w/ Ric Hanson
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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — The New York Jets have agreed to terms on a one-year deal with veteran kicker Billy Cundiff. He will compete with Nick Folk for the job in training camp. Cundiff was last with the San Francisco 49ers, who signed him during the playoffs last January to compete with a struggling David Akers but didn’t play.
A Pro Bowl pick in 2010, Cundiff is now with his 12th organization since being signed as an undrafted free agent by Dallas in 2002 out of Drake University in Des Moines. Cundiff is a former Harlan prep.
The (podcast) Freese-Notis weather forecast for the KJAN listening area, and weather information for Atlantic….
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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Federal regulators will provide another update on the efforts to repair the troubled Fort Calhoun nuclear power plant. The power plant, which sits across from Iowa on the Missouri River about 20 miles north of Omaha, has been offline for 27 months. Fort Calhoun initially shut down for routine maintenance, but significant flooding in 2011, a small fire and a series of safety violations forced it to remain closed.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokeswoman Lara Uselding says Fort Calhoun is making progress, but the Omaha Public Power District still has to address 15 items on the restart checklist. Regulators must sign off before the plant can restart.
The meeting will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the Ramada Plaza Hotel near 72nd Street and Interstate 80 in Omaha.
EDNA C. MILLER, 91, of Harlan, died Tue., July 23rd, in Harlan. Funeral services for EDNA MILLER will be held 10-a.m. Fri., July 26th, at the Immanuel Lutheran Church in Harlan. Burmeister-Johannsen Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.
Friends may call at the funeral home today (Thu., 7/25), from 5-to 9-pm, with the family greeting friends from 7-to 8-pm.
Burial will be in the Arlington Height Cemetery, in Audubon.
EDNA MILLER is survived by:
Her children – Philip (Elaine) Miller, of Harlan; Patricia (Dave) Sorensen, of Dexter; Steven (Sue) Miller, of Bettendorf, and Annette (Rick “Stick”) Anderson, of Harlan.
Her sister – Patricia Williams, of Altoona.
8 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren, other relatives and friends.
(Updated 7/25/13)
DORIS F. BRAINARD, 97, of Guthrie Center (& formerly of Adair), died Tue., July 23rd, at the New Homestead in Guthrie Center. Funeral services for DORIS BRAINARD will be held 10:00-a.m. Sat., Aug., 3rd in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Atlantic. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.
Visitation is open at the funeral home on Fri., Aug, 2nd, until 7:00-p.m.
Burial will be in Dalmanutha Cemetery in rural Casey.
Police in Red Oak arrested a Mills County man Tuesday night on a theft charge. Officials say 19-year old Bragun Michael Michaelsen, of Pacific Junction, was arrested at around 8:15-p.m. on a charge of 5th degree theft. Michaelsen was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $300 cash bond.
429 AM CDT WED JUL 24 2013
EARLY THIS MORNING…MOSTLY CLEAR. NORTHEAST WIND NEAR 5 MPH.
TODAY…PARTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 80S. NORTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH.
TONIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE LOWER 60S. SOUTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH.
THURSDAY…PARTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE MID 80S. SOUTH WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY THROUGH MIDNIGHT THEN BECOMING MOSTLY CLOUDY. A 50 PERCENT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS. LOW IN THE LOWER 60S. SOUTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH.
FRIDAY…PARTLY SUNNY WITH A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS. HIGH IN THE UPPER 70S. NORTH WIND NEAR 10 MPH.
FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY…PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE MID 50S. HIGH IN THE UPPER 70S.
One of the summer jobs is a right of passage for many Iowa teens is now underway after a slow start due to the wet spring. Seed corn companies hire thousands of workers — mostly teenagers — to pull the tassel off the top of select corn plants to control the plant breeding and produce the coveted hybrids. DuPont Pioneer has five production facilities across Iowa including one in Grundy County near Reinbeck. Field safety technician Dale Wambold greets the busloads of detasslers to make sure they’re ready for the day.
“We provide them with gloves, we provide them with safety goggles, those kinds of things. We haven’t required it yet, but we highly recommend that kids wear high-topped shoes — because these fields are very uneven out her and there could be a chance that somebody could twist an ankle or something like that,” Wambold says. The minimum age to detassel is 14, but many crew leaders who started as teens are now in their 50s and 60s. Don Sullivan teaches eighth grade science during the school year in Waterloo, this is his 39th year detasseling.
Zimmerman says his job starts the night before as he looks at his spread sheet to see who is going to show up. “And then I organize them into groups so that when we hit the field we are not just a mad mob, so there’s some kind of organization so we don’t waste a lot of time,” Sullivan says. He’s seen a lot of changes through the years in the way things are done. “When I first started, there were not a lot of big contractors, you had little contractors out doing small acres and then gradually over time it grew to be bigger and bigger contractors hiring more and more workers,” Sullivan says. “And then a lot of things changed in the sense of providing transportation for us, everybody rides the bus. And then more recently, the emphasis on taking care of the workers.”
Detasseling is manual labor and you are in a farm field where there is due in the morning, bugs, stifling heat and the danger of sunburn. Twenty-one-year-old MacKenzie McLaughlin is a seven-year veteran detasseller, who says despite the tough nature of the work, the financial reward keeps her coming back. “It’s a lot of walking. It is really hard on your body, but even though I wake up really early, I am done before most of them even go to work. I have the rest of my day, and it really does make you appreciate every other job that you do,” McLaughlin says.
The importance of doing the job right can mean thousands of dollars for the seed corn companies and eventually for the farmers who buy it. A recent study by Iowa State University found that the seed alone costs nearly 109 dollars an acre and that doesn’t include fuel or fertilizer. ReinbecK production facility manager Colby Entriken says even with all the advanced technology available in other agriculture sectors, using people to get things right. He says they have to make sure they don’t have any outcrosses or impurities and that takes the human hand and detasseling crews to get that right. Entriken says the crews have for the most part been able to rearranged schedules to allow for some of the workers who need to leave early for camps or to head back to school. He expects the work will wrap in mid August.
(Radio Iowa)