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Wheelers roll past Tri-Center to improve to 5-2

Podcasts, Sports

December 14th, 2018 by admin

The Audubon Wheelers boys basketball team notched a road win on Friday night with a 83-66 decision over Tri-Center. Audubon raced out to an early 13 points lead at the end of the first quarter and led by 12 at the half 44-32. Tri-Center didn’t go away quietly and made the Wheelers work for the win down the stretch. The Trojans pulled within 5 a couple of times in the fourth quarter but Audubon always seemed to have a response. The Wheelers poured in six 3’s in the final period to stave off the Trojans and pull away at the end.

Audubon had two players hit the 25-point plateau on the night, Tate Killeen had 28 and Lane Lawson finished with 25 to give Audubon their fifth win on the season. The Wheelers will host Underwood next Tuesday night.

Tri-Center had two players reach double figures in scoring during the loss. Brady Huebner led the Trojans with 19 and Jackson Raone finished with 14. The Trojans will travel to face IKM-Manning next Tuesday.

Listen to a postgame interview with the Wheelers’ Lane Lawson below.

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Audubon girls push past Tri-Center

Sports

December 14th, 2018 by admin

The Audubon Wheelers girls basketball team picked up a Western Iowa Conference road win on Friday night over Tri-Center 54-45. The Wheelers led most of the game but had to respond from a late rally from the Trojans to secure the win. Audubon led by just a point at the end of the first quarter and at halftime. They were then able to push the lead to as large as 12 in the third quarter and took a 39-32 advantage into the final quarter. Tri-Center then rallied to begin the fourth by going on a 10-2 run to take a one point lead at 42-41. The Wheelers responded with a late 7 point run to grab the victory.

Audubon was led by 20 points from freshman Aleah Hermansen, while Leah Subbert and Jaci Christensen each poured in 10 for the Wheelers. Audubon improves to 3-5 on the season and will next host Underwood next Tuesday.

Tri-Center got 16 points from Lilly Dahir and 7 from Madison Ausdemore in the loss. The Trojans fall to 3-3 and will prepare for a trip to IKM-Manning next Tuesday.

Listen to a postgame interview with Audubon’s Grayce Albertsen below.

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Man serving 25-year sentence out of Pott. County dies in prison

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(CORALVILLE) – The Iowa Department of Corrections reports 52-year old Paul Scott Kissel was pronounced dead due to unknown causes early this (Friday) morning. Kissel died at the Iowa Medical and Classification Center. Authorities say that while an autopsy has been ordered, his death is not considered suspicious at this time.

Kissel had been serving a 25-year sentence for the crime of Attempted Murder from Pottawattamie County. His incarceration began on September 25, 2009.

Work release escape of Nicholas Campbell-Scott

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(CEDAR RAPIDS) – The Iowa Department of Corrections report 21-year old Nicholas Robert Campbell-Scott, who was convicted of Robbery 2nd Degree and other charges in Linn and Black Hawk Counties, failed to report back to the Larry A. Nelson Residential Facility as required Thursday night.

Nicholas Campbell-Scott

Campbell-Scott is a black male, 5-feet 7-inches tall. He weighs 184 pounds. Campbell-Scott was admitted to the work release facility on October 11, 2018. Persons with information on his whereabouts should contact local police.

Des Moines man sentenced to 40 years for child pornography case from Wayne County

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A central Iowa man will spend 40 years in prison for making child pornography. Thirty-three-year-old Raymond Wayne Eugene Hall pleaded guilty in July to two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. He admitted to making child pornography with a hidden camera where he engaged in sex acts with a child. He also made videos with his cellphone and stored them on his personal computer.

The judge gave Hall an enhanced sentence since he had been convicted in 2006 in Polk County for collecting child pornography and was required to register as a sex offender. Court information shows the latestest charges stemmed from an investigation that began with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office.

Iowa man charged in connection with accidental gunshot death

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities have charged a Johnston man in connection with the accidental gunshot death of another man. The Des Moines Register reports that Urbandale police arrested 19-year-old Kyle Edward McGhghy Thursday on charges of carrying weapons, possession of marijuana and providing a weapon to an individual under the age of 21.

