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2 motorcyclists hurt in separate Mills County crashes

News

June 9th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Two motorcyclists were hurt during separate crashes last weekend, in Mills County. The Sheriff’s Office says Richard Deboodt, of Bellevue, NE, was transported by Glenwood Rescue to a hospital in Council Bluffs, after Deboodt crashed his 2014 Harley Davidson at around 8:20-p.m, Saturday. The accident happened as the cycle was traveling north on 221st Street and entered a curve too fast. The Harley entered the east ditch and went over Elrod Avenue before going back into the ditch. Deboodt suffered minor injuries to his face during the accident, which required stitches.

The second accident happened at around 3:10-p.m. Sunday, when a 2005 Honda traveling south on 230th Street in Mills County, went out of control on loose gravel. The bike apparently just fell over, according to authorities. The driver, Harry Mount, of Glenwood, suffered severe injuries and was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Omaha.

2 arrested on drug charges south of Malvern

News

June 9th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Two people were arrested last week on drug charges, south of Malvern, while a third person was picked up on a warrant. The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports 20-year old David Jesse McConahey, of Thurman, 21-year old Shelby Lynn Conn, of Glenwood, and 21-year old Dakota David Kempton, of Glenwood, were taken into custody at around 10:45-p.m, Friday, near the intersection of Marh Avenue and 315th Street.

McConahay faces charges that include Possession of Contraband, Possession of a Controlled Substance and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. His bond was set at $6,300. Conn was charged with Unlawful Possession of a Prescription Drug. Her bond was $1,000. And, Kempton, who was wanted on a warrant for Domestic Abuse Assault, was being held in the Mills County Jail on $1,000 bond.

Arrested at a separate time and location last Friday, was 23-year old Taner Michael Schoening, of Glenwood, who was wanted on a warrant for Violation of Probation. His bond was set at $1,000. Saturday evening, Mills County Deputies arrested 33-year old Melissa Sue Alley, and 43-year old Bret Phillip Samuelson, both of Randolph. The pair were charged with Providing False ID information. Alley was also charged with Driving Under Suspension, and Speeding. Her bond was $600. Samuelson’s bond was set at $300.

And, four people were arrested Sunday, in Mills County on various charges, including 29-year old Brandy Nicole Strange, of Randolph, and 30-year old Jacob Michael Eugene Gill, of Farragut, both of whom were charged with Public Intoxication. 38-year old Michael Raymond Carver, of Omaha, was arrested Sunday for Driving Under Suspension and Speeding. And, 33-year old Joshua David Morrison, of Glenwood, was arrested on a warrant for Violating Probation.

Survey shows 30-percent of Iowa employers expect to add workers in coming months

News

June 9th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Iowa has one of the strongest job markets in the country according to the latest Manpower Employment Outlook Survey. Manpower spokesperson Karen Miller says 96-percent of the state’s employers that were surveyed plan to hire more employees or maintain their current workforce levels between July and September. “We’ve got 30-percent of the employers around the state that were surveyed saying they’ll be adding (employees),” Miller said. “Only three-percent said they would be decreasing staffing levels.”

The fact that so many employers intend to hire more workers means companies will face a lot of competition for top talent. “If they’re going to be hunting and trying to find the right talent to fill their open opportunities, they’re going to have to get aggressive,” Miller said. “They’re going to have to make sure they’re competitive with their salaries and benefit offerings.” In addition, Miller suggests employers consider hiring candidates with “transferable skills” who can be taught to fill needs within the company.

The 30-percent of Iowa employers who plan to add workers over the third quarter of 2015 compares to 22-percent in the survey conducted one year ago. Iowa, North Dakota, Michigan and Virginia were the top four performing states in the latest Manpower survey.

(Radio Iowa)

Parts of Iowa still battling wet planting conditions

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 9th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The latest U-S-D-A crop report shows continued problems last week with wet weather slowing planting in south-west and south-central Iowa. This is a critical week for southwest Iowa — which has lagged behind the rest of the state most of the spring — as the calendar days continue passing. Iowa State University Extension Agronomist, Aaron Sauegling monitors 14 counties in the southwest corner of the state where wet weather has put them behind.

“The majority of all the corn is in in southwest Iowa. Soybean planting lags behind where we would like to be at this time of year. There’s still portions of southwest Iowa that have over half or 50 percent of the beans to be planted yet,” Sauegling explains. The forecast is calling for some warm and dry days that farmers have been needing.

“We’re optimistic that this week is going to provide us with the break that we need, that we just simply did not get the entire month of May for planting soybeans,” Sauegling says. Sauegling says the delay in planting beans is forcing some farmers to make crop management changes.  “I may increase my plant population. I’d like to narrow up the row — because what I need to do now as a soybean producer, I need to maximize my days,” according to Sauegling. “So, how I can do that is simply have more simply soybeans covering the ground, for ‘A’ weed control and ‘B’ I have to maximize yield. Corn at this point — I would probably be a little more panicked if I didn’t have my corn in.”

Soybean planting reached 88 percent complete and that’s nine days behind 2014, and one day behind average. The crop report shows 96 percent of the corn crop has emerged, which is four days ahead of the five-year average.

