February 9, 2012

Former Iowa receiver signs with Vikings

Former Iowa standout Kevin Kasper is trying to extend his NFL career in Minnesota. The wide receiver/kick returner signed with the Vikings this past week. Kasper has played with Denver and Arizona and this past season played for Chicago in the Arena Football League after being cut late in training camp by the Houston Texans.

Kasper is one of 13 receivers on the team right now and says he wants to find a way to contribute. He says anytime he gets and opportunity he’ll try to make the best of it, from being a receiver to blocking to playing special teams.

Kasper hopes this opportunity will lead him back to the NFL. He says it’s good to be heading into his fifth season and he’s having fun. Kasper was a walk-on at Iowa and became the school’s all-time leader in receptions.

D-N-R holds gun safety courses

New hunters will have several chances across the state to learn about state laws, firearms safety and hunting etiquette at one of several hunter safety education courses being offered by the Department of Natural Resources.

Alan Crouse of the DNR says the courses are mandatory for young hunters born after January 1st of 1967 to get a small game hunting license. Crouse says the course touches on a variety of hunting subjects. He says it’s geared toward gun safety, but they also talk about identifying animals, ethics and first aid.

Crouse believes the course is a major reason that hunting safety has improved in Iowa the last few years. He says the hunting accidents have fallen every year since the course started.

Crouse says there are courses being offered in all parts of the state, and you can find out about them on the D-N-R’s website at the safety education page.

Vilsack quizzed about energy issues in New Hampshire

New Hampshire audiences have been asking Governor Tom Vilsack about wind turbines and other energy-related issues this week. Kevin Conroy drove from nearby Massachusetts to catch one of Vilsack’s speeches.

“I took a look at the governor’s resume and bio and two things stuck out for me,” Conroy says. “One is that he had developed a lot of sustainable energy in Iowa — the largest wind farm in the country. Obviously, New England is facing some deep energy challenges and I think that’s something that people are going to find here pretty appealing about the governor — that he’s really tackled some energy issues.”

As Vilsack was introduced to one crowd, there was an audible hum that ran through the audience when that wind farm — a private-sector enterprise — was mentioned. After Vilsack spoke for about 20 minutes, the first question from the crowd was about wind energy.

Vilsack says he had expected to field those kind of questions. Vilsack says New Englanders are facing a host of energy issues, and most don’t realize Iowa’s not only generating electricity from the nation’s largest wind farm, Iowa’s also the largest ethanol-producing state.

In addition, Vilsack tells audiences that Iowa’s one of the few states where new generating plants are being constructed. Vilsack credits changes in state regulations for that extra generating capacity in Iowa. The governor says now, as a potential presidential candidate, he can point to those accomplishments and say “this is what we did” to address the nation’s energy dilemma.

More details released on deadly Middletown blast

More details are surfacing about Monday’s explosion at a military weapons factory in southeast Iowa, but many questions remain. Co-workers of the two people who are still listed as missing and presumed dead have already held memorial services for their lost colleagues, but officials at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant have still not released their names.

Two other workers were hurt in the blast which reports now say happened in the bay housing production line one, where purple-and-white-colored plastic explosive warheads were being made. They’re called plastic because they can be molded almost like clay. That reinforced concrete bay was demolished but it had been designed to vent the force of a blast to limit damage to the rest of the factory. That apparently worked. Production at the plant near Burlington is back in operation with 800-some other employees on the job.

Marshalltown to get virtual reality technology

Marshalltown Medical and Surgical Center and “Fakespace Systems” of Marshalltown are going to build a room at the hospital that will resemble Star Trek’s holo-deck, with technology that will allow doctors to view images in a way they never could before.

Fakespace has created giant-sized virtual reality displays for Iowa State University and the U.S. military as well as many other clients. Now Iowa Congressman Tom Latham says funding’s available for setting up a large imaging system to show scans of a patient’s body.

Latham says to combine the technology into a virtual reality tour of the heart, walk through someone’s blood vessels and things like that — this is the only place in the world where that will happen. Latham says the Iowa delegation worked together in Washington to get the 320-thousand dollars in funding for the project.

Jeffrey Brum, marketing manager for FakeSpace, says the firm builds large-scale advanced visualization, or virtual reality environments. Customers include car companies that want to develop new designs and look at “virtual prototype” before they build a real one, oil companies that use it for exploration, researchers in medical, material and molecular sciences, and museums that use the displays for “edu-tainment.”

