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Huge drop in Iowa college enrollment

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — There’s been a significant decline in the number of students enrolled in Iowa colleges and universities, COMMUNITY colleges and trade schools. In the fall of 2011, there were more than 363-thousand students enrolled at an Iowa institution — seeking a degree or training beyond high school. By the fall of 2018, that had dropped by 38 percent — to 225-thousand students. Jay Pennington of the Iowa Department of Education says that high point in 2011 was after the Great Recession.

“Any time you see those downward trends, typically higher education becomes a destination for many as they leave the workforce or perhaps decide to go back to get another degree, you do tend to see significant increases in higher ed enrollment,” Pennington says. Total enrollment in Iowa’s 15 area community colleges has declined over the decade, too. An upward trend in Iowa’s high education is the number of Iowa high school students who are taking community college classes.

“We, as a state, are leaders nationally in concurrent enrollment,” Pennington says. “Between 2011 and 2018-19, we see significant increases both in the number of students enrolling in those opportunities, but also the number of courses that students are taking.” Last fall, more than 37-thousand Iowa high school students were taking college classes, too. The number of students in the UNITED STATES enrolled in college THIS FALL dipped below 18 million for the first time this decade.

Notre Dame eyes strong finish vs Iowa State in bowl matchup

Sports

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

ORLANDO, Florida (AP) – No. 14 Notre Dame closes another double-digit win season against Iowa State in the Camping World Bowl. The Fighting Irish are a year removed from appearing the College Football Playoff semifinals. They lost two games this season, but are trying to finish on a six-game winning streak. Iowa State lost four games this year by a total of 11 points to teams that finished in the final CFP rankings. The Cyclones are looking for a signature win against Notre Dame.

Divers recover body of Iowa man who fell through ice

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SHELLSBURG, Iowa (AP) — A dive team has recovered the body of a man who fell through the ice of an eastern Iowa pond while fishing. Television station KCRG reports that divers pulled the body of 47-year-old Shannan Lee Hughes, of Vinton, from the water Friday. Hughes is believed to have fallen through the ice Thursday while fishing on a private pond near Shellsburg.

A passerby reported seeing Hughes fishing out on the ice. The bystander later noticed Hughes had vanished and a hole on the ice and called 911. Searchers found Hughes’ car near the pond, but no sign of him.

(UPDATE) Mormon senior missionary from Utah killed in Iowa car crash

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SALT LAKE CITY, UT (AP) (In an update to our earlier reports on KJAN) – The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints says a 66-year-old man who was serving a mission was killed in a Christmas day car crash in Iowa. Church spokesman Daniel Woodruff said in a statement today (Friday), that Craig L. Meyocks died Wednesday. The crash occurred in a rural part of the state about 40 miles  south of Iowa City, when a man tried to cross the highway and smashed into the Meyocks’ car.

The couple had been serving as senior missionaries in the Illinois Nauvoo mission since March 2019. They are from Dammeron Valley, Utah.

Iowa hate crimes suspect got breaks after earlier arrests

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(By the Associated Press) — The Iowa woman charged in a string of racially-motivated attacks this month managed to avoid prison in recent years after arrests for previous violent crimes and threats. Nicole Poole is charged with intentionally driving her SUV into a Hispanic girl and a black boy near Des Moines-area schools in separate hit-and-run crashes on Dec. 9. She’s also charged with using racial epithets that day at a gas station. In 2017, Poole was charged with stabbing her then-boyfriend while she was on probation. But a felony charge was dismissed after the alleged victim refused to cooperate. Charges alleging she assaulted and harassed another boyfriend in 2018 were dismissed after he also declined to cooperate.

9 people suspected of double voting referred for prosecution

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – State officials have referred to Iowa prosecutors the names of nine people suspected of voting twice in the November election last year. The Iowa secretary of state’s office said in a news release today (Friday) that the nine are suspected of voting in Iowa after casting ballots in other states. There were 27 suspected instances of people voting first in Iowa and then other states during the same election. The information was discovered through Iowa’s partnership with several states in the Electronic Registration Information Center. The states share data to improve the accuracy of voter rolls and enhance voter confidence.

