Iowa
Missouri football bowl game: Tigers will face Iowa in Music City Bowl, per reports
Cue the Missouri Waltz at the Grand Ole Opry.
The Tigers are headed to Nashville.
Missouri football will play its bowl game against Iowa in the Music City Bowl in Nashville, Tennessee, per a report from 247Sports’ PowerMizzou. The matchup is expected to be announced during a live selection show on ESPN on Sunday afternoon, and will be played at Nissan Stadium, home of the Tennessee Titans.
Kickoff for the game is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. CDT on Monday, Dec. 30, and it will air on ESPN.
Missouri has never played in the Music City Bowl, which has been played since 1998. Mizzou was scheduled to play in the 2020 edition of the bowl game against Iowa, but the game was canceled due to the pandemic.
Four years later, the Tigers will get their trip.
Mizzou has been bowl eligible in each of head coach Eli Drinkwitz’s five seasons at the helm. The Tigers lost to Army in the Armed Forces Bowl in 2021, then fell to Wake Forest in the Gasparilla Bowl in 2022.
Drinkwitz’s first bowl win with Missouri was a big one, knocking off Ohio State for a New Year’s Six win over Ohio State in last season’s Cotton Bowl.
The first 12-team College Football Playoff field also was announced Sunday. Missouri likely was one win away from consideration for a berth.
The Tigers went 9-3 in the 2024 regular season, with losses at Texas A&M, Alabama and South Carolina. Mizzou became eligible early this season, securing the bowl-clinching sixth win with a Oct. 19 win over Auburn.
MU closed the regular season with a 28-21 win against Arkansas on Saturday, Nov. 30. Mizzou
The Tigers will play their bowl game without star wide receiver Luther Burden III and dominant right tackle Armand Membou, as both players have declared for the 2025 NFL Draft and will opt out of the bowl game.
Iowa
‘Best friend,’ teen describes her grandma, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds
DES MOINES, Iowa (Gray Media Iowa State Capitol Bureau) — Several hundred Iowans turned out for the Republican Party of Iowa’s Lincoln Dinner fundraiser Friday night that served largely as a tribute to Gov. Kim Reynolds, the state’s first female governor who is retiring after her term expires in January.
One of granddaughters described Reynolds as her “best friend,” a moment that brought tears on stage.
Two of Reynolds’ daughters praised their mother’s work ethic and commitment to their family.
A video played during the evening included a salute for Reynolds from Terry Branstad, the former governor who had chosen Reynolds as his running mate.
Republican governors from Nebraska, South Dakota, Arkansas, and Georgia also offered their compliments for Reynolds in videos.
So did Trump administration officials including U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon and Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins .
Reynolds, first elected lt. governor in 2010, became governor in 2017 after Branstad resigned to become U.S. Ambassador to China.
Copyright 2026 Gray Media Iowa State Capitol Bureau. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Gelita USA opens new wastewater treatment plant near Sergeant Bluff after Iowa DNR violations
SERGEANT BLUFF, Iowa (KTIV) – Gelita USA held an open house Friday, July 10, to celebrate the completion of a new wastewater treatment facility at its plant near Sergeant Bluff, marking the end of years of regulatory violations tied to its discharge into the Missouri River.
Gelita manufactures gelatin and collagen, ingredients used in food, medicine, and supplements. That manufacturing process produces large amounts of contaminated wastewater containing proteins, fats, and ammonia, a substance categorized as a toxic pollutant.
According to an Iowa Department of Natural Resources sampling inspection from March 2025, the plant was processing nearly double its design capacity. Before the upgrade, the Iowa State lab documented black water in the Missouri River near the facility’s discharge site. The Iowa DNR found Gelita had exceeded ammonia limits multiple times.
The report said that at the outfall to the Missouri River, Iowa DNR Tom Ross observed that the effluent had a black coloration. Roos requested additional testing at this location.
“Following the inspection, the discharge location on the Missouri River was visited. During the visit, the effluent at the river appeared to be a dark color, much different then the effluent observed at the treatment facility. It was explained during the visit, the color of the discharge to the river was a violation of 567-61.3(2) ‘c’, lowa Administrative Code, which states that all surface waters shall be free from materials attributable to wastewater discharges or agricultural practices producing objectionable color, odor, or other aesthetically objectionable conditions.”
Jeff Tolsma, General Manager of Gelita USA, said the upgrade was the result of an extended dialogue with regulators and upgraded technology.
The new facility includes ultraviolet disinfection, a feature the old plant did not have. The UV light treatment damages the DNA of bacteria, viruses, and other microorganisms before discharge, improving the company’s compliance with Iowa DNR standards.
Company, regulators call it a turning point
“We met with the EPA and the Iowa DNR probably 18 months, two years ago. It’s been a long dialogue with them, but they were great partners, great to work with,” Tolsma said. “And this wastewater treatment plant allows us to basically meet those new regulations that have been put in place. I think what is significant is that this actually brings us forward from a compliance standpoint for a long-term sustainable operation.”
The Iowa DNR said it will continue monitoring the facility to ensure ongoing compliance.
Gelita USA has operated in the Siouxland area for approximately 30 years and employs around 200 people.
Want to get the latest news and weather from Siouxland’s News Source? Follow these links to download our KTIV News app and our First Alert Weather app.
Copyright 2026 KTIV. All rights reserved.
Iowa
PETERSON: Pollard’s “outside the lines” mindset was exactly what Iowa State needed
-
Lifestyle40 seconds agoTwice the stink! Two rare corpse flowers at the Huntington are set to bloom
-
Politics8 minutes agoAssassinations unleashed under Trump haunt Iran war endgame
-
Sports16 minutes agoQ&A: Partner, chance to play in Long Beach reignited AVP star Taylor Crabb’s Olympic fire
-
World26 minutes agoMoldova president nominates pro-European businessman Tofan for PM
-
News53 minutes agoUS congressman says he was detained by armed Israeli settlers in occupied West Bank
-
Los Angeles, Ca2 hours agoNew details emerge in fatal stabbing of boy in El Monte
-
Detroit, MI3 hours ago1 dead, 1 injured after two-vehicle crash at Collingwood and Belleterre in Detroit
-
San Francisco, CA3 hours ago4 arrested, 3 cited after brawl following Giants vs. Rockies game at Oracle Park
