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Hawkeyes Walk-Off Huskers; Keep Heroes Trophy Home

Sports

November 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa – For the second straight year and the fourth time since 2018 the University of Iowa football team defeated Nebraska on a walk-off field goal. Drew Stevens connected on a 53-yard field goal as the Hawkeyes defeated the Huskers, 13-10, on Friday night on Duke Slater Field at Kinnick Stadium.

Stevens was 2-for-2 connecting from 20 and 53 in the contest.

Jackson Stratton made his second career start at quarterback and connected on 8-of-15 for 115 yards and a touchdown. His 73-yard touchdown pass to Kaleb Johnson tied the game at 10 with 14:44 left in the fourth quarter.

Johnson added 45 yards on the ground on 17 attempts.

Defensively, the Hawkeyes were led by Jay Higgins with 12 tackles (four solo) and Sebastian Castro with 11 tackles (eight solo). Ethan Hurkett added nine tackles with two sacks and three tackles for loss. The Iowa defense forced four fumbles (Castro, Hurkett, Aaron Graves and Max Llewellyn) recovering two.

UP NEXT

The Hawkeyes await their bowl destination. Bowl pairings will be announced on Dec. 8 following the final College Football Playoff rankings.

No. 22 Iowa Beats BYU in Cancun Challenge

Sports

November 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

RIVIERA MAYA, Mexico – The nationally ranked University of Iowa women’s basketball team defeated BYU 68-48 on Friday night in the Cancun Challenge. The Hawkeyes improve to 8-0, the best start in program history since the 1993-94 season. Junior Hannah Stuelke led the Hawkeyes tying her season-high with 16 points, downing two threes. Senior Addi O’Grady followed with 12 points, and freshman Aaliyah Guyton had a career-high 11 points.

Stuelke opened the game with a three-pointer to set the tone for the Hawkeyes. Midway through the first quarter, the Hawkeyes went on an 11-0 run taking a 16-10 lead by the end of the period. Iowa’s defense held the Cougars to just 16.7% shoot from the field, while Stuelke led the offensive charge with nine points in the quarter.

In a back-and-forth second quarter, the Hawkeyes built their lead to as much as eight points while dominating the boards with a 13-5 rebounding edge over BYU. A late layup by the Cougars trimmed the deficit to six, sending the teams into halftime with Iowa holding a 25-19 advantage. The Hawkeyes came out in the third with a layup by O’Grady followed by a three from senior Kylie Feuerbach. Iowa’s offense downed four threes shooting 50% from the behind the arc to pull away with a 45-30 lead.

In the final quarter, O’Grady started with back-to-back layups, and Taylor McCabe and Freshman Teagan Mallegni were instrumental off the bench, each hitting crucial three-pointers. The Hawkeyes went 5-of-7 from beyond the arc in the final period, setting a new season-high for three-pointers.

POSTGAME NOTES
– Jan Jensen is the first coach in Iowa women’s basketball history to begin her tenure 8-0.
– The last time Iowa started 8-0 or better was in 1993-94 with C. Vivian Stringer.
– Iowa’s 8-0 start is the fourth best start in program history.
– This is Iowa’s fifth appearance in the Cancun Challenge. (2007, 2010, 2013, 2016)
– The Hawkeyes are 10-1 all-time in Cancun.
– Iowa picked up its first victory against BYU in program history.
– Sydney Affolter led the Hawkeyes with a season-high 10 rebounds, she has registered double figure rebounds on six occasions during her career.
– Affolter finished the game with seven points, 10 rebounds, four assists, and a career-high five steals.
– Affolter has recorded eight or more rebounds in three straight games.
– Hannah Stuelke registered her 44th career game in double figures which is fifth-most in program history since 2020.
– Stuelke netted a pair of three-point baskets which is a career-best.
– Stuelke has team-high 16 points (5-9 FG), and eight rebounds.
– Addi O’Grady recorded 10+ points for the seventh time this season.
– O’Grady scored 12 points and was six-of-eight from the field.
– O’Grady now has three games with three or more blocks.
– Aaliyah Guyton set a new career-best with 11 points going three-for-three from deep.
– The Hawkeye defense has surrendered single digits in a quarter on four occasions this season. (Kansas – 4, 1Q, Washington State – 4, 2Q, Washington State – 5, 3Q, BYU – 9, 2Q)
– Taylor Stremlow made her second career start for Iowa.
– Guyton has made at least two 3-pointers in both games she’s played in.
– Lucy Olsen did not play in Friday’s contest due to a lower leg laceration. She is day-to-day.
– The Hawkeyes have won 117 games since 2020-21 which ties for fourth-best nationally. (117-30)
– Iowa led for 35:34.
– The Hawkeyes have beaten seven out of its eight opponents by double digits this season.
– Iowa was 9-for-11 from the charity stripe.

