United Group Insurance

Exhibit celebrating 6-on-6 girls basketball touring the state

Sports

July 5th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa)  — An exhibit showcasing the history of 6-on-6 girls basketball in Iowa is in the midst of a six-city tour across the state. It was 25 years ago this year that Iowa’s final 6-on-6 state tournament was held. University of Iowa professor Susan Birrell is co-curator of the exhibit, which was first put on display in Mount Vernon in March. “At Mount Vernon, we were met at the door before the exhibit even opened on the first day by women who were eager to see the exhibit and share their own stories,” Birrell said.

The exhibit was moved to Ottumwa in May and is now on display in Guthrie Center through August 5. Julie Goodrich-Blake donated photos and other items to the exhibit. She played for Adel in the 1970s when her team made it to the finals of the state tournament two years in a row, losing both of those games. During her junior and senior years, Goodrich-Blake received fan mail from around the state and was a superstar in


Julie Goodrich, Adel, launches shot at state tournament

her small town in Dallas County. “We were treated like royalty, really,” Goodrich-Blake recalled. “We had so much success and the people of the community enjoyed watching us.”

Current University of Iowa women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder played 6-on-6 hoops for Linn-Mar in the late 1970s. Her teams never made it to the state tournament, but Bluder has fond memories of the pageantry put on display at Vet’s Auditorium in Des Moines. “Every year, we’d go and watch the state tournament and see all the glamour – and it was packed,” Bluder said. “The guys would come out in their tuxedos and clean the floor at halftime. The spotlights would come on and they’d announce the all-tournament teams and the people being inducted into the hall-of-fame. The whole thing was marvelous.”

Although the 6-on-6 game wasn’t unique to Iowa, support of the sport was extraordinary – both in terms of fans and organization. Iowa has the longest running state tournament dedicated to high school girls, with the first unsanctioned tournament held in 1920. Goodrich-Blake, who went on to play at Iowa State University, said she feels lucky that she grew up where she did. “My mother and grandmother played basketball, my aunts played, so I didn’t realize other girls my age weren’t getting to play across the country. It wasn’t novel to go out for basketball at Adel because everybody else had played before,” Goodrich-Blake said.

Iowa was one of the last two states to play 6-on-6 basketball (Oklahoma held its last 6-on-6 tournament in 1995). Each team in the 6-on-6 game had three guards on one side of the court and three forwards on the other. Shelly Lucas was a guard for the New London Tigerettes in the early 1980s. “I didn’t know it was unusual that I never got to score any points. I took a lot of pride in my defensive skills,” Lucas said. “My school was never a noteworthy school, we didn’t make it to state or anything like that. We were playing because it was fun to play and that’s what you did when you grew up in Iowa.”

Lucas, now a professor at Boise State University, earned a PhD at the University of Iowa in 2001. Her dissertation examined the controversy over switching Iowa high school girls’ basketball from a six-player to a five-player game. The traveling exhibit, currently in Guthrie Center, will make three more tour stops between August and the end of the year in Jefferson, Ames, and Conrad.
…….
LINK:
http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/iwa/celebrating-girls-and-womens-sport-in-iowa/

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, 7/5/18

News

July 5th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa school district is hiring more security personnel after receiving special permission to spend $1.1 million beyond state spending limits. The Davenport Community School District received approval Tuesday from the School Budget Review Committee to hire 18 unarmed security supervisors, even as the district works to cut spending in other areas. Davenport’s plan comes as schools across Iowa are working to comply with a new law requiring security plans by next summer.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa City officials are closing a merry-go-round, train and other amusement rides that for 60 years have been part of childhood in the community. The Iowa City Parks and Recreation announced Monday that the rides in Lower City Park will permanently close on Sept. 23. The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that the department will be offering free rides on weekends in August and September to commemorate the closure.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has issued a disaster proclamation for Franklin County in north-central Iowa. The proclamation issued Tuesday is in response to flooding and severe weather that began in mid-June. The proclamation allows state resources to be used to aid in recovery efforts and activates a program to give some residents grants of up to $5,000 for home and car repairs and other expenses.

CLIVE, Iowa (AP) — Officials in central Iowa say flooding from heavy rains this past weekend damaged the Clive Library and the Clive Aquatic Center. The Polk County Emergency Management Agency said in a news release Tuesday that the library and aquatic center had closed because of damage from storm water. Both have since reopened. A special flood-debris pickup has also been scheduled for Clive, a suburb of Des Moines, on Friday for residents and businesses in some areas.

Midwest Sports Headlines: Thursday, 7/5/18

Sports

July 5th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

PHOENIX (AP) — Yadier Molina and Yairo Munoz homered, Miles Mikolas threw six strong innings and the St. Louis Cardinals broke loose late to beat Arizona 8-4 and take two of three from the first-place Diamondbacks. Molina’s three-run shot on the first pitch from reliever Fernando Salas highlighted a five-run Cardinals seventh inning after Arizona had nursed a 2-1 lead through six. The Diamondbacks dropped to 1-5 on their homestand and lead the surging Dodgers by just a half-game in the NL West.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Trevor Bauer pitched effectively into the eighth inning and the Cleveland Indians beat the skidding Kansas City Royals 3-2 for a three-game sweep. Michael Brantley had an early RBI double and the Indians scored all their runs in the first three innings on only one hit.

