Sports, August 3rd

Preview for High School Football

Mt. Pleasant will be in a new classification this year as the Panthers will now be competing in Class 3A. Under new direction this season in Head Coach John Bowlin, the Panthers will start the season on August 25th against Fairfield at Mapleleaf. 

After being dormant for six years, football is coming back to Danville with Cody Thompson at the helm. The Bears will take on Lynnville-Sully to start the season.

Van Buren County will take on Central Lee to begin the season for Class A. 

In 8-man football, WACO’s week one matchup will be Fremont-Mills on the road. New London, with Darrin Loyd leading the Tigers, will travel to take on Easton Valley. Lastly, Winfield-Mt. Union will begin their hopeful season at Central City to start the year. 

Mt. Pleasant Cross Country

Summer is the time to refine your skills and Mt. Pleasant’s cross country team has done just that with their summer runs. Coach Murray has been pleased about the work put in so far. 

The high schoolers will have their camp start next week and with the season’s first official practice less than two weeks away, Coach Murray expressed his passion for the sport and explained how tough it really is. 

College Football Award Watches

Iowa and Iowa State will have a battle of the punters this season with the Hawkeye’s Tory Taylor and the Cyclones’ Tyler Perkins being named to the Ray Guy Award watch list, the award given to the best punter. 

Taylor set the single season record for total punting yards two years ago and improved that record last year to 3,688 yards for an average of 45.4 yards per punt. Taylor has been a semifinalist for the award twice in his career and was a Second Team choice by the Associated Press last season. 

Perkins averaged 42.2 yards per punt last year as a freshman, the fourth best mark for a freshman in program history. Nearly 40% of his punts were downed inside the 20-yard line last year. 

Drew Stevens for Iowa also earned a spot on the Lou Groza Award watch list; this award goes to the best place kicker in the country. Stevens was a semifinalist last season after nailing 16 of his 18 field goal attempts, which includes a 6 for 8 mark from 40 yards plus. 

Iowa/Iowa State Gambling Roundup

The number has increased to seven athletes who have been charged in the sports gambling investigation. The latest name to be added to the list is Iowa’s backup kicker Aaron Blom.

The Johnson County Attorney’s Office charged Blom, claiming that he allegedly placed 170 bets totaling $4,400 on a DraftKings account registered to his mother prior to turning 21 years old. 

Blom was expected to be the backup kicker and punter this season.

Prospect League

The Burlington Bees had the game locked at three through 5.5 innings of play, but the Clinton LumberKings would proceed to push two runs across in the 6th and 8th innings to come out on top 7-3. Keegan Schmitt and Connor Laeng each totaled an RBI in the losing effort. 

Matt Scherrman had the only extra base hit of the game for the LumberKings as he finished with one of the five evenly split RBIs. Nick Meyer, Paul Vossen, Tate Gillen, and Jeremy Conforti each collected an RBI. The Great River Divisional rivalry will continue tonight in Burlington.

This Day in Sports History

1852 – America’s first intercollegiate sporting event takes place as the Harvard heavyweight rowing crew beats Yale by 2 lengths over 2 miles on Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire.

1906 – Washington Nationals’ Tom Hughes becomes the first MLB pitcher to win a 1-0 extra innings game off his own home run in 10th vs St. Louis Browns.

1960 – For the only time in MLB history, teams exchange managers as Detroit trades Jimmy Dykes (44-52) for Cleveland’s Joe Gordon (49-46).

Is your canning recipe safe?

There are unlimited resources for canning recipes such as cookbooks, websites, family recipe boxes, and more. Iowa State University Extension and Outreach recommends following scientifically researched and tested home canning recipes to ensure a safe, quality product.

The biggest concern with home canning is the prevention of botulism which can thrive in an oxygen-free, vacuum-sealed jar if the product has not been prepared or processed correctly. To avoid the potential of botulism, it is important to determine if the recipe is safe before gathering the ingredients and proceeding.

Is the recipe Generational or a Historic Recipe? Home food preservation is an ever-evolving science. The only safe home canning methods recognized today are processing in a boiling water bath, atmospheric steam canner, or pressure canner for a specified time. When used properly, these methods provide adequate heat to destroy harmful or spoilage organisms and drive air out of the jar for a strong vacuum seal. Recipes or instructions before 1994 are considered outdated unless formulations match new research-tested formulations.

