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Should Canada Be a State? 10 States? 13 States?

Canada is made up of 10 provinces and 3 territories.

I don't imagine Rs would be willing to admit Canada as 10 or 13 states. Most would probably be blue states - you know, the whole universal health care thing, among lefty other issues - since that would hand the Senate to the Dems.

Political_map_of_Canada.svg



Questions about the end of the first half

I know it didn't matter, but I wasn't sure about a couple of things at the end of the first half tonight. First, when Wisky got the ball with about 37-38 sec left, the game clock ran for maybe 6 or 7 sec, before they started the shot clock. Wisky didn't touch the ball, but should the game clock run if the shot clock isn't?

Second, when Iowa committed a foul, it took away the chance for the last possession. Still, they had several fouls to give with only maybe 12-13 sec left. Wisky went on to get a 3-pt play, but Iowa could have prevented anything except a desperation heave, if we used the fouls. This is not the first time Fran has failed to use available fouls. Can anyone explain why you would not use the fouls to keep an opponent from having a decent scoring opportunity, or is this just lousy coaching?

6 B1G Teams in Top 25; 4 More Receiving Votes


#13 Illinois
#15 Oregon
#16 Michigan State
#20 Purdue
#22 UCLA
#24 Michigan

Receiving Votes:

Nebraska (62)
Wisconsin (31)
Maryland (7)
Indiana (6)

Nebraska is knocking on the door.

No rank/no votes:
Ohio State
Iowa
Minnesota
Washington
USC
Northwestern
Penn State
Rutgers

NE Iowa & SW Wisconsin folks

I used to spend a lot of time up in that area as a kid in the 80s/90s. Haven't been there in awhile, but I have some projects up there for the next several months. Strawberry Point, Elkader, Postville, Monona, Waukon, PDC and Platteville. And several rural areas. I'm looking forward to it. I love that area. Need some ideas where to go after work for dinner & beer. I love small town bars.
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Big Ten Players of the Week (1/6)

Player of the Week
Braden Smith, Purdue
G – Jr. – 6-0 – Westfield, Ind. – Westfield


  • Averaged 25.3 points, 9.7 assists, 5.3 rebounds, and 2.0 steals while shooting 27-of-55 from the field and 14-of-32 from three-point range with a 4.14 assist / turnover ratio as No. 20 Purdue went 3-0
  • Recorded a pair of points-assists double-doubles (34-12 vs. Toledo; 20-10 vs. Minnesota) and narrowly missed a third with 22 points, seven assists against Northwestern.
  • Claims first Player of the Week honor
  • Last Purdue Player of the Week: Zach Edey (March 11, 2024)


Co-Freshman of the Week
Kasparas Jakucionis, Illinois
G – 6-6 – Vilnius, Lithuania – Barcelona FC


  • Averaged a team-best 16.0 points and 5.3 assists and along with 5.0 rebounds and 1.0 steals across three wins for No. 13 Illinois
  • Recorded 16 second-half points with game-high six assists along with six rebounds in a 109-77 victory at then-No. 9 Oregon, as the Illini recorded the largest road win over a top-10 team in college basketball history.
  • Earns his second Freshman of the Week award
  • Last Illinois Freshman of the Week: Kasparas Jakucionis (Dec. 16, 2024)


Ace Bailey, Rutgers
G – 6-10 – Chattanooga, Tenn. – McEachern


  • Averaged 31.5 points on 57.4 percent shooting from the field, 8.0 rebounds, and 2.0 blocked shots, as Rutgers split a pair of games
  • Tied the program freshman scoring record with 39 points with eight rebounds, four blocks and one steal on 16-of-29 shooting in an 84-74 loss to Indiana
  • Collects his first Freshman of the Week award
  • Last Rutgers Freshman of the Week: Dylan Harper (Dec. 16, 2024)
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Men's Top 25 Polls & NET (1/6)

AP Top 25 (1/6)
1. Tennessee (45) (14-0)
2. Auburn (15) (13-1)
3. Iowa State (12-1)
4. Duke (12-2)
5. Alabama (12-2)
6. Kentucky (12-2)
7. Marquette (13-2)
8. Florida (13-1)
9. Connecticut (12-3)
10. Texas A&M (12-2)
11. Kansas (10-3)
12. Houston (10-3)
13. Illinois (11-3)
14. Mississippi State (13-1)
15. Oregon (13-2)
16. Michigan State (12-2)

