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Harlan Fireworks show is postponed

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Per The American Legion, Harlan’s fireworks will be postponed until tomorrow July 5th due to the potential incoming weather threat. Fireworks will take place at the same time and location.

City of Atlantic’s Fireworks show postponed due to expected weather

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Atlantic Fire Chief Tom Cappel reports the City of Atlantic’s Fireworks Show for tonight has been postponed due to the expected wet and possibly stormy weather. The decision to postpone the event was made by Cappel, Mayor Grace Garrett, and a representative from Wild Willy’s Fireworks.

A date for show has not yet been rescheduled.

18 Hawkeyes Set to Compete at 2023 USATF Championships

Sports

July 4th, 2023 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa – University of Iowa Track and Field qualified nine student-athletes to the Toyota USATF Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, and nine more at the 2023 USATF U20 Championships, July 6-9.

The Hawkeyes are represented by 12 men, with six competing in the U20 Championships. The women have six entries, including three individuals that qualified for the U20 Championships.

Joining the current student-athletes are former Hawkeyes Jamal Britt (2021), Brittany Brown (2018), Nik Curtis (2022), and Laulauga Tausaga (2021), who also qualified for the championships.

Competition begins on Thursday, July 6, with the women’s 100-meter hurdles at 1:25 p.m. (CT), followed by the men’s 100-meter dash at 1:45. U20 competition begins on Friday with the women’s 100-meter hurdles at 1 p.m.

Men’s Qualifiers

Senior Championships

Austin Kresley

            – 100-meters: 10.10

            – 200-meters: 20.26

Gratt Reed

            – 110-meter hurdles: 13.50

Grant Conway

            – 110-meter hurdles: 13.66

Julien Gillum

            – 400-meter hurdles: 49.73

James Carter Jr.

            – long jump: 8.00 meters

            – triple jump: 16.12 meters

Austin West

            – decathlon: 8,179 points

U20 Championships

Will Ryan

            – 5,000-meters: 14:15.54

Hayden Kuhn

            – 3,000-meter steeplechase: 8:23.94

Austin Busch

            – hammer throw: 58.03 meters

Mike Stein

            – javelin: 75.59 meters

Walker Whalen

            – discus: 53.47 meters

Sal Capaldo

            – decathlon: 6,465 points

Women’s Qualifiers

Senior Championships

Paige Magee

            – 100-meter hurdles: 12.90

            – 400-meter hurdles: 56.62

Tionna Tobias

            – 100-meter hurdles: 13.11

Mariel Bruxvoort

            – 400-meter hurdles: 56.71

U20 Championships

Natalie Harris

           – 100-meter hurdles: 13.49

Alexandria Edison

            – 100-meters: 11.70

            – 200-meters: 23.74

Wisdom Williams

            – shot put: 15.88 meters

Joy Chou to play in 2023 U.S. Women’s Open

Sports

July 4th, 2023 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Former Iowa State women’s golfer Joy Chou has earned a spot to play in this week’s U.S. Women’s Open, held July 6-9, at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, California.

 

Chou, a Taipei, Taiwan, native, was an alternate for the field after advancing to final qualifying at Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis and finishing in third place (73-74=147 +3). She was one stroke behind the final qualifying spot.

 

On Sunday, Chou got the call she had been hoping for and will be just the fifth Cyclone to play in the major event, joining ISU Hall of Famers Shelley Finnestad and Beth Bader, Prima Thammaraks and Celia Barquin Arozamena.

 

“I am so happy, and this will be an amazing experience to compete in the U.S. Open,” Chou said. “At the start of the year I wrote down a number of goals. Making the U.S. Open was at the top of the list.”

 

Chou played at Iowa State from 2017-21. In 2019, she fired a 64 at Mountain View, which is tied for the second-best round in school history. Her 69 in the 2019 NCAA Regional at Cle Elum is the second-best NCAA Tournament 18-hole round in school history.

 

Chou won the Iowa Women’s Amateur in 2020 and 2021.

 

She is currently a member of the Epson Tour, the LPGA Tour’s developmental circuit. She’s made a pair of cuts in seven starts.

