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Jay Higgins To Attend B1G Media Day

Sports

July 19th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

University of Iowa Moon Family Head Football Coach Kirk Ferentz announced on Wednesday that linebacker Jay Higgins will be representing Iowa Football at Big Ten Media Day. Higgins will attend in place of Noah Shannon due to Shannon’s involvement in the NCAA investigation into sports gambling. Below is a statement from Noah Shannon:

Being selected to represent the Iowa Hawkeye football team at Big Ten Media Day is a tremendous honor and privilege. I am grateful for the opportunity. However, given the circumstances I told Coach Ferentz it would best for him to select another player. Since the NCAA review is not yet complete, I don’t feel it is right for me to represent the team. 

“Noah’s decision to share this information and suggest that another player take his place is reflective of his character,” said Ferentz. “Noah is a committed and dedicated teammate, and this is a fine example of him always wanting to put the team first.”

Higgins, a native of Indianapolis, enters his fourth year in the Hawkeye football program. He totaled 39 tackles (20 solo) last year playing behind consensus All-American Jack Campbell. Higgins was awarded the team’s Hayden Fry Award (special teams), which is presented to those who show exemplary leadership and dedication, and the Next Man In Award (defense) following the 2022 season. He has played in 31 games over his first three seasons.

Cyclones add All-American Isabella Dunlap

Sports

July 19th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State head tennis coach Jaron Maestas has signed his first student-athlete with the program, adding five-time Division II All-American Isabella Dunlap to the 2023-24 roster. Dunlap has one season of eligibility remaining after playing for three seasons under Maestas at Central Oklahoma. She played the 2021-22 season at the University of Indianapolis before sitting out the 2022-23 season.

 In all four seasons she has competed, her teams have reached the NCAA Tournament and she is a two-time NCAA semifinalist. She has earned All-America honors three times in doubles and twice in singles. “Isabella and I have a long history,” Maestas said. “She is the type of kid that will run through a wall for what she believes in. We added a great competitor who is going to be fun to watch.”

The Edmond, Oklahoma, native broke onto the scene in 2019, capturing the ITA regional championship and reaching the national title match. Dunlap entered the spring of 2019 ranked No. 2 nationally and maintained a top-five spot throughout the season, finishing the season at No. 5. In doubles play, she finished the season ranked No. 9. She went on to earn All-America honors in both singles and doubles and was named ITA Freshman of the Year.

 During a COVID-shortened 2019-20 season, Dunlap earned All-America honors in doubles as she helped UCO finish seventh at the ITA Indoor National Championship. In 2020-21, Dunlap again earned All-America accolades in doubles action at UCO before transferring to UIndy when Maestas left to be an assistant coach at Kansas.

 In her only season on the courts for UIndy, Dunlap took home her fifth All-America honor after finishing No. 14 in the final ITA singles rankings. The Greyhounds reached the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament. As a high schooler, Dunlap was the top player in Oklahoma according to the USTA Sectional rankings.

Iowa Central to host nation’s only independent testing lab for ethanol, biodiesel

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Central Community College broke ground this week on what will become its new Biofuels Testing Laboratory on the west side of Fort Dodge. Iowa Central President Jesse Ulrich says it will be a welcome addition to the campus and it’ll be the only independent biofuels testing lab in the country.

“This was something that was started at Iowa Central back in the mid 2000s,” Ulrich says. “We worked with a local trucking company, Decker Truck Lines, to really test out the difference between regular fuel and biofuel within the trucking industry.” He says the planned state-of-the-art lab will be the end result of very humble beginnings.

“It’s something that really started kind of out of a closet, a very small operation, and moved into the Biohealth Science Building. We’ve just continued to grow and expand,” Ulrich says. “As a part of our 2018 public bond referendum, that our community supported, there was some money set aside to build a new testing lab.” The land on which the lab will be built didn’t cost Iowa Central anything, as it had been occupied by a Casey’s convenience store.

“When Casey’s did strategic planning and eliminated that store for use, we contacted Casey’s and heard our vision about what we wanted to do with the property in regards to the biofuel lab, and they thought it was a win-win for everyone,” he says. “We’re very fortunate that Casey’s donated that property to us.” The lab should be ready for move-in within a year.