Brum says Fakespace technology can help doctors get a clear look at test results, and show patients their scans and other things about their treatment. Old X-rays or ultrasound images were a “slice” of an image, that he says often were hard to decipher. Today’s cat-scan or other devices take multiple “slices” and can combine them into a complex 3-d image of the internal organ, the fetus or whatever they’re looking at.

The Fakespace technology makes that scan into a big picture. Brum says it provides a realistic three-dimensional impression of that object, as if it was really there. Early proposals were to make the image room-sized so a doctor could look at a body part from the inside, or show it to the patient.

Fakespace does make displays that big, where people can walk into a room and within its walls feel like they’re sitting in a car or under the earth — but Brum says for this kind of data, a single wall may be more than enough to show the images, and still give viewers “that Fantastic-Voyage type feel.” Now the money’s been appropriated Brum says the hospital and high-tech companies will consult on just what the scope of the project will be.

But Congressman Latham’s excited about the potential to attract high-powered people with the new system. Latham says there’s no place in the world that this kind of virtual-reality technology and he says it’ll draw doctors and medical professionals all over the world as well as giving a unique way to show patients about their conditions. There’s no start date established yet for building the project.

Oskaloosa man wanted in robbery captured in Yellowstone

Two men wanted in the May 8th robbery of an Oskaloosa credit union were captured this morning in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Oskaloosa Police Chief Jake McGeee says the 23-year-old Justin Schrader and 32-year-old Aaron Michael Rafferty of Oskaloosa were captured by park rangers.

He says it just after midnight when they capture Schrader and Rafferty fled on foot. McGee says officers found Rafferty a few hours later, sleeping in a car. McGee says park rangers were investigating a hit-and-run crash involving the two men when they learned the duo was wanted in the robbery.

McGee says officers recovered a large sum of money along with the capture of the men. He says they are now awaiting some paperwork before the two are returned to Iowa. McGee says the F-B-I will prosecute the case and will get new federal warrants to bring the men back to Iowa. Schrader and Rafferty are being held in the Mammoth, Wyoming jail awaiting extradition.

Vilsack wraps up Presidential campaign type tour of New Hampshire

Governor Tom Vilsack leaves New Hampshire this (Thursday) afternoon after a three-day, campaign-style trip through the state that hosts the nation’s first presidential primary.

Governor Vilsack sat down for a brief interview with Radio Iowa late Wednesday in New Hampshire. With Kiki McLean — his Washington, D-C-based aide who’s worked on the Gephardt, Clinton, Gore and Kerry campaigns sitting in the room — Vilsack began by downplaying the reason for the trip. “This is an opportunity for me to listen and to learn. Folks have been asking me to come out here and I was happy to do it,” Vilsack said. “I’m proud of the work we?ve done in Iowa.”

According to the governor, he’s fielded “tough questions” from New Hampshire crowds on subjects ranging from energy policy to nuclear proliferation. “After seven and a half years, the senior Democratic governor in the country, I’ve got some things to say and people are anxious to listen,” Vilsack said. “I’m going to keep talking as long as (they’re) listening.”

Vilsack has done many of the things presidential candidates do in New Hampshire, but with a Des Moines Register poll of likely 2008 Iowa Caucus goers showing Vilsack in fourth place, Vilsack concedes his next conversation about his presidential aspirations will have to be with Iowans. “You have to express it. You have to express it even to people who that know you, you know and you know, if we do this, we’re going to have to do it with Iowans, not just people in New Hampshire. It’s going to have to be done with Iowans. They’re going to have to know,” Vilsack said.

“They see me as a governor and they should. That’s what I’ve been for the last seven-and-a-half years and that’s what I’ll continue to be for the next half-a-year and they know some of my personal story and they know quite a bit of it. They know my values system. They know how I’ve governed but they may not know what the vision is for the country.”

Vilsack believes he has to lay out three points to every audience to convince them he’s a legitimate candidate. First, Vilsack said people have to get to know you as a person. Secondly, a candidate must prove they can things done and third, the candidate must present a compelling vision. If you offer those three components “then people are going to pay attention,” according to Vilsack.

“If you don’t have that, then they won’t. Vilsack said until he spends the time and resources convincing Iowans he is presidential material he’ll continue to finish behind other prospects in public opinion polls in his home state. “I don’t know why anybody expected that (poll) to be any different than it was,” Vilsack said. “I haven’t spent millions of dollars. I haven’t asked anybody for a vote. I haven’t even told them I’m running for president.”