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Lewis Central runs at Kirk Schmaltz Invite in Ames

Sports

September 2nd, 2022 by admin

The Lewis Central cross country teams ran at the Kirk Schmaltz Invitational in Ames on Thursday.

The Titans boys team finished with 260 points in 12th place. Ethan Eichhorn had a 4th place individual finish in 15:43.80. Kade Diercks finished 35th.

The Titans girls team had 328 points and finished 11th place. Ava Bussey was their top runner in 59th place.

—In another area XC note Coon Rapids-Bayard freshman Landon Cook ran 19th with a time of 19:54.01 at the Madrid Invitational.

West Central Valley XC Invitational 09/01/2022

Sports

September 2nd, 2022 by admin

West Central Valley XC Invitational
09/01/2022

Girls Team Scores

  1. Kuemper Catholic 55
  2. Interstate-35 76
  3. West Central Valley 80
  4. Saydel 101
  5. Greene County 109
  6. Ankeny Christian Academy 110
  7. CAM 128

Girls Individual Top Ten

  1. Marie Dea, Kuemper Catholic
  2. Stefi Beisswenger, Audubon
  3. Julia Kanne, Kuemper Catholic
  4. Chasey Rowan, West Central Valley
  5. Taitlin Koch, West Central Valley
  6. Olivia Phillips, Interstate-35
  7. Jazz Christensen, Nodaway Valley
  8. Olivia Shannon, Greene County
  9. Ella Petersen, Exira-EHK
  10. Clara Tylavsky, Saydel

CAM’s Lyndsey Chaney was 11th.

Boys Team Scores

  1. Kuemper Catholic 39
  2. Interstate-35 49
  3. Nodaway Valley 98
  4. Ankeny Christian Academy 99
  5. Greene County 99
  6. Saydel 139
  7. SW Valley 192

Boys Individual Top Ten

  1. Doug Berg, Nodaway Valley
  2. Ryan North, Kuemper Catholic
  3. Jacob Greving, Kuemper Catholic
  4. Mason Maiers, Interstate-35
  5. Daniel Schoening, Ankeny Christian
  6. Ben Reyes, Interstate-35
  7. Malachi Broers, Nodaway Valley
  8. Austin Vander Werf, Interstate-35
  9. Alex Davis, Ankeny Christian
  10. Thomas Pottebaum, Kuemper Catholic

Full results HERE

High School Volleyball Scoreboard 09/01/2022

Sports

September 2nd, 2022 by admin

ADM Tournament

(2-0) ADM 21-21, Atlantic 16-12
(2-0) Nevada 21-21, Atlantic 15-11
(2-1) Norwalk 9-21-15, Atlantic 21-7-7
(2-0) Norwalk 21-21, Gilbert 18-16
(2-0) Norwalk 21-21, Woodward-Granger 10-14
(2-1) ADM 19-21-15, Nevada 21-15-12
(2-0) ADM 21-21, Woodward-Granger 12-13
(2-1) ADM 21-17-15, Gilbert 14-21-7
(2-0) ADM 26-21, Norwalk 24-17
(2-0) Nevada 21-21, Norwalk 17-14
(2-0) Nevada 21-21, Gilbert 16-12
(2-0) Nevada 21-22, Woodward-Granger 3-20

Hawkeye Ten Conference

(3-0) Harlan 25-25-25, Denison-Schleswig 13-14-9
(3-0) Lewis Central 25-25-25, Clarinda 10-7-12
(3-0) Shenandoah 27-25-27, Creston 25-15-25

Corner Conference

(3-2) Griswold 25-22-25-22-15, Fremont-Mills 18-25-20-25-11
(3-2) Sidney 25-25-22-18-15, Stanton 20-16-25-25-2

Other Scores

(3-0) CB Abraham Lincoln 25-25-25, LeMars 15-22-23
(3-0) Bedford 25-25-25, Lamoni 15-16-19
(3-0) Boyer Valley 25-25-25, IKM-Manning 14-23-10
(2-0) Clarke 25-26, Central Decatur 22-24
(3-2) Glidden-Ralston def West Central Valley
(3-0) Lenox 25-25-25, Interstate 35 16-22-20
(2-1) Missouri Valley 17-21-15, MVAOCOU 21-6-8
(2-0) Missouri Valley 21-21, West Monona 15-7
(2-0) Missouri Valley 21-21, Sioux City West 18-4
(3-0) Mount Ayr 25-25-25, Essex 11-18-17

