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Drake set to host pro track and field event on August 29th

Sports

August 4th, 2020 by admin

Drake Stadium will host a one-of-a-kind professional track & field competition Aug. 29 with the Blue Oval Showcase. Drake Relays Director Blake Boldon announced the event on Monday afternoon. This is a one-time event featuring pro athletes.

Only athletes and officials will be allowed on the competition surface and a limited number of event staff and credentialed athlete support staff will be allowed in the stadium seating area. Seating in the first four rows surrounding the Blue Oval will not be permitted and the total number of individuals inside Drake Stadium will not exceed 10 percent of the venue’s reduced capacity.

The schedule of events includes sprints, hurdles, field events, and the USATF 1 Mile Road Championships. Additional details regarding the schedule, athletes and information on television and streaming viewing options will be shared in the coming days and weeks. Check out the full release from the Drake Relays HERE.

Hoagies for farmers

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Farmers have been busy caring for their growing crops, and soon it will be time to hit harvest them and bring those crops to market. When they are as busy as they are, it’s not easy to find time to grab something to eat, especially when you don’t want to have to stop and lose valuable time. The Exira Lions Club has a way to keep you fed and going, with their Hoagies for Farmers project.

Allen Zobel is a 17-year member of the Exira Lions Club. He says after speaking with area farmers, they agreed it would be a great idea to have sandwiches with them. The submarine-style sandwiches are three-for $10, and will be ham, turkey and salami. Zobel says they’ll only be sold in a three-pack.

Funds raised through the sale of the hoagies will be used for Lions Foundation Projects, with only a minimal amount for the local building upkeep.

(Most of the funds are used for the Iowa Lions Foundation which funds kid’s sight, cornea transplants and Torrie’s Angels and many other causes.)

Sales of the hoagies begin today (Tuesday), and will continue through August 22nd, and they would like for the tri-pack to be pre-paid.

The deadline for orders is Saturday, August 22nd. The sandwiches will be made available curbside, beginning Monday, August 24th. Call Allen’s wife and Lions Secretary Crystal Zobel, at 712-304-5197, to place your order and learn where to send your payment.

Backyard & Beyond 8-4-2020

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

August 4th, 2020 by admin

LaVon Eblen talks vegetables.

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Union County Sheriff’s report (8/4/20)

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports two arrests: At around 7:30 this (Tuesday) morning, 57-year old David Joseph Tindle, of Creston, was arrested following a traffic stop. Tindle was charged with driving while barred and later released from the Union County Jail on $2,000 bond.  Late Monday morning, 34-year old Anthony Charles Wasson, of Van Meter, was arrested at the Union County Law Enforcement Center. He was taken into custody on a Union County warrant for failure to appear on a violation of probation charge. Wasson was being held in the Union County Jail on $1,000 bond.

 

Mills County Sheriff’s report (8/4/20)

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports one person was arrested Monday night. 39-year old Larry Leigh Rice, of Lenox, was arrested near 400th Street & Highway 34, for having a concealed knife, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Rice was taken into custody at around 11-p.m.  His bond set at $1,300.

Congress’ new pandemic relief plan is hung up on $600/week jobless payments

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says extending the 600-dollars per week unemployment benefit is one of the bigger sticking points in negotiations over the latest COVID-19 relief package in Congress. While an earlier pandemic relief bill passed unanimously, compromise is slow with this one, according to Grassley, and the federal jobless payments are a key issue. “Well, we’ve got some people that think they ought to continue $600 even to the end of 2021,” Grassley says. “Then, we’ve got some that think that at four months, with the economy turning around, that we shouldn’t do anything.”

At recent town hall meetings in Iowa, Grassley says he heard from business owners in a range of professions, including in turkey processing, ethanol production and in physical therapy clinics. The chorus is always the same, he says, that they can’t get workers to come back as unemployment pays more than returning to the job. Grassley says, “When you pay people more not to work than to work, and at $600, it’s about two-thirds of the unemployed people getting more not working than working, there’s not an incentive to go back to work.”

In recent weeks, a top Democrat said the extended jobless benefits didn’t need to be 600-dollars a week, so Grassley says his fellow Republicans suggested lowering the benefit to 200-dollars, but that didn’t fly in negotiations either. “It’s a bad government policy and we have to take some guilt for it being in place in the first place,” Grassley says. “We wanted to help people that had dire need but you can’t discourage people from going back to work.”

