TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

State climatologist says weather system change ahead

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

This week’s Iowa Crop and Weather report from the USDA rates 60% of Iowa topsoil either short or very short of moisture. State Climatologist Justin Glisan says abnormally dry conditions have expanded in the past two weeks.

“In those more pervasive and dry areas, we’ve seen precipitation deficits really stack up,” Glisan says. “This is reflected in lower stream flows, but also diminishment in soil moisture.”

By last Thursday, 99% of the state reached some stage of drought or has been abnormally dry for 30 to 60 days according to the USDA’s Iowa Drought Monitor. Glisan says it appears surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific Ocean are rising — and that means a change in the weather pattern for thunderstorms that form over the ocean and later sweep into Iowa.

“I think there is good news on the horizon,” Glisan says.

Weather models indicate the swing into the wetter pattern could arrive in Iowa by July, according to Glisan, just when corn and soybeans hit a major stage in development.

“We need timely rainfalls throughout the teeth of the growing season,” Glisan says, “so seeing this potential shift into El Nino, which we are in now, and the potential for the weather patterns that set up, I am pretty confident that we are not going to see any yield loss because of early planting.”

Glisan made his comments during a recent appearance on “Iowa Press” on Iowa PBS. According to the USDA, the development of Iowa’s soybean crop is nine days ahead of normal and the corn crop is a week ahead of last year.

General Food Preservation Class Offered

OSKALOOSA — Preserving your summer bounty is a great way to enjoy home-grown produce year-round. The key is not serving food borne illness, like botulism, with your home preserved foods.

Home food preservation is not difficult but it does require following specific directions exactly, said Cathy Drost, a human sciences specialist in food and health with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. “Ignoring recommended procedures can result in home canned products that will make you, your family and friends very ill.”

To help Iowans safely preserve foods, Preserve the Taste of Summer 101 will be offered on July 25 from 6:00-7:30 pm. The class, offered at the Mahaska County Extension Office located at 212 N. I Street in Oskaloosa, is part of the ISU Extension and Outreach Preserve the Taste of Summer program.

“Preserve the Taste of Summer 101 is a general overview course that highlights the key information you need to know to get started preserving food at home,” said Drost.

This class will:

  • Discuss four food preservation techniques – pressure canning, hot water bath canning, dehydration and freezing;
  • Provide science-based, reliable, food preservation resources; and
  • Answer your general food preservation questions.

“This information-packed class is helpful for beginner home food preservers as well as for experienced home food preservers interested in staying up-to-date on the current recommendations,” said Drost. “Past participants have shared that Preserve the Taste of Summer 101 was informative and fun and that it provided new information to keep them up to date and safe.”

The cost of this workshop is $10. The registration deadline is July 20 or until the class is full.

Participants can register for the workshop at https://go.iastate.edu/9QC6BM

To learn more or to ask questions, contact Suzette Striegel at (641) 673-5841.

Remains of Korean War Corporal from Ottumwa Area Identified

OTTUMWA — The remains of a U.S. Army Corporal from the Ottumwa area who died as a prisoner of war during the Korean conflict were recently identified and will be returned to Iowa for burial.  Corporal Delbert Lloyd White was drafted to the Korean War, where on December 1, 1950, he was captured by enemy forces and marched to a prison camp in North Korea.  In March 1951, he died of malnutrition at the age of 20.  White’s remains were among 38 returned in a postwar exchange that could not be identified and were buried as “Unknowns” at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu in 1956.  White has been missing for 72 years.  His remains will be transported to Ottumwa, Iowa, where his funeral will be held this Friday, June 16th, 2023 at 10:00 A.M. at Reece Funeral Home.

WILLIE NELSON RECEIVES UNIQUE HONOR

Willie Nelson has been accorded just about every honor a legendary musician can receive – GRAMMYs, ACM’s, CMA’s – but this is a new one.

Scientist JoVonn Hill and his team have been researching the Edwards Plateau region of central Texas – near where Willie Nelson was born and raised. The scientists have discovered seven previously undiscovered species of flightless grasshopper – and have named one of those species after the country icon.

“Melanoplus nelsoni and Melanoplus walkeri immortalize the enduring contributions of these legendary musicians and their connection to Texas,” said Dr. Hill, having named the two species of grasshopper after Willie and late country legend Jerry Jeff Walker. Though Hill works out of Mississippi State University, he says, “After these last few summers [of field studies], just like Mr. Nelson, we, too, have a little Texas in our souls.”

