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AHSTW faces rematch with Southwest Valley in Class A Playoffs

Sports

October 27th, 2022 by admin

The AHSTW Vikings (9-0) will have to get past the Southwest Valley Timberwolves (7-2) for the second time this season if they want to advance in the Class A Playoffs. The Vikings host the Timberwolves for the second round game on Friday and we’ll have coverage on KJAN.

The Vikings won the first meeting back in week three of the season 28-0. They were led by 7 of 10 passing for 147 yards and a score by Kyle Sternberg and 93 yards on the ground with 2 touchdowns by Luke Sternberg. AHSTW head coach GG Harris said they know the type of hard nosed game they will get from the Timberwolves.

Southwest Valley picked up a big win on the road in the opening round over Madrid. Timberwolves head coach Anthony Donahoo is very proud of the communication and cohesiveness of his team late this season.

The Sternberg boys have combined for 3,569 yards of offense and 51 touchdowns this season for the Vikings. Coach Harris said the chemistry between those two stems from the entire team helping each other.

Coach Donahoo said he has a lot of respect for the Vikings and their style of play.

The Vikings and Timberwolves will kickoff at 7:00 p.m. on Friday night in Avoca. Chris Parks and Mike Smith will have the call on AM 1220, FM 101.1, and online at KJAN.com.  Our night starts with our final pick ’em show of the year Who’s Gonna Win? at 6:00 p.m. followed by pregame at 6:30 p.m.

2022 Round of 16 high school football playoff pairings

Sports

October 27th, 2022 by admin

CLASS 5A

Pod A
Davenport, West (7-2) vs. Dowling Catholic, W.D.M. (8-1), at Williams Stadium
Waukee Northwest (5-4) at Cedar Rapids, Kennedy (7-2)

Pod B
Ames (6-3) at Southeast Polk (8-1)
Linn-Mar, Marion (6-3) at Prairie, Cedar Rapids (6-3)

Pod C
Sioux City, East (7-2) at Ankeny (8-1)
Iowa City, City High (6-3) at Johnston (6-3)

Pod D
Valley, W.D.M. (5-4) at Pleasant Valley (9-0)
Ankeny Centennial (5-4) at Cedar Falls (7-2)

CLASS 4A

Pod A
Cedar Rapids, Washington (5-4) at Xavier, Cedar Rapids (9-0)
Indianola (6-3) at Bondurant-Farrar (8-1)

Pod B
Fort Madison (7-2) at Waverly-Shell Rock (9-0)
Epworth, Western Dubuque (6-3) at North Scott (7-2)

Pod C
LeMars (6-3) at Lewis Central (9-0)
Glenwood (6-3) at Spencer (7-2)

Pod D
Webster City (6-3) at Iowa City, Liberty (8-1)
Newton (7-2) at Carlisle (8-1)

CLASS 3A

Pod A
MOC-Floyd Valley (6-3) at Harlan Community (8-1)- ON KNOD 105.3 FM
Nevada (7-2) at Sioux Center (5-4)

Pod B
Central DeWitt (6-3) at Mount Vernon (9-0)
West Delaware (5-4) at Solon (7-2)

Pod C
Hampton-Dumont/CAL (6-3) at Humboldt (8-1)
Benton Community (6-3) at Independence (9-1)

Pod D
Grinnell (5-4) at ADM (8-1)
Creston (6-3) at North Polk (7-2)

CLASS 2A

Pod A
Clarinda (6-3) at Central Lyon/George-Little Rock (9-0)
West Lyon, Inwood (7-2) at Greene County (8-1)

Pod B
OABCIG (8-1) at Osage (7-2)- ON KDSN 104.9 FM
Clear Lake (5-4) at Spirit Lake (9-0)

Pod C
Crestwood, Cresco (6-3) at Waukon (6-3)
Wahlert Catholic, Dubuque (7-2) at West Marshall (9-0)

