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Purdy throws 3 TD passes as Iowa State routs Kansas, 27-3

Sports

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Brock Purdy threw for 263 yards and three touchdowns, two of them big-play strikes to Hakeem Butler, and Iowa State rolled to a 27-3 victory over Kansas on Saturday.
David Montgomery ran for 67 yards and Purdy added 53 more on the ground as the Cyclones (5-3, 4-2 Big 12) won their fourth straight, all since putting their freshman quarterback under center.
Purdy has thrown 12 touchdown passes and just two interceptions during the streak.

The Jayhawks’ Peyton Bender was just 19 of 40 for 185 yards, though he had several passes dropped, including one for a certain TD by Stephon Robinson early in the game. Khalil Herbert added 91 yards on the ground in what amounted to the only bright spot for coach David Beaty’s team.
Now, the calls for his job are sure to grow louder.

The Jayhawks (3-6, 1-5) upset TCU last week to give Beaty a week’s reprieve, but his team looked woefully unprepared Saturday. Substitution mistakes, four failed fourth downs and a myriad of other issues made for an ugly showing in front of a sparse crowd made up of about 50 percent Iowa State fans.
UP NEXT
Iowa State tries to become bowl-eligible against Baylor next Saturday.
Kansas heads down Interstate 70 to face Kansas State next Saturday.

Iowa City residents asked to compost _ not trash _ pumpkins

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Officials in Iowa City are reminding residents to compost their fall pumpkins and leftover Halloween jack-o-lanterns instead of trashing them. To do this, residents are asked to put pumpkins with yard waste collection, which is composted.

Officials say to compost, remove any candles or lights from inside pumpkins and place them in the organics container, or in a brown paper yard waste bag. Then set it at the curb for normal collection. Residents are limited to 50 pounds per cart or bag.

Residents who do not receive curbside services can take pumpkins at no cost to the City’s compost facility located at the Iowa City Landfill and Recycling Center.

Time to set clocks back an hour for standard time’s return

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Nebraskans and Iowans are being reminded to set their clocks back an hour before going to bed tonight (Saturday). Standard time returns this weekend at 2 a.m. Sunday. The change means most Americans will get an extra hour of rest, but those working overnight shifts might toil an hour longer. It also means some will forget to change their clocks, and show up early for church or other events on Sunday.
Daylight time returns to Nebraska and Iowa in March. Not everyone in the United States makes the switch from standard time. The exceptions are Hawaii, most of Arizona, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Marianas.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 11/3/18

News, Podcasts

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

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Seven mid-size Iowa towns make USA Today’s ‘best places to live’ list

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Seven Iowa communities are ranked among the “50 Best Mid-Size Cities to Live In,” according to U-S-A Today, and one northwest Iowa city is in the top ten. Attributes include things like safe streets, available jobs, transportation options and cultural attractions. Le Mars is listed as number-seven and Mayor Dick Kirchoff calls it a “high honor” for the community. He says the report specifically mentions affordable housing rates as a major factor for Le Mars’ high ranking. Kirchoff says, “Housing is particularly inexpensive with the typical household spending about $8,124 a year, about 4,000 less than the average annual housing cost nationwide.”

The mayor predicts Le Mars’ high ranking may help with the town’s economic development plans, though he says their biggest obstacle is finding people to fill jobs. “One of our challenges is to get enough workforce personnel, particularly our industries, for them to be able to expand and do what they want to,” Kirchoff says.

Hand-in-hand with workforce shortage issues are housing shortage issues, and the mayor says they’re working on that. “Just within this last year, we were fortunate enough to find developers and our local builders to put up 91 apartments or townhouses,” he says, “and we built about 19 or 20 brand new homes here in town.”

Most of those new dwellings are already filled, he says, with 85-percent of the residents being new in town. Other Iowa cities on the U-S-A Today “Best” list include: Carroll at #11, Johnston at #22, Pella at #23, Spencer at #29, North Liberty at #39 and Storm Lake at #47. Overall, the top three towns listed are: Perryton, Texas at #3, Mandan, North Dakota at #2, and West University Place, Texas at #1.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 11/3/18

Podcasts, Sports

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Ric Hanson.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 11/3/2018

News, Podcasts

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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On immigration, King says he stands ‘shoulder to shoulder with Donald Trump

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Republican Congressman Steve King is disputing his Democratic opponent J.D. Scholten’s assertion that King’s views on many issues, including immigration, are out-of-step with fourth district voters. “He is the antithesis of the values of this district,” King says, “and I happen to embody them and that’s a matter of record, not a matter of conjecture or opinion.”

