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Woodbine sweeps home cross country meet 10/03/2022

Sports

October 4th, 2022 by admin

Woodbine XC Meet
10/03/2022

Girls Team Scores

  1. Woodbine 27
  2. Boyer Valley 28
  3. CAM 75

Girls Individual Top Ten

1 Murdock, Addison 11 Woodbine V 21:30.20 1
2 Irwin, Lilly 11 Underwood V 21:52.20
3 Beisswenger, Stefi 10 Audubon V 22:36.70
4 Malone, Lauren 11 Boyer Valley V 23:09.20 2
5 Adyson, Lapel 10 Woodbine V 23:36.40 3
6 Falkena, Mariah 10 Boyer Valley V 23:51.50 4
7 Sherer, Nicole 11 Woodbine V 24:01.90 5
8 Gorham, Clara 10 Boyer Valley V 24:38.20 6
9 Muff, Lauryn 09 Boyer Valley V 24:38.90 7
10 Olson, Elise 09 Woodbine V 24:43.50 8

woodbine hs girls results

Boys Team Scores

  1. Woodbine 15
  2. Missouri Valley 63
  3. Exira-EHK 65
  4. Underwood 95

Boys Individual Top Ten

1 Heffernan, Patrick 12 Boyer Valley V 17:01.89
2 Bendgen, Landon 11 Woodbine V 17:27.80 1
3 Wagner, Gunner 10 Woodbine V 18:57.33 2
4 Vennink, Lane 12 Woodbine V 19:06.19 3
5 Tremel, Thomas 11 Woodbine V 19:39.07 4
6 Barry, Adam 10 Woodbine V 19:39.82 5
7 Hoden, Jacob 11 Missouri Valley V 19:43.97 6
8 Clayton, Gavin 12 Cam V 20:20.71
9 Wilson, Eric 11 V-Exira-Elk- 20:28.66 7
10 Trey, Burgmeyer 11 Woodbine V 20:49.51 8

woodbine hs boys results

Northern Iowa’s Mark Farley previews Illinois State

Sports

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Northern Iowa coach Mark Farley feels the defense if making significant progress. The Panthers are coming off a 20-14 win over Indiana State and take a 2-3 record into their homecoming contest against Illinois State.

Farley says the Panthers are getting a better pass rush and doing a better job of locking down receivers.

Farley says it is more about players making plays than the game plan.

Illinois State is 2-2 overall and opened the Missouri Valley race with a loss to Southern Illinois.

Farley hopes it is a raucous crowd in the UNI-Dome

NFL Hall of Famer Kurt Warner will return for homecoming and Farley says he enjoys having former players who made it in the NFL address the team.

Illinois coach Bret Bielema previews Iowa

Sports

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Illinois coach Bret Bielema is encouraging fans to to fill Memorial Stadium for Saturday night’s game against Iowa. The Illini are 4-1 and coming off a 34-10 win at Wisconsin.

Bielema says the Iowa program has been built on consistency. He was a walk on who played for Hayden Fry and later became a part of Kirk Ferentz’s coaching staff.

Bielema is coming off a win at Wisconsin, where he got his first head coaching job.

The Illini are riding a three game win streak and Bielema says they are still working to become a program that expects to win.

Iowa youth group launches statewide fundraiser at noon today

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Four-H Foundation is holding its annual Iowa Giving Day over 24 hours from noon today (Tuesday) through noon tomorrow. While there are some 23-thousand young Iowans in the organization now, the day is an appeal to all past members and others, according to Emily Faveraid, executive director of the Ames-based foundation. “National 4H Week is a great opportunity to highlight the 4H program and all the things that it does for young people throughout the year,” Faveraid says. “Our special Iowa 4H Giving Day is an opportunity for alumni and friends to give back a little bit to support the program that has made a difference for them.”

The program has grown well beyond its original farm-centered roots and now gives young people the opportunity to explore anything and everything that interests them. “A lot of times we think of 4H as kind of an ag-focused organization, and certainly the livestock component and those county fairs are a really important part of our program, but young people are doing so many things through 4H,” Faveraid says. “They’re doing robotics, they’re looking at entrepreneurship, they’re focusing on careers.”

When you visit the website, Iowa 4-H Giving Day-dot-org, you can make a donation directly to any of 50 individual 4-H clubs in Iowa. “We’re also fundraising generally for programs across the state and focusing on the 4H priority areas of STEM, healthy living, leadership and civic engagement, ag and natural resources,” Faveraid says. “Dollars donated to those programs will go back to support curriculum development and trips and special programs that can support and impact young people across the state.”

Anyone can donate, not just former members, and the minimum donation is $5. She says any gift, large or small, is part of a collective effort to strengthen the 4-H program and better serve Iowa’s youth.

On the web at iowa4hgivingday.org

Creighton survey shows Midwest economy continuing to slow

News

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Creighton survey of Midwest purchasing managers for September shows the overall measure dropped again. Economist Ernie Goss says they measure the status of the states on a zero to 100 scale, with 50 representing growth neutral. “It was fitting 52-point-seven and that’s still above growth neutral, but down from August 55-point-five, which is obviously stronger. This is the fifth decline in the last six months — so the manufacturing economy in the region is slowing down.

He says it is the lowest lowest number since June of 2020. Iowa’s individual state index was to 50-point-nine in September — down from 55-point-seven in August. Goss says the same issues continue to be a drag on the economy. “Supply chain disruptions, far and above the greatest challenge 43 percent said supply chain disruptions. We had 43 percent said labor shortages,” he says. The other concerns were higher input costs, global recession, and the lowest and reading was higher interest rates. The regional employment is still down seven tenths of one percent. )”When you look at growth though, over the last year, the region grew at about two-point-three percent. Now that compares to the U-S number which is better. The growth year over year for the U-S economy was about four percent,” Goss says.

