TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

$10 million from three donors for ‘Field of Dreams’ expansion

By Janelle Tucker and O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

A Dubuque-based trucking company and two northeast Iowa families have donated $10 million to support construction of a professional ballpark and other facilities at a “Field of Dreams” complex in Dyersville.

The McCoy Group’s Jim Conley said he moved to Dubuque 31 years ago and was awe struck during his first visit to the Field of Dreams. “The McCoy Group is proud to support this project that will generate a ton of opportunities for our rural communities all over the state of Iowa, support tourism, economic growth, and create a positive experience that will bring people together,” he said during an event today in Dyersville, “and I think that’s somethng that is really needed, you know, for all of us today not only here in this state, but all across the country.”

Andy Butler of Dubuque is chairman of the third-largest privately-held insurance brokerage in the U.S. His hope for the project is that a visit for a game at the site will inspire people to choose Iowa as their home. “This is a 40 year journey. It’s had ups. It’s had downs. It’s gone forward. It’s gone backwards, but without the group of dedicated and commited people here who are trying to get this done, this wouldn’t have happened,” Butler said. “The passion, the persistence, those are things that really inspired Debi and me to be part of this ongoing effort.”

Craig Breitbach of Farley is CEO of Cedar Valley Steel. He and his wife, Lisa, have donated to the site before, but Breitbach said a fishing trip last August with the Butlers and the family of Greg McCoy, president of the McCoy Group, sparked a new conversation. “On December 4, (2025), I wrote Andy and Greg an email with the concept of let’s bring our families together and do something special for the Field of Dreams,” Breitbach said.

An Oskaloosa company is also involved in the project. Charley Campbell, a vice president at Musco, said his company installs lighting all around the world for major sporting events, including the Major League Baseball games played at the Field of Dreams in Dyersville in 2021 and 2022. “When we heard that this property was going to be put back in the hands of Iowans to develop a permanent professional ballpark and a youth softball and baseball complex to complement the original movie site, we knew it was our responsibility to continue to support the project in a big way,” he said. “We couldn’t be prouder to pour of time, talents, treasure and passion into this project, this ballpark, and the Musco Ball Fields at the Field of Dreams.”

The home and baseball field featured in the 1989 movie are now at the center of a 300 acre campus that includes a ballpark that is scheduled to host a Major League baseball game this summer.

Indians Auto-Qualify 4 for State Track

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa Indians girls track team competed in their state qualifying meet at Pella last night and automatically qualified for 4 state track events.

Tierney Carter will be heading to the Blue Oval for the fourth straight year after auto-qualifying for both the 400m and the 400m hurdles. In the 400m, she was district champion with a school record time of 56.92. In the 400m hurdles, she was also district champ, finishing with a PR time of 65.52.

The Indians also had two relay teams punch their tickets to state. The SMR team of Monica Hundley, Vivian Bolibaugh, Delaney Harbour, and Tierney Carter ran to a 1st place finish with a school record time of 1:48.2. The Distance Medley Relay team of Monica Hundley, Alyssa Sheets, Delaney Harbour, and Kennedy Wright auto-qualified with a season-best time of 4:26.4, which earned 2nd place.

Additional qualifiers have since been announced, now that all times have been made official: Tierney Carter will also be representing Oskaloosa in the 800m run at state, and Delaney Harbour will be representing Oskaloosa in the long jump.

The state track meets will take place from May 21-23 for all classes.

Central Commencement Moves into P.H. Kuyper Gymnasium

PELLA — Central College will move the 2026 Commencement ceremony to the P.H. Kuyper Gymnasium. The ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 16.

“Due to the anticipated heat and unpredictable weather for Saturday, we have decided to make adjustments to the location for the safety and comfort of our graduates and their guests,” says Mary E.M. Strey, vice president for academic affairs.

Commencement will be livestreamed on the Central Dutch Network and guests with limited mobility are encouraged to watch online as the majority of seats are bleachers in the gymnasium.

The gymnasium doors will open at 8:30 a.m. Seating is on a first-come, first-seated basis. Water bottles are allowed in the facility. Golf cart shuttles between the parking lot and lobby will be available for guests with limited mobility.

From 8-10 a.m., Max’s Coffee and Jaarsma Bakery will offer refreshments for purchase. Small floral bouquets will be available for purchase from Pella Floral and Greenhouse. All vendors will accept both cash and card payments.

Trustee Mike Main, M.D., 1987 Central graduate, will speak, followed by 252 graduates crossing the stage to receive their diploma and shake hands with President Mark Putnam.

