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Iowa returns from bye week to prepare for Gophers

Sports

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Iowa is expected to be without linebacker Nick Niemann when the Hawkeyes return from their bye week with a visit to Minnesota. Niemann suffered a leg injury late in a loss to Wisconsin and defensive coordinator Phil Parker says sophomore Barrington Wade and junior Kristian Welch are expected to fill in.

Parker has been pleased with the play of the linebackers after losing all three starters from a year ago.

Offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz says the tweaked their practice schedule heading into the Minnesota game. The Iowa offense has struggled the past few years coming off a bye week.

Ferentz says the improvement on offense the past few weeks can be traced to better production on first down.

Iowa State running back David Montgomery injured in loss at TCU

Sports

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Learfield Sports) — Iowa State coach Matt Campbell is not sure about running back David Montgomery’s status for this week’s game at Oklahoma State. Montgomery rushed for 101 yards in a 17-14 loss at TCU but left the game in the fourth quarter with an injury and did not return.

The Horned Frogs won the game with a field goal with 37 seconds remaining. Campbell remains confident in his team despite a 1-3 start.

It was another stellar effort by the Iowa State defense though Campbell says they had trouble getting the TCU offense off the field on third down. The Horned Frogs lone second half touchdown was scored by the defense on a 53 yard return of a Zeb Noland fumble.

Hundreds gather for run to honor slain Iowa college student

News, Sports

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BROOKLYN, Iowa (AP) — Several hundred runners gathered in the hometown of slain Iowa college student Mollie Tibbetts over the weekend to honor her memory with a run. The Des Moines Register reports the run on Sunday in the east-central Iowa town of Brooklyn helped raise more than $20,000 for the University of Iowa Children’s Hospital. Mollie Tibbett’s older brother, Jake Tibbetts, encouraged participants to enjoy the run the way his sister would have.

Twenty-year-old Mollie Tibbettts vanished while out for a run in Brooklyn on July 18. Her body was found in a cornfield more than a month later. A 24-year-old man has been charged with first-degree murder in Tibbetts’ stabbing death.

NAFTA break-through, reports indicate it’ll be renamed USMCA

News

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Several media organizations reported late last (Sunday) night that negotiations between the U.S. and Canada have resulted in a new-fangled NAFTA — and President Trump will rebrand the trade deal as the U-S-M-C-A. Midnight on September 30th was the deadline President Trump set for renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement. Mexico’s president agreed to renegotiated terms in late August, but talks between Canada and the U.S. stalled. The U.S. demanded a reduction in Canada’s tariffs on American dairy products. Canada insisted on keeping a system in place for resolving future trade disputes. President Trump is expected to approve the new pact with Canada’s prime minister and Mexico’s president before he leaves office December 1st. Congress would then have 60 days to review and vote on the new agreement.

Canada is IOWA’S largest export market. Mexico is number two.

Iowa State University part of the project to improve sweet corn

Ag/Outdoor

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Plant researchers at Iowa State University are working together with counterparts at the University of Florida, Wisconsin and Washington State University to improve the breeding of a summer favorite. I-S-U agronomy professor Thomas Lubberstedt has worked on improving field corn varieties and says sweet corn research has some new variables. “You’re very much focused on eating quality traits besides the general yield and resistance and stress tolerance traits — so it’s adding to the complexity of finding the best varieties,” Lubberstedt explains.

Roswell Garst developed the first hybrid field corn in Iowa back in the 1930’s and Lubberstedt says there have been years of developments and thousands of dollars spent on improving field corn. Sweet corn has not gotten as much attention in part because its production is small compared to the millions of bushels of field corn grown each year. “Field corn has a much bigger market because it has a lot of acreage, which means it’s (sweet corn) not that big of a business, which means the breeding programs involved in sweet corn breeding are usually smaller — the budget is smaller than field corn — that makes it a little more difficult to deal with more traits,” according to Lubberstedt.

He says finding the right tasting sweet corn varieties is still done in an old-fashioned way. “Currently that still has to be done by persons ultimately who do bite tests or who really taste it. That is part of this project to find methods that can quantify taste ultimately, and at least pre-qualify the most promising candidates,” Lubberstedt says.

Lubberstedt’s research is trying to use technology from field corn that more quickly produces inbred lines of corn that create the hybrid varieties. It is hoped they can incorporate the good tasting qualities needed for sweet corn into those quick breeding methods. “There are groups in the project focusing on trying to replace taste panels by biochemical methods that can be applied instead and help to predict which of those plants have likely the best tastes that correlates what has been found in test panels,” Lubberstedt says.

Those chemical methods could then be used to incorporate the taste into the faster breeding process. The researchers are sharing a four-year seven-point-three million dollar grant from the U-S Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture Specialty Crop Research Initiative.

