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Chiefs sign former Vikings safety Husain Abdullah

Sports

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The Chiefs have signed former Vikings safety Husain Abdullah, who gave up football last season to make a pilgrimage to Mecca, in an attempt to add depth to their defensive backfield.  A practicing Muslim, Abdullah turned down a contract offer from Minnesota to speak at mosques across the country along with his brother, former Cardinals defensive back Hamza Abdullah.  The two of them then journeyed to Saudi Arabia.

Abdullah entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 2008. The former Washington State star made 24 starts in 54 games over the next four seasons for the Vikings, making 167 tackles and two sacks with four interceptions. He also was a contributor on special teams.  The Chiefs have little depth behind starting safeties Eric Berry and Kendrick Lewis.

Rollover accident in Montgomery County Monday evening

News

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

No injuries were reported and no citations were issued, following a rollover accident Monday evening in Montgomery County. The Sheriff’s Office says they received a call at around 6:20-p.m., indicating a single-vehicle accident had occurred on 250th Street southwest of Red Oak, just east of Evergreen Avenue.

When deputies arrived, the learned a 2003 Chevy Impala driven by 18-year old Carl Ray Mertz, of Red Oak, had gone out of control on the gravel. The car entered the north ditch and rolled onto its top, causing about $2,000 damage.

(Podcast) Skyscan Forecast: Tue., Feb. 19th 2013

Podcasts, Weather

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

The Freese-Notis (Podcast) forecast for the KJAN listening area and weather data for Atlantic…

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NWS Forecast for the KJAN listening area: Tue., Feb. 19th 2013

Weather

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Today: Sunny, with a high near 20. Wind chill values as low as -10. Windy, with a northwest wind 15 to 23 mph, with gusts as high as 31 mph.
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 4. Wind chill values as low as -5. Northwest wind 6 to 14 mph becoming northeast after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 18 mph.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 25. Wind chill values as low as -10. East wind 7 to 11 mph.
Wednesday Night: A 30 percent chance of snow, mainly after 3am. Cloudy, with a low around 17. Wind chill values as low as 5. Breezy, with a east wind 10 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 23 mph.
**WINTER STORM WATCH THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING**
Thursday: Snow. High near 25. Windy, with a east wind 16 to 22 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%.
Thursday Night: Snow likely, mainly before midnight. Cloudy, with a low around 19. Breezy. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 24.

Winter Storm watch expanded to include all of western Iowa

News, Weather

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

COUNTIES IN THE KJAN LISTENING AREA: SAC-CRAWFORD-CARROLL-AUDUBON-GUTHRIE-DALLAS-CASS-ADAIR-MADISON-ADAMS-UNION-TAYLOR & RINGGOLD- 401 AM CST TUE FEB 19 2013...

WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING…

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN DES MOINES HAS ISSUED A WINTER STORM WATCH…WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING.

* TIMING...SNOW WILL MOVE INTO SOUTHWEST IOWA BY SUNRISE THURSDAY AND SPREAD NORTHEAST INTO CENTRAL IOWA BY MID TO LATE MORNING…AND TO NORTHEAST IOWA IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON.

* STORM TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS...SNOW ACCUMULATIONS WILL RANGE FROM 5 TO 10 INCHES WITH LOCAL AMOUNTS UP TO 12 INCHES. THE HEAVIEST SNOW WILL FALL WEST OF INTERSTATE 35.

* WINDS/VISIBILITY...EASTERLY WINDS WILL INCREASE TO 15 TO 25 MPH AND GUSTY ON THURSDAY…THEN DIMINISH BY LATER THURSDAY NIGHT. SNOWFALL OF 1 TO 2 INCHES PER HOUR DURING THE PERIOD OF STRONGEST WINDS WILL REDUCE VISIBILITY TO 1/4 MILE OR LESS FOR A PERIOD OF SEVERAL HOURS.

* IMPACTS...CONDITIONS WILL DETERIORATE RAPIDLY AS THE SNOW MOVES IN. AT THE ONSET…VISIBILITY WILL FALL TO UNDER 1/2 MILES WITHIN 15 MINUTES OR SO. TRAVEL WILL BECOME HAZARDOUS DUE TO POOR VISIBILITY AND THE ROADS RAPIDLY BECOMING ICY AND SNOW CLOGGED.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A WINTER STORM WATCH MEANS THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT SNOW…SLEET…OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS THAT MAY IMPACT TRAVEL. CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS.

Lack of playing time leads to youth basketball coach assault in Council Bluffs

News, Sports

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

A Council Bluffs man reportedly upset about the amount of playing time his son received on a basketball team, allegedly assaulted a youth basketball coach Saturday afternoon. Police officials told the Daily NonPareil, 33-year old Donald D. Hastie Jr., was cited for simple assault following the incident which took place at around 1:30 p.m. Saturday, at Thomas Jefferson High School. in Council Bluffs.

Officials say Hastie allegedly pushed 37-year old David Schmitt, of Council Bluffs, when a dispute arose over the lack of playing time Hastie’s son’s received. Authorities say Schmitt fell over some chairs and injured his hand and wrist.

Note on computer printer puts Red Oak High School on lockdown Monday

News

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

A note found on a printer in the Red Oak High School media center forced officials to lockdown the school for a little more than three-hours, Monday. Superintendent Terry Schmidt told the Daily NonPareil a staff member found a note that threatened violence in the school, at around 9-a.m. The message indicated the person was upset and might injure themselves or others in the school by using a weapon.