Documentary details how materials for atomic bombs were made at ISU

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – As the movie “Oppenheimer” opens Thursday, the story of the physicist who developed the first nuclear weapons, a documentary screening tonight (Wednesday) will focus on a role Iowa played in the Manhattan Project.

Ames native and filmmaker Brittany Prater’s documentary, “Uranium Derby,” centers on top-secret experiments that were conducted in her hometown during the 1940s. One source is heard during the movie trailer saying, “On the campus at Iowa State during the war, they were making materials for atomic bombs.”

Prater details how the Ames Laboratory, run by the Department of Energy, at one point flushed high-level radioactive waste down the city’s sanitary-sewer drains. She visits an Ames neighborhood that suffered from what she calls a “cancer epidemic” in the 1990s, where toxic waste was buried, under what eventually became a youth sports complex. Once it went public, she says, the site was hastily cleaned up.

Prater will be at The Varsity Theater in Des Moines for tonight’s 7 P-M showing of the 88-minute documentary and she’ll take questions afterward.

Nunn says parental leave policies for the guard and reserve likely to expand

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congressman Zach Nunn says the defense spending bill that congress passes each year includes an expansion of parental leave for some National Guard and Reserve soldiers. Nunn, who’s in the Air Force Reserve, and a Democratic Congressman from North Carolina who’s also a reservist, co-sponsored a Parental Leave Parity Act earlier this year and it was included in the annual defense bill that passed the House last week.

“We ask our men and women in uniform to go overseas in combat zones,” Nunn says. “When the active duty folks come home, they get up to six weeks to spend with their new family members. We want to make sure that our Reserve and Guard members here in Iowa get that same privilege.” Birth mothers in all branches of the military can take up to 12 weeks of paid leave, but only fathers and adoptive parents who are full time soldiers are currently eligible for parental leave. Nunn says expanding parental leave to reservists and National Guard soldiers may boost recruitment.

“They deserve the opportunity to be there when their babies are born, help the spouse through the process,” Nunn says, “and also encourage foster families to look at adoption and know they’re going to get the same benefits as everybody else.” Nunn says as a reservist, he was denied paid parental leave when he and his wife recently adopted two foster daughters. He also experienced the disparity a few years ago when he was serving in the Iowa National Guard.

“My daughter was born and that weekend I was away at drills, leaving my wife to have both an infant baby in the hospital and being responsible for taking care of the kids,” Nunn says. The parental leave change for reservists and guard members has had bipartisan backing in the U.S. Senate and Nunn says the new policy is likely to stay in the National Defense Authorization Act when the Senate voted on it.

Hit-and-run property damage accident in Creston

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston report a legally parked 2011 GMC Terrain was struck at around 9:10-p.m. Tuesday, by a hit-and-run vehicle. The GMC, registered to Amanda Fletchall, of Creston, sustained $8,000 damage. An investigation, including witness statements, determined the suspect vehicle was a 2010 Ford Transit van, operated by 40-year-old Arturo Marin, of Creston. The van also sustained about $8,000 damage.

Authorities say a bumper with license plate attached to it, lead them to Marin, who admitted to being behind the wheel of his vehicle, when the accident occurred. Witnesses say they saw the van was parked at a bar in Creston about 15 minutes before the accident. It was also seen operating with no lights on, and running stop signs before the van struck the GMC.

As of this report, no citations had been filed nor charges issued.

Death investigation underway in southwest Iowa

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Bartlett, Iowa) [updated 7/20] – The Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation (DCI) is looking into the cause of death of a person whose body was found Tuesday afternoon from the Missouri River, south of Bartlett. The body of a white female was retrieved from the river about four miles south of the Bartlett boat ramp, at around 12:45-p.m. The State Medical Examiner’s Office in Ankeny will work to identify the woman, and determine her cause of death.

