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Iowa women down Samford to move to 2-0

Sports

November 12th, 2021 by admin

The No. 9 Iowa Hawkeyes women’s basketball team picked up a 91-54 win over Samford on Thursday night. Monika Czinano dropped in 20 points and Caitlin Clark added 19 to lead the Hawks. Ten of eleven Hawkeyes that were active for the game score five or more points as Iowa improved to 2-0 on the season.

Up Next: Iowa hits the road for the first time this season as they take on Northern Iowa inside McLeod Center in Cedar Falls on Sunday afternoon. Tipoff is set for 2:00 p.m. and we’ll have coverage on KJAN with pregame starting at 1:45 p.m. The game will also be available on ESPN+.

1 dead, 2 injured in eastern Iowa rollover accident

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Anamosa, Iowa) – One person died, and two others were injured during a single-vehicle rollover accident early today (Friday), south of Anamosa, in eastern Iowa’s Jones County. The Iowa State Patrol says a 2009 Ford Focus was traveling north in the 9200 block of Jones County Road X-40 at around 1-a.m., when the car entered the west ditch and rolled several times before hitting farm equipment. One person died at the scene, the two surviving occupants were transported to area hospitals. Authorities were withholding the names, pending notification of family.

The Patrol was assisted at the scene by Anamosa Police, Fire & Ambulance.

Sioux City’s General Bud Day honored on Veterans Day

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – One of the ceremonies on Veterans Day honored Iowa military hero George “Bud” Day of Sioux City, and his wife Doris. The event was a ribbon cutting at the Interpretive Center at the Siouxland Freedom Park in South Sioux City. Day’s son George Junior was at the ceremony. “When I think of our dad’s legacy and our mom’s legacy — and the fact that in a way we are honoring them — but more importantly we are honored by the people of this community in America and what it’s doing to inspire the youth of future generations,” he says.

Brigadier General Day received the Congressional Medal of Honor for his service after being shot down over Vietnam and put in a prison camp. He was tortured, escaped, and was caught and tortured again. “It’s incredible to hear him talk about that and then share it with others. One of the biggest things that he shared was his faith in God,” Day says. “He never expected to survive in Vietnam. He never expected to live as many years as he did. He never expected to live through two bailouts in fighters. And yet, God kept him on this earth for a reason, and we are so thankful for that.”

The Bud Day Center

His children grew up without him while he was in the prison camp until the war ended. His daughter Sandra wore his flight jacket to the ceremony, and says she didn’t realize for a time what her dad had gone through.

George Jr and Sandra Day. (KSCJ photo)

“Probably my biggest revelation was when I actually sat down and read his book. Then it really hit home about what he went through and how bad it was,” she says. Sandra learned more about what he endured in the North Vietnam prison camp as she took care of her dad.

“In taking care of him when he was sick I could see the lash marks on his back. And that was really difficult — when you see it like that and you realize what it is — that really brings a new meaning to freedom and a meaning to torture and what he went through,” Sandra says.

George Junior graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1985 and went on to become an F-16 pilot. He later flew plans for Southwest Airlines after leaving the military.

New course teaches Iowa State students how to be their own first responders

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A class in disaster preparedness is being offered at Iowa State University for the first time this fall to ready students for everything from severe weather to hazardous materials spills. I-S-U’s emergency manager Clayton Oliver is teaching the course to students in the Honors Program who need to pass special classes as part of their requirements to graduate with honors.  “The name of the class is You Are Your Own First Responder,” Oliver says. “The general concept behind it is teaching baseline first responder skills, disaster medicine, triage, how to use a fire extinguisher, light duty search and rescue to, in this case, honor students.”

As part of the course, an Ames apartment was turned into a simulated tornado disaster area as students learned how to respond to and manage an emergency. “This is a class that offers them a lot of skills where, hopefully, they’ll never be in a situation where they have to use them, but if they are, they can take definite action,” Oliver says. “There’s a strong interest in our students in learning how to take care of themselves — and how to take care of others — in emergencies.”

The seminar is built around Community Emergency Response Team, or CERT, training. It includes academic elements like studying reports from disasters like the 1993 Iowa floods and the 2011 tornado that hit Joplin, Missouri. “What I’m trying to do with this is pilot what I hope will be a larger program someday where we can spread these skills to more people across the campus, whether that’s students, faculty or staff,” Oliver says, “and ultimately, build a campus that is more prepared to respond to disasters, more resilient and more capable of recovering from them.”

Besides the tornado drill, students are also learning about disaster medicine and stabilizing victims with Thielen Student Health Center staff, search and rescue and extrication with the Ames Fire Department, and disaster psychology for victims and responders with I-S-U Student Counseling.

LARRY BUTCHER, 76, of Centerville (No Svcs.)

Obituaries

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

LARRY BUTCHER, 76, of Centerville, died Tuesday, Nov. 9th, at the Centerville Care Center. NO Services are planned for LARRY BUTCHER. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca is assisting the family.

LARRY BUTCHER is survived by:

His wife – Penny Butcher, of Centerville.

His brothers – Edwin (Pat) Butcher, of Omaha; John (Barbara) Butcher, and Eugene (Cheryl) Butcher, all of Avoca.

His sisters – Eva Frazier, of Runnells; Helen (Joel) Flug, of Audubon, and Linda (Tom) Martin, of Harlan.

