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Missing Person investigation in SE Iowa

News

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Ottumwa Police Department is asking for assistance locating Helen Elizabeth Showalter. The 60-year-old Ottumwa resident is 5 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs about 115 pounds. She was last seen walking away from a vehicle near the Garrison Rock Park in Wapello County. Showalter has preexisting medical condition and doesn’t have her medications on her. Her family reported her missing on Saturday. Anyone with information about her whereabouts is asked to call the Ottumwa Police Department at 641-683-0661.

July 2021 Weather data for Atlantic

Weather

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The month of July in Atlantic was about average, temperature wise, for the most part. The Average High of 86 was par for the month, and the Average Low of 61 was just two-degrees shy of normal. The warmest days were on July 28th and 29th, at 94 degrees each. The 11th was our coolest morning, at 53 degrees. Precipitation-wise, Atlantic was nearly one-quarter of an inch above average, at 4.87 inches for the month. Normally, we receive 4.62 inches of rain in July. The most rain fell on July 9th (1.22″) and the overnight early morning hours of July 30-31 (1.28″).

Looking ahead to the month of August, we can expected an Average High of 83-degrees, an Average Low of 61, and rain typically amounting to 3.88-inches. We’ll let you know how the data compared to the norm,  when we compile the data on September 1st.

Skyscan Forecast – Sunday, Aug, 1st 2021

Weather

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Today: Widespread haze between 9am and 11am. Sunny, with a high near 80. North wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight: Clear, with a low around 53. North northeast wind 5 to 7 mph becoming calm in the evening.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 80. Light and variable wind.
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 55. Calm wind.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 81. Calm wind becoming south around 6 mph in the morning.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 82.

Saturday’s High in Atlantic was 81. Our Low this morning, 57. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 84 and the Low was 54. The Record High on this date was 102 in 1897. The Record Low was 2 in 1898.

Body found in Ames shack

News

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Ames Police Department is investigating a death after a body was found in a shack Friday night. KCCI reports authorities were called to a dilapidated shack on the 900 block of S. Duff Avenue at about 6:05 p.m. A citizen had reported a deceased body in the shack. When police arrived on the scene they found the decomposing body of a man. The body was transferred to the Medical Examiner’s Office for an autopsy. Authorities are waiting for an autopsy to be performed before releasing a cause of death. Police conducted interviews, canvassed the area and processed evidence. They do not believe there is a threat to the community at this time.

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to call the Ames Police Department at 515-239-5133 or the anonymous tip line at 515-239-5533. Tips can also be sent in to Crime Stoppers of Central Iowa at 515-223-1400.

Iowa National Guard soldiers welcomed home

News

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

About 250 Iowa Army National Guard soldiers returned home Saturday to cheering, smiling and tearful loved ones, following a yearlong deployment. Dual ceremonies in Des Moines and Fort Dodge honored the soldiers returning home. They included members from the 1st Battalion, 194th Field Artillery, 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Division. KCCI reports Gov. Kim Reynolds attended the ceremony at a hangar at Des Moines International Airport. She called ceremonies for returning service members one of her favorite parts of the job.

“On behalf of a grateful state, thank you for your service, for your selfless devotion to cause and country, for protecting the freedoms of your fellow Americans and for doing so with courage, honor and integrity,” she said.

Ninety-nine soldiers were on the flight that returned to Des Moines.

Red Oak Police report, 8/1/21

News

August 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak arrested a woman Saturday night for allegedly driving while license revoked. Authorities report 26-year-old Aspen Renee Riley was taken into custody at around 8:30 p.m. Following a traffic stop on 200th Street. Riley was transported to the Montgomery County Jail, and held on a $1,000 bond.

MARILYN JANE EVANS, 74, of Shelby (Mem. Svc. 8/3/21)

Obituaries

July 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

MARILYN JANE EVANS, 74, of Shelby, died Friday, July 30th, at home. A Family guided Memorial Service for MARILYN EVANS will be held 7-p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 3rd, at the Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca.

