Brad Paisley performed at the White House in celebration of country music. “Country Music at the White House ” was streamed live on the White House web-site as well as a special on Great American Country.
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Astronauts squeeze in last spacewalk before SpaceX departure
By MARCIA DUNN
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Astronauts squeezed in one last spacewalk Tuesday before turning their attention to the all-important end to SpaceX’s first crew flight.
NASA’s Bob Behnken and Chris Cassidy floated out of the International Space Station on their fourth and final spacewalk in under a month. Instead of swapping batteries, they had to route cables, hook up a tool storage chest and perform other maintenance.
It was the 10th spacewalk in each of their careers, tying the U.S. record set by previous space station residents.
In less than two weeks, Behnken and Doug Hurley, who monitored the spacewalk from inside, will depart the orbiting complex in the same SpaceX Dragon crew capsule in which they arrived at the end of May.
SpaceX is aiming for a splashdown off the Florida coast in August — the first splashdown for astronauts in 45 years.
Weather permitting, the Dragon capsule will parachute into the Gulf of Mexico off the Florida Panhandle.
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said once Tuesday’s spacewalk is finished, the astronauts are “going to be focused like a laser on coming home.”
Bridenstine said the SpaceX test flight has gone exceedingly well so far. “And I’m knocking on wood because it is not over until Bob and Doug are home,” he said at a Space Foundation panel discussion Monday
The first-stage booster used to launch Behnken and Hurley on May 30 blasted off for a second time Monday from Cape Canaveral. It landed on a floating platform in the Atlantic after hoisting a satellite for South Korea’s military, to be used again for another flight.
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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.
Native American Imagery Removed from Indianola City Logo
Leaders in the south-central Iowa city of Indianola have approved a measure to remove Native American imagery from its city logo, including from police cars, badges and patches.
The Indianola City Council voted unanimously Monday (7/20) to remove the depiction of a Native American chief in full feathered headdress, television station KCCI reported.
The move comes as corporations and sports teams around the country face increasing pressure to dump nicknames and depictions that reference American Indians amid a nationwide movement calling for racial justice.
Council members said the logo will be removed immediately, but creating a new logo will take time and cost about $27,000.
The city has had a long-running reckoning with the use of Native American imagery and nicknames. Simpson College, which has a campus in Indianola, dropped the “Redmen” nickname from its sports teams in 1992. More recently, Indianola public schools removed its “Indian head” mascot, but kept the Indians name.
Osky Mayor and Mahaska County Board at odds
Oskaloosa’s mayor is unhappy with the Mahaska County Board. At Monday’s Oskaloosa City Council meeting, Mayor David Krutzfeldt released an affidavit that would be filed in court asking Mahaska County to collect tax revenue to pay for the County’s emergency management. Krutzfeldt says the County has levied that money in the past.
” Just recently, within a very short time, they’ve asked a court to say ‘No, what we’re going to do is push that back and make the cities do it.’ Well, the timing is such that what they’re asking the cities to do is to come up with the money to pay for it, In the case of Oskaloosa, $460,000, that wasn’t budgeted for, we don’t have the tax money to do it. And so it would force us to make a number of cuts to the kinds of services and personnel that we have for the city. And we’re not in a good position to do that and so we are resisting their attempt to do that.”
Krutzfeldt went on to list some cuts the City would have to make if the City has to come up with the money for emergency management.
“The way we treat Edmundson Pool for example. Close it immediately. That would save us $50,000. Would we reopen it again? Probably not. Because, again, we would have to come up with the money the year after and the year after. And what about Police officers? What about the Fire Department? What about the operations of the library? It goes on and on.”
The Mayor added that emergency management is a priority. The matter now goes to the courts.