Pod D
Centerville (7-2) at Monticello (7-2)
Mid-Prairie, Wellman (6-3) at Williamsburg (9-0)

CLASS 1A

Pod A
Western Christian, Hull (7-2) at Aplington-Parkersburg (8-1)
Kuemper Catholic, Carroll (8-1) at West Sioux, Hawarden (8-1)

Pod B
Dike-New Hartford (7-2) at MFL MarMac (8-1)
Columbus Catholic, Waterloo (6-3) at West Branch (9-0)

Pod C
Mediapolis (8-1) at Sigourney/Keota (7-2)
Woodward-Granger (6-3) at Van Meter (8-1)

Pod D
Pella Christian (8-1) at South Hamilton (8-1)
ACGC (7-2) at Underwood (9-0)

CLASS A

Pod A
Hinton (6-3) at Hartley-Melvin-Sanborn (7-2)
Gehlen Catholic, LeMars (8-1) at Woodbury Central (9-0)

Pod B
Newman Catholic, Mason City (8-1) at North Linn (8-1)
Wapsie Valley (7-2) at West Hancock (9-0)

Pod C
East Buchanan (8-1) at Alburnett (8-1)
Columbus Community (8-1) at Grundy Center (9-0)

Pod D
Southwest Valley (7-2) at AHSTW, Avoca (9-0)- ON KJAN
Mount Ayr (8-1) at Lynnville-Sully (9-0)

EIGHT-PLAYER

Pod A
West Bend-Mallard (7-2) at St. Mary’s, Remsen (9-0)
Graettinger-Terril/Ruthven-Ayrshire (8-1) at West Harrison (9-0)- ON KDSN 1530AM

Pod B
CAM, Anita (7-2) at Lenox (9-0)
Fremont-Mills (7-2) at Southeast Warren (9-1)

Pod C
Newell-Fonda (8-1) at Don Bosco, Gilbertville (8-0)
Gladbrook-Reinbeck (8-1) at Turkey Valley (7-1)

Pod D
Easton Valley (7-1) at Montezuma (8-2)
Central City (8-1) at WACO, Wayland (10-0)

Iowa City man sentenced for having child porn on his phone

News

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A 25-year-old Iowa City man caught pretending to be a minor on Instagram has been sentenced to eight years in prison on a child pornography charge.

The case against Tyler Dean Kadolph began last year as police investigated a report that someone was recording women using a locker room at the University of Iowa Field House. The Field House is a recreational facility for students and Kadolph worked there. Authorities got a warrant to search his phone and court records indicate they found child porn on it.

According to prosecutors, Kadolph pretended to be “a minor female” on Instagram and used the fake account to ask for nude photos. In May, he agreed to plead guilty to possession of child pornography. Kadolph was sentenced this week.

DOT trucks out calibrating brine spreading equipment

News

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Snow is not in the forecast — but several big orange D-O-T trucks have been out on the highway with their sprayers going. D-O-T winter operations director, Craig Bargfrede says they are spraying plain water, not salt brine. “The purpose of that is to make sure that everything is calibrated, and that we’re putting out exactly the right amount of material and the right amount of liquid. Depending upon which material we’re using,” he says. He says all of the trucks are outfitted with a G-P-S system that is connected to the spreader controllers.

“So part of the reason why we do the calibration is to make sure our accuracy in distributing the material. And then during the winter as we go through the winter season, as the trucks around operating and doing their winter operations, that information of is fed back through the G-P-S modem,” Bargfrede says. “And we capture all that data so that we know exactly how much material by each truck has done has been split out on the highway.”

Bargfrede says most of the treatment they do now is a salt brine. They may sometimes put down some wet salt, but only for certain conditions. Bargfrede says they have developed a guide for the plow drivers for setting the material that is deployed. “You know, depending on the weather conditions, and what type of precipitation we got, dependent upon the temperature, that’s a guide that gives them a range for what kind of treatment strategies that they’re going to use,” Bargfrede says. He says they started earlier this month to get everything ready for when there’s actual winter weather.

