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K-State volleyball sweeps past Iowa State

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K-State volleyball sweeps past Iowa State




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‘Fearless’ 96-year-old Husband Calling Contest winner and Iowa State Fair mainstay dies

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‘Fearless’ 96-year-old Husband Calling Contest winner and Iowa State Fair mainstay dies


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The Iowa State Fair’s Husband Calling Contest is marked by caterwauling and squawking and booming threats of Ohhhhh, you better get in hereeeeee, so help meeeeee …

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But amidst all that boisterous screaming, 95-year-old Bonnie Eilert’s high-pitched reminder, hooked onto the end of her yowling and yelping for her husband “ROYYYYYYY” like a perfect little period, will always stick with me: “I Love You!”

Bright and punchy. Delivered with a little mischievousness, maybe. Or lovesickness. Definitely a smile.

“I Love You!”

She was the only contestant — out of the 17 participating in 2023 — who thought to add a little bit of tenderness. “You win more friends with honey than vinegar,” said Rob Sand, part-time Iowa State Fair judge and full-time state auditor.

Eilert’s choice of endearment reaped reward. In front of the largest crowd to ever watch the contest, a result of an old Iowa PBS segment going viral on TikTok the winter previous, Eilert won — a highwater mark in a year stained with grief.

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“It feels wunderbar,” she told me. “I love it. I have other blue ribbons, too, but, oh, this is precious.”

Eilert — a State Fair mainstay on par with the chainsaw carvers and the 4-H stage volunteers — died March 22, 2025, on her “beloved farm,” according to her obituary. She was 96.

Born, raised and forever rooted to the land of Jasper County, Eilert graduated from Newton High in 1947 and married her sweetheart, Roy Eilert, in a ceremony at her parents’ home in 1949. The key to their loving marriage, she told me without a whiff of irony that day at the fair, was communication.  

With a strong sense of community honed at an early age, she was a “lifelong advocate for agriculture and rural life” and a stalwart member of the Jasper County Chorus and the Farm Bureau, once serving as the group’s chairwoman.

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“Her warm spirit, resilience and dedication to family and community left a lasting impression on everyone who knew her,” her family wrote in the obituary.

And, for more than 40 years, Eilert was the keeper of the First Church key at the State Fair, a volunteer position that let her visit about her cherished fair with tourists from far and wide. A replica of (you guessed it) the first Christian church built on Iowa land in 1834, the First Church was “a place dear to her heart,” her obituary says.

Indeed, the whole fair was much loved by Eilert. In her older years, she was known to wear old-timey clothes — lace stoles and pillbox hats — and tool around the grounds on her scooter. Hills be damned!

All day, every day, there was never too much fair for Bonnie, a legacy her family is honoring by asking for memorial contributions to the Iowa State Fair in lieu of flowers.

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Find an excerpt of Courtney Crowder’s column on Bonnie Eilert and the Husband Calling Contest below, and read the full story here.

IOWA STATE FAIRGROUNDS — At 95 years old — or as Bonnie Eilert likes to classify: “I’m older than dirt” — she’s been coming to the State Fair nearly as far back as she can remember. Her parents were farmers, and she married a farmer, so, in August, it’s just what you did, you came to Des Moines, she says.

About four decades ago ― when she first started getting unsteady on her feet ― her daughter Sheryl bought a camper so they could stay on the fairgrounds instead of making the hike back and forth to Newton. She’s been spending her nights at the same site ever since, and passes her days tending to the First Church, a historical prairie church in the fair’s Heritage Village area.

Eilert has been entering the Husband Calling Contest since it began about 40 years ago, she says. But it’s hard to keep track, she admits. This contest is just one of many she enters, one of many of her “adventures,” as she calls them.

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“I’m fearless,” she says. “My husband was so against it. He says, ‘Don’t you dare. Don’t you dare.’ ‘I’m going to do it,’ I said.”

So she entered and won: “He left me alone after that. He was proud of me.”

Roy died nearly a decade ago, and Sheryl ― Bonnie’s State Fair sidekick and her live-in caretaker ― died very suddenly this year. Being at the fair without her has been “pretty horrific,” she says.

