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Girls State Golf begins today

Sports

May 28th, 2019 by admin

Atlantic Girls Golf Team

The Girls State Golf Tournaments get underway today for all classes and will finish play on Wednesday.

Class 1A is playing at American Legion Golf Course in Marshalltown. Boyer Valley and IKM-Manning will be competing as teams. Local individuals include Jenna Reynolds and Roni Hook of Griswold, and Sammi Jahde of CAM.

Class 2A is being contested at Ames Golf and Country Club. Missouri Valley will be in the team field. Katie Schweers of Kuemper Catholic also qualified as an individual.

Class 3A will compete at Otter Creek Golf Course in Ankeny. Atlantic will compete as a team after finishing as Runner-Up in Region 1 play. Carroll also qualified as Runner-Up in Region 2. Rylie Driskell of Creston will compete individually as well.

Class 4A is playing at Coldwater Golf Links in Ames.

 

Stanton man arrested following motorcycle pursuit

News

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Page County Sheriff Lyle Palmer reports his deputies Page County Sheriff’s Office tried to stop a motorcycle last Thursday, in the city limits of Shenandoah. After a short pursuit the motorcycle pulled into a residence. 18-year old Cooper Michael Stanley, of Stanton, received numerous traffic citations and was arrested for driving while license suspended or revoked. Stanley was transported to the Page County Sheriff’s Office and booked into the Page County Jail on $1,000 bond. The Page County Sheriff’s Office was assisted at the scene of the arrest by the Shenandoah Police Department

Hail up to 12″ deep reported in Omaha/Council Bluffs

News

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. —A severe thunderstorm early Tuesday dumped prolific amounts of hail across Douglas, Sarpy and Pottawattamie County. KETV in Omaha says the first reports of hail came from near 198th and Harrison. Viewers started reporting piles of hail stretching all the way to Mercy Hospital in Council Bluffs.

A driver near 144th & Industrial Road had to be rescued with a tow truck from hail more than one-foot deep in the road. Other images showed hail that damaged siding in the area, filled yards, and stripped the leaves off trees and plants. Hail also covered the streets in Adair this morning.

Hail in Adair (Photos courtesy David W. Passehl)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 5/28/2019

News, Podcasts

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

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Rhubarb Cake (5-28-2019)

Mom's Tips

May 28th, 2019 by Jim Field

  • 1/2 cup butter or margarine
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar
  • 3/4 cup white sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup buttermilk or sour milk
  • 1 1/2 cup finely chopped fresh or frozen rhubarb, thawed
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 cup coconut

Cream together butter and sugars.  Beat in eggs.  Sift together flour, soda and salt.  Add to creamed mixture alternately with buttermilk.  Fold in rhubarb.  Pour into greased 13″ x 9″ x 2″ pan.  Mix sugar, cinnamon and coconut together, sprinkle over batter.  Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.

(Shirley Rieckenberg)

Storm reports (5/29)

Weather

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Severe storms battered western and southwest Iowa this morning with winds in excess of 60-mph and large hail. Here are some recent reports from the National Weather Service:

10:38-a.m. 3 miles S/SE of Thayer in Union County: 1.7″ of rain.

8:01-a.m. 1″ diameter hail 2 miles SW of Tingley in Ringgold County

7:00-a.m. Bedford: 2.74″ of rain

7:30-a.m. 4 miles S/SW of Brayton: 1.63″ of rain.

6:48-a.m. estimated 60-mph wind gust 3 miles E/SE of Dexter in Madison County

6:40-a.m. 6-to 8-inch tree branches down in Menlo, winds estimated at 70-mph

6:37-a.m. 10-to 12-inch diameter tree limbs blocking roads in Stuart

6:33-a.m. 5 miles W/NW of Gravity in Taylor County: large tree down at the intersection of Franklin Ave, & 175th Street, NW of Bedford.

6:29-a.m.  1-inch diameter hail 5 miles N. of New Market, in Taylor County.

