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MORGAN WALLEN, LUKE COMBS ACHIEVE CHART FEAT NOT DONE IN 42 YEARS

Morgan Wallen continues to set chart records with every passing week – but to accomplish this latest chart feat, he would need a little help.

For the first time in over 42 years, two country songs occupy the top two slots on the Billboard Hot 100 charts. Wallen’s “Last Night” has held down the top spot for twelve straight weeks – and rising from #3 to #2 this week, Luke Combs with his cover version of Tracy Chapman‘s 1988 hit “Fast Car”. Multi-platinum artists like Garth Brooks, Shania Twain, Faith Hill, The Band Perry and more have done well on the pop charts, but it’s been over four decades since country music had a 1-2 punch that carried over to the pop charts. The last time? When Eddie Rabbitt’s “I Love a Rainy Night” and Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5” held down the top two slots on the pop charts on March 7, 1981.

  • It’s not the only chart feat Morgan Wallen has pulled off this week. His album “One Thing At A Time” marks a 14th nonconsecutive week atop the Billboard 200 albums chart (dated July 1), marking the most weeks at No. 1 for any album since Adele‘s “21” logged 24 non-consecutive weeks on top of the album charts in 2011-12.

Source: Billboard

This day in Music History

  • Today in 1949, a classic version of “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” was recorded by Gene Autry, who didn’t like when he first heard it. As it turned out though, America couldn’t get enough of his rendition of the tune. The Christmas classic remains a treasure to this day.
  • Today in 1993, a third Garth Brooks concert was added in Dallas after the first two shows sold out. Tickets to that show also sold out, in less than two hours.
  • Today in 1993, Hollywood and Nashville combined as it was revealed that Julia Roberts had married Lyle Lovett in a hush-hush ceremony two days earlier. The fairytale was not destined for a happy ending though, the couple divorced less than two years later.
  • Today in 1995, Lorrie Morgan’s “Greatest Hits” album was released.
  • Today in 1996, as the Olympic flame made its way to Atlanta for the Summer Games, it was carried through Nashville by Billy Ray Cyrus.
  • Today in 1998, tickets for the first of a series of six Garth Brooks shows in Seattle went on sale. The show sold out in 11 minutes.
  • Today in 2000, it was announced that Lonestar’s Dean Sams and his wife, Kim, were expecting their second child. On December 17th, the Sams family welcomed their newest addition, Bryson Dean Sams.
  • Today in 2001, Tracy Lawrence and his wife, Becca, welcomed their first child, Skylar JoAnn Lawrence.
  • Today in 2005, Ralph Stanley underwent a triple bypass operation in Virginia.
  • Today in 2011, Jake Owen’s “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” video debuted on CMT.
  • Today in 2012, Miranda Lambert shot the video for “Fastest Girl In Town” in Dickson County, Tennessee, with NASCAR driver Danica Patrick.
  • Today in 2015, Brantley Gilbert and Lynyrd Skynyrd shared the stage as a new edition of “CMT Crossroads” premieres. Performances included “Kick It In The Sticks,” “Bottoms Up,” “One Hell Of An Amen” and “Sweet Home Alabama.”
  • Today in 2016, Lauren Alaina’s single, “Road Less Traveled,” hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2017, Mark Chesnutt Hot Sauce was officially announced.
  • Today in 2019, Blake Shelton received a gold single from the RIAA for “God’s Country.”

The US government is awarding $1.7 billion to buy electric and low-emission buses

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Department of Transportation is awarding almost $1.7 billion in grants for buying zero- and low-emission buses, with the money going to transit projects in 46 states and territories.

The grants will enable transit agencies and state and local governments to buy 1,700 U.S.-built buses, nearly half of which will have zero carbon emissions. Funding for the grants comes from the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure bill signed into law by President Joe Biden. The Democratic president has made it a priority to put more electric vehicles on the road — especially for schools and public transit — in an effort to contain the damage from climate change.

“Every day, millions of Americans climb aboard over 60,000 buses to get to work, to school, doctor’s appointments, everywhere they need to be,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a call with reporters. “These are unprecedented levels of investment when it comes to putting modern cleaner buses on the road.”

Monday’s announcement covers the second round of grants for buses and supporting infrastructure. All told, the U.S. has invested a total of $3.3 billion in the projects so far. Government officials expect to award roughly $5 billion more over the next three years.

