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Central College Offers Musical Performances for the Holidays

PELLA — Central College’s music program invites the community to celebrate the season with a series of festive performances.

The College Community Orchestra will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17, in the upper Chapel. The ensemble will be conducted by Kris DeWild, orchestra director, adjunct instructor of music and 1990 alumna. This concert will feature a student conductor, Quin Hull, Class of 2026 from Ottumwa, Iowa, and Luci Laidlaw, Class of 2026 from Pella, Iowa, as a soloist. Admission is free.

The annual Christmas Candlelight Concerts will be Dec. 4-6 in Des Moines and on Central’s campus. The A Cappella Choir, Chamber Singers and College Community Orchestra will perform “On Our Way to Bethlehem.” The concert will be directed by Mark Babcock, M. Joan Kuyper Farver Endowed Chair in Music, professor of music and 1991 Central alumnus, and DeWild.

The first performance will begin 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 4, at Westminster Presbyterian Church, located at 4114 Allison Ave. in Des Moines. In Pella, the concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5, and Saturday, Dec. 6, Douwstra Auditorium on Hoekstra Family Stage. Tickets for adults are $15; students up to age 12 and senior citizens are $12; and admission is free to those who present a Central ID.

The Symphonic Wind Ensemble, Percussion Ensemble and Flying Pans Steel Band will perform their Winter Serenade at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 7, in Douwstra Auditorium on Hoekstra Family Stage. The wind ensemble will be conducted by Brad Lampe, lecturer of music. Stan Dahl, senior lecturer of music, will direct the Percussion Ensemble and Flying Pans Steel Band. Tickets will be $5 or a new unwrapped toy for Toys for Tots; admission is free with a Central ID.

Kellogg Man Sentenced in Animal Abuse Case

NEWTON – A Kellogg man who was arrested in July for animal abuse was sentenced to prison time this week.

On July 6th, deputies with the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office went to the residence of 32-year-old Kerry Quick and 28-year-old Justice Goodwin in Kellogg after a witness reported someone actively abusing a dog and hearing a gun shot. 

At the residence, deputies located the injured dog and executed a search warrant, at which point they discovered a firearm, drugs, and drug paraphernalia. The dog was taken by Jasper County Animal Control to an area veterinarian, where it was later pronounced deceased, with x-rays showing that it had been shot in the head.

Both Quick and Goodwin were later charged for their roles in the incident. Quick pleaded guilty to a class D felony charge of control of a firearm as a felon, as well as animal abuse, which is an aggravated misdemeanor; as part of his plea deal, charges of possession of a controlled substance (3rd offense) and reckless use of a firearm with property damage were dismissed.

This week, Quick was sentenced to serve simultaneous five- and two-year prison terms. He’s also been ordered to pay $1,880 worth of fines.

Goodwin is still facing a class D felony charge of possession of a controlled substance (3rd offense) and a simple misdemeanor charge of possession of drug paraphernalia. She has a pre-trial conference scheduled for Monday.

