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Sioux City food bank gets donation that’s simply bee-utiful

News

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Folks are positively buzzing at the Food Bank of Siouxland in Sioux City after getting a sweet donation. Food Bank executive director Jacob Wanderscheid says they received more than 6,000 bottles of honey from the Sioux Honey Association, the makers of Sue Bee Honey.

“This is the second donation that we’ve received in as many years, and the biggest thing for us and our partners is to get that product that is shelf-stable and it’s very nutritious,” Wanderscheid says. “This product will last a very long time for the people that receive it.”

Aimee Sandman, of the Sioux Honey Association, says it’s important for them to give back to the communities in and around where their employees, beekeepers, and families live. “It feels so great to be able to impact the people in need in the communities that we live in here, and lucky for us, it’s a shelf stable thing, so it’s not something that someone will just eat once. It’s something that they can continue to get that nourishment from,” Sandman says. “I think honey is a great thing to be donated, and it has a great taste. It’s very healthy for you, and it can last a long time.”

Three pallets holding a total of 6,480 12-ounces bottles of Sue Bee Honey were brought to the Food Bank on Thursday for distribution to partner agencies in the 11-county service area.

ROGER BENTON, 67, of Greenfield (Svcs. 11/16/24)

Obituaries

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ROGER BENTON, 67, of Greenfield, died Friday, November 8, 2024, at his home.  Funeral services for ROGER BENTON will be held 11-a.m. Saturday, Nov. 16th, at the Greenfield United Methodist Church. Lamb Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.
Visitation will be held at the funeral home on Friday, Nov.15th, from 2-until 7-p.m., with the family greeting friends from 5-until 7-p.m.
Burial is in the Greenfield Cemetery following the services.  A luncheon at the church will follow the burial.
ROGER BENTON is survived by:
His wife – Mary Benton, of Greenfield.
His sons – Aaron (Ann) Benton; Adam Benton; Ray (Ashley) Young,  and Brian (Amanda) Young.
His daughters – Crystal (Joe) Wolfe,  and Amanda (Hardie) Symns.
His brother – Rory (Laura) Benton.
His sister – Rita Ebel.
20 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild; other relatives and friends.
Online condolences may be left to the family at www.lambfuneralhomes.com.

No. 17 Iowa State plays Kansas in Arrowhead

Sports

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The 17th ranked Iowa State Cyclones will be looking to bounce back in Arrowhead Stadium tomorrow (Saturday), when they take on Kansas. The Cyclones are 7-1 after suffering a home loss to Texas Tech.

That’s ISU coach Matt Campbell. After starting the season nationally ranked Kansas has struggled to a 2-6 record. Campbell says the Jayhawks have a talented offense led by quarterback Jalon Daniels.

Campbell says the Jayhawks are better than their 2-6 record.

Kick-off is at 2:30-p.m.

DNR continuing gray fox study

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa D-N-R is in its second year of a pilot study on the gray fox. D-N-R wildlife biologist Vince Evelsizer says the animal’s numbers have been dropping.
“The reason for doing pilot gray fox research is because we’re concerned about their population decline statewide, and that is occurring in other Midwest states too,” he says. Evelsizer says they are asking trappers who catch a gray fox in a live trap to give the D-N-R a call. “We are hoping to catch live foxes and put collars on them for tracking purposes,” Evelsizer says.

He says they want to find out where the gray foxes are living and hunting. “The objective with that is to better understand the habitat use within the state and causes for their what’s causes of mortality, what’s leading to their decline population level wise,” Evelsizer says. Evelsizer says there is a 400-dollar reward provided by the Iowa Wildlife Federation for anyone who catches a gray fox that can be used for this study. He says the fox will be released on the site where it was caught.

Small Gray Fox

The D-N-R is also working with Iowa State University on a pilot project this winter in northeast Iowa, using cameras to track gray foxes to determine what areas these species occupy. He says other regions may be surveyed in the future, depending on how this study goes.

Page County Attorney’s report, 11/8/24

News

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Page County Attorney, Carl M. Sonksen, reports the following activities in the Iowa District Court for Page County for the week of October 28, 2024. The Honorable Eric J. Nelson, District Court Judge of the Fourth Judicial District presided. All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

