- Today in 1971, Gilley’s nightclub, which served as the inspiration for the 1980 movie “Urban Cowboy,” opened in Pasadena Texas.
- Today in 1980, the “Classic Crystal” album by Crystal Gayle was certified gold.
- Today in 1980, Kenny Rogers’ “Coward Of The County” single was certified gold.
- Today in 1983, “The Nashville Network” Cable TV Network was launched. The network featured a variety of country music and entertainment until last year, when honchos dropped the “Nashville” in its moniker and became “The National Network.”
- Today in 1983, the “Waitin’ For The Sun To Shine” album by Ricky Skaggs was certified gold.
- Today in 1986, Randy Travis made his debut at the Grand Ole Opry. He performed “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” after an introduction by Little Jimmy Dickens.
- Today in 1990, the album, “Hank Williams Jr. Greatest Hits Volume Two,” was certified platinum.
- Today in 1995, “The Garth Brooks Collection” was certified gold, platinum and triple platinum simultaneously.
- Today in 1985, the soundtrack to “Honeymoon in Vegas,” featuring remakes of Elvis Presley, and songs by Trisha Yearwood, Willie Nelson, Billy Joel, Travis Tritt, Ricky Van Shelton, Bono, Dwight Yoakam, Amy Grant, and Vince Gill went platinum.
- Today in 1998, Sara Evans made her Grand Ole Opry debut – she sang, “Your Cheatin’ Heart.”
- Today in 1998, George Strait hit the top of the charts with “Round About Way.”
- Today in 2000, George Jones’ “Cold Hard Truth” album was certified gold.
- Today in 2000, the “Latest Greatest Straitest Hits” album by George Strait was released.
- Today in 2000, Frank “Pee Wee” King died in Louisville, Kentucky, at the age of 86.
- Today in 2001, Toby Keith’s single, “You Shouldn’t Kiss Me Like This,” topped the “Radio & Records” country chart for the third time in six, non-consecutive weeks. The accomplishment remains unprecedented in the 28-year history of the “Radio & Records” country chart.
- Today in 2001, Montgomery Gentry were named “Top Country Duo” for the second year in a row in the annual “Radio & Records’” Readers’ Poll.
- Today in 2001, the 365 Songs of the Century chosen by the Recording Industry Association of America and the National Endowment for the Arts included Lee Ann Womack’s “I Hope You Dance.”
- Today in 2008, CMT’s “40 Sexiest Music Videos” featured Faith Hill’s “Breathe” at the top of the list.
- Today in 2010, at the Oscars, Ryan Bingham and T Bone Burnett won Best Original Song for “The Weary King (Theme From Crazy Heart.)”
- Today in 2011, Taylor Swift’s single, “Mean,” hit the airwaves.
- Today in 2015, the Zac Brown Band performed “Homegrown” from New York during NBC-TV’s “Saturday Night Live.”
- Today in 2017, Reba McEntire met her wax figure during soundcheck at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. The likeness resides at Madame Tussauds’ Nashville
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Shania Twain Got Her Own Barbie for International Women’s Day
Shania Twain got her own Barbie in honor of International Women’s Day, and she celebrated by copying Ryan Gosling’s classic line from the movie. (Here’s the original.)
In an Instagram post she said, quote, “All I’ve wanted to do my whole life is tell stories of empowerment, independence and self-expression through my songwriting.”
Shania is one of several women getting Barbies, including Viola Davis, Helen Mirren, and Kylie Minogue.
Little Hawkeye Conference Announces Boys Basketball All-Conference Teams; Roach, Scholes, Bunnell Receive Honors
By Sam Parsons
The Little Hawkeye Conference unveiled their boys basketball all-conference squads for 2023-24. Below are the full teams, with area athletes highlighted in bold.