DENVER (AP) — The Denver Nuggets have agreed to a deal with rookie forward Michael Porter Jr. Porter was taken by the Nuggets with the 14th overall pick in the draft last month. He was considered a top-five pick before a back injury that required surgery limited him to three games at Missouri last season.

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — San Francisco 49ers linebacker Reuben Foster has been suspended without pay for the first two games of the regular season for violating the NFL’s conduct and substance-abuse policy. The NFL said Foster will also be fined for violations from a weapons offense and misdemeanor drug charge that were resolved earlier this offseason. Foster will miss San Francisco’s games against Minnesota and Detroit before being allowed to return on Sept. 17 before the Niners play Kansas City.

Iowa Student Loan president says check around for funding

News

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The president of Iowa Student Loan says college students and parents should be planning right now on how they are going to pay for college in the fall. Steve McCullough says start by looking for sources of money that aren’t loans. “First of all, take any scholarships or grants that the college can get for you because you don’t have to repay those,” McCullough says. “If you don’t have enough money after that — students should go ahead borrow on their own through the Federal Direct Loan Program for students — because those are the lowest cost loans.”

He says loans should be your last choice. “Before they look at any loans, they should look to see if they’ve got savings available that they could use or even current income that they could use to avoid borrowing,” according to McCullough. “Iowa Student Loan, we are non-profit and part of our missions is to get people to borrow as little as possible, so we have some really good tools on our website that talk to people about their alternatives.”

McCullough says some people will end up having to take out loans. He says the cost of borrowing for parents has recently gone up. He says the Federal Direct PLUS loan interest rate for parents has gone up to seven-point-six percent (7.60%) with a four-point-two-six percent (4.26%) up-front fee. “So, that’s relatively high and higher than people would expect for a federal loan.”

He says his organization offers a lower rate. “Our rates are currently six-point-three percent (6.30%) with no up-front fee if people start paying immediately and seven-point-two-two percent (7.22%) if they elect to defer payment until their student graduates. So, it’s a unique circumstance where the state-based program is actually less expensive than the federal program,” McCullough says.

You can find out more at: www.IowaStudentLoan.org.

(Radio Iowa)

Midwest rural bankers say they’ve rejected a significant number of farm loan applications

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A recent survey of Midwest bankers shows a “significant increase” in farm loan rejections. Creighton University professor Ernie Goss surveys the presidents and C-E-Os of rural banks in Iowa and nine other Midwest states. He found nearly 43 percent of initial farm loan applications had been rejected as bankers react to weak farm income. The financial pinch will be compounded this fall, according to Goss, who expects the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates.

“We’re likely to see short-term interest rates, from our survey, maybe growing by as much as three-quarters of a percent by the end of the year,” Goss says. Goss says the overall Midwest economy is growing, but concerns about trade “skirmishes” are slowing that growth. Goss predicts farm equipment sales may soon take a hit.

“For Iowa, you’ve got agricultural equipment manufacturers that are certainly big users of aluminum and steel. They are seeing some price increases and that’s going to really have a negative impact on that industry,” Goss says. “While the industry was doing well for June, I expect that to slow down somewhat because of these tariffs, because of these price increases and also the trade tensions as well.”

Prices remain below “break-even” for a large share of grain farmers and Goss’s survey indicates there’s been a slight “slump” in checking account deposits in rural banks. Two-thirds of the bankers he surveyed indicated their bank has increased collateral requirements on farm loans. The professor’s job index in rural areas of Iowa was in negative territory for June.

(Radio Iowa)

Fatal crash in Adair County Wed. morning

News

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A Central Iowa woman died early this (Wednesday) morning during a single-vehicle crash on Interstate 80 in Adair County. The Iowa State Patrol reports 28-year old Sheana Marie Story, of Des Moines, who was not wearing a seat belt, died in the crash that happened at around 6-a.m. on I-80 westbound, about a mile west of the Greenfield Exit.

Authorities say the 2006 Ford Fusion she was driving, drifted off the road and hit a cable barrier on the shoulder and continued into the ditch, rolling end-over-end three or four times before coming to rest facing southwest on its wheels. Story was ejected from her car as it rolled, and came to rest 12 feet away from the vehicle.

The Adair County Medical Examiner declared her deceased at the scene. The accident remains under investigation.

I-29 Construction Update

News

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Construction work to set bridge beams on the northbound Interstate 29 bridge over Floyd Boulevard in Sioux City, will require closing Floyd Boulevard from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Saturday, July 7, weather permitting, according to the Iowa Department of Transportation’s Sioux City construction office.

Motorists wanting to go to southbound I-29 will be directed around the work zone by traveling onto I-29, then left on Wesley Parkway, and then left on the southbound on-ramp. Motorists wanting to exit southbound I-29 to Floyd Boulevard will take Exit 149 to Wesley Parkway and utilize surface streets to Floyd Boulevard.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 7/04/2018

News

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

Play

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 7/04/2018

Podcasts, Sports

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Ric Hanson

Play

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 7/04/18

News, Podcasts

July 4th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

Play