Authorities say 20-year-old Anthony Taylor, of Urbandale, died of an accidental, self-inflicted gunshot wound while at a friend’s house on Sunday.

Students at Iowa college ask to drop union organizing effort

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Students at an Iowa college are seeking to end their effort to expand a union representing student workers because of fear a federal board would reject their request and set back unions at colleges across the country. Grinnell College student Cory McCartan helped organize the Union of Grinnell Student Dining Workers. He confirms Friday that the group has asked to withdraw its petition from the National Labor Relations Board in the face of opposition from college administrators.

A regional official with the board will decide whether to grant the request. A smaller union representing only food service workers will remain. McCartan says his group believes a board appointed by President Donald Trump wouldn’t give them a fair hearing, and a rejection would hurt existing student unions at other colleges.

Farmers buoyed but cautious as China resumes buying soybeans

Ag/Outdoor

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The resumption of soybean sales to China this week is encouraging to American farmers who have seen the value of their crop plummet amid a trade war with the world’s second-largest economy, but producers see it only as a small step and say they need more federal aid.

Private exporters reported sales of 1.13 million metric tons of soybeans to China on Thursday and another 300,000 metric tons on Friday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said. The Thursday report was the ninth-largest daily sale since 1977, according to the agency’s Foreign Agriculture Service, and it comes less than two weeks after the Trump administration reached a three-month truce in its trade war with China during which the two sides will try to work out their differences.

Davie Stephens, a Kentucky farmer who serves as president of the American Soybean Association, said the resumption of sales is “positive news” but that “it is vital that this 90-day process result in lifting the current 25 percent tariff that China continues to impose on U.S. soybean imports.”

China had suspended U.S. soybean purchases earlier this year but under the truce agreed to buy more U.S. farm products. The country typically buys between 30 million and 35 million metric tons of U.S. beans in a normal year. News of the U.S. sale might prompt some farmers to sell some of the soybeans they have stored on their farms, in part because South American crops will be hitting the world market within a couple of months, said Huron, South Dakota, farmer Brandon Wipf, who serves on the American Soybean Association board.

Soybean farmers are getting the largest share of a federal program created to compensate producers up to $12 billion for trade-related losses, though this year’s payment of 82 cents a bushel doesn’t match a market price drop of about $2 per bushel since May. The Trump administration has said another 82 cents might be approved next year if a trade deal isn’t reached. Both the American Soybean Association and the National Farmers Union this week pushed for a second payment while the administration works on a long-term trade solution.

North Dakota U.S. Sen. John Hoeven, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Appropriations Committee, said Friday that he stressed the importance of the second payment to Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney. Not getting a second payment could be a “deal-breaker” for some farmers in terms of their support for the Trump administration, according to Wipf.

“They would see that as a broken promise by the administration,” he said. “We’re of course encouraging the administration not to make the miscalculation that this little bit of detente we have with China has suddenly fixed all the problems we have.”

Omaha woman arrested for assault on a peace officer in Mills County

News

December 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office report a Nebraska woman was arrested Thursday night on two counts of Assault on a Peace Officer. 23-year old Sharney Alexis Avril, of Omaha, was arrested at around 7:45-p.m. at the Mills County Sheriff’s Office. Her bond was set at $2,000.

No other details were provided.

Western Iowa Conference Wrestling Championships begin tonight with new format

Sports

December 14th, 2018 by admin

The Western Iowa Conference Wrestling Championships will be contested tonight and Saturday in Avoca. The format for this year has changed a bit. Friday will be a dual tournament with teams seeded and bracketed. Each school will get three duals with action starting at 5:00pm.

Saturday will be a traditional tournament with matches starting at 10:00am. Two champions will be crowned team wise for the weekend. The Dual Team Champion on Friday and a traditional Team Champion on Saturday.

Individual champions on Saturday at each weight class will be considered All-WIC wrestlers.