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Atlantic starts district play with trip to ADM

Sports

September 23rd, 2021 by admin

Trojan LogoThe Atlantic Trojans (1-3) football team hits the road to Adel to start district play on Friday night against the ADM Tigers (3-1). Atlantic is looking to turn the page after a rough non-district portion of the schedule. The Trojans got the offense churning in a week 3 win over Shenandoah but couldn’t carry any of that over into last week’s road trip to Ballard. Atlantic will now have another tough test against an ADM squad that has had some success spreading opponents out and running the ball well with quarterback Matt Dufoe. Atlantic Head Coach Joe Brummer said slowing down Dufoe will have to be priority number one.

The Trojans will stack up against a traditional 4-3 defense from the Tigers this week and Coach Brummer said he hopes to see a rotated lineup up front start to prove themselves.

The Trojans and Tigers will kickoff at 7:00 p.m. on Friday night in Adel. Chris Parks and Mike Smith will have the call of the game on AM 1220, FM 101.1, online at KJAN.com, and live video will be available on KJANTV. Catch a full interview with Coach Brummer on Trojan Preview at 4:45 p.m. and then catch our weekly pick ’em show Who’s Gonna Win? at 6:00 p.m. That will be followed by our pregame coverage at 6:30 p.m.

IGHSAU Weekly Volleyball Rankings 09/23/2021

Sports

September 23rd, 2021 by admin

2021 Iowa High School Volleyball Rankings
Compiled by the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union
Thursday, September 23
 
Class 1A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Burlington Notre Dame
20-6
1
2
Springville
16-2
2
3
Gehlen Catholic
12-5
3
4
Lisbon
15-4
4
5
Holy Trinity Catholic
10-3
5
6
Ankeny Christian
16-3
6
7
Newell-Fonda
16-2
10
8
Dunkerton
14-4
7
9
Gladbrook-Reinbeck
16-7
8
10
New London
10-7
10
11
Lamoni
18-0
12
12
Council Bluffs St. Albert
9-9
13
13
North Tama
12-6
11
14
North Linn
16-4
NR
15
Tri-Center
13-4
NR
 
Dropped Out: Waterloo Christian (14), Southeast Warren (15)
 
Class 2A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Dike-New Hartford
28-0
1
2
Wilton
20-1
3
3
Denver
19-4
2
4
South Hardin
17-0
4
5
Boyden-Hull
14-4
5
6
Western Christian
10-5
6
7
Beckman Catholic
18-4
10
8
Wapsie Valley
9-6
7
9
Sumner-Fredericksburg
16-5
8
10
Osage
11-4
9
11
Kuemper Catholic
18-6
11
12
West Branch
13-2
NR
13
Treynor
13-5
13
14
Missouri Valley
20-2
14
15
Hinton
9-1
15
 
Dropped Out: Grundy Center (12)
 
Class 3A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
West Delaware
24-2
1
2
Davenport Assumption
17-3
2
3
Des Moines Christian
22-2
3
4
West Liberty
17-0
4
5
Sheldon
9-3
5
6
Sergeant Bluff-Luton
13-3
6
7
Mount Vernon
15-5
8
8
West Burlington
14-1
7
9
Sioux Center
12-3
9
10
Unity Christian
6-3
10
11
Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont
19-2
12
12
Independence
11-5
13
13
Union
11-5
11
14
West Lyon
15-4
NR
15
New Hampton
16-4
15
 
Dropped Out: Red Oak (14)
 
Class 4A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Western Dubuque
13-3
2
2
North Scott
14-4
1
3
Xavier
19-2
3
4
Marion
20-4
5
5
Glenwood
17-2
6
6
Bondurant-Farrar
17-1
7
7
Waverly-Shell Rock
16-4
8
8
Oskaloosa
16-4
4
9
Clear Creek-Amana
12-5
9
10
North Polk
18-7
10
11
Pella
15-5
11
12
Winterset
9-1
12
13
Indianola
13-9
13
14
Decorah
13-2
NR
15
Benton Community
13-7
NR
 
Dropped Out: Webster City (14), Norwalk (15)
 