SCRAA Asks for Guidance from Oskaloosa, Pella City Councils on Future of Project

By Sam Parsons

The South Central Regional Airport Agency held a meeting yesterday for the first time since October 2025 to seek guidance from the city councils of Oskaloosa and Pella regarding the future of the airport project.

To date, the SCRAA has acquired 378 acres of the approximately 600 acres needed for the regional airport, but staff said that based on their legislative authority, they believe it would be difficult to acquire the remaining property needed for the project, which has been on hold since July of 2024, when Mahaska County withdrew from the partnership.

Oskaloosa city councilmember Bob Drost, who is a part of the SCRAA board, said that his support for the agricultural community doesn’t clash with his support of the project.

Oskaloosa Mayor David Krutzfeldt also expressed disappointment regarding the outlook of the project, calling it a “missed opportunity.”

No official decision regarding the project was made, but the Oskaloosa and Pella city councils were urged to give direction on it as soon as possible. The Oskaloosa city council’s next meeting is scheduled for May 18, while the Pella city council will meet on May 19.

Lainey Wilson, Devlin “Duck” Hodges Marry

Lainey Wilson and her man, Devlin “Duck” Hodges, have pulled the trigger! The two are officially married, tying the knot Sunday at The Ruskin in Dickson, Tennessee. The ceremony took place at the foot of a waterfall on the property after the two arrived in a white horse-drawn carriage. “My absolute dream ceremony,” Wilson told “Vogue.” “There’s a small waterfall flowing down the hill behind the altar and windows. The waterfall is what convinced us to do the ceremony in this spot.” The couple announced their engagement in February 2025.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Lainey Wilson (@laineywilson)

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1918, Eddy Arnold was born in Henderson, Tennessee. He was called the Tennessee Plowboy in his solid recordings and shifted into string-laden recordings in the 1960s. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1966.
  • Today in 1978, Willie Nelson released his landmark album “Stardust.” It went on to spend 10 years on the country charts, selling over five million copies.
  • Today in 1982, Ricky Skaggs became a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
  • Today in 1988, Martina Schiff became Martina McBride when she married John McBride in Wichita, Kansas.
  • Today in 1990, the “Livin’ It Up” album by George Strait was released.
  • Today in 1990, Patty Loveless’ “On Down The Line” album was released.
  • Today in 1993, John Michael Montgomery earned the first #1 single of his career with “I Love The Way You Love Me.”
  • Today in 1995, Aaron Tippin’s album, “Lookin’ Back at Myself,” was certified gold.
  • Today in 1995, Martina McBride’s “The Way That I Am” album was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1995, Pam Tillis released the single, “In Between Dances.”
  • Today in 1997, Lee Ann Womack’s self-titled album was released.
  • Today in 1997, Bill Monroe was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame during a ceremony in Cleveland, alongside The Bee Gees, Joni Mitchell, The Young Rascals, The Jackson 5, King Records founder Syd Nathan, Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills & Nash.
  • Today in 1998, the “Evolution” album by Martina McBride was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1999, Keifer Thompson marries Shawna McIlwain in Nashville. Of course, the couple ultimately meshed their lives as performers as well – becoming Thompson Square.
  • Today in 1999, Tim McGraw’s “Please Remember Me,” which was written by Rodney Crowell, began a five-week stay at #1 on Billboard.
  • Today in 2000, NBC-TV aired Arista Records’ celebration of 25 years of music with archival footage and live performances with artists like Brooks & Dunn and Alan Jackson.
  • Today in 2003, June Carter Cash died in Nashville at the age of 73. She had been in the hospital for eight days following heart surgery. She had developed complications following the operation and remained in critical condition until her death. An old saying holds that behind every successful man is a woman, and June Carter spent roughly 40 years as the woman behind Johnny Cash.
  • Today in 2004, Rascal Flatts’ Jay DeMarcus married Allison Alderson in Nashville. His groomsmen included fellow band members Gary LeVox and Joe Don Rooney, plus comedian Cledus T. Judd. Vince Gill sang “When Love Finds You” during the ceremony.
  • Today in 2007, Carrie Underwood won three times at the 42nd annual Academy of Country Music awards. She took Top Female Vocalist; Album of the Year, for “Some Hearts”; and Video, for “Before He Cheats.”
  • Today in 2012, Glen Campbell joined Massachusetts congressman Edward Markey in Washington, D.C., in a call for legislative action to address research on Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Today in 2013, Lee Brice performed “I Drive Your Truck” during a Washington, D.C., event honoring fallen officers. President Barack Obama delivers the keynote address.
  • Today in 2014, it was revealed that Randy Houser was planning to divorce songwriter Jessa Lee Yantz after just two years of marriage – he also filed for a restraining order. Houser went on to marry Aussie Tatiana Starzynski in May 2016 after a yearlong engagement.
  • Today in 2014, Jerrod Niemann performed during the 33rd annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., in advance of a speech by Vice President Joe Biden.
  • Today in 2017, Loretta Lynn’s team revealed she’d been moved from the hospital into a rehab facility as she recuperated from the stroke she’d had on May 4th.
  • Today in 2017, Randy Rogers and his wife, Chelsea, welcomed their daughter, Rainey Ryan Rogers.
  • Today in 2020, Russell Dickerson snapped up a platinum single from the RIAA for “Every Little Thing.”
  • Today in 2020, a day after Hannah Mulholland announced her departure, Runaway June revealed Natalie Stovall was joining the trio.
  • Today in 2021, the state of Tennessee recognized Eddy Arnold with the installation of a Music Pathways marker at Sue Shelton White Park in Henderson.
  • Today in 2021, Ryan Hurd made his Grand Ole Opry debut. His wife, Maren Morris, made a surprise appearance to duet on “Chasing After You,” while Hurd joined Lady A on “What If I Never Get Over You.”

