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Heartbeat Today 6-25-2024

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

June 25th, 2024 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Red Oak Chamber and Industry Executive Director Elaine Carlson about Junction Days this weekend.

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Moody Heads to Finals at U.S. Olympic Trials

Sports

June 25th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

EUGENE, Ore. – Senior Kat Moody advanced to the finals of the discus with a 58.66-meter throw at the U.S. Olympic Trials on Monday night. 

Heading into her final throw, Moody was outside of the top 12 and needing improvement to qualify. Her final attempt produced her best throw by over three meters, ultimately pushing Moody to an eighth-place finish.

Moody heads back to the circle for the finals on Thursday night at approximately 6:55 p.m.

Former Hawkeye Jamal Britt clinched a spot in the semifinals of the 110-meter hurdles with a personal-best 13.07 on Monday night at Hayward Field.

Britt finished second overall in the first round, just behind Grant Holloway’s 12.92. Britt ran in heat four, which saw four of its qualifiers post top eight times. 

Britt, a native of Las Vegas, was a three-time All-American at Iowa, competing in 2020 and 2021. 

Senior Gratt Reed placed 30th with a 13.95 in the opening round, missing qualification by three spots. 

Reed concludes his decorated Hawkeye career as a six-time All-American and part of Iowa’s school-record 4×100-meter relay team.

HEAR FROM DIRECTOR OF TRACK AND FIELD JOEY WOODY
“I am so happy for Kat today. She’s had a tough few weeks and didn’t quite reach her goals for the NCAA Championships. This was a terrific way to bounce back and qualify for the finals later this week. Gratt had a tough outing today, but I am extremely proud of him and everything he’s accomplished as a Hawkeye. From an Atlantic, Iowa, kid who not many recruited to becoming a Big Ten Champion, multiple NCAA qualifier, and NCAA All-American. He has done a lot for this program throughout his career.”

UP NEXT: The U.S. Olympic Trials resume on Thursday, June 27. Moody and Britt will compete in the next rounds of their respective events. Tionna Tobias begins the long jump on Thursday, while former Hawkeyes Brittany Brown (200 meters), Reno Tuufuli (discus), and Erin Dowd (400-meter hurdles) get underway in Eugene.

HAWKEYE RESULTS
Kat Moody (Discus)
Qualifier Round
8. 58.66 meters (192’ 5”), q

Laulauga Tausaga (Discus)
Qualifier Round
Foul

Jamal Britt (110-Meter Hurdles)
Qualifier Round
2. 13.07, Q, PR

Gratt Reed (110-Meter Hurdles)
Qualifier Round
30. 13.95

 

Corps of Engineers seeks input on plan to safeguard Effigy Mounds

News

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Officials with the U-S Army Corps of Engineers will hold an open house tonight (Tuesday) at the Effigy Mounds National Monument Visitor Center in Harpers Ferry to discuss plans to protect the area from flooding and erosion. The prehistoric burial mounds that comprise Iowa’s only national monument have stood for centuries, but the Corps’ Jill Bathke (BATH-key) says they’re now under immediate threat. “Construction of the locks and dams on the Mississippi River and climate change has altered the hydrology that has increased erosion of the shorelines,” Bathke says, “and that’s really eroded a lot of the irreplaceable Native American burial and ceremonial mounds and that cultural landscape.”

The protected area of northeast Iowa is home to some 200 earthen mounds that are believed to have been built during the first millennium. Many mounds are shaped like animals, including bears and birds. About 100 mounds are in a low-lying area known as the Sny-Magill unit, and she says that’s the section being placed at risk by the river. “Right now, out on public notice is our tentatively selected plan which would protect the Sny-Magill unit with a 2,000 foot linear berm,” Bathke says. “On top of that berm, there would be an access trail where people and tribal nations could views the mounds and appreciate their context in the cultural landscape.”

The monument is managed by the National Park Service, and the area east of the Sny Magill unit is part of the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge, which is managed by the U-S Fish and Wildlife Service. Bathke says coordination and consultation with tribal nations about the proposed protection plan is ongoing. Another element in the mix, she says an endangered species of mussel has been found in the area. “A lot of the work in the last year has been done to find ways to minimize impacts to those endangered species while also protecting this really important cultural resource,” Bathke says. “We’ve done consultation with over 19 tribal nations that are culturally or traditionally affiliated with the park, and so that also has taken time.” If the project is approved, the boat launch at Sny-Magill would be temporally closed in spring and summer of 2026 for construction.

