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Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, Oct. 1st 2018

News

October 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Police are investigating a fatal shooting in Des Moines over the weekend. Des Moines Police Sgt. Paul Parizek told the Des Moines Register that a man died Sunday afternoon after he was shot several times.

BUFFALO, Iowa (AP) — The longtime fire chief in the Iowa town of Buffalo died over the weekend. The Quad-City Times reports that Terry Adams died Saturday morning at age 67. Longtime friend Buffalo Police Cpl. Rich Aleksiejczyk says Adams died of natural causes.

BELVIDERE, Neb. (AP) — Headstones will be dedicated Sunday at the southern Nebraska graves of three Union veterans of the Civil War. The Hastings Tribune reports that the group Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War will dedicate the new headstones at Belvidere Cemetery in Thayer County. The three served with infantry from Iowa, Illinois and Indiana.

MASON CITY, Iowa (AP) — Volunteer students will be helping plant trees in north-central Iowa’s Mason City next week. On Wednesday, fifth-grade students from Newman Catholic Schools will plant nearly 40 trees along Taft Avenue. On Thursday, students from Mason City Alternative High School will plant between 60 to 100 trees along streets a few blocks over.

High School Volleyball Tourney Recap Saturday 09/29/2018

Sports

September 30th, 2018 by admin

Thomas Jefferson Invitational

Treynor 4-0 Champion
St. Albert 3-1 Runner-Up
Shenandoah 2-2 3rd Place
Abraham Lincoln 3-1
Denison-Schleswig 2-2
Missouri Valley 2-2
Thomas Jefferson 1-3
Heartland Christian 0-4

Tri-Center Tournament

Tri-Center 5-0 Champion
Red Oak 4-1 Runner-Up
Lawton-Bronson 2-2
Fremont-Mills 1-4
Stanton 1-3
Westwood 1-3

Cubs force NL Central tiebreaker game, beat Cardinals 10-5

Sports

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CHICAGO (AP) — Anthony Rizzo had four hits and scored three times, and the Chicago Cubs set up a tiebreaker game for the NL Central title by beating the St. Louis Cardinals 10-5 on Sunday. Shortly after Milwaukee completed an 11-0 victory over Detroit, Jorge De La Rosa worked a hitless ninth inning to move the Cubs back into a tie with the Brewers at 95-67. The crowd of 39,275 roared in delight after Francisco Pena flied to right for the final out on a wet, cool afternoon at Wrigley Field.
Now, everything gets real crazy.

Chicago hosts Milwaukee on Monday afternoon and the Colorado Rockies visit the Los Angeles Dodgers as baseball holds a pair of tiebreaker games on the same day for the first time. At stake is the postseason road for each club. The winner at Wrigley gets a spot in the division series and home-field advantage throughout the NL playoffs. The loser plays again Tuesday night, hosting the runner-up in the NL West in the wild-card game.

St. Louis (88-74) was in contention heading into the final week of the season, but it was swept by Milwaukee before dropping two of three against Chicago. Catcher Yadier Molina, outfielder Marcell Ozuna and infielders Kolten Wong and Jedd Gyorko were held out of the finale due to nagging injuries.

St. Louis missed out on the playoffs for a third straight year for the first time since it went 75-86 in 1999. It finished with a 41-28 record under Mike Shildt, who took over as manager after Mike Matheny was fired on July 14. The only other time Chicago began the final day of the regular season tied for the lead in its division or league was in 1908, when it beat Christy Mathewson and the New York Giants 4-2 at the Polo Grounds for the NL pennant. The Cubs then won their second straight World Series title before enduring a championship drought that cruised past a century before they won it all again in 2016.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Cardinals: Wisdom was visited by a trainer and Shildt after he was hit by a pitch in the third. The trainer examined Wisdom’s left wrist for a short time, but he stayed in the game. … Wong (left knee) is expected to undergo an MRI in the near future, general manager Michael Girsch said.
UP NEXT
Jose Quintana is expected to start the tiebreaker game for Chicago. The veteran left-hander is 6-2 with a 1.60 ERA in 10 career starts against Milwaukee.

RANDAL “RANDY” KENT IRELAND, 62, of Lewis (Memorial Svcs. 10/3/18)

Obituaries

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

RANDAL “RANDY” KENT IRELAND, 62, of Lewis, died Friday, Sept. 28th, at home. Memorial Services for RANDY IRELAND will be held 1-p.m. Wed., Oct. 3rd, at the Rieken-Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold.

