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PHYLLIS LEONA SCHNACKEL, 100, of Atlantic (Memorial svcs. 10/11/24)

Obituaries

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

PHYLLIS LEONA SCHNACKEL, 100, of Atlantic, died Thursday, October 3rd, 2024, at the Heritage House in Atlantic. A Memorial service for PHYLLIS SCHNACKEL will be held on Friday, October 11th, 2024, beginning at 11-a.m., at the First United Methodist Church in Atlantic. Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family will also be held Friday, from 10- until 11-a.m.; The Order of Eastern Star, Liberty Chapter Marne, will conduct an Eastern Star Service at 10:30-a.m.

A luncheon will follow the Memorial service, in the Fellowship Hall of the First United Methodist Church.

Interment will occur following the luncheon at the Oak Hill Cemetery in Hancock.

PHYLLIS SCHNACKEL is survived by:

Her sons – Wayne (& Lee Lictenwalter) Schnackel, of Durham, NC; John (Lyla) Schnackel, of Ft. Collins, CO; Philip Schnackel of Council Bluffs, and Dick (Lisa) Schnackel of Crescent.

Her daughters – Linda Petersen, of Exira, and Marjorie (Terry) Frisbie, of Walnut

12 grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren.

LAVONNE MORGAN, 82 of Atlantic (Svcs 10/7/24)

Obituaries

October 3rd, 2024 by Lori Murphy

LAVONNE MORGAN, 82, of Atlantic, died Sunday, September 29, 2024, at Cass Heath in Atlantic.  Funeral services for LAVONNE MORGAN will be held 11-a.m. Monday, October 7, 2024 at the Massena Baptist Church in Massena. Roland Funeral Service in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Burial will immediately follow the service in the Massena Center Cemetery, north of Massena.

Memorials may be made to the family for later designation.

Condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

Evan Frost Selected For 2024 NWCA All-Star Classic

Sports

October 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State 133-pounder Evan Frost has been selected to compete at the 2024 National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) All-Star Classic on Nov. 16. Frost is matched up against Little Rock’s Nasir Bailey, who placed fourth at the NCAA Championships in March.

The event will begin at 6 p.m. (CT) inside Rec Hall on the campus of Penn State.

The Frost-Bailey matchup pits two of the NCAA’s brightest young talents at 133 pounds against each other. Both Frost and Bailey enter the 2024-25 season ranked in the top five by FloWrestling and both were All-Americans at the 2024 NCAA Championships.

It’s a rematch from last season as Bailey was responsible for one of Frost’s three regular season losses, a 15-0 tech fall in 1:57.

Frost, a sophomore, compiled a 22-7 record, including a 15-3 regular season mark, and placed sixth in the nation as a redshirt freshman a year ago. Bailey, also entering his sophomore season, went 33-6 in 2023-24 and placed fourth as a true freshman.

Frost will be the 50th Cyclone to ever compete at the All-Star Classic and the first since David Carr and Kysen Terukina did so in 2022. Frost is just the fourth Cyclone since 2009 to be selected for the event.

The NWCA All-Star Classic can be viewed only on FloWrestling and will feature 10 highly ranked Division I folkstyle matchups along with 5 cross-divisional women’s freestyle matches.

 

NWCA All-Star Classic Lineup
125: #3 Jore Volk (WYO) vs. #6 Tanner Jordan (SDSU)

133: #2 Nasir Bailey (LR) vs. #4 Evan Frost (ISU)

141: #2 Jesse Mendez (OHST) vs. #3 Beau Bartlett (PSU)

149: #2 Shayne Van Ness (PSU) vs. #3 Ty Watters (WVU)

157: #4 Tyler Kasak (PSU) vs. #5 Peyton Kellar (OHIO)

165: #3 Hunter Garvin (STAN) vs. #4 Peyton Hall (WVU)

174: #2 Levi Haines (PSU) vs. #3 Rocco Welsh (OHST)

184: #1 Carter Starocci (PSU) vs. #2 Parker Keckeisen (UNI)

197: #5 Stephen Little (LR) vs. #9 Zac Braunagel (ILL)

285: #1 Greg Kerkvliet (PSU) vs. #3 Nick Feldman (OHST)

Union says there’s a growing wave of violent assaults on Iowa prison staff

News

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The union that represents employees in Iowa prisons says it’s time for the governor to respond to a disturbing trend. AFSCME Council 61 president Todd Copley says union members report there have been at least 150 assaults on prison staff since January.