  • Heather Trena James, age 50, appeared by counsel and pled guilty to Possession of a Controlled Substance. The Defendant was sentenced to 5 days in jail and ordered to pay a fine of $840, court costs, surcharges and court-appointed attorney fees.
  • Christian Lyle Lauritsen, age 28, New Market, Iowa, appeared by counsel and entered a plea of guilty to Operating While Intoxicated-1st Offense. The Defendant was sentenced to 2 days in jail. The Defendant was ordered to pay a fine of $1,250, court costs and surcharges.
  • Dustin Perry, age 26, Shenandoah, Iowa, appeared by counsel and pled guilty to Counts I- Child Endangerment, Count II- Child Endangerment, Count III- Child Endangerment and Count IV- Child Endangerment. The Defendant was sentenced to 180 days in jail on each count, suspended. The Defendant was placed on probation for 2 years. The Defendant was ordered to pay court costs, surcharges and court-appointed attorney fees.
  • David Lowell Steeve, age 71, Clarinda, Iowa, appeared by counsel and entered a plea of guilty to Operating While Intoxicated-1st Offense. Defendant was granted a deferred judgment for 9 months and was placed on probation for 9 months. The Defendant was ordered to pay a civil penalty of $1,250, court costs and surcharges.
  • Edward Paul Swanson, age 63, Braddyville, Iowa appeared by counsel and pled guilty to Possession of a Controlled Substance-2nd Offense. The Defendant was sentenced to 2 years in prison, suspended. The Defendant was placed on probation for 2 years. The Defendant was ordered to pay a fine of $855, surcharges and attorney fees.
  • Kegan Lee Morris, age 35, Clarinda, Iowa, appeared with counsel for sentencing after previously being found guilty by a jury of Count I- Assault Causing Bodily Injury on Persons Engaged in Certain Occupations and Count II- Assault Causing Bodily Injury on Persons Engaged in Certain Occupations. On Count I- the Defendant was sentenced to 2 years in prison and ordered to pay a fine of $855, suspended. On Count II- the Defendant was sentenced to 1 year in prison, to run consecutive to Count I and ordered to pay a fine of $430. The Defendant was ordered to pay court costs and court-appointed attorney fees.
  • Terry Jay Warner, age 59, Clarinda, Iowa, appeared by counsel and entered a plea of guilty to Reckless Use of Fire/Explosives/Destructive Devices. The Defendant was sentenced to 30 days in jail, suspended. Defendant was placed on probation for 9 months and was ordered to pay a fine of $430. The Defendant was ordered to pay victim restitution, court costs and surcharges.
  • Kelli Jo Wiederholt, age 35, Braddyville, Iowa, appeared by counsel and entered a plea of guilty to Criminal Mischief – Fourth Degree. The Defendant was sentenced to 30 days in jail, suspended and was placed on probation for 9 months. The Defendant was ordered to pay court costs.

UNI-Dome modernization plan includes wider seats

News

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The first phase of a plan to modernize the 48-year-old UNI-Dome in Cedar Falls was completed last month and the board that governs the University of Northern Iowa has approved moving ahead with the second phase of the project.

“A project that will significantly transform the look and experience of one of the most iconic buildings in the state,” Michael Hager, University of Northern Iowa senior vice president for finance and operations, told the Iowa Board of Regents Property and Facilities Committee this week.

The UNI-Dome hosts the high school football championships and hosts UNI football games. The dome has been updated, with a new Teflon-coated fiberglass roof. “Everything is tight and dry now,” Hager said, “and we can move on to Phase II.”

Upgrades to the UNI-Dome will include wider seats. (UNI photo)

UNI officials say the $16 million dollar for the second phase of the project is focused on the fan experience. “Phase II will be one of the more visible phases, one of the more exciting phases. It will include restroom additions and for the record, we are adding two women’s restrooms for every male restroom,” Hager said. “…I have personal experience living with one of those women that will be very pleased to see more restrooms in that facility.”

The aisles in seating areas will be widened and handrails will be added. Seating capacity will drop from about 16,000 to around 12,000 for sporting events Hager said that’s due to wider aisles and the removal of some seating to expand loge boxes, plus each seat will be wider.

“All the seats are currently 18 inches in there. They will move up to at least 20 inches. Apparently over the last few decades people have gotten a little wider,” Hager said. “And then in the loge boxes, the seats will be closer to 22 or 24 inches then as well.”

The upgrades to seating will have a positive financial impact, according to Hager. “By having a lack of premium seating, we’ve missed out on a revenue stream there and then just having the outdated facilities we haven’t sold as many tickets as what we think we will sell,” Hager said. “We’re more likely to have events that are closer to capacity and that just makes for a more robust event than one that has a lot of empty seats.”

There were 25,000 people at the Fleetwood Mac concert in the UNI-Dome back in 1989, but Hager said given changes in the music industry the UNI-Dome is likely not a big enough arena to attract major acts.

SE Iowa man arrested on 1,000+ child porn charges

News

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A southeast Iowa man faces more than one-thousand charges after investigators allegedly found a large amount of child pornography in his possession.