(Radio Iowa)

Notre Dame administrator is in Iowa as he rides bicycle cross country to raise money for rare disease

News

June 8th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The dean of the University of Notre Dame’s College of Science is pedaling his bicycle across Iowa this week to raise awareness and money about a rare childhood disease that’s always fatal.

From the website http://blogs.nd.edu/gregcrawford/

From the website http://blogs.nd.edu/gregcrawford/

Greg Crawford is about halfway through his cross-country Road to Discovery ride that’s taking him from New York to California. Crawford is educating people along the way about Niemann-Pick Type C disease, or N-P-C. It’s often diagnosed between the ages of three and five and progresses slowly.

“The child can’t process cholesterol properly or metabolize it, as we say,” Crawford says. “It starts to build up in all of your organs and your cells and ultimately, in the brain, and it becomes neurodegenerative. When that happens, the final days are in a wheelchair with a feeding tube, you can’t eat, you can’t walk, you can’t talk and kids typically only live into their early teens.” The genetic disorder claimed the lives of three of the four grandchildren of Ara Parseghian, the Notre Dame football coach from 1964 to ’74. Crawford will spend about four weeks making the two-wheeled trek across America, covering between 100 and 150 miles a day and a total of about three-thousand miles from coast-to-coast. After stops in Davenport and Iowa City, Crawford plans to be in Des Moines for an event on Wednesday. Another stop is scheduled in Omaha on Thursday.

“We have towns that are picked out from Long Island, New York, all the way to Pebble Beach, California,” Crawford says. “Those towns or cities have a lot of Notre Dame alumni and typically, alumni rally around this cause and we’ll have events like fundraisers, auctions, good times and we actually ask for money to support research into this rare disease.” This is the 5th year Crawford has biked across the country to raise funds and awareness for N-P-C and he says, it may be the last year. About a million dollars was raised during the first four trips and this year’s goal is another full million dollars.

“What happened over the past two years is that one of our professors at Notre Dame actually discovered a drug that was repurposed for this rare disease called NPC,” Crawford says. “The drug is now in clinical trials in phase one. We’re hoping to raise money with this ride to get it to phase two and phase three trials in the very near future.” Learn more and donate at the website: roadtodiscovery.nd.edu

(Radio Iowa)

TX woman & her dog found dead in Bluffs motel parking lot

News

June 8th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Council Bluffs say foul play is NOT suspected in the death of a woman and her dog, both of whom were found near a burning pickup truck in a motel parking lot, early Monday morning. Officials say Bluffs Police and Fire responded just before 2-a.m. to the Days Inn on south 7th Street, for a vehicle fire. When Officers arrived, they found a Ford F-150 parked on the northern edge of the motel’s parking lot, fully engulfed in flames. Located to the north of that vehicle, in a grassy area, was the body of a deceased female and a deceased dog. The dog and the female each had a single gunshot wound to the head. The female was identified as 43 year old Paula Arnett, of Ingleside Texas. A handgun was located under Arnett’s body and the burning F-150 was registered to her husband. Arnett was also the owner of the deceased dog. Arnett, her husband and her seventeen year old Stepson were traveling from Texas to Sioux City, IA. and were spending the night at Days Inn. The incident is being investigated by the Council Bluffs Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Division. An autopsy will be conducted on Arnett tomorrow (Tuesday), but again, authorities say foul play is not suspected at this time.

Iowa State Hires Steve Prohm As Head Men’s Basketball Coach

Sports

June 8th, 2015 by Jim Field

AMES, Iowa – Steve Prohm (like Rome) – the 2012 Basketball Times National Coach of the Year who compiled a 104-29 record in four seasons as the head coach at Murray State – has been named the 20th head coach in Iowa State men’s basketball history, announced today by Iowa State Athletics Director Jamie Pollard.

Prohm will be formally introduced at a press conference tomorrow morning (June 9) at the Sukup Basketball Complex at 10 a.m.

Prohm’s four-year stint as the leader of the Racer program earned him the distinction as one of the nation’s best young coaches. The 40-year-old produced the top winning percentage in school history (.782) while winning two Ohio Valley Conference outright regular-season titles and three conference division championships.

His Racer teams qualified for postseason play three times, advancing to the third round of the NCAA Tournament in 2012, winning the College Insider Tournament (CIT) in 2014 and making the quarterfinals of the NIT in 2015.

The energetic Prohm, who has tutored three of the last four OVC Players of the Year, has been successful playing an exciting brand of basketball. His 2014-15 squad ranked eighth nationally in scoring offense (79.0 ppg) and 13th nationally in adjusted offense (114.8).

“We feel Steve and his family are a perfect fit for Iowa State University,” Pollard said. “Steve’s personal values, style of play and proven success as a head coach make him an outstanding choice to be our next coach. He is a proven winner who is widely respected by his current and former players. We feel Steve is the ideal coach to continue the incredible success that Coach Hoiberg and his players have achieved during the past several years. We are excited to welcome Steve, Katie and Cass to the Cyclone family.”

