Here’s the forecast for Atlantic, and the KJAN listening area…
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Here’s the forecast for Atlantic, and the KJAN listening area…
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (806.0KB)
Subscribe: RSS
PEARL ALVINA PETERSON, 85, of Bella Vista, AR (formerly of Avoca), died Mon., Feb. 13th, at the Circle of Life Hospice in Springdale, AR. Funeral services for PEARL PETERSON will be held 10:30-a.m. Mon., Feb. 20th, at the Trinity Lutheran Church in Avoca. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.
Burial will be in the Graceland Cemetery at Avoca.
PEARL PETERSON is survived by:
Her husband – Rev. Harold Peterson, of Bella Vista, AR.
Her son – Stephen Peterson, of Arvada, CO.
Her daughters – Julia Boulton, of Colorado Springs, CO.; Joy (Britt) Rendon, of Bella Vista, AR; & Lisa (Andrew) Willett, of Avoca.
and 11 grandchildren.
ARLENE WEGNER, 82, of Manning, died Tue., Feb. 14th, at the Exira Care Center. Funeral services for ARLENE WEGNER will be held 10:30-a.m. Tue., Feb. 21st, at Zion Lutheran Church in Manning. Ohde Funeral Home in Manning has the arrangements.
Friends may call at the funeral home after 4-pm Mon., Feb. 20th.
Burial will be in the Manning Cemetery.
ARLENE WEGNER is survived by:
Her husband – Duane Wegner, of Manning.
Her children – Gail Richardson, of Audubon; Dean Wegner, of Phoenix, AZ; Roger Wegner, of Westside; & Karen Odendahl, of Carroll.
Her sisters – Rita Lustig, of Huntington Beach, CA; Esther Zehrung, Betty Scott, & JoAnne Rutherford, all from CO; Lorraine Wolfe, of CA; & Darlene Warnke, of Carroll.
10 grandchildren & 12 great-grandchildren.
ELINOR “BABE” KROGH, 92, of Exira, died Sunday, Feb. 12th, at Iowa Methodist Medical Center, in Des Moines. Funeral services for ELINOR “BABE” KROGH will be held 10:30-a.m. Sat., Feb. 18th, at the Exira Lutheran Church. Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.
Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family visitation begins 5:30-pm Fri., Feb. 17th.
Burial will be in the Exira Cemetery.
ELINOR KROGH is survived by:
Her son – Richard (Sue) Krogh, of Plano, TX.
Her daughter – Sandra (Rich) (Giz) Kloppenburg, of Ankeny.
4 grandchildren, 8 great-grandchildren, her sister-in-law Charlotte Krogh, of Exira, other relatives and friends.
CORWIN KEITH KITELINGER, 76, of Exira, died Mon., Feb. 13th, at the Exira Care Center. CORWIN KITELINGER has donated his body to the University of Osteopathic Medicine & Health Sciences in Des Moines, in an effort to help study Alzheimer’s disease, from which he suffered. A Celebration of Life Memorial service will be held at a later date. Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.
CORWIN KITELINGER is survived by:
His wife – Sherry, of Exira.
His son – Keith (Andrea) Kitelinger, of Kansas City, MO.
His daughters – Dawn (John) Hahn, of Cameron, MO; & Lana Kitelinger, of Guthrie Center.
His sisters – Colleen (Lyle) Jeppesen, of Anita, & Suzanne (Bob) Behrends, of The Village, FL.
5 grandchildren, his brother-in-law, other relatives, and friends.
Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The last time China’s vice president visited Iowa, he slept in a bedroom with green shag carpeting and Star Trek character cutouts on the walls. But Xi Jinping (shee jeen ping) must have fond memories of his 1985 stay. He is scheduled to return to Muscatine today to reminisce and have tea and champagne.
DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — Dubuque officials say a blocked line caused a sanitary sewer to overflow yesterday, sending untreated wastewater onto the ground near a manhole in an undeveloped area on the city’s south side. The line was cleared but the Iowa Department of Natural Resources says residents, their children and their pets should stay clear of the area for 48 hours.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A judge has approved the IRS’s seizure of more than $90,000 from an Iowa gun show company’s bank. Investigators say owners of Manchester-based R.K. Gun Shows deposited more than $1 million in accounts in increments below $10,000 in recent years. IRS agents say banks are required to disclose deposits and withdrawals greater than $10,000.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — About 260,000 Iowa families may soon see a tax cut. The Iowa Senate approved a bill on Tuesday that would increase the state’s earned income tax credit and decrease taxes for families who make less than $45,000 a year. The House is expected to approve the measure.
315 AM CST WED FEB 15 2012 NWS/Des Moines
TODAY…CLOUDY. AREAS OF FOG THROUGH MID MORNING. A 50 PERCENT CHANCE OF RAIN IN THE AFTERNOON. HIGH AROUND 40. SOUTHEAST WIND NEAR 5 MPH SHIFTING TO THE NORTHEAST IN THE AFTERNOON.
TONIGHT…MOSTLY CLOUDY IN THE EVENING THEN BECOMING PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE LOWER 20S. NORTHWEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.
