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2022 IPSWA boys basketball all-state teams announced; Lipsey named Mr. Basketball

Sports

March 15th, 2022 by admin

DES MOINES — The Iowa Print Sports Writers Association (IPSWA) announced the 2022 boys basketball all-state teams on Tuesday. The teams were selected by print sports writers in Iowa during a meeting on Saturday, March 12.

Finishing his high school career Friday with a triple-double to lead Ames to a Class 4A state title, sports writers and coaches voted Tamin Lipsey as Mr. Basketball. The Iowa State Cyclone signee adds the honor to a resume that includes a 2019 gold medal in the FIBA Americas U16 Championship.

The 6-foot-2 senior averaged 15.7 points per game, shot 56.7% from the field, and 72.5% from the charity stripe this season for the Ames Little Cyclones. He broke the school’s record for career assists with 339.

Here’s a look at area athletes that were honored.

Class 4A

FIRST TEAM
Josh Dix, Council Bluffs Lincoln, SR

SECOND TEAM
Jamison Gruber, Council Bluffs Lincoln, SR

Class 3A

SECOND TEAM
Kaleb Booth, Carroll, SR

Class 1A

SECOND TEAM
Jaixen Frost, Mount Ayr, JR
Raydden Grobe, AHSTW, SR

THIRD TEAM
Sage Evans, West Harrison, JR

Check out the full teams HERE.

Heartbeat Today 3-15-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

March 15th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Cass County Youth Coordinator Shelby Van Horn about the 4-H Endowment Pancake Supper and Silent Auction fund raiser tonight.

Play

Creston Police report, 3/15/22: Atlantic man arrested on a warrant

News

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department report a man from Cass County was arrested Monday morning on a Union County warrant. 33-year-old Steven Matthew Behlers, of Atlantic, was taken into custody at the Union County Law Enforcement Center in Creston, on a Probation Violation warrant for an original charge of Domestic Abuse Assault. Behlers was being held in the Union County Jail on a $2,000 cash or surety bond.

And, a Creston resident reported Monday afternoon, that someone had entered their unlocked storage unit and taken all of the person’s property that was being stored there. The loss was estimated at $700.

Northwest Iowa seeing many field fires despite burn bans

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Rural fire departments have been kept busy responding to field fires the past couple of days — especially in northwest Iowa where six of the ten active burn bans are in place. That includes Woodbury County where a burn ban was enacted on February 20th. County emergency services director, Andrew Donawa, says some people have apparently forgotten about it. He says they’ve had a little snow and rain and people must think they are okay to burn brush. “That’s not the case, we’re still fighting this drought from all this dry weather.”

Donawa says they’ve had more than one dozen fire calls in Woodbury County alone the past two days. Other northwest Iowa counties with burn bans are Plymouth, Cherokee, Ida, Monona, and Crawford counties. Donawa says farmers need to be patient before burning away brush piles. “Just wait, we’ll let you know when the ban is lifted. And if you feel like you need to burn, you should probably call your local fire chief and double-check that the ban has been life. And if it is not lifted — make sure you’re not burning,” Donawa says.

Counties marked in a red flame have an active burn ban in-place; Counties with a blue “I” are where burn bans were recently lifted.

He says if you ignore the ban, you are putting your property and nearby property at risk as well as violating the law. “The sheriff’s office will come out and most likely talk with you and they could possibly give you a ticket for burning under the burn ban,” Donawa says. “The burn bans come from the fire marshal’s office at the state and then the sheriff has the authority to enforce that as a ticket or a citation or a fine.”

Any violation of the burn ban declared by the state fire marshal is a simple misdemeanor with the violator subject to a fine and court costs. The State Fire Marshal’s website lists other burn bans in Mills, Webster, Warren, and Calhoun County.

Man arrested on an assault charge in Villisca

News

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office says Deputies called at around 3:45-p.m. Monday to a residence in the 400 block of 5th Street, in Villisca, arrested a man on an assault charge. Authorities say 20-year-old Matthew Thomasen was arrested for Domestic Abuse/1st offense. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail.

House votes to open Iowa PBS archives to public use

News

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa House has passed a bill that would open many of the videos, tapes and other materials in the Iowa P-B-S archives for public use. Representative Megan Jones of Sioux Rapids says the bill is necessary because of a contract dispute between Iowa P-B-S management and former Iowa State wrestling coach Jim Gibbons over footage of a 1986 match. “Had adults come to the table, this wouldn’t have been brought forward by an Iowan who just wanted to share the story of Iowa,” Jones says. “…Had this all been worked out, I don’t think we would have seen this bill, but at the same time, I don’t think we wouldn’t have reached the potential of what Iowa PBS can offer Iowans.” The bill essentially designates Iowa P-B-S material that’s at least 10 years old as a public record that could be used for educational, historical or cultural purposes — and Jones says the videos couldn’t be used to make a profit.