UP NEXT
The Hawkeyes will hit the road to play Tennessee in the Women’s Champions Classic on Saturday, Dec. 7, at 6 p.m. (CT) inside the Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, New York. The game is set to broadcast nationally on FOX and the Hawkeye Radio Network.

DAWN WITT, 55, of Lewis (Celebration of Life 12/21/24)

Obituaries

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DAWN WITT, 55, of Lewis, died November 28, 2024. A Celebration of life for DAWN WITT will be held at 10-a.m. Saturday, December 21, 2024, at the Griswold United Methodist Church in Griswold.  Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held Friday, December 20th, 2024, from 6-until 8-p.m., at the Griswold United Methodist Church.

Condolences can be sent at: schmidtfamilyfh.com

Expert: Getting vaxxed for HPV could be lifesaver for Iowa kids

News

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – While the H-P-V vaccine is often marketed in Iowa toward women, a health care professional says it’s important that young people of -both- sexes get inoculated against the potentially-deadly virus. Dr. Ben Parsons, a hematologist-oncologist at Gundersen Health, says human papillomavirus is an equal opportunity threat.

“HPV is a virus that affects all humans, and it’s actually relatively ubiquitous. Lots and lots of people are exposed to it,” Parsons says. “Men and women are at risk for contracting HPV, and the vaccine is exceedingly effective at preventing the most harmful strains of HPV, which are very much carcinogenic.” A state report shows the H-P-V vaccination rate among adolescent Iowans in 2022 was at 57-percent, though the rate fell below 30-percent in parts of southeast and eastern Iowa.

Health officials recommend the vaccine for those between the ages of 11 and 13. That’s before they’d typically become sexually active. “When it came out in 2006, a focus was on preventing genital warts and cervical cancer, and really, both men and women benefit from this,” Parsons says. “When you think about, how do you limit an infection in our society? It takes everyone. It takes a high level of herd immunity to prevent these things from really becoming as big of a problem as they are.” Parsons says getting vaccinated can help to protect you from all sorts of cancers, including head and neck cancer.

“You can imagine the sensitive areas of your tongue and your cheek, and the treatments for people who develop those cancers are really quite rigorous, including removal of those very, very sensitive organs, or treatment with radiation that can be damaging,” Parsons says. “While those oftentimes lead to cures, it’s still a road that we would much rather prevent than have to travel.”

Parsons says his 13-year-old son has already received the vaccine, adding, it’s for his son’s best interest and for the community. Gundersen Health System has clinics in Calmar, Decorah, Fayette, Lansing, Postville and Waukon, and a hospital in West Union.

Officials say federal report on stalking on UI, ISU campuses misleading

News

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The most recent federal data shows the number of stalking reports connected to the University of Iowa and Iowa State University campuses increased last year, but officials say the statistics are misleading. For the University of Iowa, there were over 100 separate reports classified as stalking, but Mark Bullock — the university’s assistant vice president for public safety — says only 45 police reports were filed.

“And 32 of those occurred at our hospital,” Bullock says. “That includes a significant amount of violations of no-contact orders. These families that we’re bringing into our children’s hospital sometimes don’t have the greatest family dynamic, they have histories of domestic violence — things that have happened away from our campus — and they bring with them no-contact orders and they’re at the hospital together, violating those no-contact orders. That counts as a stalking case.”

The six other University of Iowa cases classified as stalking in the annual federal report on campus crime statistics were actually extortion cases according to Bullock. “A trend that we call ‘sextortion’ where somebody will reach out to somebody on social media, start a conversation, they share inappropriate pictures,” Bullock says, “and then it’s ‘I’m going to send these pictures to your family if you don’t send me an Apple gift card.'”

Michael Newton, I-S-U’s vice president for public safety, is also chief of campus police. He says most of the I-S-U cases identified as stalking in the federal report are things that happen online.  “It’s something we’re seeing not just at Iowa State, but nationally we’re seeing this trend,” he says. Newton says most stalking reports at Iowa State are about unwanted messages rather than in-person behavior. “What I’ve found with these cases, though, involving our students generally if they get authorities involved, if they get police involved we tell the person to knock it off, they stop,” Newton says. “…I’ve had a lot of conversation with my student advisory board and others about what can we do to get people to have better interpersonal skills and be able to tell people themselves that ‘Hey, I don’t want to have contact anymore,’ or ‘I don’t want to be involved with you,’ instead of a text message.”

Newton says it’s worth noting the annual federal report on crime data from all U-S college campuses defines stalking as not just engaging in conduct that would cause a reasonable person to fear for their safety or the safety of others — which can be lead to criminal charges. It also defines stalking as activity which can cause emotional distress. “You will see things that appear in our statistics that aren’t state law violations. They’re more of an annoyance. They’re more of a harassment issue,” he said. “…One we had recently was just unwanted email, text after text.”

University of NORTHERN Iowa officials report there were 16 reports of stalking and harassment on the Cedar Falls campus last year.