3 arrested late Thursday night in Red Oak

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Two women and a man were arrested late Thursday night, in Red Oak. Authorities say they were taken into custody at around 11:25-p.m. at 1200 E. Summit Street. 20-year-old Alisha Lynn Seyler, 18-year-old Adriana Rose Monreal, and 20-year-old Dyllan Hunter Hansen, all of Red Oak, were charged with Simple Assault. Seyler was additionally charged with Interference with Official Acts. Her bond was set at $2,000. Bond for Monreal and Hansen was set at $300 each. All three were being held in the Montgomery County Jail.

Ex-Sioux City councilman fined $4 million for ‘environmental crimes’

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A former member of the city council in Sioux City has been ordered to pay a more than four MILLION dollar fine for committing what a federal prosecutor calls “environmental crimes.” Forty-seven-year-old Aaron Rochester of Sioux City ran businesses that promised to recycle electronic components. In 2018, the State of Iowa filed a lawsuit against Rochester, accusing him of illegally storing 12 million pounds of hazardous waste in Sioux City and another four-and-a-half million pounds of waste at sites in Nebraska. It was mainly the leaded glass from televisions and computer monitors according to court records.

A Special Agent for the E-PA says Rochester’s disregard for the laws governing how to properly handle hazardous waste posed significant risk to nearby communities. In March of this year, Rochester pleaded guilty in FEDERAL court to one count of unlawful storage of hazardous waste and one count of transportation of hazardous waste. A federal judge issued the four-million dollar fine this week and sentenced Rochester to probation for three years.

Governor says Covid vaccine mandate would be devastating for Iowa nursing homes

News

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has signed the State of Iowa onto three separate lawsuits that are challenging Biden Administration Covid vaccination requirements in the workplace. “We’re going to keep fighting for Iowans to give them the opportunity to make their own choice about their health care,” Reynolds says. In response to one lawsuit, federal courts have temporarily blocked an OSHA rule to require businesses with more than 100 employees to ensure workers are vaccinated for Covid or tested regularly.

“We’ve got a pretty good chance,” Reynolds says. “Our goal right now, really, is to just — and I’ve let businesses know this — to really take the temporary stay and make it permanent until we can get it litigated through the courts, so we can really have our chance to make our case in court and to just pause what I feel is tremendous overreach and we believe it’s unconstitutional as well.”

The latest lawsuit Reynolds has joined was filed by 10 states on Wednesday and challenges a requirement that most U.S. health care workers get vaccinated. Reynolds says a Covid vaccine mandate for employees in facilities that treat patients receiving Medicare or Medicaid benefits could be devastating to Iowa’s nursing homes as some workers are threatening to quit rather than get vaccinated.

“They’re already stretched so thin and they are a phenomenal example of the heroes that have been on the front line from the very beginning and, you know, they don’t get to shut down for a couple of days like a restaurant or a manufacturing facility,” Reynolds says. “They have vulnerable older Iowans that they need to take care of. And so if you don’t have staff to do that, what do we do?”

An A-A-R-P analysis released yesterday (Thursday) indicated 71 percent of Iowa nursing home staff have been fully vaccinated, an increase of about four percent from early October. Reynolds got a dose of Johnson and Johnson’s Covid vaccine on live television and has encouraged Iowans to get vaccinated. She says the reluctance some Iowans have about getting a Covid shot is based on an array of factors, including what she says is an arbitrary decision to choose businesses with 100 or more workers for one of the Biden Administration’s vaccine mandates — and to exempt Postal Service workers.

“You know, people get an annual flu shot and they don’t think anything about it, but it’s been vetted. It’s been there for a long time,” Reynolds says, “so I just think there’s a lot of just frustration and confusion with the mixed messaging.” Reynolds made her comments to Radio Iowa after appearing at a Veterans Day ceremony at the Iowa Veterans Cemetery.

Officials in the Biden Administration say the federal government clearly has the authority to protect workers from grave danger and — with about 13-hundred Americans dying of Covid daily — the threat from the virus is ongoing and overwhelming. Some of the nation’s largest companies have Covid vaccine requirements. Tyson Foods announced in late October that more than 96 percent of its employees were vaccinated.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Friday, 11/12/21

Weather

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Today: **WIND ADVISORY until 6-p.m.** Cloudy & windy w/occasional light snow or flurries. Little or no snow accumulation is expected. High nearly steady in the 30’s. Winds NW @ 20-40 w/higher gusts.

Tonight: Cloudy to P/Cldy. Low around 20. Winds diminishing to around 15-20.

Tomorrw: P/Cldy. High 45. SW @ 5-10.

Sunday: Mostly cloudy w/a chance of light snow/mixed precip. in the morning. High near 40.

Monday: Partly cloudy. High 52.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 52. Our Low this morning, 33. We received a trace of precipitation this morning in the form of snow flurries. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 48 and the Low was 12. The Record High on this date was 73 in 2005. The Record Low was -4 in 1968 & 2019.

(Update) Wind Advisory continues, w/expanded counties

Weather

November 12th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Area Counties: Sac-Crawford-Carroll-Audubon-Guthrie-Dallas-Cass-Adair-Madison-Monona-Harrison-Shelby-Pottawattamie-Mills….
325 AM CST Fri Nov 12 2021

A WIND ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 6 PM CST THIS EVENING

* WHAT…West to northwest winds 25 to 35 mph with gusts to around 50 mph expected.

* IMPACTS…Gusty winds could blow around unsecured objects.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

Use extra caution when driving, especially if operating a high profile vehicle. Secure outdoor objects.