State auditor can’t speak of Medicaid review, ‘work in progress’

News

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — State Auditor Mary Mosiman says she cannot say when a review of the state’s Medicaid program will be released to the public. In June, Mosiman announced her office would examine the data to determine if Medicaid costs have been reduced since private companies assumed management of patient care. The move to privatize the system has become a political issue in the governor’s race. Mosiman, a Republican who is also seeking re-election, says she cannot answer specifics about a work in progress, but Mosiman says the final report from her office will provide “financial clarity” about Medicaid costs. “It will be issued. I just can’t give you an actual date or I would also be behaving politically,” Mosiman says. “…Everything we do in the office is important.”

Rob Sand, the Democrat challenging Mosiman, says he agrees the examination shouldn’t be political, but Sand says the auditor’s office needs to equip voters with the facts about what’s happened since Medicaid was privatized in 2016.  “This is the office that’s supposed to be a watchdog for Iowa taxpayers and I think one thing that a watchdog should be doing is as soon as there’s a major change, you ought to be sniffing around,” Sand says. “We are in a state of upheaval with this issue.”

Sand and Mosiman made their comments this weekend during an appearance on Iowa Public Television’s “Iowa Press” program. About 680-thousand low income, disabled and elderly Iowans are enrolled in Medicaid. Former Governor Terry Branstad predicted taxpayers would have saved more than 200-million dollars by now due to switching the system to private management. However, a recent report showed per patient costs increased six-and-a-half percent this past year and are projected to jump another 11 percent this year.

Adams County Sheriff’s report (10/1/18)

News

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office reports five arrests over the past couple of weeks. Yesterday (Sunday), Adams County Deputies arrested Warren Davis, of Winterset, on an Adams County warrant for Failure to Appear. And, at around 10:40-p.m. Sunday, Adams County Deputies conducted a traffic stop near the intersection of Highway 25 and 272nd Street. Upon further investigation, Galen White, of Lenox, was placed under arrest for Operating While Intoxicated 2nd Offense.

At around 8-p.m. last Thursday, Adams County Deputies were notified of a suspicious person at Dollar General. Upon further investigation, Donald Gay, of Corning, was placed under arrest for Public Intoxication.

At around 8:40-p.m. Sept. 22nd, Adams County Deputies conducted a traffic stop, and upon further investigation, Crystal Schwartz, of Nebraska was placed under arrest for Possession of a Controlled Substance and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. On Sept. 21st, Adams County Deputies conducted a traffic stop near the intersection of 6th and Davis Avenue, in Corning. Upon further investigation, Arvid Hiley, of California, was placed under arrest for Operating While Intoxicated. Hiley was also cited for Open Container-Driver.

LINDA MEYER, 68, of Atlantic (Svcs. 10/6/18)

Obituaries

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

LINDA MEYER, 68, of Atlantic, died Sunday, Sept. 30th, at home. Funeral services for LINDA MEYER will be held 10-a.m. Saturday, Oct. 6th, at the Atlantic First Church of Christ. Roland Funeral Home, in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with her family will take place from 5-until 7-p.m. Friday, Oct. 5th, at the Atlantic 1st Church of Christ.; Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

LINDA MEYER is survived by:

Her husband – Richard Meyer.

Her children – Rachelle (Jeff) Barnes, of LaVista, NE; Renee Meyer, of Atlantic; Lindsey Meyer, of Atlantic, and Leslie Meyer, of Oskaloosa.

and 2 grandchildren.

ISABELL MARIE FELDMAN, 98, of Harlan (Mass of Christian Burial 10/4/18)

Obituaries

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

ISABELL MARIE FELDMAN, 98, of Harlan, died Saturday, Sept. 29th, at home. A Mass of Christian Burial for ISABELL FELDMAN will be held 10-a.m. Thursday, Oct. 4th, at St. Mary’s of the Assumption in Panama. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Her family will greet friends at St. Mary’s Parish Center in Panama, from 5-until 8-p.m. Wed., Oct. 3rd., with a Rosary at 7-p.m.

Burial will be in the St. Mary’s Cemetery at Panama.

ISABELL FELDMAN is survived by:

Her daughters – Rosemary (Robert) Cahill, of Denver, CO; Sharon Bryan, of Sevierville, TN; Eileen (Bob) Thoma,  and Betty (Mike) Cosentino, all of Omaha, NE;

Her sons – John (Ann) Feldman, of Harlan; Robert (Deb) Feldman, of York, NE;  and Michael (Lisa) Feldman, of Panama.

21 grandchildren; many great-grandchildren; Her sisters-in-law Eunice Blum of Panama; Sylvia Feldman of Omaha, NE; Rose Feldman of Omaha

 

CALVIN KNOP, 93, of Atlantic (Svcs. 10/06/2018)

Obituaries

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CALVIN KNOP, 93, of Atlantic died Sunday, Sept. 30th at his home in rural Atlantic. Funeral services for CALVIN KNOP will be held on Saturday, October 6th at 11:00am in the First United Presbyterian Church in Atlantic. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with family will be during a lunch after the memorial service.

Burial will be in the Atlantic Cemetery.

CALVIN KNOP is survived by:

Children: Fred (Janine) Knop of Atlantic. Kay (Chuck) Ogren of Marcus. Sandra Knop of Atlantic.

4 Grandchildren

4 Great-Grandchildren