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NCAA in talks with Indianapolis to host all of March Madness

Sports

November 16th, 2020 by admin

The NCAA says it plans to hold the entire 2021 men’s college basketball tournament in one location to mitigate the risks of the coronavirus. It is in talks with Indianapolis to be the host city. The Final Four is already set to be held in Indianapolis next year. The association said it is relocating early round games that had been scheduled for 13 cities across the country. The NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee says hosting all 68 teams in one place is safer.

Chiefs sign coach Reid, GM Veach to contract extensions

Sports

November 16th, 2020 by admin

Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid watches play against the New York Jets in the second half of an NFL football game on Sunday, Nov. 1, 2020, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs signed Andy Reid and Brett Veach to contract extensions that will provide added stability by keeping the most successful coach and general manager combination in franchise history together well into the future. The Chiefs declined to announce the terms of the extensions Monday, though it’s unlikely Reid or Veach was going anywhere. They have built a juggernaut together, reaching back-to-back AFC championship games and delivering the Chiefs their first Super Bowl title in 50 years last season. And at 8-1, they are in good position to defend the title.

Last live nighttime televised speech by an Iowa governor? 1956

News

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds plans to deliver a statewide address this (Monday) evening to unveil new pandemic-related policies — and it appears to be more than six decades since an Iowa governor has delivered a televised address at night. Leo Landis, the state curator at the State Historical Society of Iowa, found the details.

“Governor Leo Hoegh, at least in a local live address, appears in Fort Dodge to have made some remarks on television on October 12, 1956,” Landis says, “so that may be the very first time an Iowa governor appeared live on television.” Hoegh was campaigning for re-election at the time and Landis found an Associated Press article about the nighttime speech.

“Fort Dodge did have a local NBC affiliate at the time, so it’s most likely that it was that NBC affilaite who carried those remarks,” Landis says. “…It was a live television address as best we can tell.” However, it was likely a local broadcast because the technology to provide the signal statewide just didn’t exist.

“Even in the mid-1950s, television was still fairly new,” Landis says. Many Iowa radio and T-V stations intend to carry the speech Governor Reynolds intends to deliver tonight, shortly after six o’clock. It will originate from Iowa P-B-S.

Artist in Residence Program at Waubonsie State Park Awards Announced

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Hamburg, IA  – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Golden Hills RC&D and the Loess Hills National Scenic Byway have announced the Waubonsie State Park Artist in Residence awards for the 2019-2020 Program. (See the winners mentioned below) The goal of the residency program is to reach a broader audience of park-goers, thus increasing the number of visitors and ultimately educating more people about the Loess Hills ecosystem.  The artists and visitors will engage with the natural resources of the park through a visual arts lens.

Many quality applications were received from artists representing a wide array of disciplines.  Four artists were selected to fill residencies ranging from one week to four weeks long in November through March of next year.  Artists receiving the residency awards for the second Waubonsie State Park Artist in Residence Program include Sheila Newenham, Shelly Eisenhauer, Daniel Castaneda and Terri Parish McGaffin.

Sheila Newenham (Nature Photography)

Shelly Eisenhauer (Photography & Digital Media)

Daniel Castaneda (Graffiti Artist/Mixed Media)

Terri Parish McGaffin (Various Painting Media)

The four artists in this year’s residency program will use their time at Waubonsie to immerse themselves in the landscape as a source of inspiration and opportunity to intensely focus on their work.  The artists represent a diverse array of media, including photography, digital media, sculpture, graffiti murals, and oil, acrylic and watercolor paint.

Sheila Newenham is a photographer from Wayne, Illinois and will begin her residency on Sunday, November 17th.  She hopes to connect people to nature by sharing her passion for wildlife and wild places. By bringing the individual, emotional, sentient side of our natural world into people’s homes, she hopes to expand your appreciation and experience of the wild. “I want my art to show you something you’ve never seen before or to make you think about something in a new way and for it to stay with you when you leave.”

Shelly Eisenhauer of Glenwood specializes in photography and digital media.  “I am excited to use my lens and lights to explore the transformation of the natural landscape of the park – specifically the native plant life – in the winter months. Rain, snow and the turn of the colder seasons affect the texture and color of plants in a very different way than the heat of summer, and I suspect most park visitors are less aware of the winter landscape.”

Daniel Castaneda of Omaha, Nebraska is a multidisciplinary graffiti artist and multifaceted artisan, “My artwork is inspired on the art of nature, keeping alive my culture and roots of my ancestors. I like to use different materials and styles to transform the components given when designing murals or sculpting ideas.”  During his residency, Daniel will use the organic materials and natural views that surround his space to create his artworks.

Terri Parish McGaffin from Sioux City, Iowa has spent many years as an art professor and administrator, and is looking forward to spending time during her residency focusing on artistic practice and discovery.  “I have always believed that which I observe is more magical than that which I can invent. Stimulated by environment, I record these observations in paintings, which have a level of intimacy unlike other processes of representation.”

