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OHS presents “The Great Gatsby”

Oskaloosa High School is presenting “The Great Gatsby” Friday and Saturday nights (12/17 & 18) at the George Daily Auditorium.  Alexandra Nolan, who plays “Myrtle”, tells us why you should see the play.

“This play is great for everyone in your household.  There are fun moments; there are sad moments.  There’s really a chance for everyone to feel involved and really feel like they’re a part of this production.  It’s also just a beautiful piece that has a true meaning behind it that is truly beautiful.”

Elliot Nelson, who plays “Tom Buchanan”, says: “Especially recovering from COVID years, this has really been an opportunity for us to come out and show what theater is about and how people in the community can really get engaged with theater and really enjoy it.”

Jade Whitley, who plays “Daisy Buchanan”, talks about what she enjoys about being in “The Great Gatsby.”  “It’s really been a great experience bonding with the rest of the cast members and just really getting into my character.  This is something I’ve never done before—-the play, not theater (laughs). So It’s just a really good experience to get to know the character.  It’s a more serious play and we’re used to doing more fun, very out there shows. And it was really nice to get to do something new.”

“The Great Gatsby” will be performed Friday and Saturday nights at 7:00 at the George Daily Auditorium.

Christmas Story Window Walk Saturday in Oskaloosa

This coming Saturday (12/18), Oskaloosa Main Street and the Golden Goose Club will hold the Christmas Story Window Walk.  You can read “’Twas the Night before Christmas” in the windows of downtown Oskaloosa stores.  Vicky Collette, vice president of the Golden Goose Club, says the Window Walk was put together with local artists—some of them quite young.

“A lot of the posters, the pictures that the artists have drawn, are also depicted in the decorating in the downtown window stores.  It’s been fun to get the community involved.  We have all the grade school children that have made paper chains…they’re draped in the windows so they can walk around and find their piece of the chain.”

From 3 to 5pm on Saturday, kids can check in at Penn Central Mall to get a Santa hat, light-up necklace, souvenir coloring book, cookies, and hot cocoa.

Rural business gathering in Oskaloosa

Iowa Lieutenant Governor Adam Gregg was in Oskaloosa Wednesday (12/15) along with leaders from rural communities….as Oskaloosa hosted a combined meeting of the Empower Rural Iowa Initiative and Iowa Rural Development Council.  Gregg and others talked about the opportunities in rural communities.  Mahaska Chamber and Development Group Executive Director Deann DeGroot talks about Oskaloosa’s plans to attract businesses.

“With our community, we are working on a certified (building) site…and we have a lot of businesses here that are looking to expand.  So we’re working on that project.  We’re always trying to grow Mahaska County.  That’s what we do at the Chamber and Oskaloosa Main Street, to fill our downtown businesses and help the community grow.”

Over 50 people from across Iowa attended Wednesday’s meeting.

Towns in mourning while digging out from deadly tornadoes

By SEAN MURPHY and BRUCE SCHREINER

DAWSON SPRINGS, Ky. (AP) — Tight-knit communities still digging out from the deadly tornadoes that killed dozens of people across eight states in the South and Midwest are turning to another heavy-hearted task: honoring and burying their dead.

The storms that began Friday night destroyed lives and property from Arkansas to Illinois and in parts of neighboring states, carving a more than 200-mile (320-kilometer) path through Kentucky alone. The National Weather Service recorded at least 41 tornadoes, including 16 in Tennessee and eight in Kentucky.

Along the violent storm path, a funeral home in western Kentucky prepared to welcome the families of those who lost loved ones while grieving losses of its own.

Beshear Funeral Home in Dawson Springs was preparing for at least four services in coming days for storm victims and has to catch up on funerals delayed by the massive storm, said funeral home owner Jenny Beshear Sewell, a cousin of Kentucky’s governor.

The storm-related deaths include those of two sisters who had worked at the funeral home, the only one in the small western Kentucky town.

Eighty-year-old Carole Grisham and 72-year-old Marsha Hall decided to “ride it out” in their home as the tornado barreled down in the dark of night, Sewell said by phone Wednesday. The home, which lacked a basement, was demolished.

