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Mahaska County Farm Bureau Hosts Breakfast Battle for Food Insecure Families

By Sam Parsons

Mahaska County Farm Bureau hosted their annual Breakfast Battle at the Oskaloosa Hy-Vee and the Oskaloosa Fareway this morning. The event was hosted in recognition of National Ag Week, and it featured a grocery store race between area businesses and organizations, with proceeds raised to benefit food-insecure families of Mahaska County.

Mahaska County Farm Bureau board member Lucas DeBruin spoke with the No Coast Network and described the breakfast battle and its purpose.

Participating businesses and organizations included Farm Credit Services of Oskaloosa, James McNaul Farm Bureau Insurance, Bank Iowa, Outer Limits Truck Repair, Full Bloom Brewhouse, and the North Mahaska FFA. DeBruin talked about some of the other organizations that the Farm Bureau was working with to make the breakfast battle possible.

All participating businesses contributed matching donations to further aid food-insecure families in the area.

MORGAN WALLEN DROPS TWO SINGLES, ANNOUNCES ALBUM RELEASE DATE

Morgan Wallen‘s highly-anticipated album “I’m The Problem” has a release date. Not only did we get that big news, but Morgan has officially released two singles today: “Just In Case” and “I’m A Little Crazy.” In the video the singer released on his socials, we also get a glimpse of the cover art for the album, a pencil sketch of the man himself. And, interestingly, Wikipedia backs up the Internet rumor that the album will consist of 37 songs; while not listing all 37 tracks, Wikipedia’s entry for the “I’m The Problem” album lists six songs said to be on the project, with the final track (“I’m A Little Crazy”) listed as track 37…but since it’s Wikipedia, take it with a grain of salt for now.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1955, Johnny Cash auditioned for Sam Philips at Sun Records in Memphis. Philips liked “Hey, Porter,” and asked Cash to come back and record the next day, despite passing on most of his other songs.
  • Today in 1981, Willie Nelson got a #1 single with “Angel Flying Too Close To The Ground.”
  • Today in 1987, Restless Heart hit the top of the charts with “I’ll Still Be Loving You.”
  • Today in 1988, at the Academy of Country Music awards, Randy Travis won Top Male Vocalist and his song “Forever And Ever, Amen,” won Single Record and Song of the Year.
  • Today in 1994, the “8 seconds” soundtrack went gold. Artists who contributed included John Anderson, Pam Tillis, Billy Dean, Brooks & Dunn, Reba McEntire, Vince Gill, McBride & The Ride, Karla Bonoff, David Lee Murphy, Mark Chesnutt, Patty Smyth, and Bill Conti.
  • Today in 1998, Clint Black and Steve Wariners “Nothin’ But The Taillights” hit the top of the Billboard country chart.
  • Today in 1999, Garth Brooks experienced the beginning of spring training, getting a single up the middle of pitcher Mike Sirotka during a San Diego Padres game, as they lost to the Chicago White Sox.
  • Today in 2000, Nickel Creek released a self-titled debut album.
  • Today in 2004, Rascal Flatts singer Gary LeVox and his wife Tara gave birth to their second daughter, Brooklyn Leigh Vernon.
  • Today in 2014, in an episode of “CMT Crossroads,” Dierks Bentley and OneRepublic sang “Apologize,” “Up On The Ridge,” “Pride (In The Name Of Love)” and “I Hold On.”
  • Today in 2015, Jason Aldean married Brittany Kerr in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. “Duck Dynasty” star Willie Robertson conducted the ceremony, and Tyler Farr was one of the groomsmen. Aldean and Kerr’s first dance? Lionel Richie’s “Stuck On You.”
  • Today in 2017, Little Big Town performed in Australia for the first time, appearing at the Enmore Theatre in Sydney with opening act Kip Moore.
  • Today in 2018, Keith Urban’s “Coming Home” hit the airwaves.

H & S FEED & COUNTRY STORE PET OF THE WEEK: OLLIE

This week’s H&S Feed and Country Store Pet of the Week is “Ollie”, a super-friendly 5 year old Pitbull terrier who loves kids, adults, dogs, and even cats! Ollie gets along great with dogs, as long as they’re outside. He’s not a fan of other dogs inside his home, however. Ollie’s a sweet, energetic fellow who is totally housetrained and certainly deserving of a ‘furr-ever’ home!