Kenny Chesney’s Book Tops The Best Seller List

Kenny Chesney has topped the country charts dozens of times, but he’s just topped a different chart for the first time. Chesney says he got a text from the editor of his new book “Heart Life Music.” “When our editor sent a text asking to Zoom,” Chesney said, “I figured he wanted to let us down easy. After all, ‘The New York Times’ is such a big deal…Everybody wants to be part of, if not number one on, their best-seller lists. Rather than send an email, obviously, he was going to soften the news.” Instead, there was no letting down to be done. Heart Life Music” was #1 on both the ‘New York Times” “Hardcover Nonfiction” and the “Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction Best Sellers Lists.” Kenny Chesney: chart-topping country legend and now, chart-topping author.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1977, the single, “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue,” by Crystal Gayle was certified gold.
  • Today in 1977, Crystal Gayle’s “We Must Believe In Magic” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1989, the “When I Call Your Name” album by Vince Gill was released.
  • Today in 1992, Whitney’s Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You” debuted on the pop charts. It made its way to #1 — and stayed there for 14 weeks. Whitney’s chart-topping rendition of the Dolly Parton classic provided the song’s third trip to the top of the charts. Dolly Parton had previously hit #1 with the song in 1974 and 1982.
  • Today in 1994, the “Without A Song” album by Willie Nelson was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1995, John Berry’s debut album, “Standing On the Edge,” was certified gold.
  • Today in 1995, Raul Malo of the Mavericks welcomed his first child, Raul Joaquin Martinez Malo III, who’s known as “Dino,” after Dean Martin.
  • Today in 1996, Raul Malo of the Mavericks welcomed his second son, Victor – on his first son Raul’s first birthday and he’s been expanding his family ever since. In March of 2000, Raul’s third son, Max was born.
  • Today in 1997, Shania Twain’s single, “Love Gets Me Every Time,” was #1 on “Radio & Records’” Country Top 50 chart.
  • Today in 2000, Cledus T. Judd’s album, “Another Day In Parodies,” and “The Mercy Project” album, which featured Martina McBride and Amy Grant, arrived in stores.
  • Today in 2001, George Strait’s album, “The Road Less Traveled,” debuted at #1 on “Billboard’s” Top Country Albums chart.
  • Today in 2001, Garth Brooks hit the stage at the LA Forum for the first of three live concert specials that air on CBS over the coming month.
  • Today in 2004, Toby Keith claimed two trophies at the American Music Awards. Other country winners included Kenny Chesney, Gretchen Wilson, Brooks & Dunn and Reba McEntire.
  • Today in 2005, the Grand Ole Opry held a show at Carnegie Hall, with Trace Adkins, Alan Jackson, Vince Gill, Martina McBride and Brad Paisley.
  • Today in 2010, Grand Ole Opry performances by Keith Urban, LeAnn Rimes and Carrie Underwood were featured in ABC’s “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.”
  • Today in 2012, Carrie Underwood’s single, “Two Black Cadillacs,” was released.
  • Today in 2015, Thomas Rhett’s “Die A Happy Man” rose to #1 on the Billboard country singles chart – and was there for a total of 17 weeks.

H & S FEED & COUNTRY STORE PET OF THE WEEK: MR HYDE

This week’s H&S Feed and Country Store Pet of the Week is “Mr. Hyde”, a sweet 11 month old kitty who gets along great with other cats, and doesn’t seem to mind dogs. Mr. Hyde likes to play with people and other cats, and he loves kids! Mr. Hyde is fully vaccinated, vetted, neutered and microchipped. And he would love to meet you!

And since Mr. Hyde is the Pet of the Week, his adoption fee is only $30 this week!

If you’d like to set up an appointment to meet Mr. Hyde 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 Mr. Hyde with Izzy from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter here:

The timeline for SNAP benefits remains uncertain, even as the government is set to reopen

WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government is reopening, but there’s still uncertainty about when one of the most far-reaching impacts of the closure will be resolved and all 42 million Americans who receive SNAP food aid will have access to their full November benefits.

President Donald Trump signed the reopening measure Wednesday.

One provision calls for restarting the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, but it doesn’t resolve when the benefits will be loaded onto the debit cards beneficiaries use to buy groceries.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which runs the program, said in an email Wednesday that funds could be available “upon the government reopening, within 24 hours for most states.” The department didn’t immediately answer questions about where it might take longer — or whether the 24-hour timeline applies to when money would be available to states or loaded onto debit cards used by beneficiaries.

There has been a series of court battles over the fate of the largest government food program, which serves about 1 in 8 Americans.

Here are things to know about how it could go.

When SNAP funds become available could vary by state

Seesawing court rulings and messages from the USDA have meant that beneficiaries in some states already have received their full monthly allocations while in others they have received nothing. Some states have issued partial payments.

States say it’s faster to provide full benefits than it is to do the calculations and computer programming required for partial amounts.