Hall, a fixture at the funeral home, had a hard day’s work Friday, hours before she died in the storm, Sewell said. As she left work, Hall’s parting words were: ”’Well, I’ll see you.”

As the tornado approached, Sewell texted Hall with an update on the storm’s path and urged the sisters to shelter in the funeral home’s basement or a church basement. Hall replied “OK” to a text — the last she heard from the longtime employee she considered a member of the family.

But the business of laying the dead to rest won’t wait. A service at the funeral home was being planned for Friday for a woman whose funeral was delayed since last Saturday, the day after the storm hit. If the building’s natural gas hasn’t been restored once services resume, “everybody will just need to bundle up. But that’s the best we can do,” Sewell said.

Arrangements were still pending for Grisham and Hall, but a double funeral is expected, Sewell said.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has pledged $5,000 payments to each of the victims’ families to help with burial expenses. The state was the hardest hit with 74 deaths reported so far.

In the western Kentucky town of Madisonville, family and friends on Wednesday mourned a couple killed when the twister ripped through nearby Dawson Springs.

Jeffrey Eckert, 70, was remembered as “mysterious and cool” by his nephew, Mike Eckert, who recalled his uncle playing in various bands, always owning a boat and buzzing his home after he’d earned his pilot’s license to let the family know it was time to meet him at the airport.

Many of the mourners wore animal prints in honor of Jeffrey Eckert’s wife, Jennifer Eckert, 69, who loved to wear them and was remembered by her niece, Kathy Moore, for her chocolate merengue pies and the love of her grandchildren.

Moore said her grief was tempered by the memories and the relationships Jennifer Eckert left behind.

“When it’s all said and done, relationships are all that matters,” Moore said. “Life has to end. Love does not.”

The grieving, meanwhile, has extended beyond the states hardest hit and into Florida, the home of a father and son killed while staying at a west Tennessee resort.

Steve Gunn and his 12-year-old son Grayson were staying at the Cypress Point Resort, a popular destination for hunters and anglers. They will be buried in Florida this weekend.

“You couldn’t go to Walmart with him without a hundred people stopping him,” said his sister, Sandy Gunn. “His son was the kid you grew up dreaming to have.”

Her brother-in-law, Jamie Hall, also was part of the hunting group and remains missing.

“Our world has been shattered,” she said. “I’m terrified each time I hear the phone ring. My brother in law was the kindest and most gentle man you would have ever known.”

In Mayfield, a vigil was held earlier this week for the victims of a Kentucky candle factory flattened by a tornado. A deputy jailer, Robert Daniel, who was escorting a group of inmates working at the factory, was one of the eight victims. He will be buried Saturday.

Across town at the heavily damaged courthouse in downtown Mayfield, Makayla Wadkins, 24, helped set up a makeshift memorial. Flyers with color photographs and the names of victims were taped to the fence surrounding the building.

“We’re just going to allow the families to have a place to come where they can grieve and see their loved ones surrounded with flowers and beauty,” said Wadkins, from neighboring Kirksey.

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Associated Press writer Kim Kruesi contributed to this story from Nashville, Tennessee.

Another weekly increase in the number of COVID patients in Iowa hospitals

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RADIO IOWA – The COVID patient count in Iowa hospitals continues to escalated.

According to the Iowa Department of Public Health, there were 823 patients with COVID in Iowa hospitals by the middle of this week. That’s a 6% increase from last Wednesday. More than 100 of those patients are on ventilators and nearly 83% of COVID patients in intensive care units in Iowa have not been vaccinated against the virus.

The death toll from COVID in Iowa is approaching 7,700.

Storms bring Iowa at least 5 tornadoes, 1 death, damage in all 99 counties

BY 

RADIO IOWA – Last night’s powerful storm spun off multiple tornadoes in Iowa, while straight line winds exceeded 80 miles an hour. There are dozens of reports of structural and tree damage — and one person is reported killed in eastern Iowa due to the strong winds.

Meteorologist Alex Krull, at the National Weather Service in metro Des Moines, says there’s storm damage in virtually all 99 Iowa counties.

