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Oskaloosa Schools want to build enrollment

The Oskaloosa School Board revealed its priorities for the upcoming school year at Tuesday night’s (8/13) monthly Board meeting.  One of those priorities is to reduce the number of students leaving the Oskaloosa district via open enrollment.  Oskaloosa Superintendent Paula Wright explains how the district will do that.

“We are doing that by addressing our culture and climate and increasing our student achievement and making Oskaloosa an amazing place and making sure that we spread the word about all the amazing things that are happening here in Oskaloosa and letting people know that they’re all welcome here and treated with respect.”

Classes at Oskaloosa High School begin August 26.

VanderBeek fourth in USMTS race

In auto racing, Zack VanderBeek of New Sharon had a productive night Wednesday (8/14) at the US Modified Touring System race in Winston, Missouri.  VanderBeek won a heat race and then finished fourth in the 40 lap feature race.  Thursday night (8/15), the USMTS racers make their first ever appearance in Urbana, Missouri.

Hy-Vee warns of credit breach

If you’ve used your credit or debit card at a Hy-Vee gas pump, drive-through coffee shop or restaurant, your data may have been breached.  Hy-Vee released a statement Wednesday saying the company is aware of a possible breach involving payments only at its gas pumps, restaurants and drive-through coffee shops.  If you have used a credit or debit card to buy groceries or prescriptions, you’re in the clear, because Hy-Vee uses a different point of sale system for its grocery stores, drug stores and convenience stores.  Hy-Vee says you should monitor your debit and bank card statements for any unauthorized charges.

This day in in 1957, the Everly Brothers record “Wake Up Little Susie”

Today in 1957, the Everly Brothers recorded “Wake Up Little Susie” at the Methodist Television, Radio and Film Commission studios in Nashville.

The record reached No. 1 on the Billboard Pop chart and the Cash Box Best Selling Records chart, despite having been banned from Boston radio stations for lyrics that, at the time, were considered suggestive, according to a 1986 interview with Don Everly. “Wake Up Little Susie” also spent seven weeks atop the Billboard country chart and got to No. two on the UK Singles Chart. The song was ranked at No. 318 on the Rolling Stone magazine’s list of “The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time”.

In an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show during the 2000 U.S. presidential election, then-Governor George W. Bush named “Wake Up Little Susie” as his favorite song. “Wake Up Little Susie” was the first single filmmaker David Lynch bought.

 

Hunter Hayes drops new album tomorrow

Hunter Hayes is releasing a new album, and fans don’t have to wait long for it. In fact, the record, “Wild Blue (Part 1),” drops tomorrow. The record, his first in four years, will actually be the first in a trilogy, featuring the 10 songs on Part 1 either written or co-written by Hunter himself.

“I was originally going to put out the album on the anniversary of my debut album (in October) because I felt like I was picking up where I left off there,” he said on Today” when announcing the record, “but I decided I couldn’t wait any longer.”

Hunter actually recorded his album in his living room, and tells “The Tennessean” it had a big impact on the final product. “I had nothing keeping me from saying what I wanted, writing what I wanted, producing what I wanted,” he says. “I spent a lot of time writing as if the world was watching, and I decided to make a record as if no one was watching, and that helped me remove all my filters.”

Check out the track list below:

“Madness”
“Wild Blue”
“Heartbreak”
“One Good Reason”
“Dear God”
“Loving You”
“My Song Too”
“One Shot”
“Night and Day”
“Still”

Aaron Blom talks about future plans

Last week, Oskaloosa senior Aaron Blom announced he would walk on at the University of Iowa next fall as a kicker.  Blom talks about his decision.

“I really like the coaching staff and I like the academic programs that they have available.  And it just felt like home, so I figured there was no time to wait.”

Blom says he also had a scholarship offer from Western Illinois, a Division I-AA school.  His 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.  

Flooded Mississippi a threat as hurricane season heats up

By JEFF MARTIN and JANET McCONNAUGHEY

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The river that drains much of the flood-soaked United States is still running far higher than normal, menacing New Orleans in multiple ways just as the hurricane season intensifies.

For months now, a massive volume of water has been pushing against the levees keeping a city mostly below sea level from being inundated. The Mississippi River has run past New Orleans at more than 11 feet (3.4 meters) above sea level for more than 200 days.

“The big threat is water getting through or underneath,” said Nicholas Pinter, an expert on river dynamics and flood risks who’s studied levee breaches across the nation. “The longer the duration, the greater the threat.”

“That ultimately could undermine the levee as well and cause a breech or a failure,” said Cassandra Rutherford, assistant professor of geotechnical engineering at Iowa State University.

The federal agency that maintains the levees is aware of the risks. But Ricky Boyett, spokesman for the New Orleans office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said the corps is confident that South Louisiana river levees are in great condition, with improvements made since 2011.

“If there’s a silver lining going into hurricane season with the river this high for this long, we’re entering the hurricane season having done 200 inspections of the levee since February,” Boyett said.

Inspectors have been checking at least twice a week for parked barges, stuck debris or other potential trouble, such as tire ruts or damage from feral hogs on grassy surfaces. They also look for water seeping through, and for sand boils — spots where water tunneling below a levee seems to bubble out of the ground.

Concrete mats armor underwater areas likely to be eaten away by the river’s current, Boyett said. Sand boils get ringed with sandbags until the water pressure on both sides equalizes, stopping the flow. And because some permanent repairs can’t be made until river levels drop, dangerous seepage gets stopgap coverage: About 63,000 large sandbags have been used since March on one 300-foot-long (91.5-meter-long) seepage area upriver of Baton Rouge, he said.

