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Oskaloosa’s Rian Yates signs letter of intent

Oskaloosa’s Rian Yates has signed a national letter of intent to attend Kirkwood Community College next year.  The senior will be a right-handed pitcher on Kirkwood’s baseball team.  Yates explains why he picked Kirkwood.

“How many guys they send to bigger schools, and most of all, how many guys they send to Iowa each year.  It’s always been a dream of mine ever since I was six years old to pitch at the University of Iowa.”

Yates was 9-3 with a 2.57 earned run average last season.  He also struck out 48 batters in 49 innings.

Luke Combs “Wouldn’t Be Here” Without Eric Church

If you caught Luke Combs having a total fan moment at the end of Eric Church’s recent CMA performance, there was a good reason for it.   For Combs, watching Church tear up the stage is a huge full-circle moment.  “I went to a really small college in North Carolina, and my freshman year, a buddy of mine that lived on my hall came into my room and said, ‘Hey, this guy is playing on campus tonight. He went to school here, and his name is Eric Church,’” Combs told reporters in the press room at the 52nd Annual CMA Awards.

That campus would be Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C., also Church’s alma mater. At this point in his life, Combs hadn’t picked up a guitar, despite being an accomplished vocalist. But all that would soon change with one listen to Church.    “I didn’t give his music much of a chance that day to be honest with you. A couple weeks later, I’d had a few at that time, illegal beverages, now legal beverages, and I said, ‘you know what? I’m gonna give this guy’s album a shot,” he said. “I listened to it front to back and it really changed my outlook and changed a lot of things for me about country music.

“I was just a fan for three years and when I decided to pick the guitar up I said, ‘You know what? If this guy went to college here and can be onstage at the CMAs and winning CMA Awards and getting number one songs, I don’t see why I can’t do it.’”

From that moment on, Combs says he set his goals and his sights on fine-tuning his artistry and career path like the Chief himself would no doubt advise. And it’s all paid off as Combs returns to the top of the Billboard Country Albums chart this week with his debut studio album “This One’s for You”, which boasts four No. 1 hits.

And then there’s that brand-new CMA for New Artist of the Year sitting pretty on his mantle.

November 28th: On this day

On this day in 1925, The Grand Ole Opry started as the WSM Barn Dance in the new fifth-floor radio studio of the National Life & Accident Insurance Company in downtown Nashville. Some of the bands regularly on the show during its early days included Bill Monroe, the Possum Hunters (with Dr. Humphrey Bate), the Fruit Jar Drinkers, the Crook Brothers, the Binkley Brothers’ Dixie Clodhoppers, Uncle Dave Macon, Sid Harkreader, Deford Bailey, Fiddlin’ Arthur Smith, and the Gully Jumpers.

Murdered woman’s family sues husband for wrongful death

The parents of a Colorado woman murdered by her husband are seeking financial damages in a lawsuit filed on the same day he was sentenced to life in prison.  Christopher Watts was sentenced Nov. 19 to three consecutive life sentences for killing his pregnant wife, Shanann, and the couple’s daughters, 4-year-old Bella and 3-year-old Celeste. He had previously pleaded guilty to charges of murder, unlawful termination of a pregnancy and tampering with a deceased human body.

Shanann Watts’ parents, Frank and Sandra Rzucek, filed their wrongful death lawsuit the same day, seeking unspecified financial damages for pain and suffering caused by the loss of their daughter and granddaughters, plus funeral and burial expenses.  Frank Rzucek also is suing on his daughter’s behalf for wrongful termination of her pregnancy.

Prosecutors said Watts strangled his wife and smothered the girls inside the family’s suburban Denver home. He then buried his wife in a shallow grave on an oil and gas work site and dumped the girls’ bodies in oil tanks nearby. He is not eligible for parole.

Blakesburg man charged with vehicular homicide

A Blakesburg man has been charged with homicide after a passenger in his pickup was killed in an August accident.  The Iowa State Patrol says 63-year-old Dennis Sandifer was driving on the Wapello-Monroe Road south of Blakesburg on August 2 his pickup struck another vehicle head-on.  Passenger 29-year-old Brandon Pruett of Blakesburg was killed in the crash.  Sandifer was arrested Tuesday morning (11/27) and charged with homicide by vehicle, which is a B Felony.  Sandifer is being held in the Wapello County Jail on $25,000 bond.

Oskaloosa’s lighted Christmas parade is Thursday night

Oskaloosa’s Lighted Christmas Parade is tomorrow night (11/29).  Deb Bruxvoort with the Oskaloosa Area Chamber and Development Group says people will be reserving good places to see the parade.   “Parking is at a bare, bare minimum.  There will be those who will put their cars downtown first thing in the morning. Right or wrong, it will happen.  But you dress warm enough, you can park several blocks away and stand with a blanket wrapped around you and watch the parade from quite a long parade route.  There’s a lot of places where you can watch the parade.”

