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River watchers already wary about 2020 spring flooding

News, Weather

November 30th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — After a year that has seen some of the worst flooding ever in parts of the Midwest, concern is already rising that the spring of 2020 may bring more high water to places that still haven’t fully recovered.

Flooding ravaged much of the Missouri and Mississippi River basins earlier this year, reaching record levels in many places. Eight months later, parts of the Missouri River are above flood stage at a time of the year when river levels traditionally run low. Conditions are only slightly better on the Mississippi River.

High river levels aren’t the only worry. National Weather Service hydrologist Mark Fuchs cites two other factors: Soil is extremely saturated in several upper Midwestern states, and the long-range forecast offers a strong possibility of a wetter-than-normal winter.

2 killed after car rolls off the road in Iowa

News

November 30th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

NEWTON, Iowa (AP) — Two people are dead and one person is badly injured after an accident in central Iowa. The Des Moines Register reports that the accident happened about 7 a.m. Friday in Jasper County when a Chevrolet Impala went off the roadway and rolled. Authorities are investigating to determine what caused the accident.

The driver, 23-year-old Dallis Harrison of Newton, and a 16-year-old passenger, Isaiah Eliander of Garwin, were both ejected and killed. A 15-year-old passenger, Kylie Eliander, was not ejected and was seriously hurt.

Adams County Sheriff’s Report 11-30-2019

News

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office reported a pair of incidents Friday.

Just after 7:00 am, deputies received a call from an individual stating that he had located a small child sitting inside a storage tote located outside of 907 Adams Street in Corning.  Deputies took the child into protective custody until a family member was located.  The child was later identified and a safety plan was put in place as she was turned over to a designated family member.  After investigating, at about 3:00 pm, deputies arrested both James Coleman and Kaitlyn DeYoung for child endangerment.  The incident remains under investigation by the Adams County Sheriff’s Office and the DHS.

Shortly after 10:00 Friday night deputies conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle owned and operated by Gabrielle Hunke of Mount Ayr.  The county K-9 gave a positive alert to the odor of narcotics.  After investigating further, Hunke and a passenger, Jawanza Curtis, Jr. of Iowa City were both placed under arrest for Possession of a Controlled Substance, Possession of a Controlled Substance with the Intent to Deliver and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.  Curtis was also charged with Interference with Official Acts.  Hunke was also charged with Minor in Possession of Alcohol.

Red Oak Police Report 11-30-2019

News

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

Red Oak police arrested 35 year old Jeremy Ray Dilocker at about 10:30 Friday night in the 300 block of Coolbaugh Street.  Police report Dilocker was charged with 3rd or subsequent offense Public Intoxication, an aggravated misdemeanor.  Dilocker was held at the Montgomery County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

RONALD L. KUNCE, 75, of Audubon (12-2-2019)

Obituaries

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

RONALD L. KUNCE, 75, of Audubon died Thursday, November 28th at the Audubon County Memorial Hospital.  A Celebration of Life Memorial Visitation for RONALD L. KUNCE will be held on Monday, December 2nd from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm at the Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon.

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RONALD L. KUNCE is survived by:

Wife:  Irene Kunce of Audubon.

Daughters:  Viki (Tom) Moore of Fayetteville, NC; Rhonda (Mike) Shriver of Audubon.

Sister:  Linda Daubert (significant other Chris Lass) of Scranton.

5 Grandchildren

12 Great-Grandchildren

Other relatives and friends.

SHARADEE ANGELL, 58, of Atlantic

Obituaries

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

SHARADEE ANGELL, 58, of Atlantic died Thursday, November 28th at University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.  Private Family Graveside services for SHARADEE ANGELL will be held in the Saints Peter & Paul Catholic Cemetery in Atlantic.  Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

SHARADEE ANGELL is survived by:

Her son – Patrick (Stacy) Henningsen;

Her father – Edmund Angell

Her brothers – Steve, and Jim (Barb)

Her sister – Cathy (Jason) Juelsgaard.

and 3 grandchildren.

No. 13 Seton Hall beats Iowa State 84-76 at Atlantis

Sports

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) — Myles Powell struggled to get in an early rhythm as No. 13 Seton Hall closed its three-game stay in the Battle 4 Atlantis.

Yet the way coach Kevin Willard saw it, it was just a matter of time before he would.

