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No. 25 Iowa State looks to extend dominance over Hawkeyes

Sports

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Iowa still has a commanding lead in the series but Iowa State has dominated recent history and the 25th ranked Cyclones are heavily favored to make it seven of eight when the teams collide in Iowa City tonight (Thursday night), beginning at 7 o’clock. The Hawkeyes are 5-5 and in their five losses gave up an average of 91 points. Fran McCaffery needs to find a way to slow down coach Steve Prohm’s Cyclone squad that is averaging more than 85 points per game.

A concern for Iowa is inexperienced point guard play against Iowa State star Monte Morris. McCaffery says the Cyclones are vastly improved defensively over last year.
He calls this the best non-conference rivalry he has been a part of.

Prohm says the Cyclones need to contain Iowa senior Peter Jok, who is averaging just under 24 points per game. This is Prohm’s second year at ISU but it did not take him long to discover what this rivalry means.

The Cyclones are 6-2. The Hawkeyes lead the all-time series 43-26.

(Learfield Sports)

Many questions remain about deaths of 3 Osceola teens

News

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Investigators are continuing to try and figure out the circumstances of a crash which resulted in the deaths of three Osceola teens. The three: 16-year-old Elaina Critz, 16-year-old Lauren Barker and 19-year-old Jesse Robinson, were found dead Tuesday morning inside a car that had gone off a road and into a creek. Iowa State Patrol Sergeant Nathan Ludwig says the weather this past weekend has potentially made the investigation more difficult. He says it rained during the weekend and that could have washed away some of the evidence that is available to the technical investigators.

Ludwig says little information is known at this time, including who the driver was and when exactly the accident happened. The State Patrol is working with the Osceola Police Department to look at a lot of things to try and determine the exact time of the accident. Ludwig says they are trying to find out when the teens last had contact with other people, when they were last on social media and those types of things to try and find out when they went missing.

Right now, Ludwig can confirm that three teens did lose control on Country Club Road two miles southeast of Osceola in Clarke County. After losing control, the three ended up in a creek down a deep ravine. Sergeant Ludwig says if it weren’t for the road maintenance worker seeing the car Tuesday, it may still be a missing persons case today. “I guess had that person not been there in that point in time sitting high up in a vehicle — that could still be a mystery today. And who knows how much longer had they not saw where the car was,” according to Ludwig.

Ludwig says investigators are continuing to work to try and find answers to the questions surrounding the accident.

(Radio Iowa)

Vilsack doesn’t intend to retire, but no firm plans yet

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack plans to “run through the tape” when his eight-year tenure as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture draws to a close. Vilsack’s the only member of President Obama’s cabinet who remains in the office where he started in January of 2009. “One of the reasons why I stayed in the job that I stayed in for as long as I did, which is unusual in this day and age, is because of the people I worked with and the people I worked for,” Vilsack says.

Vilsack made two speeches in Des Moines yesterday (Wednesday). He addressed delegates at the Iowa Farm Bureau’s annual convention. Vilsack referred to the 1986 shooting at a city council meeting that killed the mayor and wounded two others. “A tragedy actually almost 30 years to the day in my small hometown of Mount Pleasant created an opportunity for me to get in public service,” Vilsack said. “You all have given me just an incredible opportunity. You’ve allowed me to realize every dream I ever had as a kid. You didn’t have to do that. You didn’t have to give a guy from Pennsylvania the opportunity to be a mayor…to be a state senator. You certainly didn’t have to give me the opportunity to be the govenror of this great state for eight years and because of that I had the opportunity to serve you as the secretary of agriculture for eight years.”

Vilsack also was honored Wednesday by the Des Moines-based World Food Prize. The Norman Borlaug Medallion is awarded to individuals and institutions which cannot win the World Food Prize. Both Vilsack and the U-S-D-A were presented with medallions. Borlaug is the Iowa native who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his pioneering work in plant genetics. Vilsack salutes Borlaug’s vision of “using science in order to improve the lives of all people.”