Copley held a news conference in the statehouse this (Thursday) morning and told reporters the staff in the state prisons fear retaliation if they raise safety concerns.

A spokesman for the governor says Reynolds knows correctional officers work in a hostile environment and that’s why she’s worked diligently with prison managers to increase staff and improve safety and security at the facilities.

AFSCME Council 61 president Todd Copley speaks at a news conference on Oct. 3, 2024. (RI photo)

Last week, the union said two prison employees were attacked by an inmate at the Iowa State Penitentiary in Fort Madison. Copley says the inmate ripped the metal leg off a desk in his cell and used it as a weapon.

According to Copley, one of the guards was hit in the face and has a number of fractured bones, while the other was stabbed 11 times, tearing his uniform and scratching his skin. The Iowa Department of Corrections has said it doesn’t comment on open investigations.

Iowa State’s Rocco Becht previews Baylor

Sports

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht says the Cyclones are focused on Baylor as they get ready for Saturday’s prime time contest. With a victory the 16th ranked Cyclones would move to 5-0 for the first time since 1980 and are coming off a 20-0 win at Houston.

The atmosphere for the “white out” in Jack Trice Stadium could be electric.

Becht says Baylor is better than its 2-3 record.

Becht says the play of the ISU defense takes pressure off of the offense.

Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins previews No. 3 Ohio State

Sports

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa’s defense has been susceptible to the big play and that will need to change on Saturday at third ranked Ohio State. The Buckeyes big play offense is averaging nearly 49 points in a 4-0 start.

That’s Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins who says the goal is to make the Buckeyes put together multiple play drives.

Higgins says the game is a challenge for the team and him as an individual.

Burn Ban for Cass County (IA) beginning today (Oct. 3rd) & until further notice

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Cass County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Kennon reports there will be a countywide burn ban in Cass County effective at noon today (Thursday, Oct. 3, 2024) and until further notice. There are currently 27 active countywide burn bans in Iowa.

Harrison, Shelby, Audubon, Guthrie, Adair, Mills, Monona, Crawford, Carroll and Greene are other area counties with active burn bans in place.

Kennon says a burn ban does NOT prohibit the following:  supervised, controlled burn for which a permit has been issued by the fire chief of the fire district where the burn will take place, the use of outdoor fireplaces, barbecue grills, properly supervised landfills, or the burning of trash in incinerators or trash burners made of metal, concrete, masonry, or heavy one-inch wire mesh, with no openings greater than one square inch.

Please contact Mike Kennon (712-254-1500) or your local fire chief if you have further questions on the subject of open burning. Burn ban

Iowa Code Section 100.40 Marshal may prohibit open burning on request.
1. The State Fire Marshal, during periods of extremely dry conditions or under other conditions when the state fire marshal finds open burning constitutes a danger to life or property, may prohibit open burning in an area of the state at the request of the chief of a local fire department, a city council or a board of supervisors and when an investigation supports the need for the prohibition. The State Fire Marshal shall implement the prohibition by issuing a proclamation to persons in the affected area. The chief of a local fire department, the city council or the board of supervisors that requested the prohibition may rescind the proclamation after notifying the state fire marshal of the intent to do so, when the chief, city council or board of supervisors finds that the conditions responsible for the issuance of the proclamation no longer exist.
2. Violation of a prohibition issued under this section is a simple misdemeanor.
3. A proclamation issued by the state fire marshal pursuant to this section shall not prohibit a supervised, controlled burn for which a permit has been issued by the fire chief of the fire district where the burn will take place, the use of outdoor fireplaces, barbecue grills, properly supervised landfills, or the burning of trash in incinerators or trash burners made of metal, concrete, masonry, or heavy one-inch wire mesh, with no openings greater than one square inch.

 

Updates To Future Iowa Football Schedules

Sports

October 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The University of Iowa has moved its 2025 football game with Florida Atlantic to 2030 and added the University of Albany. The announcement was made Monday by the UI Athletics Department.

