In 2010 – Lady Antebellum won in three categories, Top Vocal Group, Single Record and Song of the Year, for “Need You Now”, at the 45th Academy of Country Music Awards from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Carrie Underwood became the first woman in history to win the Entertainer of the Year award at the Academy of Country Music Awards twice. Underwood previously won the award at the 2009 ceremony.
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Carrie Underwood Inducts Kelsea Ballerini into the Grand Ole Opry
CMT – Ever since she made her Grand Ole Opry debut on Valentine’s Day in 2015, Kelsea Ballerini, 25, has been absolutely crushing it.
She’s released two albums, joined the CMT Next Women of Country program, won two ACM awards, become a two-time Grammy nominee and a platinum-selling artist. She’s recorded with The Chainsmokers, toured with Kelly Clarkson, rocked the 2018 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, and she’s has hosted TV shows, including the annual CMA Fest concert special.
On Tuesday (April 16), Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban helped induct Ballerini as the Grand Ole Opry’s newest and youngest member live on Nashville’s Opry stage. Urban and Ballerini toured together on 2018’s Graffiti U tour, and Ballerini and Underwood were among last year’s CMT Artists of the Year. Ballerini’s first performances as an Opry member were “Peter Pan,” “In Between,” her current Top 10 hit, “Miss Me More” and Trisha Yearwood’s “Walk Away Joe,” the latter of which was a collaboration with Underwood.
“I want to thank [the Opry] for asking this incredible, talented, smart, sweet, beautiful, woman to be a member,” Underwood said of Ballerini onstage while becoming visibly emotional. “You have accomplished so much in your career, and you will accomplish undoubtedly infinite amounts more in your career and in your life — awards, No. 1s, sales, tours, fans and just all of it — this is better than all of that. This is the heart and soul of country music. The Opry has been and always will be here — the heart and soul of country music, the family. You are in it.”
“I think that especially since I moved to Nashville, I had this big dream to do all these kinds of things,” Ballerini said after Underwood’s formal induction. “I’ve rarely looked up. There’s rarely been a moment that’s made me just stop, take a minute, be grateful and look up. One that I remember is Feb. 14, 2015, and that is when I made my Opry debut. One is right now.
“I just want to say, that it’s so nice and comforting to know that no matter where life takes me, and no matter if the radio stops playing me tomorrow, and whatever happens, I can always come here, and I can always play country music.”
Ballerini also made time to thank family and friends who were there and listening at home.
“Thank you for loving me regardless,” she said, “and thank you for showing up for me for my mountaintop moments and for the moments that aren’t so glamorous. And Grand Ole Opry, thanks for seeing something in me and for believing that I’ll always love you like I do, because I do, but I will.”
CMT Hot 20 Countdown will have a full recap of Ballerini’s Opry induction on Saturday and Sunday (April 20-21) at 9 a.m. ET.
Ballerini’s Opry induction follows the sold-out opening weekend of The Miss Me More tour with Brett Young and Brandon Ratcliff. The tour will visit her hometown of Knoxville, Tenn. on Thursday (April) for arena show at the Knoxville Civic Coliseum.
King The Pit Bull Terrier Mix
Our Pet of the Week this week is King the 1-1/2 year old Pit Bull Terrier mix who was surrendered to the shelter because his owner could no longer care for him. He’s a handsome guy and loves attention. He loves to play with balls and tug toys and likes to play fetch and wrestle!! He knows “sit” and “come” and would love to have more training. He will jump up on you, so he will need to work on that. Come on out and meet King!! Call Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter at (641) 673-3991 for more information about King or a wide variety of other loving and adoptable pets!
Young woman ‘infatuated’ with Columbine is found dead
By KATHLEEN FOODY and COLLEEN SLEVIN
LITTLETON, Colo. (AP) — A young Florida woman who traveled to Colorado and bought a shotgun for what authorities feared would be a Columbine-inspired attack just days ahead of the 20th anniversary was found dead Wednesday in an apparent suicide after a nearly 24-hour manhunt.
Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Shrader said 18-year-old Sol Pais was discovered by the FBI with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The manhunt had led to the closing of Denver-area schools as a precaution.
During the manhunt, the FBI said Pais was “infatuated” with Columbine and made threats ahead of Saturday’s anniversary of the attack that killed 13 people at Columbine High School in 1999. The FBI described her “extremely dangerous.”
The Miami Beach high school student flew to Colorado on Monday night and bought a pump-action shotgun and ammunition, authorities said.
