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Class 1A, District 8 All-District Football Honors

Sports

November 15th, 2018 by admin

Class 1A, District 8

First Team

Offense
QB: Anthony Potthoff, Van Meter
RB: Ian Abrahamson, Van Meter
RB: Ben Kingery, ACGC
RB: Keelan Klommhaus, Mount Ayr
WR/TE: Cole Arnburg, West Central Valley
WR/TE: Dawson Frost, Mount Ayr
WR/TE: Gracen Wellberg, Panorama
OL: Ryan Schmitt, Van Meter
OL: Brett Berg, Van Meter
OL: Trent Hambleton, Panorama
OL: Sam Madsen, ACGC
OL: JD Hitt, Clarinda
Kicker: Sam Bardwell, Van Meter

Defense
DL: Chris Reames, Van Meter
DL: John Shields, Mount Ayr
DL: Hunter Holmes, Panorama
DL: Quynton Younker, ACGC
LB: Reas Knapp, Mount Ayr
LB: Cameron Smolik, Van Meter
LB: Parker Fryar, Van Meter
LB: Cole Sackett, West Central Valley
LB: Trey Cobb, Panorama
DB: Zach Rizzuti, Panorama
DB: Michael Shull, Clarinda
DB: Spencer Lamb, Van Meter
DB: Zach Madden, Van Meter
Punter: William Shull, Clarinda

Second Team

Offense
QB: Carson Wadle, West Central Valley
QB: Payton Weehler, Mount Ayr
RB: Gabe Rowley, ACGC
RB: Williams Shull, Clarinda
WR/TE: Allias Stahl, Panorama
WR/TE: JJ Richards, Van Meter
OL: Koltin Sloss, Panorama
OL: Rush Rowan, West Central Valley
OL: Noah Miller, Van Meter
OL: Sam Miller, Van Meter
Kicker: Myles Green, Mount Ayr

Defense
DL: Tyler Erdman, Van Meter
DL: Isaac Grose, Mount Ayr
DL: Lucas Marsh, ACGC
DL: Gage Buttler, ACGC
LB: Korbin Klommhaus, Mount Ayr
LB: Kasey O’Brien, Van Meter
LB: Nathan Lindsay, Clarinda
LB: Luke South, Panorama
DB: Brice Sechrist, West Central Valley
DB: Zach Drummond, Van Meter
DB: Hunter Haveman, Mount Ayr
DB: Carson Campbell, Clarinda
Punter: Kolben Klommhaus, Mount Ayr

Offensive MVP: Ian Abrahamson, Van Meter
Defensive MVP: Chris Reames, Van Meter

DNR investigates wastewater release in Denison

News

November 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Iowa Dept. of Natural Resources said Thursday, that a plugged manhole at the Smithfield Foods plant in Denison, sent some rinse water to the Boyer River early Thursday morning.

Smithfield crews noticed the discharge around 3:30 a.m., about 15 to 30 minutes after they think it started. An unknown amount of final rinse water flowed across the property, then entered a storm sewer that flows into the river.

In less than two hours, a construction crew built a small dam, stopping the flow into the river. Another crew began vacuuming up the rinse water. DNR staff were on site before 8 a.m., checking on the cleanup and the river. DNR will continue to monitor cleanup efforts and consider appropriate enforcement action.

JEANNETTE “KAY” RHOTEN, 78, of Waukee, formerly of Linden (11-19-2018)

Obituaries

November 15th, 2018 by Jim Field

JEANNETTE “KAY” RHOTEN, 78, of Waukee (formerly of Linden) died Tuesday, November 13th at her home.  Services for JEANNETTE “KAY” RHOTEN will be held on Monday, November 19th at 10:30 am at the Twigg Funeral Home in Panora.

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Visitation will be held on Sunday from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm at the funeral home.

Burial in the West Linn Cemetery of rural Linden

JEANNETTE “KAY” RHOTEN is survived by:

Children:  Johnny (Renee) Rhoten of Linden; Julie (Chris) Nelson of Overland Park, KS; Joanie (Bill) Bond of Earlham; Jay (Lexie) Rhoten of Pella.

16 Grandchildren

AHSTW falls to Hudson in Class A Championship

Sports

November 15th, 2018 by admin

The AHSTW Vikings finished as the State Runner-Up in Class A after a 30-7 loss to Hudson in the Championship game on Thursday afternoon. The Vikings finish a stellar season at 12-1 and the Pirates finish 13-0, winning their second straight trip to the title game.

