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JOAN LAURA TURNER, 80, of Oakland (Svcs. 1/13/16)

Obituaries

January 9th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

JOAN LAURA TURNER, 80, of Oakland, died January 7th, at the Oakland Manor Nursing Home in Oakland. Funeral services for JOAN TURNER will be held 2-p.m. Wed., Jan. 13th, at the Oakland United Methodist Church in Oakland. Rieken-Vieth Funeral Home in Oakland has the arrangements.

An open visitation will be held at the Rieken Vieth Funeral Home in Oakland on Tuesday, January 12th. Visitation with the family will take place at the Oakland United Methodist Church, one hour prior to the funeral service, on Wednesday.

Interment will be in the Fairview Cemetery.

JOAN TURNER is survived by:

Her sons – Craig (Cathy) Turner, of Oakland; Richard (Kristin) Turner, of Monterey, CA, and David Turner, of Phoenix, AZ.

Her sister – Judy (Steve) Brunow.

8 grandchildren, 5 great grandchildren, her sister-in-law, other relatives and friends.

IA DNR investigates potential wastewater entering stream in Shelby County

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 9th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources said Friday night, it was investigating reports of land application of process wastewater potentially entering a stream after receiving numerous telephone calls from concerned citizens. A contractor was land applying wastewater from Essentia, a processing facility in Harlan (Shelby County) under its chapter 200 license, which is issued by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. However, the DNR received reports that the processed wastewater was entering the West Nishnabotna River after it was applied.

DNR staff collected samples on Friday to determine if any of wastewater reached the river. Prior to DNR staff leaving the site, the contractor installed an earthen berm to prevent any further discharge. The investigation is ongoing. The DNR will consider appropriate enforcement action, if necessary. Jessica Montana, supervisor of the DNR’s Environmental Services field office in Atlantic, said “We really want to thank the people who took time to call us and alert us to this situation. The quicker we can get on the scene of a situation like this, the better chance we have of getting the accurate data we need to properly assess the potential impact, but more importantly, the quicker we can work with the responsible party to get material contained.”

Montana said it is important to avoid land application of wastewater and manure when conditions are not favorable like when the ground is saturated because it can result in the material being carried to surface water through runoff.

Girls high school basketball scores Friday 1/8/2016

Sports

January 8th, 2016 by admin

Hawkeye Ten Conference

  • Atlantic 53, Denison-Schleswig 41 -(Erin Olsen 24points, Atlantic)
  • Glenwood 47, Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 39
  • Harlan 60, St. Albert, Council Bluffs 38
  • Lewis Central 65, Clarinda 19
  • Shenandoah 51, Red Oak 28

Rolling Valley Conference

  • Adair-Casey 64, West Harrison 25
  • Exira/Elk Horn-Kimballton 65, Paton-Churdan 53

Western Iowa Conference

  • A-H-S-T-W, Avoca 47, Riverside, Oakland 29
  • Audubon 69, Underwood 55
  • Logan-Magnolia 72, Griswold 40
  • Treynor 55, IKM-Manning 49
  • Tri-Center, Neola 51, Missouri Valley 37

Corner Conference

  • Nishnabotna 52, Stanton 36
  • Sidney 29, Fremont Mills, Tabor 27

Pride of Iowa Conference

  • Bedford 54, Southeast Warren, Liberty Center 34
  • Interstate 35,Truro 67, Lenox 27
  • Mount Ayr 66, Martensdale-St. Marys 35
  • Murray 42, Lamoni 32

Other Scores

  • Carlisle 60, Carroll 30
  • Council Bluffs, Thomas Jefferson 52, Nebraska City Lourdes, Neb. 44
  • Guthrie Center 39, Woodward-Granger 35
  • Southwest Valley 60, Wayne, Corydon 40
  • West Central Valley, Stuart 54, Earlham 52

Boys high school basketball scores Friday 1/8/2016

Sports

January 8th, 2016 by admin

Hawkeye Ten Conference

  • Atlantic 64, Denison-Schleswig 28
  • Council Bluffs, Abraham Lincoln 80, Creston 43
  • Harlan 54, St. Albert, Council Bluffs 33
  • Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 64, Glenwood 61
  • Lewis Central 77, Clarinda 52
  • Shenandoah 56, Red Oak 50