Train derailed after being struck by semi
A semi driver is in the hospital after the rig he was driving hit a train Monday morning (7/20) south of Eddyville. The Wapello County Sheriff’s Office says the accident happened around 8:10am, when they received a call of a semi hitting a train at the railroad crossing on Wapello-Monroe Road. According to the Sheriff’s Office, the driver of the semi failed to yield at the crossing and hit a Burlington Northern coal train. Several cars on the train were derailed. The Sheriff’s Office says the semi driver was airlifted to a Des Moines hospital; no word on the driver’s condition. The accident is under investigation.
July 20: On This Day
Johnny Cash was at #1 on the country charts with “Folsom Prison Blues” Cash had performed the song at Folsom Prison itself on January 13, 1968 and this version was eventually released on the At Folsom Prison album.
Luke Combs Breaks Billboard Record Set by Taylor Swift
Luke Combs is holding onto the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart this week, breaking a record set by Taylor Swift.
Combs’ newest project, What You See Is What You Get, is spending its 25th week at No. 1, making him the only country artist to have their first two albums hold that top spot for 25 weeks. Swift’s self-titled debut album from 2006 spent 24 weeks at No. 1. Her 2008 follow-up, Fearless, spent 35 weeks at No. 1.
Biden eyes GOP supporters while Trump focuses on his base
By STEVE PEOPLES
AP – In the four months since Joe Biden effectively won the Democratic presidential nomination, he has focused on consolidating the party’s divergent and often warring factions. As the closing stretch of the campaign nears, that effort will expand to include Republicans disaffected with President Donald Trump.
Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican and frequent Trump critic, has been approached and is expected to speak at the Democratic National Convention on Biden’s behalf next month, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plans who insisted on anonymity to discuss strategy. Kasich is among a handful of high-profile Republicans likely to become more active in supporting Biden in the fall.
Trump, meanwhile, is doing virtually nothing to expand his appeal beyond his most loyal supporters. Some GOP operatives believe the suburbs are lost while a contingent of high-profile Republicans are openly questioning the president’s reelection message. In an acknowledgment of the mounting challenges, Trump named a new campaign manager last week.
With about 100 days until Election Day, there’s time for sudden developments that could shift the trajectory of the campaign. The Friday announcement that Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s cancer has returned was a reminder of the potential volatility ahead. In 2016 Trump effectively used the prospect of Supreme Court appointments to win over conservatives who otherwise found him distasteful.
And in crucial battleground states such as Florida, some Democrats are concerned that Biden’s current standing could be a high-water mark. Some polls suggest Biden’s strength comes more from voters’ displeasure with Trump than excitement over Biden, whose regular gaffes, long Washington record and recent attempts to appease progressives leave him in a tougher spot than some Democrats would like to believe.
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, the only Democrat elected to statewide office there, praised Biden’s message and said he could appeal to rural and middle-class voters. But she says “it’s way too early” to predict a victory.
“As we get closer, polls are going to get tighter,” Fried said.
That happened in 2016 when Trump narrowly won the election after trailing Hillary Clinton in the polls for months. The Democrats’ reluctance to enjoy the current moment reflects the sting of that loss, Biden’s nagging vulnerabilities and Trump’s mountain of campaign cash.
Trump’s campaign has reserved $146 million in television advertising this fall led by a $36.3 million investment in Florida alone, according to data compiled by Advertising Analytics. That’s more than double the next closest state, Ohio, where Trump has reserved $18.4 million. Biden, so far, hasn’t reserved any fall advertising, although he’s amassed a fortune in recent months that will allow him to compete, even if he can’t match Trump dollar for dollar.
Trump this fall plans to spend big trying to flip at least three states Democrats carried in 2016, according to the advertising reserves, which show he’s investing $14 million in Minnesota, $6.7 million in New Hampshire and $6.1 million in Nevada.
While the specific ads have yet to be finalized, Trump’s team signaled it was preparing to ramp up attacks on Biden’s record and mental competence designed to “redefine” the lifelong politician and scare away tentative supporters. Underlying the strategy is a risky assumption that the coronavirus and related economic devastation will improve before voting begins.