Hunter Bresch (Wapello County Jail photo)

Court records say 22-year-old Hunter Bresch of Ottumwa submitted a tip to the FBI in November 2022 that someone sent him child sexual abuse materials over the internet.

A subsequent investigation unveiled a file share account allegedly owned by Bresch that contained 16,000 files of different children involved in sexual acts.

Bresch later told investigators he tipped off the FBI because another user did not send him the illicit materials he paid for.

He’s been charged with 1,000 counts of possession of depictions of a minor engaged in a sex act and one count of sexual exploitation of a minor.

Bresch is currently in the Wapello County Jail where his bond has been set at $100,000 dollars.

BULLDOGS START SEASON 2-0 AFTER SECOND HALF ONSLAUGHT

Sports

November 8th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

DES MOINES, Iowa – Drake women’s basketball moved to 2-0 for the second straight season after running away from Saint Louis in the second half. The Bulldogs used a 58-point effort over the final 20 minutes of action to secure a 95-70 victory over the defending WNIT champion Billikens.

 

The night started with a pair of player recognitions as Anna Miller and Katie Dinnebier each received commemorative basketballs for reaching some historic milestones. Miller was honored for eclipsing the 1,000-point threshold in last year’s regular season finale and for setting the program’s career blocked shots record in Monday’s season opener. Dinnebier received an ovation of her own for becoming the seventh player to record 500+ career assists.

 

The team also celebrated last year’s MVC Championship with ceremonies pregame to reveal the title banner and postgame to distribute the Bulldogs’ championship rings.

 

  • Drake has won nine of its last 10 home openers dating back to the 2015-16 campaign, including its last four straight.
  • This also marked Drake’s fourth straight non-conference home victory.
  • This was also the second straight year Drake has started the season with a 2-0 record.
  • Drake shot 49.3 percent from the floor (33-67), including a sizzling 62.5 percent (20-32) in the second half.
  • The Bulldogs hit 66.7 percent (12-18) in the third quarter.
  • There were four ties and six lead changes in the game before Anna Miller’s three-point play with 35 seconds left gave the Bulldogs a 37-35 lead they never relinquished.
  • The Bulldogs made a season high 13 three-point baskets, tripling their effort in the season opener at NDSU.
  • Drake collected 25 assists.
  • 10 of the 13 players who suited up for Drake scored points.
  • Drake scored 13 points off 11 Saint Louis turnovers.
  • Drake outrebounded Saint Louis 43-27.
  • Senior forward Anna Miller enjoyed her seventh career 20+ scoring game with a team-high 24 points (one shy of a career high) while grabbing a game high nine rebounds.
  • Miller made a career high three treys.
  • Miller also scored all 10 of her first half points in the final 3:16 of the second quarter on two three-pointers and four free throws.
  • Junior guard Ava Hawthorne added a career high 19 points (previous best was just nine) while making a career high four triples.
  • Grad forward Courtney Becker and senior guard Ashley Iiams added 12 points apiece.
  • Senior guard Katie Dinnebier, who was named to the John R. Wooden Award Preseason Top 50 Watch List prior to the game, played a solid floor game with nine assists and a team high three steals.
  • Drake, winning its fifth straight game against the Billikens, improved its series record to 6-2 against Saint Louis.
  • The Bulldogs own a 4-0 record against Saint Louis when playing in the Knapp Center.
  • Drake travels to No. 21 ranked Creighton on Monday before returning home No. 17 to host Iowa.

Results from the State Volleyball Championships

Sports

November 8th, 2024 by Christian Adams

1A

Ankeny Christian – 3 vs BCLUW – 0

2A

Denver – 3 vs Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont – 0

3A

Mount Vernon 25-25-25, vs Western Christian 17-17-18

4A

Bishop Heelan – 3 vs Pella – 3

5A

Pleasant Valley – 3 vs Waukee Northwest – 0

ARDELL EIBEN, 94, of Atlantic (Mass of Christian Burial 11/13/24)

Obituaries

November 8th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ARDELL EIBEN, 94, of Atlantic, died Thursday, November 7, 2024 at Heritage House in Atlantic. A Mass of Christian Burial for ARDELL EIBEN will be held 11-a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 13th, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Anita. Schmidt Family Funeral Home of Atlantic has the arrangements.

The family will greet friends one hour prior to Mass on Wednesday at the church.

A luncheon will be held in the church fellowship hall following Mass.

Burial will be at Calvary Cemetery in Omaha, Nebraska at a later date.

Memorial contributions may be directed to the family for future designation and can be sent in care of Schmidt Family Funeral Home, P.O. Box 523 Atlantic, Iowa 50022.