Source: FoxNews

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1960, Loretta Lynn debuted on the charts with “Honky Tonk Girl.”
  • Today in 1970, Johnny Cash graced the cover of “TV Guide.”
  • Today in 1972, the original Country Music Foundation Library and Media Center was dedicated in Nashville.
  • Today in 1972, the “Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour” last aired on CBS-TV.
  • Today in 1989, Jerry Lee Lewis received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
  • Today in 1995, an undercover officer arrested Ty Herndon on drug possession charges ninety minutes before he was scheduled to perform at a Texas police convention. He later plead guilty.
  • Today in 1996, John Michael Montgomery’s “Kickin’ It Up” album was certified for sales of four million.
  • Today in 1997, Paul Brandt’s “Calm Before The Storm” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1997, Kenny Rogers’ albums, “20 Great Years” and “Kenny Rogers & The First Edition Greatest Hits,” were certified platinum.
  • Today in 2000, in Houston, Faith Hill made fans do a double take when she showed up dressed up as a police officer and handcuffed husband Tim McGraw while he was singing “I Like It, I Love It.” The “arresting incident” occurred during the final show of the George Strait Country Music Festival. Of course, Faith’s disguise was an end-of-tour prank. It was considered especially daring in light of Tim and Kenny Chesney’s arrest at the prior weekend’s show in Buffalo, New York. A brouhaha erupted after Kenny allegedly refused to relinquish a horse he had borrowed. In May of 2000, the pair was acquitted of all charges stemming from the incident.
  • Today in 2000, it was announced that LeAnn Rimes donated her Dodge Viper to the brand new Country Music Hall of Fame for display.
  • Today in 2000, the “Change” album by Sons of the Desert arrived in stores.
  • Today in 2001, Lee Ann Womack announced plans for a Christmas concert tour with the 15-piece Duke Ellington Orchestra, led by the late jazz legend’s son, Mercer Ellington.
  • Tomorrow in 2003, Toby Keith and Willie Nelson rode to #1 with “Beer for My Horses.”
  • Today in 2005, “You’ll Think Of Me” brought Keith Urban the first platinum single of his career, while “Somebody Like You” is certified gold.
  • Today in 2012, the Eli Young Band scored a gold single for “Even If It Breaks Your Heart.”
  • Today in 2014 Kacey Musgraves and Katy Perry were paired as the 50th episode of “CMT Crossroads” premieres. They collaborated on “Follow Your Arrow,” “Teenage Dream,” “Here You Come Again” and “Merry Go ‘Round.”
  • Today in 2015, Craig Wayne Boyd got engaged to Taylor Borland outside the Oak Ridge Boys Theatre in Branson, Missouri. They secretly got hitched the following May and share two kids together…as well as a third son from Craig’s previous relationship.
  • Today in 2015, Sturgill Simpson performed during the all-genre Bonnaroo Music Festival outside Manchester, Tennessee. Roaming the grounds as a fan is a future country hitmaker, singer/songwriter Maren Morris.
  • Today in 2015, Little Big Town, Vince Gill and Love And Theft take part in the 25th annual City of Hope celebrity softball game for charity at Nashville’s First Tennessee Park. Other players include Lauren Alaina, Chuck Wicks, Deana Carter and Bucky Covington.
  • Today in 2016, the Dixie Chicks returned to the prestigious Madison Square Garden in New York with a set that included “Landslide,” “Ready To Run” and “Not Ready To Make Nice.”
  • Today in 2016, Maren Morris’ single, “80s Mercedes,” hit the airwaves.

CARRIE UNDERWOOD DROPS NEW MUSIC, ANNOUNCES DELUXE ALBUM

Carrie Underwood‘s most recent album, “Denim & Rhinestones,” has been out a full year – and fans will be excited to know that she has been busy creating new music. But – a new album is not forthcoming.

Instead, Carrie announced Friday that she was releasing a deluxe edition of “Denim & Rhinestones” with six new songs tacked on to the twelve songs already released. On top of that, Carrie gave fans a taste of the new music, releasing a new song, “Take Me Out.” Her current single, “Out Of That Truck,” is also one of the six new tracks.

The deluxe edition of the album will be available September 22. Check out Carrie’s new song, Take Me Out,” below.

