712 Digital Group - top

No. 18 Iowa State women beat Eastern Illinois

Sports

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Audi Crooks had 30 points and Addy Brown added 20 as the 18th ranked Iowa State women beat Eastern Illinois 87-55.

That’s ISU coach Bill Fennelly. The Cyclones were 11-of-24 from three point range.

New ‘Glitter Factory’ shop caters to Iowans with ADHD

News

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A first-in-the-state combination store and craft studio is now open in central Iowa that’s geared towards people with A-D-H-D. The Glitter Factory in Des Moines offers classes, crafts and activities like moss art, button making and beading at what are called “hyper fixation stations.” Store founder Britney Brown works as a neurodiversity consultant and says she’s constantly honing her techniques for making the place more neurodivergent-friendly.

“We shift, we find a new way, we figure out a new strategy, we figure out a new learning tool,” Brown says, “and that allows me to create a more accessible space in real time, which is different, but also very valuable.” Brown was diagnosed with autism and A-D-H-D as an adult and she says she saw the demand for a store like hers from the neurodivergent community online. “There was this meme that was floating around on the socials for the last year or so that’s like, best business idea ever: somebody take everybody’s ADHD craft hoards and turn them into a library,” Brown says, “and that’s almost exactly what I’ve done.”

The store also offers “Blind Date with a Hobby” sessions where people can sign up for a random craft that will be revealed to them in class. In addition, there’s a subscription service for $25 that will deliver a new craft to your home every month. The studio doubles as a sensory-friendly co-working space.

Iowan who fought in Battle of Bulge remembered

News

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Today (November 16) is the 80th anniversary of the start of the “Battle of the Bulge, the last ditch effort by the Germans in World War Two that broke through American lines in 1945. The Iowa Goldstar Museum at Camp Dodge recently honored one of the Iowans in that battle. Museum board member Bob Holiday talked about First Lieutenant John Phillipps of Waterloo, who got involved in the battle while trying to get some rare rest in the village of Medell, Belgium. “He was woken up before daylight. Captain wants to see you. You take six men a mile east out of town, down the road, and you find a fire break on a hill. Go up that fire break to top the ridge and put a machine gun out, because the Germans are going to counter attack,” he says. Phillipps took his men to the area, but the Germans were already there.

“They opened up on the Americans, and there were five Americans killed instantly. If you go back in the back of our exhibit hall, back here towards the back, you’re going to find the shirt that John Phillipps had on that day he was hit five times by this German machine gun,” Holiday says. Phillipps and a sergeant survived, but the Germans wanted him because he was an officer. “One of these Germans spoke English, and he said, You’re coming with us. And John said, What about the sergeant? And the German who spoke English said, you’re going to bring him with you, or we’re going to shoot him right here. John said he drug this guy — now John’s been hit five times — and he drug this guy against a tree, gave him his canteen, and they went on,” Phillipps ended up in a prison camp, but never found out what happened to the sergeant.

Holiday met Phillipps through the museum and went looking for the sergeant in 2020. They found out he was Lawrence Lyon from Texas and had survived the war, but was now dead. Holiday was able to contact the man’s family in Texas so Phillipps could to talk to his kids before he died a few years ago. Phillipps’ daughter Sharon Monfredini says it took a long time before she found out about her dad’s heroic actions. “As a child, neither my sister or myself ever heard anything. Dad would not talk about it,” Monfredinisays. “And it wasn’t until we were much older, in fact, probably ten years before he passed away, that he started to share his story.” She says it was an amazing thing to learn about her dad. “It was just shocking that we didn’t know what he had gone through. It maybe explained some behavior,” she says, “if there was maybe some violence on T-V that was very hard for him to watch. He was a very quiet man, but internalized a lot. He was quite a thinker.”

Bob Holiday and Sharon Monfredini. (RI photo)

Monfredinisays her dad was so glad to be able find out the sergeant he saved made it through the war. “Oh, my goodness, it meant everything, because he had actually survived and gone on to have such a wonderful life, married with kids and was a professional, and he was just so thankful for that, but very sad that the two of them never reconnected,” Monfredini says. Phillipps went on to become a successful businessman after the war.

Governor Reynolds issued a proclamation recognizing the importance of the Battle of the Bulge in defeating the Germans and ending the war.

