w/Kate Olson.
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Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Dowling Catholic, WDM |
2 | Iowa City, City High |
3 | Norwalk |
4 | Johnston |
5 | Cedar Falls |
6 | Pleasant Valley |
7 | Dallas Center-Grimes |
8 | Ankeny |
9 | Dubuque, Hempstead |
10 | Waukee Northwest |
11 | Urbandale |
12 | Des Moines, Roosevelt |
13 | Valley, WDM |
14 | Sioux City, North |
15 | Cedar Rapids Kennedy |
16 | Iowa City, West |
17 | Southeast Polk |
18 | Prairie, Cedar Rapids |
19 | Ankeny Centennial |
20 | Iowa City, Liberty |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Dubuque Hempstead |
2 | Pleasant Valley |
3 | Johnston |
4 | West Des Moines Valley |
5 | Ankeny Centennial |
6 | Des Moines Roosevelt |
7 | Ankeny |
8 | Dowling Catholic |
9 | Ames |
10 | Dubuque Senior |
11 | Waukee |
12 | Cedar Rapids Prairie |
13 | Dallas Center-Grimes |
14 | Iowa City, City High |
15 | Linn-Mar |
16 | Southeast Polk |
17 | Indianola |
18 | Urbandale |
19 | Iowa City Liberty |
20 | Waukee Northwest |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Marion |
2 | North Polk |
3 | Pella |
4 | Western Dubuque |
5 | Glenwood |
6 | Carlisle |
7 | Lewis Central |
8 | Mount Vernon Lisbon |
9 | MOC Floyd Valley |
10 | ADM |
11 | Clear Creek Amana |
12 | Sioux Center |
13 | Washington |
14 | Solon |
15 | Clear Lake |
16 | Gilbert |
17 | Decorah |
18 | Nevada |
19 | Algona |
20 | Waverly Shell Rock |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Solon |
2 | Mount Vernon-Lisbon |
3 | Ballard |
4 | Glenwood |
5 | Pella |
6 | Gilbert |
7 | North Polk, Alleman |
8 | MOC-Floyd Valley |
9 | Spencer |
10 | Carlisle |
11 | Clear Creek-Amana |
12 | Bishop Heelan, Sioux City |
13 | Atlantic |
14 | Clear Lake |
15 | Washington |
16 | Wahlert, Dubuque |
17 | ADM, Adel |
18 | Iowa Falls-Alden/AGWSR |
19 | Harlan |
20 | Fort Madison |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Tipton |
2 | DM Christian |
3 | Waukon |
4 | Okoboji |
5 | Oelwein |
6 | Danville-NL |
7 | Grundy Center |
8 | Mid-Prairie |
9 | Monticello |
10 | Denver |
11 | Anamosa |
12 | New Hampton |
13 | Western Christian |
14 | Unity Christian |
15 | Jesup |
16 | Spirit Lake |
17 | GLR-CL |
18 | NE Goose Lake |
19 | Chariton |
20 | Williamsburg |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | Denver |
2 | Mid-Prairie Wellman |
3 | Monticello |
4 | Tipton |
5 | Van Meter |
6 | Jesup |
7 | Williamsburg |
8 | Clarinda |
9 | Beckman Catholic, Dyersville |
10 | Cherokee |
11 | Des Moines Christian |
12 | Roland-Story, Story City |
13 | Albia |
14 | Unity Christian, Orange City |
15 | Cresco, Crestwood |
16 | Union, Laporte City |
17 | Sumner Fredericksburg |
18 | Garner Hayfield Ventura |
19 | Okoboji |
20 | Davis County |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | ACGC (Guthrie Center) |
2 | Ogden |
3 | Regina (Iowa City) |
4 | Woodbine |
5 | Bellevue |
6 | St Edmond (Fort Dodge) |
7 | Cascade |
8 | St Albert (Council Bluffs) |
9 | East Marshall (Le Grand) |
10 | Newman (Mason City) |
11 | Maquoketa Valley (Delhi) |
12 | Valley Lutheran (Cedar Falls) |
13 | Earlham |
14 | Madrid |
15 | Central Decatur (Leon) |
16 | Clayton Ridge (Guttenberg) |
17 | Hudson |
18 | North Mahaska (New Sharon) |
19 | IKM-Manning |
20 | Collins Maxwell (Maxwell) |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
1 | South Winn |
2 | Sibley Ocheyedan |
3 | Logan Magnolia |
4 | St. Edmond |
5 | Woodbine |
6 | ACGC |
7 | Earlham |
8 | North Linn |
9 | Hudson |
10 | Regina |
11 | North Tama |
12 | Wapsie Valley |
13 | Pekin |
14 | Central Decatur |
15 | Central Elkader |
16 | Martensdale St. Marys |
17 | West Fork |
18 | Sioux Central |
19 | South Hardin |
20 | St. Albert |
Girls Team Scores
Girls Individual Top Ten
Full results HERE
Boys Team Scores
Boys Individual Top Ten
Full results HERE
The Atlantic cross country teams had a good showing at the Logan-Magnolia Cross Country Meet on Tuesday night. In the girls race Ava Rush won the championship and the girls team finished in 2nd place. On the boys side the Trojans finished 3rd and had top-ten finishes from Alex Sonntag and Bennett Whetstone.