“We deal with a lot of threats at Columbine,” John McDonald, executive director of security for the Jefferson County school system, said when the manhunt was over. “This one felt different. It was different. It certainly got our attention.”
Agents had focused the search around the base of Mount Evans, a popular recreational area about 60 miles southwest of Denver.
All classes and extracurricular activities for about a half-million students were canceled as a precaution, though sheriff’s spokesman Mike Taplin said the young woman’s threats were general and not specific to any school.
Authorities said Pais was last seen not far from Columbine — in the Jefferson County foothills outside Denver — in a black T-shirt, camouflage pants and black boots. Police were instructed to detain her for a mental health evaluation.
In Pais’ hometown of Surfside, Florida, Police Chief Julio Yero asked that the family be given “privacy and a little time to grieve.”
“This family contributed greatly to this investigation from the very onset. They provided valuable information that led us to Colorado and a lot of things that assisted in preventing maybe more loss of life,” he said.
Pais’ parents last saw her on Sunday and reported her missing to Florida authorities on Monday night, Surfside police said.
Because of the threats, Columbine and more than 20 other schools outside Denver locked their doors for nearly three hours Tuesday afternoon, and some canceled evening activities or moved them inside.
Adam Charni, a Miami Beach High School senior, said Pais dressed in black and kept mostly to herself. He said he was “baffled” to learn she was the person authorities in Colorado were searching for.
Two teenage gunmen attacked Columbine on April 20, 1999, killing 12 classmates and a teacher before taking their own lives.
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Associated Press writers Ellis Rua in Miami Beach, Florida and James Anderson and Thomas Peipert in Denver contributed to this report.
AARON WATSON UNFURLS HIS SUMMER 2019 THE RED BANDANA TOUR
THE BOOT – Aaron Watson will be kicking off his summer in style, with 13 just-announced stops for his 2019 The Red BandanaTour. The show will launch in Abilene, Texas — the country star’s hometown town — on June 28.
“Touring is what we do, it’s how we built the business and met so many amazing fans over the years,” says Watson of the new dates, according to Rolling Stone. “I can assure everyone that we plan on coming to your market over the course of this record with a brand-new stage and production as well as set list.”
The tour takes its name from Watson’s forthcoming new record, which will drop on June 21, just a week before the jaunt kicks off. “I am so excited to announce the new tour this summer with the release of my new album, Red Bandana,” the singer states in a press release. “Of course, kicking it off in my hometown of Abilene means the world to me … We’ll be playing the old favorites and a lot of new songs from Red Bandana.”
Tickets for all announced tour stops are on sale now, with more dates to be revealed in the coming weeks. For details and ticketing information, visit Watson’s official website.
Aaron Watson, 2019 The ‘Red Bandana’ Tour Dates:
June 28 — Abilene, Texas @ Taylor County Expo Center
June 29 — Houston, Texas @ White Oak Music Hall (Outdoors)
July 6 — Big Lake, Texas @ Big Lake Festival
July 11 — Rhinelander, Wisc. @ Hodag Country Festival
July 12 — Cincinnati, Ohio @ Riverfront Live
July 13 — Varysburg, N.Y. @ Jam In The Valley
July 18 — Hastings, Neb. @ Adams County Fair
July 19 — Lake of the Ozarks, Mo. @ Lazy Gators
July 26 — Yerington, Nev. @ A Night In The Country
Aug. 10 — Beaumont, Texas @ Ford Park Arena
Aug. 15 — Kansas City, Mo. @ Power & Lights District
Aug. 23 — Pueblo, Colo. @ Colorado State Fair
Sept. 5 — Puyallup, Wash. @ Washington State Fair
April 17 – On This Day
In 1970 – Johnny Cash played at the White House with June Carter and The Statler Brothers for President Nixon, who requested that he played “A Boy Named Sue.” Cash declined Nixon’s request to do Merle Haggard’s “Okie From Muskogee” but did perform “Folsom Prison Blues”, “Peace In The Valley” and “What Is Truth.”