Oskaloosa Police remind you that the downtown area will be closed to traffic around 6:30 Thursday night.  The detour will go to H Street and around the area to avoid congestion.   Thursday’s Lighted Christmas Parade also includes activities earlier in the day at Oskaloosa’s Penn Central Mall.  At noon, there will be the Holiday Market and Festival of Trees.  The silent auction runs until 9pm, with the winners announced at 9:30pm.  From 4 to 6pm, there’s Family Fun in the Mall with games for kids… and kids can also get their pictures taken with Santa.  And there will be live music at Penn Central Mall from 4 to 6:30pm.

Oskaloosa boys win and girls lose against Fairfield

Oskaloosa’s boys’ basketball team won its season opener last night (11/27), 42-40 over Fairfield in Oskaloosa. The Indians trailed much of the game until Rian Yates hit a three at the third quarter buzzer to tie the score at 31.  It took a basket in the last minute by Xavier Foster to put the Indians ahead to stay.  Foster had 7 of his 11 points in the fourth quarter.   “I made my first shot and I got into a rhythm…and everything just went uphill from there.”

Oskaloosa Coach Ryan Parker talked about the game.  “We’ve got a lot of things to work on, but in the end this might have been the perfect storm for us because things weren’t easy.  Sometimes things are easy in practice. We’ve got to continue to get better.”  Rian Yates, Xavier Foster and Cole Henry had 11 points apiece for Oskaloosa.  The Indians open their Little Hawkeye Conference schedule Friday night at Grinnell.

On the girls’ side last night (11/27), Fairfield beat Oskaloosa 60-39.  The Indians jumped off to a 10-2 lead in the first quarter, but Fairfield began forcing turnovers and took control of the game.  Kaylee Johnson had 8 points for Oskaloosa.  The 0-2 Indians play at Grinnell Friday night.

Shania Twain is ‘bored’ of country music

With a lifetime spent in country music, Shania Twain has some points she’d like her community to hear.

Ahead of the premiere of  “Real Country”, a new talent competition series on USA Network which follows Twain and fellow Nashville star Jake Owen as they discover rising country acts, Twain aired her grievances to ENews about the gender inequities that still plague her chosen genre of music.

“What women?” she exclaimed when asked about the state of female artists in country music today. “We have too much of the sameness right now. I’m a little bit bored of it, and I want to pick it up. The only way to do that is to be proactive … I wanted a show that, when you talk about diversity, that includes gender diversity, style diversity, lifestyle diversity.”

Twain also spoke out about the well-documented lack of female artists in country music, saying that the Nashville community is, at the very least, aware there’s a problem.  “We are not making radio progress,” she said, “but we are making very small, steady steps towards awareness that we’re lacking women on country radio.”

Twain, who turned 53 in August, also highlighted ageism within the industry, as she started to speak about advocating for “young” talent, before catching herself and amending her statement to apply to artists of all ages.  “It doesn’t matter what age you are,” she said. “I’m fed up with the whole ageist thing as well as the sexist thing. This (show) is wide open, bring your talent on if you’re good enough, I don’t care what you are, as long as you’re a human being.”

GM to lay off up to 14,000 workers and closing as many as 5 plants

General Motors will cut up to 14,000 workers in North America and put five plants up for possible closure as it abandons many of its car models and restructures to focus more on autonomous and electric vehicles, the automaker announced Monday.  The reductions could amount to as much as 8 percent of GM’s global workforce of 180,000 employees.  The restructuring reflects changing North American auto markets as manufacturers continue to shift away from cars toward SUVs and trucks. In October, almost 65 percent of new vehicles sold in the U.S. were trucks or SUVs. That figure was about 50 percent cars just five years ago.

GM is shedding cars largely because it doesn’t make money on them, Citi analyst Itay Michaeli wrote in a note to investors.  “We estimate sedans operate at a significant loss, hence the need for classic restructuring,” he wrote.  The reduction includes about 8,000 white-collar employees, or 15 percent of GM’s North American white-collar workforce. Some will take buyouts while others will be laid off.

At the factories, around 3,300 blue-collar workers could lose jobs in Canada and another 2,600 in the U.S., but some U.S. workers could transfer to truck or SUV factories that are increasing production.  The company also said it will stop operating two additional factories outside North America by the end of next year, in addition to a previously announced plant closure in Gunsan, South Korea.  General Motors Co.’s pre-emptive strike to get leaner before the next downturn likely will be followed by Ford Motor Co., which has said it is restructuring and will lay off an unspecified number of white-collar workers. Toyota Motor Corp. also has discussed cutting costs, even though it’s building a new assembly plant in Alabama.

GM isn’t the first to abandon much of its car market. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles got out of small and midsize cars two years ago, while Ford announced plans to shed all cars but the Mustang sports car in the U.S. in the coming years.  Shares of GM, the largest automaker in the U.S. which sells the Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC brands, rose nearly 6 percent on the news to $37.98 in Monday afternoon trading.

GM doesn’t foresee an economic downturn and is making the cuts “to get in front of it while the company is strong and while the economy is strong,” CEO Mary Barra told reporters.

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