Thickeners such as flour, starches, gelatin, pectin and even Clear Jel®, should not be used in canning recipes unless the recipe has been tested for such. Thickeners slow the rate of heat penetration into the product and may result in under processing and an unsafe product. Adding more processing time to accommodate the use of added thickeners is unsafe. Thickeners should be added to the product at time of use.

Added Ingredients? It is not safe to add extra ingredients to a recipe; adding beans or corn to a canned salsa recipe is not safe. It is also not safe to add extra vegetables to low-acid products, like extra onions, chilies, or peppers to tomato products or salsas. Additions may decrease the acidity and/or increase the density of the product resulting in an unsafe product.

Using current, research-based recipes from reliable sources is the best advice. The most recent USDA updates to home canning were made in 2015. Additional research has shown that elderberries and white peaches should not be canned due to safety concerns. Reliable canning resources include:

FULL ARTICLE HERE!

Eduardo Garcia-Guzman

Eduardo Garcia-Guzman, 31, of New London, formerly of California and Arizona, died Monday, July 24, 2023 in Butler County, Kansas.

A Celebration of Life for Eduardo will be held on Tuesday, August 9, 2023 from 4-7 PM at the Deerwood Golf and Country Club, 2870 Deerwood Dr., New London, IA.

Those considering an expression of sympathy may direct memorials to the family. Online condolences may be directed to www.kimzeyfh.com.

Eduardo was born August 8, 1991 in Linda Vista (near San Diego) California. He was the son of Manuel Felix and Blanca Guzman-Felix. Eduardo was united in marriage to Ginelle Smith. The couple later divorced.

Eduardo came to Iowa from Phoenix, AZ to attend Iowa Wesleyan University where he played on Wesleyan’s Tiger Football Team.  He then went to work on the line for Continental Technologies, later Contitech. He was of the Catholic faith. He was a very loving father who loved his children very much!

Those thankful for sharing in Eduardo’s life include his children: Ginevie Garcia (9 ½) , Georgina Garcia (4) and Gideon Garcia (2); his parents – Manuel and Blanca Felix; his siblings – sister Agael Garcia, brother Ezekiel Garcia and sister Stefanie Felix; his grandmother, Maria Felix and his dear friend and brother in spirit, Raymond Sanchez and family; his former wife, Ginelle, as well as a host of friends and former teammates.

Lake Geode SWCD to Receive Water Quality Funding from Iowa Department of Agriculture

The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources announced August 2nd that six Soil and Water Conservation Districts will receive water quality funding from the Publicly Owned Lakes program to help protect and enhance public lakes in Iowa.

This program, which is jointly administered by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, provides cost-share funding to landowners for conservation practices on private land within watersheds above publicly owned lakes and reservoirs. Eligible practices include soil conservation and water quality practices that reduce nutrient loss and sediment delivery to Iowa’s public lakes. These resources complement additional efforts by the departments and their public and private partners to enhance and protect water quality in Iowa lakes and other surface water.

“Iowa’s many public lakes are key assets to our state, and we want to ensure that Iowans can enjoy these beautiful attractions for generations to come,” said Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig. “Building partnerships with other government agencies, private organizations, farmers and landowners is the proven model that will ensure we can continue to accelerate conservation practice adoption across the state and make even more water quality progress.”

“Iowans value water quality and desire safe, healthy lakes in their pursuit of outdoor recreation,” said Iowa Department of Natural Resources Director Kayla Lyon. “Partnerships to establish conservation practices on land that drains into our public lakes is critical to enhance and protect water quality for future generations.”

Each year, a minimum of five percent of the appropriation to the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship for soil conservation cost share goes toward protecting the water quality of publicly owned lakes in Iowa. Local Soil and Water Conservation Districts submit applications, which the Iowa Department of Natural Resources uses to establish a priority list of watersheds above significant public lakes. Private landowners are then eligible to receive additional cost-share for practices that improve water quality.

This year $580,267.28 in funding will allow for targeted conservation practices, including 560 acres of cover crops, 50,890 feet of terraces, 12 grade stabilization structures, 4 water and sediment control basins, and 11 acres of grassed waterways. Landowner cost-share and the adoption of these practices will help protect these lakes for the enjoyment of all Iowans and those who visit our state.

