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King likens Gingrich/Cain debate to a prize fight

News

November 7th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Republican Congressman Steve King says the weekend debate he moderated between Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain was a bit like a prize fight between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frasier.  “I expected that and it unfolded that way,” King says. “Newt — he’s got all the policy, all the moves — floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee. He didn’t really sting anybody. He was very congenial though and I thought…’That’s real good Newt, but you’d better watch out for Herman’s right hook,’ and it was kind of how it went.” The 90-minute forum was held in Houston, Texas, and King says it wasn’t a confrontation between the two men, but a discussion in which the two men aggressively laid out their ideas. 

“Newt used up more airtime than Herman did,” King says. “But when Herman used his airtime, he landed good blows.” King let Cain ask the last question of the night. “He asked Newt what he’d like his first directive to be if he were vice president,” King says, laughing. Gingrich joked that he would not go hunting, a reference to the 2006 accident when then-Vice President Dick Cheney shot a hunting companion in the face. Cain has indicated Gingrich would be one of his top choices for a running mate. Saturday night’s event was a fundraiser for the Texas Patriots Political Action Committee.

(Radio Iowa)

JOYCE ELAINE MILLER, 59, of Persia (Svcs 11-10-11)

Obituaries

November 7th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

JOYCE ELAINE MILLER, 59, of Persia, died Sat., Nov. 5th, at her home. Funeral services for JOYCE MILLER will be held 10-a.m. Thu., Nov. 10th, at the Trinity Lutheran Church in Persia. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation at the funeral home is from 1-9pm Wed., Nov. 9th, with the family greeting friends from 6-8pm, and Prayer service at 7-pm.

Burial will be in the Valley View Cemetery at Persia.

JOYCE ELAINE MILLER is survived by:

Her husband – Allan Miller, of Persia.

Her daughters – Kimberly (Stephen) Lindquist, & Kelly (Kevin) Chapman, all of Persia.

Her sisters – Carolyn (Max) Nelson, of Persia,  Jean (Craig) Stahl, & Ann (Dennis) Andersen, all of Harlan.

Her brothers – Lee (Kathy) Stinn, & Mike (Teresa) Stinn, all of Harlan; & Bill (Tami) Stinn, of Westphalia.

3 grandchildren.

Monday HS Football Playoff Quarter-Finals

Sports

November 7th, 2011 by Jim Field

Monday, November 7 (7:00 pm)

Class 1-A:

  • St. Albert (11-0) @ Logan-Magnolia (10-1)
  • West Lyon (9-2) @ Emmetsburg (11-0)
  • Aplington-Parkersburg (10-1) @ Saint Ansgar (9-2)
  • Alburnett (11-0) @ West Branch (9-2)

Class 2-A:

  • Spirit Lake (11-0) @ Kuemper Catholic (10-1)
  • West Marshall (11-0) @ PCM (11-0)
  • @ UNI-Dome:  Clarion-Goldfield (7-4) vs. Dyersville Beckman (10-1)
  • Iowa City Regina (11-0) @ Mediapolis (11-0)

Class 3-A:

  • Boyden-Hull/Rock Valley (11-0) @ Harlan (8-3)
  • West Delaware (10-1) @ Decorah (9-2)
  • Maquoketa (10-1) @ Union (9-2)
  • Pella (10-1) @ ADM (11-0)

HOWARD ALBERT SCHNEIDER, 85, of Elk Horn (Svcs 11-9-11)

Obituaries

November 6th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

HOWARD ALBERT SCHNEIDER, 85, of Elk Horn, died Sat., Nov. 5th, at the Salem Lutheran Home. Funeral services for HOWARD SCHNEIDER will be held 1-p.m. Wed., Nov. 9th, at the Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan.

Visitation at the funeral home is from 5-9pm Tue., Nov. 8th, with the family present from 6-8pm.

Burial will be in the Shelby Cemetery.

HOWARD SCHNEIDER is survived by:

His Wife – Hazel Schneider, of Walnut.

His Step-daughter – Marjorie (Jerry) McIntosh, of Council Bluffs.

His Step-son – Delmar (Carol) Knudsen, of Council Bluffs.

5 grandchildren, 5 great-grandchildren, & 2 great-great grandchildren.

Drivers beware – deer are on the move in Iowa

News

November 6th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – Deer are in the spotlight – or headlights – in Iowa. The state has already recorded the highest rate of vehicle-deer collisions for November. Joe Wilkinson of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources says there are three main reasons. It’s the rutting season. The harvest is almost done and deer have lost a primary hiding spot in corn fields. Daylight hours are growing shorter, which means dawn and dusk, when deer are most active, closely coincide when people are heading to and from work. The deer road kill count in Iowa in 2010 was about 10,000. Wilkinson says nearly a fourth of the dead deer along rural highways and interstates were counted in November. The rest was counted over the 11 other months.

