February 9, 2012

ISU coach says bringing back suspended player is for the best

Iowa State coach Greg McDermott says he needed to do what was best for the team. A day after Lucca Staiger quit the team to return to Germany McDermott brought freshman guard Chris Colvin back from suspension and he played ten minutes in ISU’s 78-71 loss at Texas Tech on Wednesday night.

Colvin had been suspended until February less than two weeks ago. McDermott says it was a very difficult decision for him, but given the choices that he had he says it was the only decision. He says the other 7 players that played were unanimous in saying bring him back. one

McDermott says it was unfair to the other seven scholarship players to leave them so shorthanded. He says it’s not their fault that there were injuries, and players quit.

The Cyclones are 1-2 in the Big 12 and 12-6 overall. They host Kansas this weekend. McDermott says he told the team they have enough talent to have a successful season, but they have to clean some things up.

Iowa played well but fell short against Michigan State

The Iowa Hawkeyes played well but a late rally fell short in a 70-63 loss at sixth ranked Michigan State. Iowa led early but the Spartans dominated the waning moments of the opening half and led by 12 at the break. They built that lead to 19 points in the second half before Iowa roared back.

Iowa coach Todd Lickliter says they made two or three mistakes and the Spartans capitalized on them. Lickliter says his team did a good job on the boards. He says a lot of it is positioning and buying into what they need to do.

Iowa visits Indiana on Sunday and the start time for that game has been moved back an hour to allow Hoosier fans to watch most of the AFC title game between the Indianapolis Colts and the New York Jets before going to the basketball game. Lickliter says he wanted to leave the game where it was.

Iowa is 1-5 in the Big Ten and 7-12 overall.

Former UNI player doing well with Vikings

Former U.N.I. standout Benny Sapp has stepped up for the Minnesota Vikings this season and with one more victory will be playing in the Super Bowl. Sapp became a starting corner for the Vikings nearly midway through the season when Antoine Walker was injured and has responded with a career high 43 tackles.

Viking’s defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier says Sapp and the entire secondary will need to play well against Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints in the NFC championship game. Frzaier says it’s hard to say how they will attack them.

The Vikings held the Dallas Cowboys top just three points last week and Sapp says Frazier deserves much of the credit. He says Frazier called a good game and they won and now they have to get ready for the next game.

Sapp says the defense faces a big challenge against the Saints, as he says everyone knows about Drew Breeze. He says they will have to match the Saints intensity.

Supreme Court ruling could impact Iowa’s campaign finance law

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling today could invalidate an Iowa law that restricts corporate campaign contributions. Iowa House Democratic Leader Kevin McCarthy of Des Moines says he’s getting advice on how Iowa can continue to restrict corporate giving.

“We will move quickly to do anything we can to fix the situation,” McCarthy said. “It’s very troubling and concerning.” For 63 years federal law has banned spending corporate dollars on behalf of candidates for congress and the presidency. The court threw out that law on a 5 to 4 vote. McCarthy says Iowa law bans corporate contributions at any time, as well as lobbyist and PAC contributions to state lawmakers during the legislative session.

“We’re analyzing right now the effect of the decision on that prohibition and also the corporate ban, which appears to potentially be lifted right now,” McCarthy said. The Senate’s top Democrat, Michael Gronstal of Council Bluffs, says he “fears for the survival of democracy.”

House Republican leader Kraig Paulsen of Hiawatha says disclosure of campaign giving is the important thing, and the ruling doesn’t threaten disclosure laws. The Supreme Court ruling could mean the end of corporate campaign bans in 23 other states besides Iowa.

Campaign finance experts say Iowa may still be able to limit the size of corporate campaign contributions, or continue to restrict gifts during the legislative session.

Harkin says Massachusetts vote carries no national message on health care

Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, a Democrat, who has issued several guarantees that a health care bill would get passed and to the president, says the upset in the Massachusetts Senate race holds no national significance for the issue. Republican Scott Brown upset Democrat Martha Coakley, giving Republicans the ability to block the health care bill.

Harkin says former Democrat House Speaker Tip O’Neil once said all elections are local and he doesn’t know that they are reading anything nationally into the result. “I see one of the Republican leaders said today after the vote in Massachusetts ‘the American people have spoken’. Well, I mean this was a Massachusetts election, it wasn’t a landslide, he did win convincingly, but it wasn’t a landslide, so I don’t think you can say the American people have spoken,” Harkin says.

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Grinnell president says college aid formula is flawed

The president of Grinnell College says the formula used to determine “need” for federal student aid is flawed and places a bigger burden on middle-income families. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, is designed to calculate how much individual families can be expect to pay toward their child’s education. Grinnell College President Russell Osgood says that formula has been beneficial to those in the low-income brackets.

“The problem is most people whose kids go to college are in the middle of the income heap,” Osgood said. “And FAFSA has been less than proportionately increasing the computation of need for that group.” The expected family contributions of those in the middle-income brackets, Osgood claims, are “far out of alignment” with the rising cost of living.

“We would love the federal government to take a new look at the need brackets on the FAFSA to more equitably award aid to people in the lower middle class and middle class,” Osgood said. Federal officials recently simplified the FAFSA form, so Osgood is hoping they’ll agree to the changes he’s requesting.

“We know they’re interested in the form because they recently revised it to make it simpler, so this seemed like the moment to talk about this publicly,” Osgood told Radio Iowa. A federal mandate requires the U.S. Department of Education to update the FAFSA formula on an annual basis. Osgood plans to step down as president of Grinnell College in July. He became the 12th president of the private college in August of 1998.

Ice storm leaves thousands without power

Ice on a power line.

Ice on a power line.

Thousands of Iowans are still without power today after Wednesday’s ice storm coated much of the state.

MidAmerican Energy spokesman Mark Reinders says things got bad early in the evening. He says the peak rate saw roughly 31,000 customers without power early Wednesday around six o’clock.

Reinders says Carroll County had some of the worst problems. Reinders says the rural parts of Carroll County are among the hardest hit and another trouble spot is near Audubon in Ida County.

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