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Police ID man who fell at Iowa State stadium onto fans below

News, Sports

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Authorities have released the name of a man who was injured in a fall from the upper level of Iowa State’s Jack Trice Stadium onto fans below. A university police report says 31-year-old Eric Ely hit three women on the lower level during the Oct. 26 game against Oklahoma State. None of them suffered serious injuries, and Ely reported that he briefly lost consciousness and suffered a concussion. He was taken to an Ames hospital before being flown to a Des Moines hospital.

The report says Ely “jumped up during a big play and just went over the rail in one movement; like the momentum carried him over.” Witnesses told investigators that Ely didn’t appear to be intoxicated. Ely has declined to comment publicly. Police say no charges have been filed.

Cass County Supervisors to canvass the results of Nov. 5th election

News

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Board of Supervisors will meet 9-a.m. today (Tuesday), in their Boardroom at the Courthouse. On their agenda, is the appointment of a member to the Cass County Local Foods Policy Council (If an appointee is available), and regular reports (as available) from the Cass County Attorney and Engineer. The Board will also canvass the results of the Nov. 5th City/School Elections.

On Wednesday, Nov. 13th, the Board will meet at 8-a.m. to perform a post-election audit of ballots tallied at the Cumberland/Union Township precinct, and votes cast for Mayor/City of Cumberland on Nov. 5th. Cass County Auditor Dale Sunderman says this is not a recount, but a hand-count audit of ballots tallied by optical scan equipment, to verify that the election vote tabulation equipment functioned as designed and programmed. It will include a hand-count of the votes cast for a designated position on the first ballot style of the selected precinct.

Nov. 21st “Healthy U” at CCHS: Women’s Pelvic Health

News

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The November session of “Healthy U” will be held on Thursday, November 21st, at Cass County Health System. The program, “Women’s Pelvic Health,” will be presented by Alyssa Rogers, (Master of Occupational Therapy, Occupational Therapy- Registered/licensed).

Alyssa Rogers, MOT; OTR/L

She will be discussing several areas of pelvic health including anatomy, bladder health, helpful hints to improve incontinence, and how pelvic floor therapy works. Alyssa has worked at CCHS in occupational therapy for three years, and she has recently become a pelvic floor therapist.

Healthy U will be offered at noon on Thursday, November 21st. Healthy U is a free educational series at Cass County Health System held monthly in Conference Room 2. The public is invited and welcome to attend, but reservations are required as a meal is provided for all attendees. Call 712243-7479 to reserve your seat.

Skyscan Forecast – Tuesday, Nov. 12th, 2019

Weather

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly sunny. High 27. SW wind @ 10-15.

Tonight: Partly cloudy. Low 20. SW @ 10-15.

Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy w/scattered light afternoon rain. High 38. SW_NW @ 10-20.

Thursday: P/Cldy. High 37.

Friday: P/Cldy. High of 48

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 21. Our Low this morning (as of 5-a.m.) was -3. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 26 and the Low was 7. The record High for this date in Atlantic, was 73 in 2005. The Record Low was -4 in 1968.

Iowa NAMI conference is this week

News

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Iowa chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness or NAMI (NAH-mee) is holding its annual conference later this week. Executive director Peggy Huppert says the state continues to lag behind the rest of the nation in providing mental health services, largely because of workforce issues. “Unfortunately, we continue to rank near the bottom in a lot of areas, including the number of state psychiatric beds, and the number of psychiatrists, the number of psychologists,” according to Huppert.

Huppert says there have been positive developments in the past year, including the state putting in place a mental health system for children. She says Iowa now needs to find a way to adequately fund it.  “Are they going to allow counties to levy what they need to pay for what is required. If not, how are we going to pay for it? The Legislature needs to grapple with that,” she says.

The conference this week will include perspectives from law enforcement, a pediatrician and a former star athlete who has been diagnosed as bipolar.

Water levels still high in Missouri River reservoirs as winter nears

News

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The U-S Army Corps of Engineers is still struggling with high water levels in Missouri River reservoirs and time is running out to get them down to winter storage stages. John Remus, chief of the Corps’ Missouri River Basin Water Management Office in Omaha, says there’s been discussion all year on the congressionally-authorized purposes versus the operational priorities for the system. “It is important to understand that authorized purposes and priorities are not the same thing,” Remus says. “While the system is authorized for eight purposes, the Corps’ priority is life and heath safety. In large run-off years such as 2018 and 2019, or during an extreme hydrologic event, the flood control purpose drives the Corps’ operational decisions for the system.”

Remus says water troubles have persisted much of the year.  “In 2019, Mother Nature has made managing run-off in the Missouri River basin very challenging,” Remus says. “People throughout the basin have been, and continue to be, directly impacted, some severely impacted. The Corps is well aware of the damage that this year’s flooding has caused and we are doing all we can to reduce the impact and assist in the recovery.”

Remus says each run-off year is different and calls for different responses. “It’s important to understand that the volume, timing and location at which run-off enters the system significantly impacts the timing and amount of releases,” Remus says. “Each run-off season and flooding event is unique and care should be taken when comparing one event to another.”