A Category 4 hurricane striking the Louisiana coastline can produce a 20-foot (6.1-meter) storm surge , the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says. However, that surge’s size at New Orleans, more than 100 winding river miles up from the coast, would be reduced by the Big Muddy’s push seaward.

The levees range in height from 20 to 25 feet (6 to 7.5 meters). While river levels are finally falling, the National Weather Service projects the Mississippi will remain well above average at about 11 feet (3.4 meters) above sea-level at New Orleans this week as hurricane season heats up.

“We really have a heightened concern this year,” said Scott Hagen, of Louisiana State University’s Center for Coastal Resiliency.

For most of the past three decades, the Mississippi has run about 3 to 5 feet (1 to 1.5 meters) high in mid-August at New Orleans’ Carrollton gauge.  The last time it was near this high was 11.4 feet (3.5 meters) in August 2015, a year when no significant tropical weather reached Louisiana’s coast. It was 12.2 feet in 1993, another year Louisiana’s coast escaped harm.

When Katrina formed as a tropical storm in the Bahamas on Aug. 24, 2005, the river stage in New Orleans was just 2.44 feet (0.74 meters) above sea level. It rose to 3.6 feet (1.1 meters) the day before Katrina devastated the city in 2005.

Katrina knocked out an automatic station that would have measured peak surge at the river’s mouth, but an analysis by the Federal Emergency Management Agency indicates the surge reached nearly 28 feet at Pass Christian, Mississippi. Surge pushed the Mississippi River up to 11.6 feet (3.5 meters) at New Orleans — not a threatening height with the river low. But surge from the brackish lakes to the city’s north and east reached 19 feet, overtopping or breaching those levees and flooding 80 percent of the city with water as much as 20 feet deep in places.

The vast majority of the $14.6 billion spent on flood controls as a result of Katrina went not to the river levees, but to shore up and block areas that failed.

“I would assume major problems on the river if we had a high river with a Katrina event,” said Jeffrey Graschel, with the National Weather Service’s Lower Mississippi River Forecast Center.

The possibility of a punishing storm surge meeting a swollen Mississippi in New Orleans is a different threat, one likely to become more common as the planet warms, spawning longer-lasting floods and earlier hurricanes.

Barry was the first hurricane to menace when the river was as high as it was in July, Boyett said.

In 1929, the year construction started on the spillway that caps the river’s height at New Orleans, the Mississippi topped at 19.99 feet (6.1 meters) in June, Boyett said. But that year saw only fiveAtlantic tropical systems, with two hurricanes in the Gulf, National Hurricane Center data show — and both stayed away from Louisiana. NOAA forecasters now expect 10 to 17 named storms this year, including five to nine hurricanes.

Opening spillways upriver from New Orleans can’t fix this, because they were designed to keep water flowing at a manageable rate, not to quickly drop river levels, which could cause mudslides when levees don’t dry out as fast as the water falls, Boyett said.

The changing climate means this problem could become an annual threat.

“Flooding is never a one-time thing. We’re just waiting for the next one,” said Pinter, an associate director of the University of California Davis Center for Watershed Sciences. “Given model predictions for climate change and rising sea levels and suggestions that hurricanes are maybe getting more intense, it’s something we have to keep an eye on.”

___

Martin reported from Atlanta.

One of Heckethorn’s trials delayed

The trial for an Ottumwa man accused of attempted murder has now been pushed back to February.  19-year-old Jacob Heckethorn is accused of shooting 61-year-old Clifford Collett, Senior in the chest in August of last year.  Before that, Heckethorn is scheduled to stand trial for first degree murder in November.  He is accused of killing William Shettlesworth in August of last year.

Campaigning

The Presidential campaign will be running through the No Coast Network listening area in the next couple of days.  Former Maryland Congressman John Delaney will be in Oskaloosa Wednesday morning (8/14) at 10 at Smokey Row Coffee downtown…..then he will speak at Revelations Café in Fairfield at noon.  Then on Thursday (8/15), fellow Democrat Pete Buttigieg—the Mayor of South Bend, Indiana—will be in Fairfield at noon at Central Park, in Ottumwa at Hotel Ottumwa at 2pm, and then in Oskaloosa at 4 at Smokey Row Coffee.

Also, a campaign office for former Texas Congressman Robert “Beto” O’Rourke will hold a meeting at 7pm Wednesday at O’Rourke’s Ottumwa campaign office at 408 East Main Street.

Taylor Swift Donates Almost $5K To Fan’s College Tuition Fund

It’s no secret that Taylor Swift is good to her fans, but she just went above and beyond what any other star would probably do for them. A Swiftie just revealed on social media that the singer sent her almost $5,000 towards her college tuition.

Ayesha Khurram shared a screenshot of $4,829.45 donation ($6,386.47 in Canadian dollars) that she received from one of Taylor’s companies, Taylor Nation, LLC. The donation came along with a note that read, “Ayesha, get your learn on girl. I love you! Taylor.”

“I posted about struggling with paying for tuition. two hours later, I get this in my email,” Ayesha explained. “I have no words and i can’t stop crying.”

Ayesha had explained on social media that she was thinking about dropping out because her parents, who work minimum wage jobs, were struggling, and she says she has Taylor to thank for easing their financial burden. “Taylor Swift took that stress from my parents, my world, and I have never seen them cry/laugh the way they are right now,” she shared. “I truly do not have the words and i will never, ever be able to repay her for the love and kindness she has shown me right now.”

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