The Biden administration said that the new buses will improve public health as diesel exhaust will no longer be going into the air and that the new buses will be easier to maintain.

The government received 475 project proposals for the grants that totaled roughly $8.7 billion, a sign of the demand for the funding.

The Seattle area will be getting $33.5 million to purchase 30 electric battery buses and chargers. The Washington, D.C., transit authority will use $104 million to make a bus garage an electric facility and buy roughly 100 electric battery buses. But money also is going outside of major U.S. cities, with Iowa City, Iowa, and the Seneca Nation in Western New York also receiving grants.

Iowa State Fair hiring for August run

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

The opening of the Iowa State Fair is getting closer and the search is on for people to fill jobs during its 11-day run. State Fair spokesperson, Mindy Williamson, they hire around 16-hundred people with a range of ages.

“Some of them are 16. And older, and some of them are 14 and older. It also depends on how many hours you can work and how late you can work. So definitely check out those particular jobs on our website,” she says. Williamson says they will host an open interview day on July 6th form 2 to 7 p-m at the fairgrounds where you can learn more and apply for jobs. She says the jobs bring money and other perks.

“They are paid positions and we offer free admission into the fair, some of them have even better incentives, you know, if you work a certain number of shifts, you get an increase. And some of them have if you work, you know the full fare, you get incentives,” Williamson says. The pay ranges between 12 and 17 dollars an hour. Williamson says there have some people who have worked for more than 40 years, and others who are kids just starting out.

“We love those people who come back year after year. And we also love those people who try it out for the first time,” Williamson says, “and so there’s something for everyone out here, if you want to work a few days if you want to work a few hours, or if you want to work the whole fair.” She says you could work this year and see another job you might want to try next year.

“Maybe you didn’t work in maintenance, you know, when you were working, but now that’s something you’re interested in doing or same with, you know, working in our admissions and working with our concessions. So, all sorts of different fun things that you could do here during the fair,” according to Williamson. To find out more about the jobs, go to IowaStateFair.org.

Oskaloosa’s 4th of July Fireworks Coming Up

OSKALOOSA — Fireworks will light up the Oskaloosa sky again on the evening of Tuesday July 4th at the NEW TIME of 9:30pm.  The Oskaloosa Fireworks are sponsored by Musco Sports Lighting. This year they have scheduled fantastic fireworks to be displayed at the Lacey Recreational Complex in Oskaloosa. The fireworks will be best viewed around the football stadium area. Please feel free to bring blankets and lawn chairs for seating.

No other activities are scheduled before or after.

In case of rain, the fireworks rain date and time will be Wednesday, July 5th at the same time.

Man Dies in Albia Shooting

ALBIA — Authorities are investigating a shooting that took place on Saturday night in Albia that left one man dead.

Police say that on Saturday night, a 911 call was received at the Monroe County Law Enforcement Center. The caller reported a shooting in the 400 block of A Street South in Albia. 

Responding law enforcement found an adult male with a gunshot wound. The male was later identified as 49-year-old Albia resident Daniel Gundrum. Despite life-saving efforts, Gundrum succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced deceased.

The Albia Police Department and Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation are investigating the circumstances surrounding this shooting. 

Authorities say there is no known threat to the public, though no suspects or persons of interest have been identified at this time. This is an ongoing investigation.

TIM MCGRAW DROPS “HEY WHISKEY,” ANNOUNCES UPCOMING ALBUM

It’s been a long wait for Tim McGraw fans, but that wait is about over. His last album, “Here On Earth,” came out in 2020 – and three years later, Tim has announced a follow-up.

Titled “Standing Room Only,” (the title track is already climbing the country charts), the album is Tim’s 17th studio album, and is set to drop August 25th. To thank fans for patiently waiting, Tim dropped a second song from the upcoming release, titled “Hey Whiskey.” Tim had this to say about the album: “As an artist, I always want to dig deeper and get better every time I make a new record – it’s a big part of what drives me, and I really believe this is one of the best projects we’ve made. I’ve been working on this album since 2020, and this collection of songs are some of the most emotional, thought-provoking, and life-affirming music I’ve ever recorded. I’m excited to have ‘Hey Whiskey’ out so fans can start hearing more of what we’re working on – and maybe even more before August…” Check out the new track and the track list below.