The Hawkeyes will open the 2025 season hosting the University of Albany on Aug. 30, while welcoming Florida Atlantic to Kinnick Stadium on Aug. 31, 2030.

In 2025, Iowa will host Albany (Aug. 30), UMass (Sept. 13), Indiana, Michigan State, Minnesota, Oregon and Penn State, and travel to Iowa State (Sept. 6), Rutgers, USC, Wisconsin and Nebraska. Dates for the 2025 conference schedule will be announced later this fall.

In 2026, Iowa will entertain Northern Illinois (Sept. 5), Iowa State (Sept. 12), Northern Iowa (Sept. 19), Nebraska, Ohio State, Purdue and Wisconsin, and travel to Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Northwestern and Washington.

Other known future nonconference opponents and dates include Ball State (Sept. 4) and at Iowa State (Sept. 11) in 2027; hosting Western Michigan on Sept. 16, 2028; Northern Illinois on Sept. 15, 2029; and Florida Atlantic on Aug. 31, 2030.

2025
Albany (Aug. 30)
at Iowa State (Sept. 6)
UMass (Sept. 13)

2026
Northern Illinois (Sept. 5)
Iowa State (Sept. 12)
UNI (Sept. 19)

2027
Ball State (Sept. 4)
at Iowa State (Sept. 11)

2028
Western Michigan (Sept. 16)

2029
Northern Illinois (Sept. 15)

2030
Florida Atlantic (Aug. 31)

Top state official hints Iowa’s in running for $1 billion-plus business project

News

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The head of a state agency says she’s in negotiations that could launch a big project that would qualify for the state’s new “Major Economic Growth Attraction” or “MEGA” program incentives. Iowa Economic Development Authority director Debi Durham isn’t naming the company, but is sharing some details.

Debi Durham, director of the Iowa Economic Development Authority and the Iowa Finance Authority, who spoke Oct. 3, 2024 at Bluebird Hill near Atlantic. (Ric Hanson/Photo)

The governor signed a law this spring authorizing up to 93-million dollars in tax incentives for businesses investing at least one BILLION dollars on a facility.

To qualify for the state’s MEGA program, a project must cover at least 250 acres and be on one of the so-called certified sites around the state that are ready for development. According to the Iowa Economic Development Authority’s website, certified sites in Oskaloosa, Clinton, Princeton, Glenwood, Cedar Rapids and Ames would qualify.

Cass County Youth to Celebrate National 4-H Week October 6-12

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with Cass County ISU Extension say the anticipation is building for this year’s National 4-H Week, during which millions of youth, parents, volunteers, and alumni across the country will celebrate everything 4-H. Cass County 4-H will observe National 4-H Week this year by showcasing the incredible experiences that 4-H offers and highlighting the remarkable 4-H young people in our community who work to positively impact those around them. October 13th the community is welcome to join the Cass County 4-H Clubs with carnival games and learn more about 4-H at Fall Fest on the Fairgrounds from 2:00-4:00pm.

The 2024 National 4-H Week theme is Beyond Ready, which celebrates the program’s dedication to building a generation equipped for the future while being met where they are today. This year, 4-H is focused on helping youth be ready to lead, ready to serve, ready to build, and ready to conquer.

4-H believes that young people, in partnership with adults, can play a key role in creating a more promising and equitable future for youth, families, and communities across the country. Through hands-on learning experiences in areas such as agriculture, communication and the arts, leadership and civic engagement, healthy living, and STEM, 4-H members are equipped with the skills they need to be Beyond Ready and make a difference in the world.

Katie Bateman, County Youth Coordinator with Cass County Extension, says “We equip youth with skills for the future while meeting them where they are today. Through 4-H, we offer opportunities and experiences that shape youth into their full, authentic selves, enabling them to shine both now and in the future.”

In Cass County, more than 300 4-H youth and 50 volunteers from the community are involved in 4-H. For over 100 years, 4‑H has inspired families, shaped careers, and impacted communities. For more information on the Iowa 4-H Youth Development program, please contact the Cass County Extension office or visit the Iowa 4-H website at www.extension.iastate.edu/4h.