TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

Truck driver sues Mark Sanchez and Fox after violent fight over parking space

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A 69-year-old truck driver who was seriously injured in a fight that prosecutors say was started by former NFL quarterback and sports analyst Mark Sanchez is suing Sanchez and his employer, Fox Corporation, in Indiana state court.

Lawyers for Perry Tole filed the lawsuit Monday seeking an unspecified amount in actual and punitive damages, as well as attorney’s fees. The lawsuit accuses Sanchez of instigating a fight with Tole Saturday night outside a downtown Indianapolis hotel, leading to “severe permanent disfigurement, loss of function” and other injuries and emotional distress.

Tole also stabbed Sanchez several times in the fight, according to police. A picture of Tole circulating online shows him in a neck brace on a hospital bed, covered in blood with a deep slash to the side of his face.

In an email, Fox Sports declined to comment on the lawsuit. Attorneys representing Sanchez in his criminal case also declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Attorneys representing Tole in the lawsuit, which requested a jury trial, did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

Sanchez is facing a felony battery charge, along with several misdemeanor charges, for what prosecutors said Monday was a fight over parking.

“We are literally talking about people fighting over a parking space and-or a dispute about where people are parking, and it resulted in someone receiving just incredibly significant injures,” Marion County prosecutor Ryan Mears said at a news conference Monday.

A police affidavit says the 38-year-old Sanchez, smelling of alcohol, accosted Tole, who had backed his truck into a hotel’s loading docks in downtown Indianapolis. Tole’s lawsuit said Sanchez entered Tole’s truck without permission, then physically blocked and shoved Tole, who then doused Sanchez with pepper spray.

When Sanchez advanced after being sprayed, Tole pulled a knife to defend himself, authorities said.

Sanchez was hospitalized with stab wounds to his upper right torso, according to a police affidavit.

Sanchez was in Indianapolis for Fox’s coverage of Sunday’s game between the Colts and the Las Vegas Raiders.

Sanchez had a 10-year NFL career before retiring in 2019. He spent four seasons with the New York Jets and also appeared in games with Philadelphia, Dallas and Washington.

He appeared on ABC and ESPN for two years before joining Fox Sports as a game analyst in 2021.

Southern Iowa Speedway Set to Host Musco Lighting Fall Challenge October 10 & 11

By Jerry Mackey

OSKALOOSA — The Southern Iowa Speedway located on the Mahaska County Fairgrounds in Oskaloosa will bring the 2025 racing season to an end in spectacular fashion with the running of the annual Musco Lighting Fall Challenge. Friday and Saturday, October 10th an 11th , the Mahaska County Monster ½ mile will host two complete nights of racing action with a greatly expanded purse up for grabs for all competitors.

Friday night, warmups will get underway at 7:15 pm with racing action to follow featuring the Stock Cars, Sportmods, Hobby Stocks, Sport Compacts and the Non-Wing Sprint Cars. Following all qualifying heats, the 2025 Point Champions and the top point earners will be awarded their point fund earnings on the front chute.

Saturday nights racing will get underway following hot laps which will be slated to take the green flag at 6:30 pm. Saturday night will feature the same classes with the exception that the Non-Wings Sprint Cars will be replaced on the program by the Full Bodied Vintage Late Models.

The Southern Iowa Speedway continues to offer the fans the best deal in racing, the Musco Lighting Fall Challenge will hold the line at $10 admission for adults, Military and Vets and kids ages 6-15 will be admitted for $5 and 5 and under will be free.

This will be the final wheel event of the season at the Southern Iowa Speedway making this event a must see event for our dedicated race fans. 

Iowans Reminded of Deadlines to Request Absentee Ballots, Return Absentee Ballots, and Vote on Election Day, November 4

DES MOINES – Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate is reminding Iowans that local elections matter, and it’s time to make a plan to participate in November’s City-School Election. Iowans can begin casting ballots for the 2025 City-School Election on Wednesday, October 15. This date marks the first day of Iowa’s absentee period and the first day Iowans can vote in person absentee at their local county election office. October 15 also marks the first day county auditors can mail absentee ballots to those who have requested them.

