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LEONA GARD, 93, of Atlantic (Svcs. 7/8/20)

Obituaries

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

LEONA GARD, 93, of Atlantic, died Sunday, July 5th, at home. Funeral services for LEONA GARD will be held 1-p.m. Wed., July 8th, at the Roland Funeral Home, in Atlantic.

Burial is in the Atlantic Cemetery.

Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

LEONA GARD is survived by:

Her son – Clinton (Patricia) Gard, of Omaha, NE;

Her step-daughters: JoEllyn (Gene) Anderson, and Jacqueline (Steve) Conzemius

Her brother – John Carr of Pleasant Valley, MO.

Her sister –  Sharon (Larry) Rock, of Atlantic.

4 grandchildren and 6 great-grandchildren.

Red Oak woman arrested Sunday night

News

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A Red Oak woman was arrested at around 10:20-p.m. Sunday, for Public Intoxication. According to Red Oak Police, 31-year old Nikki Mae Brown was taken into custody in the area of 3rd and Corning Streets. She was transported to the Montgomery County Jail, where bond was set at $300.

Indigenous group seeks removal of statehouse statues, mural

News

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Indigenous activist group Seeding Sovereignty are asking state lawmakers to remove two monuments on the state capitol grounds. The group held a rally at the statehouse on the 4th of July. Christine Nobiss spoke in front of a statue that’s described by a state website as a pioneer man and his son being guided by a, quote, “friendly Indian.”

“This is not the story of this state. We did not have friendly Indians showing the way to people. We had settler invaders and colonial militias come into this state and murder their way across this country,” she said. “This land is stolen land.” The group also wants the state to remove a Christopher Columbus memorial outside the capital. They delivered a letter to lawmakers that also mentions removal of a mural inside the capitol building that depicts westward expansion.

Kelly Buffalo-Quinn says she thinks the Iowa Capitol is one of the most beautiful statehouses in the country, but it’s marred by what she calls these symbols of white supremacy. “There are better ways to depict every person within the state of Iowa, especially seeing as how this is Native land,” she said at the 4th of July rally, “the Meskwaki, the Ioway and the Lakota.” Counter-protesters gathered near the Columbus statue, but the two competing events ended without violence.

The organizer of the counter protest said it was about standing up for the rule of law and not succumbing to mob rule.

(Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Katarina Sostaric)

Muscatine Mayor orders face coverings in public

News

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The mayor of Muscatine has issued a proclamation for a city-wide face covering mandate starting at 6 a.m. today (Monday) and lasting for six months. Muscatine Mayor Diana Broderson says she’s concerned by growing COVID-19 caseloads in neighboring areas.

“Our numbers aren’t terrible right this minute. If we wait ’til they are, it’s going to be too late. People will be sick, people will die and businesses will close,” she says. Broderson made her comments during an online event organized by Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement. Broderson announced her decision in a Sunday afternoon news conference and was booed by a crowd outside city hall as she removed her face mask to begin speaking.

Broderson told the crowd a face mask is not required outdoors when a person is more than six feet away from others. According to the Iowa attorney general’s interpretation of state law, mayors do not have the authority to issue the requirement that face masks be worn in public. Broderson says she’s exercising the “home rule” authority local election officials are granted in the Iowa Constitution.

“Mayors have the authority by statute to take control of their city in an emergency situation and make whatever mandates or whatever orders need to be done in order to provide for the health and safety of their community,” Broderson says. There have been 633 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Muscatine County and 70 percent of those cases have been adults between the ages of 18 and 60. Fourty-four Muscatine County residents have died of COVID-19.

Participants in high school team sports in Muscatine will be allowed to play without face coverings and Broderson is granting other exceptions to her face-mask mandate if social distancing is maintained. The exceptions include exercising or engaging in outdoor or indoor sports where social distancing is maintained, eating while seated at a restaurant or bar. Broderson also says face coverings may be removed when a service, like dental work, requires temporary removal.

Sports Brief: 7/6/20

Sports

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Kevin Harvick took advantage of Denny Hamlin’s late crash and wound up winning his third Brickyard 400 title. The Cup points leader beat Matt Kenseth across the yard of brick by 0.743 seconds to win his fourth race of the season. Harvick won for the 53rd time to move within one of tying Lee Petty for 11th on NASCAR’s career list, and it gave Stewart-Haas Racing a sweep of the weekend following Chase Briscoe’s win Saturday in the Xfinity Series race.

UNDATED (AP) — Colleges might have to pay into the hundreds of thousands of dollars to have their football players and other athletes tested for coronavirus. Many athletic departments already are in financial binds because of declines in state funding and student fees stemming from the pandemic. Especially hard hit are the small-budget schools on the lower end of the Football Bowl Subdivision. Methods are being developed that would allow multiple athletes to be tested simultaneously. That would provide some cost savings. An individual coronavirus test now runs about $100.

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Christian Yelich acknowledges he benefited from fortunate timing in his contract negotiations. The Brewers held a March 6 news conference to announce that the 2018 NL MVP had agreed to a nine-year, $215 million contract. Spring training was halted less than a week later because of the coronavirus pandemic. Yelich’s deal was finalized before the loss of revenue from Major League Baseball’s shortened season and labor unrest created at least some uncertainty about the game’s financial future. He says everybody is in a unique situation this season.

NEW YORK (AP) — The Yankees had their Sunday brightened by Masahiro Tanaka, who came to the ballpark and seemed well a day after being hit in the head by Giancarlo Stanton’s line drive. They’re hoping Yankee Stadium’s lights will do the same this week. The Yankees are planning to hold intrasquad night games Monday and Tuesday in the Bronx as they prepare for the July 23 start of a 60-game regular season condensed by the coronavirus pandemic. Tanaka is in concussion protocol after a CT scan came back negative. Manager Aaron Boone says it looks like the Japanese right-hander “dodged a bullet.”

