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State Volleyball Scoreboard 11/06/2018

Sports

November 6th, 2018 by admin

Tuesday, November 6

Class 5A First Round

(3-0) #1 Cedar Falls 25-27-25. #8 Waukee 25-14-9 Box Score
(3-1) #5 Linn-Mar 25-21-25-25 #4 Cedar Rapids Jefferson 19-25-21-20 Box Score
(3-1)  #2 Ankeny Centennial 25-25-23-25, vs. #7 Dowling Catholic 10-19-25-12 Box Score
(3-0) #3 West Des Moines Valley 25-25-25 vs. #6 Ankeny 12-17-18 Box Score

Thursday, November 8
Class 5A Semifinals
10:00 a.m. – Court 1 – Cedar Falls (45-0) vs. Linn-Mar (32-9)
10:00 a.m. – Court 2 – Ankeny Centennial (39-3) vs. West Des Moines Valley (41-3)

Class 4A First Round

(3-1) #1 Sergeant Bluff-Luton 25-20-25-25 #8 West Delaware 15-25-18-21 Box Score
(3-2) #4 Dubuque Wahlert 25-27-25-16-17, #5 Independence 17-29-17-25-15 Box Score
(3-0) #2 Cedar Rapids Xavier 25-28-25,  #7 Pella 18-26-13 Box Score
(3-0) #3 Dallas Center-Grimes 25-25-25, #6 Bondurant-Farrar 20-8-21 Box Score

Thursday, November 8
Class 4A Semifinals

Noon – Court 1 – Sergeant Bluff-Luton (35-6) vs. Dubuque Wahlert (24-12)
Noon – Court 2 – Cedar Rapids Xavier (28-8) vs. Dallas Center-Grimes (36-4)

2018 General Election Results – Final (unofficial): Shelby County

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

*Winner(s) (I- Incumbent, Rep=Republican, D= Democrat, NBP= Nominated By Petition)

Board of Supervisors – District 1 (elect 1)

Darin Haake (Rep.)     2,846 (57.74%)*

Roger Schmitz (Dem.) 2,077

Clay Township Clerk (elect 1)

Steve Jacobs    71 (63.96%)

Joel Schlueter    40 (36.04%)

2018 General Election Results – Final (Unofficial): Cass County

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

* Winner (I- Incumbent, Rep=Republican, D= Democrat, NBP= Nominated By Petition)

County Board of Supervisors – District 2 (elect 1)

Mark T. O’Brien (Rep)    612 (62%) *

Pat McCurdy (NBP)    375 (38%)

County Board of Supervisors – District 3 (elect 1)

John Hartkopf (Rep)*     695 (52%)

Dana Halder (NBP)     642 (48%)

County Recorder

Mary Ward (Rep) (I)   4,852

County Attorney

Michael Donn Hooper (Rep) 4,638

County Treasurer

Tracey J. Marshall (Rep.)     4,996

Hospital Board of Trustees – Northwest District (elect 1)

Roger Herring    4,538

Hospital Board of Trustees – Northeast District (elect 1)

Julie Pollock     4,275

Soil & Water Conservation District Commissioner (elect 2)

Greg Zellmer 4,405

John J. Hansen 2,882

Ag Extension Council (elect 5)

Chad Becker  3,179*

David York 2,401*

Kristi Plagman 3,133*

Todd Weppler 3,181*

Brad J. Pellett 3,145*

Jeb Peck 2,313

Edna Township Trustee (2)

Patrick Erickson 52

Kevin Stender 44

Edna Township Clerk (1)

Travis Erickson 52

Union Township Trustee (2) Union Township Clerk (1)

Daryl Schrier   84                    Cheryl Christensen  93

Richard Hoffman  62

2018 General Election Results – Final (Unofficial): Adair County

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Winner (I- Incumbent, Rep=Republican, D= Democrat, NBP= Nominated By Petition)

Contested Races:

County Board of Supervisors – District 2

Steven Shelley (Dem)     190

County Board of Supervisors – District 4

Jodie Jean Hoadley (Dem)     354 (56.01%) *

Doug Davidson (NBP)     273 (43.20%)

2018 General Election Results – Final (Unofficial): Audubon County

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Winner (Rep=Republican, D= Democrat, NBP= Nominated By Petition)

County Supervisors (elect 1)

Gary Van Aernam (Rep.) (Incumbent)     1,577*

Dwight Jessen (Dem.)     1,033

County Ag Extension Council (elect 5)

Tauna Bohlmann     1,065

Jason Owen    1,196

Aaron Bruhn    1,386

Jill Christensen    1,466

2018 General Election Results – Final (Unofficial): Adams County

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Winner (Rep=Republican, D= Democrat, NBP= Nominated By Petition)

County Supervisors – District 1 (elect 1)

Douglas Birt (Rep.)     151

Marty Olive (Dem).     150

County Extension Council (Elect 5)

Marlene Hardisty     1,203

Don Gee     962

Cliff Mann     1,120

Rex Townsend     1,115

County Extension Council (to fill a vacancy) (elect 1)

Susan Bagby    1,311

Soil and Water Commissioner (elect 2)

Rodney Flaherty 1,317

Michael Olive     1,154

Iowa State rolls past Alabama State 79-53

Sports

November 6th, 2018 by admin

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Nebraska transfer Michael Jacobson led four players in double digits with 17 points, fellow transfer Marial Shayok had 14 and Iowa State rolled past Alabama State 79-53 on Tuesday night.