One of the region’s ecological and recreational treasures, Waubonsie State Park’s 2,000 acres in the Loess Hills of southwest Iowa feature prairies, savannas, and woodlands which are home to diverse flora and fauna, not to mention breathtaking vistas.  Park Manager Matt Moles has worked with Golden Hills RC&D Project Coordinator Lance Brisbois and Loess Hills National Scenic Byway Coordinator Rebecca Castle to develop and launch the project.

While there have been other artist residency programs offered through the National Parks System and select parks in other states, this was the first such program in one of Iowa’s State Parks.  The program is loosely modeled after similar regional programs such as the Residency Program at Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Since the Waubonsie State Park Artist in Residence Program’s inaugural year, the Iowa DNR and Iowa State University have partnered with the Iowa Arts Council on a similar program featuring staff and students from ISU.

The artists will receive lodging in a studio cabin and a primitive studio space in the park at no cost for the duration of the residency. In return, artists will deliver at least one public program during their residency and donate one piece of art to the park at the conclusion of their stay.

Waubonsie State Park is only about an hour’s drive from Omaha or Lincoln, NE; two hours from Kansas City; and 2.5 hours from Des Moines.  It is located near the southern end of the Loess Hills National Scenic Byway.  To learn more about the Artist in Residence program and the artists, visit www.goldenhillsrcd.org/artist-in-residence.

Cass County Sheriff’s Office to fingerprint essential employees only TFN

News

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office, Monday, reports “Effective immediately, the Cass County Sheriff’s Office will do fingerprints for essential personnel ONLY. This restriction is expected to last through late December, at which time the Coronavirus situation will be reviewed.”

RICHARD M. MIKELS, 90, of Harlan (Svcs. 11/19/2020)

Obituaries

November 16th, 2020 by Jim Field

RICHARD M. MIKELS, 90, of Harlan died Monday, November 16th at Elm Crest Retirement Community in Harlan. Private Family Mass of Christian Burial for RICHARD M. MIKELS will be held on Thursday, November 19th at 10:00 a.m. at St. Mary Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church in Portsmouth. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Burial will be in the St. Mary’s Cemetery in Portsmouth.

RICHARD M. MIKELS is survived by:

Sons: Lyle Mikels of Harlan. Lynn (Lori) Mikels of Newbury Park, CA.

Daughters: Jayne (Dan) Garrison of Harlan. Cheryl (Tom) Ferry of Harlan. Sue (Bret) Chickering of Harlan.

Sister: Dolores (John) Hicks of Manhattan Beach, CA.

6 Grandchildren

5 Great-Grandchildren

Atlantic’s Reynolds gains experience at State Swim Meet

Sports

November 16th, 2020 by admin

Atlantic’s Lexi Reynolds competed in the State Swim Meet this past Friday and Saturday in Marshalltown.

Reynolds swam in the prelims of the 500 Freestyle and the 200 Freestyle but did not qualify for the finals of either event. The top 16 times from prelims advanced to the Finals on Saturday.

Reynolds went 28th in the 500 Freestyle with a time of 5:30.32. Reynolds was 27th in the 200 Freestyle prelims with a time of 2:02.05.

Check out the full Girls State Swim Meet results HERE.

Clarinda Prison inmate dies at UI Hospital in IA City

News

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY – The Iowa Department of Corrections said Monday (Today) 72-year-old Gene Edward Dryer, an inmate at the Clarinda Correctional Facility (CCF), was pronounced dead 6-a.m. Saturday, at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, in Iowa City. Dryer dad been transported there from the CCF several days earlier, when medical staff noticed his condition beginning to worsen.  Authorities says his death was likely due to complications related to COVID-19 and other preexisting medical conditions.

Dryer had been serving a life sentence for the crime of Kidnapping 1st Degree from Dubuque County. His sentence began on May 3, 1994.

Eastern Iowa grain barn destroyed by early-morning fire

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

NEW VIENNA, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a grain barn in eastern Iowa has been destroyed in an early-morning fire. Television station KCRG reports firefighters were called to the blaze around 3:20 a.m. Monday in Dubuque County. Officials say arriving firefighters found the barn completely engulfed in flames. Crews were able to extinguish the fire, but the barn is a total loss. Officials say a house and a vehicle on the property sustained heat damage during the fire. Officials say the fire caused about $25,000 in damage. No injuries were reported.

TY BROWN, 29, of rural Anita (Private family Svcs.)

Obituaries

November 16th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

TY BROWN, 29, of rural Anita, died Friday, November 13, 2020, at his home. Private Family Services will be held for TY BROWN. Steen Funeral Home of Massena is in charge of the arrangements.

There Will Be No Visitation.;  Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

Memorials may be directed the Ty Brown memorial fund to be established by the family at a later date.

TY BROWN is survived by:

His parents – Bret (Deb) Brown of rural Anita.

His brothers – Jerod (Mary) Brown, of State Center; Heath (Alice) Brown, of Weirton, West VA; Nick Brown (fiancée Jaclyn Repplinger), of Granger; Beau (Jessi) Brown, of Plattsburg, MO.,  and Tanner Brown (fiancée Ana Jackson), of Garner, NC

His grandmother – Carole Brown, of Fontanelle; grandfather – Charles Anstey of Massena; other relatives and friends.