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High School Tennis Scoreboard 04/24/2018

Sports

April 25th, 2018 by admin

GIRLS

Clarke 9, Southwest Valley 0
Denison-Schleswig 6, Bishop Heelan 0
Glenwood 6, Shenandoah 3
Red Oak 7, Clarinda 2
Sioux City East 7, Sioux City West 2
St. Albert 8, Harlan 1

BOYS

Atlantic 6, Audubon 2
Clarke 6, Southwest Valley 3
Clarinda 9, Red Oak 0
Glenwood 9, Shenandoah 0
CB City Tournament: 1. St. Albert, 2. Abraham Lincoln, 3. Lewis Central, 4. Thomas Jefferson

 

High School Soccer Scoreboard 04/24/2018

Sports

April 25th, 2018 by admin

GIRLS

Abraham Lincoln 4, Sioux City North 1
Denison-Schleswig 3, Carroll 0
Kuemper Catholic 2, Greene County 0
Lewis Central 10, Creston 0
St. Albert 10, Atlantic 0
Thomas Jefferson 2, Glenwood 1
Treynor 6, Underwood 0
Tri-Center 4, Nodaway Valley/WCV/ACGC 1

BOYS

Abraham Lincoln 3, St. Albert 0
Carroll 11, Nodaway Valley 2
Glenwood 3, Tri-Center 2 — OT/SO
Harlan 8, Riverside 0
Lewis Central 10, Creston 0
Treynor 15, Clarinda Academy 0

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 4/25/2018

Podcasts, Sports

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Jim Field.

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NE incident leads to chase and crash near Hamburg

News

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATE) BELLEVUE, Neb. (AP) — Authorities say a police chase that began in suburban Omaha and wound south through southwest Iowa ended with a crash and the arrests of William Stanfill III and Jacqueline Streich, both of Omaha. Charges against the pair are pending in Fremont County. Bellevue, NE police investigating a reported drive-by shooting Tuesday night say a man in a vehicle fired at officers early Wednesday and then fled into Iowa. None of the officers was hit. Iowa State Patrol Sgt. Nathan Ludwig says an Iowa trooper intending to join the chase crashed his cruiser near Hamburg and was flown to an Omaha hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. Ludwig identified him as Trooper Dillon Malone.
Numerous law enforcement agencies participated or responded to the pursuit and the events that followed, including Deputies with the Mills, Montgomery, Cass and Shelby County Sheriff’s Offices, as well as Shenandoah and Tabor Police, along with rescue units from Hamburg, Sidney and Riverton.

Creston man arrested for domestic abuse by strangulation

News

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Police in Creston, Tuesday afternoon, arrested 28-year old Spencer Leitzel, of Creston, on an assault charge. Leitzel was taken into custody at his home at around 4:50-p.m. and charged with Domestic Abuse Assault by Strangulation. He was being held in the Union County Jail while awaiting a bond hearing.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 4/25/2018

News, Podcasts

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

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Iowa-Illinois bridge project taking longer than planned

News

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SABULA, Iowa (AP) — Officials say work is taking longer than expected on a new bridge that helps connect eastern Iowa with northwestern Illinois. The bridge at Sabula will provide access to a larger U.S. Highway 52/Illinois 64 bridge over the Mississippi River to Savanna, Illinois. The old Sabula bridge was closed in March, forcing motorists into a 36-mile detour. The construction was scheduled to be finished in late May. Now the Iowa Transportation Department says the bridge won’t be open until at least July because of problems with sandy soil.

Man charged with homicide in Des Moines crash death

News

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A man has been charged with vehicular homicide in connection with the crash death of another driver in Des Moines. Authorities say 33-year-old Grant Uhe, of Des Moines, was arrested Tuesday. Polk County Jail records say he remained in custody Wednesday, pending $100,000 bail. Police say Uhe was driving more than 75 mph (121 kph) in a 30 mph (48 kph) zone on April 19 before his pickup truck crashed into a car driven by 19-year-old Tyler Wilcox. Police say Wilcox died later at a hospital.