THOMAS “TOM” EARL SCHUMACHER, 61, of Avoca (Svcs 11-10-11)

Obituaries

November 6th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

THOMAS “TOM” EARL SCHUMACHER, 61, of Avoca, died Fri., Nov. 4th, at Mercy Medical Center. A Mass of Christian Burial service for THOMAS SCHUMACHER will be held 11-a.m. Thu., Nov. 10th, at St. Michael’s Catholic Church in Harlan. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held at the church on Wed., Nov. 9th, from 6-9pm, with a Wake service beginning at 7-p.m.

Burial will be in the Graceland Cemtery at Avoca.

THOMAS SCHUMACHER is survived by:

His Mother – Unis Schumacher, of Harlan.

His Wife – Linda Schumacher, of Avoca.

His Sons – Thomas “Zig” Schumacher & wife Jackie, of Harlan; Roger (& wife Jackie) Schumacher, of Tenant; & Dan (& wife Sarah) Schumacher, of Harlan.

His Brothers – Galen (Barb) Schumacher, of Huntington Beach, CA; Chuck (Coleen) Schumacher, of Shelby; & Steve Schumacher (& his fiance’ Katie), of Bristol, TN.

His Sisters – Berniece (Russ) O’Neill, of Two Mountain, Quebec, CN; & Mae (Brad) Svendsen, of Loveland, CO.

6 grandchildren

AL M. WERNIMONT, 57, of Atlantic (Svcs 11-11-11)

Obituaries

November 6th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

AL M. WERNIMONT, 57, of Atlantic, died Sun., Nov. 6th, at the Cass County Hospice Center in Atlantic. Funeral services for AL WERNIMONT will be held 10:30-a.m. Fri., Nov. 11th, at the Sts. Peter & Paul Catholic Church in Atlantic.  Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family will be from 6-8pm Thu., Nov. 10th, at the church, where a Prayer service begins at 5:30-p.m.

Burial will be in the Sts. Peter & Paul Catholic Cemetery.

AL WERNIMONT is survived by:

His wife, Kris of Atlantic.

His children:  Maggie (Kelly) Muller, of Griswold; Sarah Wernimont of Omaha; Anna Wernimont, of Dubuque; and Bryce Wernimont, of Atlantic.

His mother: Virginia Wernimont, of Atlantic.

His brother: Dan (Leah) Wernimont, of Pocahontas.

His sisters: Carol (Ralph) Kramper, of Omaha; Sharon (Jeff) Becker of Ames; and Shele (Scott) Blum, of Ames.

Other relatives, and many friends.

Additional details released on Sunday chase & arrests

News

November 6th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

In an update to a story we first posted on kjan.com this morning, two people have been arrested after a high-speed chase that ended in a Pottawattamie County corn field. The Iowa State Patrol says the pursuit began this (Sunday) morning on Interstate 29 near Glenwood, when the pair drove off without paying for gas. Speeds topped 100 miles an hour. The suspects, a man and a woman, crashed the pickup a corn field near 272nd and Juniper Streets, between McClelland and Underwood.  Authorities used k-9 units and an airplane to conduct a search of the area. The suspects were found hiding in a ravine, and surrendered without incident at 10:17-a.m..  

The patrol says the vehicle they were in had been stolen from South Carolina, where it was involved in a police chase on Tuesday. The unidentified suspects were booked into the county jail on charges and numerous outstanding warrants spanning several states.

LSU, Oklahoma State Top AP College Football Poll

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

AP Top 25
RK TEAM RECORD PTS PVS
1 LSU (59) 9-0 1499 1
2 Oklahoma State 9-0 1398 3
3 Stanford 9-0 1369 4
4 Alabama 8-1 1334 2
5 Boise State (1) 8-0 1288 5
6 Oregon 8-1 1184 6
7 Oklahoma 8-1 1138 7
8 Arkansas 8-1 1107 8
9 Clemson 8-1 979 11
10 Virginia Tech 8-1 885 12
11 Houston 9-0 804 14
12 Penn State 8-1 725 16
13 Michigan State 7-2 718 15
14 Georgia 7-2 657 18
15 South Carolina 7-2 654 10
16 Wisconsin 7-2 602 19
17 Kansas State 7-2 546 17
18 USC 7-2 502 21
19 Nebraska 7-2 491 9
20 Georgia Tech 7-2 340 22
21 Texas 6-2 313 NR
22 Michigan 7-2 264 13
23 Cincinnati 7-1 206 23
24 Auburn 6-3 181 25
25 Southern Miss 8-1 161 NR
  • Dropped from rankings: Arizona State 20, West Virginia 24
  • Others receiving votes: TCU 56, Ohio State 50, Arizona State 15, Florida State 12, Washington 8, Iowa 4, Notre Dame 4, Baylor 3, West Virginia 1, Tulsa 1, Virginia 1