“A lot of people know Joe Biden. They don’t know about Joe Biden’s record. Right now, he is this blank canvas,” said Nick Trainer, the Trump campaign’s director of delegates and party organization. “As they get more and more information about what Joe Biden’s done and what he’ll do, I’m more and more confident.”
With early voting set to begin in several states in just two months, however, there are no signs yet that the strategy is helping Trump expand his support.
Republicans working on congressional races across several battleground states believe the nation’s suburbs, where higher-educated white voters have traditionally favored the GOP, are almost completely lost for Trump. These voters, they warn, are more intensely opposed to Trump’s reelection than they were during the 2018 midterm elections, when a suburban backlash allowed Democrats to seize the House majority.
The suburban shift is emblematic of Biden’s potential to expand the Democratic coalition to include more women, seniors and moderate Republicans, who may have reluctantly voted for Trump or a third-party candidate in 2016 but may vote for a Democrat in 2020 after watching Trump struggle to govern.
Biden’s team would not confirm specific discussions with Kasich, but deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield acknowledged the campaign has begun working with Republicans, just as it has worked with progressives in recent months. At the least, she said GOP backers could help mute Trump’s efforts to paint Biden as a tool of the left.
“In terms of Republican supporters, I think it speaks to a career of being able to work across the aisle, of being able to actually get things done,” Bedingfield said. “We welcome the support of anybody who’d rather see Joe Biden be president than Donald Trump.”
Trump’s Republican allies are finding it harder to defend his inconsistent leadership as the coronavirus explodes across the country. In a Sunday interview with Fox News, Trump defended his statement from earlier in the month that coronavirus would eventually “sort of just disappear.”
“I’ll be right eventually,” the president said.
Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Trump supporter, praised the president’s recent decision to wear a face mask for the first time in public. He said Trump and his allies could help stop the spread of the virus and speed up the economic recovery if they embraced mask usage.
But Walker said he has no clear sense of Trump’s campaign message or political strategy. He encouraged Trump’s team to focus on Biden’s history of “saying or doing anything to get elected” instead of some of the attacks against his mental competence or links to his party’s left wing.
“They’ve got to be focused and disciplined — not go out on 100 different tangents,” Walker said in an interview.
Acknowledging concerns about his campaign, Trump named veteran GOP operative Bill Stepien as his new campaign manager. But the change is not expected to lead to major strategic shifts given that Stepien was already guiding much of the political operation and Trump himself ultimately drives the campaign.
Trump’s team believes the president will eventually benefit when the explosion of coronavirus infections begins to subside and the economy recovers.
So far, the numbers are moving in the opposite direction. The nation continues to break new records of daily infections and several states have scaled back reopening plans.
“It’s really a perfect storm coming. It’s like Trump’s on a sinking ship,” said former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a prominent Biden ally.
“Everybody everyday is now dealing with coronavirus in their personal lives,” he said in an interview. “Yeah, they’re going to blame Trump. They should. And there’s nothing he can do about it.”
Still, McAuliffe warned: “If any party can screw this up, it’s the Democratic Party.”
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Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.
Weekend coronavirus update
Ten more Iowans have died from coronavirus over the weekend. As of late Sunday morning (7/19), the pandemic total stood at 792. None of those deaths were in the No Coast Network listening area. Meanwhile, another 1969 new positive cases for coronavirus have been reported for a statewide total of 38,637. Seven of these new cases are in Jasper County, six are in Wapello County, four new cases in Marion County, three in Monroe County, two in Mahaska County and one each in Keokuk and Poweshiek Counties. Four more Iowans are hospitalized with coronavirus for a total of 214 as of late Sunday morning…with five more people hospitalized in intensive care units for a total of 75.
Osky City Council meets
Monday night (7/20), the Oskaloosa City Council will vote on two resolutions for a third phase of the city’s façade improvement project downtown. This would cover 1st Avenue West between Market Street and South 1st Street. One resolution would call that block of 1st Avenue West a blighted area; while the other would apply for a Community Development Block Grant for the façade improvement. Monday’s Oskaloosa City Council meeting starts at 6pm at City Hall.
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