Red Oak administrators contacted the Red Oak Police Department for assistance after determining the note was credible, and the school went into lockdown around from around 9:45 a.m. until a little before 1 p.m. During the lockdown, no one was allowed into or out of the school, as police and school staff searched lockers, backpacks and elsewhere for evidence of a weapon or of the note’s author. Staff were able to determine who had logged in to the school’s wireless server before the note was found.

After numerous interviews with students and other adults in the building – staff members and others at the school for a variety of reasons – authorities determined the school was safe. As a precaution, Red Oak Police officers stayed at the school the rest of the day, but there were no further incidents reported. The last time a string of incidents threatening violence at the school occurred a few years, school officials threatened to hold school on Saturday. That put an end to the threats.

An investigation into Monday’s incident continues,meanwhile, and school officials said they were confident the culprit will be caught and brought to justice.

Campaign to end antibiotic use in healthy livestock

Ag/Outdoor

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Representatives of a non-profit group seeking to curtail the widespread use of antibiotics in livestock are in Iowa this week, to hold public and private meetings on the topic. Gail Hansen, a veterinarian, is with the Pew Charitable Trust’s Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming. She says as antibiotic use in animals has grown, so has antibiotic resistant bacteria. “People really need to know that we are really at a crisis now,” Hansen says. “Back in the day, or back when antibiotics were first discovered, it seemed like there was a new antibiotic every week and so we were always sort of one step ahead of the game. Well, we’re running out of new antibiotics…Physicians are running out of options to treat people when they get sick.”

Lance Price, a professor of environmental health at George Washington University, says antibiotics are being used in the daily feed rations for cattle and pigs, whether the animals are sick or healthy. “Trying to prevent diseases and they’re trying to make animals grow more efficiently, so it’s really part of the formula of converting dry feed into lean muscle mass, which is meat, and so they’re trying to do it as efficiently as possible,” Price says, “but in my eyes as a public health person what I see them doing is using the crown jewels of modern medicine as cheap production tools and I find it unacceptable.”

When humans get sick from eating meat or poultry that’s contaminated with bacteria — like e-coli — Price says in a growing number of cases the bacteria is resistant to antibiotics. “We’ve been dealing with bacteria on our meat since the day we started slaughtering animals. It’s just an inevitable part of the process,” Price says. “The problem with making the bacteria resistant to antibiotics is that when (humans) get infected with them, with those bacteria, we don’t have that option of treating them with antibiotics anymore and so the cleanest way, the most efficient way to reduce antibiotic resistance is to quit feeding animals antibiotics.” According to Price, livestock producers in the country of Denmark have successfully moved away from using antibiotics in feed rations. It’s unclear how many U.S. livestock producers regularly use antibiotics in feed rations. Some swine producers, for example, use antibiotics in water to prevent the rapid spread of respiratory diseases that can quickly wipe out an entire herd.

Price, Hansen and others from the Pew Charitable Trust campaign against antibiotics use in animals arrived in Iowa Monday and visited a large-scale livestock confinement before meetings with state officials, an Iowa State University researcher and others involved in the livestock industry. They’ll host a roundtable discussion at Des Moines University early this morning (Tuesday) and a luncheon in Des Moines for consumers.

(Radio Iowa)

Winter Storm Watch update: Tues., Feb. 19th 2013

News, Weather

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

AREA COUNITES: MONONA-HARRISON-SHELBY-POTTAWATTAMIE-MILLS-MONTGOMERY-FREMONT & PAGE… 306 AM CST TUE FEB 19 2013 …WINTER STORM WATCH NOW IN EFFECT FROM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH THURSDAY EVENING…

* TIMING...SNOW IS EXPECTED TO SPREAD INTO THE AREA VERY EARLY ON THURSDAY MORNING NEAR THE TIME OF THE MORNING COMMUTE. THE HEAVIEST OF THE SNOW IS EXPECTED TO FALL FROM MID MORNING THURSDAY INTO EARLY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. OCCASIONAL LIGHT SNOW IS THEN EXPECTED INTO THURSDAY EVENING.

* ACCUMULATIONS…THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR A GENERAL SNOWFALL IN EXCESS OF 6 INCHES.

* WINDS…EAST WINDS OF 10 TO 20 MPH WILL CREATE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW ON THURSDAY MORNING INTO EARLY AFTERNOON…BUT WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO DECREASE LATE THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING LEADING TO LESS BLOWING SNOW. THE BLOWING SNOW IS MOST LIKELY IN OPEN AREAS.

* IMPACTS...TRAVEL WILL BECOME DIFFICULT DUE TO HEAVY FALLING SNOW ON THURSDAY.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS… A WINTER STORM WATCH MEANS THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT SNOW…SLEET…OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS THAT MAY IMPACT TRAVEL.

CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS. NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE PREPARATIONS.

Monday’s Area High School Basketball scores (from 2/18/13)

Sports

February 19th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

BOYS BASKETBALL
3-A District Semifinal
Atlantic 63, ADM, Adel 43
Creston 79, Winterset 49

3-A District Semifinal
Bishop Heelan Catholic 63, Denison-Schleswig 41
LeMars 82, Sergeant Bluff-Luton 73

3-A District Semifinal
Carroll 59, Greene County 52 (OT)
Harlan 79, Glenwood 53

4-A Substate Quarterfinal
Lewis Central 56, Abraham Lincoln 46 (OT)
Sioux City West 71, Thomas Jefferson 52

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Class 1-A Regional Final
Earlham 79, Twin Cedars 55

Class 1-A Regional Final
Villisca 57, Bedford 50

Class 2-A Regional Final
Panorama 52, Northwest Webster 40

Class 2-A Regional Final
IKM-Manning 63, Treynor 49