Class 5A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Iowa City Liberty
17-3
1
2
Pleasant Valley
17-1
3
3
Ankeny
24-4
2
4
Dowling Catholic
15-7
4
5
West Des Moines Valley
17-5
5
6
Urbandale
20-6
6
7
Ankeny Centennial
15-5
8
8
Cedar Rapids Kennedy
17-6
7
9
Cedar Falls
15-5
9
10
Johnston
13-6
10
11
Iowa City West
10-6
12
12
Cedar Rapids Prairie
9-6
11
13
Bettendorf
8-9
14
14
Sioux City North
13-7
15
15
Iowa City High
11-6
NR
Dropped Out: Waukee Northwest (13)

PHYLLIS ELLEN NICHOLS, 77, of Anita (9-28-2021)

Obituaries

September 23rd, 2021 by Jim Field

PHYLLIS ELLEN NICHOLS, 77, of Anita died Thursday, September 23, 2021 at her home.  Services for PHYLLIS ELLEN NICHOLS will be held Tuesday, September 28, 2021 at 10:30 a.m. at Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Atlantic.

————————————————————————————–

Visitation will be on Monday, Sept. 27 from 2 to 7 p.m. with the family present from 5 to 7 p.m. at Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Burial at the Greenfield Cemetery.

Memorials may be directed to the Nichols family and will be designated at a later date in honor of her name and can be left or mailed to the funeral home at P.O. Box 523 – Atlantic.

PHYLLIS ELLEN NICHOLS is survived by:

Husband:  Dave Nichols

Children:  Fletcher Nichols and Jennifer Nichols

Brother:  Lans Gibbs

Sisters-in-law:  Edy Hill and Lillian Nichols

several nieces and nephews and two grandchildren.

ISU’s Sami Williams named to NCAA Woman of the Year Top 30

Sports

September 23rd, 2021 by admin

INDIANAPOLIS – Former Iowa State softball star Sami Williams has advanced to the next stage of the NCAA Woman of the Year Award, as she has been selected to the top 30. There were 10 student-athletes selected from each of the three NCAA divisions.

Established in 1991, the NCAA Woman of the Year award is rooted in Title IX and recognizes graduating female college athletes who have exhausted their NCAA eligibility and distinguished themselves in academics, athletics, service and leadership throughout their collegiate careers.

Selected from 535 school nominees — a group that was then narrowed to 154 nominees by conference offices — the Top 30 honorees include 10 from each of the three NCAA divisions. All have demonstrated excellence in academics, athletics, community service and leadership. The honorees represent 12 sports and an array of academic majors, including biology, psychology, mechanical engineering, education, software engineering and anthropology. Williams is one of two softball players among the top 30 and the only from the NCAA Division I level.

“We are thrilled to recognize the 30 honorees selected this year,” said John Kietzmann, chair of the selection committee and associate director of athletics for marketing at Metropolitan State University of Denver. “These women excelled in the classroom and competition, while still prioritizing serving their peers and communities despite the challenges they faced during the pandemic. They represent the thousands of women competing in college sports each year, and we congratulate them for their incredible achievements.”

Williams capped her career as one of the greatest players in Iowa State history. She put together a staggering statistical season in 2021, while leading the Cyclone program to new heights. Williams broke single-season program records for batting average (.446) and home runs (21) on the year with 54 RBI and an incredible .902 slugging percentage.

The native of Laguna Niguel, California, is departing Iowa State as the school’s all-time leader in hits (329), doubles (79), home runs (67), RBI (180), runs scored (212), at-bats (833) and games played (253). Williams is also the Big 12’s all-time leader in career hits, doubles and total bases (627). Her 79 career doubles are tied for third-most in NCAA DI softball history. Her 627 total bases are fourth-most in NCAA history.
Williams is ISU’s all-time winningest player, having appeared in 128 victories during her time in the Cardinal & Gold. In 2021, she helped Iowa State earn the program’s first top-25 ranking in the NFCA Coaches’ poll on Feb. 23 following a 9-1 start to the season. She then led ISU to its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1988, and first NCAA Regional Final appearance.

Off the field, Williams was a finalist for the 2021 Senior CLASS Award, and was one of five student-athletes nationally to be named a Senior CLASS Award Softball First Team All-American. She is also a four-time CoSIDA Academic All-American – the first student-athlete in the history of Iowa State Athletics to earn the honor four times.

The selection committee will determine the top three honorees in each division from the Top 30, and the nine finalists will be announced this fall. From those nine finalists, the NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics will choose the 2021 NCAA Woman of the Year.

