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BASF of Germany buying Iowa-based Becker Underwood

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

AMES, Iowa (AP) – German-based chemical maker BASF had made a deal to buy Ames-based Becker Underwood, which makes seed treatment and other farm products.  BASF says the purchase price is $1.02 billion. Becker Underwood was co-founded in 1982 by Atlantic natives Roger Underwood and Jeff Becker.  They sold controlling interest to Norwest Equity Partners of Minneapolis in 2004. Becker has more than 210 employees in Ames; St. Joseph, Mo.; and Caldwell, Idaho; and nearly 270 more in several other countries.

BASF is based in Ludwigshafen, Germany, and produces chemicals and plastics as well oil and gas and agricultural herbicides and fertilizers. BASF spokeswoman Anne Burt says final decisions haven’t been made about the future of Becker Underwood’s chief executive officer, Peter Innes, other managers or other workers.

(Podcast) Skyscan Forecast: Fri., Sept. 21st 2012

Podcasts, Weather

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

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

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KAREN “KATIE” BOLIN, 55, of Casey (Svcs. 9-24-12)

Obituaries

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

KAREN “KATIE” BOLIN, 55, of Casey, died Wed., Sept. 19th, at her home in Casey. Memorial services for KATIE BOLIN will be held 11-a.m. Mon., Sept. 24th, at the Friends Church in Stuart. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Adair has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held Monday, September 24, 2012, from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. at the Friends Church in Stuart.

Katie Bolin is survived by: Her husband Johnny Hansen, of Casey.

NWs Forecast for Cass & area Counties in Iowa

Weather

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

401 AM CDT FRI SEP 21 2012

TODAY…MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE MID 70S. WEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH SHIFTING TO THE NORTH 10 TO 15 MPH IN THE AFTERNOON.
TONIGHT…MOSTLY CLEAR. LOW IN THE LOWER 40S. NORTHWEST WIND NEAR 10 MPH.

SATURDAY…SUNNY…COOLER. HIGH AROUND 60. NORTHWEST WIND 10 TO 15 MPH WITH GUSTS TO AROUND 25 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT…MOSTLY CLEAR. AREAS OF FROST AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOW IN THE LOWER 30’S. NORTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH.

SUNDAY…SUNNY. HIGH IN THE MID 60S. NORTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH SHIFTING TO THE WEST IN THE AFTERNOON.
SUNDAY NIGHT AND MONDAY…MOSTLY CLEAR. LOW IN THE LOWER 40S. HIGH IN THE LOWER 70’S.

Destructive fruit fly now infesting several Iowa counties

Ag/Outdoor

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A very tiny bug is raising big alarms for some Iowa producers. Its name is the spotted wing drosophila (droh-SOFF-ah-lah) and it closely resembles a common fruit fly. It’s only an eighth of an inch long, but an infestation is now confirmed for the first time in Iowa — in Story County, with several other colonies suspected. Laura Jesse, an entomologist at Iowa State University, says the invasive insect could be a serious threat to certain Iowa crops. “The spotted wing drosophila is going to be a big problem primarily for small fruit growers, growers of small fruits like raspberries, strawberries, blueberries,” Jesse says. “It can reportedly attack apples but not really fruits with harder skins.”

Blackberries, cherries and grapes could also be at risk. This red-eyed pest is difficult to tell from a regular fruit fly, even for an expert on wee winged creatures like Jesse, who co-directs the I-S-U Plant and Insect Diagnostic Clinic. She needs a microscope to accurately distinguish the drosophila from the more common variety. “Those fruit flies, that we’re used to, attack rotting fruit,” Jesse says. “You always know when you’ve got a bunch of ’em in your kitchen, you know there’s a banana that you forgot somewhere and it’s rotten. Our normal native fruit fly can’t attack fruit that’s not damaged where as we’re concerned about this fruit fly because it can attack healthy fruit.” The female fly can slice into the skin of fresh fruit to lay eggs and producers in other states report a serious yield impact with maggots in the produce. Jesse says the pest has already gotten a foothold in Iowa.

“Here in Story County, we were aware of it and looking for it, so we had traps out,” Jesse says. “We’ve already gotten reports at least from Mitchell County, Linn County and Dubuque County. It’s probably pretty widespread in Iowa. We’re confirming each new infestation. It’s not going to surprise us that it’ll be in a lot of counties, especially over the next few years.” Parts of Iowa have already seen frost, but she says the fruit flies shouldn’t have a problem over-wintering in the Hawkeye State.  “When it first came into the U.S, it was picked up in California, Washington and Oregon and there was some hopes that maybe it wouldn’t survive in the Midwest,” Jesse says. “It’s actually been in Michigan the past few years and done just fine there so we suspect it will be able to survive our (Iowa) winters.”

The pest is native to Asia and was first found in the U-S in 2008 and quickly spread. It’s confirmed in at least 20 states, including neighboring Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. Jesse has some advice for Iowa producers with concerns about this pest: Pick all fruit when harvesting and remove and destroy any fallen, damaged and overripe fruit. Also, there are insecticides available but options are limited.