“October 15 is the magical date. According to our policy and procedures, we need to have a certain percentage of our equipment and vehicles ready to go. And typically those early season type situations are some type of frost run or something like that depends upon conditions and the weather,” Bargfrede says. Bargfrede says there is some early indication they may be busy.

“Now in talking to our weather service provider, they’re kind of looking at the forecast for the winter season as being a below normal temperatures, meaning colder, and above normal precipitation, meaning we’re going to be wetter,” he says. “Now whether that comes in the form of rain or snow, we can’t really say for sure.” Bargfrede says they will have the equipment ready — whatever Mother Nature throws their way.

ISU partners with John Deere on demonstration farm near Ames

Ag/Outdoor

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s largest manufacturing employer is partnering with Iowa State University to create a demonstration farm near the Ames campus to field-test agricultural equipment and various farming practices in real-world conditions. Andy Greenlee, a senior staff engineer at John Deere, says the 80-acre tract is divided into eight fields where they’ll test sustainable solutions for large grain production systems.

“We’ll be looking at four different practices that will be on those eight fields in corn and soybeans,” Greenlee says. “Half the farm will be in a corn-soybean rotation and the other half will be in a corn-corn-soy rotation and it’s looking at practices that are common to farmers in that location.” Greenlee says the farm is designed to give Deere the same uncertainties and challenges as its customers, so they can test and identify which methods work — and which don’t. Over a five-year production cycle, he says four different crop production systems will be implemented.

“We’ll do a conventional tillage situation or passes, so we usually have a two-pass system of tillage,” Greenlee says. “We have a reduced tilled where we’re looking at keeping some more of that residue on the soil surface. We go into a strip till practice where tilling only a slight band, a 10-inch band, placing those fertilizers into that tillage pass and then planting right on top of it. And then the last practice that we’re demonstrating is no-till and cover crops, so growing cover crops before that cash crop and then planting into that.” The farm is being run by a combination of Deere employees and I-S-U faculty and staff who are using an array of John Deere Green equipment.

“We are using our exact emerged planter technology where we’re placing that seed at the right place within the furrow,” Greenlee says. “We also have our auto track guidance technologies for our equipment to save on fuel savings, and also a section control so that we can turn the inputs that are the seeds, the fertilizers that are being applied, and we can put those in the right place and at the right rates.” The data collected will measure multiple factors, Greenlee says, including crop productivity, the cost of production, soil health, water quality, carbon intensity and biodiversity.

Through the partnership, Deere is supplying the equipment and technology while I-S-U is covering the input costs, things like seed and fertilizer, while the university gets to keep the revenue from taking the crops they harvest to market.

NW IA man accused of making terroristic threats toward hospital

News

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A northwest Iowa man is charged with making threats that led to lock downs at two health facilities. The Sioux County Sheriff’s Office arrested 60-year-old Ryan Betcke of Granville Wednesday afternoon, after Betke allegedly called Sanford Hospital in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and threatened to shoot employees with an AK-47 rifle.

Sanford Hospital in Sioux Falls and Orange City Health were placed on lock down status until Betcke was arrested. Betcke was charged with making terroristic threats, a class D felony. He’s being held on a 10-thousand dollar cash bond.

Chicken Biscuit Pot Pie (10-27-2022)

Mom's Tips

October 27th, 2022 by Jim Field

  • 1 2/3 cups frozen mixed vegetables, thawed
  • 1 1/2 cups cubed cooked chicken
  • 1 can (10.75 oz.) condensed cream of chicken soup, undiluted
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 cup biscuit/baking mix
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1 large egg

In a bowl, combine vegetables, chicken, soup and thyme.  Pour into ungreased deep dish 9″ pie plate.  Combine biscuit mix, milk and egg;  spoon dough over the chicken mixture.

Bake pot pie at 400 degrees until golden brown, 25-30 minutes.