Visitation with the family will be Tuesday evening at the Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold from 5:30-7:30 PM.

Interment will be at a later date.

RANDAL “RANDY” IRELAND is survived by:

His wife – Gina, of Lewis.

His daughter – Bethany (Brett) Nichols, of Lewis.

His son – Colton Ireland and his fiancé Courtney Read, of Massena.

3 grandchildren, his parents-in-law Bob and Bea Goretska; and his special friends Bob and Jean Barnes.    He is also survived by many other relatives and friends

Man dies shortly after being shot in Des Moines on Sunday

News

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Police are investigating a fatal shooting in Des Moines over the weekend. Des Moines Police Sgt. Paul Parizek said a 28-year-old Des Moines man died Sunday afternoon after he was shot several times.

The man was found on the ground near a white car. A 25-year-old woman and two children younger than 10 were in the car at the time of the shooting. They were unhurt.

The man’s identity wasn’t immediately released Sunday. The death is the ninth homicide of the year in Des Moines.

RUTH ELLEN COVAULT, 95, of Guthrie Center (Svcs. 10/2/18)

Obituaries

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

RUTH ELLEN COVAULT, 95, of Guthrie Center, died Saturday, Sept. 29th, at the Guthrie County Hospital. Funeral services for RUTH COVAULT will be held 2-p.m. Tue., Oct. 2nd, at the 1st United Methodist Church in Guthrie Center. Twigg Funeral Home in Guthrie Center has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the 1st United Methodist Church in Guthrie Center on Tuesday, from 12:30-p.m. until 2-p.m.; Online condolences may be left at www.twiggfuneralhome.com.

Burial will be in the Union Cemetery in Guthrie Center.

RUTH ELLEN COVAULT is survived by:

Her daughters – Cathy (Craig) Hinderaker, and Susan (Keith) Hjelle, all of Guthrie Center, and Debbie (Leonard) Wallace, of West Des Moines.

7 grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren, her sisters-in-law, other relatives and friends.

Longtime fire chief in Iowa town of Buffalo has died

News

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

BUFFALO, Iowa (AP) — The longtime fire chief in the Iowa town of Buffalo died over the weekend. The Quad-City Times reports that Terry Adams died Saturday morning at age 67. Longtime friend Buffalo Police Cpl. Rich Aleksiejczyk says Adams died of natural causes. Adams had been with the Buffalo Fire Department for 48 years and served a chief for 33 years.

Aleksiejczyk says Adams was a great community leader and was respected in town.
The fire department became a family affair for Adams. One of his sons retired from the fire department as a lieutenant and three of his grandsons are with the department now.

Hubbell’s wife speaks at an event in Atlantic

News

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Cass County Democratic Party Chair Sherry Toelle reports Charlotte Hubbell, wife of gubernatorial candidate Fred Hubbell, spoke to 40 voters in Atlantic on Friday, September 28th. Mrs. Hubbell spoke about her husband’s top priorities for Iowa, which include: affordable health care coverage, increased funding for education, and developing good-paying jobs.

Charlotte Hubbell

Toelle says Hubbell has pledged to reverse the Iowa Legislature’s actions against worker’s compensation and collective bargaining. She said also, he is adamantly opposed to Iowa’s privatization of Medicaid and will take action on his first day in office to begin the transition to return privatized Medicaid back to the Iowa Department of Human Services. He also plans to place women’s health centers back into Iowa. Hubbell has also stated his intentions to recoup the more than $100 million in tax credits that are going to large corporations without proving Iowa with a return on those investments.

When asked what she would foresee happening in Iowa over the next few years if her husband were elected, Mrs. Hubbell remembered when the water and air were clean and when Iowa was among the top five states in education. Those restorations were part of her vision for Iowa. She drew spontaneous applause when she spoke of restoring collective bargaining rights to Iowa’s workforce and increasing family incomes. Environmental quality and support of veterans were also priorities for the Hubbell-Hart campaign.

(Press Release)

Gassy cows are bad for the planet; could seaweed diet help?

Ag/Outdoor

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The smelly reality is that cows will always pass gas. But if farmers had more access to seaweed, cow flatulence might just stink a little less for the planet. That’s the thesis of a New England-based aquaculture company which is launching a drive to become the worldwide leader in an emerging effort to thwart climate change by feeding seaweed to cows.

