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Atlantic Girls Golfers Earn Academic Honors

Sports

March 22nd, 2012 by Jim Field

The 2011 Trojann Girls Golf Team has earned an Excellence in Academic Achievement Award from the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union.  Team members were: graduated seniors, Pammy Fixmer, Kristen Schuler and Sierra Worth; current senior Kaitlynn Walter; and, current sophomores Brooke Fletcher and Bailey Walter.  These six girls finished last school year with a combined grade point average of 3.544.  The Excellence in Academic Achievement Award is awarded to teams achieving a combined GPA of 3.2 to 3.6.  Coach Kathy Hobson says, “Each year, the #1 priority on our team expectation guidelines is that each athlete make academics a top priority.  These girls exemplify that expectation.  I’m very proud of them.”

Multi-state Missouri River group meets for first time without Iowa

News

March 22nd, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The multi-state group known as MORAST is meeting this week in Kansas City, for the first time without representatives from Iowa at the table. The Missouri River Association of States and Tribes is one of several groups working on river issues. Executive director Mike Hayden says they’ll discuss actions on the river by the U-S Army Corps of Engineers. Hayden says changes were needed, long before last year’s historic flood. “The law that governs the river has been in place since 1944,” Hayden says. “It does not represent the contemporary needs of the people in the Missouri River basin. After 68 years, at the very least, it needs a thorough review.”

A review was underway in recent years but he says Congress cut off the funding before it could be completed. During the height of last summer’s flooding, the states of Iowa and Nebraska left MORAST because of disputes over the group’s direction. Hayden says both states can return at any time. “Iowa and Nebraska are always welcome back,” he says. “It is disappointing that they dropped out but our whole emphasis from the beginning was to get the states to work together, at the very least, get them to the table. If they’re not at the table, then they can’t even dialogue with the other states.” Hayden says he has a pretty good idea of the various states’ motivations up and down the river, but the states have to get past that. “It’s understandable why there was perhaps some confusion and hard feelings, but it’s time to put those aside and time for everybody in the basin to, at least, begin to dialogue together,” he says.

The Kansas City meeting runs today (Thursday) and tomorrow. MORAST still includes representatives from: Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Kansas.

(Matt Kelley/Radio Iowa)

Report: retail sales up slightly in Iowa in fiscal 2011

News

March 22nd, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A report from Iowa State University shows retail sales in many large and small Iowa cities stabilized over the past fiscal year. Liesl Eathington, an assistant scientist in I-S-U’s Department of Economics, produced the annual analysis showing average per capita sales statewide grew by less than one-percent for the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2011. “That was a pretty big improvement over the prior year when the state, as a whole, saw a 6.5-percent drop in per capita sales,” Eathington says.

More than half of Iowa’s counties experienced growth in retail sales last year. Iowa’s large metropolitan areas accounted for 64-percent of the state’s taxable sales. Eathington says retail sales declined slightly (0.6%) in micropolitan areas – which include cities with 10,000 to 50,000 residents – cities like Fort Dodge, Storm Lake and Mason City. “We saw a lot of job losses in these communities and especially manufacturing jobs, which are the core of the economy in a lot of these mid-sized cities,” Eathington says. “So, the manufacturing and other job losses in these communities would ripple through…affecting the retail sales.” 

The analysis found some positive news for Iowa’s rural areas. The state’s 21 most rural counties posted a four-percent increase in retail sales last year. Eathington says it’s difficult to determine how much rising internet sales might be impacting Iowa’s retail sector. “To really get at how internet sales are affecting Iowa’s retailers, you’d really have to do some household level research – such as surveys to find out how (Iowans) are changing their spending habits,” Eathington says. “That’s just not something that we can figure out from the sales tax return data.”

 (Pat Curtis/Radio Iowa)

Links:

CITY:
http://www.recap.iastate.edu/retail/
COUNTY: http://www.recap.iastate.edu/retail/county.php

Shelby man makes deal, pleads guilty to sex abuse

News

March 22nd, 2012 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) – A 46-year-old man Iowa man already sentenced for raping two women in Nebraska has pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual abuse in Iowa. The Omaha World-Herald reports Todd Mills made his pleas Wednesday in Council Bluffs.  Mills, of Shelby, originally was charged with four counts of kidnapping and sexually assaulting four women in Iowa from 2008 to June 2010.
 
On Wednesday he pleaded guilty to three counts of second-degree sexual abuse. The newspaper says that under terms of the agreement with prosecutors, Mills will serve two terms of 25 years at the same time, then another 25-year term.
 
Mills was sentenced in Nebraska in September to up to 140 years in prison for sexually assaulting two women in Omaha.

8AM Sportscast 03-22-2012

Podcasts, Sports

March 22nd, 2012 by admin

w/ Jim Field

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Iowa bishops urge fasts on birth control coverage

News

March 22nd, 2012 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) – Iowa’s bishops have asked Catholics to fast as a way to demonstrate their concerns over mandates in the federal health care law. Sioux City television station KTIV reports parishioners have been asked to fast on March 30 to highlight what the bishops call “ongoing religious liberty concerns.”  The bishops say in a letter that the law will force religious people and groups to violate their “most deeply held convictions.”  The federal policy requires nearly all employers to provide insurance coverage that includes free birth control for workers. Houses of worship are exempt; religiously affiliated charities, hospitals and schools are not.  Bishops and others consider the religious exemption too narrow. President Barack Obama has said insurance companies would pay for the coverage instead of religious employers.

8AM Newscast 03-22-2012

News, Podcasts

March 22nd, 2012 by admin

w/ Ric Hanson

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Heartbeat Today 03-22-2012

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

March 22nd, 2012 by admin

Jim Field speaks about how the order of birth can impact your finance habits.

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7AM Newscast 03-22-2012

News, Podcasts

March 22nd, 2012 by admin

w/ Ric Hanson

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USDA Report 03-22-2012

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

March 22nd, 2012 by admin

w/ Denny Heflin.

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