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Woman found dead after Marion County fire

Crews have found the body of a woman while fighting a mobile home fire in Marion County.  The Marion County Sheriff’s Office says firefighters found the body of 56-year-old Rhonda Kiler early Monday (11/18) after being called to the scene.  Firefighters worked for about 45 minutes to douse the fire before finding Kiler’s body in the home.  Local and state investigators are still working to determine the cause of the fire.

Big Machine Denies Taylor Swift’s Claims, Taylor Fights Back

As we previously told you, Taylor Swift recently went public about her ongoing feud with Scott Borchetta and Scooter Braun, claiming they won’t allow her to perform her old songs on the American Music Awards, and they’ve refused to okay the use of her music in an upcoming Netflix documentary. Well, now the two men have fired back.

In a statement they say they are “shocked” by Taylor’s claims, noting, “At no point did we say Taylor could not perform on the AMAs or block her Netflix special.” They also add, “we do not have the right to keep her from performing live anywhere,” and they insist that since her departure from Big Machine Label Group they “have continued to honor all of her requests to license her catalog to third parties as she promotes her current record in which we do not financially participate.”

They also claim Taylor owes them “millions of dollars and multiple assets to our company,” and suggests they almost had a deal to settle all their issues before Taylor “made a unilateral decision last night to enlist her fanbase in a calculated manner that greatly affects the safety of our employees and their families.”

They added, “Taylor, the narrative you have created does not exist. All we ask is to have a direct and honest conversation.”

But Taylor’s rep is shooting down their statement, and even provided emails proving that Big Machine denied her license request for the AMAs, Netflix and even her recent Alibaba Singles day concert. The rep notes that Taylor stuck to songs from “Lover” because of the denial. The rep adds, “Scott Borchetta… flatly denied the request for both American Music Awards and Netflix.” They also deny suggestions Taylor owes the label money, and adds the label actually owes her “$7.9 million of unpaid royalties over several years.”

As for those possible threats to Braun and Borchetta, one report claimed Braun’s Nashville office was closed Friday because of threats received based on Taylor’s post. The Blast claims in one instance a “voicemail was left for an employee with their exact address and a threat to kill them at their home,” while another person threatened to “shoot up the place.”

Source: Rolling Stone

This day in 1970: Jerry Lee Lewis divorces his second wife (and cousin)

This day in 1970: Jerry Lee Lewis and his second wife, Myra – who was also his cousin – were divorced. Their 1958 wedding, which took place when she was just 13 years old, caused such a scandal that it effectively ruined his career. In fact, the only thing illegal about the marriage was the fact that Jerry hadn’t divorced his first wife when he wed Myra.

 

 

Partisan divide seen in how local news should be propped up

By DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK (AP) — The nation’s partisan divide is evident when Americans are asked about what should be done to help the nation’s struggling local news industry.

While two-thirds of Democrats say news organizations in need should be able to receive government or private funding in order to survive, only 17 percent of Republicans feel the same way, according to a study released Sunday by Gallup and the Knight Foundation. For independents, 37 percent back such funding.

Republicans are also more likely to take a sink-or-swim attitude toward the press. While 72 percent of Democrats say local newspapers are vital and should be preserved even if they’re failing financially, 76 percent of Republicans say they’re just like any other business and if they can’t hack it, tough luck.

“It’s not surprising to me to see the level of polarization in general shading most people’s views toward anything to do with the media,” said Sam Gill, vice president for communities and impact and special adviser to the president at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

Republicans are more likely to view the media as hostile and biased, along with having a deep-seated suspicion toward government involvement in the public discourse, he said.

Local news has suffered over the past two decades as readers and advertisers found alternatives online. More than 2,000 local newspapers in the United States have closed since 2004, according to the University of North Carolina.

One barrier toward halting that trend is a lack of public awareness: The Knight/Gallup study found that 56 percent of Americans wrongly believe that local news organizations are doing well financially.

There are positive signs. The survey found that nearly six in 10 Americans consider newspapers an important symbol of civic pride. Eighty-six percent of those polled said everyone should have access to local news.

But the number of people supporting news has dwindled. The survey said 30 percent of adults say they pay a monthly or annual fee to a news source. Roughly half of the people who said they have subscribed to a news source in their lifetime no longer do so, and 44 percent said they had stopped paying for at least one type of subscription over the past five years.

The organizations took two surveys over the summer that included 1,701 people chosen by random sampling to be on a Gallup panel. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Gill said journalists have been adjusting the way they produce news to accommodate the changing ways in which Americans access it.

“I think we should be asking the same questions about the business,” he said.

Indians football postseason awards

The Oskaloosa High football team handed out awards Friday (11/15) at its annual postseason banquet.  Senior Tyler Miller received the Benz Trophy as most valuable player, the Brent Blanchard Outstanding Offensive Back award and the Down-Up Award for perseverance.  Sullivan Tighe received the Kenneth Heinle Academic Excellence and David Roepke Commitment to Excellence awards.  Cody Gunn received the Outstanding Perimeter Defender and Outstanding Special Teams Impact Player awards.  Kenny Settimi received the Outstanding Interior Defensive Player and Outstanding Strength and Conditioning awards.  Colton Butler was named Outstanding Offensive Lineman, Aaron Blom was named Outstanding Special Teams Skill Player and Nikki Parlet was chosen Outstanding Support Staff.

