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IGHSAU Girls Basketball Rankings, Week of 2/4/26

Below are the updated high school girls basketball rankings from the IGHSAU. Area teams are highlighted in bold.

Class 1A

  School Record Last Week
1 Newell-Fonda 16-1 1
2 Algona Bishop Garrigan 17-2 2
3 Council Bluffs St. Albert 16-2 3
4 Springville 17-1 4
5 Lynnville-Sully 19-0 5
6 Dunkerton 17-2 6
7 Exira-EHK 17-1 7
8 Gladbrook-Reinbeck 16-3 8
9 Turkey Valley 17-2 11
10 GTRA 18-2 10
11 Saint Ansgar 16-3 12
12 Lake Mills 14-4 9
13 North Union 12-7 15
14 Coon Rapids-Bayard 14-5 NR
15 Kee 13-5 NR

Dropped Out: George-Little Rock (13), Montezuma (14)

Class 2A

  School Record Last Week
1 Rock Valley 17-1 1
2 Central Lyon 15-3 2
3 Hinton 14-1 3
4 Denver 17-1 4
5 Emmetsburg 17-2 5
6 Treynor 15-1 6
7 Riverside 17-2 7
8 Grundy Center 17-2 9
9 West Lyon 13-6 11
10 Iowa City Regina 15-4 12
11 Westwood 17-1 10
12 Maquoketa Valley 15-3 8
13 Mount Ayr 19-1 14
14 Cascade 14-4 15
15 Earlham 15-4 NR
       

Dropped Out: Nodaway Valley (13)

Class 3A

  School Record Last Week
1 Maquoketa 16-2 1
2 Des Moines Christian 17-2 2
3 Mount Vernon 17-2 3
4 Dubuque Wahlert Catholic 13-4 4
5 Williamsburg 14-5 5
6 PCM 18-1 7
7 Forest City 16-3 6
8 Spirit Lake 13-3 8
9 Mediapolis 20-0 9
10 Cherokee 14-3 10
11 Tipton 16-2 11
12 Mid-Prairie 14-5 13
13 Algona 16-4 15
14 Center Point-Urbana 11-8 14
15 Davenport Assumption 11-6 12

Dropped Out: None

Class 4A

  School Record Last Week
1 Clear Creek-Amana 16-0 1
2 Sioux City Bishop Heelan 17-0 2
3 Dallas Center-Grimes 16-2 4
4 Norwalk 15-2 3
5 Carlisle 17-0 5
6 Central DeWitt 17-1 6
7 Waverly-Shell Rock 15-1 7
8 North Polk 15-3 8
9 Solon 11-6 9
10 Cedar Rapids Xavier 9-8 10
11 Sioux Center 15-5 11
12 ADM 12-6 12
13 MOC-Floyd Valley 12-8 13
14 Independence 13-6 15
15 Clinton 11-8 14

Dropped Out: None

Class 5A

  School Record Last Week
1 Johnston 17-0 1
2 Waukee Northwest 13-4 2
3 Dowling Catholic 15-3 3
4 Ankeny 12-5 5
5 Cedar Rapids Washington 13-3 9
6 Cedar Falls 14-4 6
7 Iowa City Liberty 13-5 10
8 West Des Moines Valley 10-8 7
9 Iowa City High 15-4 4
10 Iowa City West 13-5 8
11 Ankeny Centennial 8-9 12
12 Sioux City East 13-3 13
13 Bettendorf 14-4 14
14 Cedar Rapids Kennedy 11-7 15
15 Cedar Rapids Prairie 8-9 NR

Dropped Out: Indianola (11)

Missing Child Found in Wapello County

WAPELLO COUNTY – A missing 13-year-old child was found in Wapello County this week.

According to the Wapello County Sheriff’s Office, the child was reported missing on February 3 at approximately 8:08pm. It was determined that the child had walked away from their residence approximately one hour prior to being reported missing. Family members were concerned as the child had not returned and could not be located.

Authorities initiated an immediate investigation and search. The Wapello County Sheriff’s Office requested assistance from the Wapello County Rural Fire Department, Wapello County Emergency Management, and the Ottumwa Police Department.

At around 10:30pm, a concerned citizen contacted the Sheriff’s Office to report seeing a younger child walking near Highway 34 around mile marker 191. Search personnel responded to the area and began searching immediately, though the child was not located at that time.

