May 22, 2012

Heavy rains drench southern Iowa

Parts of southern Iowa were absolutely soaked overnight with 5 to 7.5 inches of rain. Rachel Hatteberg, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, says Centerville recorded 5.1 inches, Promise City 5.2 inches and Seymour  around 6 inches.

A local observer for the weather service recorded seven-point-five inches just southwest of Seymour. All of the rainfall totals were recorded between 8 o’clock last night and 8 this morning. The heavy downpours caused a lot of street flooding in Appanoose and Wayne Counties and emergency personnel rescued at least two people who were stuck in stalled vehicles near Seymour and Millerton.

“Southern Iowa has been hit very hard,” Hatteberg told Radio Iowa. “The Chariton River is definitely seeing the effects…some water is spilling out of the river and affecting the roadways around there.” More rain is expected today – mainly over southern Iowa. Hatteberg says the rain should mostly be in the form of light showers. An extended dry spell is expected to arrive by Thursday.

“Thursday morning, there’s about a 20-percent chance for storms but as we move into the afternoon, that chance diminishes and we should be seeing some clear weather with highs in the upper 80s and low 90s,” Hatteberg said. “We’ll be looking at a dry weekend with average or above average temperatures.”

Marshalltown teen drowns in the Iowa River

A central Iowa teen drowned after jumping off a railroad bridge. Authorities received the call at 6:45 last night of a swimmer going underwater while swimming with companions in the Iowa River near Albion.

Eighteen-year-old Joseph Gutierrez of Marshalltown was identified as the victim. Gutierrez, his brother and a friend, had been jumping off the railroad trestle into the Iowa River. Gutierrez was not an experienced swimmer and was overtaken by the strong current. His body was recovered at 9 P.M. in several feet of water by the Marshalltown Fire Department with their boat and search equipment.

The incident is considered an accidental drowning.

By Lance Renaud, KFJB, Marshalltown

Cedar Rapids honors iconic artist Grant Wood

Cedar Rapids leaders have christened the “Grant Wood Cultural District,” a tribute to the Iowa native who painted the iconic “American Gothic” image in his Cedar Rapids studio in 1930. A two-story tall window Wood designed for the lobby of the Veterans Memorial Building in Cedar Rapids was rededicated earlier this month. Mike Jager is head of the commission that’s in charge of the building and he says the stained-glass images are striking.

“The first row are life-size, six-foot-high figures of veterans of the six wars that had been fought up to that point — the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, Mexican-American War, American Civil War, the Spanish-American War and World War I,” Jager says.

A giant angel is above the soldiers, holding an olive branch in one hand and a victory wreath in the other.  The stained-glass artwork had suffered from age and from flood damage in 2008. Just a few months ago, the window was in about nine-thousand pieces. John Watts, co-owner of the Glass Heritage Shop in Davenport, helped in the restoration. Watts says it was an honor to work on the project.

“I’m a Vietnam Vet. It took me years of therapy just to get to say that,” Watts says. “…Going from being spit on when I got home into being able to work on a project that really honors veterans is really therapeutic for me.” Grant Wood was a World War One veteran, but his stained glass tribute to veterans was the object of some controversy in 1929 when it debuted. Critics complained because the stained glass window was manufactured in Germany, an enemy during World War One. Sean Ulmer, curator at the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, says in the 1920s, the best-skilled stained glass craftsmen were in Germany.

“He really wanted to be a very good artist, a great artist, and so he wasn’t going to do all of this work and invest all of this time to have it be made in a less than acceptable form,” Ulmer says. The sketches Wood made of the window’s design are now on display in the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art.

The sketches were found above the boiler in the Veterans Memorial Building in Cedar Rapids in 1973, but this is the first time Wood’s huge, full-scale drawings have been on public display. Wood created some of his most famous paintings, like “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere,” in a studio in Cedar Rapids that’s now part of the Grant Wood Cultural District. His studio is open for tours on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

Class 4A: Damek Tomscha, Sioux City North

The senior batted .500 with seven hits in 14 at bats. He had two home runs, a double, seven RBI and scored six runs. Tomscha was three-for-three with a homer and four RBI in a substate victory over Sioux City West. He also homered and picked up the win on the mound in a victory over Boyden-Hull/Rock Valley by striking out eight and allowing no hits in five innings of work.

Class 3A: Tyler Smith, Decorah

The senior picked up two victories on the mound and in 13 innings of work allowed only one earned run and seven hits. Smith tossed a four hit shutout and also helped his own cayuse with a solo homer in a district tournament victory over Waukon.

Class 2A: Casey Berg, Carroll Kuemper

The freshman infielder batted .500 in two games with four RBI, three stolen bases and scored two runs. Berg had a big game in a district tournament victory over Odebolt-Arthur/Battle Creek-Ida Grove. He was two-of-four at the plate with a triple and drove in three runs.

Class 1A: Cole Welter, Don Bosco (Gilbertville)

The senior played a big part in the Dons’ district tournament victory over Lansing Kee. Welter had three hits, including a leadoff homer, drove in four runs and earned the victory on the mound by striking out nine in three and a third innings of work.