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

This week’s H&S Feed and Country Store Pet of the Week is “Gojira”, a beautiful 3 year old black and white tuxedo kitty. Gojira is a good-sized fella, weighing in around 16 pounds. Gojira is a friendly guy who loves attention, loves kids, enjoys cuddling up on your lap and does ok with other cats and smaller dogs. (Larger dogs freak him out a little.) Gojira is fully vetted, vaccinated, neutered and microchipped, and is ready for his ‘furr-ever’ home!

And since Gojira is the H & S Feed & Country Store Pet of the Week, his adoption fee is only $30 this week!

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

Drug counselor who delivered ‘Friends’ star Matthew Perry ketamine that killed him gets 2 years

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A licensed drug addiction counselor who delivered Matthew Perry the doses of ketamine that killed him, and later became a key informant in the investigation, was sentenced Wednesday to two years in prison.

At a federal court in Los Angeles, Judge Sherilyn Peace Garnett handed down the sentence to 56-year-old Erik Fleming for his role in the death of the “Friends” star.

“It’s truly a nightmare I can’t wake up from,” Fleming said in a deep, somber voice from the podium before his sentencing. “I’m haunted by the mistakes I made.”

The judge ordered Fleming, who has been free on bond, to turn himself in to serve his term in 45 days. He was also sentenced to three years of probation.

Fleming was the fourth defendant sentenced of the five who have pleaded guilty in prosecutions over the actor’s 2023 death in the Jacuzzi at his Los Angeles home. Fleming connected Perry to Jasveen Sangha, the convicted drug who prosecutors called “The Ketamine Queen.” He delivered drugs from her house to Perry’s, and marked them up to make a profit.

Fleming gave up Sangha to investigators the same day they first found him at his sister’s house, where he was sleeping on the couch several months after Perry’s death. Sangha was sentenced last month to 15 years in prison.

Fleming’s attorney Robert Dugdale told the judge he “handed over the Ketamine Queen on a silver platter.”

“They didn’t have a clue who she was before that day,” Dugdale said.

He would likely have gotten about four years in prison if it weren’t for his cooperation.

The prosecution said he deserved credit for doing the right thing, but argued that he did so only when confronted and cornered by authorities.

“Mr. Fleming didn’t cooperate because he had a benevolent motive, or because he wanted justice for Mr. Perry,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Ian Yanniello said. “He wanted to save himself.”

The judge also pointed out that Fleming didn’t come forward in the months after Perry’s death, that he didn’t create new evidence by making phone calls to co-conspirators or anything similar, and that investigators might have gotten the same information he gave them simply through the seizure of his phone.

But all agreed that his cooperation sped up and smoothed the investigation.

Prosecutors also said Fleming’s job as a drug counselor made him especially morally culpable for selling street drugs to a victim who had a public, well-documented battle with addiction, even if he wasn’t acting as counselor to Perry.

Fleming became the first defendant to plead guilty in August 2024, admitting to distribution of ketamine resulting in death. That was before arrests in the case were even announced, and Wednesday was his first court appearance since his role became public knowledge.

Defense lawyers emphasized that he had no criminal record and said he spent only 11 days as a drug dealer, with a single customer. Fleming told the judge it was an act of desperation “in the midst of the worst time of my life.”