“Generally, we found that there’s a lot of support for this project,” Bathke says. “We are proposing to have tribal monitors on site during all active construction activities to ensure that we’re doing this in a way that’s appropriate. And if there’s any significant findings that we would coordinate that appropriately with tribal nations.” Tonight’s open house runs from 5:30 to 7 P-M.

High School Softball Scores from Monday

Sports

June 25th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Hawkeye Ten 

#9 Clarinda 10, Kuemper Catholic 3
#9 Clarinda 12, Kuemper Catholic 0
Glenwood 2, St. Albert 1
Creston 11, Lewis Central 3
Creston 13, Lewis Central 5
Denison-Schleswig 11, Red Oak 0
Denison-Schleswig 14, Red Oak 2
Shenandoah 9, Harlan 6
Harlan 6, Shenandoah 5

Western Iowa Conference

#8 Missouri Valley 5, Westwood 1
#7 Audubon 6, Woodbine 3

Corner Conference 

#10 Griswold 13, Essex 1
Stanton 22, Sidney 11
Fremont-Mills 13, East Mills 1

Rolling Valley Conference 

Glidden-Ralston 23, Boyer Valley 7
CAM 8, Coon Rapids-Bayard 5
Ar-We-Va 5, East Sac County 4

West Central Activities Conference 

ACGC 5, Panorama 0
#1 Ankeny Centennial 10, #10 Interstate-35  0
Woodward-Granger 11, Ogden 4
#1 Van Meter 10, #12 Earlham 0

High School Baseball Scores from Monday

Sports

June 25th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Hawkeye Ten 

Clarinda 11, Kuemper Catholic 1
Clarinda 17, Kuemper Catholic 16
Lewis Central 7, Creston 1
Creston 5, Lewis Central 3
Harlan 8, Shenandoah 5
Harlan 5, Shenandoah 4
Denison-Schleswig 8, Red Oak 2
Denison-Schleswig 7, Red Oak 3
Glenwood 3, St. Albert 2

Western Iowa Conference

Logan-Magnolia 4, Martensdale-St Marys 0
Martensdale-St Marys 3, Logan-Magnolia 2
Bedford 13, Audubon 0
Westwood 5, Missouri Valley 1
Woodbury Central 14, Tri-Center 4

Corner Conference 

Stanton 12, Sidney 1
Fremont-Mills 6, East Mills 5

Rolling Valley Conference 

Boyer Valley 9, Glidden-Ralston 5
Coon Rapids-Bayard 6, CAM 5
Woodbine 10, Exira-EHK 0

West Central Activities Conference 

ACGC 6, Panorama 3
Des Moines Christian 3, Pleasantville 2
Van Meter 5, Earlham 2
Madrid 8, West Central Valley 5

Red Oak man arrested on assault, armed w/intent & criminal mischief charges

News

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Red Oak Police Department reports officers dispatched to a residence in the 200 block of E. Elm Street, Monday, ended-up arresting a man on assault and other charges. Following a brief investigation, officers took 41-year-old Michael Duwayne Cobb, of Red Oak, into custody at around 5:30-p.m., on: 2 counts of Assault w/bodily injury; Going Armed with Intent (A Class-D Felony), and 4th Degree Criminal Mischief.

Cobb was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $5,000 bond.

Inspectors: Medication errors in a western IA care facility linked to woman’s acute kidney injury

News

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

A Council Bluffs nursing home is facing a potential fine for medication errors that may have resulted in serious injury to the resident. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports state inspectors allege the staff at Prairie Gate, a 32-resident nursing home in Council Bluffs, recently committed a series of “significant” medication errors in its treatment of a female resident.

According to the inspectors, in early March the woman’s cardiologist ordered that she be given Bumetanide twice per day in 2-milligram doses for 3 days, followed by a once-daily dose of 2 milligrams.

The home didn’t initiate the once-per-day order, which meant the woman didn’t receive the drug from March 10 through March 15. A second error occurred when she was allegedly given, for two full months, a 2-milligram dose twice per day rather once per day. That error was compounded when the home began providing an additional, prescribed 1 milligrams per day. The net result, according to state inspectors, was that the woman “received 5 milligrams of Bumetanide a day, for roughly 58 days, when 3 milligrams was ordered.”