Masters and Lipari win at Grand Blue Mile; SE Polk athlete sets State Record in 400 hurdles

Sports

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

After finishing second last year and third in 2016 Riley Masters finally stood at the top of the podium after winning the Grand Blue Mile in downtown Des Moines Tuesday night. His winning time was 4:03.12. Emily Lipari edged Olympian Brenda Martinez to win the women’s division and dropping her personal record nearly three seconds in the process. And, Southeast Polk’s Sydney Milani set an all time Iowa high school record in the 400 hurdles at the Tiger Relays in Grinnell. Her time was 53.70 seconds which breaks the previous mark of 53.96 set by Hannah Willms of Dike New Hartford in 2010. Milani is a senior and going to Iowa State.

Cedar Rapids turns to egg oiling to cut goose population

Ag/Outdoor

April 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The wild goose chase in Cedar Rapids could be coming to an end with a new method for dealing with an overpopulation of Canadian Geese. The Cedar Rapids Parks and Recreation Department began using “egg oiling” this month to cut the goose population. Parks and Rec Supervisor, Brent Neighbor, says it starts by floating goose eggs in a bucket of water to determine their stage of development. “Based on that stage — then you know whether it is good to oil or whether it is not,” Neighbor explains. “If it is, then you take 100 percent corn oil and then you coat the egg, and then you put it back in the nest.”

Cedar Rapids Geese

He says the corn oil stops the development of the egg. “The egg is porous and so the coating cuts off the oxygen to the interior of the egg,” Neighbor says. The eggs are left in the nest and the mother stays with them, but the never develop. More than one-thousand eggs in 200 nests have been oiled. The city has tied all sorts of other methods to control the geese population since 1996, including big roundups where the geese were chased into pens and relocated. Neighbor says the efforts to control the population have been controversial on both sides — but the egg oiling is one that appears to be acceptable. “It’s actually accepted by PETA as the most humane way to reduce populations,” he says, “so it has been accepted by both sides, which is good.”

Neighbor says if they just removed the eggs then the goose could lay again and it wouldn’t solve the problem. This allows them to cut the number of new goslings and the hope is that will eventually cut the number of adults who make Cedar Rapids their home. “Once they’re imprinted on an area and they are born in and area they are either going to stay here or not leave. And when they do leave they will come right back,” according to Neighbor. “…When we have done the roundups in the past and taken them to other areas of the state the D-N-R has tagged those geese and they just find them right back in Cedar Rapids.”

Neighbor says the egg oiling method is also cheaper than some of the other efforts. He says they use three park staff to oil the eggs and with the roundup they used the entire park staff and added several D-N-R employees to gather up the geese. “The labor savings is huge and the corn oil is very cheap.” The great goose roundups evolved after several other methods failed — including mechanical dogs designed to scare the geese away. “We called those the Fido, the radio-controlled units. And then we’ve also tried the distress calls, lasers, decoys, coyote and fox decoys, so we’ve tried quite a few things to get them to move along, ” Neighbor says. “And it works temporarily and then it doesn’t work any more.”

He says the population kept growing and the persistent geese cause all sorts of problems. “They are up and down the sidewalks, they’re covering the law areas, they are crossing the streets, which stops traffic and gives us an unexpected traffic delay, which is dangerous to the public,” he explains. “And then also on the trails the goose droppings makes it slippery and we’ve had some slipping incidents. We’ve had interactions with bicyclists where bicyclists have been flown at and charged by geese.” He says they are always getting calls to come pick up geese that had flown into cars or gotten run over. The results of the egg oil effort could start to show in a few months.

Neighbor says they should know by this summer how effective the oil treatment has been as the remaining goose eggs hatch and they see how many new goslings there are crossing the streets and in the parks and green spaces. He says it will two to four years down the road to know if they have brought the population to a more manageable level. The goose egg oiling was done under the training and supervision of the Iowa D-N-R.

(Radio Iowa)