Hudson scored on the opening possession of the game by trotting down the field with a 12-play 75-yard drive that was capped off by an 8 yard touchdown run by Christian Seres. The defenses stole the show for a good chunk of the first half before Hudson scored again with 1:05 left in the first half on a Jacob Murray 10 yard touchdown run. The Pirates led 13-0 at halftime.

The third quarter was owned by the Pirates as they capitalized on an early short field to add a 32-yard Austin Appleton field goal. After an interception on the Vikings next possession, the pirates scored again on a 20-yard touchdown run by Seres to make it 23-0. Jacob Murray would add another touchdown run with 7:57 left to make it 30-0. The Vikings would get in the end zone to avoid a shutout with 3:57 left on a 6 yard touchdown run by quarterback Blake Osbahr. The Vikings converted two fourth downs on that drive to get some points on the board.

Hudson was led by star tailback Christian Seres with 161 yards on 32 carries and two touchdowns. Jacob Murray was 10-16 passing for 116 yards for Hudson. Ethan Fulcher finished with 66 total offensive yards and led the way on defense with 7.5 tackles and 5 tackles for loss.

AHSTW got 46 yards on the ground from Gabe Pauley on 10 carries. Osbahr ran for 22 yards and the score. He also was 14-27 passing for 198 yards on the day. Pauley was the leading Viking tackler with 12 stops on the day.

AHSTW says goodbye to a talented senior class that had one of the most accomplished seasons in school history. Listen to postgame comments from AHSTW Head Coach Davis Pattee below.

Play

GAGE LLOYD RALPH KODER, 23, of Casey (11-18-2018)

Obituaries

November 15th, 2018 by Jim Field

GAGE LLOYD RALPH KODER, 23, of Casey died Tuesday, November 13th in an automobile accident.  A gathering of friends and family for GAGE LLOYD RALPH KODER will be held on Sunday, November 18th from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm at the Johnson Family Funeral Home – Stuart Chapel.

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Memorial contributions may be made to the Gage Koder Memorial Fund in care of the funeral home.

Online condolences may be made to www.johnsonfamilyfuneralhome.com.

School safety expert says parking lot can be most dangerous

News

November 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The executive director of a group which provides school safety training says districts are overlooking a key area where student deaths could be prevented. Michael Dorn of Safe Havens International says accidents in parking lots are the biggest danger to students.  “In 1998 to 2013 we had 525 people hit and killed in the parking lots, 487 died from violence — this is nationally — of those, 62 died in active shooter events,” Dorn says.

Dorn made a presentation at the Iowa Association of School Boards annual convention. He says the parking lot deaths often involved one individual at a time, so they don’t get the headlines that other things do. “When you look at the data on it, we are focusing a great deal of our time, energy, money on some of the rarest — to be clear most catastrophic types of events that we can’t ignore — but even within the category of violence, nine of ten people, more than nine out of ten who are murdered, it doesn’t look like the events we see on the national news,” Dorn says. “Or if you Google school violence on the internet or social media you are going to get the rare but catastrophic, but you are going to miss most of what causes fatalities.”

Dorn says suicides accounted for 129 deaths in the same five-year time period.  “Twice as many people died from suicide than at the hands of an active shooter,” Dorn says. “And suicide prevention efforts lower the risk for both. One of our more effective approaches. If you step back and look at the data what we see is a lot of schools are now very seriously out of whack with their risk profile. And we are doing a lot of things that sound good — that are very popular — but they are not tested.”

Dorn says the images of school shootings push schools to take some kind of action. “What has happened in this country in the last few years is there’s been a bit of a motive reaction to things. And we’re rolling out products and we’re rolling out training programs but people are taking the time to test them with simulation to see how they actually work and they are not doing as well as we might thin, And they can make things much more dangerous as we see.”

Dorn says school districts could benefit more by spending money training personnel on student supervision techniques. “We can reduce our risk of death in tornadoes, active shooter, sudden cardiac arrest, anaphylactic shock, the risk of abduction, sexual abuse of children by children, accidents on the playground,” Dorn explains. “So, taking the time to teach people how to supervise. Taking the time to teach people how to look at our traffic flow in the morning.”

He says schools need to create drills that provide real experiences and teach school personnel the best way to react to situations to keep kids safe.  “We go to a staff member, give them a scenario and they have to react as they would in a real event. That does a lot of things. It reinforces the empowerment of the individual employed to take lifesaving action. It lets them practice, it really makes them confront the reality that they have to be prepared and they have to learn what’s in those plans,” Dorn says. “And when you do that, you won’t get that type of complacency and boredom. Because every time we do a drill, those teachers, those custodians are saying ‘next month it could be me’.”