Secretary Pate is also urging Iowans to submit their absentee ballot requests early – written applications for mailed absentee ballots must be received by the county auditor’s office no later than 5:00 p.m. on Monday, October 20. Marked absentee ballots must be returned to the county auditor’s office by the time polls close on Election Day, November 4, at 8:00 p.m. The United States Postal Service (USPS) encourages voters to put their ballot in the mail at least one week before Election Day to ensure it arrives on time.

“Local elections matter. Now is the time to make your plan to vote and have an impact on what happens right in your neighborhood,” said Secretary Pate. “Our City-School Elections decide who sits on our school boards and city councils, and have a profound impact on local taxes, property values, infrastructure quality, and access to community services.”

All registered voters are eligible to make written requests for absentee ballots. In order to receive an absentee ballot, registered voters must provide the following information on the request form:

  • Name
  • Date of birth
  • Iowa residential address
  • Iowa Driver’s License or Non-Operator ID Number OR
  • Four-digit Voter PIN found on voter’s Iowa Voter ID Card. Any voter can request an Iowa Voter ID Card by contacting their County Auditor’s Office.
  • Name or date of the election for which a voter is requesting the absentee ballot
  • Signature and date the form was completed

All eligible voters are also encouraged to provide a phone number and email address in the event their county auditor needs to confirm any information on the request form.

“It’s never too early to make your plan to vote, and voting absentee by mail or absentee in person are both safe and secure methods to make sure your ballot is cast this fall. Whether you vote early or on Election Day, Iowans can trust that their votes will be counted accurately and fairly.”

Absentee ballot request forms are available for download directly from the Iowa Secretary of State website, voterready.iowa.gov. Requests to receive a ballot by mail must be received by the County Auditor’s office by Monday, October 20, no later than 5:00 p.m. In-person absentee voting at the county auditor’s office is available through November 3, the day before the election.

Laborshed Study to be Conducted in Oskaloosa

OSKALOOSA — The Mahaska Chamber & Development Group is partnering with Iowa Workforce Development and Iowa Economic Development Authority to complete a Laborshed employment study for the Oskaloosa area. This study will geographically define which communities contribute to Oskaloosa workforce, regardless of political boundaries. This defined area is called a Laborshed area and is based upon commuting patterns.

The purpose of this Laborshed study is to measure the availability and characteristics of Oskaloosa area workers. Laborshed studies are useful tools for economic development teams and existing or prospective employers to understand the local labor market, make informed expansion and site selection decisions, and maintain/recruit a high-quality workforce. The Laborshed boundary is based on the place of residence of individuals commuting into the Oskaloosa area for employment. For the success of this study, we will be sending letters to employers in Oskaloosa asking that they provide us with aggregate counts of their employees’ residential ZIP codes. This reporting will give us an understanding of where each community’s workforce resides.
Every year Iowa Workforce Development conducts Laborshed studies across the State. The results of each analysis are publicly available online at workforce.iowa.gov/laborshed. If you have any questions about the Laborshed project, please contact Sam Queen at samuel.queen@iwd.iowa.gov or 515-281-8179 or Deann De Groot with the Mahaska Chamber at 641.672.2591.

Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ breaks record, sells 2.7 million copies in U.S. on first day

NEW YORK (AP) — It’s the life of a saleswoman. Taylor Swift’s 12th studio album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” sold 2.7 million copies in traditional album sales — which include physical and digital formats — in its first day in the U.S. That’s according to Luminate, an industry data and analytics company.

The album was released Friday.

The sales are impressive for a number of reasons. Swift has broken her record for most first week sales… in one day. Her last album, 2024’s “The Tortured Poets Department,” amassed 2.61 million equivalent album units in the U.S. in its first week.

“The Life of a Showgirl” has also become the second-largest sales week for any album in the modern era, since Luminate began tracking sales in 1991. That was also accomplished in just one day.