University of Dubuque to open medical school

News

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The University of Dubuque announced it will open a medical school after receiving a 50-million-dollar donation. The school announced Friday will be called the John and Alice Butler School of Osteopathic Medicine after the donors. Dubuque Mayor Brad Cavanagh said the influx of students will provide an economic boost to the city. “Not only will this initiative create a tremendous opportunity for workforce development for our already strong community of local healthcare providers, but the addition of more faculty and students to our increasingly vibrant downtown will be a true catalyst for the great momentum we’re already experiencing in our city” Cavanagh say.

The school plans to start accepting students in August of 2028. The University of Dubuque anticipates that the school will have 800 students in full enrollment. It will be Iowa’s first new medical school in 125 years.

Red Oak woman arrested for PCS & OWI Sunday night

News

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa)  – The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest Sunday night, of 64-year-old Jill Renee Schmadeke, of Red Oak. She was arrested at around 10-p.m. on serious misdemeanor charges that include Possession of a Controlled Substance/1st offense, and OWI/1st offense. Schmadeke was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

Dec. 15th was the 3 year anniversary of a devastating Derecho in Iowa

News, Weather

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Sunday (Dec. 15th) marked three years since the December derecho hit the Hawkeye state. The intense weather system created 63 tornadoes. That broke the record for most tornadoes in a single day here in Iowa. Five people across the Midwest were killed.

The storm caused more than $1 billion in damage. It was the first December derecho ever recorded in U.S. history.

Iowa livestock producers increase antibiotic use

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service story) – Livestock being raised with antibiotics is on the rise in Iowa, the nation’s number one hog producer. Doctors say the trend increases the risk of antibiotic-resistant infections for people who consume drug-treated meat.  Scientists have described drug-resistant infections as a growing crisis. The National Institutes of Health say the drugs are overused.  The Food Animal Concerns Trust’s Safe and Healthy Food Program Director and Senior Analyst, Steven Roach, said federal data show sales for antibiotics used in cattle and other animals is as high as it’s been in nearly a decade.

That’s especially important in Iowa. “In pigs in the U.S. – it’s up by 24%, and in cattle it’s up by 10%,” said Roach. “The chicken industry has continued to reduce their use, so it’s possible for the animal ag industry to make changes – but we haven’t seen that happen in cattle and pigs.” Data for 2024 show the use of antibiotics in chickens dropped by 50% over the last 7 years.

hog farming in iowa

In Iowa, livestock, including hogs, are mostly raised in large corporate confinements – which are known to pollute the air and nearby ground and surface water.  Confinement operators say they are trying to keep up with consumer demand for a high-quality, consistent source of meat. Roach said most of the meat available at grocery stores has been raised in confinements and treated with antibiotics.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates antibiotic-resistant infections kill at least 35,000 Americans every year. Roach said large-scale ag producers could help reduce that number by changing their philosophy of routinely using drugs in their operations. “We know we’re raising animals in unhealthy conditions,” said Roach, “so then we’re going to give them antibiotics independent of whether they’ve been diagnosed with an illness.”

Roach said meat in the grocery store that has been raised without antibiotics is identified as such on the packaging.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the KJAN listening area: Monday, 12/16/24

Weather

December 16th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly sunny & windy. High near 47. West winds 10-20 this morning, gusting to near 30 this afternoon.
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 23. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 43. Winds becoming SE at 10-20 mph.
Tue. Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 20.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 32. NW winds 5-10 mph.
Thursday: Mostly sunny & breezy, with a high near 47.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 40. Our Low was 27. Last year on this day (12/16), the High in Atlantic was 40 & the Low was 30. The Record High on this date was 59 in 1962, & the Record Low was -22, in 1951. Sunrise: 7:39; Sunset: 4:51.

No. 3 Iowa State men beat Omaha

Sports

December 15th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State closed the first half on a 20-2 run and roared away to an 83-51 win over Nebraska-Omaha as the third ranked Cyclones improved to 9-1.

That’s Cyclone coach T.J. Otzelberger who says the Cyclones overcame a sluggish start.

Keshon Gilbert led five Cyclones in double figures with 16 points.

Iowa men beat New Orleans 104-57

Sports

December 15th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa shot better than 62 percent and made 14 three pointers in a 104-57 win over New Orleans. The Hawkeyes had 28 assists in the game as they bounced back from two straight losses.

That’s Iowa coach Fran McCaffery who was happy with the way his team shared the ball.

Owen Freeman led the Hawkeyes with 22 points. The Hawkeyes are off for final exams until Saturday’s game against Utah in Sioux Falls.