“Standing Room Only” Track List

“Hold On To It”
“Standing Room Only”
“Paper Umbrellas”
“Remember Me Well”
“Hey Whiskey”
“Her”
“Fool Me Again”
“Small Town King”
“Beautiful Hurricane”
“Cowboy Junkie”
“Nashville CA/L.A. Tennessee (Featuring Lori McKenna)”
“Some Songs Change Your World”
“Letter From Heaven”

Source: WhiskeyRiff

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1970, Ray Stevens’ “Everything Is Beautiful” single was certified gold.
  • Today in 1976, The Oak Ridge Boys first appeared on the country charts.
  • Today in 1977, Elvis Presley gave his final concert in Indianapolis, Indiana.
  • Today in 1979, Elvis’ father, Vernon, died of a heart attack in Tupelo, Mississippi at the age of 63.
  • Today in 1981, “The Originals” album by Statler Brothers was certified gold.
  • Today in 1984, George Strait records “The Cowboy Rides Away” in a late-night session at the Sound Stage in Nashville
  • Today in 1989, Alan Jackson signed with Arista Records.
  • Today in 1992, Mary Chapin Carpenter’s “Come On, Come On” album was released.
  • Today in 1992, the chart-topping single, “I Still Believe In You,” by Vince Gill first debuted on the charts.
  • Today in 1994, Garth Brooks was among the musicians honored for their charity work by VH-1 with an hour-long TV special.
  • Today in 2000, it was revealed that Randy Travis and his wife, Elizabeth, were selling their Ashland City, Tennessee residence named Dogwood Farms. The 100-year-old, 8,800-sq-ft. log house, which featured a gym and southwestern-style adobe fireplace, was put on the market for $1.875 million.
  • Today in 2002, Lonestar’s album, “I’m Already There,” the “Mountain Soul” project from Patty Loveless and Lila McCann’s album, “Complete,” arrived in stores.
  • Today in 2003, Reba McEntire received a very special honor in Nashville – Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc. (CRB), presenters of the annual Country Radio Seminar (CRS), honored Reba with the Country Radio Broadcasters Career Achievement Award as part of their annual Country Music DJ Hall of Fame Ceremonies. Following the presentation, Reba will become a member of a very special class of people – as she was only the sixth country artist to receive the award. The others were Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, Sonny James, Loretta Lynn and Buck Owens.
  • Today in 2009, Josh and Jennifer Turner welcomed their son, Colby Lynch Turner.
  • Today in 2012, Carrie Underwood made her Australian concert debut with a show at the Palais Theatre in Melbourne.
  • Today in 2013, Kenny Rogers made his African concert debut by playing for 70,000 people in Morocco. His performances include “Love Or Something Like It,” “Lady” and “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love To Town.”
  • Today in 2014, Zac Brown made a surprise appearance during a Billy Joel concert at Boston’s Fenway Park, joining in on “You May Be Right.”
  • Today in 2015, Garth Brooks was on hand for the grand opening of an expanded Child Life Zone at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.
  • Today in 2016, Kenny Chesney called a Philadelphia police officer to apologize for the prior night. A well-meaning Chesney had given a shout-out to the cop, who was shot seven times, during his concert at Lincoln Financial Field…and said the officer was dead. The officer obviously lives.
  • Today in 2017, Brett Young’s single, “Like I Loved You,” hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2018, A Thousand Horses was burning with pride as their single, “Smoke,” went platinum.
  • Today in 2019, The Rascal Flatts single “What Hurts The Most” is certified six-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.
  • Today in 2020, Kelly Clarkson won Outstanding Entertainment Talk Show Host for her work on “The Kelly Clarkson Show” during the 47th annual Daytime Emmy Awards.
  • Today in 2020, Tractor Supply Company announced the new On The Farm line of pet food in conjunction with Miranda Lambert’s MuttNation.
  • Today in 2021, Alan Jackson played a benefit concert at the Coweta County Fairgrounds in Newnan, Georgia, for survivors of a March 26th tornado that destroyed 70 homes in the area. Support acts include Chris Young, Caylee Hammack and Adam Wright.

Animal sedative adds new suffering to opioid drug crisis, but is it driving up deaths?

WASHINGTON (AP) — A powerful animal sedative in the illicit drug supply is complicating the U.S. response to the opioid crisis, scrambling longstanding methods for reversing overdoses and treating addiction.

