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Olympic opening ceremony director fired for Holocaust joke

By MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO (AP) — The Tokyo Olympic organizing committee fired the director of the opening ceremony on Thursday because of a Holocaust joke he made during a comedy show in 1998.

Organizing committee president Seiko Hashimoto said a day ahead of the opening ceremony that director Kentaro Kobayashi has been dismissed. He was accused of using a joke about the Holocaust in his comedy act, including the phrase “Let’s play Holocaust.”

“We found out that Mr. Kobayashi, in his own performance, has used a phrase ridiculing a historical tragedy,” Hashimoto said. “We deeply apologize for causing such a development the day before the opening ceremony and for causing troubles and concerns to many involved parties as well as the people in Tokyo and the rest of the country.”

Tokyo has been plagued with scandals since being awarded the Games in 2013. French investigators are looking into alleged bribes paid to International Olympic Committee members to influence the vote for Tokyo. The fallout forced the resignation two years ago of Tsunekazu Takeda, who headed the Japanese Olympic Committee and was an IOC member.

The opening ceremony of the pandemic-delayed Games is scheduled for Friday. The ceremony will be held without spectators as a measure to prevent the spread of coronavirus infections, although some officials, guests and media will attend.

“We are going to have the opening ceremony tomorrow and, yes, I am sure there are a lot of people who are not feeling easy about the opening of the Games,” Hashimoto said. “But we are going to open the Games tomorrow under this difficult situation.”

Earlier this week, composer Keigo Oyamada, whose music was to be used at the ceremony, was forced to resign because of past bullying of his classmates, which he boasted about in magazine interviews. The segment of his music will not be used.

Soon after a video clip and script of Kobayashi’s performance were revealed, criticism flooded social media.

“Any person, no matter how creative, does not have the right to mock the victims of the Nazi genocide,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean and global social action director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Los Angeles-based human rights group.

He also noted that the Nazis gassed Germans with disabilities.

“Any association of this person to the Tokyo Olympics would insult the memory of 6 million Jews and make a cruel mockery of the Paralympics,” he said.

Kobayashi is a former member of a popular comedy duo Rahmens and known overseas for comedy series including “The Japanese Tradition.”

Japan is pushing ahead with the Olympics against the advice of most of its medical experts. This is partially due to pressure from the IOC, which is estimated to face losses of $3 billion to $4 billion in television rights income if the Games were not held.

The official cost of the Olympics is $15.4 billion, but government audits suggest it’s much more. All but $6.7 billion is public money.

“We have been preparing for the last year to send a positive message,” Hashimoto said. “Toward the very end now there are so many incidents that give a negative image toward Tokyo 2020.”

Toshiro Muto, the CEO of the Tokyo organizing committee, also acknowledged the reputational damage.

“Maybe these negative incidents will impact the positive message we wanted to deliver to the world,” he said.

The last-minute scandals come as Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s government faces criticism for prioritizing the Olympics despite public health concerns amid a resurgence of coronavirus infections.

Koichi Nakano, who teach politics at Sophia University, wrote on Twitter that the opening ceremony chaos underscores a lack of awareness in Japan about diversity.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said she learned of Koyayashi’s comments from Hashimoto.

“I was astonished,” she said.

Kobayashi’s Holocaust joke and Oyamada’s resignation were the latest to plague the Games. Yoshiro Mori resigned as organizing committee president over sexist remarks. Hiroshi Sasaki also stepped down as creative director for the opening and closing ceremonies after suggesting a Japanese actress should dress as a pig.

Also this week, the chiropractor for the American women’s wrestling team apologized after comparing Olympic COVID-19 protocols to Nazi Germany in a social media post. Rosie Gallegos-Main, the team’s chiropractor since 2009, will be allowed to finish her planned stay at USA Wrestling’s pre-Olympic camp in Nakatsugawa, Japan.

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More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2020-tokyo-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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AP Sports Writer Stephen Wade contributed to this report.

Rep. Miller-Meeks urges Iowans to get COVID-19 vaccine

The Iowa Department of Public Health’s website shows the number of Covid-19 patients in Iowa hospitals has been increasing over the past three and a half weeks.  Iowa Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Ottumwa is an eye doctor who’s the former director of the state health department. She went on the floor of the U.S. House Wednesday (7/21) to urge Iowans to get vaccinated.

