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Heartbeat Today 4-7-2023

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

April 7th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Joseph Hall about his “Elvis – Rock & Remember” tribute show coming up on April 15, 2023 at 7:30 pm at the Wilson Performing Arts Center in Red Oak.

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Lawmakers may file legal brief challenging Iowa Supreme Court’s ‘logrolling’ conclusion

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – G-O-P leaders in the legislature are considering a formal response to a recent Iowa Supreme Court ruling critical of so-called “logrolling” in the lawmaking process. The justices concluded proposals that didn’t have majority support were attached to a bill during a vote taken well after midnight in the Iowa Senate, violating the constitutional requirement that each bill address a single subject. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver says the ruling raises concerns. “That decision will now make its way back through the court system and we will definitely want to get involved with a brief from our standpoint on legislative intent,” Whitver says.

The ruling also accused a state senator of misrepresenting the contents of the bill to sway votes. Whitver says assigning a single reason for every yes vote on a bill is questionable. “I believe legislative intent is whatever is on the paper and to ask why a legislator votes for a bill — there could be 20 different reasons or 30 different reasons,” Whitver says, “and so to say: ‘This is the legislature’s intent’ is problematic. Whatever’s on the paper is the intent of the bill.”

A spokesperson for House Speaker Pat Grassley says leaders are reviewing options and the House is interested in doing something to respond to the ruling, but no decision has been made. Last month’s Iowa Supreme Court decision centered aroud a 2020 Iowa law that was changed by language added to a bill on another subject. The justices ruled the law had unfairly prevented out of state companies from bidding to build transmission lines in Iowa and the case was sent back to a district court.

Creston Police report 2 OWI arrests

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department report two people were arrested on separate OWI charges this (Friday) morning. At midnight, 51-year-old Pedro Quintanilla-Flores, of Lenox, was arrested at 509 W. Taylor St. He was charged with Operating While Under the Influence (OWI) – 1st Offense, and Driving While License Suspended. Quintanilla-Flores was being held in the Union County Jail on a $1,300 bond.

And, at around 2:15-a.m., Creston Police arrested 30-year-old Abel Estuardo Vargas Blanco, of Richmond, Virginia, at Elm and Freemont Streets, in Creston. He was charged with OWI/1st offense. Blanco was taken to Union County Jail and released after posted at $1,000 bond.

(UPDATE) Oskaloosa shooting suspect arrested in Missouri

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Oskaloosa, Iowa) – Officials with the Iowa Department of Public Safety, Thursday, said a man suspected of shooting a man in Oskaloosa, Tuesday night, was arrested Thursday, in Missouri.  22-year-old Gavin Jones was taken into custody in connection with an incident whereby another man was shot in the leg. Jones faces a charge of Willful Injury causing serious injury.

Gavin Jones (latest booking photo)

Original story follows

“On Tuesday, April 4, 2023, at 10:16 p.m., officers with the Oskaloosa Police Department were dispatched to 709 D Avenue West on the report of a shooting. Responding officers found an adult male with a gunshot wound. Officers and EMS rendered aid at the scene. The man was transported to a Des Moines area hospital, where he remains.

As a result of the overnight investigation, officers with the Oskaloosa Police Department and agents with the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation are seeking help from the public to locate 22-year-old Gavin Jones. Authorities say “This incident appears to be isolated, and there is no known ongoing threat to the public.”

Gavin Jones (photo issued in the 1st press release by the DPS)

UI prof: NASA crew for next Moon mission shatters stereotypes and ceilings

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – This week’s NASA announcement naming the four astronauts who will crew the Artemis Two mission to the Moon is being called “historic” by a physics and astronomy professor at the University of Iowa. Professor Allison Jaynes says she was thrilled to see astronaut Christina Koch assigned to the lunar mission, the first in more than 50 years. “Having her to be one of the first people to revisit the Moon is very substantial because we are living in a society where we’re still talking about and arguing about these issues of equality,” Jaynes says, “and so having her be selected, and Victor Glover as well, is an incredible decision.”

Glover will be the first black astronaut to orbit the Moon. All previous Moon missions were crewed entirely by white men. Artemis Two will fly around the Moon late next year or early in 2025, while later missions aim to -land- on the Moon’s surface, a feat that hasn’t been accomplished since 1972. Sally Ride became the first American woman in space aboard the Shuttle Challenger in 1983, and women have played an increasingly important role in the program over the decades. Still, Jaynes says there are glass ceilings in space, too.

Artemis 2 crew

“You might say cowboys are the ones we think of when we think of astronauts,” Jaynes says. “Women still aren’t the image of an astronaut. When you say ‘astronaut’ to a bunch of schoolchildren, they will assume a man, they will assume a male astronaut. So this spaceflight, it’s really going to change the way that students and children and everyone around the world views astronauts.”