First Team
Redek Born, Senior, Norwalk*
Calix Cahill, Senior, DCG*
Jackson Green, Senior, DCG*
Aidan Harder, Senior, Norwalk
Jonathan Howard, Senior, DCG
Tysen De Vries, Senior, Pella Christian
Dane Geetings, Senior, Pella Christian
Jack McGuire, Sophomore, Pella
Second Team
Luke Hardman, Senior, Pella
Cameron Rowe, Senior, Pella
Jaden Jones, Senior, DCG
Tate Perrin, Junior, DCG
Cameron Thomas, Junior, Norwalk
Josiah Vos, Senior, Pella Christian
Max Roach, Sophomore, Oskaloosa
Caleb Mattes, Senior, Newton
Honorable Mentions
Brogan Fuller, Senior, DCG
Dayne Mauk, Senior, DCG
Grady Sigrist, Junior, Norwalk
Timothy Korselman, Junior, Norwalk
Caleb Van Arendonk, Senior, Pella Christian
Isaiah Breems, Junior, Pella Christian
Brayden Traetow, Junior, Pella
Romon Hugan, Senior, Pella
Christian Lawson, Senior, Newton
Nate Lampe, Senior, Newton
Aiden Scholes, Senior, Oskaloosa
Gus Bunnell, Senior, Oskaloosa
George Blake, Freshman, Indianola
Andrew DeWall, Junior, Indianola
TSA unveils passenger self-screening lanes at Vegas airport as ‘a step into the future’
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Federal airport security officials unveiled passenger self-screening lanes Wednesday at busy Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas, with plans to test it for use in other cities around the country.
“How do we step into the future? This is a step,” said a system designer, Dimitri Kusnezov, science and technology under secretary at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. “The interface with people makes all the difference.”
The Transportation Security Administration checkpoint — initially only in Las Vegas, only for TSA PreCheck customers and only using the English language — incorporates a screen with do-it-yourself instructions telling people how to smoothly pass themselves and their carry-on luggage through pre-flight screening with little or no help from uniformed TSA officers.
“We want to avoid passengers having to be patted down,” said John Fortune, program manager of the Department of Homeland Security’s “Screening at Speed” program and a developer with Kusnezov of the prototype.
Instead of a boxy belt-fed device using a stack of gray trays, the futuristic-looking baggage and personal belongings inspection system looks like a scaled-down starship medical magnetic resonance imaging machine. It uses an automated bin return that sanitizes trays with germ-killing ultraviolet light between users.
Travelers step into a separate clear glass body scanning booth with a video display inside showing how to stand when being sensed with what officials said is the type of “millimeter wave technology” already in use around the country. A reporter found it sensitive enough to identify a forgotten handkerchief in a pocket. He did not have to remove his shoes.
“Really, one of the main aims here is to allow individuals to get through the system without necessarily having to interact directly with an officer and … at their own pace,” said Christina Peach, a TSA administrator involved in the system design. “It’s also about not feeling rushed.”
Nationally, nearly all passengers who pay to enroll in the TSA PreCheck program pass through screening in 10 minutes or less, agency spokesman R. Carter Langston said, while regular traveler and carry-on screening takes about 30 minutes.
Peach said eight uniformed TSA officers might be needed to staff two lanes of the new system, compared with 12 officers in lanes today.
However, Kusnezov and Karen Burke, TSA federal security director in Nevada, said agents including union members would just be freed from hands-on screening to focus more attention on broader security concerns.
“No one is going to lose their job,” Burke said.
Fortune declined to estimate the cost of designing the system, but he said the type of scanners used were similar to ones already deployed around the country.
Officials said they’ll time how quickly travelers pass through the prototype during evaluations this year.
Testing is being done at a unique-in-the-nation “innovation checkpoint” that TSA unveiled in 2019 in a sprawling international arrivals terminal that opened in 2012 at Harry Reid airport. It already features screening lanes with instruction displays and estimated wait times.
“This change in technology is for people who want to get through a checkpoint faster,” said Keith Jeffries, a former TSA director at Los Angeles International Airport and now vice president of K2 Security Screening Group, a company that installs screening systems at shipping ports including airports. “It’ll be a great step, but I anticipate it will be for the experienced passengers.”
Jeffries, in an interview on Tuesday with The Associated Press, compared the new system to self-checkout lanes that were introduced in the 1980s and are now common at supermarkets across the nation. He recalled that some shoppers initially avoided scanning their own purchases.
“It’s going to take time to educate the public,” he said of the TSA screening lanes. “You’re going to have a new generation of travelers that just wants to get through with the least amount of hassle and delay. I think eventually we’ll see more and more of them.”