Then at approximately 10:50pm, a Deputy utilizing a thermal imaging device located the child in a nearby tree line. Contact was made with the child who explained he had got lost. The child was safely recovered and transported back to his residence by law enforcement.

The Wapello County Sheriff’s Office said that they would like to thank the concerned citizen who reported suspicious activity, and they reminded the public to contact authorities when something does not feel right.

The public is also reminded that the Sheriff’s Office offers an anonymous crime tip line for those who do not wish to provide their name. Tips are received through this service daily, and the Sheriff’s Office says it has proven to be instrumental.

Judge: Deal reached to protect identities of Epstein victims in documents release

NEW YORK (AP) — A deal was reached between lawyers for victims of Jeffrey Epstein and the Justice Department to protect the identities of nearly 100 women whose lives were allegedly harmed after the government began releasing millions of documents last week, a lawyer told a federal judge on Tuesday.

Judge Richard M. Berman in Manhattan cancelled a hearing scheduled for Wednesday after he was notified by Florida attorney Brittany Henderson that “extensive and constructive discussions” with the government had resulted in an agreement.

Henderson and attorney Brad Edwards had complained to Berman in a letter Sunday that “immediate judicial intervention” was needed after there were thousands of instances when the government had failed to redact names and other personally identifying information of women sexually abused by Epstein.

Among eight women whose comments were included in the lawyers’ Sunday letter, one said the records’ release was “life threatening” while another said she’d gotten death threats and she was forced to shut down her credit cards and banking accounts after their security was jeopardized.

The lawyers had requested that the Justice Department website be temporarily shut down and that an independent monitor be appointed to ensure no further errors occurred.

Henderson did not say what government lawyers said to ensure identities would be protected going forward or what the agreement consisted of.

“We trust that the deficiencies will be corrected expeditiously and in a manner that protects victims from further harm,” she wrote to the judge.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The judge wrote in an order cancelling the Wednesday public hearing that he was “pleased but not surprised that the parties were able to resolve the privacy issues.”

On Monday, U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton in Manhattan wrote in a letter filed in Manhattan federal court that errors blamed on “technical or human error” occurred on redactions during the document release.

He said the Justice Department had improved its protocols to protect victims and had taken down nearly all materials identified by victims or their lawyers, along with many more that the government had found on its own.

Mistakes in the largest release of Epstein documents yet included nude photos showing the faces of potential victims as well as names, email addresses and other identifying information that was either unredacted or not fully obscured.

Most of the materials that were released stemmed from sex trafficking probes of Epstein and his former girlfriend, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence after she was convicted in December 2021 at a New York trial.

Epstein took his life in a federal jail in New York in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

Iowa House committee votes to ban kratom, a plant-based stimulant

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

A bill that’s cleared a committee in the Iowa House would ban the sale of kratom, a plant-based stimulant that’s being sold in some Iowa gas stations and vape shops.

Kratom trees are native to southeast Asia and the crushed tree leaves are being used in teas or sold as a powder or pill, plus a new synthetic version has been developed. Seven states have banned the sale of kratom. Bill backers say the adverse effects of kratom are profound. During a senate subcommittee hearing, Katie Hall of Clive told lawmakers she’s witnessed someone get addicted to kratom. “They’re going to say it’s a botanical like coffee and it’s just not,” Hall said. “I have personal experience with a young adult under 21 getting access to this product because it was billed as safe, because it was billed as a mood enhancer.”

Jen Rathje, a spokesperson for the Iowa Department of Corrections, said kratom is being smuggled into Iowa prisons and represents an escalating threat to security and public safety. “The physiological and the behavioral effects that it has had on individuals is often times more severe and volatile than other synthetics, such as K2 that we’ve seen historically.” Paper soaked with K2 — sometimes called fake marijuana — has been used to send letters to inmates.

Seth Brown of the Iowa Medical Society told lawmakers doctors are increasingly concerned about widespread use of substances like kratom. “Currently there are no FDA approved prescription or over-the-counter drug products containing kratom,” Brown said, “so in our opinion until the FDA says it’s safe, keep it out of the marketplace.”

