712 Digital Group - top

Chiefs will have best 13-game record ever if they beat Miami

Sports

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(By The Associated Press undefined) – The Chiefs are second in the NFL in point differential going into Sunday’s game at Miami and the Dolphins are fourth. Kansas City will clinch the AFC West with a victory or a tie or a Raiders loss against the Colts. With a win the Chiefs would have the best 13-game record in franchise history at 12-1. The Chiefs would reach 12 wins for the third consecutive season, the longest streak in club history.

The Dolphins have won seven of their past eight games. Their 12-game record of 8-4 is their best since 2003.

 

Russell Wilson, Travis Kelce among NFL Man of Year nominees

Sports

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer) – Seattle’s star quarterback Russell Wilson and Kansas City’s standout tight end Travis Kelce are among the 32 finalists for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award. The award recognizes an NFL player for outstanding community service activities off the field, as well as excellence on the field. It was established in 1970 and renamed in 1999 after the late Hall of Fame running back.

FILE – Kansas City Chiefs’ Travis Kelce smiles before the NFL Super Bowl 54 football game between the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs in Miami Gardens Fla., in this Sunday, Feb. 2, 2020, file photo. Seattle’s star quarterback Russell Wilson and Kansas City’s standout tight end Travis Kelce are among the 32 finalists for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)

The award will be presented during Super Bowl week at the NFL Honors television show when The Associated Press reveals its individual award winners.

 

Chiefs, Steelers top AFC, but plenty of others could contend

Sports

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(By DENNIS WASZAK Jr. AP Pro Football Writer) – Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are already in the NFL playoffs and that’s no surprise for the defending Super Bowl champions. Ben Roethlisberger and the Pittsburgh Steelers are undefeated no more but they’re also on the verge of clinching an AFC spot. After that there are plenty of other contenders who might have something to say about the conference being just a top-heavy twosome.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes thows against the Denver Broncos in the first half of an NFL football game in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday, Dec. 6, 2020. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel )

Buffalo and Cleveland are 9-3 with Tennessee, Miami and Indianapolis all 8-4. Baltimore and Las Vegas are still in the mix at 7-5. And it’s never smart to count out a Bill Belichick-coached New England team at 6-6.

 

Trial delayed again for man charged in the death of Mollie Tibbetts

News

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The trial for a man charged with first-degree murder in the July 2018 death of 20-year-old University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbitts has been moved once again. KCCI reports court documents filed Wednesday in Poweshiek County indicate that Cristhian Bahena Rivera’s jury trial will take place May 17 in Scott County. The trial had been scheduled for Jan. 25. According to court documents, the trial delay is in accordance with an order from the Iowa Supreme Court to postpone trials due to the pandemic.

Mollie Tibbetts

A pretrial conference scheduled for Jan. 12 is continued to April 14 and will be held at the Poweshiek County Courthouse. The trial has already been delayed at least three times from the original date in April 2019.

Tibbetts, a psychology student at the University of Iowa, went missing after going for a jog in her hometown of Brooklyn. Investigators say Rivera stalked Tibbetts while she was out for a run in July 2018 in Brooklyn, Iowa, and stabbed her to death. After a massive police and volunteer effort to find Tibbetts, authorities say, Bahena Rivera led them to her body, which was found Aug. 21, 2018, in a cornfield.

Two Iowa seniors plan to move on

Sports

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa kicker Keith Duncan says it is time to move on. The All-American will be one of 22 seniors honored prior to Saturday’s game against Wisconsin. Because of NCAA rules regarding the pandemic, Duncan could return for a sixth year.

Duncan hopes to land a job in the NFL. A finals for the Lou Groza Award last year, Duncan is 12 of 16 in field goal attempts this season.

Senior linebacker Nick Niemann (nee-mun) does not plan on taking advantage of the extra year.

Niemann watched his older brother, Ben, played for the Hawkeyes and now his father, Jay, is a member of the coaching staff.

Private Pesticide Applicators Have Options for Completing Continuing Education Courses Pre-registration required for 2020-21 Season

Ag/Outdoor

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Extension office will again host continuing instructional courses (CICs) for local private pesticide applicators this year, but applicators are strongly encouraged to pre-register to ensure admittance on the day of a scheduled show. To accommodate schedules and reduce class sizes, multiple methods and formats to attend the training will be offered from December-March. Any registered applicator in Cass County should have received a brochure in the mail in early December outlining upcoming training dates and options. Two types of trainings are currently scheduled in Cass County. A “Live Zoom” option will be offered monthly from December to March, with applicators attending the training in person at the office, and the instructor teaching the program remotely. A Face to Face option, with both the instructor and participants in the meeting room, will be offered in January and March. Individual or small group DVD showings are also available on a limited basis, as scheduling allows. All trainings, regardless of method, will be offered for the usual $20 fee to cover materials.

To follow social distancing recommendations, the Cass County Extension Office will be limiting attendance at CIC trainings. Individuals registering in advance will be guaranteed a seat, or informed if the showing is full and offered another date. Applicators showing up without registering on the scheduled date may be turned away if the meeting room is already at capacity for the day. Pre-registration can be done by calling, emailing or stopping by the office. Cass County Extension will be following all mandates as outlined by the Iowa Governor’s office, which currently means that attendees at indoor programs will be required to wear masks when unable to distance. Applicators needing additional options for no-contact re-shows are asked to call the Extension Office for information on available formats.