The concept of reducing livestock emissions by using seaweed as feed is the subject of ongoing scientific research, and early results are promising. University of California researchers have found that cows that eat seaweed appear to emit less methane, a greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming, when they belch and pass gas.
But one of the big challenges to implementing the seaweed solution is getting enough of the stuff to farmers, and the kind of seaweed that has shown results in cows isn’t commercially farmed.

Enter Australis Aquaculture of Greenfield, Massachusetts, which is in the midst of research at facilities in Vietnam and Portugal that is part of its push to become the first farm to produce the seaweed at commercial scale. The company calls the effort “Greener Grazing” and it expects to be operating at commercial scale in two years, said Josh Goldman, the company’s chief executive officer.

“If you could feed all the cows this seaweed, it would be the equivalent of taking all these cars off the road,” Goldman said. “Greener Grazing’s mission is to cultivate this, and accelerate scaling of this kind of seaweed.” The type of algae in question is a red seaweed called Asparagopsis, and it grows wild in many parts of the world.

Researchers from the University of California, Davis, found earlier this year that methane emissions were reduced by 24 to 58 percent in a dozen cows that ate one variety of the seaweed, depending on dose. The seaweed constituted only a small percentage of the cows’ food, but researchers found that the dent it could make in emissions would be significant if it were available to farmers. The methane from cow’s burps makes up 25 percent of methane emissions in the U.S., according to the university. The seaweed interrupts the bacterial process of producing methane in their guts, Goldman said.

Challenges remain, said Ermias Kebreab, a professor of animal science at UC Davis. The seaweed needs more tests to determine if it would impact meat and milk quality from the animals. The challenge of producing enough of the seaweed is staggering, leading Goldman to call it an “aquatic moonshot.” He estimated that the amount of seaweed needed to reach every cattle operation would be greater than the amount presently farmed in the world. “We need to have a consistent product. We need to find a way to grow it in a more consistent way,” Kebreab said.

That’s exactly what Australis Aquaculture is working on. The company has collected different strains of Asparagopsis seaweed to establish a seed bank of seaweeds that can grow in different climates, Goldman said. The next step will be to reproduce the seaweed on the company’s farms, Goldman said. Creating the seed bank will make it possible for farmers to grow the seaweed elsewhere, he said.

The effort has attracted the attention of the World Bank, said its senior aquaculture specialist Randall Brummett. He said scaling up farming of the seaweed in the developing world could make livestock operations more climate friendly and boost the economies of poorer nations.

Skeptics remain. The seaweed has yet to be proven palatable to cows, and the milk that they would yield hasn’t proven to be safe for human consumption, said Frank Mitloehner, a professor and air quality extension specialist in the animal science department at UC Davis. “When you look at it a little deeper, some serious concerns have to be addressed before it can be considered a serious mitigation tool,” he said.

There’s also the question of whether it will find acceptance with farmers. Jenni Tilton-Flood, a dairy farmer at Flood Brothers Farm in Clinton, Maine, said she’d be willing to try it, but cost and availability are also important. “As long as the nutrition would be valuable to our animals. We don’t just throw food at our cows. We have nutritionists for our cows,” she said. “If it can be a food source for livestock, that’s great.”

NextGen spends $112,000 on digital ads targeting Iowa millennials, Generation Z

News

September 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A group working to get more young voters to turn out for Democrats this year has bought more than 100-thousand dollars worth of ads on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter aimed at millennials and Generation Z in Iowa. Haley Hager is the state director for NextGen America, a group that’s spending 33 million dollars nationally on these kind of digital ads. “Eighteen to 35 years olds don’t watch a lot of cable,” Hager says. “They are on their phones, all the time.”

Unlike traditional campaign ads that run 30- and 60 seconds, these NextGen digital ads are short, 15 second messages. That’s designed to deliver the message before the viewer doesn’t click away. Hager says in Iowa, 18-to-24 year olds are the least active voting block. “Political ads don’t usually target 18 year olds,” Hager says. “We turn out at half the rate, which means that traditionally campaigns don’t talk to us.”

NextGen has nearly five dozen paid staff in Iowa as well, working to register young voters. NextGen is financed by a California billionaire who has held town hall meetings around the country and has run T-V ads calling for impeachment proceedings against President Trump.