, Borges said she’s seen people as young as 18 and as old as 98 treated for stroke. “It can happen to anybody that is not of ideal weight, that smokes, that has those risk factors – sedentary lifestyle, high cholesterol, diabetes, high blood pressure – any of those things makes people at risk,” Borges said. “It doesn’t matter what age you are.”
Fifty-one year-old movie director John Singleton and actor Luke Perry, age 52, both died from strokes in the past two months. May is American Stroke Month, and the American Heart Association of Iowa reminds residents that 80% of strokes are preventable. To learn what your numbers should be, go to heart.org/bloodpressure. Borges said “FAST” is an easy way to remember and identify the most common symptoms of stroke: face drooping, arm weakness and speech difficulty. She added the “T” in FAST, which stands for “time”, is critical for a positive outcome. “If any of your loved ones, or anybody you know, is experiencing these symptoms, get to the hospital immediately so we can treat their stroke as fast as possible,” she said.
In May alone, some 65,000 Americans will experience a stroke, with many unaware that they were even at risk. High blood pressure is the biggest factor, but of the 116 million people in the U.S. who have high blood pressure, fewer than 50% have it under control. At the same time, lowering blood pressure by 20 points can cut your risk for stroke by half.
AMES, Iowa (AP) — A judge has ordered a trial moved for a homeless man accused of killing a former Iowa State University golfer. Story County court records say the judge decided Monday to move the trial of 22-year-old Collin Richards to northeast Iowa’s Winneshiek County. He’s pleaded not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder in the Sept. 17 slaying of 22-year-old Celia Barquín Arozamena.
Authorities say Richards stabbed her to death while she was playing a round at a public course in Ames, near the Iowa State campus in Story County. Barquín was a top golfer in Spain as a teenager and came to Iowa State to pursue her career. Richards’ attorney said in a motion that pretrial publicity would keep Richards from getting a fair trial in Story County.
More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (5.0MB)
Subscribe: RSS
Mix all ingredients as follows with electric mixer. Spread in 9″ x 13″ pan and bake at b350 degrees for 35 minutes.
FROSTING:
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A June sentencing has been scheduled for a man accused of using a stick or a broom handle to kill a Des Moines resident. Polk County District Court records say 41-year-old Michael Bell Jr. was convicted last week of voluntary manslaughter. He’d originally been charged with first-degree murder in the Oct. 25, 2017, slaying of 42-year-old Jerry Martin.
Police say Bell told investigators he had several weapons with him when he confronted Martin over a $50 debt.
Two witnesses told police they saw Bell use a weapon to hit and stab Martin several times, cutting Martin’s neck and puncturing his chest. Bell’s sentencing is set for June 18.
(Radio Iowa) — While the bald eagle is making a comeback in Iowa and across the country, an expert says there are still some challenges facing the national symbol The executive director Saving Our Avian Resources (SOAR) Kay Newman from Carroll, operates a rehabilitation program for eagles. “Half of all the eagles who come to rehabilitators in Iowa have ingested lead, and are impaired or lead poisoned,” Newman says, “and that’s a huge percentage.”
She says the huge number of lead issues is a concern. “We expect to see sort of a random assortment of injuries coming in. A poke in the eye, a broken wing, a broken leg, hit by car, just a random assortment of accidental injuries,” Newman says. “Poisoning is in sort of a different category — where it concerns us.” Newman spoke in Le Mars this past weekend and says eagles will prey on other animals that may have been shot by lead-based ammunition, and that is how they get the lead poisoning. “This type of poisoning is completely preventable. So, anyone who hunts — it doesn’t matter what they hunt — there’s a non-lead version of the ammunition out there,” according toe Newman.
Newman says the same thing happens with fishing, when anglers use lead sinkers, or lead based lures.
(Radio Iowa) — Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke says historic droughts, wildfires, hurricanes AND flooding illustrate why climate change is the greatest challenge the country faces. “Climate change is…understood to be happening beyond a shadow of a doubt for at least anyone who listens to the scientists or who lives in Pacific Junction or Davenport or Houston, Texas,” O’Rourke says. O’Rourke, a former Texas congressman, has unveiled a plan to spend five TRILLION dollars over the next decade to address climate change. During a forum Monday afternoon in Des Moines, O’Rourke said there’s an “economic upside in doing the right thing” and farmers can play a key role in meeting the challenges climate change presents. “Not be dictating to them, but by partnering with them, listening to them, allowing them to provide the public service of capturing and storing more carbon on their land and then paying them for the public benefit that we receive from that,” O’Rourke says.
O’Rourke says flood prevention or “mitigation” is part of his climate action plan — and that means reconstructing and fortifying Missouri and Mississippi River levees to protect life and property. “We can pay the cost of clean-up, of repair, of replacement or we can invest upfront,” O’Rourke says.
O’Rourke visited a farm near Pacific Junction this past weekend. “It’s a lake right now or at least some significant part of it is,” O’Rourke says. “Those farmers in some cases already underwater in terms of their debt are now, literally, underwater in terms of their farms,” O’Rourke says. O’Rourke supports efforts in congress to offer some financial help to farmers with uninsured grain that was stored in bins, swamped and spoiled by the floodwaters. O’Rourke will campaign in Adel, Boone, Waverly, Charles City and Fayette today (Tuesday).
Two men were arrested on separate charges Monday, in Creston. Authorities say 49-year old Tony Fizer, of Creston, was arrested on a Union County Warrant for Violation of Probation. Fizer was already in custody at the Union County Jail and continues to be held there. And, 31-year old John Willis, of Creston, was arrested at the Law Enforcement Center for Harassment in the 2nd Degree. Willis was released from the Union County Jail on $1,000 bond.
The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (4.4MB)
Subscribe: RSS
ALTOONA, Iowa (AP) — A Des Moines suburb has approved a $400 million development agreement with social media giant Facebook for construction of another data center building. The nearly 1 million-square-foot building would be the fifth Facebook has erected in Altoona. The City Council’s decision will make the building exempt from property taxes for 20 years. But Facebook has agreed to pay a yearly fee of nearly 60% of what it would otherwise have paid in property taxes.
Facebook also will pay for the construction of a $500,000 pump station that will boost the water pressure for the data center and other structures in the area. Officials say the new building is expected to bring 70 new jobs to Altoona. Facebook’s headquarters is in Menlo Park, California, south of San Francisco.