Powell scored 19 of his 24 points after halftime to help Seton Hall beat Iowa State 84-76 in Friday night’s fifth-place game, giving the Pirates two wins after an opening-round loss to No. 11 Oregon.

“He plays so hard that defenders, they’ll stick with him for the first half,” Willard said. “Then, usually in the second half, he’s going to come get you.”

Powell, a preseason Associated Press All-American, made just 2 of 9 shots in the opening half. He made 7 of 10 after the break, including three 3-pointers, for the Pirates (6-2).

“I know my team’s going to go as I go,” Powell said. “So I just tried to come out and feed on defense first and the game just came to me.”

Sandro Mamukelashvili added 18 points for the Pirates, who finally took control with a 12-2 second-half run. The run included Powell burying a 3 over Tre Jackson at the 6:12 mark, then pointing emphatically at his shooting elbow as he got back on defense.

Later, Mamukelashvili hit his own 3 off a feed from Powell for a 76-65 lead with 4:38 left to cap the 12-2 run. It was also part of a run of five straight made shots for the Pirates, while the Cyclones went 1 for 7 during those key minutes.

Previously, neither team had led by more than six in the second half, and the Pirates didn’t let that margin slip below six again.

Seton Hall shot 61% for the second half and 54% for the game, the first of two in a row against Iowa State due to a quirk in the schedule.

Rasir Bolton scored 20 points for the Cyclones (4-3), who led by nine midway through the first half. Tyrese Haliburton added 19 points and seven assists.

“We were really in a good rhythm early,” Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said. “And then they raised it up a notch, and we didn’t weather that storm enough. We got flustered. We took some bad shots.”

BIG PICTURE

Seton Hall: The Pirates had a test-filled stay in the Bahamas. First came the opener against Oregon, with Seton Hall rolling to a 19-point lead only to blow that lead and lose on a late bucket. They had to bring more energy to a losers’ bracket game to finally put away Southern Miss in the latest game on Thursday’s schedule, then pulled away late in this one.

“I said (the Oregon loss) doesn’t stop where we are as a program, where we are as a team,” Willard said. “I said the only thing that stops us is if we don’t get two wins. And they responded tremendously.”

Iowa State: The Cyclones had a tough time defensively in the tournament opener against eventual champion Michigan, though they bounced back to beat Alabama on Thursday behind a near-triple-double from Haliburton. They traded plenty of baskets with the Pirates before Seton Hall pulled away.

LIGHTS OUT

The game was also played amid a power outage at parts of the Atlantis resort on Paradise Island. The lights in Imperial Arena went out for a few seconds twice, once during halftime and later during a play as Haliburton drove for a scooping layup with 11:02 left.

The arena went dark as the ball was bouncing off the backboard before it went through the net. Fans broke out cellphones and turned on their flashlight apps in the seconds before the lights quickly came back on, and then Iowa State fans started chanting “Count it!” as officials discussed what to do about Haliburton’s drive.

Officials complied, and the game continued without further (electrical) drama.

“I just stopped moving because they said don’t move,” Haliburton said, adding: “I just wanted to make sure they counted the basket.”

UP NEXT

Seton Hall: The Pirates visit the Cyclones on Dec. 8.

Iowa State: The Cyclones host Kansas City on Wednesday to tune up for their Seton Hall rematch.

Duncan’s late FG lifts No. 19 Iowa past Cornhuskers 27-24

Sports

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — It was cold and damp, Iowa had the ball at its 26 with 32 seconds left in regulation in a tie game, and the Hawkeyes’ offense hadn’t done much since the first quarter.

Instead of being content to play for overtime against border rival Nebraska, coach Kirk Ferentz went for the win Friday.

The Hawkeyes got it when Keith Duncan kicked a 48-yard field goal with one second left, giving No. 19 Iowa a 27-24 victory over Nebraska that leaves the Cornhuskers out of the postseason for a third consecutive season.

“We thought we had a chance if we executed,” Ferentz said. “There’s some risk and reward involved there. We thought the reward outweighed the risk. At least we came out the right side this time.”

The Hawkeyes (9-3, 6-3 Big Ten) beat the Huskers (5-7, 3-6) for a fifth straight year and second year in a row on a late field goal.

Duncan, who walked on to Iowa in 2016, had more to celebrate than just helping the Hawkeyes hold onto the Heroes Game trophy for at least another year. Ferentz announced after the game that he was giving Duncan a scholarship.