He talked to school board members about how they can conduct simulations that he says work.  “We get tremendous affect with it and it dramatically improves the speed and reliability of decision making under stress. And very easy to do, not expensive, they don’t have to buy anything. And any school in Iowa can do this,” Dorn says.

Dorn’s bio says he is a former police officer who became a safety specialist and has traveled around the world helping organizations improve their safety.

Mullenix Signs with ISU Track

Sports

November 15th, 2018 by Jim Field

Chase Mullenix with his parents, Matt & Michelle and AHS Track coach Jordan Mullen.

 

 

 

 

Atlantic multi-sport athlete Chase Mullenix signed a letter of intent Thursday to join the Iowa State Track team.  Mullenix said the recruiting process started after his junior track season.

After settling on track, Mullenix said Iowa State stood out.

Mullenix helped Atlantic to a runner-up team finish in class 3-A last spring by winning four titles.  He won the 800 meters and helped win the 4 x 800, 4 x 400 and distance medley relays.  After playing multiple sports in high school, Mullenix says he’s excited to see how much he can improve by specializing.

Mullenix plans to major in kinesiology at ISU.

Gov. Reynolds orders flags at half-staff to honor fallen sailor

News

November 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES) – Gov. Kim Reynolds ordered all flags in Iowa to fly at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Friday, November 16, 2018, to honor a fallen U.S. sailor. Navy Carpenter’s Mate 3rd Class William L. Kvidera, of Traer, was killed in action on December 7, 1941, when the USS Oklahoma was attacked by Japanese aircraft at Pearl Harbor. The 22-year-old was accounted for on July 3, 2018. Kvidera’s remains were returned to his family for burial in Traer with full military honors.

William Kvidera

A Mass of Christian Burial for Kvidera will be held 1-p.m. Friday, Nov. 16th, at the St. Paul Catholic Church, in Traer. Flags will be at half-staff on the State Capitol Building and on flag displays in the Capitol Complex. Flags will also be half-staff on all public buildings, grounds and facilities throughout the state.

Individuals, businesses, schools, municipalities, counties and other government subdivisions are encouraged to fly the flag at half-staff for the same length of time as a sign of respect.

Wells Fargo announces layoff of 400 in Des Moines area

News

November 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Banking giant Wells Fargo has informed employees that it will lay off 400 workers in the Des Moines area. Local bank spokesman Steve Carlson told the Des Moines Register that the company notified employees in the home lending department on Thursday. The layoffs go into effect early next year. The layoffs announced Thursday were among 1,000 positions cut companywide.

Wells Fargo employs more than 15,500 people in Iowa, including about 14,000 in metropolitan Des Moines. The San Francisco-based bank announced in September it planned to reduce its national workforce by more than 26,000 jobs. The bank has faced several investigations in recent years over practices including the opening of accounts without customers’ consent, charging clients for unnecessary insurance policies, and imposing unfair fees tied to mortgage rates.

Montgomery County Post-Election Audit results

News

November 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Montgomery County conducted its first post-election audit Thursday under a new law designed to monitor and protect election processes.  Auditor Stephanie Burke said Thursday, “The audit was a perfect match to the result recorded on the election tabulator.”

Iowa law now requires that after each general election, the Secretary of State will choose, at random, one precinct in each Iowa county to be audited. County auditors must then supervise a hand count of the ballots from that precinct and compare the results from the presidential or gubernatorial election, depending on the year, to the voting machine count from election night.

In Montgomery County, the Secretary of State chose the Absentee precinct. The process for auditing the absentee precinct is a little different than auditing all other precincts. During the absentee audit, the same machine is used and at least 50% of the ballots must be ran through the machine during the audit. 800 ballots were counted. The machine count and hand count matched perfectly.

“That’s what we like to see,” said County Auditor Stephanie Burke. “the hand count shows that our machines are accurately counting the ballots.” Burke said that the new law is in response to concerns about computer hackers altering election results. “Since our voting machines, as well as our programming and tabulating computers, aren’t hooked up to the internet, hacking the vote is highly unlikely, but not totally impossible,” she said. “Being able to rely on paper ballots should give us confidence in the integrity of our voting system.”

Four precinct election officials, representing the two major political parties, conducted the count under the supervision of Elections Clerk, Beth Peterson, and Auditor Stephanie Burke. As required in the law, the Auditor’s Office notified the county chairs of both of the two major political parties. The process was witnessed by a representative of the Montgomery County Democrats.

Questions about the post-election audit and other election matters may be directed to the Montgomery County Auditor’s office at 712-623-5127.