2023 IHSBCA All-District Baseball Teams

Sports

July 19th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

Below are the IHSBCA All-District Baseball Teams:

(Click on link to view)

2023 All-District Teams Class 1A

2023 All-District Teams Class 2A

2023 All-District Teams Class 3A

2023 All-District Teams Class 4A

Shelby County BOS receives pipeline update and concerns

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Harlan, Iowa) – The Shelby County Board of Supervisors met in a regular session Tuesday morning. Board Chairman Steve Kenkel provided a report on the results of the Shelby County Pipeline Ordinance Injunction.

The County has 30 days to respond to the ruling. Legal counsel is reviewing the situation. Kenkel on his position concerning the pipeline proceedings thus far.

He noted none of the six ethanol plants within 60 miles of Harlan, have signed-on with any of the three proposed carbon pipeline companies coming through Iowa.

Janice Gaul, Mayor of Earling, spoke and mentioned that Earling is a small town and has retirees and working-class citizens with children; the children often play at the baseball diamond and playground unsupervised and the proposed pipeline only has a 50 foot limit from those areas. That is also the distance the pipeline can pass by the Earling water supply. Sherry Webb spoke about her family’s century farm that the pipeline route is intended to cross, and she does not want this to be forced to have this project cross her family farm. In other business:

  • The regional Representatives for Senator Joni Ernst and Representative Randy Feenstra were in attendance to listen to Tuesday’s proceedings. Abby Vander Werf (Feenstra) and Brittany Rockwell (Ernst) introduced themselves and will presumably report back to the officials that they represent.
  • Brandon Burmeister gave a report of Secondary Road happenings and asked the Supervisors to approve and upgrade a level B service roadway to a level A roadway, a portion of 660th street west to m56. The landowner requesting the upgrade is paying for this service. Schaben made a motion to approve the upgrade, Parkhurst seconded the motion the motion passed.
  • Todd Valline of the Shelby County Chamber of Commerce and Industry informed the Board of Supervisor of the many Chamber events and programs including today’s all member meeting and goals set forth for the upcoming year.

    Shelby County BOS meeting, 7-18-23

The Supervisors then considered a formal Resolution 2023-42 required by the Iowa DOT to process the grant application by Shelby County Trails. Support of the grant is required to be in Resolution form to be accepted for consideration. Schaben made a motion to approve the resolution and Parkhurst seconded the motion the motion passed after Kenkel, Parkhurst and Schaben all voted in favor of passage, no nays were cast.

Taya Vonnahme from the Manning Regional Recovery Center was invited by the Supervisors to explain the services that the Recovery Center Provides, specifically the Opioid Addiction function of the Center. Shelby County is on track to receive opioid treatment funding in the coming years and Vonnahme representing a regional center, that does serve Shelby County asked for Manning Regional Health to be considered as a recipient of a portion of the funds available

Anna Schwarte, of Shelby County Public Health spoke to the Supervisors about expending funds for from the opioid litigation funds for her organization to inform and provide information to Shelby County schools about recognizing opioid types, use and overdoses. Supervisor Parkhurst motioned to award Public Health $3,000 for this service provided by Public Health. And $21,000 this fiscal year to be spent on prevention and treatment of opioid addiction. The motion passed as presented.

Shelby County Treasurer, Carolyn Blum was on the agenda to have the Supervisors inspect and vote on approval of her Semi-Annual report. Schaben made a motion to approve the report and Parkhurst seconded the report, the motion carried. Blum noted that County Treasurers are now allowed to charge a $10.00 fee for out of County drivers licenses and identifications. This is called a convenience fee and used to offset the costs that were 100% paid by county residents for this service to out of County residents for licenses and Identifications.

The supervisors reported on the various committees that they are assigned it was noted that Steve Kenkel who will have a report next meeting on the Iowa Utilities Board Process and Charles Parkhurst reported that there are funds with MAPA available for trails.

Iowa defensive end Joe Evans talks summer workouts

Sports

July 19th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

Iowa defensive end Joe Evans is trying to soak everything in as he prepares for his final season. The Ames native began his career as a walk-on but is garnering preseason All-Big Ten recognition after posting six and-a-half sacks and starting all 13 games last season.

Evans says it has been apparent during summer workouts that the Hawkeye offense has something to prove. Iowa finished next to last a year ago in the country in total offense.