Harry Reid International Airport was the seventh-busiest passenger airport in the U.S. in 2022, ranked by Airports Council International behind New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. In 2023, the Las Vegas airport handled a new record of 57.6 million arriving and departing passengers.
The Transportation Security Administration reported its busiest day ever at the airport last month, screening nearly 104,000 travelers and their luggage as they headed for airline flights Feb. 12, the day after the NFL Super Bowl was played at Allegiant Stadium.
National ag survey shows Iowa gained farms, younger farmers
By John Slegers (Radio Iowa)
Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig says he noticed two surprises in the latest Census of Agriculture, as he says it’s always interesting to see where Iowa bucks the national trends.
“More farms was one of those,” Naig says. “Really, only a handful of states that had more farms than the last census. The average age of an Iowa farmer did go up slightly, but it didn’t go up as high as the national average, and we did have an increase in young farmers, farmers under 35.”
Naig says several factors may be behind these emerging agricultural trends for the state.
“This is about opportunities for the next generation of farmers to come into agriculture,” he says. “Livestock is often a way to do that, but we also launched Choose Iowa this year, a branded program for Iowa-grown, Iowa-made, Iowa-raised products. We’re also seeing some of our younger farmers get into diversified agriculture, selling things direct to consumers.”
While he’s pleased by elements of the survey, Naig says a host of obstacles are still in place for farmers who are just starting out.
“It also remains very difficult for our young farmers to get access to the land that they need, the capital that they need,” Naig says. “It’s encouraging, but we know that there’s a lot of work to do.”
Naig says the ag census shows there is generational change underway on Iowa’s farms.
“As farmers get older in Iowa, there’s going to have to be a transfer to the next generation. I think the numbers also indicate that that transfer is occurring,” Naig says. “So it’s something that again, what are the various ways that we can assist with that transfer and again, give our youngest farmers a chance to be successful.”
The 2022 Census of Agriculture shows Iowa gained 800 farms, about one-percent more than the 2017 Ag Census, and the number of farmers under the age of 35 is ten-percent of the total.
ISU Extension in Mahaska County hosts Iowa Farmers Market Nutrition Program Training on March 14 and May 30
OSKALOOSA — Iowa State University Extension and Outreach in Mahaska County is proud to announce a partnership with the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS) to host an Iowa Farmers Market Nutrition Program (FMNP) vendor training on March 14 and May 30 at 9 am. This training is for fruit and vegetable growers, as well as honey producers, who sell their product at farmers markets, and aims to enhance their participation in the FMNP.
The Iowa FMNP, administered by IDALS with support from the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, is vital in supporting local farmers and providing access to fresh, locally grown produce for eligible seniors and WIC families. In 2023, over 14,000 seniors and 30,000 mothers and children in Iowa received FMNP vouchers, contributing to the certification of more than 500 farmers at 125 farmers markets and 100 farmstands. Certified farmers saw an average increase of $1,500 in sales through FMNP participation.
This training is the initial step toward FMNP certification, a requirement for farmers who wish to accept FMNP vouchers. In 2024, the Iowa FMNP is embracing modernization by introducing QR code scanning for instant voucher redemption via smartphones. Farmers without technological access can mail vouchers to a designated redemption center. All new and recertifying farmers must undergo vendor training in 2024, regardless of their last training date.
The training will take place at the Iowa State University Extension and Outreach office in Mahaska, located at 212 North I Street Oskaloosa, on March 14 and May 30 at 9 am. Attendance is free, but preregistration is mandatory. For registration and further details, please contact 641-673-5841. striegel@iastate.edu. For inquiries regarding FMNP vendor certification, please contact IDALS at 515-725-1179 or FarmersMarket@IowaAgriculture.gov.
Beacon Man Arrested on Warrant
OSKALOOSA — A Beacon man was arrested by authorities on a warrant from another county, and charged with several crimes related to an investigation.
The Oskaloosa Police Department reports that on Tuesday, 18-year-old Jaemon Hole of Beacon was arrested by officers on a warrant from Hardin County for probation violation from 3 counts of assault on a police officer.