And because Ollie is the Pet of the Week, the adoption fee is only $100 this week!

If you’d like to set up an appointment to meet Ollie or any of the pets at Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter, visit https://www.stephenmemorial.org/ and fill out an adoption application.

Check out our visit about Ollie with Nicole from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter here:

CODY JOHNSON HINTS A LUKE COMBS COLLAB MIGHT BE COMING

The last time Cody Johnson hinted at a high profile collaboration, it resulted in the #1 country hit “I’m Gonna Love You” with Carrie Underwood. So when he recently teased another big name he might be working with, naturally fan’s ears perked up. In a recent interview, Johnson talked about Combs and a possible song featuring the two. “I’m going in this year to go record a new album and there’s a certain song that I’m pretty certain…we’re kind of playing with it. We’re going back and forth. But I mean, it could be in the works. I can neither confirm nor deny,” Johnson said. Can history repeat itself? If these two powerhouses join forces, you can bet on it.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1984, The Judds made their first large-venue appearance opening for the Statler Brothers at an arena in Omaha.
  • Today in 1993, George Strait’s “Heartland” topped the Billboard charts at #1.
  • Today in 1998, Steve Wariner gave his first public performance during the Grand Ole Opry of “Holes In The Floor Of Heaven.”
  • Today in 2002, Alison Krauss + Union Station picked up a gold album for “New Favorite.”
  • Today in 2004, Tim McGraw rose to #1 in Billboard with “Watch The Wind Blow By.”
  • Today in 2004, Gretchen Wilson’s video for “Redneck Woman” debuted on CMT’s “Most Wanted Live.” The clip included Hank Williams Jr. and Kid Rock.
  • Today in 2011, “Do not challenge the intelligence of my audience,” said John Rich, taking offense after Jose Canseco and Richard Hatch put down his theme song for Camping World on NBC’s “The Celebrity Apprentice.” The men’s team won the episode.
  • Today in 2013, Lady Antebellum nabbed a quadruple-platinum album from the Recording Industry Association of America for “Need You Now.”
  • Today in 2014, Canaan Smith announced his engagement to Christy Hardesty. The lovebirds married the following August and in October 2019? Th they welcomed daughter Virginia Rose Smith.
  • Today in 2016, Trisha Yearwood portrayed Mary, the mother of Jesus, as FOX aired a live two-hour TV special, “The Passion.”
  • Today in 2018, Sturgill Simpson was honored by the state legislature in Frankfort, Kentucky.
  • Today in 2018, Chris Janson joined the Grand Ole Opry…inducted by Garth Brooks.
  • Today in 2019, Lefty Frizzell’s “The Long Black Veil” was entered into the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress. The 2019 class also included music by Cyndi Lauper, Sam & Dave, Neil Diamond and Ritchie Valens.
  • Today in 2019, Randy Owen received the Heart Of An Eagle Award from the Boy Scouts of America during a luncheon in Anniston, Alabama.

Newly released JFK assassination files reveal more about CIA but don’t yet point to conspiracies

DALLAS (AP) — Newly released documents related to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963 gave curious readers more details Wednesday into Cold War-era covert U.S. operations in other nations but didn’t initially lend credence to long-circulating conspiracy theories about who killed JFK.

Assessments of the roughly 2,200 files posted by the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration on its website came with a huge caveat: No one had enough time as of Wednesday to review more than a small fraction of them. The vast majority of the National Archives’ more than 6 million pages of records, photographs, motion pictures, sound recordings and artifacts related to the assassination have previously been released.

An initial Associated Press review of more than 63,000 pages of records released this week shows that some were not directly related to the assassination but rather dealt with covert CIA operations, particularly in Cuba. And nothing in the first documents examined undercut the conclusion that Kennedy assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.

“Nothing points to a second gunman,” said Philip Shenon, who wrote a 2013 book about the assassination. “I haven’t seen any big blockbusters that rewrite the essential history of the assassination, but it is very early.”