Prohm, who has 17 years of college coaching experience at four schools (Centenary, Southeastern Louisiana, Tulane, Murray State), is coming off one of the greatest seasons in MSU history in 2014-15 where he led the team to a 29-6 overall mark, a perfect 16-0 record in conference play and a spot in the NIT.

The Racers won 25-straight games during the season, which was the second-longest winning streak in the nation at the time. Prohm won his second OVC Coach of the Year honor and point guard Cameron Payne was named OVC Player of the Year, OVC Male Athlete of the Year and earned third-team All-America honors by CBSSports.com.

In 2013-14, the Racers won the OVC West Division title with a 23-11 record and a 13-3 league mark. His team rallied in the postseason, winning five-straight games to claim the 2014 CIT title, defeating Yale, 65-57 in the championship game.

Prohm’s first season as a head coach in 2011-12 ranks as the best year in Racer hoops history. Led by All-American and NBA player Isaiah Canaan, a player Prohm helped recruit, the Racers set the OVC and school record for winning percentage and total wins with a 31-2 record.

The Racers cracked the top-10 in the Associated Press poll for the first time in school history and were the nation’s final unbeaten team, winning their first 23 games. As the No. 6 seed in the NCAA Tournament, MSU defeated Colorado State in the first round.

Prohm’s auspicious debut as a head coach earned him national coach of the year honors by the Basketball Times, the first of his two OVC Coach of the Year awards (2012, 2015) and district coach of the year kudos from both the NABC and USBWA.

Prohm just finished his ninth overall season at MSU, spending five seasons as an assistant for current Texas A&M head coach Billy Kennedy from 2006-11. The Racers made the NCAA Tournament in 2010 and the NIT in 2011 in his final two seasons as an assistant before being promoted to head coach for the 2011-12 season.

Prohm considers Kennedy one of his mentors in the coaching profession. He also worked on Kennedy’s staff at both Centenary and Southeastern Louisiana. In his final two years as an assistant at SLU, the Lions won back-to-back Southland Conference titles and earned an NCAA berth in 2005.

A 1997 graduate of Alabama, Prohm got his start in coaching under David Hobbs. Prohm worked as a student assistant coach and student manager for the Crimson Tide for five years, which included two NCAA Tournament appearances and one trip to the NIT Final Four.

The Vienna, Va., native attended high school at Northwest Whitfield High in Tunnel Hill, Ga.

Prohm and his wife, the former Katie Ross, have a son, Cass.

Prohm agreed to a five-year contract with a base salary of $1.5 million.
Prohm’s Coaching Experience

1998-99 – Centenary – Assistant Coach

1999-05 – SE Louisiana – Assistant Coach

2005-06 – Tulane – Assistant Coach

2006-11 – Murray State – Assistant Coach

2011-15 – Murray State – Head Coach

Prohm’s Head Coaching Record

2011-12 – 31-2 overall, 15-1 conference (NCAA 3rd Round/OVC regular-season & tournament champs)

2012-13 – 21-10 overall, 10-6 conference (OVC West Division champs)

2013-14 – 23-11 overall, 13-3 conference (CIT Champions/OVC West Division champs)

2014-15 – 29-6 overall, 16-0 conference (NIT quarterfinals/OVC West Division champs)

Overall: 104-29 (.782) Conference: 54-10 (.844)

ROLLAND WATKINS, 55, of Omaha (& formerly of Anita) – Visitation 6/12/15

Obituaries

June 8th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

ROLLAND WATKINS, 55, of Omaha (& formerly of Anita), died June 2nd, at the Nebraska Skilled Nursing Home, in Omaha. A Celebration of Life visitation with the family of ROLLAND WATKINS will be held on Friday, June 12th, from 3-until 5-p.m., at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic.

ROLLAND WATKINS is survived by:
His son – Zach Watkins and his fiancé Lyssa Lank, of Atlantic.
His sister – Cathy Hankemeier, of Omaha.
His brother – Rod Watkins, of Omaha.
2 grandsons, other relatives, and friends.

CINDY L. RICHTER, 59, of Adair (Svcs. 6/10/15)

Obituaries

June 8th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

CINDY L. RICHTER, 59, of Adair, died Sun., June 7th, at the Guthrie County Hospital. Services for CINDY RICHTER will be held 2-p.m. Wed., June 10th, at the Casey United Methodist Church. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Adair has the arrangements.

Visitation with her family will be held from 5:30-until 8-p.m. Tuesday, at the funeral home.

CINDY RICHTER is survived by:

Her husband – Mark Richter, of Adair.

Elk Horn (IA) man arrested Sun. following an investigation

News

June 8th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Audubon County Sheriff Todd Johnson reports an investigation into two separate incidents that took place in the 2100 and 2200 blocks of 300th Street on May 26th, has resulted in the arrest of 35-year old Christopher Matthew Andersen, of Elk Horn. Andersen was taken into custody with the help of deputies from Shelby County, at around 11-p.m. Sunday. He was arrested on an outstanding Audubon County warrant for Operating (a motor vehicle) without the Owner’s Consent, Trespassing, and Theft in the 5th degree.

Anderson was booked into the Audubon County Jail and held on $2,000 bond.