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Former Iowa congressman publishes his memoir

News

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Former Iowa Congressman Jim Ross Lightfoot is sharing the story of his life in a new memoir called, “Climbing Mountains With God.” Lightfoot says the book is about the importance of faith in helping meet life’s challenges.  “That’s what life is — it’s a bunch of mountains,” said Lightfoot. “They pop up in front of you and you’ve got the choice of either trying to climb them, or just sitting on your fanny and doing nothing. If you don’t try to climb them, sitting on our fanny is about all you’re gonna’ accomplish.”

Born in 1938 in Sioux City, Lightfoot graduated from Farragut High School in 1956. After serving in the U.S. Army and Army Reserve, he worked for I-B-M as a customer engineer and was eventually transferred to Oklahoma, where he later worked as a Tulsa police officer. Returning to southwest Iowa in the 1960s, Lightfoot joined the K-M-A radio farm department and stayed until 1984, when he was elected to the U-S House, serving until 1997. Lightfoot says he decided to write the book after recalling things his father said.

“My dad had all these wonderful stories to tell about riding his pony to school, and growing up in the Great Depression,” he said. “He and my mother renting a four-room house, and subletting two rooms so that they had enough money to live on. He farmed in the daytime and cut wood at night. She did sewing, and so on. All those years — almost 20 years at KMA — I had a tape recorder sitting right beside me and never once did I turn that recorder and get any of those wonderful stories he had to tell.” Lightfoot says he came to an epiphany of sorts in writing his memoir.

“As I was writing it,” said Lightfoot, “it occurred to me that, hey, I didn’t do all this stuff. I was just a tool. God used me to do it, and I believe that’s what’s life is all about. I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow up — so, we’re still working on it.” Lightfoot also recalled the mountains he faced in attempting to pass his first bill in Congress, one aimed at helping farmers during the farm crisis of the mid-1980s.

“I was green. I was a freshman. I didn’t know ‘come here’ from ‘sic em’ and I had to learn the ropes,” he says. “I wrote a bill that basically gave farmers some financial relief and allowed lending institutions to step outside the rules that are the Banking Commission had on them so they can negotiate with farmers and suppliers and so on. There are a lot of people sit down and made some fantastic deals which never would have happened otherwise, but it saved all of them and they stayed in business.”

The book “Climbing Mountains With God” is available through his website, jimrosslightfoot.com.

Iowa Girls High School Basketball Rankings

Sports

December 21st, 2023 by admin

Class 1A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
North Linn
8-1
1
2
Newell-Fonda
8-1
2
3
Martensdale-St. Marys
7-2
3
4
Remsen St, Mary’s
8-0
4
5
Riceville
9-0
5
6
Council Bluffs St. Albert
8-1
6
7
Calamus-Wheatland
10-0
7
8
Algona Bishop Garrigan
9-1
8
9
CAM
7-1
11
10
Woodbine
6-2
12
11
Lynnville-Sully
8-2
13
12
Coon Rapids-Bayard
5-2
9
13
Edgwood-Colesburg
9-2
14
14
Springville
8-3
NR
15
Earlham
5-2
10
 
Dropped Out: Burlington Notre Dame (15)
 
Class 2A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Dike-New Hartford
8-1
1
2
Panorama
8-0
3
3
Iowa City Regina
7-1
4
4
Westwood
9-0
5
5
Sioux Central
8-1
6
6
Central Lyon
9-0
8
7
Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont
8-1
2
8
Nodaway Valley
7-1
5
9
North Mahaska
8-1
9
10
MVAOCOU
7-0
12
11
Cascade
6-2
13
12
Treynor
6-2
14
13
Jesup
8-0
15
14
Grundy Center
8-1
NR
15
Aplington-Parkersburg
7-2
10
 
Dropped Out: Hinton (11)
 