“Throughout the state of Iowa, we know we have at least five tornadoes, coordinating with the other NWS offices that also cover counties in Iowa,” Krull says. “Most of the offices today are going to be sending out damage survey teams to go look at the tornadoes we have confirmed, and then also assess if any of the other damage reports we got are associated with tornadoes or straight line winds.”

The storm packed exceptionally strong winds which reportedly topped out in western Iowa with identical reports from Missouri Valley and Sidney.

“I believe 83 miles per hour is what we got from one of our ASOS (Automated Surface Observing Systems) stations, which tend to be more reliable,” Krull says. “There was a personal weather station report of 88 miles per hour out in Audubon but the reliability of those personal weather stations isn’t always the best, but it’s definitely possible that a thunderstorm could’ve produced an 88 mile an hour wind gust in west-central Iowa.”

One death is reported in eastern Iowa that’s attributed directly to the storm. The Iowa State Patrol says strong winds flipped a tractor-trailer into a ditch in Benton County, killing the driver. The name is being withheld. Krull says it appears that’s the only casualty.

“No, that is the only report that we have had so far reported to the Weather Service,” Krull says. “No other injuries or fatalities have been reported with any of the severe thunderstorms that occurred nor with any of the non-thunderstorm wind gusts that occurred overnight.”

More than 140,000 homes were without power statewide at the peak of the storm. Utilities say it may be three days before all of the power is restored.

Area Storm Follow-up

Very strong winds blew through Iowa Wednesday night (12/15).  How strong?  An 82 mph wind gust was reported in Ottumwa just before 8pm.  MidAmerican Energy says hundreds of customers are without power Thursday morning….with Des Moines, Monroe and Knoxville hardest hit.  There are also outages in these counties: Mahaska, Jasper, Marion, Monroe and Poweshiek.

Wapello County Emergency Management Director Tim Richmond tells the No Coast Network you might be smelling smoke, or may have Wednesday night.  He says that is not from a fire in the county.  Instead, the smoke is from a wildfire in Kansas and the smoke was pulled into Wapello County by Wednesday’s strong winds.

The No Coast Network is reaching out to emergency management personnel in the region for reports of storm damage.

We have a couple of notes about area schools: Davis County schools will start two hours late Thursday (12/16) and classes at Moulton-Udell will start at 10:30 Thursday morning.

Chauvin pleads guilty to federal charges in Floyd’s death

By AMY FORLITI

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal charges of violating George Floyd’s civil rights, averting a trial but likely extending the time he is already spending behind bars on a state conviction.

Chauvin, who is white, was convicted this spring of state murder and manslaughter charges for pinning his knee against Floyd’s neck during a May 25, 2020, arrest as the Black man said he couldn’t breathe Chauvin was sentenced to 22 1/2 years in that case.

The federal charges included two counts alleging that Chauvin deprived Floyd of his rights by kneeling on his neck as he was handcuffed and not resisting, and then failing to provide medical care.

Chauvin appeared in person Wednesday for the change of plea hearing in an orange short-sleeve prison shirt. He said “Guilty, your honor” to confirm his pleas.

Federal prosecutors recommended up to 300 months, or 25 years, in prison. A judge will determine his sentence later, but a 25-year federal sentence would likely extend Chauvin’s time behind bars by about six years if he earns credit for good behavior.

Judge Paul Magnuson didn’t set a date for sentencing.

Three other former officers — Thomas Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao — were indicted on federal charges alongside Chauvin earlier this year. They are still on course for trial early next year on those charges, with a state trial still to come.

Floyd’s arrest and death, which a bystander captured on cellphone video, sparked mass protests nationwide calling for an end to racial inequality and police mistreatment of Black people.

In Minnesota, defendants with good behavior serve two-thirds of their sentence in prison, and the remaining one-third on supervised release, also known as parole. Under that formula, he’s expected to serve 15 years in prison on the state charges, and 7 1/2 years on parole.

Under sentencing guidelines, Chauvin could get a federal penalty ranging from 27 years to more than 33 years in prison, with credit for taking responsibility, said Mark Osler, a professor at the University of St. Thomas School of Law. But the guidelines are not mandatory, and Osler estimated Chauvin would be sentenced toward the lower end of the range.

