712 Digital Group - top

High School Basketball Scoreboard 12/02/2021

Sports

December 3rd, 2021 by admin

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Hawkeye Ten Conference

Denison-Schleswig 49, Storm Lake 46
Shenandoah 54, Harlan 38

Western Iowa Conference

Logan-Magnolia 38, Fremont-Mills 28 (Lo-Ma Coach Derek Sonderland’s 300th career win)

Rolling Valley Conference

Woodbine 55, CAM 48

Corner Conference

East Mills 60, Riverside 25
Johnson-Brock 39, Sidney 37

Other Scores

Southeast Warren 65, Melcher-Dallas 13
Martensdale-St. Marys 59, Woodward-Granger 32
Bedford 50, Murray 29

 

BOYS BASKETBALL

Hawkeye Ten Conference

Denison-Schleswig 51, Storm Lake 47
Harlan 70, Shenandoah 38

Western Iowa Conference

Treynor 50, Bishop Heelan 46
Logan-Magnolia 49, Fremont-Mills 32

Rolling Valley Conference

CAM 52, Woodbine 31

Corner Conference

East Mills 56, Riverside 51
Sidney 52, Johnson Brock 49

Other Scores

Southeast Valley 80, Madrid 65

UPDATE: Missing autistic NE Iowa teen found safe

News

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATE/Radio Iowa) – The search for a missing northeast Iowa teenager ended not long after it began, Thursday morning. Fayette County sheriff’s officials said 14-year-old Walker Richardson was found, and is safe. They released no other details on where he was located or where he had been.

Authorities said previously, they were searching for the teen who had last been seen Wednesday, around 2:30 p.m. They said Richardson is a highly-functioning autistic. Sheriff’s officials began their search Wednesday afternoon but suspended operations overnight over safety concerns. The search resumed 9:30-a.m. Thursday.

One fatality as van hits tractor pulling hay trailer near Bode

News

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Authorities have released more details about Wednesday afternoon’s fatal accident in rural Humboldt County, about half a mile east of Bode. According to the Iowa State Patrol, a 2019 Dodge Caravan driven by David Eddington Sr. of Bode struck the rear of a Case I-H farm tractor pulling a large round bale trailer. The tractor was driven by Kyle Olson of Bode.

Pamela Eddington of Bode was a passenger in the Dodge Caravan and she was pronounced dead at the scene. David Eddington, Sr. sustained minor injuries, The tractor driver and other passengers in the Caravan were not injured.

Economist is not optimistic about outlook for Iowa & Midwest in 2022

News

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – After another year filled with supply chain troubles and global health concerns, the economic outlook for 2022 in Iowa and for the Midwest isn’t rosy, according to Creighton University economist Ernie Goss. “The outlook depends heavily on what happens with the South African strain of COVID-19, the variant there,” Goss says. “Even with that, I’m still expecting slower growth in the first half of 2022. It will slow even more, obviously, if we see that expanding in the U.S.” The monthly Creighton survey of supply managers in Iowa and eight other states in the region is showing strong growth, but it’s bogged down by continued transportation troubles and labor shortages.

“One out of four of the supply managers expect the supply chain delays that we’re currently now experiencing to improve in the first half of 2022,” Goss says. “More than 50-percent of supply chain managers expect these supply chain disruptions, supply chain bottlenecks to get worse.” According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Iowa’s seasonally adjusted manufacturing employment rate was down by fewer than 500 jobs from October to November, or only about two-tenths of one-percent. On the national front, the Gross Domestic Product is booming. “The oddity of it is, we’ve got GDP back to above pre-pandemic levels, but employment? Not there,” Goss says. “We’re still seeing reluctance to return to work. We’ve got a lot of retirements. We’ve got individuals leaving the workforce.”

Ernie Goss

Goss says job gains for Iowa’s nondurable goods producers, including food processors, were more than offset in the past month by losses for the state’s durable goods manufacturers such as metal producers. Also, inflation levels are worsening and keeping prices on a wide range of products high. The region’s wholesale inflation gauge for November hit 92.9 on a zero-to-100 scale. “We’re seeing some of the highest numbers we’ve recorded here at Creighton University since we began the survey more than 25 years ago,” Goss says. “I would say it’s the most consistent upward price pressures we’ve recorded in the last three decades.”

The survey’s overall Business Conditions Index for the Midwest, which also uses a zero-to-100 scale, dropped from 65.2 in October to 60.2 in November. The overall index for Iowa tumbled even further, from 67.8 in October to 59.4 in November.

