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Larry Gatlin and Dwight Yoakam inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame

Larry Gatlin and Dwight Yoakam are among the artists set to be inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame this year.

The pair, along with Marcus Hummon, Kostas, Rivers Rutherford, and Sharon Vaughn, will join the prestigious organization during the 49th Anniversary Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Gala, taking place October 14th at Nashville’s Music City Center.

Dwight is being honored in the songwriter/artist category, while Larry is getting in in the veteran songwriter/artist category. As for the others, Vaughn is this year’s veteran songwriter inductee, while Hummon, Kostas and Rutherford are being inducted in the songwriter category.

 

 

Kitty Cat Kate

Kate, a 3 1/2 month old Domestic Short Hair kitten is our KBOE/KMZN Pet of the Week.  Kate was born at the shelter on April 19 and is excited about finding her furever home! She’s a sweet girl loves to be held, likes to explore, and is litter trained.  After  Call Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter at (641) 673-3991 for more information about Kate or a wide variety of other loving and adoptable pets!

Largest US immigration raids in a decade net 680 arrests

By ROGELIO V. SOLIS and JEFF AMY

MORTON, Miss. (AP) — U.S. immigration officials raided seven Mississippi chicken processing plants Wednesday, arresting 680 mostly Latino workers in the largest workplace sting in at least a decade.

The raids, planned months ago, happened just hours before President Donald Trump visited El Paso, Texas, the majority-Latino border city where a man linked to an online screed about a “Hispanic invasion” was charged in a shooting that left 22 people dead.

“On a day when we seek unifying words and acts to heal the nation’s broken heart, President Trump allows so many families and communities to be torn apart,” said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights.

About 600 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents fanned out across the plants operated by five companies, surrounding the perimeters to prevent workers from fleeing.

In Morton, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) east of the capital of Jackson, workers filled three buses — two for men and one for women — at a Koch Foods Inc. plant.

Those arrested were taken to a military hangar to be processed for immigration violations. About 70 family, friends and residents waved goodbye and shouted, “Let them go! Let them go!” Later, two more buses arrived.

A tearful 13-year-old boy whose parents are from Guatemala waved goodbye to his mother, a Koch worker, as he stood beside his father. Some employees tried to flee on foot but were captured in the parking lot.

Workers, including Domingo Candelaria, who could show they were in the country legally were allowed to leave the plant after agents searched the trunks of their vehicles.

“It was a sad situation inside,” Candelaria said.

Mississippi is the nation’s fifth-largest chicken producing state and the plants’ tough processing jobs have mainly been filled by Latino immigrants eager to take whatever work they can get. Chicken plants dominate the economies of Morton and other small towns east of Jackson.

Based in Park Ridge, Illinois, Koch is one of the largest poultry producers in the U.S, with operations in Mississippi and five other states. The company didn’t respond to telephone calls and emails seeking comment.

Matthew Albence, ICE’s acting director, told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday in Pearl, just down the road from the Koch plant, that the raids could be the largest-ever workplace operation in any single state. Asked about their coinciding with Trump’s visit to El Paso, Albence responded, “This is a long-term operation that’s been going on.” He said raids are “racially neutral” and based on evidence of illegal residency.

The companies involved could be charged with knowingly hiring workers who are in the county illegally and will be scrutinized for tax, document and wage fraud, Albence said.

Bill Chandler, executive director of the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance, called the “terrible” raids “another effort to drive Latinos out of Mississippi,” and he blamed Trump for fanning racism with his past incendiary comments about immigrants.

“This is the same thing that Trump is doing at the border with the Border Patrol,” he said, referring to the increased crackdown on migrants coming into the U.S.

Major immigration raids were common under President George W. Bush, including one at a kosher meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, in 2008 that resulted in about 400 arrests. President Barack Obama avoided them, limiting workplace immigration efforts to low-profile audits.

Trump resumed workplace raids, but the months of preparation and hefty resources they require make them rare. Last year, the administration targeted a landscaping company near Toledo, Ohio, and a meatpacking plant in eastern Tennessee. The former owner of the Tennessee plant was sentenced to 18 months in prison last month.