17. Oklahoma (13-1)
18. Gonzaga (12-4)
19. Memphis (12-3)
20. Purdue (11-4)
21. West Virginia (11-2)
22. UCLA (11-3)
23. Mississippi (12-2)
24. Michigan (11-3)
25. Utah State (14-1)

Others Receiving Votes
Pittsburgh, Nebraska, Arkansas, Baylor, Wisconsin, St. John's, San Diego State, Cincinnati, Clemson, Maryland, Texas Tech, St. Bonaventure, Indiana, Georgia, Missouri, Arizona, Xavier, Dayton, Vanderbilt, Georgetown

========================

USA Today Coaches Poll (1/6)
1. Tennessee (21) (14-0)
2. Auburn (10) (13-1)
3. Iowa State (12-1)
4. Duke (12-2)
5. Alabama (12-2)
6. Marquette (13-2)
7. Kentucky (12-2)
8. Florida (13-1)
9. Texas A&M (12-2)
10. Connecticut (12-3)
11. Houston (10-3)
12. Kansas (10-3)
13. Mississippi State (13-1)
14. Michigan State (12-2)
15. Illinois (11-3)

16. Oklahoma (13-1)
17. Oregon (13-2)
18. Gonzaga (12-4)
19. Purdue (11-4)
20. Memphis (12-3)
21. UCLA (11-3)
22. Mississippi (12-2)
23. West Virginia (11-2)
24. Michigan (11-3)
25. Utah State (14-1)

Others Receiving Votes
Baylor, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, San Diego State, St. John's, Clemson, Maryland, Georgia, Nebraska, Arizona, Wisconsin, Vanderbilt, Indiana, Texas Tech, UC-San Diego, Arkansas
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Anchors Away: TV-News Veterans Exit Ahead of Ratings Challenges, Digital Change in 2025

Anchors Away: TV-News Veterans Exit Ahead of Ratings Challenges, Digital Change in 2025​


For TV-news outlets, 2025 is shaping up to be a year of out with the old and in with the….who?

With the economics of newsgathering less certain as info-hounds move to streaming and social media for their early facts, traditional TV-news venues have been parting ways with veteran anchors and correspondents. Whether the decisions are mutual or unilateral, amicable or adverse, they will leave places such as NBC News, MSNBC, Fox News, CBS News and CNN with fewer of some of their most recognizable faces at a point in the business cycle when viewership tends to narrow.

Hoda Kotb is taking a final lap this week at NBC's "Today," after deciding to leave the show and spend more time with her young children. Andrea Mitchell will this month sign off from the MSNBC program she has anchored since 2008, opting to work her reporting roles more heavily. Norah O'Donnell will leave "CBS Evening News" at about the same time and take on a new special correspondent role. Jeff Glor, a central part of CBS News' Saturday-morning program, left the network in September amid layoffs. Before the end of 2024, CNN bid farewell to both Chris Wallace and Alisyn Camerota. Fox News' Neil Cavuto, one of the few anchors whose time at the Fox Corp. owned outlet dates to its 1996 launch, said in late December he was leaving.

All these exits take place amid a not-so-gradual shrinking of the TV-news sector. CBS News, ABC News, NBC News, CNN and CNBC all shed staffers last year, and the fiscal terrain is likely to be just as challenging in months ahead - if not more so. News audiences typically dwindle after a presidential election cycle.

Already, 2025 projections from market-research firm Kagan, part of S&P Global Intelligence, call for declines in advertising and subscriptions at all three mainstay cable-news outlets. Ad sales at Fox News Channel are seen dipping to approximately $1.01 billion from $1.03 billion in 2024; to nearly $568.9 million at MSNBC from $639.6 million last year; and to about $499.1 million at CNN from $563.9 million. Each of the three is also projected to lose about 3 million subscribers over the next 12 months, according to the Kagan data.

Last year was supposed to be a watermark in the business, with interest in the 2024 presidential election fueling ratings, which in turn generate new ad dollars. Indeed, primetime ratings surged for all three cable-news outlets over the year, with the number of viewers between 25 and 54 - the demographic coveted most by advertisers - up 40% at Fox News,17% at CNN and 9% at MSNBC.

Of course, that was then.

Since the election, CNN and MSNBC have suffered notable ratings declines. According to Nielsen, MSNBC lost 65% of its primetime audience in the 25-to-54 demographic between the election and the end of 2024. CNN lost 57%. Fox News in December captured about 71% of the overall audience still turning in to any of the three outlets. Executives and producers at CNN and MSNBC remain optimistic that audiences will return following the second inauguration of President Donald Trump, and some hold out hope to attract more viewers via digital platforms.