Mills County Sheriff’s report (from 12/2/21)

News

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office, Thursday, reported the arrest of 35-year-old Daniel John Vornbrock, from Glenwood. He was arrested for Driving while barred, Possession of a Controlled Substance, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Bond was set at $4,300.

Sheriff’s officials said also, a single-vehicle accident that took place at around 8:45-a.m. Tuesday, resulted in one person being transported to the hospital. Authorities say 63-year-old Mark Blair, of Stanton, was driving a 2007 Mack truck eastbound on Highway 34 eight mile-marker for Glenwood, and approaching the intersection of the off-ramp and 221st Street. When he attempted to turn right (South) onto 221st, the vehicle went out of control and rolled onto its side on 221st, dumping a load of dirt the truck was carrying across the northbound lanes.

Glenwood Fire Department personnel extricated Blair from the truck by mechanical means. He was then flown by helicopter to the hospital. An initial investigation determined there were skid marks about 52-feet long past the stop sign, traversing the corner. Authorities say that indicates the truck did not stop at the stop sign, and was traveling at a speed which, combined with the turn, resulted in the vehicle overturning.

Iowa men visit No. 2 Purdue tonight (Friday night)

Sports

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – After posting a win at Virginia the task is even tougher for the Iowa Hawkeyes tonight (Friday night_ as they visit second ranked Purdue in their Big Ten opener. Iowa coach Fran McCaffery.

McCaffery says it will be the first of may games against highly ranked foes in the Big Ten.

Iowa guard Jordan Bohannon says Purdue looks like a team that could be ranked number one next week.

Bohannon says Purdue’s size advantage will challenge the Hawkeyes at the defensive end.

Coverage of the game on KJAN begins at 7-p.m.

Iowa players preview B1G title game

Sports

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa linebacker Jestin Jacobs says playing in the Big Ten Championship fulfills a childhood dream. The 13th ranked Hawkeyes take on number-two Michigan and both teams will be in search of their first league title since sharing it in 2004.

Junior running back Tyler Goodson does not mind the role of underdog as a team or as a player. The native of Georgia was lightly recruited out of high school.

LSU beats No. 14 Iowa State women 69-60

Sports

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The 14th ranked Iowa State women trailed nearly the entire way in a 69-60 loss at LSU.

That’s forward Ashley Joens who led the Cyclones with 24 points on eight of 12 shooting.

The Cyclones are 7-1.

No. 9 Iowa women fall at Duke 79-64

Sports

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Duke women used a 14-2 run in the third quarter to take command in a 79-64 win over Iowa, handing the ninth ranked Hawkeyes their first loss of the season. Iowa shot only 40 percent, including three of 19 from behind the arc.

Iowa coach Lisa Bluder. The Hawkeyes fall to 4-1 and open Big Ten play Sunday at home against Michigan State.

Will this unseasonable warming trend hold through December?

News, Weather

December 3rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – December in Iowa began with a very unseasonably warm start. State climatologist Justin Glisan says November wrapped up slightly warmer than normal, too, as well as drier.  “The average temperature was about 39 degrees and that’s a little over two degrees above average,” Glisan says. “On the precipitation front, we were drier than average across the state. We did have pockets of slightly-above-average precipitation but overall slightly under an inch below-average precipitation.”  While winter doesn’t officially start until December 21st, snowfall isn’t out of the ordinary for this time of year, though there weren’t many flakes flying during November.

“We were below-average on snowfall across the state, anywhere from two to three inches, and there were some stations that didn’t get any snowfall in November,” Glisan says, “which is not extreme but also remarkable.” The forecast models for the month of December are showing a trend toward more spring-like temperatures versus fall or winter. “We have seen a persistent signal in which we’re seeing above-average behavior for warmer temperatures,” Glisan says. “We’ve definitely seen that over the last week with temperatures in the 50s and 60s, anywhere from 15 to 25 degrees above average, depending on your location.”

State Climatologist Justin Glisan. (file photo)

The La Nina weather pattern is expected to start influencing our region’s climate soon, but Iowa is in the center of two converging fronts — so it’s a toss-up as to what we might get for snow or rain. “If we look at the precipitation outlook for December, it’s showing us that classic La Nina signature in which we have above-average chances of wetter conditions in the Ohio Valley, Great Lakes and up to the Pacific Northwest, drier probabilities south of us and Iowa happens to be right in the middle.”

The National Weather Service won’t be making its forecast for the likelihood of a White Christmas until around the 15th of December, or some ten days out from the 25th.