On Wednesday, a hangar at a Mississippi Air National Guard base in Flowood, adjoining the Jackson airport, was set up to process those who were detained. Employees formed seven lines, one for each workplace raided, with fingerprint scanners and document printers at each interview station.

Cooling misters blew in front of fans, and 2,000 catered meals were ordered.

Agents who arrived at the Morton plant passed a chain-link fence with a sign that said the company was hiring. Workers’ wrists were tied with plastic bands and they deposited personal belongings in clear plastic bags.

“This will affect the economy,” Maria Isabel Ayala, a child care worker for plant employees, said as the buses left. “Without them here, how will you get your chicken?”

Other companies targeted in the raids included Peco Foods Inc., which has plants in Bay Springs, Canton and Sebastopol; PH Food Inc. in Morton; MP Food Inc. in Pelahatchie and Pearl River Foods Inc. in Carthage.

“We are fully cooperating with the authorities in their investigation and are navigating a potential disruption of operations,” Peco, based in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, said in a statement. The company added that it participates in E-Verify, a government program to screen new hires for immigration status.

No one answered the phone at Pearl River Foods. A woman who answered the phone at PH Food declined to comment or identify herself. A telephone listing could not be found for MP Food.

___

Amy reported from Pearl, Mississippi. Associated Press reporter Elliot Spagat in San Diego contributed to this report.

Osky’s Blom to walk on at Iowa in 2020

From the Oskaloosa Indians to the Iowa Hawkeyes.  According to several online sources, kicker Aaron Blom has agreed to be a preferred walk-on at Iowa in the fall of 2020.  Blom is going into his senior season at Oskaloosa.  He made four of nine field goals in 2018 and 35 of his 58 kicksoffs went for touchbacks.  Blom’s 16 career field goals are most in Oskaloosa history…and he also holds the school record for longest field goal—a 50 yarder against Mount Pleasant in 2016.  Blom goes into this season ninth on the Indians’ all-time scoring list with 177 points.

Foster’s final five

Oskaloosa High senior to be Xavier Foster, has whittled his list of favored colleges to five. Foster, a seven foot center who helped the Indians win the Class 3A State boys’ basketball championship in March, says his final five includes Iowa, Iowa State, Providence, Baylor and Virginia Tech.  Foster holds the Oskaloosa records for single season and career blocked shots and last season averaged 14.4 points, 11.8 rebounds and 6.2 blocked shots per game for the Indians.

Butter Sesame Street characters to join traditional Iowa State Fair cow

 Story and Photo by Dennis Morrice, (KLEM, Le Mars)

RADIO IOWA – The iconic “butter cow” has been a part of the annual Iowa State Fair since 1911 and Sarah Pratt of West Des Moines sculpted this year’s dairy cow — as she’s done each of the past 18 years.

“Really any kind of butter works, although if I have access to it, low moisture butter — so butter that’s been churned for a longer period of time — works better,” Pratt says. “I typically used recycled butter, so it in effect does the same thing. As I use it year-to-year-to-year, it reduces the moisture and becomes more like clay.”

Pratt carves a butter cow for the Illinois State Fair and does a butter sculpture for the Kansas State Fair as well.

“Here at the Iowa State Fair we have a lovely, very long stretch of cooler, so I can put inside the cooler a cow and also a themed-sculpture,” Pratt says.

Pratt marked the 100th anniversary of John Deere during the 2018 Iowa State Fair and sculpted — out of butter — a replica of the “Waterloo Boy” tractor.

“It was extremely difficult in the sence of trying to get the scale just right and all the details,” Pratt says.

This year, fair-goers who pass through the Agriculture Building may see the figures Pratt has made to celebrate a long-running children’s television program.

“We are very excited to be honoring the 50th anniversary of ‘Sesame Street’ which I grew up watching and also the 50th anniversary of Iowa Public Television, which is the channel I watched ‘Sesame Street’ on, so they kind of go hand-in-hand,” Pratt says. “It’s really going to be a family-friendly sculpture this year.”

Pratt uses about 1200 pounds of butter for her Iowa State Fair carvings.