Osky boys track team aiming for Drake Relays
This is the time of year when a young athlete starts thinking about the Drake Relays. Oskaloosa’s boys’ track team could send three relay teams to the Relays based on Tuesday’s (4/16) results at Mid-Prairie in Wellman. The Indians’ distance medley team of Aaron Blom, Casey Hill, Brayden VanKampen and Carter Huyser won in a time of 3:37.69 seconds—which is the top time in Iowa Class 3A track this season. Oskaloosa’s 4 by 400 relay team of Brayden VanKampen, Iszac Schultz, Aaron Blom and Carter Huyser ran a season best 3:27.31, which is second best in the state in Class 3A. And Osky’s 4 by 100 relay team of Aaron Blom, Reed Brown, Brayden VanKampen and Casey Hill reduced their time to 44.93 seconds, which Indians Coach Mike Sterner says should qualify them for the Drake Relays. Those Drake Relays are next week in Des Moines. The Indians boys’ track team will run again Thursday (4/18) at Newton.
Columbine attack shapes schools, families 20 years later
By KATHLEEN FOODY, ALLEN G. BREED and P. SOLOMON BANDA
DENVER (AP) — Dropping her kids off at school used to be the hardest part of Kacey Ruegsegger Johnson’s day. She would cry most mornings as they left the car, and relied on texted photos from their teachers to make it through the day.
Now, the mother of four — and Columbine shooting survivor — sees mornings as an opportunity. She wakes early, makes breakfast and strives to send a clear message before her kids leave home: I adore you.
Twenty years after teenage gunmen attacked Columbine High School, Ruegsegger Johnson and other alumni of the Littleton, Colorado, school have become parents. The emotional toll of the shooting that killed 12 classmates and a teacher has been amplified by fears about their own kids’ safety , spiking each time yet another shooter enters yet another school.
“I’m grateful I have the chance to be a mom. I know some of my classmates weren’t given that opportunity,” Ruegsegger Johnson said, tears springing to her eyes. “There are parts of the world I wish our kids never had to know about. I wish that there would never be a day I had to tell them the things I’ve been through.”
As the survivors of Columbine entered adulthood, they watched the attacks at their school and so many others — Virginia Tech, Sandy Hook, Parkland — alter the American classroom.
Drills teaching students to “lock down” inside classrooms became routine. Schools formed teams to assess threats, particularly from students. Security firms forged a multibillion-dollar industry, introducing surveillance video, panic buttons and upgraded doors and locks. And police changed their strategies for responding to a gunman intent only on killing.
Some of the Columbine survivors find comfort in students being shielded by high fences or locked doors. Others find themselves frustrated by the ready acceptance of active-shooter drills in schools.
Now, many of these students-turned-parents grapple with crippling fear dwarfing pride as their children walk into their own schools.
Ruegsegger Johnson has developed her own ritual for the school drop-off. On a recent sunny spring morning, she helped her kids find their book bags and tie their shoes before ushering them to the car. She prayed aloud as they neared the school, giving thanks for a beautiful morning and asking for a day of learning and friendship.
As always, she made a silent addition: Keep them safe.
She coaches her daughter when she ventures to places outside her mom’s control: Where is the closest exit? What street are you on? Who is around you?
“I never want my kids to feel an ounce of pain, the way that I felt pain,” Over said. “I know that that’s something that I can’t control. And I think that’s hard on me.”
Over was in the Columbine cafeteria when the gunmen approached the school, targeting students eating lunch outside. She escaped with no physical injuries, but has struggled emotionally for years.
Therapy and family support helped. But waving goodbye to her daughter on the first day of preschool triggered a panic attack — the first of many. She was diagnosed with chronic panic disorder, resumed therapy and found new strategies for her life as a mother of two.
Over’s daughter, Brie, was 11 when her mother first told her about Columbine, a few days before the anniversary. That April 20, they visited the school for a memorial ceremony that included a reading of the names of the 13 people killed. Afterward, the Overs walked together through the quiet school.
Here is where she hid in the cafeteria, Amy Over showed her daughter. And that is the staircase where she last saw her basketball coach, Dave Sanders, who died in a classroom awaiting rescue after valiantly trying to help evacuate the school.
For Over, opening up to her daughter was cathartic and so they have continued to attend annual memorial events, now imbued with a gentler tone with the girl by her side.
“It’s a day of reflection,” Over said. “It’s a day of love and hope. And I get to share that with my daughter.”
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Though it sometimes seems mass shootings inside schools are a commonplace occurrence, they are relatively rare, and statistics show the number has not substantially increased since 2000.
But that is of little consolation to a swath of American parents. About 2 in 10 parents said they are not at all or not very confident in their children’s safety while at school, while a third of parents are very or extremely confident, according to a March survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Austin Eubanks, who survived being shot in the Columbine library, is among those who doesn’t fear the schools his sons, ages 13 and 9, attend.