Xylazine can cause severe skin wounds, but whether it is leading to more deaths — as suggested by officials in Washington — is not yet clear, according to health and law enforcement professionals on the front lines of efforts in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. In fact, early data suggests the drug may inadvertently be diluting the effects of fentanyl, the synthetic opioid behind most overdose deaths.

There is broad agreement, however, that much more information is needed to understand xylazine’s impact, to craft ways of disrupting illegal supplies and to develop medicines to reverse its effects.

“We don’t know whether xylazine is increasing the risk of overdose or reducing the risk of overdose,” said Dr. Lewis Nelson of Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, who advises federal regulators on drug safety. “All we know is that there are a lot of people taking xylazine and a lot of them are dying, but it doesn’t mean that xylazine is doing it.”

In almost all cases, xylazine — a drug for sedating horses and other animals — is added to fentanyl, the potent opioid that can be lethal even in small amounts. Some users say the combination, dubbed “tranq” or “tranq dope,” gives a longer-lasting high, more like heroin, which has largely been replaced by fentanyl in U.S. drug markets.

Like other cutting agents, xylazine benefits dealers: It’s often cheaper and easier to get than fentanyl. Chinese websites sell a kilogram for $6 to $20, no prescription required. Chemicals used to produce fentanyl can cost $75 or more per kilogram.

“Nobody asked for xylazine in the drug supply,” said Sarah Laurel, founder of Savage Sisters, a Philadelphia outreach group. “Before anybody knew it, the community was chemically dependent on it. So now, yes, people do seek it out.”

From a storefront in Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood, Laurel’s group provides first aid, showers, clothes and snacks to people using drugs.

Xylazine’s effects are easy to spot: users experience a lethargic, trance-like state and sometimes black out, exposing themselves to robbery or assault.

“It’s a delayed reaction, I could be walking down the street, it’s 45 minutes later,” says Dominic Rodriguez, who is homeless and battling addiction. “Then I wake up, trying to piece together what happened.”

___

U.S. regulators approved xylazine in 1971 to sedate animals for surgery, dental procedures and handling purposes.

In humans, the drug can cause breathing and heart rates to drop. It’s also linked to severe skin ulcers and abscesses, which can lead to infections, rotting tissue and amputations. Experts disagree on the exact cause of the wounds, which are much deeper than those seen with other injectable drugs.

In Philadelphia, the drug’s introduction has created a host of new challenges.

Naloxone, a medication used revive people who have stopped breathing, doesn’t reverse the effects of xylazine. Philadelphia officials stress that naloxone should still be administered in all cases of suspected overdose, since xylazine is almost always found in combination with fentanyl.

With no approved reversal drug for xylazine, the Savage Sisters group has taken to carrying oxygen tanks to help revive people.

Meanwhile, a roaming van staffed by local health workers and city staffers aims to treat the skin wounds before they require hospitalization.

The wounds can make it harder to get people into addiction treatment programs, which typically don’t have the expertise to treat deep lesions that can expose tissue and bone.

“If you have someone out there who’s ready to come in for treatment, you really want to act on that quickly,” said Jill Bowen, who runs Philadelphia’s behavioral health department.

The city recently launched a pilot program where hospitals treat patients for wounds and then directly transfer them into addiction treatment.

Xylazine can be addictive and patients who stop taking it report severe withdrawal symptoms, including anxiety and distress. There’s no approved treatment but physicians have been using the blood pressure-lowering drug clonidine, which is sometimes prescribed for anxiety.

In April, federal officials declared xylazine-laced fentanyl an “ emerging threat,” pointing to the problems in Philadelphia and other northeastern cities. Testing is far from uniform, but the drug has been detected in all 50 states and appears to be moving westward, similar to earlier waves of drug use.

Officials describe the drug’s toll in stark terms and statistics: Fatal overdoses involving xylazine increased more than 1,200% percent between 2018 and 2021. But that largely reflects increased testing, since most medical examiners weren’t looking for the drug until recently.

“What it is doing is making the deadliest drug we’ve ever seen, fentanyl, even deadlier,” Anne Milgram, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, told attendees at a recent conference.

But those who have studied the problem closely aren’t so sure.

___

One of the only studies looking at the issue reached a startling conclusion: People who overdosed on a combination of fentanyl and xylazine had “significantly less severe” outcomes than those taking fentanyl alone.