Currently, Adele’s “25,” which sold 3.378 million copies in its first week in 2015 in the U.S., holds the top spot.

Also, according to Luminate, “The Life of a Showgirl” has already broken the record for the most copies of a vinyl album sold in a single week in the U.S., with 1.2 million copies. The previous record holder? “The Tortured Poets Department,” which sold 859,000 copies on vinyl in its first week.

Swift’s many variants may have something to do with the album’s economic success. One of her major partners, Target, carries three CD variants, titled as “It’s Frightening,” “It’s Rapturous” and “It’s Beautiful” editions. There is also an exclusive vinyl release, “The Crowd Is Your King” edition in “summertime spritz pink shimmer vinyl.”

There are a number of other vinyl variants as well: “The Tiny Bubble in Champagne Collection,” “The Baby That’s Show Business Collection,” “The Shiny Bug Collection,” and the standard LP and cassette, in “sweat and vanilla perfume Portofino orange vinyl.”

Artwork varies throughout, likely inspiring diehard fans to pick up multiple copies.

And most recently, on Saturday, Swift announced four new CD variants featuring acoustic renditions of the album’s tracks. Each edition features two different stripped-down recordings.

She also dominated the box office over the weekend with her three-day event, “The Official Release Party of a Show Girl,” which debuted at No. 1 with $33 million in North America, according to Sunday estimates from Comscore.

Semifinalists named in search for new Iowa State University president

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

The Iowa State University presidential search committee met today and narrowed the list of candidates.

The search committee met in closed session for several hours and cut to list of candidates to eight semifinalists. They will conduct closed-session interviews with those candidates October 20th to the 22nd and then identify the finalists. Those finalists will visit the campus the first week in November and their names will be released they day before they visit.

The Board of Regents is expected to name the new president on November 11th. The new president will replace Wendy Wintersteen who is retiring.

WPU Slips Out of Top 25

OSKALOOSA — After losing its first game of the season, the Statesmen football team is now on the outside looking in on the top 25 as the NAIA released its fourth poll Monday, sponsored by Netting Professionals.

WPU (5-1, 1-1 Heart North) is unofficially 26th with 79 points.

William Penn is one of five representatives from the Heart of America Athletic Conference in the rating.  No. 1 Grand View leads the quintet with all 15 first-place votes, while Benedictine is No. 3 and MidAmerica Nazarene is No. 23.  Peru State joins the Statesmen in the receiving votes section at No. 35 unofficially.

Keiser (Fla.) is second nationally, while Morningside is fourth and Friends (Kan.) is fifth to round out the top five.

WPU is off this weekend, but will return to action next Saturday as it hosts Missouri Baptist at Statesmen Community Stadium for a Heart North-South crossover game at 12:30 p.m.

To view the complete poll, click HERE

Oskaloosa City Council Discusses 8th Ave West Reconstruction Project, Comprehensive Park System Vision Plan

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa City Council held a regular meeting last night and had a discussion about the 8th Avenue West Reconstruction Project. The project’s plans and specifications were first rejected in the city council’s meeting on July 7, and then again on August 18. Last night, the council was asked by city staff to set guidelines for a new design for the project, including whether the road width should be reduced, and on which side of the road, if any, a sidewalk should be constructed.

After a lengthy discussion, the council directed staff to reduce the width of the road from 31 feet to 27 feet and to construct a sidewalk on the south side of the road only, as per the recommendation of the staff. The motion was passed on a 5-2 vote, with council members Lisa Ossian and Ronda Almond voting “no”.

The council also discussed the city’s Comprehensive Park System Vision Plan. The city’s current Parks Vision Plan was accepted on July 1, 2024, and included an item with the “most desired updates” by the community. City staff said that, based on prior community engagement, residents were most likely to support various improvements to Edmundson Park, including a splash pad, expanded natural habitats, and improvements to existing structures and restrooms; as well as improvements to the City Square Park, including restrooms and additional landscaping. The council ultimately directed staff to conduct a survey of residents to further pinpoint their most desired improvements to city parks.