Source: TheBoot

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1957, Jerry Lee Lewis’ “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” entered the national country chart. By the next week it will have made its debut on the national pop chart. It eventually sold six million copies.
  • Today in 1973, Dolly Parton recorded “Jolene” at RCA Studio B in Nashville.
  • Today in 1976, Crystal Gayle notched her first #1 country single in Billboard with “I’ll Get Over You.”
  • Today in 1978, Dolly Parton’s “The Best Of Dolly Parton” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1982, the single, “Always On My Mind,” by Willie Nelson peaked at #5 on the pop singles chart.
  • Today in 1992, Trisha Yearwood’s single, “The Woman Before Me,” hit the top of the charts.
  • Today in 1997, LeAnn Rimes performs the national anthem at the Ballpark in Arlington when the Texas Rangers host the San Francisco Giants in the first interleague game in baseball history. The Giants win, 4-3.
  • Today in 2000, after endless amounts of speculation, Lorrie Morgan’s publicist confirmed that Lorrie and Sammy Kershaw were indeed a couple. The twosome got hitched the following September.
  • Today in 2000, Kenny Chesney made his first public statement about the infamous “horse incident” following the George Strait Country Music Festival in Buffalo, New York on NBC-TV’s “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.” It also marked his very first “Tonight Show” appearance. Of course, Kenny and buddy Tim McGraw were acquitted of all charges stemming from the brouhaha in an Orchard Park, New York courtroom.
  • Today in 2000, Trace Adkins appeared on the Lifetime TV series, “The Things We Do For Love.” A young woman had written to the series explaining that her grandmother’s greatest wish was to see the Grand Ole Opry. The cable channel decided to grant the wish and flew the grandmother into Nashville from California and the granddaughter from Washington, D.C. During the program, Trace greeted the two women at the Opry and presented the grandmother with a corsage before giving them a backstage tour before the Opry performance began.
  • Today in 2001, Travis Tritt officially began going “down” his road as his home state of Georgia officially re-named a three-mile section of Highway 92 “Travis Tritt Highway.” But that’s not all – as of this day, Paulding County signs also read “Home of Country Music Star Travis Tritt.”
  • Today in 2002, Alan Jackson had some “Down Under” success to celebrate. His “Drive” album, which had already been certified double platinum here in the United States, went gold in Australia. Of course, “Drive” has since gone on to greater success Stateside – it was recently certified quadruple platinum for sales of 4 million copies.
  • Today in 2002, Kenny Chesney is the only double-winner at the inaugural CMT Flameworthy Video Music Awards, taking honors for the video to “Young” at Nashville’s Gaylord Entertainment Center.
  • Today in 2004, Terri Clark became the first Canadian-born female to join the Grand Ole Opry.
  • Today in 2009, Shania Twain spoke to fans for the first time about her split from Robert John “Mutt” Lange in an online letter, saying she’s “inspired by my pain to write.” She also notes she’s gone skydiving and deep-sea diving for the first time. She has since re-married.
  • Today in 2014, the Band Perry’s Kimberly Perry married Texas Rangers catcher J.P. Arencibia at the First Presbyterian Church in Greeneville, Tennessee. Lennon and Maisy Stella – aka the Stella Sisters – performed. The couple announced their split March 2018.
  • Today in 2015, Ty Herndon co-hosted A Concert for Love and Acceptance, a gay-themed show at City Winery in Nashville. Also on the bill were Billy Gilman, Jamie O’Neal, Crystal Gayle, Shelly Fairchild, Chris Carmack, Meghan Linsey, Deborah Allen and “Livin’ On A Prayer” songwriter Desmond Child.
  • Today in 2016, Trace Adkins concluded a USO tour that stopped Bahrain, Kuwait and Germany.
  • Today in 2017, Maren Morris earned her first gold album from the RIAA for “Hero” and she got to celebrate it on stage at the pop-and-rock Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tennessee. Her set included “My Church.”

US confirms China has had a spy base in Cuba since at least 2019

WASHINGTON (AP) — China has been operating a spy base in Cuba since at least 2019, part of a global effort by Beijing to upgrade its intelligence-gathering capabilities, according to a Biden administration official.

The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the U.S. intelligence community has been aware of China’s spying from Cuba and a larger effort to set up intelligence-gathering operations around the globe for some time.

The Biden administration has stepped up efforts to thwart the Chinese push to expand its spying operations and believes it has made some progress through diplomacy and other unspecified action, according to the official, who was familiar with U.S. intelligence on the matter.

The existence of the Chinese spy base was confirmed after The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that China and Cuba had reached an agreement in principle to build an electronic eavesdropping station on the island. The Journal reported China planned to pay a cash-strapped Cuba billions of dollars as part of the negotiations.

The White House called the report inaccurate.

“I’ve seen that press report, it’s not accurate,” White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said in an MSNBC interview Thursday. “What I can tell you is that we have been concerned since day one of this administration about China’s influence activities around the world; certainly in this hemisphere and in this region, we’re watching this very, very closely.”

The U.S. intelligence community had determined Chinese spying from Cuba has been an “ongoing” matter and is “not a new development,” the administration official said.

Cuban Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossío also refuted the report in a Twitter post Saturday.

“The slanderous speculation continues, evidently promoted by certain media to cause harm and alarm without observing minimum patterns of communication and without providing data or evidence to support what they disseminate,” he wrote.