Clarke County Reservoir

Clarke County SWCD

$105,975.00

 

Lake Geode

Des Moines County SWCD and Henry County SWCD

$9,966.00

 

Lake Icaria

Adams County SWCD

$109,250.00

 

Lake Miami

Monroe County SWCD

$47,250.00

 

Three Mile Lake

Union County SWCD and Adair County SWCD

$244,854.41

 

Twelve Mile Lake

Union County SWCD and Adair County SWCD

$62,971.87

Henry County Public Health Offering Back to School Health Fair

Back to school time brings excitement and nerves to school age children, and a few headaches to their parents. Henry County Public Health is looking to make this time as easy as possible on everyone involved. This coming Tuesday, August 8th from 4-7 p.m. there will be a Back to School Health Fair in Manning Hall at St. Alphonsus Catholic Church, 607 S. Jackson Street in Mount Pleasant. This health fair will include back to school immunizations which are required for kindergarten, 7th graders and high school seniors, dental screenings required for kindergarten and high school freshmen, lead testing required for kindergarten, vision screenings required for kindergarten and 3rd graders, and sports physicals for $25 cash only. There will also be language translation available, community resource tables, kids activities, giveaways, and food trucks. Physicals and most screenings have paperwork that will need to be filled out, these are available at the event as well as online at healthyhenrycounty.org/publichealth. The Henry County Public Health Back to School Health Fair is this Tuesday, August 8th from 4-7 p.m. in Manning Hall at St. Alphonsus Catholic Church in Mount Pleasant. If you have kids headed back to school, this is the perfect event to ensure they have everything they need before the school year begins.

Sports, August 2nd

Preview for High School Football

Mt. Pleasant will be in a new classification this year as the Panthers will now be competing in Class 3A. Under new direction this season in Head Coach John Bowlin, the Panthers will start the season on August 25th against Fairfield at Mapleleaf. 

After being dormant for six years, football is coming back to Danville with Cody Thompson at the helm. The Bears will take on Lynnville-Sully to start the season.

Van Buren County will take on Central Lee to begin the season for Class A. 

In 8-man football, WACO’s week one matchup will be Fremont-Mills on the road. New London, with Darrin Loyd leading the Tigers, will travel to take on Easton Valley. Lastly, Winfield-Mt. Union will begin their hopeful season at Central City to start the year. 

Mt. Pleasant Cross Country

On Mondays and Wednesdays, runs will begin at the Old Threshers Museum Theatre at 6:30 am.

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, runs will start at 7 pm at Saunders Park by the swimming pool.

The runs will continue throughout the summer until the middle of August. If you have any questions, reach out to Coach Murray at 319-850-0867.

College Football Award Watches

Iowa and Iowa State both have a player in the 2023 Bronko Nagurski Trophy watch list. The award goes to the best defensive player in college football. 

For the Hawkeyes, Cooper DeJean, a junior defensive back, is the name to watch out for in the secondary after receiving a first-team All-Big Ten selection from the media and a second-team nomination from the coaches for his play last year. He finished with 75 tackles and five interceptions, including three pick-sixes, a single season record for Iowa. 

The Cyclones tout their own talented defensive back in senior T.J. Tampa. After earning All-Big 12 Second Team honors last season, there are high expectations for the senior. He collected 40 tackles last season, which included five for a loss, and snatched his first career interception. 

Iowa State’s senior offensive lineman Jarrod Hufford is also receiving some praise after being put on the Outland Trophy watch list, the award for the top interior lineman on offense or defense. He helped the Cyclones gain 1,625 yards on the ground last season.

Lastly, Cade McNamara is on the Maxwell Award watch list for Iowa as the award goes to the most outstanding player in college football. McNamara transferred from Michigan after tossing for 2,576 yards and 15 touchdowns for the Wolverines last season. 

Iowa State Football

The Cyclones have a different quarterback controversy brewing this offseason after Hunter Dekkers, last year’s starter and this year’s expected starter, was accused of betting on 26 Iowa State sporting events including a Big 12 football game back in 2021 that he did not participate in. 

The affidavit stated that Dekkers was under 21, the legal betting age in Iowa, but skirted around the issue with the help of his parents on DraftKings. 

Dekkers’ attorney released a statement saying the quarterback will be stepping away from the team and plead not guilty to the charge. This stems from the investigation launched in May after school officials for Iowa State and the University of Iowa suspected a total of 41 student-athletes violated gambling rules. 

