Oskaloosa boys’ basketball coach Ryan Parker returned to the bench Tuesday (12/17) after being sidelined for a week because of illness. The Indians were glad to have him back and they went on to defeat Washington 54-52 in Oskaloosa. The Indians jumped out to a 24-10 lead, as Noah Van Veldhuizen scored 14 of his team-high 20 points in the first quarter. Washington fought back to go ahead 31-28 at the half. The game was tied 44 all after three quarters, but Oskaloosa held on for the victory. Iszak Schultz added 15 points for Oskaloosa; Ethan Patterson led Washington with 17 points. Both teams are now 3-2 on the season. Oskaloosa’s next game will be Friday night (12/20) at Newton as part of a boys and girls doubleheader. You can hear both of Oskaloosa’s games at Newton on KBOE-FM.
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Brown resigns at Oskaloosa Main Street
Oskaloosa Main Street is looking for a new executive director. Emily Brown is resigning her job effective December 31. She has held the position for two and a half years. Brown says she wants to spend more time with her family. During her tenure with Oskaloosa Main Street, Brown helped with the Downtown Façade Revitalization Project, moving the Lighted Christmas Parade to Saturday, and the Ready to Recruit process aimed at bringing more businesses to Oskaloosa’s Main Street.
Former Iowa Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry dies
RADIO IOWA – Legendary former Iowa football coach Hayden Fry died today at the age of 90.
Fry’s family released a statement saying that Fry died with his family at his side following a lengthy battle with cancer.
The statement from the family says “We are proud to know that our father’s life had a positive influence on so many people, the players, the coaches, and the fans who played for, worked with, and supported his long and successful coaching career.
His legend will live forever with the people he touched and inspired, and the programs he led to greater heights. Though Hayden was born in Texas and moved there more recently to be closer to our family, his love for the University of Iowa, his players and coaches, the people of Iowa, and the state of Iowa, is well known. Hayden often shared, “I’ll Always Be a Hawkeye”.
Fry was announced as Iowa’s new coach in December of 1978 and took over a team that had not had a winning season in 17 years. He turned the Hawkeye program around and made them into a Big Ten Conference and national contender. Fry won 143 football games in 20 seasons, retiring in 1998 while fighting cancer.
Statements on Hayden Fry’s death:
Iowa Coach Kirk Ferentz
“Hayden Fry is a college football icon and an Iowa legend. His Hall of Fame career is well known, but personally, he will always be the man who took a chance on me at the start of my coaching career. I was proud to coach with him and honored to succeed him when he retired. He’s been a great mentor and a true friend. I am forever grateful to him.
Mary and I send our heartfelt condolences to his wife Shirley, their children and the entire Fry family. We hope that Hayden’s legacy of integrity and high character will provide his family comfort during this difficult time.”
Dan McCarney
Iowa football letterman (1972-74) and former assistant coach:
“He loves energy. He loves passion. He loves guys that can communicate. He had gotten some good recommendations, I don’t know who they were from, from at least a couple people in Iowa City. One of the many things I learned from Hayden Fry: If a young man doesn’t have all the things experience wise that you’re looking for, but he has those other intangibles — work ethic, loyalty, coachable, can communicate, can build relationships, a lot of enthusiasm, a lot of passion and energy for life, could be a good recruiter and a guy that might be a person on the rise — then maybe I’ll embrace him, give him a chance and opportunity, and that’s what Hayden Fry did with me.”
Chuck Long
Iowa quarterback, 1981-85:
“I have to give him all the credit for getting my personal career launched among others. I speak for many of the Hawkeye football past players. He had a special way of making you feel good all the time even in the tough games and in the tough moments. For me it was after an interception. He had a way of getting you back up and confident. That feeling… not every coach has that ability and I’ve been around a bunch of them. Not every coach has that ability to make you feel confident and be positive even in the negative situations.”
Merton Hanks
Iowa defensive back, 1987-90:
“Hayden was always on the cutting edge and looking for the best people, regardless of race, creed, or color. What he did at Iowa, really rebuilding that program to what it was to, quite frankly, national power. To get it to the point where you were able to attract young men from states away, like myself, who may not have known about the University of Iowa and everything Iowa has to offer, speaks very well of not only him, but the University itself and being a partner with him to make the University of Iowa brand that much bigger and better.”
Sam Hunt Added To “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve”
The lineup for “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2020” just got even bigger. Sam Hunt has been added to the telecast, marking his first TV appearance since his arrest last month for DUI.
But Sam isn’t the only new addition. Post Malone is set to perform live from New York City’s Times Square, just minutes before the ball drops, with BTS, and Alanis Morissette also added to the lineup.
The new artists join previously announced performers Paula Abdul, Kelsea Ballerini, Blanco Brown, Dan + Shay, Green Day, Dua Lipa, Ava Max, Megan Thee Stallion, Anthony Ramos, Salt-N-Pepa and SHAED, from Los Angeles, Sheryl Crow and Usher from New Orleans and Jonas Brothers, from Miami.
ABC’s “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2020” kicks off at 8 pm on December 31st.