Class 3A
 
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Solon
8-1
1
2
Mount Vernon
9-0
2
3
Des Moines Christian
9-1
3
4
Estherville-Lincoln Central
9-2
4
5
Dubuque Wahlert
8-1
5
6
Harlan
8-0
6
7
Forest City
8-0
7
8
Roland-Story
8-0
11
9
Monticello
9-1
9
10
Benton Community
6-3
8
11
Algona
6-3
10
12
Spirit Lake
4-3
NR
13
Cherokee
9-1
12
14
Williamsburg
5-3
14
15
Chariton
9-1
15
 
Dropped Out: Clear Lake (13)
 
Class 4A
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Dallas Center-Grimes
8-1
1
2
Clear Creek-Amana
8-0
2
3
North Polk
7-1
3
4
Waverly-Shell Rock
9-0
4
5
Mason City
8-1
5
6
Sioux City Bishop Heelan
8-0
6
7
Norwalk
9-1
7
8
Central DeWitt
8-0
8
9
Le Mars
7-2
9
10
Lewis Central
6-3
10
11
Marion
8-2
11
12
Carlisle
5-3
12
13
Maquoketa
8-2
13
14
Pella
7-2
NR
15
Western Dubuque
6-4
15
 
Dropped Out: Ballard (14)
 
 Class 5A
 
No.
School
Record
LW
1
Johnston
9-0
1
2
Davenport North
8-2
3
3
Dowling Catholic
6-3
4
4
Waukee
7-1
5
5
West Des Moines Valley
7-3
2
6
Ankeny Centennial
4-5
6
7
Pleasant Valley
7-3
7
8
Ankeny
6-4
8
9
Cedar Falls
8-1
9
10
Cedar Rapids Prairie
6-1
11
11
Southeast Polk
5-4
13
12
Waukee Northwest
4-4
12
13
Sioux City East
5-3
10
14
Iowa City West
4-4
NR
15
Iowa City High
3-5
14

GRACE PAULEY, 93, of Panama (12-27-2023)

Obituaries

December 21st, 2023 by Jim Field

GRACE PAULEY, 93, of Panama died December 20, 2023 at Myrtue Medical Center.  Mass of Christian Burial for GRACE PAULEY will be held on Wednesday, December 27, 2023 at 10:30 am at St. Mary’s of the Assumption Church in Panama.  Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan is assisting the family.

—————————————————————————————

Visitation will be held Tuesday from 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm at the St. Mary’s Parish Center with a wake at 7:00 pm at the church.

Burial in the St. Mary’s Cemetery in Panama.

GRACE PAULEY is survived by:

Daughters:  Melinda (Dale) Kreher of Omaha; Denice (Steve) Nie of Jesup; Kris (Jerry) Hermsen of Dubuque; Julie (Guyle) Sonderman of Portsmouth

Sons:  Doug (Joan) Pauley of Columbus, NE; Dan (Alicia) Pauley of Guthrie Center; Pat (Sandy) Pauley of Honey Creek

Brother:  John Schoemann of Portsmouth

Sister:  Ceil Langer of Portsmouth

Sister-in-Law:  Thelma Schoemann of Porsmouth

26 Grandchildren

17 Great-Grandchildren

Top Wrestling Tournaments of the Holiday Season Live Stream Exclusively on B1G+

Sports

December 21st, 2023 by admin

The 59th annual Ken Kraft Midlands Championships and the second annual Soldier Salute live stream exclusively on B1G+, Dec. 29-30.

As wrestling season ramps up, a season-long wrestling pass is available for $69.99 on B1G+, the Big Ten Network’s home for non-televised events and on-demand archives. The subscription includes access to both the Midlands Championships and Soldier Salute, as well as more than 80 additional non-televised Big Ten wrestling events, 2024 Big Ten Wrestling Championships coverage and on-demand replays of televised duals. Additionally, you can watch up to four live streams/mats simultaneously on one screen at bigtenplus.com or with Apple TV.