To ensure a spot on the training schedule, applicators needing to complete CIC for the year are asked to call as soon as possible to register for scheduled dates, or to reserve a DVD show time. Training dates can be scheduled locally by calling the Cass County Extension office at 712-243-1132 or by emailing Office Manager Lori Anderson at lander@iastate.edu. Individuals wishing to complete the training in another county should call that county for information, as training dates, availability and procedures vary by office. For more information on the Private Pesticide Applicator CIC classes statewide, please visit www.extension.iastate.edu/psep/. Applicators have until April 15, 2021, to attend a P-CIC program and maintain a current license.

Cedar Falls native named to elite astronaut team to return to the Moon

News

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa native is chosen by NASA to be one of 18 astronauts on what’s being called the Artemis (ART-ah-mus) Team which aims to return to the Moon. Forty-one-year-old Raja Chari grew up in Cedar Falls and has degrees in aeronautics and astronautics from the Air Force Academy and M-I-T. He’s a colonel and a test pilot for the Air Force and flew combat missions over Iraq. In a 2017 Radio Iowa interview, Chari told how he was picked from among 18-thousand applicants to be in that year’s class of 12 astronaut candidates, but was ordered to only share the secret with his immediate family. “I was able to call my wife and that’s when there was screaming on her end and I was still in my office with all of the folks right outside the door,” Chari says, laughing. “I had to just do a little happy dance in place. It was about all I could do at the time to not totally give everything away.”

Raja Chari (Photo via nasa.gov)

Chari’s wife, Holly, is a Cedar Falls native and they have three children. Chari graduated from Waterloo Columbus High School in 1995 before heading to the academy. He admits he hasn’t always dreamed of becoming an astronaut but learning to fly was one of his early goals, along with studying science.”Right around eighth grade, we got a new science lab and new science tables in that lab and that was a very big deal to an eighth grader,” Chari says. “I distinctly remember, ‘Now we can do all kinds of cool things in there.’ We dissected frogs and other activities that we now have this science lab for and that really sparked my interest.”

Chari’s father came to the U-S from India to get his master’s degree and spent his entire career at John Deere in Waterloo. “My father came to the country with the goal of getting an education and realizing the importance of that and that directly translated to how I was brought up,” Chari says. “There was a focus throughout my childhood on education and that being the thing you really needed to do well to succeed.”

The Artemis Team consists of nine men and nine women — and the name Artemis may be familiar. In Greek mythology, Artemis is the twin sister of Apollo, which was the name of the American space program that first landed on the Moon in 1969. In the 2017 interview, Chari said he was excited at the prospects of rocketing into orbit and perhaps — going well beyond. “We’ll do International Space Station systems training, we’ll do robotics training, spacewalk training, and then Russian training,” Chari says. “Those are the major subsets that we’ll work on over the next two years. Once you’re done with that, then you’re in the mission assignment cue and I’m excited to see what the possibilities are. I’ll be happy to do whatever they need me to do.”

He’s piloted all sort of aircraft and has helped in developing America’s newest fighter, the F-35. With the space shuttle fleet long since retired, the prospects of being the first to pilot a completely new spacecraft into orbit are a thrill for Chari: “I wouldn’t say daunted so much as excited.” Chari will join a short list of seven other Iowa natives who’ve been in orbit, including the state’s first astronaut, Walter Cunningham of Creston who flew aboard Apollo 7. Iowa’s other six astronauts all served during the shuttle era: Peggy Whitson of Mount Ayr, Jim Kelly of Burlington, George Nelson of Charles City, Loren Shriver of Jefferson, David Hilmers of Clinton, and Laurel Clark of Ames, who died in the Columbia tragedy of 2003.

Cedar Rapids Man Appears in Federal Court on Threat and Damage to Federal Property Charges

News

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa – A man from Cedar Rapids appeared in Federal Court Tuesday, following a complaint charging him with influencing, impeding or retaliating against a federal official by threatening a United States official, a United States judge, or a federal law enforcement officer; malicious damage to federal property; and interstate communications with the intent to injure.

The U-S Attorney’s Office says 39-year old John Edward Miller is alleged to have sent a threatening message via Facebook to a federal prosecutor and named several other federal employees in the message. Miller is additionally accused of firing a flare gun at the Cedar Rapids United States Courthouse, causing a fire that needed to be extinguished.

If convicted, the Court must impose a reasonable sentence under federal sentencing statutes and the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines. Miller’s detention hearing will be held at the Cedar Rapids United States Courthouse on December 11, 2020, at 1 p.m. The matter is being investigated by the FBI, ATF, U-S Marshals Service, and the Cedar Rapids Police Department.

The United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa will prosecute the case.

Snow Ordinance may be activated in Clarinda this weekend

News, Weather

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Clarinda Police Chief Keith Brothers says with a potential winter storm approaching our area Friday night through Saturday morning, the Clarinda Police Department would like to remind the citizens of Clarinda about the snow ordinance. The ordinance says “No person shall park any motor vehicle or other apparatus upon any street of the city that will obstruct the removal of snow when there has been an accumulation of two (2) inches or more. Any vehicle left parked on any street in violation of this ordinance may be impounded, and the registered owner of the vehicle will be subject to a $30 parking fine, and payment of all applicable towing and storage fees before the vehicle is released.”

Chief Brothers says the parking ban remains in effect until the snow ceases to fall and the streets have been plowed from curb to curb.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 12/10/20

News, Podcasts

December 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

Play