Prospect League

The Clinton LumberKings have now won three straight after exploding for 7 runs in the 6th inning to win 12-5 against the Normal CornBelters. Jeremy Conforti had a 3-RBI double in the inning as he led the team with 4 RBIs on the night. Brandon Vicko capped off the night with a 3-run moonshot as Drew Dykstra picked up the win on the mound. 

The LumberKings and Burlington Bees begin a three game series tonight with Clinton playing host for tonight’s contest. 

This Day in Sports History

1921 – After 3 hours of deliberation a Chicago jury acquits 8 Chicago White Sox accused in the Black Sox scandal; the next day they are banned from organized baseball for life.

1968 – Ron Hansen (Washington Senators) and Tim Cullen (Chicago White Sox) become the first MLB players to be traded for each other twice in the same season; they had been traded in February in opposite directions.

1982 – Oakland outfielder Rickey Henderson steals his 100th MLB base of the season in 6-5 win vs Seattle, first to steal 100 bases twice in modern era.

YMCA to close childcare centers in Donnellson, IA

Access to childcare in Southeast Iowa is always a concern. On Friday, the Fort Madison YMCA informed families of children under their care at the Donnellson facilities that both facilities will be closing at the end of the workday this coming Friday, August 4th.This includes both The Fort Madison Family YMCA Early Learning Center and the Fort Madison Family YMCA Learning Center.

Ryan Wilson, the Fort Madison YMCA Executive Director, said the YMCA is looking at different avenues for the childcare centers and they have no reopening date set. He said more staff is needed along with necessary training before any reopening could occur.

The center had recently closed an investigation by the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services over a complaint filed with the department on June 23. The complaint is the fifth at the two centers since 2022. The YMCA purchased the centers in the spring of 2020.

The most recent complaint was around a 4-year-old boy who was left unattended for anywhere from three to seven minutes. The boy had been sequestered due to an illness waiting for a parent to pick him up.
According to a report filed by HHS, staff took two different groups for walks and forgot the boy was sleeping at the time. When he awoke, no one was in the building. The center was assessed two violations for not being aware of the children in the center, and not following procedures for a sick child.

Through the investigations, no licensure changes were administered by the state, but the center was cautioned that additional violations could result in licensure status changes.

Wilson said the issue was resolved and staff training was initiated, but the board had already decided to close the centers due to staffing shortages.

Wilson said anyone with questions concerning the closures can contact him at 319-372-2403 ext. 5 or at ryan.wilson@fortmadisony.org.

2023 Access Energy Cooperative Annual Meeting “Navigating Change”

Members were welcomed to the Access Energy Cooperative annual meeting of members last night, August 1, 2023, and the weather was perfect at McMillan Park in Mount Pleasant for the celebration. The theme for this year’s Access Energy Cooperative annual meeting was “Navigating Change.”

A parachuter with the help of the US Army dropped in with the American Flag as “God Bless America” played over the speakers to kick off the annual business meeting.

Speakers of the evening included President of Access Energy Cooperative Marvin Newton, CEO of the cooperative’s power supplier Northeast Power Doug Aeilts, General Manager of Access Energy Cooperative Kevin Wheeler, and 2023 Youth Tour Award recipient Alexis Wagner of Mount Pleasant who shared about her experience traveling to Washington D.C. for one week with student leaders from around Iowa and the country.

Highlights of the event included an outstanding performance by Jake McVey and a great meal served by Mount Pleasant Hy-Vee. Homemade Ice Cream from Hinterland Dairy of Donnellson was served for dessert. Members enjoyed drive-a-tractor by the Proennecke brothers and Dick McGohan, inflatable activities for the kids from Fields of Fun, pony rides by Windy Acres, various other lawn games, refreshing sno cones, a live line demonstration on being safe around electricity by Access Energy Cooperative employees, and information from Henry County Public Health and the Henry County Sheriff. Access Energy Cooperative appreciates their participation and everyone else who helped make the event a success for the members.

The Grand Prize of a $500 bill credit was drawn along with many other prizes. Dividend checks for 2023 were available for members to pick up at the meeting. For those who were unable to make it to the meeting, checks will be mailed out in the next few weeks.

Access Energy Cooperative is an electric distribution cooperative, owned by the members who use the services, located in and serving over 9,000 meters in ten counties in southeast Iowa.