Big Ten Network veteran wrestling broadcasters Shane Sparks and Jim Gibbons will anchor the Midlands Championships coverage on B1G+. For the first two sessions on Dec. 29, B1G+ will feature 10 individual mat cameras along with whip-around coverage focused on the best action at a given moment. On Dec. 30, B1G+ will once again be home to individual mat cameras for both the men’s and women’s divisions in sessions three and four, along with the whip-around feed.

Individual mat cameras will be available for all four sessions of the Soldier Salute. The tournament is hosted by the Iowa City Area Sports Commission and 100% of the annual tournament proceeds will be split between the United Service Organizations (USO) and a development fund targeted towards the continued growth of high school girls wrestling. As part of its coverage commitment, the Big Ten Network will also make a contribution benefitting both organizations.

Competitors from 10 Big Ten men’s programs are expected to compete across both tournaments, including several ranked in Intermat’s top 30. The list includes No. 2 Iowa, No. 6 Ohio State, No. 10 Michigan, No. 12 Minnesota, No. 14 Rutgers, No. 23 Illinois, No. 30 Wisconsin, Michigan State, Northwestern and Purdue. The Iowa women’s program will also compete at the Solider Salute.

Additional Big Ten wrestling coverage can be found on the B1G Wrestling Instagram page and the Big Ten Network YouTube wrestling page.

Atlantic Police report 4 arrests from Dec. 2nd through the 12th

News

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic Police Department says four people were arrested between December 2nd and the 12th. Several others cited into court and released.  Most recently:

33-year-old Tyler Mills, of Atlantic, was arrested December 12th for Stalking/3rd & subsequent offense, Criminal Mischief in the 4th Degree; Providing False Information, and Interference with Official Acts. Officers cited and then released 42-year-old Heather Ott, on December 12th. Her citation was for Compulsory Education Violation/1st offense.

There were two arrests in Atlantic on Dec. 11th: 26-year-old Sergio Ramos, of Atlantic, was arrested for Violation of Probation; and, 23-year-old Fietko Ranu, of Atlantic, was arrested for Public Intoxication.

Atlantic Police report also, 19-year-old Brianna Loving, and 18-year-old Zoey Hansen, both of Atlantic, were cited into court Dec. 10th, for Possession of Controlled Substance (marijuana)/1st Offense. The woman were released from the scene with their citations.

On December 9th, the A-PD arrested 18-year-old Efrain Sandiego, of Atlantic, for Public Intoxication.

On the 7th, 46-year-old Robert Loving, of Atlantic, was cited for Theft in the 5th Degree, and released. On the 3rd, 41-year-old Chad Wilcox, of Atlantic, was cited for two-counts of Theft in the 5th Degree. And, on the 2nd, 20-year-old Kayden Good, of Atlantic, was cited for Theft in the 4th Degree.

Iowa unemployment rate rises to 3.3% in November

News

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s unemployment rate increased to three-point-three percent in November. That’s six-tenths of a percent higher than it was in July and the fourth consecutive month it has inched up. Beth Townsend, director of the Iowa Workforce Development agency, says there were about a thousand job losses in Iowa’s professional and business services sector in November — including a reduction in administrative support staff. “We also saw a number of people drop out of the workforce — about 6700 people between October and November. That was mostly due to retirements and students who willingly left the workforce,” Townsend says. “While we don’t like to see a reduction in our labor force, that number’s not overly concerning at this point.”

Just over 68 percent of Iowans who are 16 or older and actively seeking employment were working in November — that’s about five points higher than the national average. “Before the pandemic, we were at about almost 69% labor particiption rate and we’ve been over 68% for 2023,” Townsend says, “so we’re inching up and moving closer to pre-pandemic labor rate participation numbers.” There were about 100 layoffs in Iowa’s manufacturing sector in November, but Townsend says compared to the beginning of the year, there were about three-thousand more people employed in Iowa manufacturing by the end of November.