Kennedy was killed on a visit to Dallas, when his motorcade was finishing its parade route downtown and shots rang out from the Texas School Book Depository building. Police arrested the 24-year-old Oswald, a former Marine who had positioned himself from a sniper’s perch on the sixth floor. Two days later Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner, fatally shot Oswald during a jail transfer broadcast live on television.

Historians hope for new details about the man who killed JFK

A year after the assassination, the Warren Commission, established by President Lyndon B. Johnson to investigate, concluded that Oswald acted alone and there was no evidence of a conspiracy. But critics of the commission still spun a web of alternative theories.

Historians are hoping for details fleshing out Oswald’s activities before the assassination and what the CIA and FBI knew about him beforehand.

Shenon pointed Wednesday to previously released documents about a trip Oswald made to Mexico City at the end of September 1963. Records show Oswald intended to contact the Soviet Union’s embassy there after living as a U.S. defector in the U.S.S.R. from October 1959 until June 1962.

Shenon said the U.S. government may have kept information about what it knew about Oswald before the assassination secret to hide what he described as officials’ possible “incompetence and laziness.”

“The CIA had Oswald under pretty aggressive surveillance while he was there and this was just several weeks before the assassination,” Shenon said. “There’s reason to believe he talked openly about killing Kennedy in Mexico City and that people overheard him say that.”

Speculation about such details surrounding Kennedy’s assassination has been intense over the decades, generating countless conspiracy theories about multiple shooters and involvement by the Soviet Union, the mafia and the CIA. The new release fueled rampant online speculation and sent people scurrying to read the documents and share online what they might mean.

Many documents already were public but information had been redacted

The latest release of documents followed an order by President Donald Trump, though most of the records were made public previously with redactions. Before Tuesday, researchers had estimated that 3,000 to 3,500 files were still unreleased, either wholly or partially. Last month, the FBI said it had discovered about 2,400 new records related to the assassination.

Jefferson Morley, vice president of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a repository for files related to the assassination, said in a statement posted on the social platform X that much of the “rampant overclassification of trivial information has been eliminated” from the documents.

The timing of the release drew criticism from a Kennedy grandson, Jack Schlossberg. In a post on X, Schlossberg said the Trump administration did not notify family members before the records were made public.

“a total surprise, and not shocker !!” Schlossberg wrote.

Trump issued his executive order to release the files on Jan. 23.

A boon to historians of the Cold War

The latest release also is a boon to historians of the Cold War. Timothy Naftali, an adjunct professor at Columbia University who is writing a book about JFK’s presidency, said scholars now appear to have more details about U.S. intelligence activities under Kennedy than under any other president.

For example, in October 1975, U.S. senators were investigating what the CIA knew about Oswald, and an October 1975 memo said they considered the agency “not forthcoming.”

A version of that memo released in 2023 redacted the name of the CIA’s security contact on Oswald in Mexico, as well as the identity of someone behind the “penetration of the Cuban embassy” there. The latest version shows that the security contact was the president of Mexico in 1975, Luis Echeverria Alvarez, who died in 2022, and that the Mexican government itself penetrated the Cuban embassy.

Also, Naftali said, before the latest release, the government had made public copies of Johnson’s presidential “daily checklist” of highly sensitive foreign intelligence in the days after Kennedy’s assassination, but with much of the material redacted. Now, he said, people can read what Johnson read.

“It’s quite remarkable to be able to walk through that secret world,” he said.

Some records provide small details about covert operations

Documents show that in December 1963, the CIA director’s office was receiving messages from and replying to operatives in Cuba seeking to undermine the government under Fidel Castro. One, on Dec. 9, 1963, relayed a message to the director from Cuba: “TODAY RECD THE MAGNUM PISTOLS BUT NO BULLETS.”

“You’re getting both a bird’s-eye view of U.S. foreign policy, and you’re also getting a snail’s eye view of covert action, right there on the ground,” Naftali said.

In a previously released April 1975 memo, the CIA downplayed what it knew about Oswald’s visit to Mexico City before the assassination. The memo said the CIA recorded three phone calls between Oswald and a guard at the Soviet embassy, but only in the last one did Oswald identify himself.

“We’re now discovering how much more the CIA and the FBI knew before the assassination about Oswald,” Shenon said. “And the question is, why didn’t they act on the information in their own files?”