Sheldon Bradshaw, an attorney representing a group called Scientific Association for Botanical Education and Research, is urging Iowa legislators to reject the bill. He said the natural botanical version of kratom has been used in Southeast Asia “for centuries” and that form of kratom should remain available for sale in Iowa. “It’s consumed for its pain relieving properties,” he said, “and it’s currently used by 20 million Americans.”

The Trump Administration is considering a ban on the synthetic version of kratom, by classifying it as a controlled substance that’s highly addictive, like heroin. Bradshaw’s group supports a ban on synthetic kratom. “Synthetics absolutely should be banned,” he said. “They’re dangerous. They’re opioids. They have no business being in the marketplace.” Bradshaw also indicated his group would support the same kind of age restrictions for natural kratom that are used for alcohol and cigarettes.

Susie Sher, head of the Iowa Office of Drug Control Policy, said the synthetic version of kratom is relatively new and most of the kratom-related overdoses her office has tracked in Iowa are related to the natural version of kratom. “In Iowa, we’ve had 92 cases reported by our state medical examiner where mitragynine, that primary compound in the kratom plant, was a contributory factor in that death,” Sher said. “We’ve seen increases in Poison Control Center calls. They’ve got up over 120% just the past couple of years. Most of those are intentional abuse, misuse or withdrawal.”

And Sher told lawmakers Des Moines hospitals have recently notified state officials about newborns, “where the mom is saying, ‘I was using kratom because I thought it was safe…Babies are being born in opioid withdrawal because those compounds act in the brain the same way as other opioids do.”

A state ban on natural and synthetic kratom has passed the House Public Safety Committee on an 18-5 vote. A similar proposal is eligible for debate in a senate committee.

Mahaska Health Awarded $3.3 Million in Rural Health Transformation Funding

OSKALOOSA — Mahaska Health’s physician and nursing care teams have been awarded more than $3.3 million through the Iowa Rural Health Transformation Program to support advanced imaging technology and provider recruitment serving rural communities across southeastern Iowa. The funding is part of a statewide initiative announced by Governor Kim Reynolds and the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services. 

Iowa is the first state in the nation to receive federal funding through the Rural Health Transformation Program, made possible through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and administered through the Iowa Healthy Hometowns Project.

Mahaska Health was awarded three grant applications, supporting continued investment in advanced technology and workforce recruitment to strengthen access to care across the region. The awards include $3,122,894 for a new PET/CT system with cardiac imaging capability, along with $120,000 to support recruitment for a third OB/GYN physician and $120,000 to support recruitment of a third General Surgery Physician Assistant.

The PET/CT technology investment provides earlier detection, more precise diagnosis, and coordinated treatment planning for patients receiving cancer care. This advanced imaging technology provides clearer visualization of cancer tumors to support informed clinical decision-making across oncology services. Clinicians frequently use the PET/CT in oncology for detection and determination of cancer staging, evaluation of response to therapy, and assessment for recurrence. In cardiology, the technology assesses quantitative blood flow to assist in the diagnosis of myocardial ischemia.

Central to this multidisciplinary approach is Mahaska Health’s Cancer Tumor Board, the first tumor board established in Iowa by a critical access hospital. The tumor board medical team meets monthly and brings together specialists from around the state in surgical and medical oncology, general surgery, radiology, pathology, radiation oncology, genetics, along with care coordination, social work, nutritionists, and support services, to review cases and coordinate individualized treatment planning. This collaborative physician peer-to-peer model supports timely access to care and allows patients to benefit from informed clinical decision-making through coordinated, multidisciplinary expertise significantly reducing diagnosis to treatment times.

Workforce recruitment funding will support continued growth in obstetrics, fertility, surgical and gynecological services at Mahaska Health, expanding access to essential care for patients and families across the region amid ongoing labor and delivery unit closures across Iowa.

Iowa Department of Health and Human Services Rural Health Transformation Funding has also renewed Mahaska Health’s four Centers of Excellence financial support in Maternity Care, Cardiology, General Surgery, and Surgical & Medical Oncology. These recognitions acknowledge sustained performance and adherence to evidence-based standards and reinforce our physician and nurse led dedication to compassionate care from trusted health experts for patients and families across the region. We are grateful to Iowa HHS for their support of vital healthcare projects for Iowans.  

Clintons agree to testify in House Epstein investigation ahead of contempt of Congress vote

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton agreed late Monday to testify in a House investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but the Republican leading the probe said an agreement had not yet been finalized.

