w/ Ric Hanson
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Across Oceans Across Time, Podcasts
Jim Field tells the Christmas story of Luke 1-2.
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An elderly Council Bluffs man remained in critical condition Monday, following a fire in his home, Sunday morning. According to the Omaha World-Herald, 90-year old Robert A. Kissel, Sr., was taken to Creighton University Medical Center in critical condition following the blaze which took place at the home located at 28 Bennett Avenue, at around 2:30-a.m. Sunday. Kissel was transferred from Creighton to the St. Elizabeth Regional Medical Center in Lincoln, NE, for further treatment of third-degree burns, smoke inhalation and other, possible injuries.
Fire investigators say a smoke detector saved the lives of Kissel, Sr., and his 59-year old daughter, Robin Ann Krause. Krause told firefighters that she tried to reach her father but couldn’t because the staircase was on fire. She called 911 and crawled out a basement window. Fire crews found Kissel, Sr. in his bedroom.
HELEN R. PIGG, 90, a long-time Atlantic resident, died Mon., Dec. 24th, at the Heritage House in Atlantic. Funeral services for HELEN PIGG will be held 10:30-a.m. Sat., Dec. 29th, at the United Church of Christ in Atlantic. Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 8am-until 5-pm until the day of service. Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com
Burial will be in the Atlantic Cemetery.
HELEN PIGG is survived by:
Her husband – Lyle Pigg.
Her children – Ronald Pigg (& Betty Delavan), of Omaha; Nancy Pigg-Rhiner & husband Ralph, of Cedar Rapids; Coni (John) D’Alessandro, of Orland Park, IL; Roger (Susan) Pigg, of Bettendorf; Rodney (LaVonna) Pigg, of Sun City, AZ; Robin (Misty) Pigg, of Mooresville, NC, and Janet Adams (& Brian Sothman), of Atlantic.
Her sister – Kathryn Jensen-Illian & husband, Rev. Donald Illian, of Hudson.
Her brother – Edwin (Sondra) Jensen, of Atlantic.
16 grandchildren, 3 step-grandchildren.
The (podcast) forecast for the KJAN listening area from Freese-Notis, and weather data for Atlantic from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson…
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The song says some kids just want two front teeth for Christmas, but others are getting a whole new face. Children across the region who are the targets of bullies are going to great lengths to make the taunting stop, including plastic surgery. Dr. Richard Bruneteasu is a plastic surgeon in Omaha/Council Bluffs who says more children from Iowa, Nebraska and beyond are seeking help from his office because they’re bullied.
“When people stand out a bit, they become targets of abuse from time to time,” Dr. Bruneteasu says. “We see kids who come in, maybe they have prominent ears and people make fun of them because of that. We see kids with nasal deformities, they may have an ethnic nose which results in people picking on them.” He says there’s a big difference between wanting surgery and needing it.
“You have to look at each case on an individual basis,” Bruneteasu says. “If it’s just vanity, then maybe it’s something that you can wait until you’re older and a bit more mature, but if it’s something that’s just totally disrupting your life, then I think it’s a reasonable thing to consider.” Bruneteasu says more children are having expensive procedures done to improve their self-image.
“We get the occasional kid who has a pretty significant nasal deformity and is very bothered by it and maybe has been subject to teasing by his peers or maybe physical bullying,” he says. “In those kinds of situations, we consider everybody on a case-by-case basis and in some parts of the country, like New York City, it’s very common. They do a lot of teenage rhinoplasties.”
Bruneteasu says the most common procedure performed on a child is to fix prominent ears and that’s usually done at age five.
(Radio Iowa)