712 Digital Group - top

Griswold School Board set to meet this evening

News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Griswold School Board will meet this evening at 5:30, in their Board Room at the High School. On their agenda are updates from KPE architects/Estes Construction, with regard to district facilities projects, as well as discussion pertaining to Daycare. New Business includes an Early Retirement Policy, and information on: Certified Enrollment; and the Teacher Leadership and Compensation Program.

Audubon School Board to meet tonight

News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Audubon School District’s Board of Education will meet tonight in a regular session. Prior to the start of their 7-p.m. meeting, the Board will hold a work session for Policy Review, at 6:30. Both take place in the High School Boardroom. On the regular agenda, is action on: A School Budget Review Committee (SBRC) request for On-Time Funding; Requests to use the AC Gym for private basketball workouts, and to allow Exira-EHK to pick up an Open Enrolled student, along with action on an Early Retirement Plan.

The Board will receive the district’s final enrollment numbers, an Audit Update, and discuss the upcoming school elections, among other matters.

Brother of Atlantic man killed in Wisconsin plane crash last week

News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

LEDGEVIEW, Wis. (AP) — Sheriff’s officials say the pilot of a small plane was killed and the driver of a pickup truck was critically injured Thursday afternoon, in a collision near a private airfield in eastern Wisconsin. The pilot – identified as John Fiddelke, of De Pere, WI., and who died at the scene – is the brother of Atlantic Photographer Fred Fiddelke, who is also a part-time announcer here at KJAN.

Authorities say the fixed-wing, single-engine plane was coming in for a landing in Ledgeview at around 4:50-p.m., Thursday, when it struck the pickup, which was traveling west on a Brown County highway. The driver of the pickup, Patrick Schounard, who is from Greenleaf, WI., was rushed to the hospital, where he was being treated for serious injuries. The Brown County Sheriff’s Office sent its crash reconstruction unit to the scene near Green Bay. Federal aviation officials are also investigating.

WEEK OF OCTOBER 21, 2019

Trading Post

October 21st, 2019 by Jim Field

FREE: Pallets to give away. Call 712-243-2288 to arrange pick up.

FOR SALE:  An Argo 6 wheel ATV, $3500 SOLD.  A Miller Bobcat 225G Welder Generator used only 37 hours, $3,000 SOLD.  A 500 gallon fuel tank, $200.  Call 712-323-4890.

FOR SALE:   Hudson brand Lawn/Garden Sprayer – 3 gallon size – Good condition.  It is an older sprayer so it is more heavyweight than the newer ones. – $10.  Larson Storm Door Windows  – Three of them and all different sizes with white frames.  Will need to call for sizes.  Good condition. – $4 each.  Items are located in Exira.  Phone 515-681-5997.

FREE:  For pick up older box springs and mattress (full/double) bed size.  Items are located in Exira.  Phone 515-681-5997.

WANTED: Looking to purchase a 1974 Javelin Yearbook from Atlantic. Would like it to be in good shape. Call 712-769-2557.

FOR SALE: 4 Christmas Items:  Wreath with lights and plays Christmas songs…..$20.00, Centerpiece $20.00, Wooden Mr. & Mrs. Santa $20.00, Decorative bird house (12″ high) $15.00.  Call 417-876-7108 (Kimballton Area), could deliver to Atlantic.

FOR SALE: 2 antique barber chairs. One is Koken and the other is a Clairemont. $250 each SOLD. Log splitter, powered by 8 hp Briggs & Stratton, 28 ton. $600. 712-323-4890.

FOR SALE:  Whirlpool smooth top electric range.  Make an offer.  Call 249-2133.

FOR SALE:  13 Indian head pennies.  Asking $10 each.  Call 249-5391.

FOR SALE:  I have three rat terrier female puppies left to sell.  They are 6 weeks old, tails and dewclaws done, raised in our home, potty training, played with daily. Mom is regular size rat terrier and dad is a toy rat terrier.  located in Atlantic.  Asking $200/each.  Call 712-303-9291 for more info and pictures.

FOR SALE: 150cc Trailmaster dune buggy. $1,200 cash or partial trade for vehicle and cash. 712-243-8434.

FOR SALE:  1. White kitchen cabinet cupboard.Asking price is $40 (firm).  2. A wooden 4 shelf ladder type.  Shelves start out small and go bigger at the bottom.  Asking $25 (firm) for that SOLD.  Call 712-249-7699 if interested.

FOR SALE:   2 – 14.4 lb bags of Purina One True Instinct Grain Free High Protein Adult Cat Food…..$20 ea or $35 for both.  Normally runs around $27 to $33 a bag before tax.  Call 712-249-2033 and leave a message if no answer and I’ll get back to you.