“The culmination of all these four years of hard work,” said Duncan, who also kicked a 49-yarder against the Huskers and now owns the Big Ten single-season record with 29. “These 12 weeks have been really hard for us, just working 100%. There’s been some setbacks, but we finished here. Team goals will lead to individual goals, and that’s where we are today.”

Iowa, which had its 14-point lead wiped out in the third quarter, got the ball back after forcing a Nebraska punt in the final minute. Nate Stanley had a long pass to Nico Ragaini overturned to incomplete on video review, but then completed a pair of 22-yard passes to Ihmir Smith-Marsette and Sam LaPorta to bring on the reliable Duncan.

The Huskers called two timeouts before Duncan drilled the winner down the middle and with plenty of distance.

“Every field goal I’m hungry for, especially in a situation like that with tough conditions,” Duncan said. “That’s why you become a kicker. You’ve got to be hungry and not scared.”

After the ball went through, holder Colten Rastetter and Duncan ran toward the Nebraska sideline. Rastetter pointed at the Huskers while Duncan blew kisses at them.

“Nebraska fans came for some entertainment, and that’s what it was, entertainment,” Duncan said. “Just having fun with it.”

Nebraska, down 24-10 at half, tied it with back-to-back touchdowns in the third quarter. Luke McCaffrey entered the game for a play in place of quarterback Adrian Martinez, rolled to his left and hit JD Spielman with a perfect 39-yard TD pass. The Huskers ran on 12 of 13 plays while covering 60 yards on their next drive, converting a fourth-and-6 before Wyatt Mazour ran in from 9 yards.

Smith-Marsette scored on a 45-yard on a reverse run and ran back a kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown and Tyler Goodson broke a 55-yard TD run as Iowa got out to its lead in the first half.

Iowa had 18 plays for 191 yards in the first quarter but just 131 yards on 38 plays for the remainder of the game. Iowa gained 11 yards in the second quarter and 7 in the third.

Stanley completed 11 of 24 passes for 99 yards, his lowest total since throwing for 86 against Maryland last year. Tyler Goodson ran 13 times for a season-high 116 yards.

The Huskers are in their longest bowl drought since 1955-61, but coach Scott Frost is encouraged by the progress the second half of the season.

“There’s a lot of things that needed to get fixed, and I think a lot of those have been addressed,” Frost said. “I think when you plant a seed, you don’t necessarily see sprouts right away. There’s a lot going on underneath the ground before you see things shooting out of it. I know a lot of things have gotten better.”

Trial set for 2 accused of shooting car theft suspect

News

November 30th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Two people accused in the shooting death of a man suspected of stealing a friend’s car are scheduled for trial next year in western Iowa. Pottawattamie County District Court records say 25-year-old Jonathan Echtinaw and 23-year-old Carissa Kendall, have pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. They’re scheduled to go on trial Jan. 7 in Council Bluffs. Nebraska court records say they live in Omaha.

Echtinaw is accused of shooting 18-year-old Ethan Edgar, of Hutchinson, Kansas, on May 6. Authorities say Echtinaw, Kendall and other friends of a woman who’d reported the car’s theft to Omaha police went looking for it. They spotted at a Council Bluffs gas station. Authorities say Kendall stopped her vehicle behind the stolen car to help block it, and Echtinaw opened fire when Edgar put the car into reverse and rammed Kendall’s vehicle.

PATRICIA K. RATIGAN, 64, of Harlan (11-30-2019)

Obituaries

November 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

PATRICIA K. RATIGAN, 64, of Harlan died Thursday, November 28th at Myrtue Medical Center in Harlan.  Mass of Christian Burial for PATRICIA K. RATIGAN will be held on Saturday, November 30th at 10:30 am in the St. Mary’s of the Assumption Catholic Church in Panama.  Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

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Visitation with the family will be held Saturday morning prior to the service beginning at 9:30 am at the church.

Burial in the St. Mary’s Cemetery in Panama.

PATRICIA K. RATIGAN is survived by:

Sister:  Janet Block of Bellevue, NE.

Brothers:  Jim (Joyce) Ratigan of Omaha, NE; Gary (Marcy) Ratigan of Ankeny; Denny Ratigan of Yutan, NE; Tom (Lori) Ratigan of Omaha, NE>