The future, however, is foggy. Many of the corporations that support the aforementioned news divisions face existential dilemmas. Paramount Global, parent of CBS News, is about to be acquired by Skydance Media, which has vowed to cut another $1.5 billion in costs off the company's balance sheet - following $500 million in cuts that have already taken place. Warner Bros. Discovery, parent of CNN, is restructuring itself so that its cable networks are housed in a separate division from its production studios and streaming platforms. Many on Wall Street see the maneuver as one that could set up its TV networks for potential sale. What's more, CNN this week goes on trial in a defamation suit that has a plaintiff seeking $1 billion after a 2021 report on the network questioned the activities of a security consultant aiding people who wanted to escape Afghanistan.

The news assets of NBCUniversal are navigating through an uncertain time as parent Comcast spins off the bulk of its cable networks, separating MSNBC and CNBC from NBC News. Disney's commitment to ABC News has come under scrutiny after the company agreed to pay a settlement of $15 million to Donald Trump's presidential library after anchor George Stephanopoulos asserted incorrectly in March on air that Trump had been found liable in a court case for raping writer E. Jean Carroll.

Fox Corp., which sold off many of its cable and entertainment assets to Disney in 2019, has fared better than many of its competitors in recent years, but it faces challenges as well. The company's controlling Murdoch family is at odds about how Fox and sister News Corp. will be governed should founder Rupert Murdoch, 93, die. And its Fox News unit is expected to face a defamation lawsuit as soon as this year levied by voting-technology firm Smartmatic that seeks $2 billion for debunked claims aired on the network about that company's role in rigging the 2020 presidential election, which was conducted legally and without interference.

Perhaps those pressures clamp down on any desire to make startling hires to replace those who are departing. At CBS, John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois, veterans themselves, will helm a retooled "Evening News" that may closely resemble a local broadcast. NBC News will next week elevate Craig Melvin, a regular morning presence at "Today," to replace Kotb during the show's first two hours. Fox News, MSNBC and CNN are widely expected to rely at present on current staffers to fill vacancies made by the exits of Wallace, Mitchell and Cavuto, according to people familiar with each situation.

Veterans, with their entrenched ways of working and their higher-than-median salaries, seem like an obvious element for cost-cutting. In some cases, they have become so familiar over the years that viewers take them for granted, and they no longer generate the best ratings in their time periods. Little wonder, then, that so many have announced departures in recent weeks.

And yet, these well-known anchors still have connections to an audience. Some of them still have enough of a recognition factor to develop their own communities. Wallace, Cavuto and Camerota, have, for example, suggested that they have new chapters to explore. None of them will capture, most likely, the large simultaneous crowds that tune into their previous employers. But they won't have to in order to be successful.

They need only generate enough ad and subscription revenue to feed a small online venture - not so hard to accomplish in an era of YouTube channels and Substack newsletters. Former colleagues like Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly and Don Lemon have already dipped their toes into such waters.

TV-news mainstays have little to fear from any single departure. Stack up enough of them over time, however, and they may be looking at damage by a thousand cuts. Some of those well-worn anchors, as things turn out, may have a long way to go before their careers are truly at an end.

2025 IOWA Baseball Schedule includes Oregon State. Will Open Season at South Florida (Feb 14-16)

November 6, 2024 Update

Summary of what's been announced so far:

Feb 14-16 at South Florida
Feb 18 vs Loras
Feb 21-23 at Stetson Tournament in DeLand, Florida (vs Notre Dame, Stetson & UMBC)
Feb 27-Mar 1 vs Washington State (Cleburne, TX)
March 7-9 TBA
March 14-16 vs Michigan St
March 21-23 vs Ohio St
March 28-30 TBA
April 4-6 at Northwestern
April 11-13 vs Nebraska
Apr 18-20 at Michigan
April 25-27 TBA
May 2-4 at Washington
May 9-11 vs Oregon State (Des Moines)
May 15-17 vs/at Oregon (site TBD)

...............................................

ORIGINAL POST:

Oregon State finished 45-16 last season. They advanced to the 16 team Super Regional, falling to Kentucky 2 games to 0.

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EPA fines Iowa 80 Truckstop, 'World's Largest,' for failing to properly plan for fuel spill

owa 80, the self-proclaimed "World's Largest Truckstop," has several restaurants, a truck repair garage, a laundromat, a movie theater, a pet wash service, a chiropractor and even a museum of trucking.

