Jim Field and Chris Parks have the call of the games played at Griswold High School.
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Jim Field and Chris Parks have the call of the games played at Griswold High School.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (105.4MB)
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A fire that destroyed a 102-year old apartment building in Harlan Wednesday evening, was apparently caused by a carelessly tossed cigarette. According to Harlan Fire Chief Roger Bissen, a resident in one of the apartments at 707 Durant Street was lighting a cigarette with a butane lighter when the cigarette flared up. The resident reacted by quickly tossing the cigarette, which rolled and ignited materials in the room.
The fire, which started just after 6-p.m. Wednesday, ended-up displacing at least eight residents, one of whom was treated at the local hospital, after suffering from smoke inhalation.
The State Fire Marshall’s Office investigated the fire Thursday, and ruled the cause as accidental.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – A day of free admission has been scheduled at Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium. First National Bank is the sponsor. Gate admission will be free from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
The zoo is located just south of Interstate 80, off Exit 454, South 13th Street, in eastern Omaha. It is open daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through February.
The KJAN listening area forecast from Freese-Notis Meteorologist Dan Hicks, and weather data for Atlantic…
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344 AM CST FRI NOV 30 2012
TODAY…PARTLY SUNNY. AREAS OF FOG THROUGH MID MORNING. HIGH IN THE MID 50S. NORTH WIND NEAR 5 MPH SHIFTING TO THE NORTHEAST IN THE AFTERNOON.
TONIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY. PATCHY FOG AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOW IN THE UPPER 30S. SOUTH WIND NEAR 10 MPH.
SATURDAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY. PATCHY FOG IN THE MORNING. A SLIGHT CHANCE OF LIGHT RAIN AND PATCHY DRIZZLE IN THE MORNING…THEN AREAS OF DRIZZLE AND A SLIGHT CHANCE OF LIGHT RAIN IN THE AFTERNOON. HIGH IN THE UPPER 50S. SOUTH WIND 10 TO 15 MPH. CHANCE OF RAIN 20 PERCENT.
SATURDAY NIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE MID 30S. NORTHWEST WIND NEAR 10 MPH.
SUNDAY…PARTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 60S. SOUTH WIND NEAR 10 MPH.
SUNDAY NIGHT…MOSTLY CLOUDY. NOT AS COOL. LOW IN THE UPPER 40S.
MONDAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH AREAS OF DRIZZLE AND A SLIGHT CHANCE OF LIGHT RAIN. HIGH IN THE LOWER 60S. CHANCE OF RAIN 20 PERCENT.
Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS (AP) — After months of drought, companies that ship grain and other goods down the Mississippi River are being haunted by a potential nightmare: If water levels fall too low, the nation’s main inland waterway could become impassable to barges just as the harvest heads to market. The focus of greatest concern is a 180-mile stretch of the river between St. Louis and Cairo, Ilinois, where depths in drought-parched river channels have become dangerously shallow.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An administrative law judge will decide whether Governor Terry Branstad’s administration broke the law in July when he allowed state employees the option of paying 20 percent of their health insurance premiums. Three labor unions challenged Branstad’s executive order saying any changes in insurance benefits must be negotiated or agreed to by the unions. The unions want a judge to end the program and reimburse workers who participated. A hearing was held yesterday. A decision is expected by March 2013.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — University of Iowa officials have asked the Board of Regents next week to approve a plan to demolish flood-damaged Hancher Auditorium and the School of Art building. Both buildings have been vacant since the 2008 flood. The Regents heard the request on Wednesday.
WACO, Neb. (AP) — Monsanto is investing more than $100 million to expand four of its seed processing plants in Nebraska, Iowa and Indiana. St. Louis, Missouri-based Monsanto announced the expansion Wednesday.
The opening of deer season this weekend will also mark the start of another round of testing for Chronic Wasting Disease (C-W-D). The Department of Natural Resources will be particularly focused on a few select counties this year. The disease which is fatal to deer has not been found in 10 years of sampling of the wild deer population, but this year it was discovered in deer held at private hunting preserves in southern Iowa. D-N-R biologist Willy Suchy says they won’t be increasing the number of tests very much.
“Well, we have to keep the cost about the same, so we not going to take too many more. We sampled about 47-hundred last year. We’re going to do pretty much the same, we’re just going to shift some around to different areas to do our surveillance and to target where we think there’s the highest risk,” Suchy says. They will sample more heavily in Wapello, Davis, Pottawattamie and Cerro Gordo counties where the infected deer were found. Most samples of the deer tissue are obtained by wildlife staff.
A majority of the samples are taken received from hunters, but Suchy says they also take some sample from road-kill deer too. “And the most important thing is if anybody sees an animal that appears sick of emaciated, to contact one of our wildlife officers or wildlife biologists to get a sample,” according to Suchy.
The D-N-R has worked with the facilities to contain the infected deer, but Suchy can’t say if that has kept the disease from spreading to the wild population until the check the samples. The heaviest focus on samples in past years has been in northeast Iowa after cases of C-W-D were discovered in the border states of Wisconsin and Illinois.
The state has tested samples from over 42-thousand wild deer thus far and found not positive tests for C-W-D.
(Radio Iowa)
BOYS BASKETBALL
GIRLS BASKETBALL
A central Iowa police officer and his K-9 partner have been honored with an award for a case that helped uncover a massive, nationwide drug operation. Urbandale Police Officer Shane Taylor and his German Shepherd, Sabre, were called to a weighing station along Interstate 80 in Dallas County on October 15, 2011. Officers were investigating what appeared to be a hidden floor in an enclosed trailer hauling a motorcycle. Sabre “alerted” on the odor of narcotics near the front of the trailer.
“Once we were able to get the floor pulled up, there was a duffle bag containing $180,000 (in cash),” Taylor said. “It was from the sale of narcotics on the East Coast and they were transporting the money back to California.” The man who was hauling the trailer was arrested. About a week later, a truck hauling a horse trailer – also traveling from the East Coast to California – was pulled over near Atlantic. Taylor said that trailer also had a false floor, but nothing was found inside. A tracking device was placed on the trailer, which went back to California and then to Reno, Nevada.
“She was pulled over by a state trooper (in Reno) who was made aware of what was going on with this trailer,” Taylor said. “There was 250 pounds of marijuana – over $1 million dollars worth – in this trailer.” The driver of the truck was identified as the mother-in-law of the man who was arrested earlier in Iowa. Taylor said authorities discovered the family-run marijuana operation in California financed the purchase of a $600,000 home and nearly a dozen expensive vehicles. Officer Taylor and Sabre were recently awarded the “2012 Case of the Year” during an annual conference of the Heart of America Police Dog Association.