“Norm was about feeding people. Norm was about helping people,” Vilsack says. “And he never stopped.” Vilsack, who will turn 67 on December 13th, isn’t planning to retire after he leaves the U-S-D-A in January, but Vilsack told reporters yesterday that he has no firm plans yet. “I want to be involved in one way, shape or form of advocating for agriculture, for rural America and I have, obviously, an affinity for young people so it’s an opportunity potentially for Christie and me to team up with some young folks,” Vilsack says.

The Vilsacks have two married sons — one in Iowa, the other in Colorado. The former governor says “family is important” and he and his wife want to “spend time” in both states with their four grandchildren.

(Radio Iowa)

No word yet on when Branstad exits and Reynolds takes over

News

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Officials say details on the transition of power at the Iowa capitol “will be forthcoming,” but whenever Governor Terry Branstad leaves to become U.S. Ambassador to China, Iowa Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds will become the first woman to serve as Iowa’s governor. Joni Ernst — the first female from Iowa to be elected to the U.S. Senate — says she is thrilled. “I could not think of a more appropriate person to take on this responsibility,” Ernst says. “She has served Iowa in so many ways and has been such a strong and graceful leader.”

Reynolds has been Iowa’s lieutenant governor since 2011. Reynolds was elected to four terms as treasurer in Clarke County before winning a seat in the state senate in 2008. Branstad asked her to be his lieutenant governor runningmate in 2010. Ernst says Reynolds has been a “wonderful advocate” for HER political career. “We began corresponding when I was serving overseas with the Iowa National Guard during my deployment and she was encouraging me to run for county office and she provided a lot of wonderful guidance for me,” Ernst says. “All through my career she has been very, very helpful to me.”

Reynolds and her husband, Kevin, live in Osceola. Iowa Senator Ernst says Branstad’s opportunity is good news for Iowa. “I know that he will excel and give this new role all of his full attention and provide a great line of communication between our two countries,” Ernst says. Senator Chuck Grassley says Branstad’s “reputation as a straight shooter” will serve the U.S. well and Grassley predicts Branstad will get senate confirmation to the post of ambassador “very easily.”

Economic Development Authority director Debi Durham of Sioux City, shares a Des Moines apartment with Reynolds when they are both at work in the capitol city. “As someone that knows the lieutenant governor very well, not only from working with her on so many initiatives that she has led, but obviously being a friend, I can’t be more pleased,” Durham says. “I don’t think we’ve had someone more ready to be governor from day one than Kim Reynolds.”

Durham says Reynolds “has been involved in every decision” made in the Branstad Administration over the past six years. “When Governor Branstad recruited her to run with him, he told her from the beginning it was going to be a partnership,” Durham says, “and it truly has been.”

Durham has been in New York City this week, with Branstad, prospecting with businesses that might expand or relocate in Iowa — just as President-elect Trump’s team revealed Branstad will be the next ambassador to China.

(Radio Iowa)

Midwest women’s college basketball scores from 12/7/16

Sports

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Creighton 82, Omaha 45

Iowa 88, Iowa St. 76

W. Illinois 118, Graceland 40

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, Dec. 8th 2016

News

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CST

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — If Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad becomes the next U.S. Ambassador to China, he may want to leave any Masonic symbols at home. That’s because the Freemasons group Branstad belongs to is banned in mainland China. Brent Morris, who wrote “The Idiot’s Guide to Freemasonry,” says masonic groups often run into trouble in Communist countries because of their secret meetings.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds is cutting short a family vacation to appear alongside Gov. Terry Branstad at an Iowa rally for President-elect Donald Trump. Ben Hammes, a spokesman for Branstad, says Reynolds will attend a Thursday night rally in Des Moines that will feature Branstad, Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence. Hammes says Reynolds is traveling to Des Moines sometime between Wednesday and Thursday.

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — A judge has determined that a Dubuque woman is now mentally fit enough to stand trial for the beating death of her ex-husband. The Dubuque Telegraph Herald reports that Iowa District Court Judge Michael Shubatt ordered Wednesday that 62-year-old Dolores Flynn stand trial on a charge of second-degree murder in the January death of 72-year-old Gary Breckenridge. Police say Flynn beat Breckenridge with a baseball bat, which officers say they found in a Dubuque ditch.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa dental office chain has settled a whistleblower lawsuit alleging Medicaid fraud. The Des Moines Register reports that Lifepoint Dental Partners, which has five clinics in Iowa, agreed to pay $300,000 to settle the lawsuit filed in April by federal prosecutors and the company’s former chief financial officer, Todd Willson, and a former financial coordinator, Peggy Lemley. Willson and Lemley say they were fired after reporting the fraud.