The Corps will maintain releases from Gavins Point Dam at 80-thousand cubic feet per second through November before rapidly stepping them down by mid-December.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 11/12/19

Sports

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Paul Reed scored 25 points with 12 rebounds and DePaul blew past Iowa 93-78 on the road to move to 4-0 for the first time in 11 years. Jalen Coleman-Lands had 17 points for the Blue Demons, who opened the game on a 19-2 run, went up 24 in just 13:16 and never looked back.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Jarron Cumberland scored all of his 11 points in the first half, and Cincinnati showed off its new up-tempo offense under John Brannen, beating Drake 81-59 for their new coach’s first win. The Bearcats struggled offensively during an opening nine-point loss at Ohio State, but made the most of Brannen’s wide-open style against Drake.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — JT Gibson had a career-high 26 points as Omaha routed Bethune-Cookman 90-61. Gibson made 10 of 13 shots. He added six rebounds, four assists and two steals. Zach Thornhill had 19 points for Omaha (2-1). Matt Pile added 15 points, seven rebounds and four blocks. Wanjang Tut had 13 points and seven rebounds for the Mavericks.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — During a calamitous 35-32 loss to the Tennessee Titans, the Chiefs botched a field-goal attempt that could have made overtime a worst-case scenario. They had another field-goal try blocked when they managed to drive within range in the final seconds for a tying attempt. It followed a recent trend of Chiefs special teams being anything but special.

UNDATED (AP) — Kentucky has climbed to No. 1 in The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll for the first time since early in the 2016-17 season. The Wildcats rose one spot after winning a 1-vs-2 matchup with Michigan State to open the season in the Champions Classic, followed by an easy win against Eastern Kentucky. Duke was second, followed by Michigan State, Louisville and Kansas. No. 20 Washington and No. 25 Colorado were the new additions to the AP Top 25 while Purdue and VCU fell out.

Iowa early News Headlines: Tuesday, Nov. 12th 2019

News

November 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CST

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Regulators have found serious workplace safety violations at a state-run psychiatric hospital in Iowa where combative patients have assaulted employees. A recent inspection found that employees at the Independence Mental Health Institute struggle to manage violent outbursts due to inadequate emergency plans, low staffing, ineffective communication and dissatisfactory safety shields. Inspectors ordered the state to fix seven serious safety violations and proposed a $72,770 fine.

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A half-dozen or so of the Democrats running for president are languishing at the bottom of polling less than three months before the Iowa primaries. Yet they are continuing to campaign, a resolve bolstered in part by some concerns over the lineup of top contenders and the belief that the race could be upended. One of those candidates, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, says everyone goes up and down in polls and that he needs to be organizing and catching fire as the voting begins.

LE MARS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a man burned in a fire at a northwest Iowa hog confinement has died. Le Mars Fire-Rescue says 38-year-old Jorge Orozco died Saturday at St. Elizabeth Burn Center in Lincoln, Nebraska. He’d been flown there after being taken in a private vehicle on Sept. 30 to Floyd Valley Healthcare in Le Mars. The hog confinement sits about 5 miles northwest of Le Mars. Orozco lived in Sioux City.

Shooting incident in Griswold Monday night

News

November 11th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Griswold Rescue and law enforcement were called to the scene of a shooting Monday night. The incident involving a female in an SUV took place in the parking lot of the Casey’s Store in Griswold. It was reported at around 9:44-p.m.

The weapon was said to be a .38-caliber Ruger handgun. The woman, a 39-year old whose name was not immediately released, suffered a self-inflicted, non-life threatening, gunshot wound to the hand.

The vehicle was impounded as evidence late Monday night. Authorities were interviewing witnesses late Monday night.

Cincinnati gets 1st win under John Brannen, 81-59 over Drake

Sports

November 11th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CINCINNATI (AP) — John Brannen’s first win at Cincinnati was no big deal. The Bearcats had a low-key celebration in the locker room after their 81-59 victory over Drake on Monday night that displayed their new up-tempo offense under their first-year head coach. “We clapped it up, that’s about it,” center Chris Vogt said. “Nothing too crazy.” It’s how Brannen wanted it after his first win in the Bearcats’ arena.

Against Drake, they made the most of a wide-open style installed by Brannen, who came from Northern Kentucky. Brannen replaced Mick Cronin , a defense-oriented coach who went to UCLA after a first-round loss in the NCAA Tournament.

Drake (1-1) relies on 3s but couldn’t find many open ones. The Bulldogs matched their school record with 17 3s during an 86-55 win over Kennesaw State, but went only 4 of 19 against Cincinnati. Liam Robbins led the Bulldogs with 12 points and seven rebounds. Drake has been one of the nation’s most prolific 3-point shooting teams the last few seasons, which was the focus of Cincinnati’s man-to-man defense. D.J. Wilkins hit an open 3 from the corner to start the game, but Cincinnati clamped down and the Bulldogs missed eight of their next nine shots from beyond the arc while falling behind by 20 points.
UP NEXT
Drake hosts Kansas City on Wednesday.