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Boys District Basketball Scoreboard 02/13/2023

Sports

February 14th, 2023 by Lori Murphy

CLASS 2A

District 13

Quarterfinals
Panorama 63, West Central Valley 49
Nodaway Valley 70, I-35 44

District 14

Quarterfinals
Chariton 68, Davis County 63
Centerville 64, Central Decatur 63

District 15

Quarterfinals
Boyden-Hull 53, Hinton 39
Unity Christian 63, MVAOCOU 24

District 16

Quarterfinals
Red Oak 61, Missouri Valley 58
Clarinda 59, Shenandoah 30

CLASS 1A

District 13

Quarterfinals
Grand View Christian 104, East Union 33
Earlham 71, Murray 39
Lenox 81, Diagonal 40
Stanton 70, Southwest Valley 64

District 14

Quarterfinals
Ankeny Christian 52, Glidden-Ralston 37
Coon Rapids-Bayard 57, CAM 42
ACGC 80, Ar-We-Va 51
IKM-Manning 60, Audubon 44

District 15

Quarterfinals
West Harrison 84, Boyer Valley 39
West Monona 72, Westwood 66
Exira-EHK 70, St. Albert 48
Woodbine 53, Riverside 50

District 16

Quarterfinals
East Mills 54, Logan-Magnolia 45
Tri-Center 77, Heartland Christian 28
Bedford 66, Essex 28
Sidney 53, Fremont-Mills 41

Local Posted County Prices, 2/14/2023

Ag/Outdoor

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Cass County: Corn $6.66 Beans $14.91
Adair County: Corn $6.63 Beans $14.94
Adams County: Corn $6.63 Beans $14.90
Audubon County: Corn $6.65 Beans $14.93
East Pottawattamie County: Corn $6.69 Beans $14.91
Guthrie County: Corn $6.68 Beans $14.95
Montgomery County: Corn $6.68 Beans $14.93
Shelby County: Corn $6.69 Beans $14.91

Oats $3.54 (Same in all counties)

 

Girls Regional Basketball Schedule 02/14/2023

Sports

February 14th, 2023 by admin

CLASS 1A

Regional Quarterfinals

Region 4

George-Little Rock @ Remsen St. Mary’s
Harris-Lake Park @ Kingsley-Pierson
Ar-We-Va @ Exira-EHK
River Valley @ Coon Rapids-Bayard

Region 5

Boyer Valley @ Westwood
Tri-Center @ CAM- ON KJAN
Riverside @ Woodbine
Murray @ Stanton

Region 7

Lenox @ St. Albert
Fremont-Mills @ East Mills
Melcher-Dallas @ Martensdale-St. Marys
Lamoni @ Earlham

CLASS 2A

Regional Quarterfinals

Region 7

West Central Valley @ Panorama
Central Decatur @ Mount Ayr
ACGC @ Treynor
I-35 @ Nodaway Valley

Region 8

East Sac County @ Pocahontas Area
Manson-NW Webster @ South Central Calhoun
AHSTW @ Underwood
Kuemper Catholic @ Logan-Magnolia

Iowa florists are planning for a busy, profitable Valentine’s Day

News

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa flower shops will be exceptionally busy places to patronize on this Valentine’s Day and if you’re hoping to buy flowers for someone special, you may have to stand in line for what will likely end up being a limited selection. Kelsey Thompson, the owner of Bloom Algona, says customers are always better served if they placed an order well in advance. “We always encourage people to pre-order as soon as they can because we start designing usually three to four days ahead,” Thompson says, “so that way, when the big day is here, we have flowers ready and waiting.” Anticipating high demand, florists across the state are hiring on extra help both in-store and for deliveries, especially with Valentine’s Day falling on a Tuesday this year.

“It really fluctuates depending on the day of the week,” Thompson says, “Tuesday’s generally busy because people come to work Monday morning and go, ‘Oh, shoot,’ and then they call us, so I’m anticipating a little bit busier than last year.” Between ballooning inflation rates and prolonged supply chain issues, Thompson says the price for roses is rising. “Pretty similar to last year, maybe a bit higher,” Thompson says, “Like everything else in the world, you know, you go to the grocery store and prices are higher, you go to any store and prices are higher, so we’re seeing a little bit of a price increase.”

She says the average price for a dozen roses this year is roughly 80-dollars at Iowa floral shops.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tue., 2/14/23 – Valentine’s Day

Weather

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Cloudy w/rain & isolated thunderstorms. High around 50. S @ 15-25. New rainfall amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Tonight: Rain ending. Mostly cloudy. Low around 30. W/NW @ 15-25.
Tomorrow: Mo. Cloudy. High 35. NW @ 10-20.
Thursday: Cloudy w/snow, mainly in the morning. High 28. New snow accumulations of 2 to 4 inches are possible.
Friday: P/Cloudy. High 28.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 56. The Low was 21. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 42 and the Low was 11. The Record High on this date was 68 in 1934. The Record Low was -20 in 1936.

No. 22 Iowa State women beat Texas 66-61

Sports

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

The 22nd ranked Iowa State women raced out to a 22-9 lead, Monday night, and beat number-17 Texas 66-61 in Ames as the Cyclones snapped a three game losing skid.

