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Tulsa for 31-17 Liberty Bowl win over Iowa State

Sports

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Trey Watts rushed for 149 yards, Alex Singleton ran for three scores and Tulsa beat Iowa State 31-17 on Monday in the Liberty Bowl, avenging a season-opening loss to the Cyclones. Iowa State rallied to beat Tulsa 38-23 on Sept. 1, but the Golden Hurricane put together the comeback in the rematch. Tulsa trailed 17-7 at the end of the first quarter.

The Golden Hurricane (11-3) posted the second 11-win season in school history. Tulsa, which has the smallest enrollment of any Football Bowl Subdivision program, also finished 11-3 in 2008. Iowa State (6-7) was seeking its second winning season in the last seven years. Tulsa scored two touchdowns in the first four minutes of the second quarter to pull ahead for good. Singleton’s three scores gave him a school-record 24 touchdown runs this season.

No. 5 Indiana holds off Iowa 69-65

Sports

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – Cody Zeller had 15 of his 19 points in the second half and fifth-ranked Indiana opened Big Ten play by holding off Iowa 69-65 on Monday night.  Victor Oladipo scored 14 points for the Hoosiers (13-1, 1-0 Big Ten), who snapped a four-game losing streak in Iowa City and have now won four straight since losing to Butler two weeks ago.

Oladipo beat the shot clock with a putback with 1:04 left to put the Hoosiers ahead 65-60. He also made two key free throws with 26 seconds to go to make it a two-possession game.  Aaron White had 15 points to lead Iowa (11-3, 0-1), which might have pulled off the upset had it shot better than 3 of 17 from 3-point range.

New Iowa laws include hunting, fishing changes

Ag/Outdoor, News, Sports

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa fisherman will be able to drop a third line in the water on the same fishing license beginning Tuesday. The law is among a handful taking effect Jan. 1. It allows anglers to fish with three poles and a total of six hooks, up from two poles and four hooks.

Another law would allow hunters and anglers to use three-year licenses. A separate law allows combined licenses for hunting and fishing. Most laws approved by legislators in 2012 take effect July 1, 2013, but a few start with the new year. Other laws include one making Iowa’s volunteer firefighters and emergency medical technicians eligible for a $50 income tax credit. Also, childcare providers who serve children eligible for the state’s assistance program will receive a rate increase.

MidAmerican complete 3 Iowa wind projects

News

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — MidAmerican Energy says it has completed three Iowa wind projects generating 407 megawatts of electricity, enough to power more than 100,000 homes. CEO Bill Fehrman says wind power now makes up about a third of the electricity generated by the company, which provides power to 732,000 customers in Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska and South Dakota.

In January 2012 the company announced it had acquired three wind projects in west central, central, and southwest Iowa that would include construction of 176 wind turbines. They included a 106-megawatt Vienna wind project, located in Marshall and Tama counties; a 200-megawatt Eclipse wind project, located in Guthrie and Audubon counties; and a 101-megawatt Morning Light wind projects, located in Adair County.

MidAmerican Energy also owns Iowa wind projects in Buena Vista, Carroll, Crawford, Floyd, Hamilton, Polk, Pottawattamie, Sac and Wright counties totaling 1,284 megawatts of wind generation.

Over the past two years Des Moines-based MidAmerican has added more than 430 wind turbines to its generation network. The company began building wind farms in 2004 and has invested about $3.9 billion in Iowa wind generation.

Sentencing set in bribery case for ex-egg official

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — Sentencing has been scheduled for a former manager at Iowa egg farms who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to bribe a federal inspector. U.S. District Judge Mark Bennett this week ordered Tony Wasmund to appear Feb. 12 in his courtroom in Sioux City. Wasmund has been free pending sentencing, where he will face a maximum of five years in prison. Wasmund was a supervisor at the network of companies owned by Jack DeCoster, whose operations in northern Iowa were blamed for a 2010 salmonella outbreak that caused the recall of 550 million eggs.

Months before the outbreak, Wasmund authorized giving $300 in petty cash to another employee to bribe a U.S. Department of Agriculture inspector to allow sales of shell eggs that had been withheld for failing to meet federal standards.

(Podcast) Backyard & Beyond – Mon., Dec. 31st 2012

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

LaVon Eblen speaks with Glenda Farrier, CEO of Cass Incorporated, about resolutions and goals.

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(Podcast) Monday morning Sports (12/31/12)

Podcasts, Sports

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

With KJAN Sports Director Jim Field…..

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Lenox woman arrested on an assault charge

News

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A Lenox woman was arrested early Sunday morning, on an assault charge.

Dulce Pantoja (Photo courtesy Lenox P-D)

According to the Police Department, officers were called to a domestic disturbance in the 200 block of West Michigan at around 5:30-a.m. Following an investigation into the incident, 26-year old Dulce E. Pantoja, of Lenox,  was arrested on a charge of domestic assault. Pantoja was transported to the Ringgold County Jail.

Finding land to farm is still top chore for wanna-be Iowa farmers

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A recent report from Iowa State University found the average price for an acre of Iowa farmland hit a new record high in 2012. The price was just short of 83-hundred dollars, an increase of 24-percent from the year before. Doug Stark, president of Farm Credit Services of America, says obtaining farmland is the single biggest issue facing new farmers. “It’s that they need to find access to land to be able to farm,” Stark says. “It’s so competitive out there right now, with people buying land and with successful producers that are bidding up the price of rented land, it’s very challenging for young producers just to get the base of operation through land to get their operations started.”

Stark says with advances in technology, farmers today have a bit more down time for family and other activities, something relatively new in the world of agriculture. That’s making it more appealing for young people to pick farming as a career path.  “I think we’re seeing more young people wanting to come back to farming now than we’ve seen in a long, long time,” Stark says. “They know they can come back to the farm and not only have it be a way of life, but that they can they can have a life.”

The challenge of finding land to farm remains, it part due to record corn and bean prices as well as low interest rates.

(Radio Iowa)

Officials asked to do more to help Iowans with epilepsy

News

December 31st, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Advocates for Iowans who suffer from epilepsy say state support for a private group that helps epileptics has declined by 70 percent in the past five years. Courtney Strutt Todd is a member of the Iowa Advisory Council for the Epilepsy Foundation of North and Central Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska. “There are currently 30,000 persons living in Iowa that have or are effected by epilepsy,” Strutt Todd says. Strutt Todd and other advocates are asking state officials to provide the Epilepsy Foundation with 100-thousand dollars worth of state taxpayer support next year.

“We are the only sustainable service in the state and the only resource available for individuals and families suffering from epilepsy,” Strutt Todd says. “This program specifically saves the state thousands of dollars by preventing emergency room visits billable to Medicaid, by preventing unemployment or underemployment with persons with epilepsy and by saving lives in persons with uncontrolled seizures.”

The Epilepsy Foundation has an office in Des Moines that coordinates the work of support groups in Des Moines, Sioux City, Cedar Rapids and Waterloo. The foundation offers counseling, education and referrals to Iowans who have been diagnosed with epilepsy. “This year alone 200,000 people in the United States will develop epilepsy and 50,000 will die of seizures,” Strutt Todd says. “The Epilepsy Foundation is working to lower this statistic.”

A state task force formed in 2011 is currently studying whether generic drugs are an appropriate substitute for brand-name drugs prescribed to treat epileptic seizures. One estimate indicates the state could save 11-million dollars if generics were used instead of brand-name drugs. That task force is to submit a report to legislators by the end of January.

(Radio Iowa)