Rep. James Comer, the chair of the House Oversight Committee, continued to press for criminal contempt of Congress charges against both Clintons Monday evening for defying a congressional subpoena when attorneys for the Clintons emailed staff for the Oversight panel, saying the pair would accept Comer’s demands and “will appear for depositions on mutually agreeable dates.”

The attorneys requested that Comer, a Kentucky Republican, agree not to move forward with the contempt proceedings. Comer, however, said he was not immediately dropping the charges, which would carry the threat of a substantial fine and even incarceration if passed by the House and successfully prosecuted by the Department of Justice.

“We don’t have anything in writing,” Comer told reporters, adding that he was open to accepting the Clintons’ offer but “it depends on what they say.”

The last-minute negotiating came as Republican leaders were advancing the contempt resolution through the House Rules Committee — a final hurdle before it headed to the House floor for a vote. It was potentially a grave moment for Congress, the first time it could hold a former president in contempt and advance the threat of prison time.

As Comer and the Clintons negotiated over the terms of the depositions, the House Rules Committee postponed advancing the contempt of Congress resolutions.

Comer earlier Monday rejected an offer from attorneys for the Clintons to have Bill Clinton conduct a transcribed interview and Hillary Clinton submit a sworn declaration. He insisted that both Clintons sit for sworn depositions before the committee in order to fulfill the panel’s subpoenas.

A letter from the committee to attorneys for the Clintons indicated that they had offered for Bill Clinton to conduct a 4-hour transcribed interview on “matters related to the investigations and prosecutions of Jeffrey Epstein” and for Hillary Clinton to submit a sworn declaration.

“The Clintons do not get to dictate the terms of lawful subpoenas,” Comer said.

The former president and secretary of state had resisted the subpoenas for months after the Oversight panel issued subpoenas for their testimony in August as it opened an investigation into Epstein and his associates. Their attorneys had tried to argue against the validity of the subpoena.

However, as Comer threatened to begin contempt of Congress proceedings, the Clintons started negotiating towards a compromise. The Republican-controlled Oversight committee advanced criminal contempt of Congress charges last month. Nine of the committee’s 21 Democrats joined Republicans in support of the charges against Bill Clinton as they argued for full transparency in the Epstein investigation. Three Democrats also supported advancing the charges against Hillary Clinton.

Republicans push Bill Clinton’s involvement

Bill Clinton’s relationship with Epstein has reemerged as a focal point for Republicans amid the push for a reckoning over Epstein, who killed himself in 2019 in a New York jail cell as he faced sex trafficking charges.

Clinton, like a bevy of other high-powered men, had a well-documented relationship with Epstein in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He has not been accused of wrongdoing in his interactions with the late financier.

The Clintons have remained highly critical of Comer’s decision, saying he was bringing politics into the investigation while failing to hold the Trump administration accountable for delays in producing the Department of Justice’s case files on Epstein.

“They negotiated in good faith. You did not,” a spokesperson for the Clintons, Angel Ureña, said in response to Comer’s threats on Monday. “They told you under oath what they know, but you don’t care.”

Still, the prospect of a vote raised the potential for Congress to use one of its most severe punishments against a former president for the first time. Historically, Congress has given deference to former presidents. None has ever been forced to testify before lawmakers, although a few have voluntarily done so.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said earlier Monday that his caucus would have a discussion on the contempt resolutions later in the week but remained noncommittal on whipping votes against them.

Jeffries said he was a “hard no” on contempt and accused Comer of focusing on political retribution rather than investigating the delayed release of case files. Democrats also say the Justice Department has not yet released all the material it has on the late financier.

“They don’t want a serious interview, they want a charade,” Jeffries said.

Iowa gubernatorial candidates organize for 2026 Caucuses

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

The 2026 Iowa Caucuses are history. Tonight’s gatherings gave activists from both of Iowa’s major parties a chance to talk about their party platforms and hear from candidates.

Randy Feenstra of Hull, one of the Republicans who’s running for governor, spoke to several precincts in the Des Moines area — including 16 precincts meeting together in a West Des Moines school’s cafeteria. Feenstra told reporters “hundreds” of volunteers spoke on his behalf at other caucuses around the state. “This is the time the Republican Party gets together, talks about policy and talks about how we are going to make sure that we keep this state red,” Feenstra said. “…This is the grassroots. These are the people who door knock, put out the signs and everything like that.”

