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West Virginia beats No. 14 Iowa State 20-16

Sports

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — Will Grier threw two touchdown passes, Justin Crawford broke out of a three-game slump with 102 yards rushing and West Virginia held on for a 20-16 victory over No. 14 Iowa State on Saturday. West Virginia (6-3, 4-2 Big 12) became bowl eligible and knocked the Cyclones (6-3, 4-2, No. 15 CFP) out of a four-way tie for first place.

Iowa State trailed 20-0 late in the second quarter and never recovered in losing on the road for the first time. The Cyclones allowed 524 yards of offense, couldn’t come back from its biggest deficit of the season and now has some work to do if it’s going to reach the Big 12 championship game.

UP NEXT: Iowa State: The Cyclones play No. 11 Oklahoma State at home next Saturday.

Stanley, Hawkeyes throttle No. 3 Ohio State 55-24

Sports

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Nate Stanley threw for 226 yards and five touchdowns, and Iowa throttled third-ranked Ohio State 55-24 on Saturday, dealing what’s likely to be a fatal blow to the Buckeyes’ playoff hopes. Josh Jackson added three interceptions for the Hawkeyes (6-3, 3-3), who beat their fourth top-5 opponent in their last five tries at home.

Iowa raced out to a 31-17 halftime lead on a pair of Stanley TD passes to Noah Fant. Stanley, following a successful and highly unusual fake field goal, later fired a 2-yard TD pass with a defender hanging onto his foot that put the Hawkeyes ahead 38-17 late in the third quarter.

J.T. Barrett threw a career-high four interceptions for Ohio State (7-2, 5-1, No. 6 CFP), which allowed its most points in a game under coach Urban Meyer. The Buckeyes committed nine penalties and gained just 371 yards in their most lopsided defeat since last year’s 31-0 loss to eventual national champion Clemson in the playoff.

 

Ohio State is sure to plummet in the polls because of the loss, although with so many Top 25 teams facing each other that fall might not be as drastic this week. Iowa got 1 point last week. The Hawkeyes will get a lot more of those on Sunday.

 

Up next: Iowa travels to face Wisconsin next week. The Badgers are now the Big Ten’s best hope — by far — for the playoff.

Northern Iowa rallies late to knock off South Dakota

Sports

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) — Marcus Weymiller scored on an 8-yard run with 3:02 left and Keelon Brookins sealed the victory with a 29-yard pick-6 as Northern Iowa rallied for a 34-29 upset win over South Dakota on Saturday.

South Dakota turned it over on three straight fourth-quarter possessions — two of which the Panthers (5-4, 4-2 Missouri Valley Conference) turned into touchdowns. South Dakota led 23-13 after Brett Samson’s 11-yard TD run with 12:37 left in the third quarter. But Eli Dunne jump-started the comeback when he connected with Isaiah Weston for a 4-yard score to cut the Coyotes’ lead to 23-20 with 3:56 left in the third.

Chris Streveler hooked up with Dakarai Allen from 4 yards out with 11 seconds remaining to cap the scoring for the Coyotes (7-2, 4-2). Dunne passed for 228 yards and two TDs and Weymiller finished with 69 yards on 24 carries. Streveler completed 34 of 51 passes for 401 yards and two scores, but he was also intercepted twice.

The Panthers are 3-1 in their last four games — all against top-ten teams.

Congressman Young talks bump stocks and background checks

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa Third District Republican Representative David Young made his way to parts of western Iowa Saturday afternoon. In Cass County, Congressman Young paid a visit to McCunn Specialty Firearms, just east Massena. There, he spoke with owners Kevin and his son Brice, McCunn, and others, about their store, which opened a couple of years ago, about accessories for weapons, such as the “Bump Stock,” which authorities said was used in the deadly attack on Las Vegas concert-goers event last month.

Brice McCunn e-mailed Young following statements he made following the shootings in Nevada, and invited him to the store to try one for himself. During his visit Saturday, Young declined the offer to fire a weapon equipped with a bump stock.