Fleming told the judge his great remorse “can’t compare to the agony I’ve caused.”

Outside the courthouse, he said “my chest and heart hurt every day for the pain I caused not only his family but the millions of people who adore him.”

He and his lawyers also highlighted what they called his extraordinary moves toward rehabilitation, spending 20 months sober and helping to establish a sober living home.

Perry had been receiving ketamine treatments for depression — an increasingly common off-label use.

Perry was seeking more of the drug than he could get through doctors and asked a friend to help him get more. She introduced him to Fleming, a former film and television producer whose career had been ravaged by addiction but had since become a drug counselor.

Fleming said he was in the midst of a major relapse brought on by life struggles. He got ketamine from Sangha and took it to Perry’s house where he sold it to the actor’s live-in personal assistant Kenneth Iwamasa.

His deliveries included 25 vials for $6,000 four days before Perry’s death.

Iwamasa would inject Perry from that batch on Oct. 28, 2023, and hours later, he found the actor dead. A medical examiner’s report found that Perry died from the acute effects of ketamine, a surgical anesthetic, and drowning was a secondary cause.

The 2 1/2-year investigation and prosecution that resulted should come to a close in two weeks with the sentencing of Iwamasa.

Perry, who died at 54, became one of the biggest stars of his generation as Chandler Bing on “Friends,” NBC’s culture-changing sitcom that ran from 1994 to 2004.

New state funds for Iowa charter schools, rule change for homeschoolers

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

A new state law will send public charter schools in Iowa $1.3 million more dollars to boost teacher salaries in the coming school year and a revolving loan fund has been created to provide low-interest loans for charter school facilities.

Governor Kim Reynolds signed the law yesterday at Des Moines Prep, a charter school for 8th and 9th graders that’s not far from the Iowa Capitol. “Just five years Iowa only had two public charter schools, both established by local school boards,” Reynolds said. “Today there are total of 10 in operation, with another eight already authorized and demand coninues to grow, all thanks to Iowa’s adoption and expansion of school choice.”

Public school districts will be required to pay the tuition for charter school students who take community college courses. Matt Lakis is the principal at Des Moines Prep, where every 9th grader has been enrolled in community college, too. “Opportunities to access rigorous coursework earlier, opportunities to explore college and career pathways in meaningful, hands on ways,” Lakis said, “and opportunities for students to participate in the activities that they love.”

The law requires districts to let all charter school students participate in sports and other extracurricular activities at their local public school if the charter school doesn’t have those options. The law also gets rid of the cap on the number of unrelated children who can be homeschooled together and a home-based instructor may charge tuition and fees if they’re teaching kids they’re not related to.  “I firmly believe that education freedom is the best way to ensure that every kid is prepared to truly thrive,” Reynolds said.

Democrats in the legislature criticized the plan, saying it opens the door for unscrupulous people to offer to teach unrelated kids, for a fee and they say the benefits for charter schools place additional burdens on public school budgets.

Ottumwa 2026 Asphalt Street Repair Program Getting Underway

OTTUMWA — Beginning Monday, May 18, 2026, work will get underway on the City of Ottumwa’s 2026 Asphalt Street Repair Program. A contractor will begin in the West Finley Avenue and Skyline Drive areas, progressing through the project area over the coming weeks.

This is a multi-step process that will include milling of the existing pavement surface, patching, curb work, and new hot mix asphalt surfacing. At times, access to some streets may be limited during active construction, but residents should have access to their homes by the end of each workday. As with any construction project, weather may affect the timing of the work.

Large equipment will be operating throughout the project area. Several of the neighborhoods included in this program have limited access points, and residents are asked to be patient and courteous as congestion may occur in these areas.

Streets included in this project are:

  • West Finley Avenue (1900-2000 blocks)
  • Skyline Drive – West Finley Avenue to Albia Road
  • Lake Drive
  • Richmond Avenue (1600, 1800-1900 blocks)
  • Gladstone Street
  • Greenwood Drive – Wildwood Drive to McKinley Avenue
  • McKinley Avenue – Greenwood Drive to West Finley Avenue
  • West Finley Avenue – McKinley Avenue to the 1700 block
  • Minneopa Avenue – West Finley Avenue to Albia Road

Wildwood Drive, from West Finley Avenue to Albia Road, will be paved later following the completion of new water main construction in that area.

Trash collection, recycling, and mail delivery should not be significantly impacted by this work. Some delays in waste collection may occur, but service will be completed as soon as possible.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.