Weekly Fuel Report

DES MOINES — The price of regular unleaded gasoline rose 7 cents, averaging $2.98 across Iowa according to AAA.

Crude Oil Summary

  • The price of global crude oil fell this week on the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) by $.38 per barrel over last week, currently priced at $66.89.
  • Brent crude oil rose by $.11 and is currently priced at $70.57.
  • One year ago, WTI crude sold for $84.39 and Brent crude was $87.36.

Motor Fuels

  • As of Wednesday, the price of regular unleaded gasoline averaged $2.98 across Iowa according to AAA.
    • Prices rose 7 cents from last week’s price and are down 26 cents from a year ago.
    • The national average on Wednesday was $3.10, up 2 cents from last week’s price.
  • Retail diesel prices in Iowa fell 2 cents this week with a statewide average of $3.33.
    • One year ago, diesel prices averaged $3.79 in Iowa.
    • The current Iowa diesel price is 27 cents lower than the national average of $3.60.
  • Wholesale ethanol held steady and is currently priced at $2.16.
  • The current Des Moines Terminal/Rack Prices are $2.21 for U87-E10, $2.43 for Unleaded 87 (clear), $2.27 for ULSD#2, $2.52 for ULSD#1, and $1.96 per gallon for E-70 prices.

Heating Fuels

  • Natural gas prices were down $.04 at the Henry Hub reporting site and are currently priced at $4.15 MMbtu.
  • Propane prices averaged $1.65 per gallon in Iowa.
  • Home heating oil prices had a statewide average of $2.84 per gallon.

Tips for saving energy on the road or at home are available at energy.gov and fueleconomy.gov.

Spring community trout stocking in Ottumwa on Saturday

DES MOINES — The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) fisheries staff will release between 1,000 to 2,000 rainbow trout in nine lakes across Iowa in March and April as part of its cool weather trout program.

The spring community trout stockings are a great place to take kids to catch their first fish. A small hook with a nightcrawler or corn under a small bobber to casting small simple spinners, such as a Panther Martin or Mepps, is all you need to get in on the fun.

Bringing trout to cities and towns offers a “close to home” option for Iowans who might not travel to northeast Iowa to experience trout fishing. Heritage Pond, Ottumwa Park Pond, Prairie Park Fishery and North Prairie Lake will also host family-friendly events to help anglers catch trout and have fun while fishing.

The popular program is supported by the sales of the trout fee. Anglers need a valid fishing license and pay the trout fee to fish for or possess trout. The daily limit is five trout per licensed angler with a possession limit of 10.

Children age 15 or younger can fish for trout with a properly licensed adult, but together, they can only keep one daily limit. Children can pay the trout fee, allowing them to keep their own daily limit.

Once you buy your trout fee, you can fish for trout all year long at any of the community trout lakes and trout streams in northeast Iowa. Find more information about Iowa trout streams on the DNR website at www.iowadnr.gov/trout.

2025 Spring Community Trout Stocking Schedule

March 20

March 21

March 22

April 25

April 26

Fremont Man Arrested after Single Vehicle Accident

FREMONT – A Fremont man was arrested this week after a single vehicle accident in the city of Fremont.

The Mahaska County Sheriff’s Office says that on Tuesday evening, they were dispatched to the Fremont Elevator at the intersection of North Chestnut Street and West Kennedy Street for a single vehicle collision.

Upon arrival, deputies found 44-year-old Michael Lee of Fremont highly intoxicated. Witnesses at the scene reported that Lee was driving at a high rate of speed when he crashed into the semi scale of the Fremont Grain Elevator.

As deputies were en route, Lee got back into his vehicle and retrieved a Smith and Wesson .38 special revolver. When that firearm was secured by deputies, Lee reached into his pocket, despite being ordered not to, and pulled out another hand gun; this time, a Ruger LCP .22 caliber.

Lee reportedly refused to take a standardized field sobriety test and preliminary breath test. A search warrant was obtained for a sample of Lee’s breath, which showed a .198 BAC.

Lee was arrested and is being charged with operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, as well as possession/display/use of dangerous weapons. He was booked into the Mahaska County Jail.

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