Lavon Eblen speaks about Soups and Stews!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (8.2MB)
Subscribe: RSS
Lavon Eblen speaks about Soups and Stews!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (8.2MB)
Subscribe: RSS
FOR SALE: Moving, must sell. 42″ HD tv. LG brand. Only 3 months old. $300 firm. Call Rick at 249-5872 or 605-951-6907(work cell).
FOR RENT: 1 bedroom house, newly remodeled, must sign 6 month or 1 year lease, no smoking, off street parking $275 per month, $350 deposit. 712-249-6223.
FOR SALE: Brand new chest type freezer – Fridge Adair. Its 8.8 cube and has two baskets. $300. 243-6772.
WANTED: Rocker/recliner…would like it to be brown or light brown. 402-516-4746.
Sheriff’s officials in Pottawattamie County say a Shelby County man was injured during a single-vehicle accident Wednesday morning about four-miles south of Shelby. 63-year old Larry Sheeler, of Tennant, was traveling south on 380th Street at around 11:30-a.m., when he apparently suffered from a medical condition and blacked-out. Sheeler’s 1995 Cadillac hit a fence post before coming to rest in the east ditch near the intersection with Sycamore Road.
The man was pinned in his vehicle and had to be extricated with the “Jaws of Life,” by Shelby Fire and Rescue. Sheeler was transported to Jennie Edmundson Hospital in Council Bluffs for were described as non-life threatening injuries.
FRANK A. HOWEY, 82, of Ridgeway, MO (& formerly of Guthrie Center), died Tue., Nov. 8th, in St. Joseph, MO. Funeral services for FRANK HOWEY will be held 10-a.m. Sat., Nov. 12th, at the Twigg Funeral Home in Guthrie Center.
Visitation will be held at the funeral home from 6-8pm Friday, Nov. 11th, with the family present.
Burial will be in the Union Township Cemetery in rural Guthrie Center.
2011 Hawkeye Ten
All Conference Volleyball
First Team
Name School GR Position
*Jess Schabeen Harlan 9 M
*Carly DeMarque Lewis Central 12 M
*Madi Drees Kuemper 12 M
*Gabi French Red Oak 12 OH
*Darcy Sunderman Clarinda 10 M
Morgan Naberhaus Kuemper 10 S
Asia Kloewer Harlan 9 L
Megan Scherff Denison 12 M
Marlee Price Lewis Central 12 OH
Morgan Lucy Glenwood 12 M
*Unanimous Selection
2nd Team
Morgan Means Lewis Central 11 L
Amber Huttmann Lewis Central 11 S
Brandi Bueltel Kuemper 11 OH
Kristi Yardas Red Oak 12 L
Josie Esser Harlan 11 M
Kaylee Buch Clarinda 12 OH
Adrienne Mahoney Red Oak 12 S
Kim Graf Shenandoah 12 M
Mackenzie Holmes Atlantic 11 L
McKenna Henze Glenwood 11 S
Honorable Mention
Sam McConnell Atlantic 12 M
Lauren Larsen Harlan 11 OH
Kate Schomers Harlan 12 RS
Kenzie Bierl Kuemper 12 L
Chelsey Van Ness Denison 11 OH
Elizabeth Sieleman Lewis Central 12 OH
Allyson Karr Clarinda 12 M
Maddie Holmgren Red Oak 11 S/RS
Emily Ray Shenandoah 12 S
Lindsay Hastings Shenandoah 12 OH
Jim Field talks about the book “Heaven is for Real” by Todd Burpo.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (7.2MB)
Subscribe: RSS
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) – For the first time in almost a half-century, someone other than Joe Paterno is calling the shots at Penn State. The winningest coach in major college football history was fired
Wednesday night, sending angry students into the streets where they shouted support for Paterno and tipped over a news van. Also relieved of duty was Penn State president Graham Spanier. Both were ousted by a board of trustees fed up with the damage being done to the university’s reputation by a child sex-abuse scandal involving Paterno’s one-time heir apparent. “Right now, I’m not the football coach. And I’ve got to get used to that. After 61 years, I’ve got to get used to it,” the 84-year-old Paterno said, speaking outside his house. “Let me think it through.” Paterno had earlier in the day announced his intention to retire at the end of the season, his 46th. It didn’t matter. “I’m not sure I can tell you specifically,” board vice chair John Surma replied when asked at a packed news conference why Paterno had to be fired immediately. “In our view, we thought change now was necessary.” As word of the firings spread, thousands of students flocked to the administration building, shouting, “We want Joe back!” and “One more game!” They then headed downtown to Beaver Avenue, where about 100 police wearing helmets and carrying pepper spray were on standby. Witnesses said some rocks and bottles were thrown, a lamppost was toppled and a news van was knocked over, its windows kicked out. State College police said early Thursday they were still gathering information on any possible arrests. The decisions to oust Paterno and Spanier were unanimous, Surma said. Defensive coordinator Tom Bradley will serve as interim coach, and the university scheduled a news conference with him for Thursday morning. Penn State hosts Nebraska on Saturday in the final home game of the season, a day usually set aside to honor seniors on the team. Provost Rodney Erickson will be the interim school president. Paterno had come under increasing criticism – including from within the community known as Happy Valley – for not doing more to stop the alleged abuse by former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, who has been charged with molesting eight boys over 15 years. Some of the assaults took place at the Penn State football complex, including a 2002 incident witnessed by then-graduate assistant and current assistant coach Mike McQueary. McQueary went to Paterno and reported seeing Sandusky assaulting a young boy in the Penn State showers. Paterno notified the