Under the plan, Grassley says the federal government is essentially “out-competing private employers for workers.” There’s also disagreement over the second round of stimulus checks to most taxpayers. Some suggested one-time checks of between one-thousand and 12-hundred dollars, while Democrats suggested checks of up to two-thousand dollars — per month — but that proposal has no chance of passage.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 8/4/20

News, Podcasts

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Walnut City Council to meet Thursday evening

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Members of the Walnut City Council will meet during a regular session 5-p.m. Thursday, Aug. 6th at the Walnut Community Center. (You may also join the meeting electronically at https://www.gotomeet.me/WalnutCityCouncil1/august-6-2020-city-council-mtg, or dial-in by phone to 1-408-650-3123, and using access code 401-177-605).

Among the matters on the agenda for their meeting, is:

  • Information from Donna Dostal, w/regard to the Pottawattamie County Community Foundation.
  • Discussion pertaining to the Walnut Community & Fitness Center, including: Practices – Jr. High & Little League.
  • Discussion about the Sesquicentennial Celebration, Fire Dept. matters, and a FY 2020-21 Budget Amendment.
  • Following the Budget discussion, the Walnut City Council will act on an expected Motion to Amend the FY2020-21 Budget by $62,000 in the Sewer Fund, with the Public Hearing set for 5-p.m. Sept. 3rd.
  • The Council will also hold Zoning discussion, including: the possible appointment of a Zoning Administrator; New building permit application(s), and a Demolition Permit Fee.

New novel follows love story with the Manhattan Project as the backdrop

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A scientist who helped to build the atomic bombs that killed hundreds of thousands of people during World War Two went on to become one of the world’s greatest builders of cathedral pipe organs. That man is the basis for a new work of historical fiction by author Stephen Kiernan, a graduate of the University of Iowa Writers Workshop. Kiernan says his book, “Universe of Two,” follows the life of Charlie Fish.

Stephan Kiernan

“Like many of the young men who were drawn in to work on the Manhattan Project, he had no idea what he was being recruited for,” Kiernan says. “When he discovered his job was to help build an atomic weapon and that, in fact, he was to going to build the trigger, he felt a lot of moral misgivings. He wasn’t totally opposed to the bomb but he had a lot of conflict in his conscience about this.”

Set during the 1940s, the book revolves around a love story between a young musician and her brilliant mathematician sweetheart who finds himself a civilian employee of the military in Los Alamos, New Mexico. In our current time of a global pandemic, where social media posts can quickly become volatile, Kiernan says the novel might be a welcome avenue for readers to explore a bygone era. “There are three guys working on the atomic bomb together who have very different ideas about what it ought to be and how it ought to be used and the way that they debate it is, they sit around a campfire and drink beers together and talk about it every day,” Kiernan says. “I think that is an incredibly refreshing contrast with how we conduct our civic dialogue today.”

Months of research went into the book on an array of topics, like how pipe organs function, the soldering of electronics, and the physics and destructive capabilities of a nuclear weapon. During his research, Kiernan met two Japanese people who survived the bombings and he says his studies took several unexpected turns. “A lot of the scientists working on the bomb didn’t want it to be used and they certainly didn’t want it to be used on people. Hundreds of them signed petitions to President Roosevelt and then to President Truman saying, ‘Don’t use this on people,'” Kiernan says. “That was a total surprise to me. I thought they were all kind of gung ho for it.”

The book is being released today (Tuesday), the same week as the 75th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Kiernan’s last book dealt with the D-Day invasion, the massive Allied push to win the war in Europe, which had a more definitive focus than the first use of atomic weapons.  “This is an opportunity for us to reflect on something that’s a little less clear cut in terms of the right and wrong of it. This book doesn’t take a strong stance one way or another but there are characters within it who argue for and against the bomb and I think that’s a good way for people to be thinking about it,” Kiernan says. “Even with everything that’s going on in the world right now, it’s never a bad idea to reflect on history and what we can learn from it.”

A former newspaper reporter, Kiernan is 60 and lives in Vermont. This is his sixth book and his fourth novel.

(On the web at www.stephenpkiernan.com)

Creston Police report – 8/4/20

News

August 4th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department says a local business, The Bookwyrm at 210 N Maple, reported Monday afternoon that sometime between midnight and 3-a.m., Monday, someone vandalized a pop machine at the business. The damage was estimated at $25. And, 45-year old John Neely, of Creston, was arrested late Monday morning in the 500 block of W. Buckeye. Neely was charged with Driving While Suspended. He was subsequently released from the Union County Jail on a $300 bond.