At least 19 states plus the District of Columbia issued full benefits to at least some recipients last week, an Associated Press tally found. Many of them managed to do it in a day or so, in the narrow window between the Nov. 6 court ruling that required the federal government to make full payments and one Nov. 7 by the U.S. Supreme Court that stopped it.

Jessica Garon, a spokesperson for the American Public Human Services Association, said she anticipates most states will be able to issue full benefits within three days after they’re given the go-ahead, but that it might take a week for others.

Experts say the states that have sent no November benefits already, such as South Carolina and West Virginia, will likely be the quickest.

But there’s a complication. Sixteen states have loaded the EBT cards used in SNAP with partial benefits. Carolyn Vega, a policy analyst with the advocacy group Share Our Strength said some of those states might run into technical hurdles to issue the remaining amount.

Delays in benefits can be a problem for recipients

Even if there’s some clarity that benefits are on the way, exactly when they arrive will matter to millions of Americans.

About 42 million lower-income Americans receive SNAP benefits, on average about $190 monthly per person. Many say the benefits don’t and aren’t intended to cover the full cost of groceries in a regular month, even with careful budgeting.

It’s worse when benefits are delayed.

Doretha Washington, 41, of St. Louis, and her husband have themselves and six children to feed and not enough money to cover that cost. Her husband works servicing heating and cooling systems, but the family still needs SNAP to get by. They had received nothing in November, although Missouri said Tuesday that partial benefits would be issued.

“Now it’s making things difficult because we can’t pay our bills in full and keep food in here,” Washington said this week. “I’m down to three days of food and trying to figure out what to do.”

She has been rationing what they have.

Other people have turned to food charities but are sometimes finding long lines and low supplies.

Cutting off funds left state governments scrambling

The USDA told states Oct. 24 that it would not fund the program for November if the shutdown continued. That left states scrambling. Most Democratic-led states sued to have the funding restored.

Some Democratic and Republican-led states launched efforts to pay for SNAP benefits using state money, boost food banks and deploy the National Guard to help with food distribution. Another group of states used their money allotted for SNAP benefits only after a judge ordered the Trump administration to cover the full cost for the month.

The legislation to reopen the government passed by the Senate on Monday calls for states to be reimbursed for spending their funds to run programs usually paid for by the federal government.

It’s not immediately clear, though, which situations might qualify in the case of SNAP.

In the meantime, the USDA told states Tuesday that it would reimburse them for paying out partial SNAP benefits under a system where recipients get up to 65% of their regular allocations — and even states that paid the full amount can receive partial reimbursements. It also said it would not reduce the amount on cards for recipients in states that paid full amounts.

Democratic-led states that sued for benefits to be made available said in a filing Wednesday that the late-arriving information “illustrates the chaos and confusion occasioned by USDA’s multiple, conflicting guidance documents.”

Weekly Fuel Report

DES MOINES — The price of regular unleaded gasoline fell 5 cents from last week’s price and is currently averaging $2.76 across Iowa according to AAA.

Crude Oil Summary

  • The price of global crude oil fell this week on the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) by $1.40 per barrel, and is currently priced at $58.76.
  • Brent crude oil fell by $1.06 and is currently priced at $62.99.
  • One year ago, WTI crude sold for $68.43 and Brent crude was $72.56.

Motor Fuels

  • As of Wednesday, the price of regular unleaded gasoline averaged $2.76 across Iowa according to AAA.
    • Prices fell 5 cents from last week’s price and are down 5 cents from a year ago.
    • The national average on Wednesday was $3.08, unchanged from last week’s price.
  • Retail diesel prices in Iowa rose 17 cents this week with a statewide average of $3.76.
    • One year ago, diesel prices averaged $3.31 in Iowa.
    • The current Iowa diesel price is the same as the national average of $3.76.
  • The current Des Moines Terminal/Rack Prices are $1.82 for U87-E10, $2.03 for Unleaded 87 (clear), $2.67 for ULSD#2, $2.95 for ULSD#1, and $1.96 per gallon for E-70 prices.