This day in 1981: Buck Owens appears on “The Dukes Of Hazzard”
Today in 1981, Buck Owens had a fictitious speeding ticket rescinded by singing “I’ve Got A Tiger By The Tail” in an episode of the CBS series “The Dukes Of Hazzard,” starring John Schneider and Tom Wopat.
Tammy Wynette, Roy Orbison, Dottie West, the Oak Ridge Boys and Mel Tillis were also “caught speeding” in Hazzard County. The recurring “Celebrity Speed Trap” bit was a way to feature the most popular country artists of the era on the show.
Other notable appearances included Loretta Lynn in a 1980 episode in which she was kidnapped. And Mickey Gilley played himself in an episode that featured Boss Hogg attempting to sell an illegal bootleg of a concert.
Garth Brooks Has The Top Country Tour Of 2019, According To “Pollstar”
“Pollstar” has come out with their year in review, and when it comes to touring, Garth Brooks is still doing mighty fine business.
Garth is the highest-ranking country star on the mag’s list of the Top 100 Worldwide Tours, landing at 24. What makes the feat even more impressive, is that he landed so high with only 13 shows in 10 cities, bringing in $76.1 million.
Other country artists making the list include: Erich Church (28), Florida Georgia Line (35), Carrie Underwood (44), Thomas Rhett (45), Zac Brown Band (50), Luke Bryan (52) and Chris Stapleton (61).
This day in 2002: Faith Hill breaks a streaming record
Today in 2002, the numbers were made final and Faith Hill was tapped as logging a record setting 6-million streams as AOL’s “Artist of the Month” campaign. The achievement proved to be the online provider’s most successful in history. This news also came on the heels of Faith’s nomination as Favorite Female Artist by the People’s Choice Awards and the highest network ratings for any music special broadcast during Thanksgiving week.
Jon Pardi’s Interest In Music Was Sparked One Christmas
Jon Pardi may not be the musician he is today if it wasn’t for a very special Christmas present he got when he was young.
Jon says when he was “real young” he got a guitar for Christmas, although he admits he didn’t take very good care of it. “This guitar spent multiple nights in the backyard and probably got hit by a sprinkler,” he shares. “I was a kid. I didn’t know what to do with this thing.”
But apparently that guitar had an impact on him. “I always tell parents you just never know, if you get a little toy that’s a guitar or drum set, you never know what that’ll spark in a child’s mind,” he shares. “So, who would’ve know if I had never gotten that guitar.”
Meanwhile, like most people, Jon loves a good holiday movie, but what he watches definitely depends on who he’s watching it with. Jon says that while he’s a fan of the raunchy Christmas comedy “Bad Santa,” if he’s watching with his little cousins the movie choice tends to be “Elf.”
As for what he plans to do this Christmas, Jon and his fiancée Summer invited their family to Hawaii, with the caveat of “no gifts.” “We’re just gonna go and help celebrate as a family and everybody and Christmas in Maui,” he shares. “So we kinda turned it into this nice family vacation that’s over Christmas, and then we’ll fly back to Nashville and have Christmas there. So, it’s cool.”
Born on this day in 1966: Tracy Byrd
Today in 1966, Tracy Byrd was born in Vidor, Texas. He emerged in 1993 to record a series of hits, including “Lifestyles Of The Not So Rich And Famous,” “Watermelon Crawl,” and “The Keeper Of The Stars.”
Byrd has charted more than thirty hit singles in his career, including eleven additional Top Ten hits. He has also released ten studio albums and two greatest-hits albums, with four gold certifications and one double-platinum certification from the RIAA.
Byrd has been the National Spokesperson for Special Olympics International for the Country Music Association. He developed a crank bait fishing lure marketed by Norman Lures called The Lifestyles Of The Not So Rich & Famous’, named after his hit recording of the song written by Byron Hill and Wayne Tester. For every one of the lures sold Byrd donated ten cents to the Special Olympics.
For several years Byrd hosted an annual golfing/fishing/music event, “The Tracy Byrd Homecoming Weekend,” later called “The Beaumont Boys Bash”, in Southeast Texas to raise money for local charities, including the March of Dimes, the Children’s Miracle Network, and culminating in the donation of money to fund the Tracy Byrd Hyperbaric Medicine and Wound Care Center at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Beaumont. Byrd also raised money by soliciting pledges for his attempt to complete the 2002 Houston Marathon. He finished the marathon, and donated all of his pledges to the Children’s Miracle Network.
In 2003 Byrd published Eat Like a Byrd: The Tracy Byrd Cookbook. He also launched a line of spices, rubs, and marinades to go along with it, called “Tracy Byrd’s Tiny Town Products”; a portion of these sales were donated to the Children’s Miracle Network.
Source: Wikipedia
75 years on, Battle of the Bulge memories bond people
By RAF CASERT
THIMISTER-CLERMONT, Belgium (AP) — As a schoolboy three quarters of a century ago, Marcel Schmetz would regularly see open trucks rumble past to a makeshift American cemetery — filled with bodies, some headless, some limbless, blood seeping from the vehicles onto the roads that the U.S. soldiers had given their lives to liberate.