THURSDAY…SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 40S. WEST WIND AROUND 10 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT…MOSTLY CLEAR. LOW IN THE MID 20S. SOUTHWEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.
FRIDAY…SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 40S. WEST WIND 10 TO 15 MPH.
FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY…PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE LOWER 20S. HIGH IN THE UPPER 30S.
SUNDAY NIGHT…MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SNOW. LOW IN THE UPPER 20S.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Promoting farm subsidies was once a no-brainer for rural members of Congress seeking re-election. This year, it’s a bit trickier. As lawmakers wade cautiously into writing the next five-year farm bill, agribusiness and farmers’ lobbyists are preparing for the worst. With little appetite for spending on Capitol Hill, subsidy cuts in the billions of dollars are on the table as rural voters also cry out for less government. It doesn’t help that farm business is booming. “What’s different this time is we have very strong commodity prices,” says Roger Johnson, president of the National Farmers Union. “And that is generally not a really good time to write a farm bill because everyone who is projecting the future says, ‘Oh, this is going to last forever.'”
Farm bills in 2002 and 2008 also were driven by rural election-year politics. Lawmakers, particularly in the Senate, curried favor with farm interests in their states by slipping their priorities into the bills. Taking care of everyone’s needs ensured passage and subsidies remained almost untouched. But this year, many of farmers’ traditional allies are just as concerned, if not more concerned, about voters’ calls for less spending. Sen. Pat Roberts, senior Republican on the Senate Agriculture Committee and a veteran of many farm bills, says his constituents aren’t asking about farm subsidies as much as they used to. He says he gets more questions about government regulations that farmers see as burdensome. Traditional farm issues and the impact of farm policy have gotten somewhat lost. “I don’t think most people who run for office realize there is still a significant farm vote,” he says.
Nowhere was that more clear than in Iowa, where presidential candidates have wooed farm country for decades. Several of the contenders in the Iowa caucuses actually spoke out against corn-based ethanol, a position unthinkable in the past. Farm-state members have already said they will support eliminating some subsidies. Last fall, the heads of the House and Senate agriculture committees — Republican Rep. Frank Lucas of Oklahoma and Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan — negotiated a farm bill that cut $23 billion from agriculture and nutrition programs, hoping to piggyback it on the budget-cutting supercommittee’s bill. When the supercommittee fizzled, so did their hopes for a speedy farm bill.
This year, they are starting over with more input from other agriculture committee members. But direct payments, a type of subsidy paid without regard to crop price or crop yield and costing taxpayers about $5 billion a year, are still a top target as the Senate Agriculture Committee opens hearings on the legislation Wednesday. That was cemented by President Barack Obama’s call to eliminate them in his budget proposal Monday, which put forth a $32 billion cut in farm programs. That’s a strong contrast from 2008, when Obama supported the last farm bill while he was campaigning for president. That legislation was far more generous — even raising some subsidies — than the bill Congress is weighing this year.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Class 2A Region 1 – Regional Quarterfinal
Cherokee, Washington 69, Orange City Unity Christian 36
Hull Western Christian 70, Sibley-Ocheyedan 39
Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 73, East Sac County 45
Sioux Rapids Sioux Central 56, Sheldon 53
Class 2A Region 7 – Regional Quarterfinal
Des Moines Christian 59, Alleman North Polk 48
IKM-Manning 41, Audubon 16
Leon Central Decatur 56, Greenfield Nodaway Valley 42
Panora Panorama 56, Osceola Clarke 34
Class 2A Region 8 – Regional Quarterfinal
Lawton-Bronson 73, Hinton 54
Missouri Valley 43, Council Bluffs St. Albert 35
OA-BCIG 65, Moville Woodbury Central 49
Shenandoah 31, Neola Tri-Center 29
Class 1A Region 2 – Regional Quarterfinal
Correctionville River Valley 53, Charter Oak-Ute 36
Hawarden West Sioux 52, Remsen Saint Mary’s 41
Newell-Fonda 88, Glidden-Ralston 24
Southeast Webster-Grand, Burnside 51, Blairsburg NE Hamilton
Class 1A Region 7 – Regional Quarterfinal
Bedford 57, Afton East Union 37
Coon Rapids-Bayard 36, Exira-EHK 35 (CR-B: Katie Dentlinger 19pts. Exira-EHK: Maddy Peppers 17pts.)
Martensdale-St. Marys 50, Earlham 42
Murray 56, Mount Ayr 47
Class 1A Region 8 – Regional Quarterfinal
Corning 42, Villisca 40
Oakland Riverside 46, Avoca AHST 43
Tabor Fremont-Mills 59, Stanton 56
Westside Ar-We-Va 67, Dunlap Boyer Valley 30
WANTED: leniger for a citizens band bass radio. 243-6772 in Atlantic.
FOR SALE: Like new pair of Carhart insulated coveralls. Size is 48 wide by 31 or 32 tall. 243-2408 before 5 PM.
FOR SALE: 2 $50 gift cards to H & R block. Has to be used by April 30th, 2011. Looking for $60 for both. 243-2408 before 5 PM.