EDDIE RAY MACK, 67, of Hamlin (9-5-2022)

Obituaries

September 2nd, 2022 by Jim Field

EDDIE RAY MACK, 67, of Hamlin died Thursday, September 1, 2022 at his home.  Funeral services for EDDIE RAY MACK will be held on Monday, September 5, 2022 at 2:00 P.M. in the Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon.

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Friends may call at the Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon.  Family visitation will be Monday from 12:00 pm until service time at the funeral home.

Burial in the Maple Grove Cemetery in Audubon.

EDDIE RAY MACK is survived by:

Wife:  Kathy Mack of Hamlin

Children:  Trina (Aaron) Sarsfield of Atlantic; Eddie Ray Mack, Jr. of Hamlin and Nikki (Nathan) Johnson of Hamlin

Sisters:  Connie Mack of Murray; Nora Keller of Lyons, NE

Brother:  Arthur Mack of Skidmore, MO

Brother-in-law:  Kip (Jenny) Malone of Corning

Sister-in-law:  Jane Mack

9 Grandchildren

2 Great-Grandchildren

nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.

ISU police hoping new pedestrian bridge helps fans for season opener

News, Sports

September 2nd, 2022 by admin

Thousands of fans are expected to head to Ames for the first Iowa State home football game Saturday. I-S-U Police Chief Michael Newton says a new pedestrian bridge on the east side of Jack Trice Stadium should help with all the extra traffic.

Officers have had to stop cars to let pedestrians cross the street safely, and now they can just walk across the bridge.

There is a new R-V parking lot that will feed into the bridge too. Newton says there are not a lot of changes for those who attend the game.

Newton reminds everyone to park legally for the game.

Newton says to give yourself extra time to get to your parking area, as there will be lots of traffic for the game. The Cyclones face Southeast Missouri State at 1 p-m.

Skyscan Forecast Friday 09/02/2022

Weather

September 2nd, 2022 by admin

Skyscan Forecast  Friday, September 2, 2022  Dan Hicks

Today: Areas of fog early then partly cloudy. A few scattered showers and thunderstorms this afternoon. S @ 10-15. High 90.

Tonight: Partly to mostly cloudy. A few scattered showers and thunderstorms. S shifting to N @ 5-10. Low 65.

Saturday: Partly cloudy. N @ 10. High 82.

Saturday Night: Mostly clear. NNE @ 5-10. Low 57.

Sunday: Partly cloudy. High 84.

Monday: Partly cloudy. High 88.

Yesterday’s high was 79 and the low overnight was 64. This day last year the high was 75 and the low 65. The all-time record high was 101 in 2000. The record low was 30 in 1893. Sunrise is 6:46 a.m. and Sunset is 7:52 p.m.

Iowa beef plant developer calls Walmart’s move a ‘seismic shift’ for industry

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 1st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Retail giant Walmart bought a minority share in a Nebraska beef packing plant on Wednesday, what an Iowa cattleman says is a “seismic shift” in the beef processing industry.

Chad Tentinger, principal developer of Cattlemen’s Heritage Beef Company, says the move is historic — and it was inevitable. “We’ve already seen it in other avenues, in pork and we’ve seen it in chicken, I think beef is just the next natural progression of that,” Tentinger says. “It also is going to be another playing field. I think anytime you can bring the farmer’s product closer to the end user — to retail — is a good thing long-term.” 

Cattlemen’s Heritage is planning to build a $325 million beef packing plant in southwest Iowa’s Mills County. Tentinger says Walmart’s move this week is what he sees for the future, which he says represents a “massive, fundamental change” to the beef industry. “It started out as stockyards and stockyards sold to packing plants, and then the stockyards went away and then farmers sold directly to the packing plant. Packing plants got consolidated into what we call the Big Four today and for the first time in a very long time, now there’s other industry that’s getting into this process,” Tentinger says. “So to have retailers enter the processing business is a drastic shift than what we’ve ever seen before.”