McCunn to Young they typically don’t sell them at their store, because there’s no demand for them. In fact, they have sold only one since the store opened in the past five-years.  Brice said he e-mailed Young because of comments he made about bump stocks turning a semi-automatic weapon in automatic. McCunn said disagreed, because legally you can’t turn a gun into an automatic. “It might function like an automatic,” he said, but legally, “they are two completely different guns.”

Left to right: David Young, Aaron McCurdy, Kevin McCunn and Brice McCunn.

McCunn said the government closed the registration period for machine guns in 1986. They can only be sold to law enforcement and for demonstration purposes only. McCunn said neither his father Kevin nor himself are fans of bump stocks. Young said a lot people had never heard of them, prior to Las Vegas, and, at the man who opened fire in Las Vegas, would have done so even without one. He said “He’s a criminal. He’s evil, and you can’t regulate evil. I wish you could. I wish you could regulate sanity as well.”

Young also asked about suppressors, or “silencers” as they are commonly called. MSF employee Aaron McCurdy told Young there are good reasons why a person might want a suppressor, even though they only reduce the sound by 30-percent. He said there’s less recoil, it’s easier to learn in an instructional environment, and it increases hearing protection.”

Young said opponents of suppressors claim deregulating them would mean supporting “Bad people doing bad things without getting caught,” which he called “insane.” McCunn pointed out that there is an expensive and lengthy process of paperwork hurdles to overcome before a person can legally own a suppressor. McCurdy said if a person wants one bad enough, there are illegal ways to make a suppressor.

Kevin McCunn, Brice McCunn and Congressman Young talk inside the indoor firing range.

Young asked about background checks on potential gun owners. Brice McCunn said they’ve turned away two people who were rejected by the computerized background program called NICS (National Instant Criminal Background Check System) over the past two weeks, and about five altogether, since the store opened.

And, they’ve refused to sell weapons to persons based on a “Gut instinct” that something wasn’t right. Brice said he doesn’t have an answer to how NICS can be improved. On the topic of insurance, Young was asked about stop-gap insurance. He said there’s been no change to the Affordable Care Act (ACA, or “Obamacare”) law, but “It’s collapsing, it’s not working. Democrats and Republicans agree that it’s not working, and something needs to be done.” He said his health insurance policy expires at the end of the year, like it will for many Iowans.” He suggested those persons check across state lines.

He said thanks to President Trump, he can make it possible to set up an “association,” where people with similar employment or business backgrounds, can pool their resources and create a group policy. Young said he would be in favor of that. He also said he wants to see transparency in pricing of insurance policies. The solution will have to be bipartisan, though, and even though it may not appeal to everyone, it’s better than nothing.

Iowa man can’t avoid trial using ‘stand your ground’

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A judge has ruled that a man accused in a deadly shooting on Iowa City’s pedestrian mall cannot avoid trial using Iowa’s new “stand your ground” law as a defense. The Press-Citizen reports that Sixth Judicial District Judge Paul Miller ruled Friday that 23-year-old Lamar Wilson’s case must first be heard by a jury.

Wilson is charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder and intimidation with a dangerous weapon in connection with an Aug. 27 shooting that killed one man and injured two others. He has pleaded not guilty.

The state’s “stand your ground” legislation took effect July 1. It says law-abiding citizens don’t have to retreat before using deadly force if they believe they’re in danger. His trial is scheduled for Nov. 27 in Polk County.

Work release escape of David Michael Evans

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES) – The Iowa Dept. of Corrections reports David Michael Evans, convicted of assault, multiple drug-related charges and escape/absence while on work release in Polk County, failed to report back to the Fort Des Moines Correctional Facility as required last (Friday) night.

Evans is a 31-year-old white male, height 6’1″, and weighing 166 pounds. He was admitted to the work release facility on October 19, 2017  Persons with information on Evans’ whereabouts should contact local police.

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

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Nebraskans and Iowans are being reminded to set their clocks back an hour before going to bed 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.