Iowa native Peggy Whitson, who retired from the astronaut corps in 2018, is among the most accomplished space travelers. Whitson, who was born in Mount Ayr and raised on a farm near Beaconsfield, spent 665 days in space — a record for any American astronaut. She was the International Space Station’s first science officer and its first woman commander. In addition to the space endurance record, Whiston logged more EVAs — or spacewalks — than any other woman.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Friday, April 7, 2023

Weather

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Sunny, with a high near 66. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 7 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph.
Tonight: Clear, with a low around 38. Breezy, with a south wind 13 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 68. Breezy, with a south wind 14 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 42. South southeast wind around 14 mph, with gusts as high as 23 mph.
Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 69. Breezy.
Sunday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 48.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 71.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 57. The Low was 13. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 43 and the Low was 31. The Record High on this date was 85 in 2000. The Record Low was 10 in 2018.

UI unveils its digital twin campus ‘metaversity,’ first of its kind in the Big Ten

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The president of the University of Iowa cut a virtual ribbon during an online ceremony Thursday afternoon, to open what’s known as a digital twin replica campus. The so-called “metaversity” will be used for online learning as well as campus labs for residential students. Steve Grubbs is the founder of Victory-X-R, a Davenport-based tech company that creates 3-D immersive educational environments.

Victory built an online replica of the Pentacrest and the Tippie College of Business where remote students can go to class, just as if they were actually on campus. Thursday’s launch of the Metaversity of Iowa only makes a couple of courses available, for starters, but students who attend those courses will be able to attend from anywhere.

Other Big Ten schools are using virtual reality for this type of distance learning, but Grubbs says the U-I is the first to launch a full digital twin campus. He says 40-percent of today’s students already take classes remotely.

Iowa baseball opens B1G series at Indiana Friday night

Sports

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hawkeye baseball team opens a three game Big Ten series tonight (Friday night) at Indiana. The Hawkeyes opened the league race by dropping two of three games against Maryland. Indiana is 5-1 in the Big Ten and is 15-0 this season at home.

That’s Iowa coach Rick Heller who expects Brody Brecht to take the mound in Friday’s opener. He took a line drive off of his ankle in last week’s start against Maryland.

Heller hopes eventually Iowa’s starting pitchers will eat up more innings but for right now the key remains the bullpen and an offense that averages nearly nine runs per game.

Iowa is 21-6 overall.

Northern Iowa softball takes Missouri Valley lead to Indiana State beginning Friday

Sports

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

The Northern Iowa softball team takes a 9-0 Missouri Valley Conference record on the road to Indiana State for this (Friday) afternoon’s start of a three game series. The Panthers are at or near the top of nearly offensive category despite being without standout catcher Emmy Wells. The reigning Missouri Valley player of the year is out for the season with an arm injury. UNI coach Ryan Jacobs.

Sami Heyer and Kailyn Packard lead a deep pitching staff that has given up only seven runs in nine league games.

Indiana State is 7-3 and Jacobs says the Sycamores have a pitching staff that will challenge the Panthers.

Vilsack says he’s asking USDA staff to ‘be creative’ about finding new uses for Iowa Wesleyan campus

News

April 7th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The U-S-D-A will become responsible for the Iowa Wesleyan campus in Mount Pleasant when the university closes May 31st and U-S Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack says it’s too early to tell what’s next. “Our folks will work with the community to see what the options could be,” Vilsack says. “I mean there’s a variety of opportunities to think about. I’ve asked the team to be very creative about this.” Last week, the university’s board of directors voted to close the school at the end of the current semester.

“Right now the community’s hurting. There are people whose lives are turned upside down and in that circumstance and situation you’ve got to be able to say to them: ‘We feel for you and we’re going to try our level best to create something good out of this that will help the community,” Vilsack says. Iowa Wesleyan has had significant operating losses for years and nearly closed in 2018. The university owes 21 million on a U-S-D-A loan and another five million dollars on a bank loan that was guaranteed by the U-S-D-A.

“One of the reasons we invested and have invested in other colleges across the country is that they’re an economic driver. They’re a job creator…A lot of opportunity can be generated by a college in a regional area,” Vilsack says. “Wesleyan, I think they did an evaluation. They had a $50-70 million dollar impact on the community every single year, so that’s real and obviously the community is going to have to be dealing with the potential of how do we replace that.” Vilsack, a former Iowa governor, was mayor of Mount Pleasant in the late 80s and early 90s. Vilsack says he’d like U-S-D-A staff to avoid dividing the 60 acre campus into parcels and selling off individual buildings.

“I’d like them to start working with the college to see whether or not there are other universities or colleges that might be interested. Are there other folks that might be interested in a campus of some kind? Are there agencies of the federal government, for example, that might be thinking about training facilities and could this be an opportunity,” Vilsack says. “People need to think creatively at this point to try to keep it as a whole, if possible, and keep it as the economic driver that it has been.”

Vilsack’s wife Christie is a Mount Pleasant native and Tom Vilsack told reporters yesterday (Thursday) that she recently resigned from Iowa Wesleyan’s board of trustees and Vilsack says that means he may now speak and be involved in decisions about the campus property. Five years ago, the Vilsacks hosted a three day event on Mount Pleasant radio station K-I-L-J that raised more than a million dollars for Iowa Wesleyan.