athletic director, Tim Curley, and a vice president, Gary Schultz, who in turn notified Spanier. Curley and Schultz have been charged with failing to report the incident to authorities, and Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly earlier this week refused to rule out charges against Spanier. Paterno is not a target of the criminal investigation, but the state police commissioner called his failure to contact police himself a lapse in “moral responsibility.” Paterno said in his statement earlier Wednesday that he was “absolutely devastated” by the abuse case. “This is a tragedy,” Paterno said. “It is one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more.” The Penn State trustees had already said they would appoint a committee to investigate the “circumstances” that resulted in the indictment of Sandusky, and of Curley and Schultz. The committee will be appointed Friday at the board’s regular meeting, which Gov. Tom Corbett said he plans to attend, and will examine “what failures occurred and who is responsible and what measures are necessary to ensure” similar mistakes aren’t made in the future. In Washington, the U.S. Department of Education said it has launched an investigation into whether Penn State failed to report incidents of sexual abuse on campus, as required by federal law. “The Penn State board of trustees tonight decided it is in the
best interest of the university to have a change in leadership to deal with the difficult issues that we are facing,” Surma said. “The past several days have been absolutely terrible for the entire Penn State community. But the outrage that we feel is nothing compared to the physical and psychological suffering that allegedly took place.” Sandusky, who announced his retirement from Penn State in June
1999, maintained his innocence through his lawyer. Curley has taken a leave of absence and Schultz has decided to step down. They also say they are innocent. Sandusky founded The Second Mile charity in 1977, working with at-risk youths. It now raises and spends several million dollars each year for its programs. Paterno is listed on The Second Mile’s website as a member of its honorary board of directors, a group that includes business executives, golfing great Arnold Palmer and several NFL Hall of Famers and coaches, including retired Pittsburgh Steelers stars Jack Ham and Franco Harris.
The ouster of the man affectionately known as “JoePa” brings to an end one of the most storied coaching careers – not just in college football but in all of sports. Paterno has 409 victories – a record for major college football – won two national titles and guided five teams to unbeaten, untied seasons. He reached 300 wins faster than any other coach. Penn State is 8-1 this year, with its only loss to powerhouse Alabama. The Nittany Lions are No. 12 in The Associated Press poll. After 19th-ranked Nebraska, Penn State plays at Ohio State and at No. 16 Wisconsin, both Big Ten rivals. It has a chance to play in the Big Ten championship game Dec. 3 in Indianapolis, with a Rose Bowl bid on the line. Paterno has raised millions of dollars for Penn State in his career, and elevated the stature of what was once a sleepy land-grant school. Asked why he was fired over the phone, Surma said, “We were unable to find a way to do that in person without causing further distraction.” At Paterno’s house, his wife, Sue, was teary-eyed as she blew kisses to the 100 or so students who gathered on the lawn in a show of support. “You’re all so sweet. And I guess we have to go beat Nebraska without being there,” she said. “We love you all. Go Penn State.”
POMEROY, Iowa (AP) – The state of Iowa has fined a Pomeroy nursing home where an 8-year-old girl reported seeing an elderly resident being sexually assaulted by a registered sex offender who lives there. The Des Moines Register says the 83-year-old sex offender hasn’t been charged but that a Calhoun County prosecutor says charges are expected. State records say an Iowa judge had ordered the man placed in the Pomeroy Care Center. The girl had been visiting a relative on Aug. 21. She told officials she saw the man in the room of a resident in her upper 90s who has dementia. The state fined the center $10,000 last week for failing to protect its residents. The center’s administrator declined to comment on the state allegations.