A nurse at the woman’s cardiologist’s office allegedly told inspectors such an error could cause acute kidney injury, adding that she didn’t understand why the home did not question the order in March. The state inspectors’ report does not indicate whether the resident survived, but it does state that she was discharged from the facility on May 28 with a diagnosis of acute kidney injury. The state has proposed, but held in suspension, an $8,000 fine. Earlier this year, the state fined Prairie Gate $6,250 for inadequate nursing services related to an alleged failure to address pressure sores. That fine was later reduced by the state to $4,062.

Prairie Gate has a one-star overall rating, as well as a one-star rating for both staffing and quality measures, on the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ Care Compare website, which scores the nation’s nursing homes on a five-star scale. CMS also reports that it has imposed no fines or penalties against the facility in the past three years.

Prairie Gate is owned by a nonprofit organization, Presbyterian Homes & Services.

NW Iowa flood drowning victim is identified

News

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Spencer, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in northwest Iowa have identified a man who died Saturday, after his vehicle was swept away by flood waters. According to the Clay County Sheriff’s Office, William Schulze, of Elburn, Illinois, was driving a red Ford vehicle and attempting to cross rapid flood waters on 240th Avenue, when he was swept away in the flood waters from the Little Sioux River on Saturday. Witnesses told officers they saw a vehicle float under the waters.

Authorities said they knew where the vehicle was, but weren’t able to get to it safely until Monday.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Weather

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly sunny w/a 30% chance of afternoon showers & thunderstorms. High near 94. Heat index values as high as 103. HEAT ADVISORY in effect from Noon until 7-p.m. today. SW winds 5-10 this morning becoming SE this afternoon.
Tonight: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before midnight. Low around 65.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 84. N/NE winds 10-20 mph.
Wed. Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 59.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy w/a 40% chance of showers & thunderstorms. High near 78. .
Thu. Night: A 70% chance of showers & thunderstorms. Low around 65.
Friday: Showers and thunderstorms ending in the morning; Becoming partly sunny. High near 88.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 97, and the Low was 74. This day last year in Atlantic the high was 80 and the low 52. The record high in Atlantic on June 25th, was 106 in 1937, & the record Low was 40, in 2004. Sunrise this morning: 5:47 am. Sunset: 8:58 pm.

GOP lawmaker calls for review of UI use of animals in research

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Republican lawmaker is calling on the University of Iowa to examine its use of animals in medical research, consider alternatives and release a public report. State Representative Taylor Collins of Mediapolis says he finds one experiment particularly grotesque — beagles with a fatal infection were euthanized, then blood and tissue samples from the dogs were studied.

“These are really concerning research practices that are occurring at the University of Iowa and we’re simply asking for a review of these practices because we shouldn’t be simply only looking at dollar signs when we’re conducting research,” Collins says. “We also need to be thinking about the ethical use of these animals.”

University of Iowa officials say the 25 dogs were infected with the disease when the owners of the beagles donated the animals for the research a decade ago and no dogs have been used in the university’s research since 2019. A written statement from university says faculty have an unwavering commitment to the health and well being of research animals and strongly support development of non-animal alternatives for research.

“As usual we have received no commitments to make any improvements, conduct any kind of review or even admit any wrongdoing ever occurred. The only thing we have gotten back is a boilerplate FAQ to simply answer questions about the study,” Collins says. “The university and the Board of Regents can’t just continue to ignore issues that legislators bring to their attention. They either need to address this or we’ll do it for them like many other things.”

Collins led efforts in the legislature this year to cut the budgets for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion programs at Iowa, Iowa State and the University of Northern Iowa. Collins says two years ago the legislature passed a law that requires university researchers to set up adoption programs for dogs and cats that are retired from research.  “We’ve sounded the alarm bell on it before,” Collins says, “but as usual the university has become increasingly out of touch with everyday Iowans and the legislature when it comes to research.”

The Iowa director of the Humane Society has raised the same concerns as Collins and the group has started an online petition calling for changes in animal testing practices at the University of Iowa. Officials at the University of Iowa say for the past 30 years the university has been accredited by an international nonprofit that promotes the humane treatment of animals in science.