The most job GROWTH in November came in Iowa’s construction industry, which added 18-hundred jobs. “The good weather has certainly helped us out in that,” Townsend says, “and the hiring was primarily in commercial construction, so that was a good sign.” About a thousand jobs were added in the financial services sector in November. “Insurance and the financial industry are very key to the Iowa economy,” Townsend says, “and one of our bigger industries.” Townsend says 11-hundred people were hired in November to work in Iowa hospitals, nursing homes and other health care settings.

“Which is really good news for the health care industry because as you know they’ve had a difficult time hiring since the pandemic,” she says, “and they are up over 8500 jobs over the past 12 months.” The state’s IowaWORKS website lists 62-thousand job openings today. According to government data, more than one-point-six million people are working in Iowa. The national unemployment rate dropped to three-point-seven percent in November.

LARRY DEVIN, 73, of Atlantic [formerly of Lewis] (Memorial Svcs. 12/29/23)

Obituaries

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

LARRY DEVIN, 73, of Atlantic [formerly of Lewis], died Thursday, December 21, 2023, at Atlantic Specialty Care. Memorial services for LARRY DEVIN will be held 11-a.m. Friday, Dec. 29, 2023, at Zion Lutheran Church in Atlantic. Roland Funeral Service in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family present is on Dec. 29th, from 9:30-a.m. until the time of service.

The family welcomes attendees to the church fellowship hall for a luncheon, following the service.

Memorials may be directed to the family for later designation.

LARRY DEVIN is survived by:

His wife – Sharon Mathias, of Atlantic.

Condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

Former Iowa star T.J. Hockenson previews Vikings versus Lions

Sports

December 21st, 2023 by Asa Lucas

Former Iowa star T.J. Hockenson will go up against his former team on Sunday when the Minnesota Vikings host the Detroit Lions. The tight end spent his first three and a half years in the NFL with the Lions before being traded to Minnesota. He knows Detroit offensive coordinator Ben Johnson well.

At 7-7 the Vikings are in the thick of the NFC playoff race.

Hockenson says the Vikings need a strong finish.

Because of a season ending injury to Kirk Cousins the Vikings have used four different starting quarterbacks this season.

Nebraska man arrested in Red Oak on warrant for Felony Assault & Felony Attempted Murder of a Peace Officer

News

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Red Oak Police have arrested a man from Nebraska on felony warrants. 53-year-old Joshua Norman Fuller, of Lincoln, NE, was arrested a little after 8:30-a.m. today (Thursday), on a valid DCI (Dept. of Criminal Investigations) warrant for Class-D Felony two-counts of Assault on persons in certain occupations, and a Class-B Felony charge of Attempted Murder of a Peace Officer.

Fuller was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $100,000 cash-only bond.

Drought conditions continue during record streak

News, Weather

December 21st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources says the current drought is the longest in Iowa since the 1950s, with abnormally dry and drought conditions extending into the 188th week in a row, according to the latest data available.Following the 16th driest November on record, precipitation for December is currently about 60 percent of average, which is normally 1.37 inches. Portions of southeast Iowa recorded above normal rainfall for the month, leaving most of the state with below average precipitation.

Depending on potential rainfall during the coming weekend, December could finish with average levels This would help stabilize, but not improve, drought conditions. Tim Hall, the Hydrology Resources Coordinator for the Iowa DNR, says “At this point, any moisture we get in the state will be helpful. With conditions as dry as they are coming out of 2023 there is a real concern for hydrologic conditions moving into 2024. Low stream flows and dry soil conditions could lead to water supply challenges in the coming year.”

However, the dry winter months will make drought recovery challenging. January is normally the driest month of the year in the state, with an average of less than one inch of moisture. Iowa State Climatologist, Dr. Justin Glisan says “Strong El Niño conditions are projected to persist through winter. In an El Niño winter, precipitation can be highly variable. Warmer than normal temperatures could result in more rain than snow during the winter months.” 

The Iowa Drought Team, made up of staff from the Departments of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, Agriculture and Land Stewardship, and Natural Resources will continue to meet over the winter months to prepare for potential continuation and worsening of drought conditions. The next Water Summary Update, which will include a review of the 2023 conditions, will be published in January.