YIELD:  4 servings

Ownership change for Waldorf University, to again be non-profit Christian school

News

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The ownership of Waldorf University in Forest City may change before the end of the year. A family-owned company in Alabama called Columbia Southern Educational Group bought Waldorf in 2010 and converted it into a for-profit institution. However, plans are in the works to transition the ownership to the Waldorf Lutheran College Foundation. The change is expected to take place in December. Waldorf University President Robert Alsop says the current owners initiated the change. “That family has decided that they’re at a point in their life where they’re looking to kind of simplify their lives and one of the ways of doing was to see if there would be a suitable owner for Waldorf that that would be able to take good stewardship of both the campus and the online programs for generations to come,” Alsop says, “and we’ve found that ownership with the Waldorf Lutheran College Foundation.”

The foundation has been supporting the university for the past 15 years by providing scholarships for students and sponsoring other activities. “Alumni events and campus ministry for our students here,” Alsop says, “so that’s how we got to this point.” Alsop says students shouldn’t see any changes in university operations after the ownership change is made. “It should be very seamless for our students,” Alsop says. “Hopefully, they will only see benefits.” Alsop is hopeful the closing date on the sale will be in the first week of December. “We’ve made application to our accreditor, the Higher Learning Commission,” Alsop says. “They’ve come to visit campus to evaluate the application and, while they do not make a recommendation to the board, their report indicates that we’ve met all five of the key aspects for a change of ownership transaction.” Alsop expects enrollment growth after the change.

“First, it’s a return to our roots as a private, non-profit Christian university,” Alsop says. “We will continue to leverage our progress both in incremental enrollment growth on campus and then continue to grow our online programs with new offerings and new partnerships and then we can leverage what we had in the past with an advancement office, giving alumni and friends more opportunities to support Waldorf University in the future.” Waldorf was founded in 1903. Its current enrollment is around 45-hundred students.

Dubuque adding to its already vast camera network

News

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The mayor of Dubuque is recommending the city spend more than 150-thousand dollars to add to the more than 13-hundred cameras already surveilling the city. The A-C-L-U of Iowa doesn’t like the idea — but Dubuque Chief of Police Jeremy Jensen defends the system. He tells K-C-R-G T-V cameras are instrumental in helping his department solve crimes.  “It helps us be just quicker. It just changes the speed at what we can do investigations by quite a bit,” he says.

Dubuque cameras

David Ness with the city’s Traffic Engineering Department added the cameras aren’t just for solving crime and provide valuable information. “You know, a picture is worth a thousand words, a video is worth that much more,” Ness says. Ness cites the example of a camera on the highway near the Q Casino which helped them monitor people coming and going from a concert to see what type of traffic issues they have. “They are used citywide…and it makes us all more efficient at our jobs,” said Ness. The Executive Director of the A-C-L-U of Iowa, Mark Stringer, says the ability to investigate crimes more quickly is not a good enough reason to have this surveillance, let alone using it to study traffic.

“We’re not supportive, generally suspicious even, of local governments using video surveillance to watch and record people just because they want to,” Stringer says. Police Chief Jensen said people in Dubuque had privacy concerns when cameras went in initially — but he says they now “pretty much expect us to be checking the cameras.” Stringer said it’s important for people to reflect on why do they feel like they need to do this.

GEORGE WILLIAM MARTENS, 55, of Shelby (Svcs. at a later date)

Obituaries

October 27th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

GEORGE WILLIAM MARTENS, 55, of Shelby, died Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022, at home. Services for GEORGE MARTENS will be held at a later date. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

GEORGE WILLIAM MARTENS is survived by:

His wife – Deb Martens, of Shelby.

His daughters – Amanda Martens (& Kyle Chamberland); Angela Martens (Nora Saidy); Brianna (Sara) Martens.

His son – Geoff (Carmen) Martens

His brothers – David Brammann, Rodney Brammann and Garth Bramman.

His sister – Diane Knuth.

and 4 grandchildren.