“For the last few months, I have traveled across my district administering vaccines to Iowans. It has been a pleasure to see my constituents and the entire country have a renewed sense of freedom and a return to normal.  But fully engaged living is threatened by the Delta variant, which is causing increased hospitalizations and deaths, especially among those unvaccinated.” Miller-Meeks says if you haven’t gotten a shot and have concerns, talk to your doctor.

“It is miraculous to have three safe and effective vaccines for Covid-19 so rapidly. Decades of research informed the development of these break-through vaccines and millions have been vaccinated with tremendously low risk.”

As she spoke, Miller-Meeks, who is a Republican, positioned a large photo showing her giving a Covid shot to the chairman of the Iowa G-O-P. Forty-seven percent of Iowans are fully vaccinated according to the Iowa Department of Public Health’s data.

US life expectancy in 2020 saw biggest drop since WWII

By MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. life expectancy fell by a year and a half in 2020, the largest one-year decline since World War II, public health officials said Wednesday. The decrease for both Black Americans and Hispanic Americans was even worse: three years.

The drop spelled out by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is due mainly to the COVID-19 pandemic, which health officials said is responsible for close to 74% of the overall life expectancy decline. More than 3.3 million Americans died last year, far more than any other year in U.S. history, with COVID-19 accounting for about 11% of those deaths.

Black life expectancy has not fallen so much in one year since the mid-1930s, during the Great Depression. Health officials have not tracked Hispanic life expectancy for nearly as long, but the 2020 decline was the largest recorded one-year drop.

The abrupt fall is “basically catastrophic,” said Mark Hayward, a University of Texas sociology professor who studies changes in U.S. mortality.

Killers other than COVID-19 played a role. Drug overdoses pushed life expectancy down, particularly for whites. And rising homicides were a small but significant reason for the decline for Black Americans, said Elizabeth Arias, the report’s lead author.

Other problems affected Black and Hispanic people, including lack of access to quality health care, more crowded living conditions, and a greater share of the population in lower-paying jobs that required them to keep working when the pandemic was at its worst, experts said.

Life expectancy is an estimate of the average number of years a baby born in a given year might expect to live. It’s an important statistical snapshot of a country’s health that can be influenced both by sustained trends such as obesity as well as more temporary threats like pandemics or war that might not endanger those newborns in their lifetimes.

For decades, U.S. life expectancy was on the upswing. But that trend stalled in 2015, for several years, before hitting 78 years, 10 months in 2019. Last year, the CDC said, it dropped to about 77 years, 4 months.

Other findings in the new CDC report:

—Hispanic Americans have longer life expectancy than white or Black Americans, but had the largest decline in 2020. The three-year drop was the largest since the CDC started tracking Hispanic life expectancy 15 years ago.

—Black life expectancy dropped nearly three years, to 71 years, 10 months. It has not been that low since 2000.

—White life expectancy fell by roughly 14 months to about 77 years, 7 months. That was the lowest the lowest life expectancy for that population since 2002.

—COVID-19′s role varied by race and ethnicity. The coronavirus was responsible for 90% of the decline in life expectancy among Hispanics, 68% among white people and 59% among Black Americans.

—Life expectancy fell nearly two years for men, but about one year for women, widening a longstanding gap. The CDC estimated life expectancy of 74 years, 6 months for boys vs. 80 years, 2 months for girls.

More than 80% of last year’s COVID deaths were people 65 and older, CDC data shows. That actually diminished the pandemic’s toll on life expectancy at birth, which is swayed more by deaths of younger adults and children than those among seniors.

That’s why last year’s decline was just half as much as the three-year drop between 1942 and 1943, when young soldiers were dying in World War II. And it was just a fraction of the drop between 1917 and 1918, when World War I and a Spanish flu pandemic devastated younger generations.

Life expectancy bounced back after those drops, and experts believe it will this time, too. But some said it could take years.

Too many people have already died from COVID-19 this year, while variants of the coronavirus are spreading among unvaccinated Americans — many of them younger adults, some experts said.

“We can’t. In 2021, we can’t get back to pre-pandemic” life expectancy, said Noreen Goldman, a Princeton University researcher.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Iowa is soon to be under a La Nina Watch

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The Climate Prediction Center of the National Weather Service is issuing a La Nina Watch for later this year.

Cooler than normal Pacific Ocean surface temperatures lead to the formation of a La Nina, which can cause cooler, wetter conditions in Iowa and across much of North America.

Meteorologist Doug Kluck, with the National Weather Service in Kansas City, says we just had a La Nina pattern fade away several months ago.