“While they might just be videos of sporting events, they shouldn’t be treated any differently than any other record,” Jones says. “They shouldn’t be treated any different than any other record and the public deserves to show and to share those videos.” House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst of Windsor Heights worked at Iowa P-B-S for 14 years. “This is a sledgehammer when we needed a flyswatter,” Konfrst says. “If folks had come to the table and had a conversation, we wouldn’t be here today. This is too broad and it is too risky.” Konfrst says the bill will endanger future broadcasts of events like the All-State Music Festival because of copyright concerns, Konfrst and others also said it would open the state up to lawsuits. Jones says she doesn’t expect a flood of requests for Iowa P-B-S videos, but if that happens — that’s an important signal.

“In that we are spending so much time through Iowa Public Television fighting and bickering and negotiating out contracts and withholding these archives from people, we are spinning our wheels,” Jones says. The bill passed the House on a 54 to 39 vote. Senators have been developing a similar proposal.

Sac County Teacher charged w/3 counts of sexual abuse

News

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Lake View, Iowa) – The Sac County Sheriff’s Office on Monday, said a teacher accused of sexually abusing one of her students faces multiple charges. On their social media page, authorities said 34-year-old Stefanie Regine Kelsey, of Sac City, was allegedly having a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old male student at East Sac County High School. The relationship had been going on since sometime after the school year started, the sheriff’s office said in a news release.

“Sheriff’s officials were notified on March 10, 2022, by a concerned parent after hearing rumors about the relationship. Sheriff McClure says that after talking with the concerned parent, an investigation was opened. East Sac County School administrators fully cooperated and assisted the Sac County Sheriffs’ Office with their investigation,” the sheriff’s office said. Kelsey is charged with three counts of third-degree sexual abuse. She was arrested and booked into the Sac County Jail but has since been released on a $30,000 bond.

Sac County School District officials have stated “The District is aware of the recent criminal charges filed against a staff member, Stefanie Kelsey. During its investigation into this matter, the District received and plans to accept her resignation effective immediately. The Board plans to take action on Monday, March 14. The District will continue to cooperate fully with law enforcement and follow all applicable District policies regarding this matter, including performing any and all reporting obligations as required by law.”

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley, 3/15/22

Weather

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Patchy fog this morning; Partly cloudy. High near 60. NW-SW winds at 10.
Tonight: Fair to P/Cldy. Low around 35. South wind 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 72. SW @ 10-20.
Thursday: P/Cldy to Cldy w/a chance of light rain. High 57.
Friday: P/Cldy to Cldy w/a chance of light rain in the morning. High 48.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 59. Our Low this morning was 27. Last year on this date, the High was 38 and the Low was 35. The Record High on March 15th in Atlantic, was 79 in 2003, and the Record Low was 0 in 1944.

Iowa is 16th in final AP basketball poll

Sports

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hawkeyes are 16th in the final AP basketball poll. The Hawks won their first Big Ten Tournament title since 2006 on Sunday with a 75-66 win over Purdue. Iowa caught fire late after starting Big Ten play 1-3.

That’s Iowa coach Fran McCaffery who says the Hawkeyes have become very good at absorbing and executing game plans.

Iowa is 26-9, the second most wins in program history. All from a team that was picked to finish ninth in the Big Ten in the preseason.

That’s sophomore forward Keegan Murray. The Hawkeyes will have a quick turnaround as they open the NCAA Tournament Thursday afternoon in Buffalo against Richmond.

That’s senior guard Jordan Bohannon.

Iowa’s deadly March 5th tornadoes could be sign of what’s to come

News, Weather

March 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The experts are still studying the series of ten tornadoes that touched down in Iowa on March 5th, claiming seven lives and damaging or destroying dozens of houses. Meteorologist Dennis Todey, director of the U-S-D-A’s Midwest Climate Hub in Ames, says the strength of the tornadoes was very unusual, as they included a pair of E-F-2s, an E-F-3 and an E-F-4.

Todey says, “Small tornadoes in March is not a surprise, too much, but something of this nature and several of them, the total is up to ten now that the Weather Service has confirmed related to this, is really more than we want to see at this point.” Forecasters are trying to determine if this is a sign of more frequent early-season severe weather. “I don’t know that we can take it as a signal for anything larger just yet,” Todey says, “but it is also an example of a typical spring kind of thing where you get some severe weather ahead of a big system and then cold air and snow behind it.”

Temperatures in parts of Iowa that day were in the 60s and 70s, then the late afternoon storm brought tornadoes and hail, followed the next day by highs only in the 20s and 30s and several inches of snow. That clash of large masses of warm and cold air, Todey says, is textbook for tornadoes.

“The jet stream itself is starting to work its way back northward from being in the southern U.S. during the winter,” Todey says, “so that boundary between the warm air and cold air is more in the middle of the country now and we’re able to get more warm air and moisture further northward more readily.” That can be a recipe for severe weather. Iowa also saw a massive outbreak of tornadoes during the derecho in mid-December, which was very rare.