Government shutdown entering sixth day as Republicans and Democrats remain at an impasse

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican and Democratic lawmakers at an impasse on reopening the federal government provided few public signs Sunday of meaningful negotiations taking place to end what is about to be a six-day shutdown — with President Donald Trump saying that layoffs are occurring.

Asked on Sunday night when federal workers would be fired as he has threatened to do, Trump told reporters: “It’s taking place right now and it’s all because of the Democrats.”

“The Democrats are causing the loss of a lot of jobs,” Trump added, declining to answer a question about which agencies are subject to the cuts.

The possibility of layoffs would escalate an already tense situation in which Washington lawmakers have struggled to find common ground and build mutual trust. Leaders in both parties are betting that public sentiment has swung their way, putting pressure on the other side to cave.

Democrats are insisting on renewing subsidies to cover health insurance costs for millions of households, while Trump wants to preserve existing spending levels as he believes that Democrats will have to cave because of the jobs and federal projects being put at risk.

The squabble comes at a moment of troubling economic uncertainty. While the U.S. economy has continued to grow this year, hiring has slowed and inflation remains elevated as Trump’s import taxes have created a series of disruptions for businesses and hurt confidence in his leadership. At the same time, there is a recognition that the nearly $2 trillion annual budget deficit is financially unsustainable.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, among those appearing on the Sunday news shows, said there have been no talks with Republican leaders since their White House meeting last Monday.

“And, unfortunately, since that point in time, Republicans, including Donald Trump, have gone radio silent,” Jeffries said. “And what we’ve seen is negotiation through deepfake videos, the House canceling votes, and of course President Trump spending yesterday on the golf course. That’s not responsible behavior.”

The Trump administration sees the shutdown as an opening to wield greater power over the budget, with multiple officials saying they will save money as workers are furloughed by imposing permanent job cuts on thousands of government workers, a tactic that has never been used before.

Even though it would be Trump’s choice to cut jobs, he believes he can put the blame on the Democrats because of the shutdown.

“It’s up to them,” Trump told reporters on Sunday morning before boarding the presidential helicopter to celebrate the Navy’s 250th anniversary in Norfolk, Virginia.

While Trump rose to fame on the TV show “The Apprentice” with its catchphrase of “You’re fired,” Republicans on Sunday claimed that the administration would take no pleasure in letting go of federal workers, even though the administration had also put funding on hold for infrastructure and energy projects in Democratic areas without clear signs of remorse.

“We haven’t seen the details yet about what’s happening” with layoffs, House Speaker Mike Johnson said Sunday morning on NBC. “But it is a regrettable situation that the president does not want.”

Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, also said the administration would prefer to avoid the layoffs.

“We want the Democrats to come forward and to make a deal that’s a clean, continuing resolution that gives us seven more weeks to talk about these things,” Hassett said on CNN. “But the bottom line is that with Republicans in control, the Republicans have a lot more power over the outcome than the Democrats.”

Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California defended his party’s stance on the shutdown, saying on NBC that the possible increase in health care costs for “millions of Americans” would make insurance unaffordable in what he called a “crisis.”

But Schiff also noted that the Trump administration has stopped congressionally approved spending from being used. That essentially undermines the value of Democrats trying to seek compromises on the budget since the administration could block the spending of money from any deal. The Trump administration sent Congress roughly $4.9 billion in “ pocket rescissions ” on foreign aid, a process that meant the spending was withheld without time for Congress to weigh in before the previous fiscal year ended last month.

“We need both to address the health care crisis and we need some written assurance in the law — I won’t take a promise — that they’re not going to renege on any deal we make,” Schiff said.

The television appearances indicated that Democrats and Republicans are busy talking, deploying internet memes against each other that have raised concerns about whether it’s possible to negotiate in good faith.

