United Group Insurance

CHARLES “CHARLIE” B. SIMPSON, 56, of rural Brayton (Svcs. 09-28-2014)

Obituaries

September 27th, 2014 by admin

CHARLES “CHARLIE” B. SIMPSON, 56, of rural Brayton died Thursday, September 25, 2014 at his home in rural Brayton.  A Celebration of Life Service for CHARLIE SIMPSON will be held on Sunday, September 28th at 3:00pm in the Brayton Lutheran Church in Brayton.  Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.

Private family burial will be held at a later date.

Family Visitation will be held Sunday from 1:30pm until the time of service at the Brayton Lutheran Church.

CHARLES “CHARLIE” B. SIMPSON is survived by:

Wife: Annie Simpson of Brayton

Daughter: Emily (Jay) Ratigan of Exira

Parents: John and Lin Simpson of Ft. Dodge. Molly and Mike Ster of Marion.

Brother: David (Nancy) Simpson of Sonoma, CA.

Sister: Cathy (Rev. Leland) Webb of Des Moines.

2 Grandchildren

Nieces, Nephews, Other Family and many Friends.

Red Oak Man Arrested After Fight at Convenience Store

News

September 27th, 2014 by admin

The Red Oak Police Department responded to a fight that occurred at the South Casey’s Store on Broadway Street in Red Oak around 5:00pm Friday (9/26) afternoon.  After investigation officers arrested 23-year-old Michael Eugene Sickels of Red Oak for Serious Assault which is a Serious Misdemeanor.  Sickels was taken to the Montgomery County Correctional Facility and is being held on $1,000 bond.

Skyscan Forecast 09-27-2014

Podcasts, Weather

September 27th, 2014 by admin

 

Today: Slight chance Isolated showers and thunderstorms, mainly between 9am and 2pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 80. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 57. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 81. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 56. Light southeast wind.

Monday: Sunny, with a high near 80. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tuesday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 77. Breezy.

Wednesday: A moderate chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 74.

 

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High School Football Scoreboard-Week 5- 09/26/2014

Sports

September 26th, 2014 by admin

Class 3-A District 8
Winterset 16, ADM 6
Harlan 24, Atlantic 21
Creston 42, Glenwood 19
Dallas Center Grimes 45, Boone 27

Class 2-A District 8
Clarinda 54, Shenandoah 21
East Sac County 33, Pocahontas Area 15
Kuemper Catholic 37, Red Oak 14
Southeast Valley 48, West Central Valley 14

Class 1-A District 1
IKM-Manning 42, A-H-S-T-W 9
Missouri Valley 34, West Monona 22
Ridge View 20, OA-BCIG 7
Underwood 33, Treynor 7

Class 1-A District 8
Panorama 42, Central Decatur 12
Madrid 46, Des Moines Christian 14
Van Meter 28, Interstate-35 14
Woodward-Granger 48, Southwest Valley 0

Class A District 1
Audubon 33, Maple Valley 0
Westwood 24, Griswold 7
Logan-Magnolia 65, Riverside 7
Tri-Center 33, St. Albert 14

Class A District 8
Bedford 33, Pleasantville 21
Martensdale-St. Marys 69, Clarinda Academy 26
Earlham 65, SE Warren 12
Mount Ayr 42, Nodaway Valley 14

8-Man District 1
Ar-We-Va 54, Woodbine 20
Boyer Valley 32, Kingsley-Pierson 14
Exira/EHK 68, West Harrison 12
Newell-Fonda 53, River Valley 18

8-Man District 7
Adair-Casey 59, Murray 44
East Union 68, Ankeny Christian Academy 33
Coon Rapids-Bayard 62, NE Hamilton 8
Glidden-Ralston 59, Guthrie Center 33

8-Man District 8
Sidney 47, CAM 46
Fremont-Mills 56, East Mills 26
Stanton 78, Essex 34
Lenox 31, Nishnabotna 14

Who’s Gonna Win? – Week 5- 09-26-2014

Podcasts, Trojan Preview/Who’s Gonna Win?

September 26th, 2014 by admin

w/ Jim Field, Chris Parks, Matt Mullenix and Doug Leonard.

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Trojan Preview 09-26-2014

Podcasts, Trojan Preview/Who’s Gonna Win?

September 26th, 2014 by admin

Jim Field speaks with Atlantic Head Football Eric Waldstein as his team prepares for a Week 5 match-up at Harlan.