(Update) – 2 dead, 1 injured in an eastern IA crash Thursday afternoon

News

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Dubuque, Iowa) – In an update to our earlier report, the Iowa State Patrol today (Friday), identified the victims of a crash that took place Thursday afternoon, south of Dubuque. Authorities say 64-year-old Raymond S. Seeley and 62-year-old Deana K. Seeley, both of Sterling, IL, died when a semi tractor-trailer struck their SUV. The driver of the semi, 48-year-old William S. James, of Amarillo, TX, was injured.

The Patrol says the accident happened at around 1-p.m. Thursday, at the intersection of Skyline Road and U-S Highway 15, when Raymond Seeley, who was driving a 2023 Subaru Ascent SUV,failed to obey a stop sign and yield the right-of-way to a semi tractor-trailer before the SUV was struck by the semi.

Raymond Seeley died at the scene. His passenger, Deana Seeley, was transported by ambulance to a local hospital and later flown by helicopter to the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics, where she later died from her injuries.

Black Friday sales are important break-even point for many Iowa merchants

News

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Today’s Black Friday shopping extravaganza, followed by Small Business Saturday, marks a vital kickoff to the holiday shopping season, which a University of Iowa College of Business professor says could be make-or-break time for countless Iowa merchants.

Professor Peggy Stover, who directs the UI’s Marketing Institute, says some businesses may have a so-so 11 months and they rely on this weekend’s events to kickstart consumers for December to meet their margins and stay afloat.

“They’re very important, especially for the small retailers in Iowa, since so many of them are competing against your big box retailers,” Stover says, “and then you have, of course, the online retailers who have managed to carve out a significant market share of the holiday shopping.”

Not too many years ago, a majority of stores opened on Thanksgiving Day to beat the Black Friday deals, but there was a backlash that returned the holiday’s focus to family, reserving Friday for the shop-’til-you-drop enthusiasts. Now, very few retailers are open on Thanksgiving, and even many grocery stores will be closed.

“I think it’s both a great PR move by retailers, but it also comes on the heels of consumers just really realizing that the unsung heroes during the holiday season are the retail workers,” Stover says. “They oftentimes are not able to enjoy the holiday season, much like the rest of us, because they have to work.”

Radio Iowa photo

Many factors may impact the shopping season ahead, including interest rates, inflation, and credit card debt. Stover also says there’s a demographic change and a shift in mindsets coming, for which retailers will need to brace.

“You have Gen Z and then the younger Millennials, who they would prefer to pay for an experience versus goods or a product,” Stover says. “Another thing to take into account is that Gen Xers are starting to retire, so now you’re losing a consumer base that could have had more disposable income.”

Stover predicts the holiday shopping season ahead will be robust, with a retail sales increase of between two-and-a-half to three-and-a-half percentage points from last year. She says, “Overall, holiday shopping is going to be strong again this year.”

JEANETTE CARLSON, 51, of Elk Horn (Visitation 12/3/24)

Obituaries

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

JEANETTE CARLSON, 51, of Elk Horn, died Wednesday, November 27, 2024, at Cass Health in Atlantic. A visitation for JEANETTE CARLSON will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024, from 1-until 3-pm, at Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Jeanette is survived by her husband, Brian and his two children and their families, Anthony Carlson and Brandon Carlson.

Condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

ARNOLD “ARNIE” BINTNER, 95, of Exira (Mass of Christian Burial 12/3/24)

Obituaries

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ARNOLD “ARNIE” BINTNER, 95, of Exira, died Tuesday, Nov. 26th, at the Exira Nursing Home.  A Mass of Christian Burial for ARNIE BINTNER will be held 1-p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 3, 224, at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Exira. Schmidt Familhy Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family present will be held at the Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Exira on Monday, December 2, 2024, from 4 pm to 6 pm.

Burial will follow at the Holy Trinity Catholic Cemetery in Exira with Military honor given. Coffee and cake afterwards at the Catholic Hall in Exira.

Memorials can be made in his name to the Exira Care Center and left or mailed to the funeral home at PO Box 523 – Atlantic, IA 50022.

He is survived by his son, Tim Bintner, of Castle Rock, CO; Tom (Paula) Bintner of Ankeny, IA; Mitch (Becky) Bintner of Castle Rock, CO; Marty (Lila) Bintner of Stuart, IA; and a daughter, Vicki (Jamie) Brehmer of Lyons, NE; nineteen grandchildren; and thirteen great-grandchildren.

Condolences can be sent at: schmidtfamilyFH.com

Iowa woman was allegedly driving high on meth when a crash that killed her 10-year-old son

News

November 29th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Court records show a Polk City woman was under the influence of methamphetamine when she caused a crash that killed her son. Abby Amenson, 41, has been charged with homicide by vehicle-operating under the influence in the crash that killed 10-year-old Maxwell Amenson last summer.

Authorities say she crossed the center line on Northwest Fisher Lane and hit another vehicle head-on July 7. Court records say authorities found drug paraphernalia and meth inside the woman’s purse in a search after the crash.