Lindell Wigginton chipped in with 13 for the Cyclones (1-0), who’ll get their first major test on Friday when Missouri, their old Big 12 rivals, visit Hilton Coliseum.

Iowa State sophomore forward Cam Lard was on the bench but not in uniform after spending much of the summer at a wellness center following some legal issues. Lard averaged 12.6 points and 8.1 rebounds a game in 2017-18.

As for the game itself, Shayok scored eight points in the opening 2:10 to help the Cyclones take an early double-digit lead it never came close to relinquishing.

Iowa State struggled at times from there as it worked freshmen Talen Horton-Tucker, Tyrese Haliburton, George Conditt IV and Zion Griffin into the rotation for the first time. But a lineup featuring Haliburton, Lewis and Griffin sparked a late 19-5 run, with Haliburton canning a 3 to make it 65-41 with just over six minutes left.

Haliburton scored 12 points in 29 minutes.

Reginald Gee had 15 points to lead Alabama State (0-1).

THE BIG PICTURE

Iowa State: Horton-Tucker started, but he got off to a very sluggish start in his debut. He missed six of his first seven shots — including four 3s — and finished 3-of-12 shooting for six points. Shayok, on the other hand, looked like the perimeter threat the Cyclones had been searching for.

Alabama State: The Cyclones will likely prove to be the toughest team the Hornets, coming off back-to-back 8-23 seasons, will play all year. At least they got it out of the way as soon as possible.

UP NEXT
Iowa State hosts the Tigers on Nov. 9.
Alabama State plays at South Dakota State on Thursday.

Mills County Sheriff’s report (11/6/18)

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office, Tuesday, released a report on two arrests. On Monday, 24-year old Kadie Lynn Clark, of Glenwood, was arrested at the Mills County Sheriff’s Office, on a warrant for Violation of Probation. Her bond was set at $5,000. And, at around 2-a.m. Tuesday, 39-year old Jerry Joseph Richardson, of Hastings, was arrested for Driving Under Suspension. His bond was set at $300.

Iowa man convicted in death of infant found in swing

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MOUNT PLEASANT, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa man was convicted Tuesday of first-degree murder in the death of his infant son who was found in a maggot-infested baby swing last year. Jurors took less than an hour to convict Zachary Paul Koehn, 29, of Alta Vista, of first-degree murder and child endangerment causing death, the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports . The murder conviction carries a mandatory prison sentence of life without parole. Koehn had blamed his son’s mother for the death of 4-month-old Sterling Koehn. A trial is pending for the 21-year-old mother, Cheyanne Harris.

Koehn and Harris were arrested after medics were called to an Alta Vista apartment on Aug. 30, 2017, and found the infant dead in a swing in a dark, sweltering back bedroom. An autopsy showed he’d died of malnutrition, dehydration and an E. coli infection caused by being left in a maggot-infested diaper for up to two weeks. Koehn’s defense team had argued that he had entrusted care of the baby to Harris, saying he had been working 70 to 80 hours a week as a trucker to provide for his family. His attorneys said Koehn simply failed to notice signs that Harris may have been suffering from depression, which kept her from caring for the baby. But prosecutors argued that Koehn was a meth user who also provided Harris with drugs.

Assistant Attorney General Denise Timmins told jurors that Koehn was home often enough to know that the baby wasn’t being cared for and did nothing to help him. “He let Sterling rot in that room. He left him there to die,” Timmins said. Koehn’s trial was moved from Chickasaw County to Henry County to counter pretrial publicity in the case.

Apologizing for cover-up, diocese vows to ID accused priests

News

November 6th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Roman Catholic diocese issued an apology Tuesday for covering up an Iowa priest’s sexual abuse of boys for decades and promised to identify all priests who have faced credible allegations. The actions by the Diocese of Sioux City come in response to an investigation by The Associated Press, which last week broke the church’s 32-year silence on serial abuse by the Rev. Jerome Coyle.
In a lengthy statement Tuesday, the diocese said more disclosures of misconduct may be forthcoming. It urged all victims to come forward and vowed to use their reports and other files to create and publish a list of credibly accused priests — a step the diocese had long resisted.

Coyle admitted to then-Bishop Lawrence Soens in 1986 to having sexually abused 50 boys over a 20-year period. The diocese said that it should have notified parishes and asked victims to come forward back then, and apologized that its former leaders failed to do so. Instead, the diocese sent Coyle to a treatment center for accused priests in New Mexico, where he lived and worked as a civilian for decades. The diocese said that its current leadership should have notified the public this summer when Coyle was placed at a retirement home near a Catholic school, which he moved out of last week following AP’s disclosure of his history. But the statement said that its bishop, R. Walker Nickless, “inherited many issues from the past,” including the challenging of finding housing for accused priests who were never charged and aren’t listed as sex offenders.

“What do we do with these men? We know that you do not want them in your community. Many care facilities will not, or cannot, take them. Their families sometimes will take them in, but not always,” said the statement, issued through diocese spokeswoman Susan O’Brien. The diocese indicated that other accused priests were sent for treatment, rather than investigated by police, and “we know now that is not the way to handle any allegation of sexual misconduct.”

The statement noted that the former bishop, Soens, is now 92 and lives in a Catholic retirement home in Sioux City. After retiring in 1998, he was accused of abusing boys when he was a priest and principal in the 1960s in Iowa City, and the Diocese of Davenport paid settlements to his accusers. The statement said that Soens has not faced any misconduct allegations stemming from his tenure in Sioux City.
As for Coyle, the diocese continues to pay his pension because he is entitled to those benefits by law, the statement said.