Iowa
Iowa Athletics and Athletics Development Announce 2022 Hawkeye Events
IOWA CITY, Iowa – The College of Iowa Division of Athletics and Athletics Growth are happy to current the 2022 Hawkeye Summer time Occasions outreach schedule that includes Hawkeye coaches and student-athletes.
This practically 50-year custom of touring to our supporters throughout the state of Iowa permits followers of all ages the chance to satisfy and work together with our coaches and student-athletes by means of quite a lot of occasions. These will embrace occasions that includes our head and assistant coaches, Hawkeye Hometown visits with student-athletes and coaches, ballpark nights, RAGBRAI, the State Honest, and extra.
DATE | LOCATION | EVENT | FEATURING |
Saturday, Might 7 | Iowa Metropolis – Cretzmeyer Observe | HERkys’ Hawk Stroll –
Celebrating Title IX |
Numerous coaches and student-athletes |
Wednesday, Might 11 | West Des Moines –
Embassy Membership |
Lunch with the Hawkeyes – that includes our feminine sport head coaches | Barbara Burke, Lisa Bluder, Jim Barnes, Clarissa Chun, Jeff Garbutt, Lisa Cellucci Nathan Mundt, Dave DiIanni, Sasha Schmid |
Thursday, Might 12 | Davenport –
Public Home |
Hawkeye Comfortable Hour with the Larger Quad Cities I-Membership | Coaches Jim Barnes, Clarissa Chun. Together with Laura VandeBerg |
Tuesday, Might 24 | Carroll/Arcadia American Legion | Carroll Space I-Membership Spring Occasion | Coaches Kirk Ferentz, Terry Manufacturers, Jan Jensen, and Courtney Eldridge. Together with Gary Dolphin |
Thursday, Might 26 | Peosta – Thunder Hills Nation Membership |
Dubuque County
I-Membership Golf and Dinner |
Coaches Kirk Ferentz, Lisa Bluder, Tom Manufacturers. Together with Gary Dolphin |
Monday, June 6 | Solon-
Saddleback Ridge |
Johnson County I-Membership Golf Outing | |
Saturday, June 18 | Des Moines –
Iowa Cubs |
Hawkeye Day on the Iowa Cubs | Caitlin Clark
Herky and the Iowa Spirit Squad |
Monday, June 20 | Des Moines – Wakonda Membership |
Polk County I-Membership Golf Outing | |
June / July TBD | Sioux Metropolis – Scheels | Pupil-athlete meet & greet | |
July 24 – 30 | Numerous | RAGBRAI 2022 | |
August 11 – 21 | Iowa State Honest | ||
Thursday, August 18 | Iowa Metropolis | Johnson County I-Membership Hawk Celebration |
New this 12 months, we’re providing communities and occasion organizers the chance to request a Hawkeye presence at their native occasions all year long. Occasions will be submitted by way of the web type at hawkeyesports.com/Hawkeye-Occasions.
For extra info and to RSVP for considered one of our Hawkeye Occasions please go to jointheiclub.com/occasions. These dates are along with the occasions deliberate and hosted all year long by statewide native I-Membership chapters. We look ahead to seeing Hawkeye followers in your black and gold this spring and summer season.
Go Hawks!
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Iowa
Historic front page from the Des Moines Register, July 2, 1919: Iowa supports women’s vote
![Historic front page from the Des Moines Register, July 2, 1919: Iowa supports women’s vote](https://www.gannett-cdn.com/authoring/authoring-images/2024/05/18/PDEM/73754761007-07021919-suffrage.jpg?auto=webp&crop=4703,2646,x0,y0&format=pjpg&width=1200)
Featured front page
The Des Moines Register’s sister paper, the Evening Tribune, reports on July 2, 1919, that the Iowa Legislature in a special session has added the state to the growing roll of those in support of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. That amendment, ratified the following year, gave women the full right to vote. Iowa women had long been prominent in the suffrage movement. Today in Iowa, women hold two of four congressional seats, one of two U.S. Senate seats and the governor’s office.
Each day this month, as the Register marks its 175th birthday, we’re sharing front pages from noteworthy moments in history.
Iowa
Red Cross volunteers in northwestern Iowa work to clean up after flooding
![Red Cross volunteers in northwestern Iowa work to clean up after flooding](https://gray-kcrg-prod.cdn.arcpublishing.com/resizer/v2/5AROGUP4ZBHE3P2L4NPQZBKU2A.png?auth=fc023b2e9003041e3b7ec3c60798200f302711651db906f329160ca9c0c9e32f&width=1200&height=600&smart=true)
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (KCRG) – The American Red Cross currently has around 250 volunteers in northwestern Iowa cleaning up flood damage.
Peter Teahan, Red Cross spokesperson and volunteer, said flooding in northwestern Iowa has hit the region harder than it ever has in recent years, and it caught people by surprise.
”What it looked like when we got here was towns inundated with water. For those in Cedar Rapids who lived in the 2008 floods, it was similar to that, of course smaller towns,” Teahan said.
Governor Kim Reynolds has issued a disaster proclamation for 27 counties in northwest Iowa, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Individual Assistance Program is already activated in five northwest Iowa counties.
Roads are flooded and towns are so isolated that groups like the Red Cross are having a hard time even getting in to help people, and the lack of available housing is leaving people without options.
”Until they can find the resources and the workers to build a new house they may need to relocate,” Teahan said.
Red Cross volunteers are managing five shelters and providing meals to people using emergency dispatch vehicles.
They’ve also started distributing emergency supplies to people who haven’t fully lost their homes to help with the extensive cleanup process.
”It’s not the water we think of when we go swimming or when we take our boat out on the water. This is all the chemicals and all the discharge from all over now in the water and inundating their houses,” Teahan said.
Even though help has been around for weeks, Teahan said it will take much longer before everyone can get back home.
”This is a long term process and a long term recovery. This is just the beginning.”
Copyright 2024 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Inside Iowa Politics: Ag Industry cuts
![Inside Iowa Politics: Ag Industry cuts](https://gray-kcrg-prod.cdn.arcpublishing.com/resizer/v2/5L53FDYW7RC6LFKZAYOUBE6G34.jpg?auth=ec05ba198491db4ca23378bb5aa73472d46a6a5246505e8dbe55845d37b4195e&width=1200&height=600&smart=true)
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (KCRG) – On this episode, Iowa Political Director Dave Price speaks with Iowa State University extension economist Dr. Chad Hart about recent job cuts within the agriculture industry and how they will cause problems for other industries.
Copyright 2024 KCRG. All rights reserved.
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