It was the opposite of what Dr. Jennifer Love and her colleagues expected, given xylazine’s dangerous effects on breathing. But their analysis of more than 320 overdose patients who received emergency care found lower rates of cardiac arrest and coma when xylazine was involved.

Love, an emergency medicine physician at New York’s Mount Sinai hospital, suggested xylazine may be reducing the amount of fentanyl in each dose. She stressed that this is only one possible explanation, and more research is needed into xylazine’s long-term effects. She also noted that the study didn’t track downstream effects of xylazine that could be deadly, including skin infections and amputations.

But hints that xylazine could be blunting fatal overdoses are showing up elsewhere.

In New Jersey, about one-third of the opioid supply contains xylazine, based on testing of drug paraphernalia. But less than 8% of fatal overdoses involved xylazine in 2021, the latest year with complete data.

Police Capt. Jason Piotrowski, who oversees the analysis of state drug data, said xylazine’s ability to extend users’ high may be a factor in why it’s showing up less than expected in fatal overdoses.

“If xylazine is lasting longer and that’s why people are using it, then they’re not going to need as many doses,” he said. “So now their exposure to the more deadly fentanyl decreases.”

Like other experts, Piotrowski stressed that this is only one theory and xylazine’s impact is far from clear.

Philadelphia officials see no upside to the drug.

“I don’t frankly see a plus side to xylazine,” said Dr. Cheryl Bettigole, the city’s health commissioner. “It seems to increase the risk of overdose and it causes these severe, debilitating wounds that interfere with peoples’ ability to get into treatment.”

Philadelphia’s annual toll of fatal overdoses has climbed by 14% since xylazine became a significant part of the local drug market around 2018. In 2021, the city reported 1,276 overdose deaths. Bettigole expects final 2022 figures to show another increase.

More than 90% of lab-tested opioids in Philadelphia contain xylazine, according to city figures.

Even as Savage Sisters and other advocates deal with xylazine’s toll, they are seeing newer drugs circulate, including nitazenes, a synthetic opioid that can be even more potent than fentanyl.

A shifting mix of opioids, stimulants and sedatives has come to define the U.S. drug epidemic, making it harder to manage a crisis that now claims more than 100,000 lives a year.

The Biden administration and Congress are considering changes to try to limit xylazine prescribing and distribution.

But past restrictions didn’t solve the problem: When regulators cracked down on painkillers like OxyContin, people largely shifted to heroin and then fentanyl.

“First we had pills, then we had heroin and then we had fentanyl,” Piotrowski said. “Now we have everything. And xylazine is just a part of that.”

Applications Open for Iowa Farm Bureau’s “Grow Your Future” Award

WEST DES MOINES — Iowa Farm Bureau Federation (IFBF), the state’s largest grassroots farm organization, encourages young farmer entrepreneurs between 18-35 years old with an ag-related business to enter the Grow Your Future Award for a chance to win $7,500. This competition is focused on Farm Bureau members with enterprises that tap into niche production, agritourism and specialty services.

“The Grow Your Future Award was created by the IFBF young farmer committee who understand the need to diversify and can appreciate the challenges that come with efforts to bring additional income to the farm,” says Amanda Van Steenwyk, Iowa Farm Bureau’s farm business development manager.

Interested entrepreneurs should apply at www.iowafarmbureau.com/growyourfuture by Sept. 1. Up to ten applicants will be selected and narrowed down by public vote. The top finalists will compete in a live pitch-off during the 2024 Iowa Farm Bureau Young Farmer Conference on Feb. 2, 2024. Winners will be announced Feb. 3.

First, second and third place finalists will receive $7,500, $5000 and $2,500, respectively. Last year’s Grow Your Future Award winner was a mushroom grower who used his winnings to purchase a delivery van and walk-in cooler.

“In addition to the Grow Your Future Award, Iowa Farm Bureau has a rich history of supporting rural entrepreneurs.  One example is through the Renew Rural Iowa program, mentoring nearly 4,000 rural entrepreneurs and business owners while creating more than $150 million in economic impact for rural Iowa communities,” says Iowa Farm Bureau President Brent Johnson.  “The Grow Your Future Award is just one more way to highlight innovation and support rural entrepreneurs. The crop of applicants we get are equally diverse and impressive, ranging from cricket farmers to cover crop seed dealers, but the common thread is a vision and willingness to explore unconventional avenues in farming that make Iowa agriculture and our rural communities even stronger.”

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