That’s ISU coach Bill Fennelly. The Cyclones held off a late Texas rally to give Fennelly his 750th career win.

Ashley Joens scored 24 points as the Cyclones bounced back from Saturday’s loss at West Virginia.

Drake set for stretch run in MVC

Sports

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

A seven game winning streak has Drake in the hunt for the Missouri Valley title. The Bulldogs are tied at the top with Bradley at 12-4 with four games remaining. Drake has scored 85 or more points in each of the last four games.

That’s Drake coach Darian DeVries who says the Bulldogs have been shooting well the past couple of weeks.

The Bulldogs visit Northern Iowa on Wednesday night.

Stuart Police warn residents to beware an increase in property crimes

News

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Stuart, Iowa) – Police in Stuart are warning residents that “As warmer weather approaches, it’s important to remember that property crimes often increase. Please remember to lock doors on your house and vehicles, remove valuables from vehicles and yards, and install lights and cameras in places where valuables are stored outside. Remember almost all vehicle burglaries occur to unlocked vehicles.”
On their social media page, Stuart Police posted a video that was shared with Police Monday morning, showing two thieves attempting to enter two vehicles in Stuart Sunday or early Monday morning. “Thankfully, authorities said, “the owner had locked his doors and the thieves left after discovering the doors were locked. It is believed the thieves are not from the area.”
The ask that “if you recognize the car (light colored 4-door sedan) or the two males,” please let the Police Department know. “And as always, please report all suspicious people and vehicles.”

Blind and deaf Iowans oppose elements of governor’s state government realignment

News

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa)- Blind and deaf Iowans are urging lawmakers to reject some of the changes proposed in the governor’s state government reorganization plan. A spokesperson for Governor Reynolds say there are no plans to close the Iowa School for the Deaf in Council Bluffs, but some advocates point to a part of the governor’s bill that would repeal the Iowa law that says the legislature has to approve a move to close the school. Speaking through an American Sign Language interpreter, Sarah Young Bear-Brown says her six-year-old daughter is thriving at the school.

“It’s like our second home,” Young Bear-Brown says. “I don’t want to see another school close. I do not want to see that. We need to keep the Iowa School for the Deaf open.” Young Bear-Brown, a graduate of the Iowa School for the Deaf, tried to share her views during a Senate subcommittee meeting yesterday (Monday), but there was no sign language interpreter on the online platform.

The government reorganization bill also calls for Governor Kim Reynolds to start appointing the director of the Iowa Department for the Blind. For nearly 100 years, the Iowa Commission for the Blind has selected the agency’s director. Cindy Ray of Urbandale is an officer with the National Federation of the Blind of Iowa. “I have seen that blind people running the agency understand and know blind people,” Ray said.

Mary McGee of Des Moines, who has been blind all her life, says the agency’s training gives blind Iowans the confidence to work and contribute to society. “And we’re going to lose that if friends of the governor or good political supporters or optometrists get on that board and consumers have no input like they do now,” McGee said.

Molly Severn, an aide to Governor Reynolds, says Iowans have the perception that state government officials are accountable to the governor, so governors should be appointing the agency’s director.

Iowa GOP lawmakers question UI, ISU, UNI spending on diversity, equity, inclusion

News

February 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Key Republican lawmakers are questioning “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” programs at Iowa’s three state universities. Republican Representative Taylor Collins of Mediapolis, is a member of the House panel that oversees the budgets for the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa. Collins suggests the six figure salaries for the the top diversity and social justice officers at the three schools are excessive.

“I don’t know anybody in my district who makes north of $250,000 a year,” Collins said during a subcommittee hearing today. Collins said he has a “hard time squaring” a request for more state funding when the state universities are spending about $750-thousand a year to pay the four diversity officers on the campuses in Ames, Iowa City and Cedar Falls. “I think everything’s on the table to make sure costs are being affordable for students,” Collins said.

Republican Representative Skyler Wheeler of Hull, chairman of the House Education Committee, told the three university president he wants to know why diversity, equity and inclusion programs “have become such a phenomenon” on college campuses. “These positions haven’t always been there,” Wheeler said.

University of Northern Iowa president Mark Nook said UNI has been involved in working on diversity issues in and around the Cedar Falls campus for 50 years and he said large Iowa employers like John Deere are asking universities to help students from diverse backgrounds complete college. “It’s about solving the primary economic challenge that this state faces,” Nook said, “simply not having enough people for the jobs that are here.”

University of Iowa president Barbara Wilson told lawmakers employers are asking for graduates who can lead in a diverse world. “How to be able to work in diverse teams, how to be able to think about diversity in terms of clients, products, marketplaces,” Wilson said, “so if we don’t have strategies that really think for where we’re headed in the next 10 years, we’re not going to be able to get our students great jobs either.”

Iowa State University president Wendy Wintersteen told lawmakers diversity and equity are part of ISU’s heritage. “When Iowa State had its first presidential installation in 1869, the board of trustees said at that time said that everyone would be welcome regardless of race, regardless of gender, regardless of socioeconomic status,” Wintersteen said. “This was a new idea at that time.”

Earlier this month, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said he plans to ban Florida’s state universities from spending money on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and GOP lawmakers in other states are discussing similar moves.