Earlier Friday, Scholten said King’s stand on immigration is “10 miles down the road” from most Democrats and Republicans. “First thing I thought when I heard that was: ‘There’s Steve King…standing right shoulder-to-shoulder with Donald Trump, who by the way borrowed my immigration policy when he came to Iowa to run for president,” King says. “…We sat at his desk in the Oval Office just a couple of weeks ago and agreed how we were going to move them.”

And King — who has sponsored bills in congress that would end “birthright citizenship” — points to Trump’s recent comment that he’d issue an executive order to end citizenship for babies born to parents who are in the country illegally. Scholten also has said the VISA guest worker program must be revamped so businesses, like the pork processing plants in northwest Iowa, can hire more workers. King says the border must be secured before those kind of issues are discussed in congress.

“The employers, they knew what the demographics were when they built these places,” King says. “I want to help them as much as I can, but they invested their capital and they shouldn’t be coming to congress saying, ‘Oh, whoops. I need cheap labor. Please change the laws.'” King says his evaluation indicates there are more than 100 million people already here who could or should be working.

“We need to put more Americans back to work. They’re sitting there right now, drawing down welfare checks. We’re borrowing money from China to pay people not to work and I’ll say short-term, narrow-minded people just want to take a look at how do we solve this problem in the here and now, real quick and real cheap,” King says. “You know, one thing that’s happening today is this tight labor supply is moving wages and benefits up. That’s a good thing because it broadens our middle class.”

King, who is recovering from laryngitis, spoke by phone with a reporter from Radio Iowa, Friday afternoon.

Scholten says King is ’10 miles down the road’ from mainstream on immigration

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — J.D. Scholten, the Democrat challenging Republican Congressman Steve King, says the end of “straight ticket” voting in Iowa may give his own campaign a boost this year.  “If you look at the 2016 election numbers, four percent of all the people who voted in my district, they undervoted in this race. They voted for president. They voted down ballot,” Scholten said. “…To me, that is a Republican who said: ‘I can no longer consciously vote for Steve King.'”

Those 2016 voters Scholten is talking about were picking and choosing among the candidates rather than checking the box to vote for all the Republicans on the ballot. Now that such “straight ticket” voting for all the candidates of one party is no longer an option in Iowa, Scholten says he expects more G-O-P voters to skip voting for King. “With straight ticket off, they’re going to have to see his name and make that decision,” Scholten says, “and I see that getting into a lot of people’s heads.”

There are 70-thousand more active Republican voters than Democrats in the fourth district. King has easily won the district in the eight previous elections, but Scholten suggests King’s hard-line stance on immigration is wearing thin in the area. “When it comes to immigration and a lot of things there’s Democrats and there’s Republicans and 10 miles down the road there’s Steve King,” Scholten says, “and especially when it comes to immigration because we have the pork plant we have in Sioux City that’s been open for about a year and the pork plant that’s going to open up in Eagle Grove and both of them have talked about the need for an immigrant workforce.”

Scholten says small business owners all across the political spectrum tell him they need workers. “Last harvest, I was down in Greene County and they needed for the harvest, their grain elevator needed 39 workers and they didn’t get one American citizen to apply for that.” Scholten says the country “absolutely” needs secure borders, but it also needs an improved VISA program to help businesses get guest workers. “Being the second-most agriculture producing district in American and having a congressman who doesn’t understand the needs of his own district because right now the VISA programs match, for agriculture, the coasts. They don’t match the year-round workers we need in our district,” and so he’s advocated — he, as in Steve King — has abdicated his own leadership for his own personal agenda on this.”

Scholten says the process of becoming a naturalized system must be improved as well. He made his comments Friday morning, during taping of Iowa Public Television’s “Iowa Press” program.

Woman injured in Cass County ATV accident

News

November 3rd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Updated 6:50-a.m.) Anita Rescue, Wiota 1st Responders and Medivac Ambulance responded early this morning to an ATV accident on what was said to be private property. The accident at 606 Michigan Avenue (Highway 148), south of Anita, happened at around 5:15-a.m. A 41-year old woman was injured during the accident. According to dispatch reports, she was apparently a passenger on the ATV. No other details are available at this time.