What it and sister truck stop Joplin 80 in Missouri didn't have, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, was an adequate plan for addressing a potential fuel spill.

As a result, owner Iowa 80 Group Inc. has agreed to pay a combined $390,784 fine to resolve alleged violations of the federal Clean Water Act, the EPA announced Monday.

A proposed consent order says the Iowa 80 Truckstop, on Interstate 80 in Walcott near Davenport, and Joplin 44 in southwest Missouri failed to adequately develop and implement plans that would prevent and control spills as required by the Clean Water Act for facilities that store 1,320 gallons or greater of oil products in above-ground storage tanks.




Travelers can't miss the Iowa 80 Truckstop, known to be the World's Largest Truckstop, as they pass through Walcott.


The truck stops both have above-ground storage of more than 1 million gallons of diesel fuel, gasoline, lubricants and oil, according to the EPA. The agency plans to fine Iowa 80 Group $204,142 for violations at the Iowa business and $186,642 at the Missouri operation.
The EPA said a spill in Iowa could threaten Mud Creek, which eventually flows to the Cedar and Mississippi rivers. And in Missouri, a spill could contaminate Rock Branch Creek, Spring River and eventually, the Grand River, also known as the lower section of the Neosho River.

Council Bluffs power plant to host University of Iowa carbon capture study

Council Bluffs will be home to a new $11 million study being conducted by the University of Iowa researchers.
The university is launching a study on different ways to store carbon dioxide emissions, according to a news release.
MidAmerican Energy agreed to partner with the university to use the company's Walter Scott, Jr. Energy Center south of Council Bluffs as the study's location.
The center is a coal-fired power plant in Council Bluffs on top of the Midcontinent Rift System. The formation holds about a 6-mile-thick area of basalt, which researchers are examining to see whether it could store carbon dioxide.

To do this, the project will drill about 5,000 feet into the site to gather data and rock samples which will then be tested for carbon dioxide injection simulations.






The Walter Scott Jr. Energy Center, located at 7215 Navajo St. in Council Bluffs, is a coal power plant operated by MidAmerican Energy.
SCOTT STEWART, THE NONPAREIL

“It's these predictive models that really kind of help us identify if this is even going to work in this location or not,” said Ryan Clark, a geologist at the University of Iowa.

The study will be a two-year project for $11.3 million, of which 20% will be funded by MidAmerican Energy. The U.S. Department of Energy will contribute $9 million toward the research.
“We are participating and contributing to the study because we view this as an important project that will help researchers determine whether carbon storage in the basalt formation deep below our facility is viable,” said Geoff Greenwood, media relations manager at MidAmerican Energy.
The injection of carbon dioxide under the Earth’s surface is not a new concept but is new to Iowa. Clark pointed out that many states around Iowa are already researching and moving toward this method.


“It has a really huge air quality benefit, not only, you know, kind of regionally and big picture, but it would have a really significant effect on the improving air quality there, locally,” Clark said.
Clark said that the project is not only conducted solely by the University of Iowa. While the school is the lead, it has partnered with a consulting firm, a drilling company and the Pacific Northwest National Lab.

“I want to make sure that folks know that it's, it's definitely a pretty good-sized project team that's got a lot of experience and should help us succeed in this,” Clark said.

Mazda shatters North American sales records with no EVs in the lineup....

Sales for Mazda North American Operations rose 17% last year boosting the company to a new record for the number of vehicles sold.

A total of 424,382 vehicles were sold in 2024 compared with 363,354 the previous year, the company said Friday.

Mazda had its best December ever last month with 40,201 vehicles sold, including 35,540 trucks and 4,661 cars. Sales rose 1.7% in December despite there being one less selling day in the month compared with the prior year.

The company also had its best month ever for sales of the CX-30, CX-50 and CX-90.

Mazda's Canada division posted a 23% rise in sales last year, and a 2.4% increase in December. Sales for the company's Mexico unit climbed 31% in 2024 and increased 19% in December.

2024 Minnesota SF Talks Iowa Offer, NBA Africa Connections

Sat down and spoke with Isaiah Johnson-Arigu, who has continued ascend in recruiting circles, about his Iowa offer, connections to basketball in Africa, and more.

Plans to release his top 5 soon.

STORY:
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10 Hawks on Women's team named to Dean’s List







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!
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