On Tuesday, Nov. 9, during a virtual awards ceremony, the Top 30 honorees will be celebrated, and the NCAA Woman of the Year will be named.

1 arrest, 1 injury accident reported in Mills County

News

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Mills County said Thursday the driver of a pickup suffered from a laceration to the top of his head and was transported to Mercy Hospital, following an accident Monday morning. Authorities say 66-year-old Alvin Sobbing, of Council Bluffs, was driving a 1997 Dodge RAM pickup northbound in the right-hand lane on 221st Street, and approaching the intersection with Eastman Road, when he lost control of the vehicle due to slick road conditions. The pickup, and the unloaded trailer it was pulling, ended up in the ditch/embankment area at the northwest corner of the intersection, where it drove over a small tree and came to rest. The accident happened at around 9:15-a.m.

Sobbing told Deputies he saw the flashing lights ahead at the intersection, and “touched his brakes,” before the vehicle and trailer went out of control. The pickup sustained disabling damage to the undercarriage. No citations were issued.

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports also, 25-year-old Kamerson Riley Myers, of Glenwood, was arrested Wednesday afternoon, at the Mills County Sheriff’s Office. He was taken into custody on a warrant for Failure to Appear on the original charge of Child Endangerment. Bond was set at $5,000.

DHS Partners with UI Health Care to Recruit Chief Medical Officer for Glenwood Resource Center

News

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES, Iowa) – The Department of Human Services (DHS) and University of Iowa Health Care are partnering to improve support of Iowans with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDDs). The newly signed agreement includes the creation of a faculty position within the university who will serve as the new Chief Medical Officer (CMO) for Intellectual Disabilities at the Glenwood Resource Center (GRC). GRC’s new CMO will serve as the chief physician for the center’s residents and will be a member of a multidisciplinary team of therapists, psychologists, and Qualified Intellectual Disability Professionals (QIDPs). They will also be responsible for expanding the capacity of the community system of care to better serve Iowans with IDDs.

DHS Director Kelly Garcia said Thursday, “While we have started the transition to a community-based model of care, there are a number of elderly residents at GRC who have lived there for decades and have complex health conditions that could make transferring to a community placement difficult. To give these residents access to the high-quality care they deserve, we are seeking a CMO who is highly qualified and passionate about serving individuals with IDDs. Our agreement with UI Health Care allows us to tap into its expertise at recruiting exceptional physician leaders and maintaining high standards of quality control.”

Kevin Glenn, MD, clinical associate professor of internal medicine at UI Carver College of Medicine, is the chair of the search committee for GRC’s new CMO.  Glenn says “As the state’s academic medical center, UI Health Care is committed to providing high-quality care for all Iowans, including the state’s most vulnerable populations. We are thankful for the opportunity to help DHS fill this important position. This collaborative agreement will provide the new CMO with access to a breadth of resources to support their success.”

Health officials say this significant new collaboration and partnership will provide the new GRC CMO with access to medical experts in every specialty, infection and quality control support, ethics consultations, and more. It may also help Iowa develop better pipelines for future recruitment of quality medical and other health care providers, particularly in the public sector. Cory Turner, MHDS Division Administrator for Facilities, says “Our continued and evolving partnership with the university has been vital to the stabilization of numerous services within DHS’ Mental Health and Disability Services division. This is yet another example of our collaboration built on a foundation of trust and rooted in clinical expertise that ensures Iowans, wherever they reside, receive the best care possible.”

University of Iowa Health Care is actively recruiting for the Glenwood Medical Director position. A detailed job description and position duties is available here. Marsha Edgington, the GRC superintendent, will work directly with UI Health Care to establish day-to-day connection with DHS once the candidate is on board.

Lawyers getting many calls about COVID lawsuits

News

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Many attorneys say they are getting contacted by people seeking to take legal action in cases involving mask mandates, vaccines, and other pandemic-related issues. Attorney Richard Moeller of Sioux City says he has received many calls. “In fact, I probably get on average three, four calls a day from people in different situations — whether they are working for a government employer, otherwise, a private employer is mandating a vaccination, or in the alternative, they can use a mask or be tested,” Moeller says.

