712 Digital Group - top

Illinois St. pulls away early in 2nd half, beats Drake 69-55

Sports

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Phil Fayne scored 16 of his 22 points in the second half, Zach Copeland finished with 19 and Illinois State beat Drake 69-55 on Wednesday night. Milik Yarbrough added 17 points, nine rebounds and five assists for Illinois State (13-9, 6-3 Missouri Valley Conference), which has won four of its last five games. Keyshawn Evans chipped in with 11 points. Copeland, Yarbrough and Evans combined to make all nine of the Redbirds’ 3-pointers. Fayne posted his sixth game of the season with 20-plus points.

Nick McGlynn had 15 points and seven rebounds to lead Drake (16-6, 5-4). Tremell Murphy added 11 points, and Brady Ellingson scored nine points on three 3-pointers. Fayne scored eight points during a 13-4 surge to open the second half that stretched the Redbirds’ lead to 45-31 with 15 minutes remaining. Fayne’s dunk with 5:47 left made it 64-43.

Traffic stop in Red Oak results in an arrest Thu. morning

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak conducted a traffic stop a little before 2-a.m. today in the 1800 block of Highway 48. As a result, 39-year old Meri Ellen Kling, of Red Oak, was arrested for Driving While Barred. She was transported to the Montgomery County Law Enforcement Center and held on a $2,000 bond.

Ringgold County man arrested in Adams County on drug charges

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A man from Ringgold County was arrested Wednesday afternoon on drug charges in Adams County, following a traffic stop at 250th and Orange. When an Adams County Deputy approached the vehicle, he could smell the odor of marijuana. The driver, 32-year old Tyler Dean Gage, of Kellerton, was arrested at around 2-p.m., for: Felony Possession of Meth – 18 grams; Felony Possession of Marijuana/3rd offense; Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, and OWI/2nd offense. His bond was set at $32,000. Inside the vehicles’ emergency brake handle compartment, authorities found 18 grams of methamphetamine, 11 grams of marijuana, and a glass smoking device. Authorities say Gage was believed to be impaired, but he refused to give a urine sample.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Area: 1/31/2019

Weather

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: **Wind Chill Advisory until 10-a.m.** Cloudy w/a 20% chance of light snow or flurries. High 15. SE @ 10-15 mph.

Tonight: Partly cloudy to cloudy. Low 10. SE @ 5-10.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 34. SE @ 10-20.

Saturday: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 43.

Sunday: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 47.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was -3. Our Low was -19. We received a trace of snow early this morning in Atlantic (through 5:25-a.m.). Last year on this date our High was 39 and the Low was 10. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 59 in 2012. The Record Low was -28 in 1996.

Bill ending tenure at Iowa, Iowa State and UNI clears subcommittee

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A bill that would end tenure for professors at the three state universities has cleared the first procedural hurdle in the Iowa Senate and key lawmakers say they want to “keep the conversation alive.” Senator Brad Zaun, a Republican from Urbandale, says too many courses are being taught by teaching assistants rather than professors.

“My job is simple: look out for the kids, the students,” Zaun says. About 10 percent of classes at the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa are being led by teaching assistants. Keith Saunders, a lobbyist for the University of Iowa, says if the bill becomes law, Iowa would be the only state that does not offer tenure to professors at its public universities.

“This bill would really relegate Iowa to sort of the backwaters of higher education,” Saunders says. “…Faculty would avoid Iowa. I think it’s everyone’s goal to have the best and the brightest teaching our next generation, but they would not come here if tenure’s not available to them.” Zaun questions some of the sabbaticals professors have been granted for research outside the classroom and Zaun says, to him, tenure “pretty much guarantees” a professor can’t be fired.

“I recognize there is brilliant professors at our three public universities. I’m not picking on them,” Zaun said. “It’s just frustrating to me.” Rachel Boon, the chief academic officer for the Iowa Board of Regents, says 25 tenured professors have been terminated or agreed to resign in the past decade. “I want to make clear tenure is not a blanket guarantee of job security or immunity from termination,” Boon says. The bill cleared a three-member senate subcommittee yesterday (Wednesday) with the votes of Zaun and fellow Republican Jerry Behn, a state senator from Boone.