 

Cyclones In The U.S. Women’s Open

1998 – Baltimore Country Club (East Course) – Shelley Finnestad

2002 – Prairie Dunes Golf Club – Beth Bader

2003 – Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club – Beth Bader

2004 – The Orchards Golf Club – Beth Bader

2005 – Cherry Hills Country Club – Beth Bader

2006 – Newport Country Club – Beth Bader

2007 – Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club – Beth Bader

2009 – Saucon Valley Country Club – Beth Bader

2018 – Shoal Creek Golf and Country Club – Celia Barquin Arozamena

2019 – Country Club of Charleston – Prima Thammaraks

2023 – Pebble Beach Golf Links – Joy Chou

Drake Women’s Basketball, Hittner to Remain on Women’s Basketball Staff in New Role

Sports

July 4th, 2023 by admin

DES MOINES, Iowa — After two years as the Drake women’s basketball graduate assistant, former Bulldog star Becca Hittner will remain on staff in a new role. The three-time Jackie Stiles MVC Player of the Year Award winner will continue to help guide Drake women’s basketball as the Director of Basketball Analytics and Player Development.

“Keeping Becca on staff is a home run for our Drake women’s basketball program and Drake University.” Suzie Glazer Burt Head Coach Allison Pohlman stated. “She is a decorated student athlete that has earned multiple accolades degrees from Drake and during her tenure as a dominant player in the MVC will guide her into her new position as the Director of Basketball Analytics & Player Development for our team.  I’m so excited for the direction of our program!”

Hittner started her Drake journey in 2016 and proceeded to garner various recognitions including three MVC Player of the Year nods, two All-America Honorable Mentions, a pair of CoSIDA Academic All-American awards, and a handful of Bulldog scoring records.

After graduating in 2020, she played one season of professional hoops in Spain’s LF Endesa before returning to Des Moines as the Bulldog women’s basketball team’s graduate assistant.

Hittner officially began her new post on July 1.

 

From Abingdon to Zwingle, find your way across Iowa with new DOT map

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Even with all of the satellite mapping technology on our smartphones, some Iowans still enjoy having the old-school paper road maps in their vehicle’s glove box. The 2023-2024 edition of the Iowa Transportation Map is now available. Mark Hansen, a transportation planner with the Iowa DOT, says the new edition has a host of changes from last year. “This year, we got the 2020 Census changes in for the populations of the cities in Iowa,” Hansen says, “so that involved changing hundreds of hundreds of populations for the cities.”

The map shows all of Iowa’s highways, airports, railroad lines, lakes, rivers, and major county roads. Smaller detail maps are also included for the state’s 16 largest cities which identify highways, major streets, and city boundaries. “We have some new roadways across Iowa. We have the US 30 four-lane east of Tama. We have US 61 four-lane north of Burlington,” Hansen says. “We’ve got several interchanges that were built this last year, so we reflected those correctly on that new transportation map.”

The map includes a chart to find mileage between select Iowa cities along with an index listing all of the cities shown on the map, along with their populations and their map locations. “New transportation maps are available at the rest areas, the welcome centers, driver’s license stations across the state,” Hansen says. “It’s also available online at iowadot.gov/maps.”

There’s also a link to a mobile app version available at the same website. The maps are printed every two years and they’re free.

Pence, in Iowa campaigning in this week, says he’s well known, but not known well

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Former Vice President Mike Pence walked in Urbandale’s 4th of July parade today (Tuesday) and will campaign in western Iowa over the next three days. Pence plans to visit each of Iowa’s 99 counties before the Iowa Republican Party’s Caucuses early next year. “One of the things I’ve learned traveling the nation over the last two years is that I’m well known, but I don’t think we’re known well,” Pence said. “Most Americans know me as a loyal lieutenant standing beside the president right up until my oath to the Constitution required me to do otherwise, but the story of our family, the story of our service, the story of a family that’s lived the American dream, that I’ve been a champion of the conservative movement all my life — that’s a story I’ll look forward to telling on the debate stage and in all 99 counties of Iowa before we get to that Caucus.”

Pence, who held his presidential campaign kick-off in Iowa last month, spoke with Radio Iowa this (Tuesday) morning and shared that his first parade appearance was in 1964. “My mother took a picture of us actually on a float for Barry Goldwater on his float for president when I was a toddler, but I have no memory of that,” Pence said, with a laugh. “…I would tell you the opportunity to be back on the street, shaking hands, greeting people, celebrating Independence Day, waving ‘Old Glory’ and cheering on the incredible progress our country has made through all these so many years is something that I cherish.”