Instead, he laments that active-shooter drills, video surveillance and armed guards are all too routine for them — as natural as a tornado drill was for him growing up in Oklahoma.
“We are so unwilling to actually make meaningful progress on eradicating the issue,” said Eubanks, who remains scarred by watching his best friend, Corey DePooter, die. “So we’re just going to focus on teaching kids to hide better, regardless of the emotional impact that that bears on their life. To me, that’s pretty sad.”
Isolation, depression, addiction and suicide are among the larger dangers he sees facing his kids’ generation, and he knows firsthand the damage those can cause.
For more than a decade after the attack, Eubanks was addicted to prescription pain medication. He got sober in 2011 and began repairing his family, including his relationship with his sons and their mother. He works at an addiction treatment facility and travels the country telling his story.
At home in Colorado, he tries to help his sons become attuned to pain others may be feeling. He encourages them to talk to an adult when peers seem so angry or afraid that they may need help. He tries to remember that — for them — all of the changes in schools are just normal.
He was horrified by videos that Marjory Stoneman Douglas students shot in Parkland, Florida, as they hid inside a classroom while a gunman moved through the halls of the high school. He has urged his own boys to always try to escape first — whatever it takes — even if the drills advise staying put.
“These are my children, and what I care about most is their safety,” he said. “And I know that for them, in a situation like that, getting away from it as quickly as possible is the best likelihood of success.”
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When Kacey Ruegsegger Johnson’s daughter Mallory was 8, a classmate saw her mom on a Denver news station. Mallory had a question: Was her mother famous?
Ruegsegger Johnson knew it was time for the conversation she and her husband had anticipated for years. During a family vacation, she pulled her oldest daughter aside for a private talk — the one that finally explained the scars marking Ruegsegger Johnson’s right shoulder and why she was unable to reach up toward high shelves or use her right arm to lift the kids.
In 1999, Kacey Ruegsegger was reading a magazine in the school library when a teacher entered, shouting that someone had a gun. The junior crouched under a computer desk, pulling a chair in front of her body. She felt well-hidden, but the shooters’ taunting voices and the sound of gunshots grew louder and got closer. Then one of the gunmen leaned down and fired a shotgun at her.
The blast shredded her right shoulder. She tried not to move or cry out, praying the shooter would believe she was dead and walk away. When the pair left the library, other students helped her flee.
For the last 20 years, she has lived with post-traumatic stress disorder, along with physical pain. She worked as a nurse until the injuries to her arm forced her to stop.
Ruegsegger Johnson was thrilled to become a mother, but struggled to leave her infant daughter at daycare during church services. She considered home schooling, terrified that sending her children into a school was akin to exposing them to danger.
Leaning on her religious faith and family support, she worked hard to push the terror down as her children got older. She avoided media coverage of school violence and became a resource for other survivors of shootings. She grew tired of living in fear and unwilling to let her past affect her kids’ experience.
Though she still struggles occasionally, she resolved to make mornings before school a positive time, focused on building her children up. And she finds at least some comfort in their school’s evacuation plans and security measures. She told her children that lockdown drills were like fire drills — practice to keep them safe from an unlikely danger.
But when Mallory confessed to feeling afraid that “a bad person” could still find her in the evacuation location used during one drill, Ruegsegger Johnson flashed back to herself crouched under that computer desk in the Columbine library.
“The bad guys found me, and I thought I had a really great hiding spot,” she said. “So what am I going to say to a little girl who has that same fear that the bad guy might find her? It was a really hard moment for me.”
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Breed reported from Cary, North Carolina. Associated Press researcher Jennifer Farrar in New York and writer Reese Dunklin in Dallas contributed to this report.
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The prospect of Amy Over’s 13-year-old daughter starting high school could have triggered a panic attack in the not-too-distant past. But now she’s focused on helping the girl prepare for the unexpected.
Osky girls track
Oskaloosa High’s girls’ track team finished fourth at a meet at Bondurant-Farrar Monday (4/15). The Indians’ Emma Kelderman won two events: the high jump and 400 meter hurdles, while Faith DeRonde won the discus. Pella won the meet; their individual results are not available. The Oskaloosa girls have their next meet Thursday (4/18) at Newton.
Kane Brown and Wife Katelyn Jae Expecting
Kane Brown is going to be a dad! The country star, 25, and his wife Katelyn Jae, 26, are expecting their first child together.
Brown revealed the big baby news on Instagram on Monday (April 15)
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