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ISU Developing new exercise tool

News

September 26th, 2014 by admin

An Iowa State University research team is using a 400 thousand dollar ($400,000) federal grant to improve a physical activity tracking program for kids. ISU Professor of Kinesiology Greg Welk says the online tool provides a more accurate picture of how much exercise kids actually get each day. “Schools might say, ‘well, we provide PE and recess, and so therefore we’ve given kids 30 minutes a day.’ But, the reality is kids might not actually be getting that much physical activity, those are just opportunities they have,” Welk says. Youth Activity Profile is the online system that tracks a child’s time spent exercising or at play. Welk says the measurement tool focuses student’s patterns of physical exertion to encourage them to get up and moving. “Most schools measure fitness in children and kids are used to doing fitness assessments and those provide a lot of value. But, a key need in physical education is a way to help kids to learn about their physical activity habits because physical activity is how you eventually change your fitness,” Welk says. The online tracker is filled out once a semester by students. The students report whether they walk or bike to school and answer other questions about their amount of physical activity. Then, the researchers pair that information with data collected from physical fitness monitors worn by a sample group of students. Health and fitness experts generally recommend children get at least 60 minutes of physical activity a day.

Harkin says to help Africa

News

September 26th, 2014 by admin

Senator Tom Harkin says it’s time to focus on building better “public health infrastructure” on the African continent, to help local officials more quickly deal with health threats like the current Ebola epidemic. “So when an outbreak happens like this, they don’t have the labs, they don’t have the technicians, they don’t have the public health personnel that are culturally sensitive to people to go out and out and stop this as soon as it starts,” Harkin says. Since 1976 there have been 17 outbreaks of Ebola in Africa, but the current outbreak is the largest in history. The United Nations held a meeting in New York City yesterday (Thursdsay) to discuss the outbreak and the president of “Doctors without Borders” said the global response to the crisis is “moving at the speed of a turtle.” Harkin says while U.S. health care workers did get to Africa early on to try to contain the spread of the disease, they met resistance. “And if they weren’t denied access, they were threatened by local people who thought they were coming in to do something to them,” Harkin says. “I mean, you’ve got to think when you’re in a rural village and you don’t even have the basics and some people show up in a truck and they’ve got these space suits on, that can be pretty frightening and so what happened is that local customs like washing the dead like they do and everything — it just spread that virus.” Harkin is chairman of a senate committee that drafts the budget for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and he is encouraged by last week’s vote in congress to approve 88 million dollars for C-D-C efforts to fight the Ebola outbreak. “We’re going to get on top of it,” Harkin says. “I don’t think we should be unduly alarmed in this country right now, but we’ve got to get on top of this in a hurry before it starts getting into more and more cities.” According to Harkin, the outbreak has been exacerbated because many Ebola victims in rural parts of Africa went to get help from relatives in urban centers. “That’s the place you want someone who’s tested positive for the Ebola virus to be,” Harkin says, “then it just started spreading like mad.” Harkin visited Africa last year to see for himself how health officials were responding to the AIDS epidemic on the continent. Harkin helped set aside six-million dollars in federal funds last year to start building facilities in Africa that are similar to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and later this fall the first two locations will be announced. I told my colleagues: ‘I’m leaving the Senate, but don’t drop the ball on this one,'” Harkin says. “We’ve got to build these laboratories and these institutions in these countries, so as soon as something break out, they’ve got the right personnel. It’s not me from America, it’s their people. They know how to test. They can do the laboratory work. They can do all that stuff right there.” The Ebola epidemic was first detected this winter in Guinea. It has spread to five West African nations and killed more than two-thousand people so far. Four medical missionaries who contracted the virus in Africa were flown back to the U.S. for treatment.

 

Radio Iowa

Backyard and Beyond 09-26-2014

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

September 26th, 2014 by admin

Lavon Eblen speaks with Kelly Norris, Horticulture Manager of the Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden, about a ceremonial grand opening of new outdoor gardens. Find out more at www.dmbotanicalgarden.com

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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th

Trading Post

September 26th, 2014 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  Still have 2 tickets for sale for Saturday’s Nebraska vs. Illinois game. $ 56 each. 249-9084.

GARAGE SALE:  1108 Chicago st. Audubon,Iowa-Friday-Oct.3rd-1;00-5:00-Saturday-Oct.4th-8:00-1:00.Large salt and pepper shaker collection.Also large Snoopy and Peanut gang collection. And much misc. call 712-563-2076- Audubon.

FOR SALE: Goodyaer Eagle LS P205 60R 16 tire. $10. 243-6348

FOR SALE: 12 Muscovie Ducks ready to dress $4 each; 44 big bales of grass & red clvoer from last year and this year $50 each. 712-563-3593. (Audubon)

FOR SALE: Fairly new hide-a-sofa, medium blue plaid, moving and can’t take it $65. 243-4371.

FOR SALE: Homedics Massager w/heat, works very well $15, also have a bottle of Calvin Klein Crisp Spicey Wood, 3.4 fl oz, $10 call 712-249-2238 after 5:30pm

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