“Two La Ninas in a row or two winters with La Nina activity or signs in the equator aren’t that unusual,” Kluck says. “Actually, it does tend to happen fairly often that you have back-to-back years of La Nina.”

Historically, La Ninas have caused below-normal temperatures across much of the Northern Plains states. An El Nino can bring weather extremes, including severe drought or severe flooding.

Kluck says the last La Nina, which evaporated this past spring, didn’t have the normal impacts.

“A lot of people attribute a lot of things to that and I’m not sure we can in North America,” Kluck says. “We saw last year wasn’t a typical La Nina year in terms of when it was supposed to get cold.

The Northern Plains, for example, were supposed to be perhaps cooler and wetter than normal. That wasn’t the case.” Kluck says the issuing of the watch means it’s anticipated there will be a formation of a La Nina by late fall and into winter.

(By Jerry Oster, WNAX, Yankton)

New UI president calls proposed tuition hikes ‘reasonable’

RADIO IOWA – The University of Iowa’s new president says proposed tuition increases at the school are “reasonable,” but Barbara Wilson says she will be looking for financial aid and scholarships to help students struggling to pay escalating tuition costs.

“I think the goal is to allow increases when needed, but to keep them very manageable and closely connected to inflation and/or to the amount money we get from the state,” Wilson says, “and when the state keeps us at a level playing field, we don’t have a lot of other levers.”

The board that governs Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa is scheduled to vote on proposed tuition hikes next week. Fall tuition is expected to go up more than $280 for in-state students at Iowa and Iowa State and by $115 for Iowa residents attending the University of Northern Iowa. Wilson says while the added costs may strain some families, the University of Iowa still has lower rates that many of its peers.

Wilson, who officially started her new job July 15, has met with Governor Reynolds and some legislators already. A bill to ban tenure died in the 2021 legislative session, but it advanced farther in the process than ever before. Wilson says academic freedom is critical to the university’s ability to recruit faculty.

“They’re not going to come here if somehow tenure is threatened or their ability to do the kind of work that they need to do and that will certainly be a really important part of my goal, is to help people appreciate that,” she says, “not just legislators, but taxpayers, families, students.”

Wilson made her comments to reporters on Tuesday afternoon. Wilson, a Wisconsin native, was the executive vice president and vice president for academic affairs at the University of Illinois before she was hired to lead the University of Iowa.

(Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Kate Payne)

Southern Iowa Fair Races Provide Thrilling Finishes

By Jerry Mackey:

Oskaloosa, Iowa: Perfect weather, packed infield and exciting races greeted the Southern Iowa Fair goers on Tuesday night as the Third Annual Caleb Hammond Memorial was held with a large enthusiastic crowd in attendance.

In addition to remembering Caleb Hammond a young man who loved racing, that lost his battle with cancer three years ago at the age of nine, the racing family pulled together to raise funds for Bentley DeGeest who is currently battling a brain tumor. The 4 year old is under going chemotherapy and faces a tough challenge. Several drivers went into the grandstands and passed helmets to raise funds for the family during intermission. Our racing family came through again as we raised over $2,300 for young Bentley.

The racing action on Tuesday night was spectacular with three of the five feature events decided at the finish line. The Oskaloosa Quality Rental Sportmods produced one of those photo finishes. Dylan Van Wyk led the 16 lap main event for the majority of the race before Curtis VanDerwal was able to get by the “Lil Speedster” for the lead. VanWyk quickly shot back into the lead. Then a late race caution set up a two lap dash to the checkers. On the restart Maguire Dejong shot to the extreme high side of the track and found some moisture and was able to use that line to pull even with VanWyk as the two raced down the back chute. Van Wyk still held the lead as the two exited turn four. Dejong was able to race to the win by less than a foot by racing right next to the outside rail. Cayden Carter nipped Curtis VanDerwal for third.

A strong 26 car field lined up for the green flag in the Mid State Machine Stock Car feature. In only his third night in his new Stock Car Nathan Ballard scored the win collecting the $1,000 pay day. Ballard is a very accomplished Hobby Stock driver who is making the move into the very tough Stock Car division. Ballard took the lead from early race leader Pat Rachels and went on to score an impressive win. With multiple packs of cars battling for positions Ballard was able to get out to a comfortable lead.

Todd Reitzler was able to close on Ballard late in the race but he ran out of time and settled for second. Derrick Agee advanced from a 7th position start to take third ahead of Brett Lowry.

The Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks provided the fans with a very wild finish. The caution flew on the white flag lap setting up a two lap overtime dash to the finish. When the white flag flew a pack a four cars passed under the flag stand with all four drivers having a shot a the win. The last lap saw Craig Brown race all the way to the top of the track and bolt from 4th to the win. Brown found the quickest line and took the win by approximately ½ a car length over Rick VanDusseldorp. Clint Nelson crossed the line third ahead of Keaton Gordon.

The Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts feature also provided plenty of excitement as the lead changed several times in the early going. When the checkered flag waved it was Billy Cain making his way to victory lane. Cain scored the win ahead of Tyler Haring and his team mate Clayton Webster crossed the line in third.

Local Sprint Car Driver AJ Johnson scored his first ever Non-Wing Sprint car main event win on Tuesday night. Johnson got out front early and raced to the win ahead of Ben Woods and Doug Sylvester.

The Southern Iowa Speedway will host the Season Championship races on Wednesday, July 28th will all five exciting classes in action. Hot laps will get underway at 7:15 pm. The Annual Musco Lighting Fall Challenge will bring the season to a close with two big nights of racing October, 15 & 16.

Southern Iowa Fair Races 3rd Annual Caleb Hammond Memorial Tuesday, July 20

Oskaloosa Quality Rental Sportmods

  1. 30M Maguire DeJong-Montezuma
  2. 17V Dylan VanWyk-Oskaloosa
  3. 01 Cayden Carter-Oskaloosa
  4. 1V Curtis VanDerwal-Oskaloosa
  5. 34Z Corey VanZante-Sully

Mid States Machine Stock Cars

  1. 29 Nathan Ballard-Marengo
  2. 22R Todd Reitzler-Grinnell
  3. 14 Derrick Agee-Moberly, MO
  4. 4M Brett Lowry-Ottumwa
  5. 34 Pat Rachels-China Grove, NC

Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks

  1. 69 Craig Brown-Eldon
  2. 1R Rick VanDusseldorp-Oskaloosa
  3. 27 Clint Nelson-Baxter
  4. 10G Dustin Griffiths-Hedrick
  5. 77 Keaton Gordon-Ottumwa

Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts

  1. 52 Billy Cain-Bloomfield
  2. 41 Nathan Moody-Oskaloosa
  3. 5 Tyler Haring-Oskaloosa
  4. 152 Clayton Webster-Ottumwa
  5. 2H James Haring-Oskaloosa

Non-Wing Sprints

  1. 93J AJ Johnson-Oskaloosa
  2. 11B Ben Woods-Newton
  3. 12 Doug Sylvester-Ottumwa
  4. 25 Kelly Graham-Hedrick
  5. 7J Nathan James-Russell

Pella Windows shifting jobs from Illinois to Shenandoah

The Pella Windows & Doors company plans to shift more window production to its southwest Iowa factory and hire 120 additional workers in Shenandoah. Company officials say they plan to move production of its wooden double-hung windows to Shenandoah from its factory in Macomb, Illinois. The Iowa Economic Development Authority agreed to give the company a forgivable $200,000 loan to help pay for the move. In return, the company said it plans to spend $5.6 million on equipment for the new lines, and the new jobs will pay at least $20.58 an hour. The city of Shenandoah is also providing a $40,000 forgivable loan. Pella already employs about 300 people at the Shenandoah plant.

Blue Origin’s Bezos reaches space on 1st passenger flight

By MARCIA DUNN

VAN HORN, Texas (AP) — Jeff Bezos blasted into space Tuesday on his rocket company’s first flight with people on board, becoming the second billionaire in just over a week to ride his own spacecraft.

The Amazon founder was accompanied by a hand-picked group: his brother, an 18-year-old from the Netherlands and an 82-year-old aviation pioneer from Texas — the youngest and oldest to ever fly in space.

“Best day ever,” Bezos said after the capsule touched down on the desert floor at the end of the 10-minute flight.

Named after America’s first astronaut, Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket soared from remote West Texas on the 52nd anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, a date chosen by Bezos for its historical significance. He held fast to it, even as Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson pushed up his own flight from New Mexico in the race for space tourist dollars and beat him to space by nine days.

Unlike Branson’s piloted rocket plane, Bezos’ capsule was completely automated and required no official staff on board for the up-and-down flight.

Blue Origin reached an altitude of about 66 miles (106 kilometers), more than 10 miles (16 kilometers) higher than Branson’s July 11 ride. The 60-foot (18-meter) booster accelerated to Mach 3 or three times the speed of sound to get the capsule high enough, before separating and landing upright.