Knoxville Nationals begin Wednesday

Sprint Car racing’s biggest event begins Wednesday night (8/7) with the first of two nights of qualifying at the 59th Knoxville Nationals.  Saturday night’s (8/10) championship lineup will be determined by a points system which includes qualifying, heat races and qualifying feature races.  Race director John McCoy says it’s a system that’s been in place since the 1970s.

“It’s a ‘stand on the gas’ format and it’s a points thing and you have to make points every time you hit the track.  Everybody’s complained about it and said there’s a better way of doing it and they’ve raised Cain and everything.  But you know what?  Day in and day out, year in and year out, it just seems to be the fairest result.”
Ten time winner Donny Schatz makes a qualifying run on Wednesday night, while defending champion Brad Sweet will be part of Thursday night’s (8/8) qualifying program.
“We try to split the nights up.  More importantly by a little bit of seeding, so we try to get some of the guys, the nationwide guys, the (World of) Outlaws, we try to go every other car in their points. Some of the other tracks around the country, we look at their points, and if some of those guys came, we try to slough them up a little bit.  (We try to) do everything we can. Of course, some years it’s impossible.”
The more than $1 million purse will pay $150,000 to the winner.  Saturday night’s championship race will be 50 laps.
Wednesday’s racing at Knoxville Nationals has hot laps at 7:15pm with the heat races starting around 8:30.

USA Today HQ evacuated after report of man with weapon

By MATTHEW BARAKAT

McLEAN, Va. (AP) — An unconfirmed report of an armed person at the Northern Virginia office building that houses USA Today prompted an evacuation and massive police response Wednesday that found no immediate signs of violence.

Fairfax County Police Chief Edwin Roessler said at a news conference that his department got a 911 call around noon from the building saying an armed “former employee” had been seen there.

Roessler said it was not clear yet whether that report was true. A floor-by-floor search of the 11-story building was underway Wednesday afternoon and expected to last for hours, but Roessler said so far there had been no evidence of violence.

USA Today reported that alarms sounded and police squad cars converged on the scene in McLean, Virginia, as employees waited outside. Law enforcement officers with rifles and body armor patrolled the area and a helicopter hovered overhead.

Taylor Rosa, an accountant for USA Today’s owner, Gannett, said he was in his office when co-workers told him there were police with body armor on the campus. But he and others went back to work. He said his initial guess was that some sort of VIP was visiting the headquarters and had police protection. About five minutes later, they were told to evacuate.

“There were some people that definitely had panic in their faces” as they evacuated, Rosa said.

“Mostly we were just a little confused,” he said.

Rosa said he had gotten notice from his human resources department that it may be two to four hours before employees could re-enter the building, a glass structure tucked in Tysons Corner in a row of other corporate campuses.

Roessler said he couldn’t say for sure whether the person reported to be in the building was a Gannett employee. The building also houses other tenants.

Police were searching for the “person of interest,” he said.

The incident came just two days after GateHouse Media, a fast-growing chain backed by an investment firm, announced it was buying Gannett in a $1.4 billion merger of two of the largest U.S. newspaper companies.

The companies said they were committed to journalistic excellence while also cutting costs by $300 million annually. The combined company would have more than 260 daily papers in the U.S. along with more than 300 weeklies.

Future Ready Iowa

Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds wants Iowans to get ahead in the workplace. That’s why the Legislature has passed the Future Ready Iowa initiative.  The Governor says:

“It has a goal of having 70{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} of Iowans to have either education or training beyond high school by the year 2025.  We’re about 58{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} right now, so we’re starting from a pretty good place.”
Reynolds says there will be summits on Future Ready Iowa this fall across the state, including in Pella and Fairfield at dates to be announced.

Body in South Skunk River identified

Here’s an update to a story the No Coast Network has been following.  The body that was found in the South Skunk River Tuesday afternoon (8/6) is that of an Oskaloosa woman.  The Iowa Department of Public Safety has identified the victim as 24-year-old Ashley Shafer.  She had been reported missing to Oskaloosa Police on Monday (8/5).  Shafer’s body was found Tuesday afternoon in the South Skunk River near the Glendale Access in Mahaska County.  While there was an autopsy on Shafer, the cause of her death is still being investigated.  The Division of Criminal Investigation, Oskaloosa Police and Mahaska County Sheriff’s Office are still looking into what led to Ashley Shafer’s death.

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