Goss says we’re seeing less and less inflationary pressures and he expect that to impact interest rates. ” I expect short term rates to rise by another half percent by year’s end. And so that’s that’s a little below expectations. I think the Feds gonna pull back somewhat in the November meeting,” according to Goss. “Again, I expect a half percent increase because of inflationary pressures, which are weakening or diminishing.”  Goss says we’re still seeing a recession. “Let’s call it stagflation, very low growth and inflationary pressures way above the Feds target of two percent. So I’ll call it stagflation. And that’s, of course, not good,” Goss says. “Manufacturing is stronger than the rest of the economy. Housing is where there’s a real problem right now that’s residential housing, multifamily doing okay. industrial, okay. So that’s where we’re seeing some real problems.”

Goss says gasoline prices are probably going to be move a bit higher, as the federal government gets out of the oil selling business from the emergency reserve.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022

Weather

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly Cloudy. High near 80. Wind S @ 10-20 mph.
Tonight: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered showers late. Low 56. S @ 5-10 mph.
Tomorrow: A chance of showers in the morning; Becoming P/Cldy. High 75. NW @ 10 mph.
Thursday: P/Cldy. High 66.
Friday: /Cldy. High 58.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 79. The Low was 43. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 81 and the Low,43. The Record High was 90 in 1938 & 2005. The Record Low was 20 in 1968.

(Updated) Fatal accident involving a tractor-trailer and a farm tractor

News

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Brooklyn, Iowa) – A collision between a semi tractor-trailer and a farm tractor, Monday evening in Poweshiek County, left the driver of the semi dead and the tractor driver injured. The accident happened at around 6-p.m. on County Highway V-18.

According to the Iowa State Patrol, a 2007 Kenworth semi driven by 68-year-old Garland Alan Roth, of Grinnell, struck the rear of a grain wagon being pulled by John Deere 8520 tractor. The tractor was being driven by 72-year-old Charles E. Griffith, of Brooklyn. Both vehicles were traveling northbound. Following the collision, the the semi came to rest on its side in the west ditch. The farm tractor remained on the highway.

Roth died at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt. Charles Griffith was transported by private vehicle to the hospital in Grinnell. The accident was under investigation.

Candidates for ag secretary differ on approach to water quality

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 4th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The two candidates running to be Iowa’s secretary of agriculture for the next four  years disagree on how to advance voluntary efforts to improve water quality in the state. Republican Mike Naig has been ag secretary since the spring of 2018 and he’s seeking a second full term in the office.  “I can confidently say there’s never been more awareness, more work, more partnerships and more resources being focused and more actual conservation work getting done than at any time in our history,” Naig says. “I’m proud of that.”

Naig says over the past 10 years, the state’s voluntary Nutrient Reduction Strategy has been showing farmers the value of new conservation practices. “Historically, we’ve wanted to move water off of the landscape as fast as we can,” Naig says, “and, in fact, that’s the sole purpose of a drainage district is to remove water from the landscape , to make that land more productive.” Naig says research is showing farmers the value of cover crops and buffer zones along waterways.

John Norwood, the Democratic challenger, is a Polk County Soil and Water Commissioner.  “The current Nutrient Reduction Strategy isn’t working…Doing things one at a time can’t scale to the 23 million acres,” Norwood says, “The framework ought to be not going things one at a time, but doing them systematically.” Norwood says well over half of Iowa farmland is owned by people who aren’t actively farming it and federal incentives should encourage landowners to adopt more conservation practices.

“Manage water for filtration, manage for acquifer recharge, manage water for flooding,” Norwood says. “We have to scale up soil health. That’s another aspect that we, frankly, don’t have a strategy for.”

The candidates made their comments recently on Iowa Press on Iowa P-B-S. The state’s voluntary Nutrient Reduction Strategy was announced nearly a decade ago, to reduce harmful runoff into Iowa lakes and rivers. An Iowa State University dashboard to gauge progress toward the strategy’s goals was posted online a year ago, but has not been updated this year.

Washington Man Sentenced for Methamphetamine Offense

News

October 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa reports a man from Mount Vernon, Washington. 22-year-old Brian James Bell, was sentenced Friday, September 30, 2022, to 66 months (5 1/2 years) in prison, following his plea in Council Bluffs U-S District Court, to a charge of Possession with Intent to Distribute Methamphetamine.

In June 2021, Bell was involved in a traffic accident on Interstate 29. Law enforcement arrived on the scene and observed Bell carrying a backpack away from the accident site. A During a probable cause search of the vehicle and backpack, law enforcement located 97 grams of methamphetamine and two loaded firearms.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Pottawattamie Sheriff’s Department and Southwest Iowa Narcotics Enforcement Task Force investigated the case.

Pottawattamie County Man Sentenced for a Drug Offense

News

October 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – A man from Pottawattamie County was sentenced last Friday in Council Bluffs District Court, on drug charges. 58-year-old Scott Paul Polinski, of Council Bluffs, was sentenced to 120 months (10 years) in prison for Possession with Intent to Distribute Methamphetamine. He must also serve a five-year term of supervised release after the prison term. There is no parole in the federal system.

In October 2021, Polinski was on parole with the State of Iowa Fourth Judicial District Probation and Parole Department for prior distribution of methamphetamine convictions. Officers received information that Polinski was selling methamphetamine out of his home. Officers went to Polinksi’s address to complete a home visit and speak with Polinski. Officers located 264 grams of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia related to distributing illegal drugs.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Council Bluffs Police Department, Fourth Judicial District Department of Correctional Services Probation and Parole Department, and Southwest Iowa Narcotics Enforcement Task Force investigated the case. This case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Offices for the Southern District of Iowa.