February 9, 2012

Cornell’s historic 1947 wrestling team to be honored

The team that shocked the college wrestling world will be honored this week at the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in Stillwater, Oklahoma. In 1947, Cornell College won the all-division NCAA championship and with an enrollment of 650 is the smallest school to ever win the national title.

Current Cornell wrestling coach Mike Duroe says it was the only private school to ever win the NCAA championship, and the only school to win the NCAA and AAU championship in the same year. Duroe says the AAU championship at that time was almost more important that the NCAA championship.

At that tournament Cornell snapped Oklahoma State’s string of seven consecutive national titles. Duroe says it’s incredible when you look at the competitiveness of wrestling at the time. The championship was the crowning feat for then coach Paul Scott who also led Cornell to third place finishes in 1949 and 1950.

Duroe says Scott was the master at getting the most out of his wrestlers. He was also able to get some great wrestlers to transfer. A ceremony honoring the 60th anniversary of Cornell’s national championship will be held on Friday night and it is all part of a weekend in which 10 members will be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Duroe says at least a half dozen of the teammembers from the 1947 team will he on hand for the ceremony.

Wartburg football team takes long road trip to Germany

The Wartburg College football team is in Germany and will play a game this Saturday against the Franken Knights. Wartburg coach Eric Koehler says the week-long trip will have a number of benefits beyond football, including 10 extra practices that wouldn’t normally have.

Koehler also expects the trip to create some cohesiveness among the players are they participate in a new experience in a unique setting. Koehler says athletics and football are the vehicles that let them make the trip, but other than that, there’s not a lot of footbal stuff involved. He says it’s a chance to be immersed culturally in a different world.

Koehler says trips like these help build team chemistry. He says past experience shows the guys on the team that go on the trip are a much tighter knit group when they come back.

Man faces federal charges for fake Dubuque concert

Authorities in Iowa have filed federal charges against a Tennessee man for selling tickets to a fake concert that was supposed to be held in Dubuque. Thirty-one-year-old Charles Warthan of Chattanooga, Tennessee is charged with mail fraud.

Warthan and some others are accused of executing a fraudulent scheme last summer in which they conned over 400 rap and hip-hop fans out of more than $18,000 in cash for tickets to the a Dubuque concert that was never to be held.

Several businesses and organizations in Dubuque were contacted to promote the concert which was to feature several artists. A Dubuque radio station was contracted to advertise the event, which was going to be held at the Dubuque County Fairgrounds.

The advertised performers on the bill apparently knew nothing about the concert. Warthan was arrested when he returned to the music store which sold the tickets. At the time, Warthan was wearing a wig, hat and glasses.


Audio: Roger King report. :40 MP3

Iowan who escaped from Missouri jail caught in Des Moines

An Iowa man who escaped from jail in Missouri was caught again today in Des Moines. Polk County officials say Abdul Jabbar Jackson escaped from Midwest Security Housing in Pattonsburg, Missouri around 11:30 p.m. on May 25th.

Jackson had been sent to Missouri due to overcrowding at the Polk County Jail. He was free just less than one week as the Sheriff’s Department found him hiding in the Des Moines home of a relative, and arrested him again. Jackson was being held charges of drug possession with intent to deliver, third-degree burglary, and numerous other charges.

Jackson is now charged with escape. Chief Deputy Neil Schultz says Polk County now ships 395 of its 966 prisoners out to other states due to overcrowding. It’s the second escape recently, as two prisoners broke away while being transported to Missouri, but were later caught. Polk County is building a new jail that’s expected to be open in July of 2008. 

Iowans knocked out of spelling bee in written test

Iowa’s two competitors in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. were both eliminated today by the written exam. Fourteen year old Benjamin Fallon of Dyersville and 11 year old Taryn Shaw of Oskaloosa failed to make it past the second round.

Taryn, a fifth-grader at Eddyville Elementary, was one of the youngest kids in the field of 286 spellers. Taryn says she can go to the bee three more years, "I’m disappointed about this year, but I’m really excited about my next three years." Taryn says she was tripped-up by some very difficult words on the exam.

Taryn missed words like Bewusstseinslage (bay-VOOHST-seins-lahg-eh), scytale (SIT-ul-ee), noesis (NOH-ee-sis), and syssarcosis (sis-sar-KOH-sis), "I was four points away from getting into (the third round)". Taryn says she spent a lot of time preparing for the bee.

"After I won the state bee on March 3rd, I think I studied an hour-and-a-half or two hours a day," Taryn says, "and if I missed some time, I would study for three hours on the weekend." This year’s championship round of the National Spelling Bee will be carried live on ABC-TV from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday night. 

Romney ridicules Democrats’ health care reform plans

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney says Democrats who’re promising Americans "universal" health care coverage are on the wrong track.

According to Romney, it would be wrong to impose a "single answer" on the country. Romney says states should be allowed to experiment with health care reform. "The idea that every time there’s a challenge in America, the federal government should step in and put in place a one-size-fits-all program is in my opinion an idea that should not be pursued," Romney says.

Romney just finished a term as governor of Massachusetts and he signed a health care reform law that forces Massachusetts residents to get health insurance — just like car insurance is mandatory — and the state helps low income Massachusetts residents get insurance. That Massachusetts law also forces businesses to provide health care coverage to employees or pay a fine. "The objective — getting people insured — is something which I think Republicans and Democrats can agree on," Romney says. "The issue is are we going to have the government run health care and the insurance world or are we instead going to have the private market be the source upon which we rely for better care."

According to Romney, voters don’t like the status quo and Republicans have to offer some alternatives. "We have to agree that it’s a great idea to have everybody insured and to have primary care. The key is how are we going to get primary care and the Democrats’ path is always government-mandated, government-run, government insurance. The Republican path has to be how do get personal responsibility and the private market to work more effectively. That’s got to be the right answer for us," Romney says. "Government running something is almost by definition going to be inefficient, ineffective and expensive."

This winter Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards unveiled a plan to provide universal health care coverage. On Tuesday in Iowa City, Barack Obama outlined his proposal to deal with the issue. During a speech today in Des Moines, Romney ridiculed those plans as well as the health care reform effort Hillary Clinton led during her husband’s presidency. "They don’t understand. The path of Europe is not the way to go. Socialized medicine. Hillarycare. Obamacare. They don’t get it," Romney said. "The best way to make health care work is to make health care more like a market and with the dynamics of the private market, that’s the way to go."

Romney is making appearances in the Des Moines area today. He’ll be in Newton, Sioux City, Sioux Center and LeMars tomorrow.

Grassley says Zoellick a good choice for World Bank

Former Iowa Congressman Jim Leach was reportedly on the short list for the job, but President Bush has instead chosen former cabinet member Bob Zoellick as the new president of the World Bank. Zoellick is a former special trade representative to the Bush administration and was Deputy Secretary of State.

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he’s worked with Zoellick for years and he’s a good choice for the job. Grassley says, "I got to know him because trade was in the jurisdiction of the finance committee. He’s very knowledgeable on trade issues, very internationally-oriented and I think is extremely intelligent and capable."

Grassley is the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee and says he has "a lot of respect" for Zoellick. Grassley says: "I know he has a real understanding of what it takes to advance economic development in poor countries which is one of the World Bank’s main objectives."

Zoellick is replacing the embattled Paul Wolfowitz as head of the World Bank. Grassley says the World Bank is "in need of reform from top to bottom. We can’t accept business as usual. Paul Wolfowitz may have been railroaded out of his job, but his initiative must continue."