President Joe Biden’s national security team was briefed by the intelligence community soon after he took office in January 2021 about a number of sensitive Chinese efforts around the globe where Beijing was weighing expanding logistics, basing and collection infrastructure as part of the People’s Liberation Army’s attempt to further its influence, the official said.

Chinese officials looked at sites spanning the Atlantic Ocean, Latin America, the Middle East, Central Asia, Africa and the Indo-Pacific. The effort included looking at existing collection facilities in Cuba, and China conducted an upgrade of its spying operation on the island in 2019, the official said.

Tensions between the U.S. and China have been fraught throughout Biden’s term.

The relationship may have hit a nadir last year after then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to democratically governed Taiwan. That visit, the first by a sitting House speaker since Newt Gingrich in 1997, led China, which claims the island as its territory, to launch military exercises around Taiwan.

U.S.-China relations became further strained early this year after the U.S. shot down a Chinese spy balloon that had crossed the United States.

Beijing also was angered by Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen’s stopover in the U.S. last month that included an encounter with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. The speaker hosted the Taiwanese leader at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in southern California.

Still, the White House has been eager to resume high-level communications between the two sides.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is planning to travel to China next week, a trip that was canceled as the balloon was flying over the U.S. Blinken expects to be in Beijing on June 18 for meetings with senior Chinese officials, according to U.S. officials, who spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because neither the State Department nor the Chinese foreign ministry has yet confirmed the trip.

CIA Director William Burns met in Beijing with his counterpart last month. White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan met with his Chinese counterpart in Vienna over two days in May and made clear that the administration wanted to improve high-level communications with the Chinese side.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin recently spoke briefly with Li Shangfu, China’s minister of national defense, at the opening dinner of a security forum in Singapore. China had earlier rejected Austin’s request for a meeting on the sidelines of the forum.

Treasurer hopes to expand number of tax-free accounts for Iowans with disabilities

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

State Treasurer Roby Smith sees room for expansion of the I-ABLE program his office manages for Iowans with disabilities.

The money deposited in a tax-free I-ABLE account may be used to cover expenses related to a disability and the spending does not affect the person’s eligibility for government assistance programs like Medicaid or Social Security.

“There’s just a little over 2000 accounts,” Smith said during an interview with Radio Iowa. “I believe we can have a lot of growth there.”

U.S. Census data indicates nearly 400,000 Iowans have some sort of a disability. I-ABLE accounts can accrue interest and help Iowans living with a disability cover expenses like housing, transportation and job training as well as in-home support services.

“It’s an important tool and we’ve got to do more reaching out,” Smith said. “Part of my job is to travel the state to talk about I-ABLE.”

Smith recently made a presentation about I-ABLE in Pella and the treasurer’s office hosted a webinar with the Iowa Developmental Disabilities Council this spring.

“We know that there’s a number of other agencies that deal with that population that could use it and help their lives,” Smith says, “and so we’re going to look to team up and sign up more people.”

An Iowan with a disability may open their own I-ABLE account or accounts may be opened by relatives, legal guardians or conservators who act on behalf of an Iowan with a disability. The yearly contribution limit is $17,000.

Forty-nine states now offer the program after congress established the tax-free benefit for an “Achieving a Better Life Experience: or ABLE accounts in 2014. Iowa lawmakers authorized the I-ABLE program here the following year.

Marion County’s Annual Tax Sale is Next Monday

KNOXVILLE — The annual Marion County tax sale will be held online on June 19, 2023.  Any unpaid property taxes will be offered for sale to qualifying tax investors, and the monthly penalty will increase from 1.5% to 2%.

You may check for outstanding property taxes by clicking the links to our payment page on the county website:  https://marioncountyiowa.gov/treasurer/property_taxes/ .

Note:  Property tax records only cycle once a year on July 1 when the county prepares to issue new tax statements.  Therefore, any ownership changes that happen after July 1 are not reflected on tax statements or in the system until the next July 1.  If you have purchased/closed on a property after July 1, 2022, you must search for the property by address, parcel, or the old owner’s name to see if the taxes are paid. 

Here are a few important things to remember about property taxes and the tax sale:

  • The county accepts guaranteed funds only beginning June 5 – NO CHECKS.
  • Unpaid taxes are sold at tax sale; not properties.  However, if the taxes remain unpaid, the tax sale investor may begin legal proceedings to acquire the deed to the property after 1 year and 9 months.
  • The county accepts partial payments on regular taxes.  However, they cannot accept partial payments on taxes that are in a tax sale.  Therefore, even if you can’t pay the full amount due right now, you are encouraged to pay what you can on your current taxes to limit the amount sold at tax sale.

Additional details about the tax sale process can be found on the county website:  https://marioncountyiowa.gov/treasurer/tax_sale/.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.