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Grassley praises Trump’s new nominee for A.G.

News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Senator Chuck Grassley says President-elect Trump’s second pick to serve as attorney general is well-regarded and experienced. Grassley will be chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2025 and will oversee the confirmation hearing for former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi. Grassley says senators will learn more about her in the coming weeks, but Grassley says he worked with Bondi on criminal justice reform during Trump’s first term.

Former Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz withdrew his nomination to be Trump’s attorney general last Thursday, and Trump announced he’d nominate Bondi for the job.

Hunger adds to holiday concerns for people with budget issues

News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The holiday season can be a stressful time of year for people struggling with their monthly budgets. Food Bank of Iowa C-E-O Michelle Book says that of them don’t have enough food to eat. “As I go out and visit our pantry partners, what I’m hearing from them is that the increase in the lines for food pantry service is made up of two demographics; one, it’s young families with children who are working, or two, it’s folks living on fixed income, people living on Social Security and disability,” she says.

Book says every month since COVID-19 aid ended in 2022, food pantries across the state have seen more and more traffic. “Iowa is among three states that saw the largest increase, 44 percent, in the number of people facing food insecurity according to Feeding America’s latest “Map the Meal Gap” report,” Book says. With Thanksgiving just a few days away and December holidays around the corner, she worries about Iowans faced with making some tough financial choices. “If they’re struggling to make ends meet, save your financial resources to pay your heating bill or to cover the cost of transportation and find food assistance near you. People can come to foodbankofIowa.org, and click the “find food” button,” Book says.

Iowa is served by six Feeding America food banks – with 40% of food going to children.

UI study: Showing gratitude may help you live longer

News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Many Iowans will go around the table at Thanksgiving and list the things for which they’re thankful, but a University of Iowa study finds simply expressing gratitude can help to improve heart health. Dr. Harleah Buck is director of the U-I’s Csomay Center for Gerontological Excellence. Buck says research shows gratitude can help to reduce inflammation, blood pressure, and heart rate, and it’s an odd coincidence we offer thanks during this particular holiday. “The foods that we eat at Thanksgiving tend -not- to be good for our heart. They’re heavy in the fats and things that we know are not good,” Buck says, “however, expressing gratitude around the table, I like to think ameliorates some of that.”

Research finds gratitude may help to boost a person’s ability to care for themselves, whether that’s taking their medication or getting more sleep. Buck and her team reviewed more than a dozen research studies involving the impact of gratitude on more than four-thousand people. “One of the studies that we looked at actually showed that expressing gratitude results in people feeling more confident that what they do makes a difference with their heart,” Buck says, “so it really is the gift that keeps on giving.” Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death globally, killing more people in recent years than even COVID-19. Buck, who’s also a professor in the U-I College of Nursing, says it’s fascinating something like gratitude can have such a far-reaching psychological and physiological impact.

“In the scientific literature, gratitude is defined as an emotional response to other people’s kindness, but it can also be a mood that focuses on what we cherish in life,” Buck says, “but the important part is it can become a trait. It can be something, a practice, that you can actually make part of your life.” How do we put more gratitude in our lives? Buck says there are all sorts of ways, and one of the easiest may be writing in a journal — on your laptop, in a notebook, or even on your phone. “Start out by writing what you’re thankful for each and every day. That can help you to track new things and remind you of the good things in your life,” Buck says. “At Thanksgiving around the table, we can share our gratitude. We can express it directly to people, and then we can listen to theirs, which also helps to lift our mood.”

The website for the Csomay Center says its mission is to advance innovations in research, education, and practice to promote optimal aging and quality of life in all older adults and their caregivers.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the KJAN listening area: Monday, 11/25/24

Weather

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing. High near 36. N/NW winds 10-20 mph, with gusts to around 30 mph.
Tonight: Clear, with a low around 20.
Tomorrow: Increasing clouds. High near 43. S/SW winds 10-20 mph.
Tom. Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27.
Wednesday: A slight chance of snow/rain-mixed precipitation. High near 41.
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 16.
Thanksgiving Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 31.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 60. Our Low this morning was 30. Last year on this date, the High was 30 and the Low was 19. The All-time Record High for Nov. 25th in Atlantic, was 71 in 1960. The Record Low was -6 in 1991. Sunrise today: 7:20. Sunset: 4:53.

Iowa Senate Democrats choose first term lawmaker as new leader

News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Democrats in the Iowa Senate have selected their next leader. Janice Weiner of Iowa City will be the Minority Leader in the Iowa Senate when the legislature starts January 13th. Weiner is a retired U-S State Department foreign service officer who moved back to her hometown of Iowa City in 2015, served on the city council and was elected to the Iowa Senate in 2022. Democrats will hold just 15 of the 50 seats in the Iowa Senate in January, their lowest point since 1970.

Weiner says Senate Democrats will work to hold those in power accountable and fight to ensure opportunity for all Iowans. Weiner is the third leader for Senate Democrats in less than two years. In mid-2023, Senate Democrats ousted Senator Zach Wahls of Coralville after he hired new staff to work for Senate Democrats and fired two longtime employees.