Feenstra’s Republican rivals organized for Caucus Night, too. According to social media posts, Zach Lahn of Belle Plaine spoke at three different precinct sites in Scott County tonight. Adam Steen’s campaign had over 450 people sign-up up online to speak at their local precinct gatherings. “It’s a moment we’ve been looking forward to,” Steen said in a post on social media. “We’ve been working really hard to get to this point.”

Rob Sand, a Democrat who’s running for governor, spoke to voters in his own precinct in Des Moines. Some counties had all precincts meet in one location. For example, Republicans in Adams County met at the Corning Community Building, while Adams County Democrats met at the Corning Public Library.

Oskaloosa City Council Approves New Council Pledge

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa City Council held a regular meeting last night and approved a new city council pledge. City staff said that the pledge was crafted using feedback from the city council’s brainstorming activity, and the plan is to put the pledge on TV screens in the city hall council chambers before each council meeting. The pledge features a list of behaviors that members of the council agree to follow, including addressing issues civilly, demonstrating professionalism and decorum, upholding ethical standards, accountability, and transparency, acting in the best interest of the entire community while setting aside personal bias or individual interests, supporting, encouraging, and valuing city employees, and more.

In other business, the council approved:

  • A resolution that amended the agreement between Strand Associates and the city to provide professional services for the Wastewater Facility Plan
  • The 1st reading of an ordinance amending a chapter of the city code relating to the sewage system
  • The 2nd reading of an ordinance that eliminates licensing requirements for bicycles within city limits
  • Payment of $39,977.38 to Terracon Consultants, INC for services completed for the Natatorium at the Early Childhood and Recreation Center

The next regular meeting for the Oskaloosa City Council is scheduled for February 16.

Top Justice Department official plays down chance for charges arising from Epstein files revelations

WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official played down the possibility of additional criminal charges arising from the Jeffrey Epstein files, saying Sunday that the existence of “horrible photographs” and troubling email correspondence does not “allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody.”

Department officials said over the summer that a review of Epstein-related records did not establish a basis for new criminal investigations, and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said that position remains unchanged even as a massive document dump since Friday has focused fresh attention on Epstein’s links to powerful individuals around the world and revived questions about what, if any, knowledge the wealthy financier’s associates had about his crimes.

“There’s a lot of correspondence. There’s a lot of emails. There’s a lot of photographs. There’s a lot of horrible photographs that appear to be taken by Mr. Epstein or people around him,” Blanche said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “But that doesn’t allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody.”

He said victims of Epstein’s sex abuse “want to be made whole,” but that “doesn’t mean we can just create evidence or that we can just kind of come up with a case that isn’t there.”

President Donald Trump’s Justice Department said Friday that it would be releasing more than 3 million pages of documents and more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images under a law intended to reveal most of the material it collected during long-running investigations into Epstein.

The fallout from the release of the files has been swift.

In the United Kingdom, Lord Peter Mandelson announced his resignation from the governing Labour Party on Sunday following further revelations about his relationship with Epstein. He said he was stepping aside to avoid causing “further embarrassment,” even as he denied allegations he had received payments from Epstein two decades ago.

A top official in Slovakia, meanwhile, left his position after photos and emails revealed he had met with Epstein in the years after Epstein was released from jail. And British Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggested that longtime Epstein friend Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, should tell U.S. investigators whatever he knows about Epstein’s activities.

The revelations continue

The files posted to the department’s website included documents involving Epstein’s friendship with Mountbatten-Windsor, along with Epstein’s email correspondence with onetime Trump adviser Steve Bannon, New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch and other prominent contacts with people in political, business and philanthropic circles, such as billionaires Bill Gates and Elon Musk.

The Epstein saga has long fueled public fascination in part because of his past friendships with Trump and former President Bill Clinton. Both men have said they had no knowledge Epstein was abusing underage girls.

Among the records was a spreadsheet created last August that summarized calls made to the FBI’s National Threat Operation Center or to a hotline set up by prosecutors from people claiming to have some knowledge of wrongdoing by Trump. That document included a range of uncorroborated stories involving different celebrities, and somewhat fantastical scenarios, occasionally with notations indicating what follow-up, if any, was done by agents.