Iowa Prevails After Michigan’s Final Drive Comes Up Three Yards Short

Sports

November 6th, 2011 by Jim Field

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Michigan’s Denard Robinson had four shots at the potential game-tying touchdown with 16 seconds left and three yards to go.  Nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing.  Iowa’s struggling defense stopped the electrifying quarterback each time, and the Wolverines (No. 15 BCS, No. 13 AP) were stuck with a 24-16 loss to Iowa on Saturday that damaged their Big Ten title game hopes.  Marcus Coker ran for 132 yards and a pair of touchdowns, while James Vandenberg added 171 yards passing and a TD for the Hawkeyes (6-3, 3-2 Big Ten), who have won three straight over Michigan for the first time in school history.  Michigan (7-2, 3-2) drove 79 yards to Iowa’s 3-yard line on its final drive. But Robinson missed on four straight throws, with Iowa’s B.J. Lowery breaking up Robinson’s final toss to seal the win.  “They showed a lot of heart,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “It’s almost better that we ended the game that way because that’s a tough circumstance, certainly, and you’re kind of rolling the dice a little bit because (Robinson) is a dangerous thrower but also he can squirt out of there and run that ball in there.”  Iowa’s defense bent on the final drive — in fact, it nearly broke.  But a couple of calls went the Hawkeyes’ way, and a defense that couldn’t stop Minnesota in the fourth quarter in an upset loss last week did the rest.  Vincent Smith appeared to pull the Wolverines within 24-22 on an 82-yard TD run after bouncing off Iowa’s James Morris and going untouched for the score with just over two minutes left.  Replay officials, however, ruled Morris’ elbow had touched the ground. Robinson shook it off and calmly drove the Wolverines down the field.  Then, in the final sequence, Junior Hemingway’s apparent TD grab was ruled out of bounds, and Smith dropped one in the end zone on the next play.  Robinson couldn’t connect with Roy Roundtree on fourth down, sending the jubilant Hawkeyes streaming onto the field.  Robinson finished 17-of-37 passing for 194 yards and two TD passes.  “We can’t leave the game to the officials. We’ve got to do it ourselves,” Robinson said.  Coker’s second touchdown, a 13-yard run with 10:42 left, put Iowa ahead 24-9. Robinson wasted little time answering, finding Kevin Koger for a 7-yard touchdown pass that pulled Michigan within 24-16 with 7:53 to go.  Iowa, which was gashed for a pair of fourth-quarter TDs in last week’s 22-21 loss at Minnesota, stalled on their last two drives and gave Robinson one more shot to win it.  But he didn’t, and now Michigan sits a game back of Michigan State in the division race — with the Spartans holding a tiebreaker edge thanks to a 28-14 win over the Wolverines on Oct. 15.  “It’s still November. We’ve got a lot of games left,” Michigan coach Brady Hoke said. “There’s a lot of football to be played. There’s a lot of things at stake.”  Robinson led the Wolverines to a field goal on their first possession of the second half, cutting Iowa’s lead to 17-9 with 6:19 left in third quarter. But he dinged his elbow and was replaced for a series by Devin Gardner.  Robinson found himself and the Wolverines in a big hole when he got back.  The Hawkeyes took 5:27 off the clock, and Coker burst through a huge hole and went into the end zone untouched to put the Hawkeyes ahead by 15.  The upset was a huge win for Iowa after its debacle in Minnesota — a game that ranked among the worst in Ferentz’s 13-year tenure.  The Hawkeyes came out like they’d had enough of hearing about that stinker, driving 76 yards on just six plays and going ahead 7-0 on Coker’s 4-yard TD run less than five minutes in.  Michigan answered on Robinson’s 5-yard TD pass to Toussaint late in the first quarter. But holder Drew Delio bobbled the snap on the kick, allowing Iowa to stay ahead 7-6.  Iowa made it 14-6 on Vandenberg’s 1-yard TD pass to Brad Herman midway through the second — and pushed it to 17-6 at halftime behind a pair of Robinson blunders.  Robinson’s fumble led to a 42-yard field goal by Mike Meyer, and he finished the half by getting picked off by Christian Kirksey on a deflected ball at the Iowa goal line just before the break.  Michigan had gained over 500 yards of offense in three of its last four games, but Iowa held the Wolverines to 323 yards.  “The guys really had to play good team defense, something we’ve struggled with at times. We have not been the most sound at times, and given up some big plays, so it’s good to see our guys make them earn it and great to come up with stops clearly at the end,” Ferentz said.