Sometimes, Schmetz said, there were over 200bodies a day, casualties of one of the bloodiest and most important battles in World War II: The Battle of the Bulge which started 75 years ago on Monday and effectively sealed the defeat of Nazi Germany.
”It gave me nightmares,” Schmetz said. It also gave the 11-year-old the resolve that, one day, he would give something back.
“I had to do something,” he said.
M&M
Fast forward to 2019, when memories are fading and relations between Europe and the United States deteriorating.
There’s a rambling house and converted warehouse in the bucolic, verdant hills that were once among the worst killing grounds of World War II. Zoom in to the living-room table, where Marcel, 86, sits with his wife, Mathilde, and one of the many World War II veterans that have shared coffee and cake — and often a nip of something stronger — with them, telling stories that span generations.
“Well, I don’t share them very often,” said Arthur Jacobson, who was just 20 when he fought in the Battle of the Bulge. “Once in a while, somebody is interested and I tell them a little bit.”
In Marcel and Mathilde’s home, which also serves as the Remember Museum 39-45, “a little bit” doesn’t count. Soon the former Bazooka operator was sharing stories of friends lost, ties gained, all between a chuckle and a moist eye.
For M&M, as the couple is known to fans from across the United States, remembering has become a mission in life, since memory brings understanding and friendship. They are not alone. From the shores of Normandy, where the allies first landed on D-Day, to the forests deep in the Belgian Ardennes, there remains a deep appreciation for what the soldiers did.
Yet, those people live on the scar tissue of war, where battlefields, memorials and cemeteries lie just a few miles away. That memory fades quickly the more one moves from the old front lines to European cities, where peace and prosperity has reigned for the best part of a century. The voices of the last witnesses of the war’s fighting, mostly in their 90s now, are also becoming frailer by the day.
And with the growing questioning of trans-Atlantic ties and trust, the challenge to keep those bonds across the ocean intact has increased.
It makes Marcel and Mathilde’s mission to connect all the more vital.
“Whoever is your president, whoever runs the show, the boys who were on the front lines, who still go out and fight for our freedoms, they need to know we appreciate them,” Mathilde said.
IT GIVES ME GOOSEBUMPS
Lt. Col. Jim Moretti of the 171st Air Refueling Wing knows it well, and whenever he is in Germany on a mission he always makes the pilgrimage to Marcel and Mathilde just across the border.
The first time he thought to spend perhaps half an hour in their small museum. Then he found out that the hardware sinks into insignificance compared to the software of the place — the stories which are linked to every item on show.
“We ended up being there for 3, 4, 5 hours,” he said.
Mathilde connects a face in a photograph to a veteran she met years ago and still remembers the story that makes it all relevant to the families of the fallen.
“It gives me goosebumps. It’s sobering, humbling,” Moretti said.
It became even better when he was able to be part of such a story himself.
THE SMALLEST OF THINGS
Soft-spoken local policeman Serge Fafchamps had something troubling him for a while. Through his family, he obtained a fist-sized Bible that had been left behind by Pvt. Millard Weekley in a local hotel during the war, likely in the rush to reach the front line.
Like so many locals, Fafchamps is strongly aware of the sacrifices U.S. soldiers made during World War II and wanted to make a gesture, however small, to show that in the 21st century it was not forgotten.
“It was, I think, the smallest of things, it was a friendly act that I hoped would deliver some happiness to the family,” he said.
Even though he got close to finding the family, there was still a missing link, and he long thought he had reached a dead end. Then, by chance, he learned of Marcel and Mathilde. Soon, they were on the case.
“I began to make these searches with the help of American friends,” Mathilde said. “Then, finally, someone found the daughter,” Paula Ferrell.
But they still needed someone to deliver the Bible, in person. So in walked Lt. Col Moretti, who saw, as luck would have it, that Ferrell lived close to his airbase in Coraopolis, Pa.
“Of all the places in the U.S., this could not be true,” Moretti said.
And one Sunday on the airbase, Ferrell and her family were handed the Bible.
“It was an amazing idea. I am so thankful for that,” Ferrell said of Fafchamps’ kindness. Now the Bible sits on a night table next to her bed, the handwriting on the opening page a palpable memory of a father who was always taciturn when it came to war stories and memories.
“He never talked about it. He was a man of few words,” she said.
A new bond had been forged across the ocean. “If he was here, I’d give him a hug,” she said of Fafchamps.
The policeman himself said it gave him “a sense of mission accomplished.”
IT IS NOT TO FORGET THEM
The mission though, is getting tougher by the day.
Perhaps the best part of the museum is a “Red Ball Express” army supply truck, on which countless veterans have written their names. Ever more though, the owners of the white-painted signatures are dying off. Just this week, Mathilde opened a letter informing her of yet another death.
Marcel, ever the optimist, is looking to a new generation of U.S. troops, soldiers like Moretti, to carry on the torch.
“When I look at the young soldiers who are on U.S. bases in Germany,” he said, “it always reminds me of the arrival of the Americans in 1944,” who had come to liberate him and his family.
“It is not to forget them. It is not to forget them, no?”
___
AP photojournalist Virginia Mayo and videojournalist Mark Carlson contributed to this report.
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