Tentinger sees Walmart’s investment in the North Platte property as the first step by retail into beef production, which he predicts will be good for the consumer and good for the cattle producer. “Retailers, at the end of the day, they want to know where their meat’s coming from. They want to know exactly, down to what farm it came off of, potentially, where it came from, animal health, wellbeing, all these things are becoming more and more important to the consumer,” Tentinger says. “And when you have that, it automatically draws off smaller producer farms and smaller family farms.”

It may only be a matter of time, he says, before Iowa-based grocery chains like Hy-Vee or Fareway make a similar move to Walmart by investing in localized meat processing. “I think every retailer nationwide today is taking note of this and looking at the opportunities going forward in the processing business, for sure,” he says.

Tentinger is founder and owner of TenCorp, a cattle industry construction firm with offices in Des Moines and Marcus. The planned beef plant in Mills County is on target to begin construction late this fall, Tentinger says, with the opening scheduled for late 2024. It will employ up to 750 workers and at capacity, will be able to process up to 1,500 head of cattle per day.

Ex-Clarksville cop charged with sexual exploitation of a minor

News

September 1st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A former northeast Iowa policeman has been arrested and charged with sexual exploitation of a minor. According to the Iowa Department of Public Safety, a minor told local law enforcement in early March that Clarksville police officer Mike Tobin had shown them sexually explicit photos and videos, including nude images of minors. The material was evidence in a pending criminal case.

Tobin was fired the next day, but in May, KWWL reported that the Clarksville City Council voted to rescind Tobin’s firing and accepted his resignation instead. Tobin was arrested today (Thursday), and charged with three felony counts of sexual exploitation of a minor and eight aggravated misdemeanors related to sexual exploitation of a minor.

Conservation leader named Council Bluffs Convention & Visitors Bureau Board President

News

September 1st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Council Bluffs, Iowa – Mark Shoemaker, Executive Director of Pottawattamie County Conservation, was recently appointed President of the Council Bluffs Convention & Visitors Bureau (CBCVB) Board of Directors. Shoemaker, who’s been a Pottawattamie County employee since 1993, has served as a CBCVB Board Member since July 2016. Following a brief absence from the board, he’s been the Vice President since August 2020. “This is a very exciting opportunity,” said Shoemaker. “The CBCVB has an outstanding staff and to be able to continue to work with them in this capacity is truly an honor.”

The mission of the Council Bluffs Convention & Visitors Bureau is to serve as a catalyst to grow Pottawattamie County’s visitor economy through collaborative sales and marketing, destination advocacy, and sustainable placemaking activities in order to enhance the region’s quality of life. Shoemaker sees obvious cross-over with his work for Pottawattamie County Conservation.

“When you talk about highlighting the great things Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie County have to offer, some of that appeal starts with our natural landscape and what we’re able to do with Conservation,” he said. “There are so many things in place to allow us to be leaders in tourism in the state of Iowa and across the Midwest.”

Mark Shoemaker

As CBCVB Board President, Shoemaker will now chair monthly board meetings and provide direction and assistance to staff. Mark Eckman, Executive Director for CBCVB, says Shoemaker displays passion and offers a wealth of experience, having led Pottawattamie Conservation since 1997. “As a board member, Mark has helped lead the CBCVB as it has achieved its most significant accomplishments,” said Eckman. “These include the purchase of its office building, being designated as an Iowa Welcome Center, and receiving seven Iowa Tourism Awards during the past six years”

Shoemaker’s appointment came during the CBCVB Board of Directors meeting Thursday, August 25th. He says his primary goal is to keep things moving in a positive direction. “I just want to see us continue to grow and compete with CVB’s across the state,” said Shoemaker. “The board and staff are already making that a reality but continuing to market Council Bluffs by attracting high quality and meaningful events to the area is important.”