Bench helps Northern Iowa roll past South Dakota State 86-58

Sports

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) — Hunter Rhodes and Jordan Ashton came off the bench to combine 35 points, and Northern Iowa set a school record with 20 3-pointers in an 86-58 win over South Dakota State on Wednesday night. Rhodes, a transfer from Iowa State, hit 6 of 9 from 3-point range for 20 points and Ashton, a junior college transfer, was 5 of 8 with three 3s for 15 points, both career-highs at Northern Iowa (4-4), which snapped a four-game losing streak.

Jeremy Morgan added 17 points, making five 3s as Northern Iowa went 20 of 37 behind the arc. He had five from distance in the first half as the Panthers were 13 of 23 behind the arc and shot 55 percent to lead 49-25. He finished with eight rebounds. UNI had 21 assists on 28 baskets.

Reed Tellinghuisen had 16 points with four 3s and Mike Daum had 15 points for the Jackrabbits (4-7). Northern Iowa never shot better than 37.9 percent in its four losses but finished at 52 percent for the game.

Cubs get closer Wade Davis from Royals for OF Jorge Soler

Sports

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

OXON HILL, Md. (AP) — The World Series champion Chicago Cubs have acquired star closer Wade Davis from the Kansas City Royals for outfielder Jorge Soler. The trade was announced Wednesday at the winter meetings. Davis will take over the ninth-inning role held by Aroldis Chapman, who became a free agent after the Cubs won their first championship since 1908.

The 31-year-old Davis went 2-1 with 27 saves in 30 tries and a 1.87 ERA last season. He spent time on the disabled with a forearm injury and was limited to 43 1/3 innings, but returned to pitch in September. Davis has done especially well in the postseason and helped the Royals win the 2015 crown. In 27 1/3 postseason innings as a reliever, he has a 0.33 ERA with 39 strikeouts.

The 24-year-old Soler hit .238 with 12 home runs and 31 RBIs in 86 games last season. He missed almost two months because of a strained left hamstring.

RAIDEEN MARTIN, 84, of Greenfield (Svcs. 12/12/16)

Obituaries

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

RAIDEEN MARTIN, 84, of Greenfield, died Wednesday, December 7th, 2016, at the Greater Regional Hospice House in Creston. Funeral services for RAIDEEN MARTIN will be held 10:30-a.m. Monday, Dec. 12th, at the United Methodist Church in Greenfield. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield on Sunday from 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.; The family will greet friends on Sunday afternoon from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield.; Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

Burial will be in the Greenfield Cemetery. A luncheon will be held following the committal services at the Greenfield United Methodist Church.

Memorials may be directed to the Raideen Martin memorial fund to be established by the family at a later date.

RAIDEEN MARTIN is survived by:

Her three children –  Steve Martin and wife Ruth, of Creston; Lori Christensen of Greenfield; and Mike Martin (Teresa) of Tracy, Iowa

Her sister – Mary Ann St. Peter, of Scranton

8 grandchildren; 15 great grandchildren; other relatives and friends.

FRIEDA PORTER, 100, of Greenfield (Svcs. 12/10/16)

Obituaries

December 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

FRIEDA PORTER, 100, of Greenfield, died Wed., Dec. 7th, at the Greenfield Rehabilitation and Health Care Center in Greenfield. Funeral services for FRIEDA PORTER will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, December 10th, at the Immanuel Lutheran Church in Greenfield. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held from Noon until 6-p.m. Friday, Dec. 9th, at the funeral home. Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

Burial will be in the Greenfield Cemetery with a luncheon to be held at Immanuel Lutheran Church following services at the cemetery.

Memorials may be directed to the Frieda Porter memorial fund to be established by the family at a later date.

FRIEDA PORTER is survived by:

Her two daughters – Patricia Barkalow, and Becky (Jim) Hagen, all of Creston.

10 grandchildren; 21 great grandchildren; six great great grandchildren; other relatives and friends.