Rolling Valley Conference

  • Adair-Casey 51, West Harrison, Mondamin 43
  • Ar-We-Va, Westside 70, CAM, Anita 45
  • Boyer Valley, Dunlap 59, Glidden-Ralston 55, OT
  • Exira/Elk Horn-Kimballton 46, Paton-Churdan 45

Western Iowa Conference

  • Missouri Valley 71, Tri-Center, Neola 55
  • Stanton 48, Nishnabotna 36
  • Treynor 63, IKM-Manning 55

Corner Conference

  • East Mills 65, Clarinda Academy 31
  • Essex 68, Heartland Christian 23
  • Fremont Mills, Tabor 66, Sidney 42

Pride of Iowa Conference

  • Bedford 68, Southeast Warren, Liberty Center 27
  • Central Decatur, Leon 67, East Union, Afton 29
  • Mount Ayr 67, Martensdale-St. Marys 62
  • Murray 68, Lamoni 42
  • Pleasantville 62, Nodaway Valley 55

Other Scores

  • Nebraska City Lourdes, Neb. 65, Council Bluffs, Thomas Jefferson 24
  • Perry 77, Winterset 61
  • Wayne, Corydon 59, Southwest Valley 55

Roads becoming hazardous to travel

News, Weather

January 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Travel on Interstate 80 in western Iowa is becoming hazardous this evening. Already two rollover accidents have been reported, one near Shelby at the 34 mile marker eastbound off ramp, the other in Cass County at the 71-mile marker of I-80 westbound. Wiota 1st Responders and Anita Rescue, along with Medivac ambulance were called to the scene at around 6:10-p.m.

Other vehicles have gone off into the median along I-80. No reports of injuries as of 6:18-p.m.

Roads in pink are completely covered in snow, ice or slush. Roads in blue are partially covered.

Roads in pink are completely covered in snow, ice or slush. Roads in blue are partially covered.

WAYNE E. DeBORD, 92, of Atlantic (Svcs. 01-13-2016)

Obituaries

January 8th, 2016 by admin

WAYNE E. DeBORD, 92, of Atlantic died Friday, January 8th at his home in Atlantic.  Funeral services for WAYNE E. DeBORD will be held 10:30-a.m. Wednesday, January 13th, at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Atlantic.  Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family will be held from 5-until 7-p.m. Tuesday, January 12th, at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Burial will be in the Atlantic Cemetery.

WAYNE E. DeBORD is survived by:

His wife: Betty DeBord of Atlantic.

His Son – Larry (Judy) BeBord.

His daughters – Sandra (Henry) Eggert, and Dorothy (Bob) Bond.

9 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.

Iowa settles lawsuit with ex-player injured in 2011 workout

Sports

January 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The University of Iowa has settled a lawsuit brought by a former football player who was one of 13 Hawkeyes hospitalized after a high-intensity 2011 workout. Records obtained by The Associated Press show a lawyer representing the university notified court officials Friday of the settlement with William Lowe. Details weren’t immediately released.

Lowe’s lawsuit alleged that coaches and trainers failed to properly supervise the January 2011 workout and didn’t offer medical care after he and others reported severe pain and symptoms. He had been seeking unspecified damages for pain and suffering. Trial had been scheduled later this month.

Lowe and 12 others were eventually hospitalized and diagnosed with exertional rhabdomyolysis, which is the result of muscles breaking down and releasing proteins into the bloodstream. The program has abandoned the workout.

 

Lewis man arrested on an assault charge

News

January 8th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on Monday of a Lewis man on a Felony assault charge. 21-year old Philip Reed Thompson, Jr., of Lewis, was taken into custody on a charge of Domestic Abuse 3rd or Subsequent Offense (a Class-D Felony). Thompson was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains held on $5,000 bond.

On Thursday, deputies in Cass County arrested 30-year old Shaun Allen Williams, of Fremont, NE, on a District Court warrant for Probation Violation. Williams was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains held on $5,000.

And today (Friday), 23-year old Ashly Marie Rollins, of Atlantic, was arrested on two District Court warrants for Failure to Appear. Rollins was taken to the Cass County Jail where she remains held on $6,000 bond.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 8th

Trading Post

January 8th, 2016 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  36″ Panasonic TV and stand, $50 for both.  Also, custom designed Ethan Allen sofa, multi-stripe, beige, green & maroon.  In excellent condition, $50.  Call 712-343-2292 and leave a message if no answer.