“I think the underlying goal of all of this is to do what’s best for the students,” Behn said. “After all, that’s why all the professors are there, so I think it’s important to keep the conversation alive.” A similar bill has stalled in the senate in year’s past.  Tenure has existed for more than a century. The chief academic officer for the Iowa Board of Regents says tenure does protect professors who “make some people uncomfortable.”

“We can’t fire them because they do that really important work in an area that maybe makes the employer or some other external entity unhappy,” Boon says. Senator Herman Quirmbach, a Democrat, is a tenured Iowa State University professor and he says this bill might lead to the suppression of research, like the “oleo” controversy of 1943. Iowa State economists suggested margarine compared favorably with butter and American should eat more of it because there was a shortage of butter for World War II soldiers. The dairy industry objected, the pro-margarine wording was retracted and 16 economics professors left Iowa State.

“That’s what happens when you challenge and undermine academic freedom,” Quirmbach says. Two of the professors who left Iowa State over the oleo controversy later won the Nobel Prize for Economics.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 1/31/2019

Sports

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

UNDATED (AP) — The polar vortex couldn’t stop college basketball in the Midwest. Despite the deep freeze, a dozen men’s games and four women’s games in major conferences went on as scheduled as temperatures approached or broke records.

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Lindell Wigginton scored a season-high 28 points off the bench and 20th-ranked Iowa State cruised past West Virginia 93-68, its fourth win in five games. Marial Shayok scored 18 points for the surging Cyclones (16-5, 5-3 Big 12), who shot 26 of 40 inside the 3-point line and 29 of 32 from the free throw line.

CHICAGO (AP) — Cameron Krutwig hit his first 3-pointer of the season for a five-point lead with 48 seconds left and Loyola-Chicago held off Northern Iowa 61-60 for its seventh straight home win. Krutwig made a hook shot in the lane for a 57-55 lead and he blocked a shot under the basket at the other end.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Shamorie Ponds scored 26 points and St. John’s had its best shooting game of the season while forcing Creighton into its worst shooting game, rolling to an 83-67 win. Mustapha Heron added 17 points and LJ Figueroa 15 for the Red Storm (16-5, 4-5 Big East Conference), who snapped a two-game skid.

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — Jared Harper scored 16 points while Chuma Okeke and Bryce Brown each had 14 to help Auburn snap a three-game losing streak with a 92-58 rout of Missouri. Auburn used a dominant second half to end the slide that sent the team tumbling out of the Top 25 following a six-week run in the Top 10.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Samajae Haynes-Jones scored 17 points and hit a dramatic layup with a second remaining to lift Wichita State to an 85-83 victory over SMU. SMU’s Jimmy Whitt Jr. hit a step-back 10-footer to tie the game at 83 with 19 seconds to go.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs are planning more than $10 million in upgrades to Arrowhead Stadium. The Chiefs announced that the renovations will include a “modernization” of the Arrowvision scoreboard, along with waterproofing and new seats _ with cup holders _ in the stadium’s upper deck. The work could begin next week. The Kansas City Star reports the Chiefs are paying for the work but can ask in the future to be reimbursed by the Jackson County Sports Complex Authority.

Iowa/Midwest early News Headlines: Thursday, Jan. 31st 2019

News

January 31st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

JAMAICA, Iowa (AP) — The central Iowa town of Jamaica is set to appoint a new mayor after its previous mayor was arrested earlier this month on charges related to marijuana found growing in her basement. Acting mayor Tim McDermott tells the Des Moines Register that city leaders are expected to appoint a new mayor at a meeting Monday. Former mayor LaDonna Kennedy and her husband, Randy Kennedy, were arrested Jan. 16 after sheriff’s deputies found marijuana plants in the home.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The clearest path for Democrats to reclaim the White House runs through the upper Midwest, and the party could soon have multiple presidential contenders who have deep roots in the region. The two biggest Midwestern Democratic names in the mix for 2020 are Sens. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota. They’ve succeeded in states where it’s critical to appeal to rural and working-class voters _ groups Democrats are eager to court as they work to defeat President Donald Trump.