6:23-a.m. 62-mph wind gust recorded on a home weather station 5 miles NW of Creston

6:22-a.m.  10-to 12-inch diameter tree branches down in Casey

6:20-a.m. Tree limbs down in Clarinda, some landed on power lines

6:19-a.m.  61-mph wind gust recorded on a home weather station 3-miles w. of Anita

 

 

I-80 westbound shut down near Adair due to multiple accidents

News

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Update 8:25-a.m.) A portion of I-80 West between Adair and Casey has been shut down Tuesday morning because of several crashes. According to Iowa State Patrol, I-80 West between the 77 and 83 mile marker is shut down. There are currently four crashes. A couple of them are personal injuries. At least four semis are on their sides. A detour is in-place at Highway 25.

I-29 southbound in Council Bluffs is closed between N. 15th and N. 25th Streets (Exits 55-56) due to water over the road. A detour is in-place.

Highway 169 between Highways 6 and 44 (Adel) is closed due to flooding. A detour is in-place.

Experienced driver talks about seatbelts on buses

News

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The state is proposing a change in rules to require that all new school buses must have seatbelts. The Des Moines School System has been purchasing new buses with the lap/shoulder belts for a couple of years now. The district’s transportation safety specialist, Robin Witt, says reaction is mixed when the issue is brought up to bus drivers. “They’re good and bad, I will tell you that. And it’s basically all what your beliefs have been,” Witt says. “I’ve been in busing since 2005 — and of course I originally thought when I heard seatbelts was ‘oh my goodness, how are we going to get them out in case of a fire’?”

She learned that fear was not an issue. “Kids can still get out of the seatbelts, and we do have seatbelt cutters just in case there is a problem with one or two. And I believe with the safety issue of kids sitting down, seatbelts are great, because they are belted into their seats,” Witt says. She says the designed of the seats on buses makes it important that the kids are sitting to avoid injuries. “Because they’re not sitting they can end up wrenching their back on the seat if they are standing or walking around. With the seatbelts, yeah, they do stay in the seat. It is so much better that way,” Witt says.

Witt drives a bus and says there are different adjustment periods for kids to adapt to the belts based on their age and experience. “The little kids that have never been on a bus before, yes, it’s like second nature. However, even our elementary kids who have been riding buses for a couple of years and all of a sudden you bring a seatbelt bus to them, they are like ‘no, no.’ They don’t just get in the seat and buckle up, you have to tell them,” according to Witt.

Witt says the bus she drives does not have seatbelts on it and her kids complained when she was gone and the fill-in driver used a bus with seatbelts on it. Buses can have 60 or more kids on them, and Witt says drivers are concerned about getting all the kids to wear seatbelts and whether the driver will get in trouble if the kids don’t . But she believes the kids can adapt. “If you had to go seat to seat to make sure somebody is belted — we would never be able to get them home on time or get them to school on time,” Witt says. “It’s going to be a learning curve. And the kids are going to have to learn when they get in to put their seatbelts on, and then we can go.”

Witt says the drivers do like the idea of having fewer discipline problems during bus trips because the students are buckled in. The State Board of Education has given approval to a plan that would require schools to belts in the new buses they order.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 5/28/2019

Podcasts, Sports

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

Flood Warning until Noon today for Pottawattamie County

Weather

May 28th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Pottawattamie IA-Sarpy NE-Douglas NE-Saunders NE-Cass NE-
707 AM CDT Tue May 28 2019

The National Weather Service in Omaha has issued a Flood Warning for Urban Areas and Small Streams in Pottawattamie County in southwestern Iowa…
Northern Sarpy County in east central Nebraska…
Douglas County in east central Nebraska…
Saunders County in east central Nebraska…
Northwestern Cass County in southeastern Nebraska…

* Until noon CDT.

* At 703 AM CDT, Doppler radar rain estimates and automated rain gauges indicated heavy rain had caused flooding from Saunders County west of the Omaha Metro, through Omaha, and across much of Pottawattamie County Iowa. The heaviest rain has ended but flooding continues along roadways, with rises in area creeks on-going. Up to two inches of rain have already fallen.

This includes the following highways…
Interstate 29 between mile markers 43 and 63.
Interstate 80 in Iowa between mile markers 1 and 23, and near mile marker 48.
Interstate 80 in Nebraska near mile marker 426, and between mile markers 443 and 454.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

Turn around, don`t drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood
deaths occur in vehicles.