Well-known eastern Iowa truck stop will get bigger

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

WALCOTT, Iowa (AP) — A well-known truck stop in eastern Iowa that bills itself as the world’s biggest will get even larger as crews begin a $10 million expansion and remodeling that will create more retail space and expand a food court.

The Quad-City Times reports the expansion will add 23,000 square feet of space to the truck stop, which already had a main building of about 100,000 square feet. The truck stop, about 10 miles northwest of Davenport, sprawls across 200 acres.

Delia Moon Meier, senior vice president of the group that owns the truck stop, called it a “re-make of everything.” Meier says the move is driving by changes in the trucking industry that has led truckers to buy more “grab-and-go” food because they don’t have time to stop for lunch.

Western Iowa man guilty a second time for 2014 killing

News

November 4th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

AVOCA, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa man has been found guilty a second time of killing a woman at his western Iowa home in 2014. The Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil reports that a judge issued the verdict Friday against Robert Reynolds. He faces up to 50 years in prison when he’s sentenced Dec. 13 for the second-degree murder conviction.

Reynolds was first convicted three years ago of first-degree murder for the April 2014 of killing 64-year-old Patricia Kinkade-Dorsey after a night of drinking at his and his wife’s Oakland home. Kinkade-Dorsey was a friend of his wife’s.

The Iowa Appeals Court later ordered a new trial, ruling that the trial judge erroneously changed the first trial’s location. Reynolds had claimed he hallucinated while intoxicated and thought Kinkaid-Dorsey was a demon when he shot her.

Cass County Community Foundation announces fall grant distributions

News

November 4th, 2017 by admin

The Cass County Community Foundation and Chair Nicholas Hunt announced $29,000 was awarded to Cass County nonprofit agencies on Friday, November 3rd. Organizations had to submit applications by a September 1st deadline to be eligible. The following organizations were awarded funds:

  • Anita Child Care Center- $1,500 for a sun shade.
  • Anita Public Library- $1,000 for a Maker Space and STEM Center.
  • Ann W. Wickman Child Development Center- $5,000 for a Freezer and to replace toys.
  • Atlantic Youth Sports Organization $3,000 for restroom updates.
  • Cass County Historical Society- $1,900 for Tuck-pointing.
  • Friends of the Griswold Public Library- $1,000 for a Maker Space Expansion
  • Griswold FFA- $800 for a greenhouse construction for use by FFA members and horticulture students.
  • Griswold Rescue Department- $2,800 for Two Pediatric Emergency Medical Kits.
  • Hitchcock House Advisory Board- $2,000 for Handicap Parking Pad and Sidewalk.
  • Lewis First Responders- $2,000 to replace/upgrade defibrillator equipment.
  • Massena Historical Society- $1,500 for Heritage Park repairs.
  • Massena Public Library- $1,500 for an awning at the library.
  • Nishna Valley Family YMCA- $5,000 to upgrade pool features.

Nonprofit representatives receiving grant awards 1st row, left to right: Sara Young, Anita Public Library; Shiona Putnam and Lila Hoogeveen, Cass County Historical Museum; Sue Petersen, Griswold Public Library; Linda Eilts, Massena Public Library; Earlene Krauth, Massena Historical Society. 2nd row: Brad Amos, Griswold Rescue; Sandy Fairbairn, Hitchcock House; Wendy Wittrock, Anita Child Care; Tim Pope, Lewis First Responders & Firefighters Association; Sara Wood, Atlantic Youth Sports Organization. Back row: Mark D. Kyhnn, Cass County Community Foundation; Dianna Williams, Ann W. Wickman Child Development Center;

All grantees met the criteria as a Cass County nonprofit agency or organization with charitable missions in the areas of civic, cultural, health, education, and social services. Only organizations providing services in Cass County were eligible. The amount awarded included $2,500 from the Griswold Community Development Endowed Fund and $500 from the Triumph Endowed Fund for Cass County. With this distribution the Cass County Community Foundation has now given more than $1,6 million in grants and scholarships over the last 19 years.