As part of the plea deal, Chauvin also pleaded guilty to violating the rights of a then-14-year-old boy during a 2017 arrest in which he held the boy by the throat, hit him in the head with a flashlight and held his knee on the boy’s neck and upper back while he was prone, handcuffed and not resisting.

Floyd’s arrest and death, which a bystander captured on cellphone video, sparked mass protests nationwide that called for an end to racial inequality and police mistreatment of Black people.

To bring federal charges in deaths involving police, prosecutors must believe an officer acted under the “color of law,” or government authority, and willfully deprived someone of their constitutional rights. That’s a high legal standard. An accident, bad judgment or simple negligence on the officer’s part isn’t enough to support federal charges. Prosecutors have to prove the officer knew what he was doing was wrong in that moment but did it anyway.

According to evidence in the state case against Chauvin, Kueng and Lane helped restrain the 46-year-old Floyd as he was on the ground — Kueng knelt on Floyd’s back and Lane held down Floyd’s legs. Thao held back bystanders and kept them from intervening during the 9 1/2-minute restraint.

All four former officers were charged broadly in federal court with depriving Floyd of his rights while acting under government authority, but the federal indictment broke down the counts even further. The first count against Chauvin alleges he violated Floyd’s right to be free from unreasonable seizure and unreasonable force by a police officer when he kept his knee on Floyd’s neck, even after Floyd was unresponsive.

The second count alleges Chauvin willfully deprived Floyd of liberty without due process, including the right to be free from “deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs.”

In the 2017 case involving the then-14-year-old boy, Chauvin is charged with depriving the boy, who was handcuffed and not resisting, of his right to be free of unreasonable force when he held him by the throat, hit him in the head with a flashlight and held his knee on the boy’s neck and upper back while he was in a prone position.

According to a police report from that 2017 encounter, Chauvin wrote that the teen resisted arrest and after the teen, whom he described as 6-foot-2 and about 240 pounds, was handcuffed, Chauvin “used body weight to pin” him to the floor. The boy was bleeding from the ear and needed two stitches.

That encounter was one of several mentioned in state court filings that prosecutors said showed Chauvin had used neck or head and upper body restraints seven times before dating back to 2014, including four times state prosecutors said he went too far and held the restraints “beyond the point when such force was needed under the circumstances.”

The other three former officers are still expected to go to trial on federal charges in January, and they face state trial on aiding and abetting counts in March.

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Find AP’s full coverage of the death of George Floyd at: https://apnews.com/hub/death-of-george-floyd

Farm land values in Iowa rising

Iowa farmland values jumped 29% this year to an average statewide cost of $9,751 per acre, the highest such value recorded by Iowa State University since it began its survey in 1941.

The nominal land value is 12% higher than the 2013 peak in nominal land values.

The last time farmland values increased more than 25% in a year was in 2011, when values rose 32.5% due to surging ethanol demand and high commodity prices.

“The increase this year is in part due to much stronger commodity prices thanks to higher exports, stronger than expected crop yields and strong ad hoc COVID-19 related government payments,” said Wendong Zhang, an associate professor of economics at Iowa State’s Center for Agricultural and Rural Development.

Zhang leads the ISU annual Land Value Survey, which found that the average statewide value of an acre of farmland rose by $2,193 an acre since last year. The land values represent a statewide average of low-, medium-, and high-quality farmland.

While all 99 of Iowa’s counties showed an increase in land values, Scott County reported the highest value of $13,852 an acre and Decatur County the lowest value at $5,062.

The survey is based on reports by agricultural professionals knowledgeable of land market conditions, such as appraisers, farm managers, agricultural lenders, and actual land sales.

Goodale asks to be tried as a juvenile in Fairfield murder case

The attorney for a second Fairfield teen charged with killing a teacher is asking that his client be tried as a juvenile instead of an adult.  Jeremy Goodale’s attorney filed the request in Jefferson County Court.  Last week, Willard Miller’s attorney filed a similar request.  The two 16-year-olds are charged with first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the November 2 death of Nohema Graber, a Spanish teacher at Fairfield High.  Goodale and Miller have both pleaded not guilty and they are being held on $1 million cash only bond.

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