FREE:  Toolbox for truck, fits a Ford pickup, homemade and covered with metal. Can be seen in the alley between 10th & 11th of Maple & Elm. 243-2743.

FOR RENT: Trailer house in Lewis on a nice big yard. 712-769-2338, leave a message if no answer.

FOR SALE:  Chip and dip bowl and accessories. Asking $20.00 call 712-249-2905 no answer leave a message. Exira

FOR SALE:  16 x 20 dog kennel, $40, 712-435-9254.

FOR SALE:  Large horse cart for sale, $500.  Call  712 268 2130.

Man gets 2 years for taking locker room pictures

News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A former janitor has been sentenced to two years for taking pictures of women in an eastern Iowa college locker room. Linn County court records say 46-year-old Jeffrey Pospisil was sentenced Friday on two counts of invasion of privacy. He’d pleaded guilty in September. The investigation began when students at Cornell College in Mount Vernon reported seeing a cellphone held in an open doorway leading to the locker room. A coach found Pospisil in the area. He was an employee with a business that provides custodial service for the college.

He told police he had been texting on the phone. But a search of the phone revealed more than 100 images taken in the locker room as students were fully or partially nude.
Pospisil was fired from his job.

Public, election officials may be kept in the dark on hacks

News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON (AP) — If the FBI discovers that foreign hackers have infiltrated the networks of your county election office, you may not find out about it until after voting is over. And your governor and other state officials may be kept in the dark, too. There’s no federal law compelling state and local governments to share information when an electoral system is hacked. And a federal policy keeps details secret by shielding the identity of all cyber victims regardless of whether election systems are involved.

Election officials are in a difficult spot: If someone else’s voting system is targeted, they want to know exactly what happened so they can protect their own system. Yet when their own systems are targeted, they may be cautious about disclosing details. They must balance the need for openness with worries over undermining any criminal investigation. And they want to avoid chaos or confusion, the kind of disruption that hackers want.

The secrecy surrounding foreign hacks is not a hypothetical issue. The public still doesn’t know which Florida counties were breached by Russian agents in the 2016 election. Rick Scott, Florida’s governor in 2016 and now a U.S. senator, was not told at the time and didn’t learn most of the details until this year. And the threat to electoral systems is real. Federal officials believe Russian agents in 2016 searched for vulnerabilities within election systems in all 50 states. And the nation’s intelligence chiefs warn that Russia and other nations remain interested in interfering in U.S. elections.

Meanwhile, experts worry the White House hasn’t highlighted the threat as President Donald Trump argues it’s OK for foreign countries to provide damaging information on his political rivals, a matter now the subject of an impeachment inquiry led by House Democrats. In general, it’s up to electoral agencies to disclose when they’ve been hacked. That, plus the federal policy protecting the identity of cyber victims, could mean that state election officials might not be told immediately if one of their local election offices experiences a breach. In addition, the whole situation could be considered classified as part of a federal investigation.

At least two states — Colorado and Iowa — have implemented policies to compel local officials to notify the state about suspected breaches involving election systems. Due to the criminal nature of cyber breaches, law enforcement officials may seek to withhold releasing certain information long after the incident. In June, a majority of Americans expressed at least some concern that voting systems are vulnerable to hackers, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Yet election officials want to ensure they have a good understanding of what happened before going public so they don’t contribute to the confusion that the hackers may be trying to achieve.

Cyber intrusions are inherently complicated, taking time to understand and contain. There is also a concern of inadvertently releasing information that could invite further compromises or undermine an investigation. Matt Dietrich, spokesman for the Illinois State Board of Elections, said it would be hard to imagine that any election office would seek to keep something like that quiet today. “In 2016, it was a story and then it was dealt with and then it kind of went away for a year,” Dietrich said. “That is not going to happen this time. It will be a national and a worldwide story. We all know this. We all know we are going to be under the microscope.”

Federal legislation targets rising rate of farmer suicides

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A University of Iowa professor who’s done extensive research on farmer suicide is applauding proposed new legislation in Congress to address the worsening issue. Corinne Peek-Asa, a U-I professor of occupational and environmental health, says she and her team studied a wealth of federal data and found suicide rates were 45-percent higher for people in rural areas, and farmers stood out as having even higher rates compared to the general population. “We looked at specifically Midwestern states and we found that between 1992 and 2010, some 230 farmers died from suicide,” Peek-Asa says. “When we look overall at the workforce and at work-related suicides, we see that’s three times the national average.”

Unlike someone who works in a bank, Peek-Asa says a farmer’s work is much more closely tied to their lives, making it harder to put stress away or to keep one’s work and personal lives separate. Peek-Asa says, “When we look at those circumstances in Iowa farmers, we do see that things like financial stress, personal isolation, symptoms of feeling anxious and depressed are things that we see in the review of cases of farmer suicides.”