The family will greet friends at the funeral home on Tuesday, from 5:30-until 7-p.m.

Burial will be in the Shelby Cemetery at a later date.

MARILYN JANE EVANS is survived by:

Her son – Andy Evans, of Dunlap,and Joel (Jamie) Evans, of Shelby.

Her daughter – Allison Maassen, of Neola.

Her brother – Mick Meredith, of Omaha.

5 grandchildren, other relatives and friends.

I-29 SB to be closed early Sunday morning in Fremont County

News

July 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Sidney, Iowa – July 31, 2021, The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office is notifying drivers that I-29 Southbound, south of the Hamburg Exit, will be closed tomorrow (August 1, 2021) at 7:00 A.M. so that an accident scene can be cleaned up at the 122 MM in Missouri. The estimated clean up time is one to two hours. Sign boards will direct traffic on a detour through Hamburg, Iowa via Highway 333 east to US 275 south to Missouri Highway 136.

Cass County Fair announcement for 7/31/21

News

July 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Despite the heavy rain Atlantic received Friday night and early today, the Cass County Fair Board has determined that ALL activities scheduled for today, will take place as planned. Thank you.

You thought RAGBRAI was hot. UI researchers explore the sun, via spacecraft.

News

July 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Sure, it’s been a sweltering week in Iowa, but University of Iowa researchers are doing groundbreaking studies on an environment that’s beyond scorching — using data from a spacecraft that’s orbiting the sun. U-I physics and astronomy professor Jasper Halekas is the lead author of a report on the sun’s electric field and the solar wind that flows outward from our star. Halekas compares that flow to an earthly waterway. “Let’s say we’re sitting here in Iowa City watching the Iowa River go by. It’s hard to know when that river might flood unless we know what’s going on upstream, say, at the Coralville Dam,” Halekas says. “So, we really need to make measurements up close, where the source of this solar wind — or in my analogy, the river — is to know what’s going to happen when that solar wind gets to Earth.”

Fluctuations in that solar wind, like a solar flare, can disrupt our power grid, our satellites, and much of our communications on Earth — everything from cell phone calls to G-P-S navigation to T-V and radio broadcasts. The Parker Solar Probe has made eight orbits of the sun so far, and each orbit takes about three months to complete. Remember, the sun is huge. “Every couple of orbits we fly by Venus and dump a little bit of our momentum there and that allows us to get in still closer to the sun,” Halekas says. “By the end of the mission, we hope to get about two times closer to the sun than we are now — and where we are now is already far closer than anything man-made has ever gone.”

The spacecraft has gotten within nine-million miles of the sun, which may not sound all that close, but temperatures on the side facing the sun are peaking around one-thousand degrees. It’s a robotic explorer like no other in history, and no, it won’t melt. “The front end of our spacecraft has this big carbon-carbon heat shield and then there’s a bunch of plumbing that hangs off of the back of it that acts to shunt heat away from that heat shield and keep it from getting back to the rest of the spacecraft,” Halekas says, “and the rest of the spacecraft kinda’ hangs back in the shadow.”

The research they’re doing is historic, he says, as these are the first definitive measurements anyone’s ever been able to make of the sun’s electric field. “I’ve been involved in this mission since it was just a sketch on a napkin, so it’s been extraordinarily rewarding to see it built and tested and launched and now we’re charting new territory closer to the sun than anything man-made has ever gone,” Halekas says, “so, yes, it’s very exciting for me.”

Launched in 2018, the NASA-funded mission is scheduled to run through at least 2025 as the spacecraft should be able to make about 20 orbits around the sun, drawing ever closer, at a speed that should top off around 430-thousand miles an hour. It’s the first NASA spacecraft named after someone who’s still alive, 94-year-old Eugene Parker, an astrophysicist and professor emeritus at the University of Chicago, who first did key research in solar physics in the 1950s.