Heating Fuels

  • Natural gas prices were up 23 cents at the Henry Hub reporting site and are currently priced at $4.50 MMbtu.
  • Propane prices averaged $1.53 per gallon in Iowa.
  • Home heating oil prices had a statewide average of $3.27 per gallon.

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

Iowa 4-H Youth Development Receives $50,000 Grant From Iowa Total Care to Support Early Childhood Literacy

AMES – Iowa 4-H Youth Development today announced the receipt of a $50,000 grant from Iowa Total Care, a provider of Medicaid healthcare coverage in Iowa and a Centene Corporation (NYSE: CNC). The grant will support early literacy skill development in all Iowa counties.
This grant and collaboration with Iowa Total Care expands Iowa 4-H Clover Kids K-3rd grade programming to include new literacy resources connecting youth health and wellness concepts, while promoting childhood reading. These materials make learning and reading fun and engaging, while incorporating proven literacy practices that support foundational early childhood reading skills.
All 100 Iowa State University Extension and Outreach County offices will receive toolkits that pair a book with appropriate age-related activities and learning objectives. The kits include an innovative Iowa 4-H curriculum, The Balanced Bookshelf, that weaves together K-3rd grade literacy development and wellness education.
“Iowa Total Care is proud to support Iowa 4-H Clover Kids in growing early literacy skills. Together, we’re helping young Iowans build a strong foundation for lifelong learning and health,” said Bryan Sanders, Plan President & CEO, Iowa Total Care.
“We’re grateful for Iowa Total Care’s partnership in this effort. Iowa 4-H is committed to helping youth become Beyond Ready for their future, and literacy is a significant component of readiness,” said Mitchell Hoyer, State 4-H Youth Development Program Leader. “We know that early literacy helps to improve long-term youth outcomes, and our Clover Kids programming helps set a solid foundation for youth learning.”
Families can enroll their children in Iowa 4-H Clover Kids by contacting their local County Extension and Outreach office.

Ottumwa Man Arrested for Robbery, Assaulting Police Officers

OTTUMWA – An Ottumwa man is behind bars for an incident in which authorities say he attempted to rob a residence and assaulted multiple police officers.

According to court records, on November 7, at around 9:07am, 36-year-old Mitchell Schlote was seen entering a garage building on the 500 block of Camille Street in Ottumwa. It is alleged that Schlote intended to steal property from the building.

Police arrived, and as they were trying to detain Schlote, he allegedly resisted, refusing to lay on his stomach and put his arms around his back. Court documents show that Schlote quickly rolled on his back and swung his fist, hitting an Ottumwa Police officer in the face. Police say that Schlote punched another officer multiple times and caused an injury to the top of the other officer’s head.

During the altercation, an officer warned Schlote that he was about to use his taser on him; upon producing his taser, Schlote allegedly attempted to grab it.

Authorities say that one officer sustained a knee injury during the incident, while another sustained knee and elbow injuries.

Ultimately, Schlote was taken into custody and transported to the Wapello County Jail, where he now faces a total of 5 criminal charges, including Assault of Persons of Certain Occupations Causing Bodily Injury (class D felony), Disarming a Police Officer (class D felony), Third Degree Burglary (class D felony), Assault on Persons of Certain Occupations (aggravated misdemeanor), and Interference with Official Acts (serious misdemeanor).

Schlote is being held in custody on a $10,000 bond and his preliminary hearing is scheduled for November 18.

Field & Stream TV, Backed By Morgan Wallen And Eric Church, To Launch In January

They’re putting the “stream” in streaming…and on broadcast television. Field & Stream and media company Outdoor America are partnering up, with Outdoor America’s free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) channel being rebranded as Field & Stream TV in January. The two companies also plan to distribute programming on broadcast TV, available to 90-million households weekly through broadcast syndication, with additional details to be announced. The rebranded channel will feature “exclusive new content, original series and special programming, offering sponsors the largest combined audience reach in outdoor media,” the companies said in a statement. The Field & Stream brand was obtained by country stars Morgan Wallen and Eric Church last year.

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