Authorities say he was also charged based on a separate, months-long investigation for 3 different felonies, including sexual abuse in the 2nd degree with a child (a Class B Felony), enticing a minor under 14 years of age (a Class D Felony), and lascivious acts with a child (fondle or touch – a Class C Felony).
LAINEY WILSON VISITS “THE KELLY CLARKSON SHOW,” EPIC DUET ENSUES
Talent recognizes talent. Lainey Wilson visited with Kelly Clarkson yesterday on “The Kelly Clarkson Show” and the two spent some quality time chatting before treating the audience to an epic duet.
The two singers spent considerable time fangirling over each other, each praising the other for their talents and their ability to convey emotion through song. Lainey pointed out that Kelly sings other people’s songs better than they do, and it’s not just learning the lyrics: “Even when you’re up here just covering everybody else’s songs, it’s not just like, you just learn the words and you got up there…you were feeling it, for everything that it is,” adding that it meant so much to her when Kelly covered her “Heart Like A Truck.” And Kelly fired back with her own raves, saying “That’s the thing I love about your voice – you open up your mouth…a musical baby of Dolly (Parton) and LeAnn (Rimes), but it’s still your sound…no one sounds like you..that’s so cool. I love it. And I’m obsessed with you.”
After, the pair jumped on stage and performed a duet version of Lainey’s “Country’s Cool Again” to the delight of the audience.
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1983, CMT made its cable debut with Faron Young’s video “It’s Four In The Morning.”
- Today in 1999, Sara Evans got her first #1 single with “No Place That Far.”
- Today in 1999, George Jones was driving home in Nashville when he tried to play his single “Choices” for his stepdaughter on his cellphone. His car crashed, seriously injuring him. Later, police found an opened vodka bottle in the car.
- Today in 2003, George W. Bush presented the National Medal of Arts at the White House to George Jones and Smokey Robinson.
- Today in 2006, Miranda Lambert got her first gold single with “Kerosene.”
- Today in 2010, Brad Paisley fell off the stage during a concert as he sang the last notes of his final song “Alcohol.” He was treated a local hospital for bruises – and no, he wasn’t tipsy.
- Today in 2012, the Country Music Association announced that Garth Brooks, Connie Smith, and session piano player Hargus “Pig” Robbins were the next to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
- Today in 2014, the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo announced an $18,000 scholarship in the name of Reba McEntire as she played Reliant Stadium. Her set list included “Whoever’s In New England,” “Consider Me Gone” and “Fancy.”
- Today in 2017, com reported that Blake Shelton’s mother, Dorothy Shelton, had placed the home where he grew up on the market. The asking price for the three-bedroom structure and quarter-acre of land is $250,000.
- Today in 2017, Kelsea Ballerini co-hosted the CBS daytime show, “The Talk,” for one day.
- Today in 2018, Cam teamed with Smokey Robinson to shoot an installment of “CMT Crossroads” at the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville. The set included “The Tears Of A Clown,” “I Second That Emotion,” “Diane” and “Burning House.”
Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and Threads logins restored after widespread outage
BOSTON (AP) — A technical issue caused widespread login issues for a few hours across Meta’s Facebook, Instagram, Threads and Messenger platforms Tuesday.
Andy Stone, Meta’s head communications, acknowledged the issues on X, formerly known as Twitter, and said the company “resolved the issue as quickly as possible for everyone who was impacted, and we apologize for any inconvenience.”
Users reported being locked out of their Facebook accounts and feeds on the platform as well as Threads and Instagram were not refreshing. WhatsApp, which is also owned by Meta, appeared unaffected.
A senior official with the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency told reporters Tuesday that the agency was “not aware of any specific election nexus nor any specific malicious cyberactivity nexus to the outage.”
The outage comes just ahead of Thursday’s deadline for Big Tech companies to comply with the European Union’s new Digital Markets Act. To comply, Meta is making changes, like allowing users to separate their Facebook and Instagram accounts so personal information can’t be combined to target them with online ads. It’s not clear whether the outage is connected to any preparations Meta might be carrying out for the DMA.
In 2021, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp were down for hours, an outage the company said was a result of faulty changes on routers that coordinate network traffic between its data centers. The next year, WhatsApp had another brief outage.
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