Blanche said Sunday that there were a “ton of people” named in the files besides Trump and that the FBI had fielded “hundreds of calls” about prominent individuals where the allegations were “quickly determined to not be credible.”

Some of Epstein’s personal email correspondence contained candid discussions with others about his penchant for paying women for sex, even after he served jail time for soliciting an underage prostitute. Epstein killed himself in a New York jail in August 2019, a month after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.

In one 2013 email, a person whose name was blacked out wrote to Epstein about his choice “to surround yourself with these young women in a capacity that bleeds — perhaps, somewhat arbitrarily — from the professional into the personal and back.”

“Though these women are young, they are not too young to know that they are making a very particular choice in taking on this role with you,” the person wrote. “Especially in the aftermath of your trial which, after all, was public and could be — indeed was — interpreted as a powerful man taking advantage of powerless young women, instead of the other way around.”

In a 2009 email, not long after Epstein had finished serving jail time for his Florida sex crime, another woman, whose name was redacted, excoriated him for breaking a promise that they would spend time alone together and try to conceive a baby.

“I find myself having to question every agreement we have made (no prostitutes staying in the house, in our bed, movies, naps, two weeks Alone, baby…),” She wrote. “Your last minute suggestion to spend THIS weekend with prostitutes is just too much for me to handle. I can’t live like this anymore.”

‘This review is over’

Blanche said in a separate appearance on ABC’s “This Week” that though there are a “small number of documents” the Justice Department was waiting for a judge’s approval before it can release, when it comes to the department’s own scouring of documents, “this review is over.”

“We reviewed over six million pieces of paper, thousands of videos, tens of thousands of images,” Blanche said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that he believed the Justice Department was complying with the law requiring disclosure of the files.

But Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., a co-sponsor of the law, said he did not believe the department had fully complied. He said survivors were upset some of their names had inadvertently come out without redactions.

Blanche said each time the department has learned a victim’s name was not properly redacted, it has moved quickly to fix the problem and that those mistakes account for a tiny fraction of the overall materials.

William Penn Continues Home Dominance in Win Over Park

OSKALOOSA — The William Penn men’s basketball team kept its momentum rolling Saturday, securing a 105–88 Heart of America Athletic Conference victory over Park inside Penn Gym.

The Statesmen (18-5, 12-3 Heart) traded punches early with the Pirates (9-13, 6-8 Heart) but never allowed Park to seize control of the contest. Holding a slim 39–36 advantage late in the first half, William Penn closed the period on a 10–6 run to carry a 49–42 lead into the break.

William Penn shot 50 percent from the floor and 44.4 percent from three-point range in the opening half, while Park connected at a 52.9 percent clip overall and 40 percent from beyond the arc. Daivion Boleware (Jr., Jackson, Mich., Psychology) paced the Statesmen with 12 first-half points.

The Navy and Gold wasted little time pulling away in the second half, opening with a decisive 14–4 run before settling back into back-and-forth play. With just over eight minutes remaining, WPU delivered the knockout blow, using a 16–3 surge to stretch its lead to 98–75. Javion Belle-McCrary (Sr., Reform, Ala., Sports Management) buried a three-pointer to secure the 100th point of the night, triggering 25-cent hot dogs at Wednesday’s home game against Grand View. Although Park trimmed the margin in the closing minutes, the outcome was firmly in hand.

For the game, William Penn shot an efficient 57.4 percent from the field and 44.4 percent from long range, while holding Park to 45.5 percent shooting overall and 36.4 percent from deep.

Boleware led all scorers with 23 points, followed closely by Malik Larane (Jr., Palmdale, Calif., Sports Management) with 22. Both were highly efficient, as Boleware went 9-for-13 from the floor and Larane finished 8-for-10. Foday Sheriff (Jr., Upper Darby, Pa., Business Management) recorded his 12th double-double of the season with 18 points and 10 rebounds, while Belle-McCrary added 14 points and eight boards.

The Statesmen held a 40–33 edge on the glass, though Park grabbed an 11–9 advantage in offensive rebounds. William Penn converted those opportunities into an 18–15 edge in second-chance points. WPU committed 10 turnovers, which Park turned into 12 points, while the Statesmen forced seven Pirate miscues for six points. Foul trouble loomed throughout, as William Penn was whistled for 23 fouls compared to Park’s 13.

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