One of the biggest challenges in suicide prevention, she says, is the stigma of talking about the topic, worries about seeking mental health care in general, and the availablity of such care in rural areas. “One of the pieces the legislation has written into it is a public campaign to talk about this issue, to bring it more into the light and to try to reduce the barriers to recognizing that it is okay, that there are stresses associated with farming,” Peek-Asa says. “I think that’s a very important component of the bill.”

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is one of the two primary co-sponsors of the bill, called of the Seeding Rural Resilience Act. A news release from Grassley’s office says the legislation aims to curb the rising rate of farmer suicides through a stress management training program.

https://www.grassley.senate.gov/news/news-releases/grassley-tester-address-farmer-suicide

MLB umpire Eric Cooper (IA Native & ISU grad) dies at 52; did playoffs 2 weeks ago

Sports

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Eric Cooper, the Major League Baseball umpire who worked the AL Division Series two weeks ago, has died. He was 52. Commissioner Rob Manfred announced Cooper’s death Sunday.
Cooper died after having a blood clot. He had knee surgery earlier in the week and was recuperating at his father’s home in Iowa. Popular with his fellow umps, he was talking to them Saturday about his recovery. Cooper made his debut in the majors in 1996 as a minor league fill-in and joined the big league staff in 1999.

His most recent assignment came in the playoffs this month when he worked the New York Yankees’ sweep of Minnesota in the ALDS. He was at second base on Oct. 7 for the clinching Game 3 at Target Field. Cooper worked the 2014 World Series between the Kansas City Royals and San Francisco Giants. He drew that post helped by his success rate on replay challenges — MLB took those numbers into account in picking the crew, and Cooper had only three calls reversed all season.

Cooper umpired in 10 division series, four League Championship Series and the 2005 All-Star Game, along with two World Baseball Classics. He also was behind the plate for three no-hitters — two by Mark Buehrle, including a perfect game, and another by Hideo Nomo. Cooper worked the plate in the final game in the career of Cal Ripken Jr. “This is a very sad day across Major League Baseball,” Manfred said in a statement. “Eric Cooper was a highly respected umpire, a hard worker on the field and a popular member of our staff. He also served as a key voice of the MLB Umpires Association on important issues in our game.”

In a statement, players’ union chief Tony Clark said: “Eric Cooper’s friendly and familiar presence in the baseball community will be missed by all of us. He was a professional and gentleman whose passion for our game, the players and his fellow umpires was evident in the way he went about his work and life.” Cooper was an Iowa native and Iowa State graduate. He was known for rooting for another school — Notre Dame, and frequently wore Fighting Irish gear in the umpires’ locker rooms while talking about the football team’s success.

Skyscan Forecast – Monday, Oct. 21, 2019

Weather

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy & windy. High 58. W @ 15-30.
Tonight: Mostly cloudy w/light rain. Low 38. NW @ 15-30. *Wind Advisory from 5-p.m. today thru 4-p.m. Tuesday**
Tomorrow: Cldy to P/Cldy & windy. High 53. NW @ 15-30.
Wednesday: Mo. Cldy w/light rain. High 58.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Thursday: P/Cldy. High 56.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 64. Our Low was 35. We received .16″ rain here at the KJAN Studios yesterday thru early this morning. Last year on this date our High was 65 and the Low was 30. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 87 in 1947. The Record Low was 13 in 1930.

 

RONALD RAYMOND ELLSWORTH, 76, of Corley (Mass of Christian Burial 10/24/19)

Obituaries

October 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

RONALD RAYMOND ELLSWORTH, 76, of Corley, died Sunday, Oct. 20th, in Harlan. A Mass of Christian Burial for RONALD ELLSWORTH will be held 11-a.m. Thursday, Oct. 24th, at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, in Harlan. Burmeister-Johannsen Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home on Wed., Oct. 23rd, from 2-until 8-p.m., with the family greeting friends from 5-until 7-p.m.

RONALD RAYMOND ELLSWORTH is survived by:

His wife – Peggy Ellsworth, of Corley.

His sons – Damon Ellsworth (& partner Tammy Nelson), of Harlan; Chad (Collen) Ellsworth, of Lubbock, TX; Dan (Missy) Ellsworth, of Erie, CO; Darrin (amy) Ellsworth, of Ely, IA; and Ben Ellsworth, of Colorado Springs, CO.

His daughter – Beth Ellsworth, of Harlan.

His brothers – Gary (Barb) Ellsworth, of Hillsboro, OR, and Mark (Marsha) Ellsworth, of Omaha.

His sisters – Judy (Henry) Scheffler, of Harlan, and Joyce Rabenberg, of Armour, SD.

8 grandchildren, other relatives and friends.