The Secretary of State’s Office says four of the alleged instances of double voting where the second vote was cast in Iowa, are believed to have taken place in Polk County. There is one suspected incident each in Johnson, Mitchell, Sioux, Story and Warren counties. The 27 other instances of suspected double voting have been shared with the respective states’ commissioner/board of elections.

Iowa fossil collector donates 18,000 items to the UI

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — After more than five decades of collecting rare rocks, a self-taught geologist from Fort Dodge recently donated the thousands of fossil specimens he catalogued in his garage to the University of Iowa. Sixty-four-year-old Robert Wolf says he got interested in fossils very early on. “I was in 4th grade and a friend of mine showed me a fossil he found in his driveway of crushed rock,” Wolf says. “I didn’t know anything about them and we started looking in the field between the two houses and found a few fossils.”

Wolf started studying fossils and essentially never stopped. He furthered his knowledge by joining the Geological Society of Iowa and went on field trips to dig sites around the region. “I started numbering my specimens and before you know it, I was up to over 18,000 catalogued and a lot more than weren’t catalogued,” he says. While he made his career as a writer, working for many years as a reporter at the Fort Dodge Messenger, Wolf says geology has always been his number-one hobby. “A lot of it was stuff I learned out in the field and in libraries and I had an Earth Science teacher in high school who taught me a lot about it, too,” Wolf says. “Now, I’m on Facebook and I learn a lot of stuff through Facebook and people are always contacting me to have me identify things.”

Some Iowans love to collect arrowheads, he notes, and they’ve found hundreds of Native American artifacts by roaming through the state’s cornfields and forests. “I’ve been doing this for 55 years and I have never found an arrowhead,” Wolf says. “I think, after a while, your eyes just grow accustomed to what you’re looking for and that’s how I go about it, just trial and error.”  Wolf says one of his most memorable moments was discovering fossils from the Cambrian Era in northern Iowa. “I’m just fascinated by these things because they’re like 490-million years old and they come on the heels of what they call the Cambrian Explosion, which was a big worldwide event where many of the lifeforms we know today first started appearing,” Wolf says. “It’s just fascinating to read this and see documentaries on it and actually be able to put my hands on that stuff right here in Iowa.”

Wolf made his comments on the Iowa Public Radio program “Talk of Iowa.”

(Thanks to Charity Nebbe, Iowa Public Radio)

Backyard & Beyond 12-27-2019

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

December 27th, 2019 by Jim Field

Lavon Eblen visits with Chris Parks, President of the Iowa Bluebirds Conservationists, about the Christmas Bird County this Sunday.

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Things look good for beef and pork producers in 2020

Ag/Outdoor

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — An Iowa State University livestock economist says at the current point in the beef production cycle, the number of cattle should be leveling-off. That would usually mean lower prices — but as Lee Schulz looks ahead to 2020 — he sees better prices than the ones today. “That’s certainly setting up that we could continue to hold inventories or not see very large declines or liquidations of the cattle herd because of those supported prices in the horizon,” Schulz says.

Schulz says export sales grew by double-digits in recent years, and a bit more modestly in 2019. The new trade deal with Japan and the likely implementation of a new North American agreement could keep beef exports strong in 2020. On the pork side, 2019 included ongoing tariffs on Chinese imports of U-S pork. But the year also saw the unprecedented African swine fever outbreak claim more than half the pigs in China, which pushed the country to go shopping for more pork on the world market. Schulz says China started buying more pork from the European Union but it eventually turned to the U-S, too. “We’ve seen the U-S really ramp-up exports to China as well as back-filling other places that maybe weren’t getting exports from the European Union,” he says.

African swine fever has not been found in North America. But Schulz says the threat of it has prompted many farmers to pour profits into shoring-up bio-security, which has the added benefit of reducing the spread of existing diseases, too.

26 animals rescued from farm where several animals had died

News

December 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities have removed several animals from a Dubuque farm where more than a dozen other animals were found dead. The Telegraph Herald reports that several of the 26 animals removed earlier this month were in poor health. The animals removed included horses, a pony, goats, sheep, pigs, geese and other fowl. Authorities say the bones and rib cages of some of the animals could be seen, and many had matted hair. Charges are pending.