For more information on the Council Bluffs Convention & Visitors Bureau visit UNleashCB.com. To learn more about Pottawattamie County Conservation visit PottConservation.com

9th Annual Southwest Iowa Art Tour: Connecting Rural Communities Through Art

News

September 1st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Oakland, Iowa) –  The Southwest Iowa Art Tour is gearing up for its ninth year connecting rural communities through art. The event will take place Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 16th, 17th and 18th.  In 2014, a group of southwest Iowa artists came together to pull off a regional event to connect their rural communities – a self-guided ‘Art Tour’ that would showcase their artworks, studios, galleries, and hometowns. The first year included nine participating communities and thirty artists. The success of the Southwest Iowa Art Tour has grown the ninth annual event to eleven communities, sixteen Gathering Places, and more than seventy local artists.

The self-guided tour allows participants to begin and end where they would like, come and go from location to location at their leisure, and explore diverse art forms – including fiber art, sculpture, pottery, painting, metal works, jewelry, glassware and much more from over seventy artists. The sixteen unique stops this year include all of last year’s locations plus an additional stop in rural Malvern. Gathering Places will be located in the following Southwest Iowa towns: Avoca, rural Clarinda, Council Bluffs, rural Essex, Glenwood, Harlan, Macedonia, Malvern, rural Malvern, Neola, Red Oak and Villisca.

The event will be held on its traditional third Saturday and Sunday in September, with an additional Friday “Sneak Peek” at select locations. Modification of the Southwest Iowa Art Tour into a three-day event has allowed the public time to hit all 16 Gathering Places over the weekend. This year’s Friday “Sneak Peek” hours are from 4 to 7 PM on September 16th at 10 of the 16 locations. This will provide attendees with the additional opportunity to explore the Gathering Places in Clarinda, Essex, Macedonia, Malvern, Neola and Villisca a little early – whether you can’t make it the other days or just need additional time to visit all locations over the weekend.

Langille Studios southwest of Malvern will also be having live music by Hector Anchondo for the Sneak Peek, so you can make them your last stop for Friday evening! Avoca, Council Bluffs, Glenwood, Harlan and Red Oak’s Gathering Places will join the tour on Saturday morning; the hours for all locations are from 10 AM to 5 PM on Saturday, September 17th and from Noon to 4 PM on Sunday, September 18th.

The Southwest Iowa Art Tour is coordinated by Golden Hills RC&D of Oakland and the collaborative efforts of local participating artists. Funding for coordination of this event, which is free to the public, comes in part from local sponsorships. This year, partnering supporters at the $1,000+ level are Houghton State Bank of Red Oak and the Pottawattamie Countywide Tourism Promotion Committee. The $350 sponsors for 2022 include Malvern Bank, CB Skin Secrets of Council Bluffs, and Dave Carbaugh State Farm of Red Oak.

Over 20 local businesses and organizations are sponsoring for the 9th Annual Southwest Iowa Art Tour. We encourage you to support those businesses who support the arts in southwest Iowa, and make the most of your Southwest Iowa Art Tour experience by stopping at the great restaurants and other shops in the host towns. To find out which businesses are sponsors of the Art Tour, a full listing may be found on our website at www.swiarttour.com, as well as a map so you can plan out your route!  (click on the map to enlarge >>>)

The Southwest Iowa Art Tour began with the intent to not only bring awareness of the arts and artists in rural southwest Iowa, but also to help support economic reinvestment in our small towns through the arts. Remember that when you purchase an original piece of work from an artist, you are directly helping to make the arts a viable career choice in our area. And while you’re at it, grab a shake from the local ice cream shop and a burger from your local café.

For more information be sure to check the “Southwest Iowa Art” Tour Facebook page (with individual Facebook Events for each Gathering Place) and visit the website: www.swiarttour.com, or contact Becca at rebecca.castle@goldenhillsrcd.org. Come support our artists in Southwest Iowa, and be a part of “connecting rural communities through art.”

Golden Hills RC&D is a nonprofit organization with a mission “to develop and promote sustainable cultural and conservation projects that enhance the quality of life and preserve the assets of rural western Iowa.” For more information about Golden Hills RC&D visit www.goldenhillsrcd.org.