(Radio Iowa)

Thursday’s H.S. Football Scores

Sports

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Thursday’s Scores (Sept. 20th)
 PREP FOOTBALL
Council Bluffs Lincoln 33, Sioux City West 21
Davenport Assumption 35, Clinton 7

Iowa early News Headlines: Fri., Sept. 21st 2012

News

September 21st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) – A Cedar Rapids police spokeswoman says no obvious signs of trauma have been found on the body of a man that was found between two houses. Officers were sent to the scene on the southwest side of the city after a neighbor reported seeing the body of 25-year-old James Tamayo shortly after 7 a.m. yesterday.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – A Des Moines area developer has pleaded guilty to bank fraud in connection with a loan to develop a condominium project. U.S. Attorney Nicholas Klinefeldt announced that Randal Walters of Polk County pleaded guilty yesterday to one count of bank fraud related to the Meadow Cove project. The 55-year-old Walters acknowledged during court proceedings that he diverted loans intended for condos to other uses.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Rural electric cooperatives operating in Iowa, Nebraska and seven other states are getting federal loan guarantees to improve portions of their power lines and generating systems. The funding includes a $6.7 million loan guarantee for Nobles Electric Cooperative, which serves customers in northwest Iowa and Minnesota.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Cleanup of an oil spill along 10 to 15 miles of the North Raccoon River south of Jefferson continues as environmental officials warn people to avoid canoeing, fishing, or even hiking in the area. Pools of thick black smelly oil are apparent in the area after a valve on a storage tank malfunctioned September 13th at Krieger’s Greenhouse in Jefferson.

Friday High School Football Schedule

Sports

September 21st, 2012 by Jim Field

Class 3-A District 1  
Atlantic @ Denison
Lewis Central @ ADM
Creston @ Perry
Glenwood @ Harlan

Class 3-A District 2
Carroll @ Storm Lake

Class 2-A District 8
OA-BCIG @ Clarinda
Clarinda Academy @ Red Oak
JSPC @ Kuemper Catholic
Treynor @ Shenandoah

Class 1-A District 2
Sioux Central @ IKM/Manning

Class 1-A District 8 
Panorama @ Missouri Valley
West Central Valley @ Nodaway Valley
St. Albert @ Tri-Center
Treynor @ Shenandoah

Class A District 7
Audubon @ Bedford
Madrid @ Earlham
Guthrie Center @ Woodward Academy
Woodward-Granger @ Martensdale-St. Marys

Class A District 8
West Monona @ A-H-S-T
Logan-Magnolia @ East Mills
Westwood @ Griswold
Underwood @ Riverside

8-Man District 6
Adair-Casey @ Murray
East Union @ Ankeny Christian
Lamoni @ Colo-Nesco
Harmony @ Mormon Trail

8-Man District 7
Ar-We-Va @ Boyer Valley
Heartland Christian @ Charter Oak-Ute
Coon Rapids-Bayard @ West Harrison
Glidden-Ralston @ Exira/EHK
Sidney @ Woodbine

8-Man District 8
CAM @ Essex
Corning @ Nishnabotna
Stanton @ Fremont-Mills
Lenox @ Villisca
Sidney @ Woodbine

Missouri River trash cleanup is Saturday, volunteers needed

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 20th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Volunteers are needed to pull on boots and gloves this weekend to help clean up the banks of the Missouri River after last year’s historic flooding. Jeff Barrow is director of Missouri River Relief and says they’re focusing their efforts Saturday on the Nebraska side of the river, just north of Omaha. They’ll be getting the debris that washed up on the islands and in the woods in last year’s flooding. Barrow says up to 300 volunteers are expected for the event who will help pick up 10 to 15 tons of trash. He recommends bringing bug spray and sunscreen. The trash pick-up runs until noon and lunch will be provided. After lunch, more volunteers are needed to sort and haul that trash away.

The Army Corps of Engineers is providing a barge on which the trash will be dumped, while there will also be separate dumpsters for trash and scrap metal. Volunteers should be on the look-out for unusual items and there’s a contest for the best “trash treasures” found. Barrow says they’ve literally found a message in a bottle before.”We were doing a clean-up way down near the Mississippi River on the Missouri River and someone in Council Bluffs had put a message in a bottle and it’d been in the river ten years,” he says. “We found it. It was really amazing. We tried to call the person back but the phone number was no longer active.”

Volunteers should be at N-P Dodge Park north of Omaha at 9 AM Saturday. Barrow says in ten years, more than 16,500 volunteers have collected and hauled away more than one-million pounds of trash from 784 miles of river.

(Radio Iowa)

Cass County residents encouraged to participate in local walks

News

September 20th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Governor Terry Branstad and Lt. Governor Kim Reynolds are calling on Cass County residents and all Iowans to join in a one-kilometer Healthiest State Walk on Wednesday, October 3rd, as one part of an effort to become the healthiest state in the nation. More than 291,000 Iowans from each of Iowa’s 99 counties participated in the Healthiest State Initiative’s “Start Somewhere” walk in 2011. This year, many organized Healthiest State Walks will be held at noon on October 3rd, but walks are encouraged throughout the day.

A kilometer is about 7.5 city blocks, a 12-minute stroll for the average walker. Walkers can sign up for the event and find or create a local, organized walk at www.iowahealthieststate.com. In addition to walking, Branstad and Reynolds are encouraging Iowans to add one more wellness activity to their day on October 3rd.  The Governor and Lt. Gov. last year announced the plan to make Iowa the healthiest state in the nation within five years as measured by the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index(r). In 2011, Iowa ranked 16th compared to all other states, moving up from the 19th position in 2010.

The Healthiest State Initiative is a privately led, public effort that engages Iowans and their communities throughout the state. It involves individuals, families, businesses, faith-based organizations, not-for-profits and the public sector in a broad-based community-focused effort.