FOR SALE: Lyon by Washburn Classic Six String Acoustic Guitar. Barely used and in great condition. Comes with case, electronic tuner, dvd, extra strings and strap. $60. Call or text 712-520-2103.

20130904_200509

FOR SALE: Kelvinator side-by-side refrigerator.  24 cubic foot, almond color, $150 obo.  Call 712-243-5447.

Iowa State’s Troy Davis to enter College Football Hall of Fame

Sports

January 8th, 2016 by Jim Field

Davis, Troy 95 action2009AMES, Iowa – Iowa State’s Troy Davis is one of the greatest running backs in college football history. His unprecedented exploits on the gridiron were cemented forever when it was announced today he is one of 16 players/coaches who will be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame Class of 2016.

“I am extremely honored and humbled to be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame,” Davis said. “This was one of my goals when I first came to Iowa State. Twenty years later and I made it! This is a true blessing and I want to thank God and everybody in Ames, Iowa who kept pushing me. I didn’t win the Heisman, but I made the College Football Hall of Fame.”

Davis’ induction was announced by the National Football Foundation’s (NFF) College Football Hall of Fame. The award represents the highest level of achievement in college football for players and coaches. The annual awards dinner is slated for Dec. 6 at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City.

“This a monumental honor for Troy, Iowa State football and for the tradition of this program,” Iowa State head football coach Matt Campbell said. “He defines what it means to play at this university. Troy has reached the pinnacle of college football and it says a lot about him. To rush for 2,000 yards in back-to-back seasons against the competition he was going against is ridiculous. It says the world about him and his Cyclone teammates and coaches who put him in a position to have great success.”

Davis’ accomplishments at Iowa State are well-documented. The hard-nosed, stocky running back shattered virtually every school rushing record in his three-year tenure with the Cyclones (1994-96), earning the distinction as ISU’s only two-time first-team consensus All-American and the school’s only player to be invited to the Heisman Trophy ceremony twice. He finished second to Danny Weurffel (Florida) in the 1996 Heisman Trophy race.

The Miami, Florida, native is the only player in Division I (FBS) college football history to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a season twice, leading the nation in rushing in 1995 (2,010) and 1996 (2,185).

Much of Davis’ success belongs to former Iowa State head coach Dan McCarney. McCarney was hired as the Cyclone mentor prior to Davis’ sophomore campaign. It didn’t take McCarney very long to figure out he had a thoroughbred ready to bust out.Davis, Troy96

“Troy rushed for 2,000 yards in back-to-back seasons and still nobody else has done it,” McCarney said. “All these years have passed and nobody has done it two years in a row. That’s pretty amazing. I was a part of the Iowa State family for a number of years and I was so lucky to be able to witness Troy do what he did. This is the highest honor in all of college football and he was the main subject in one of the greatest chapters in the history of Iowa State football. As we worked to lay our foundation for future success, there was no chance we could have done it without Troy Davis. He brought respect and honor to our program. He is so special. I have been around a lot of great teams and I have still never seen another player like Troy Davis.”

In Davis’ historic 1996 season, he rushed for over 130 yards in all 11 games, including a school-record 378 yards vs. Missouri, the third-best rushing effort in NCAA history at the time. His 2,185 yards rushing as a junior is the third-best season total in NCAA history in an 11-game schedule (Barry Sanders, Oklahoma State, 2,628; Marcus Allen, USC, 2,342).

He still owns Iowa State career records in rushing (4,382), all-purpose yards (5,177), 100-yard games (21), 200-yard games (9) and rushing touchdowns (36).

Davis chose to forgo his senior season and was selected in the second round of the 1997 NFL Draft by the New Orleans Saints. He played three seasons with the Saints before switching to the Canadian Football League (CFL). He emerged as one of the top backs in the CFL, racking up five-straight 1,000-yard seasons in the pass-happy league.

Davis is the second Cyclone player inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, joining All-American guard Ed Bock (1936-38), who was enshrined in 1970. Former Cyclone coaches Pop Warner and Earle Bruce have also been inducted.

John Cooper, a three-year letterwinner for the Cyclones (1959-61), was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2008 for his contributions as a head coach at Tulsa, Arizona State and Ohio State. Former Iowa State head coach Johnny Majors was enshrined as a player in 1987.

Davis was inducted into the Iowa State Athletics Hall of Fame in 2007.