Moeller gets calls because he represents clients in vaccine injury cases in the U-S Court of Federal Claims.  “It is designed for those rare situations where someone receives a certain vaccination — it has to be a covered vaccination — meaning it’s one of the vaccines the program covers so to speak. The flu vaccine is a very common one, sometimes the D-TAPs, the childhood M-M-R and those kinds of things,” he says. Moeller says none of the COVID vaccines are covered. “Although that may change….probably some action by Congress might take place that would include that. But as of right now, the COVID vaccine is not covered,” Moeller says.

Moeller says he has to explain this to people who call asking about COVID lawsuits. “The inquiries that I have received are ‘what can I do if my employer has or is going to implement some kind of mandate having to do with the vaccine or the alternative for testing.’ I just don’t do those kinds of cases. There are a few lawyers I think in different locations who will help a client….to at least look into whether there is an alternative to a mandate for a vaccine,” according to Moeller.

Moeller says the current law appears to make it tough to sue vaccine manufacturers. “My understanding of the federal law that kind of paved the way for those vaccines is that they will not allow a lawsuit,” Moeller says, “in other words, the pharmaceutical companies and distributors of the vaccines are immune from lawsuits.”

A list of attorneys in all 50 states who have expressed a willingness to accept vaccine injury cases is on the U-S Courts website.

BERNARD BAUDLER, 92, of Fontanelle (Svcs. 10/1/21)

Obituaries

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

BERNARD BAUDLER, 92, of Fontanelle, died Thursday, September 23, 2021, at the Good Samaritan Society in Fontanelle.  Funeral services for BERNARD BAUDLER will be held 10:30-a.m. Friday, Oct. 1st, at Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Fontanelle. Steen Funeral Home in Fontanelle has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Sept. 30th, from 2-until 8-p.m., with the family present from 6-until 8-p.m.; Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

Burial with full military rites conducted by the Fontanelle American Legion Carlson Post No. 247, will be in the Fontanelle Cemetery. Full military graveside rites will be conducted by the Fontanelle American Legion Carlson Post No. 247.

Memorials may be directed to Bernard Baudler memorial fund to be established by the family at a later date.

BERNARD BAUDLER is survived by:

His wife of 72 years – Maxine Baudler.

His brother – Virgil (Carol) Baudler.

His sisters – Sylvia and Ruth (Wayne).

Children – Jacqueline, Kevin and Janell (Brian) Hansen

Sisters-in-law Betty (Louis) Baudler (Louis) and Ruth (Henry) Baudler

14 grandchildren, and many “greats” for grandchildren, nieces and nephews.

State of Iowa retains Moody’s Aaa bond rating

News

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Moody’s, a national company that issues credit ratings on bonds, has given bonds from the State of Iowa its highest rating. It’s sort of like credit ratings for individuals, as investors check bond ratings to determine whether state-issued bonds are a safe bet. Moody’s Aaa (referred to as triple A) rating means the bonds are considered the highest quality and the lowest credit risk.

State Treasurer Michael Fitzgerald says retention of the top rating from Moody’s is “a testament to the State of Iowa’s financial wellness.” According to Fitzgerald, Moody’s cited the state’s cash reserves and its low debt and pension liabilities in issuing the Aaa rating.

In 2020, Iowa was one of only a dozen states that had Triple A bond ratings from Moody’s, as well as two other national credit rating agencies.

Iowa’s largest hospital reports staffing shortages, burnout due to COVID

News

September 23rd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – As the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations continues rising in Iowa, the C-E-O of the state’s largest hospital says he’s dealing with staffing shortages and burnout. Suresh Gunasekaran, who heads the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, says the staff is straining with the jump in both COVID and non-COVID patients. He says it’s a statewide trend. “There are bed challenges that are being caused by not having enough staffing,” Gunasekaran says, “and we see that by increased transfer requests from various different parts of the state when they’re unable to staff the same number of beds that they were last year.”

Suresh Gunasekaran (UIHC photo)

Gunasekaran says the pandemic has taken a significant toll on health care workers at the Iowa City facility and elsewhere, leading to a higher-than-average number leaving the workforce in the past year. “We are paying a pretty heavy price in terms of the mental health of our workforce in terms of the physical workload that they see day in and day out.”

State health officials reported Thursday that 638 Iowans were hospitalized with the virus in the past week. That’s up ten-percent from last week and is the highest number this year.

(Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)