Girls Team Scores
Girls Individual Top Ten
Boys Team Scores
Boys Individual Top Ten
Hawkeye Ten Conference
(3-1) Red Oak 25-21-25-25, Atlantic 20-25-14-17 (Lexi Noelck 8 kills and 12 assists for Atlantic. Ava Rush 12 digs.)
(3-0) Kuemper Catholic 25-25-25, Creston 15-10-16
(3-0) Shenandoah 25-25-25, Glenwood 19-16-21
Pride of Iowa Conference
(3-1) Southwest Valley 25-25-18-25, Central Decatur 11-18-25-16
Other Scores
(2-0) AHSTW 25-25, Nodaway Valley 19-19
(2-0) Griswold 25-25, AHSTW 16-16
(2-0) Griswold 25-25 Nodaway Valley 21-12
(3-0) CAM 25-25-25, East Union 7-8-19
(3-1) East Mills 22-25-25-25, Lenox 25-4-15-9
(3-2) Heartland Christian 25-19-17-25-16, Cedar Bluffs 18-25-25-22-14
(3-1) Lamoni 25-25-20-25, Wayne 19-17-25-12
(3-2) Logan-Magnolia 25-22-13-25-15, Woodbine 22-25-25-21-10
(3-2) Lourdes Central Catholic 25-22-22-25-15, Fremont-Mills 20-25-25-22-12
(3-0) Mormon Trail 25-25-25, Melcher-Dallas 16-10-18
(3-1) Orient-Macksburg 22-25-25-25 Paton-Churdan 25-23-13-21
(3-0) Sidney 25-25-25, Johnson-Brock 13-16-14
The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest on Tuesday at 6:35 p.m. of 30-year-old Raejean Mae Steele of Red Oak in the 1800 block of East Summit Street on a valid warrant for Violation of Probation. Steele was taken to the Montgomery County Jail and held on $5,000 bond.
WASHINGTON – The Drug Enforcement Administration is advising the public of an alarming emerging trend of colorful fentanyl available across the United States. In August 2022, DEA and our law enforcement partners began seizing brightly-colored fentanyl and fentanyl pills in 18 states. Dubbed “rainbow fentanyl” in the media, this trend appears to be a new method used by drug cartels to sell highly addictive and potentially deadly fentanyl made to look like candy to children and young people.
“Rainbow fentanyl—fentanyl pills and powder that come in a variety of bright colors, shapes, and sizes—is a deliberate effort by drug traffickers to drive addiction amongst kids and young adults,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. “The men and women of the DEA are relentlessly working to stop the trafficking of rainbow fentanyl and defeat the Mexican drug cartels that are responsible for the vast majority of the fentanyl that is being trafficked in the United States.”
Brightly-colored fentanyl is being seized in multiple forms, including pills, powder, and blocks that resembles sidewalk chalk. Despite claims that certain colors may be more potent than others, there is no indication through DEA’s laboratory testing that this is the case. Every color, shape, and size of fentanyl should be considered extremely dangerous.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. Just two milligrams of fentanyl, which is equal to 10-15 grains of table salt, is considered a lethal dose. Without laboratory testing, there is no way to know how much fentanyl is concentrated in a pill or powder.
Fentanyl remains the deadliest drug threat facing this country. According to the CDC, 107,622 Americans died of drug overdoses in 2021, with 66 percent of those deaths related to synthetic opioids like fentanyl. Drug poisonings are the leading killer of Americans between the ages of 18 and 45. Fentanyl available in the United States is primarily supplied by two criminal drug networks, the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).
In September 2021, DEA launched the One Pill Can Kill Public Awareness Campaign to educate Americans about the dangers of fake pills. Additional resources for parents and the community can be found on DEA’s Fentanyl Awareness page.
If you encounter fentanyl in any form, do not handle it and call 911 immediately.
(Radio Iowa) – A couple of cities in central Iowa have found West Nile-infected mosquitoes in their monitoring traps. Iowa State University entomologist, Ryan Smith, says August and September are generally the peak months for the disease.
“West Nile virus is something that we refer to as being endemic, that means that we are going to see West Nile virus activity and potentially human cases every year,” Smith says. “Since it’s been introduced that that may vary from year to year and the intensity and or how many cases that we ultimately end up with.”
Ames and Des Moines announced they have found mosquitoes with West Nile. Smith does surveillance in seven counties and has found West Nile in three of them. He says mosquito populations are influenced by rainfall, and the drought that has expanded in the state has made an impact. “The numbers are maybe a little bit lower. Things are kind of on the quiet side right now. But when we look at the season as a whole, there’s actually been a pretty surprising number of mosquitoes kind of considering that for most of the year that it has been pretty much under drought-like conditions,” he says.
Smith says all the other things happening can sometimes overshadow West Nile. “It’s easy to kind of forget about, and if anything, I think these reports kind of serve as an additional reminder of it. West Nile is not something… most of the people are going to have very mild symptoms and won’t even know that they have it. But for those people who do develop a more severe infection, it could even be fatal,” Smith says.
Smith says it’s a reminder to take precautions against getting bitten if you are outdoors and mosquitoes are present. He says there isn’t anything else on the radar right now when it comes to mosquitoes. “At least right now, it is just our West Nile, our numbers of mosquitoes aren’t that high,” he says. Smith says you should still take precautions by wearing insect repellent, and dumping out any standing water where mosquitoes might breed.