UNDATED (AP) — The Oakland Athletics’ first full-squad workout was pushed back from Sunday following the July 4 holiday given the club hadn’t received results from position player intake testing done Friday, according to general manager David Forst. Manager Bob Melvin is eager to get everybody on the field together at the Coliseum while understanding he must be flexible during this fluid time.

UNDATED (AP) — Former Cy Young Award winner Félix Hernández has joined the list of major leaguers opting out of the 2020 season due to the coronavirus pandemic. The 34-year-old’s decision at least temporarily ends his bid to revive his career. The news comes amid growing unease in major league clubhouses with the season less than three weeks away. Stars Christian Yelich and Jose Altuve say they plan to play the 60-game season scheduled to start later this month. Reliever Sean Doolittle, who helped Washington win the World Series, plans to play but says that if he feels uncomfortable, he’ll opt out.

UNDATED (AP) — Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly says the NHL and NHL Players’ Association have agreed on protocols to resume the season but are still negotiating a collective bargaining agreement extension. The league’s board of governors and players’ executive committee and full membership must approve it for it to happen. If ratified, the agreement will end a pandemic-forced shutdown for 31 teams across North America that began in mid-March. Games would resume in late July or early August with 24 teams taking part in expanded playoffs, finishing with the Stanley Cup being awarded in October.

Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, July 6, 2020

News

July 6th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:35 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Four men died and a woman was injured in a fiery single-vehicle crash southwest of downtown Des Moines early Sunday. Des Moines Police said the crash happened around 2:30 a.m. Sunday on George Flagg Parkway near Water Works Park. The Volkswagen Golf caught fire after crashing into a tree with five people inside. An officer responding to the crash was able to pull a 22-year-old woman from the wreck. Police said she was in serious condition at a hospital. Police said the vehicle’s 22-year-old driver and three passengers, ages 22, 23 and 24, died in the crash. Their names weren’t immediately released.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa reported another 321 coronavirus cases Sunday to give the state 31,243 cases of COVID-19. The Iowa Department of Public Health said that as of 10 a.m. Sunday 721 people with COVID-19 had died since the outbreak began. For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness. Of all the people who have tested positive in Iowa, 24,671 have recovered. A total of 332,114 people have been tested in Iowa.

KNOXVILLE, Iowa (AP) — Police say an Iowa man who successfully sued one of his sons for the shooting death of his wife has been assaulted by his other son. The Des Moines Register reports that 55-year-old Billy Dean Carter was arrested Wednesday and charged with assaulting his father, 74-year-old Bill Carter. Police say the younger Carter knocked his father to the ground and kicked him twice on a road near the elder father’s home following an argument. In 2017, a jury ordered another of Bill Carter’s sons, Jason Carter, to pay $10 million to the estate of of his mother, 68-year-old Shirley, who died in 2015 from two gunshot wounds fired by a rifle. Jason Carter was later acquitted of murder in the case.

SCOTT KRAUTH, 51, of Grimes [& formerly of Massena] (Visitation 7/24/20)

Obituaries

July 5th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

SCOTT KRAUTH, 51, of Grimes [& formerly of Massena], died July 4, 2020, at his home. A Visitation for SCOTT KRAUTH will be held July 24th, from 3-until 8-p.m., at the Steen Funeral Home in Massena, where the family will greet friends from 6-until 8-p.m. July 24th.  (Due to COVID-19, social distancing will be practiced)

Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

A Private, family-only graveside service will be held at Victoria Township Cemetery, south of Massena.

Memorials may be directed to the Scott Krauth Memorial Fund to be established by the family.

SCOTT KRAUTH is survived by:

His mother – Earlene Krauth, of Massena

His sister – Stephanie Krauth & her husband Christopher Lindgren.

Other relatives, and friends.

Body of missing man recovered in MO. River near Bartlett

News

July 5th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The remains of a man who disappeared Wednesday afternoon following a boating incident, was recovered Saturday, in Fremont County. According to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, the man – whose name was not immediately released, but was said to be from out of the area – had entered the Missouri River to try and swim to shore after the boat he was in, ran out of gas on the Missouri River, in Mills County. The man’s companion made it to shore, but the victim got lost and likely drowned, or had a medical issue, authorities reported. His body was found  about two miles south of the Bartlett landing Saturday afternoon.

Missing/runaway Creston teen located in Corning

News

July 5th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office says a 15-year old reported missing/runaway from Creston was located Saturday at a residence in Corning. Following-up on tips, Deputies arrived at the residence and found the teen hiding in a closet. Further investigation revealed the teen was wanted on an active warrant out of Union County.  The juvenile was placed into custody and transported to the Union County Sheriff’s Office.

JOHN SHANNON, 65, of rural Pottawattamie County, formerly of Lewis (7-10-2020)

Obituaries

July 5th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

JOHN SHANNON, 65, of rural Pottawattamie County, formerly of Lewis, died Sunday, July 5th in Omaha. A Celebration of Life Memorial service for JOHN SHANNON will be held on Friday, July 10th at 2:00 pm at Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic.

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Visitation with the family will be held on Friday from 1:00 pm to service time at the funeral home.

Burial in the Oakwood Cemetery in Lewis.

Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

JOHN SHANNON is survived by:

Children:  Heather (Brian) Sandstrom of Indianapolis, IN; JK (Shelly) Shannon of Walnut; Sara (Dan) Connor of Waukee.

9 Grandchildren

3 Great-Grandchildren