Eight Indians were named to the All-District first team: defensive tackle Kenny Settimi, Aaron Blom as a kicker and linebacker, Tyler Miller as a running back and kick returner, linebacker Cody Gunn, offensive tackle Colton Butler, center Noah Ide, defensive end Noah Van Veldhuizen and defensive back Mason Ford.  Honorable mention All-District honors went to defensive back Iszac Schultz, defensive end Walker Newman, safety Reed Brown, guard Kale Bollinger, quarterback Will Schultz and receiver and defensive back Wyatt Krier.

And six Oskaloosa players and three managers earned Academic All-District honors: players Aaron Blom, Reed Brown, Wyatt Krier, Kenny Settimi, Sullivan Tighe and Noah Van Veldhuizen and managers Kiara Bjornson, Nikki Parlet and Lily Stream.

Pasa sentenced to life for murdering her husband

A Centerville woman will spend the rest of her life in prison for killing her husband last year.  47-year-old Barbara Pasa was sentenced Friday (11/15) to life plus 25 years for the May 2018 death of Timothy Pasa.  In September, Barbara Pasa was convicted of first degree murder and arson.  Timothy Pasa was found dead in their home following a fire.  An autopsy determined the cause of his death was due to an injection of an anesthetic often used in surgery….instead of smoke inhalation.  Barbara Pasa worked as a nurse in Centerville at the time of her husband’s death.  Monroe County Judge Sean Showers on Friday also denied Barbara Pasa’s request for a new trial, saying she received a fair trial.

Astronauts start spacewalk series to fix cosmic ray detector

By MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Astronauts launched an extraordinarily complicated series of spacewalks Friday to fix a cosmic ray detector at the International Space Station.

Armed with dozens of dissecting tools, Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano removed two protective covers to gain access to the inside of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer. He handed them to his U.S. spacewalking partner, American Andrew Morgan, for tossing overboard.

“OK, 3-2-1, release,” Morgan said as he let go of the 4-foot-long (127-centimeter) shield high above the Pacific.

Later, over the South Atlantic, Morgan ditched the second, smaller cover. “Another great pitch,” Mission Control radioed.

These latest pieces of space junk pose no danger to the orbiting lab, according to NASA. The larger shield should remain in orbit a year or so before re-entering the atmosphere and burning up. The smaller one should re-enter in a few weeks.

NASA considers these spacewalks the most difficult since the Hubble Space Telescope repairs a few decades ago. Unlike Hubble, the spectrometer was never meant to undergo space surgery. After 8 ½ years in orbit, its cooling system is almost dead.

Parmitano and Morgan will go out at least four times this month and next to revitalize the instrument. Their second spacewalk is next Friday.

Delivered to orbit by Endeavour in 2011 on the next-to-last space shuttle flight, the $2 billion spectrometer is hunting for elusive antimatter and dark matter.

It’s already studied more than 148 billion charged cosmic rays. That’s more than what was collected in over a century by high-altitude balloons and small satellites, said lead scientist Samuel Ting, a Nobel laureate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He monitored Friday’s 6 ½-hour spacewalk from Mission Control in Houston.

The huge spectrometer — 16 feet by 13 feet by 10 feet (5 meters by 4 meters by 3 meters), with a mass of 7 ½ tons (6,800 kilograms) — was designed to operate for three years. By installing four new and improved coolant pumps, the astronauts can keep it working throughout the life of the space station, or another five to 10 years. The replacement pumps arrived at the space station nearly two weeks ago, along with an assortment of new tools.

Parmitano, the lead spacewalker, and Morgan trained extensively for the plumbing job before rocketing into orbit in July. They hustled through Friday’s cover removals and even got a jump on future chores.

Next week’s spacewalk will involve slicing through stainless steel tubes and splicing in connections for the new pumps, which like the old will use liquid carbon dioxide as the coolant.

In some respects, this work, 250 miles (400 kilometers) up, is even trickier than the Hubble spacewalks, said NASA project manager Ken Bollweg. As before, the stakes are high.

“Any time you do heart surgery you’re taking some risks,” Bollweg said in an interview earlier this week.

Morgan is an emergency physician in the Army — a bonus for this kind of intricate work. He’s making his first spaceflight.

For second-time station resident Parmitano, it marked his return to spacewalking following a close call in 2013. He almost drowned when his helmet flooded with water from the cooling system of his spacesuit. Unable to talk because of the rising water, he managed to keep his cool as he made his way back to the safe confines of the space station.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

 

Montezuma’s Wetering signs with Iowa

The University of Iowa women’s basketball team has the 15th best recruiting class in the country, according to ESPN W Hoop Gurlz.  One of those recruits is from Montezuma.  Forward Shateah Wetering committed to the Hawkeyes over a year ago, but officially signed her national letter of intent on Wednesday.  Wetering averaged 19 points, five and a half rebounds, three steals, a blocked shot and an assist per game last season as the Bravettes reached the Class 1A State tournament.   She is a three time all-conference player, two time all-state and was also named to the Class 1A all-State tournament team last year.

FBI investigating threat to Benton Community School District

BY 

All classes and activities are canceled through Sunday after a threat was made against a northeast Iowa school district.

Officials with the Benton Community School District say they’re working with the FBI to find whoever is responsible for the threat, though they’re not saying how it was received. The violence was reportedly directed at the combined middle and high school in Van Horne.

In addition to classes being cancelled, a host of academic and sports practices and events are canceled, from drivers ed courses to wrestling meets.

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