Iowa Senate Minority Leader-elect Janice Weiner (D-Iowa City) (official photo)

Senator Pam Jochum of Dubuque has been Minority Leader in the state senate since then. She did not seek reelection and is retiring about 32 years as a state legislator.

ISU research suggests earlier planting date for soybeans

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa State University researchers say an earlier planting date for soybeans in the spring takes better advantage of nitrogen left behind from corn production. I-S-U agronomy professor Michael Castellano says it would help reduce nitrous oxide emissions.

“Forty percent of the emissions from a two-year sequence — or rotation we might call it — of corn and soybeans comes during the soybean part of the crop rotation that doesn’t receive nitrogen fertilizer,” Castellano says. “…This was a big surprise and really required rethinking of approaches to reduce nitrous oxide emissions from crop production.” Crop rotation – planting corn in a field one year and soybeans the following year — already reduces emissions by 50 percent.

Castellano says most research has focused on reducing the amount of nitrogen applied to help corn grow, which also reduces farm chemical costs. Castellano says this new research finds that once nitrogen for corn production is reduced to the optimum level, the main way to cut nitrous oxide emissions is to move up the planting date of soybeans.

“It takes better advantage of the nitrogen being produced by the microbes in the soil, so the plants use it and less of it is lost to the atmosphere as nitrous oxide,” Castellano says. “Simple, practical, scalable solutions to help reduce nitrous oxide emissions from crop production that we may not often hear about.” Nitrous oxide is the primary source of greenhouse gas emissions from crop production. Nitrous oxide is the byproduct of microbial activity in soil that is essential for growing grain.

Castellano says farmers tend to focus on getting corn in the ground early because it’s a more expensive crop to grow, but moving up the soybean planting date is likely to result in higher soybean yields because the plants have a longer growing season. “Springs are getting warmer in Iowa and another real challenge, though, is that the spring are getting wetter, too,” Castellano says, “and so it’s going to require farmers to think about opportunities to manage their soil and their cropping systems.” Castello and another I-S-U researcher worked on this project, which dramatically increased the amount of time plants are growing on farmland.

Cover crops were planted after the beans were harvested. “And also got reductions in nitrous oxide as well as nitrate leaching,” he says, “so water quality benefits as well.”

The study was published in the November issue of a scientific journal called “Nature Sustainability.”

Drake beats Vanderbilt 81-70 to win the Charleston Classic

Sports

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Drake raced away from a three point halftime lead and beat Vanderbilt 81-70 to win the Charleston Classic. Cam Manyawu  had 18 points and 11 rebounds. Bennett Stirtz had 16 points and 11 assists in being named the tournament MVP.

Thar’s Drake coach Ben McCollum who felt it was a great opportunity when thre Bulldogs were invited to the tournament last summer.

After completely rebuilding the Bulldog roster McCollum has led Drake to a 6-0 start.

Iowa researcher: ‘Hardening’ schools doesn’t stop classroom violence

News

November 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Ames, Iowa) – Researchers say increasing the police presence in schools isn’t the best way to address classroom violence. One expert in Iowa says educators would do better to treat the underlying causes. Fifty years ago, just 1% of the nation’s public schools had police officers on campus. That number has jumped to more than 40% now.

The 1999 Columbine High School shooting in Colorado prompted officials to harden schools with more police presence, thinking it would keep students safer. Iowa State University Associate Dean for the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice Monic Behnken said academic research shows that hasn’t worked. “What the literature is clear about for the past 20 years is actually the thing that you want to do is, you want to soften your schools,” said Behnken. “You want to increase access to therapists, counselors, social workers, community liaisons.”

Behnken said these professionals can address the emotional and social stressors among kids before they’d commit crimes. She added that although school shootings have increased and get huge media attention when they happen, they are still statistically rare. Behnken said data show that School Resource Officers (SROs), have next to no impact on stopping violence, bullying, or even schoolyard fights – but they do have a big impact in other areas.

Female police office standing in classroom showing transmitter device to group of kids on career day at school

“The research shows that SROs are good at policing,” said Behnken. “So, they are fantastic in a school that has a drug problem. They are fantastic at a school that has a gang problem.”

Behnken said otherwise, more officers on school campuses can do more harm than good – because school staff may learn to rely on SROs to solve discipline problems that administrators could handle without having to involve the police.

(Iowa News Service)

No. 5 Iowa State men play No. 4 Auburn Monday night in Maui

Sports

November 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The fifth ranked Iowa State men open the Maui Invitational Monday night against fourth ranked Auburn. The Cyclones are 3-0. Auburn is 4-0, including a road victory at Houston.

That’s Cyclone coach T.J. Otzelberger who says Auburn will provide a difficult test.

The tournament has a loaded field that includes North Carolina, Michigan State and two-time defending national champion UConn.

Iowa State up to 17th in AP Poll

Sports

November 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State has climbed to 17th in the latest AP football poll. The Cyclones close the regular season at home on Saturday night against Kansas State and needs a victory to play in the Big-12 Championship game.

That’s Iowa State coach Matt Campbell who says the Cyclones never wavered in posting a late touchdown in a 31-28 win at Utah.

The Cyclones are 9-2 and control their own destiny, once again.