Stoughton
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Thursday, February 28, 2019 • Vol. 137, No. 32 • Stoughton, WI • ConnectStoughton.com • $1.25
Stoughton High School Wrestling
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www.gundersonfh.com East Madison/Monona • West Madison/Middleton • Mt. Horeb Stoughton • Black Earth • Oregon • Cross Plains • Fitchburg • Lodi
City of Stoughton
New offerings for food pantry Federal TEFAP funding expanded
Freshman Nicolar Rivera celebrates winning the WIAA Division 1 state title at 106 pounds Saturday, Feb. 23.
Photo by Jeremy Jones
Two champions Inside Vikings bring home five medals at state Page 8 Rivera has big goals as nation’s No. 2 wrestler Page 11
Inside
Kiwanis connections
iPad donations benefit students on the autism spectrum On the Web
Unified Newspaper Group
A Stoughton Kiwanis tech initiative is helping connect with students on the autism spectrum. The group has been working over the last few years to collect donations and give iPads to students with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Earlier this month, the group donated one to David Friedman, a student at Fox Prairie Elementary School. Stoughton Kiwanis vice president — and soon-to-be president — Sharon
For more information about the Wisconsin Upper Michigan Kiwanis Autism Project, visit:
Kiwanisautismproject.com. Mason-Boersma told the Hub earlier this week the initiative is part of the Wisconsin Upper Michigan Kiwanis Autism Project. The iPad was given in memory of Katie Stout, a former Kiwanis Club member and an advocate in the field of education.
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“Teachers are using iPads as a tool to reach out to children with ASD and the results have shown to have tremendous improvement when learning academic concepts, direction following and comprehension,” Mason-Boersma wrote in an email. “It has also been found that “visually supported iPad apps help motivate the students’ ability to follow a schedule, complete multi-step directions and transition between activities and places.” The initiative started with the
SPRING 2019
Ar unexpectt in ed places SENIOR LIV
Manage youING: r risk for dia betes
Area creato rs and museums go beyond galleries to show the ir stuff HISTORIC
Day Trip:
CHARM IN MANITOW
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AMBER LEVENHAGEN
The spring issue of Your Family magazine
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Freshman Nicolar Rivera and senior Hunter Lewis both won state titles for the Stoughton wrestling team Saturday, Feb. 23. The two were among five to earn medals as the Vikings head to team state this weekend. A three-time medalist, senior Hunter Lewis won his second straight state title at 138 pounds. Rivera was the 50th state champion in school history and Lewis was the 51st, putting Stoughton one ahead of Mineral Point on the all-time list. Sophomore Brooks Empey (195) and junior Luke Mechler (145) were runners-up, and senior Cade Spilde (160) was fourth.
typically gets between 1,000 to 2,500 pounds of food each month. That’s expected to increase AMBER LEVENHAGEN over the next few months as more surplus from Unified Newspaper Group TEFAP, The EmergenCity of Stoughton Food cy Food Assistance ProP a n t r y c l i e n t s m i g h t gram, continues to hit have noticed a few more pantry shelves. options on the shelves the Farm Bill impacts last few weeks. T E FA P i s a f e d e r That’s because federal funding has grown by al program that “helps 300 percent for one of the supplement the diets of pantry’s main sources of low-income Americans,” according to its website. food. The increase will be ful- It provides funds to help ly felt starting in March, pantries purchase supbut has been “crawling in” plies, at no cost to the the last few months, pan- pantry. The increase, Heger try board president Mike Heger told the Hub on said, is in response to Monday, taking a break the Trump administrafrom organizing shelves tion’s tariffs on importand helping volunteers at ed steel and aluminum, which were imposed last the pantry. He opened one of the spring. Retaliatory tarseveral large refrigera- iffs from Canada and the tors near the back of the European Union, among office, in the EMS build- others, impact nearly $30 ing on Fourth Street, and billion of American agrishowed the shelves full of culture exports, according to a July study from boxes, squeezed in to fit. “Most are 40-pound the Peterson Institute for boxes, and we have to International Economics. “We’ve been participatunpack them, so getting them to fit has been a ing in TEFAP for a long challenge, but it’s a good time, and suddenly now problem to have,” Heger with the prices of meats said. Turn to Pantry/Page 16 He said the pantry