The passengers had several minutes of weightlessness to float around the spacious white capsule. The window-filled capsule landed under parachutes, with Bezos and his guests briefly experiencing nearly six times the force of gravity, or 6 G’s, on the way back.

Sharing Bezos’ dream-come-true adventure was Wally Funk, from the Dallas area, one of 13 female pilots who went through the same tests as NASA’s all-male astronaut corps in the early 1960s but never made it into space.

Joining them on the ultimate joyride was the company’s first paying customer, Oliver Daemen, a last-minute fill-in for the mystery winner of a $28 million auction who opted for a later flight. The Dutch teen’s father took part in the auction, and agreed on a lower undisclosed price last week when Blue Origin offered his son the vacated seat.

Blue Origin — founded by Bezos in 2000 in Kent, Washington, near Amazon’s Seattle headquarters — has yet to open ticket sales to the public or reveal the price. For now, it’s booking auction bidders. Two more passenger flights are planned by year’s end, said Blue Origin CEO Bob Smith.

The recycled rocket and capsule that carried up Tuesday’s passengers were used on the last two space demos, according to company officials.

Virgin Galactic already has more than 600 reservations at $250,000 apiece. Founded by Branson in 2004, the company has sent crew into space four times and plans two more test flights from New Mexico before launching customers next year.

Blue Origin’s approach was slower and more deliberate. After 15 successful unoccupied test flights to space since 2015, Bezos finally declared it was time to put people on board. The Federal Aviation Administration agreed last week, approving the commercial space license.

Bezos, 57, who also owns The Washington Post, claimed the first seat. The next went to his 50-year-old brother, Mark Bezos, an investor and volunteer firefighter, then Funk and Daemen. They spent two days together in training.

University of Chicago space historian Jordan Bimm said the passenger makeup is truly remarkable. Imagine if the head of NASA decided he wanted to launch in 1961 instead of Alan Shepard on the first U.S. spaceflight, he said in an email.

“That would have been unthinkable!” Bimm said. “”It shows just how much the idea of who and what space is for has changed in the last 60 years.”

Bezos stepped down earlier this month as Amazon’s CEO and just last week donated $200 million to renovate the National Air and Space Museum. Most of the $28 million from the auction has been distributed to space advocacy and education groups, with the rest benefiting Blue Origin’s Club for the Future, its own education effort.

Fewer than 600 people have reached the edge of space or beyond. Until Tuesday, the youngest was 25-year-old Soviet cosmonaut Gherman Titov and the oldest at 77 was Mercury-turned-shuttle astronaut John Glenn.

Both Bezos and Branson want to drastically increase those overall numbers, as does SpaceX’s Elon Musk, who’s skipping brief space hops and sending his private clients straight to orbit for tens of millions apiece, with the first flight coming up in September.

Despite appearances, Bezos and Branson insist they weren’t trying to outdo each other by strapping in themselves. Bezos noted this week that only one person can lay claim to being first in space: Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who rocketed into orbit on April 12, 1961.

“This isn’t a competition, this is about building a road to space so that future generations can do incredible things in space,” he said on NBC’s ”Today.”

Blue Origin is working on a massive rocket, New Glenn, to put payloads and people into orbit from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The company also wants to put astronauts back on the moon with its proposed lunar lander Blue Moon; it’s challenging NASA’s sole contract award to SpaceX.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Eviction fears rise as Iowans approach cut-off of federal aid

BY 

Some 30.000 Iowans say they will likely lose their housing due to eviction in the next two months, according to a recent federal survey.

Renters and service providers are bracing for a surge in evictions, as a federal moratorium is slated to expire next week.

The eviction orders are expected to have an impact on Iowans’ ability to find housing for years to come, according to Ericka Petersen of Iowa Legal Aid.

Petersen says, “Even the filing an eviction, even if it doesn’t actually…don’t even end up being evicted, the filing of an eviction dramatically decreases your opportunities for future housing. So it’s huge.”

With affordable housing shortages in communities across the state, Petersen says some renters are finding themselves at a loss for where to go next.

“Other states have turned to things like expungements of eviction records, but we don’t have anything like that here right now,” Petersen says, “and so I think that it is going to harm and does harm a lot of people.”

Qualifying Iowans can get rental assistance to help pay down their bills. More information is available by calling 855-300-5885.

(By Kate Payne, Iowa Public Radio)

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