Pence will make stops in Boone, Sioux Center, Le Mars, Sioux City, Holstein and Neola over the next few days and he’ll be back in Iowa next week to appear along with several other candidates at an event hosted by The Family Leader.

Two new vaccines for R-S-V will soon be available

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – There are now two R-S-V vaccines approved by the F-D-A to protect people 60 and older from serious cases of the illness. Doctor Vanessa Ogundipe) of MercyOne in Sioux City says R-S-V is an upper respiratory virus.”For most people it’s very benign, causes mild symptoms such as coughing sneezing and kind of runny nose. But in infants and older adults and patients who are have lots of chronic medical conditions it can cause severe illness,” she says. Ogundipe says the two vaccines will soon be available.

“But the first one that was approved was G-S-K’s Arexvy (Uh-rex-vee), and it’s been approved for adults six years and older. So it works by preventing severe R-S-V or prevents severe lower respiratory tract infection in that age group,” Ogundipe says. “And then there’s a second vaccine Pfizer’s Abrysvo (Uh-breeze-voh, that’s also approved for adults 60 years and older.” She says Arexvy is a little different than Abrysvo.

“It boosts the body’s immune response. When you take it you’ll get more of an immune response which should help you protect yourself better,” she says. “And then the Pfizer R-S-V vaccine Abryso protects against both R-S-V A and B.” The vaccines are just need the D-D-C’s approval before they are distributed nationwide. She says there is also an R-S-V vaccine in the works for pregnant women that is hoped to be able to prevent the disease in their newborns.

ISU study finds too much social media may be bad for your mental health

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa State University study is expanding on recent advisories from the American Psychological Association and the U-S surgeon general that found the more people use social media, the lower their psychological wellbeing. Ella Faulhaber is a P-H-D student in human computer interaction at I-S-U and she’s the lead author of the study. “Social media is really prevalent nowadays,” Faulhaber says. “If you’re on a college campus, you ride the bus, you might be one student who doesn’t a have phone buried in their faces. Social media is really everywhere so we wanted to come up with a strategy in order to improve people’s wellbeing when it comes to social media usage.”

Faulhaber offers some suggestions for cutting back on social media usage, and they start with creating an awareness. “Most people don’t even know how much they’re using social media, so you can set a timer on your phone,” Faulhaber says. “There are many built-in wellness apps, you can become aware if you use it. And then also give yourself grace, so really understand that the design and the character of social media platforms is to keep you engaged, keep your attention, keep you scrolling.” Faulhaber notes, it can be very difficult to adhere to time limits in an effort to trim your screen time.

“Just don’t give up,” she says. “Our study has shown it is doable. Loneliness, depression, anxiety all go down once you use your phone less, once you use social media less.” The I-S-U study found college students who cut their social media use to 30 minutes per day scored significantly lower for anxiety, depression, loneliness and fear of missing out at the end of a two-week experiment, when compared to the control group.

State treasurer mulling increase in allowable deposits in College Savings Iowa

News

July 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – State Treasurer Roby Smith says it may be time to raise the amount of money that can be deposited in College Savings Iowa accounts each year. “Obviously I have to have the legislature and the governor sign off on that, but that’s something that we’re going to be looking at next session,” Smith says. “We wanted to get in office, do a deep dive January through December and then we’ll introduce a bill that’s going to take some of these recommendations that we have and then we’ll leave it up to the legislature to make that decision.”

Smith was elected state treasurer last November and has been in office nearly six months. His office oversees the College Savings Iowa program which lets individuals make deposits in an account for a future or current student and withdrawals are not taxed at the federal level. If you’re an Iowa resident, withdrawals aren’t subject to the Iowa income tax either. The current limit on yearly contributions is 37-hundred-85 dollars. “It’s always moving because every year it indexes to inflation,” Smith says. “What I want to do is look to take a jump up from that. I don’t have an amount right now, but let’s just say maybe we shoot for $5000 and then start indexing it from there, but college has gone up much that it’s outpaced inflation.”

Lawmakers established College Savings Iowa in 1998 when the average cost for tuition and fees at a public university in the U-S was 32-hundred dollars. It’s now more than nine-thousand dollars a year. State records indicate there are more than 100-thousand College Savings Iowa accounts.