Vice President JD Vance said a video putting Jeffries in a sombrero and thick mustache was simply a joke, even though it came across as mocking people of Mexican descent as Republicans insist that the Democratic demands would lead to health care spending on immigrants in the country illegally, a claim that Democrats dispute.

Immigrants in the U.S. illegally are not eligible for any federal health care programs, including insurance provided through the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid. Still, hospitals do receive Medicaid reimbursements for emergency care that they are obligated to provide to people who meet other Medicaid eligibility requirements but do not have an eligible immigration status.

The challenge, however, is that the two parties do not appear to be having productive conversations with each other in private, even as Republicans insist they are in conversation with their Democratic colleagues.

On Friday, a Senate vote to advance a Republican bill that would reopen the government failed to notch the necessary 60 votes to end a filibuster. Johnson said the House would close for legislative business next week, a strategy that could obligate the Senate to work with the government funding bill that was passed by House Republicans.

“Johnson’s not serious about this,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said on CBS. “He sent all his congressmen home last week and home this week. How are you going to negotiate?”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Sunday that the shutdown on discretionary spending, the furloughing of federal workers and requirements that other federal employees work without pay will go on so long as Democrats vote no.

“They’ll get another chance on Monday to vote again,” Thune said on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures.”

“And I’m hoping that some of them have a change of heart,” he said.

Of Statesmen and Vikings: William Penn Falls in Rock and Ladder Trophy Game

OSKALOOSA — The William Penn football team was defeated for the first time this season, falling 41-9 to rival and Heart of America Athletic Conference North Division opponent Grand View Saturday.

The Statesmen (5-1, 1-1 Heart North) were unable to keep up with the Vikings (5-0, 2-0 Heart North), being outgained 393-245 as Grand View retained the Rock and Ladder Trophy for another year.

Grand View started on offense and moved the ball 67 yards over 10 plays before punching the ball in to take a 7-0 over the Statesmen.

The ensuing kickoff was returned 46 yards by Jersharius Lawrence (Fr., Decatur, Ga., General Accounting) to start the Statesmen offense at the Grand View 27. William Penn moved to the 13-yard-line before fumbling the ball away to the Vikings.

It unfortunately was the first of four turnovers by William Penn, including three interceptions.

The Vikings took advantage of the fumble and moved the ball down field to make the score 14-0 late in the opening stanza.

The scoring was halted until the 9:19 mark of the second quarter when Micheal Johnson III (Jr., Dallas, Texas, Computer Science) blocked a Grand View punt.  The ball bounded into the endzone, but several navy and gold members failed to pounce on it as it went through the back of the endzone for a safety.

The navy and gold got the ball right back after the safety, but came up empty, while GVU answered with the first of its two field goals.

WPU attempted to mount a comeback, but on its next drive, the Vikings intercepted a pass and turned it into three more points for a 20-2 halftime lead.

When the second half started, the Vikings showed why they are the No. 1 team in the NAIA, and outpaced the Statesmen for the rest of the matchup.

GVU scored on each of its three third-quarter drives and put the game to rest early.  The Vikings ended the day with over an 11-minute advantage in time of possession with 35:50, while William Penn only had the ball for 24:10.

William Penn was able to finally able to find the endzone with 4:05 left in the afternoon on a two-yard run from quarterback Sterling Ramsey II (Sr., Broken Arrow, Okla., Business Management). Ramsey finished the day 22-for-42 for 183 yards. The drive also saw the longest reception for William Penn in the contest, a 19-yard grab made by Amir Everett (Sr., Minneapolis, Minn., Sports Management). Everett ended the day as William Penn’s top receiver with 53 yards on six catches.

William Penn’s potent running game was stymied as Destynd Loring (Sr., Charleston, S.C., Sports Management) was held to only 45 yards on 17 carries.

Defensively, Willie Page (Sr., San Diego, Calif., Business Management) led the Statesmen with 11 total tackles.

“This was a tough result against a top-ranked opponent, but we will respond,” Head Coach Marc Benavidez said.  “We will learn from our mistakes and keep working to finish the second half of the season strong.”

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.