CHICAGO (AP) — The painfully cold weather system that put much of the Midwest into a historic deep freeze is expected to ease Thursday, though temperatures could still tumble to record lows in some places before the region begins to thaw out. Disruptions caused by the cold will persist, too, including power outages and canceled flights and trains. Crews in Detroit will need days to repair water mains that burst Wednesday, and other pipes can still burst in persistent subzero temperatures.

URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) — An Urbandale police sergeant is suing the city, saying he suffered harassment, discrimination and retaliation for the post-traumatic stress disorder he suffered in the wake of the 2016 ambush killings of a colleague and a Des Moines officer. The Des Moines Register reports that Sgt. Mark Jorgensen was one of the first responders on the scene when Urbandale Officer Justin Martin was shot as he sat in his patrol car.

Cass County Supervisors to appoint County Attorney, Friday

News

January 30th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Board of Supervisors, Friday, will announce their appointment of a person to fill a vacancy position for the Cass County Attorney’s Office. Earlier this week, the Board interviewed four candidates who had submitted their applications by the deadline: Robert Engler (With the Cambridge Law Firm, in Atlantic); Anne Rohling, a lawyer from Council Bluffs who owns her own law firm; Marti Sleister, an experienced trial attorney in criminal and juvenile law, with the Sleister Law firm in Fremont, NE; and Vanessa Strazdas, a lawyer from Omaha.

On Wednesday (Jan. 30th), the Supervisors discussed the four applicants.  During their meeting, it was noted that all four were well qualified.  One applicant is a current county resident and the other three noted they would be able to establish residence by date of appointment, therefore the board determined that all were eligible for appointment.  After due consideration, the board reached a decision on whom they would choose to appoint. That individual was reached by phone and offered the position. They immediately accepted the offer.

The person appointed during the Board’s meeting at 9-a.m., Friday, will immediately succeed Michael Hooper, who Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds on Jan/ 11th appointed as a judge in the Fourth Judicial District. Following the appointment of the new County Attorney, the Board will act on a Resolution to approve the number of, and appointment of Administrative Assistants to the Cass County Attorney.

They will also act to fill the vacancy term of a Cass Township Trustee (an appointed position).

CATHERINE ACKERMAN, 80, of Atlantic (Svcs. 02/04/2019)

Obituaries

January 30th, 2019 by Jim Field

CATHERINE ACKERMAN, 80, of Atlantic died Wednesday. January 30th at Methodist Hospital in Omaha.  Mass of Christian Burial for CATHERINE ACKERMAN will be held on Monday, February 4th at 2:00pm at Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Atlantic. Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Open visitation will be held on Sunday, February 3rd from 1:00pm-3:00pm at Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Burial will be in the Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Cemetery in Atlantic

Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com

CATHERINE ACKERMAN is survived by:

Children: Jolene (Todd) Leighton of Lewis. Christy (Bill) Pederson of Atlantic. Lori (Norman “Buke”) Petersen of Marne. Robin (Connie) Davis of Las Vegas, NV. Patrick Ackerman of Griswold. Ann Ackerman of Griswold.

9 Grandchildren

2 Step-Grandchildren

6 Great-Grandchildren

4 Step-Great-Grandchildren

University of Iowa student found dead amid cold

News

January 30th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The body of a University of Iowa student has been found on the campus in Iowa City, and officials say they believe his death was weather-related.

Television station KCRG reports that the body of 18-year-old Gerald Belz was found behind an academic hall just before 3 a.m. Wednesday by campus police. He was taken to a hospital, where he died. While officials believe his death was related to dangerously low temperatures at the time he was found, officials have not given a specific cause of death.

Belz’s family told KCRG that doctors did not find alcohol in his system.

The National Weather Service says the wind chill around 3 a.m. was negative 51 degrees (negative 46 Celsius).

The death is the eighth fatality linked to the extremely cold weather in the Midwest.