But attending some of the contests that Sheryl loved so much has been a bit of salve.

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“Yes, it’s brought me some comfort because people ask about my dear, charming child,” she says, clutching her ribbon and her winnings, a whopping $15. “Everybody’s just made my day.”

Read the full story here.

Courtney Crowder, the Register’s Iowa Columnist, traverses the state’s 99 counties telling Iowans’ stories. Her State Fair food must-get is the Bauder’s Peppermint Bar. Don’t be ashamed to have seconds! Reach her at ccrowder@dmreg.com or 515-284-8360. Follow her on Twitter @courtneycare.





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Colorado authorities arrest Iowa convict after ranch burglary

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Colorado authorities arrest Iowa convict after ranch burglary


A 43-year-old man who allegedly stole firearms and a pickup truck from a ranch was captured Friday night after a day-long manhunt in northwestern Colorado.

Officers and deputies took Valentin Velez into custody shortly after sunset. They were first notified of the burglary and theft almost 10 hours earlier. 

The Moffat County Sheriff’s Office responded to the initial call at 10:15 a.m. Dispatchers were told that at least one thief had taken several firearms from the ranch at Moffat County Roads 103 and 6, about 10 miles northwest of Craig. The suspect(s) fled in an older Dodge pickup with Wyoming plates. One deputy on his way to the scene encountered the truck and started to pursue it. The pickup truck eluded the deputy.

Then, a witness called 9-1-1 and described the pickup entering the Cedar Mountain Recreation Area about six miles south of the ranch. The day-use area is operated by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and has one access road. 

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“There is one way in and one way out,” said Moffat County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Nicholas Cordova, “and the truck never came out.”  

A shelter-in-place order was broadcast to the area at 11:30 a.m. Moffat deputies, accompanied by Craig Police Department officers, Colorado Parks and Wildlife personnel, BLM officers, and the county’s Combined Special Response Team, began searching for the truck and suspect(s). 

A drone located the truck. The stolen firearms were inside it, but no suspect was with it. 

At 3:30 p.m., the shelter-in-place order was lifted. The search effort was called off, although Craig and Moffat law officers stayed in the area and warned civilians to consider the suspect(s) to still be armed and dangerous.

It was at 8 p.m. that a suspicious man was reported walking along County Road 7 outside the recreation area. One Moffat deputy and one Craig officer approached the man and chased him when he started to run. The officers used a taser to take him into custody. 

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A loaded handgun was found on Velez at the time of his arrest. 

Valentin Velez following his arrest Friday night in northwestern Colorado.

Moffat County Sheriff’s Office


Velez was booked into the Moffat County Jail on four felony charges — theft, auto theft, burglary and distribution of fentanyl — and five misdemeanors. 

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Velez is an Omaha, Nebraska resident, according to online public records. He was released from the Iowa Department of Corrections last summer following a 2018 kidnapping arrest. Humboldt County deputies found the woman and arrested Velez in an apartment after she reached out to family and friends on a social media post, per local media reports.

The burglarized ranch was singled out by Velez, MCSO’s Cordova told CBS Colorado. “It appears this was not a targeted burglary but rather a crime of opportunity and random.”

The burglary and theft are still under investigation, Cordova added, and more leads are being pursued. Anyone with information is asked to contact the sheriff’s office at 970-824-6501.

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Central Iowa teacher among finalists for America’s Favorite Teacher contest

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Central Iowa teacher among finalists for America’s Favorite Teacher contest


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A central Iowa high school teacher is in the running to become America’s next favorite teacher.

Matt Heston, a math teacher at Knoxville High School, has advanced to the group finals for the “America’s Favorite Teacher” contest, a national competition where teachers across the country compete for the title, a grand prize and a feature in Reader’s Digest.

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Heston, a teacher at Knoxville for more than two decades, received the second most votes in his initial group of nearly 100 teachers. Now, he’s advancing to the group finals alongside the other top five vote-getters. The public will vote to select one preliminary winner who will move on to a quarterfinal among all groups.

Voting in the group finals began on March 27 and ends on April 3. The grand prize winner will be announced on May 31.

“I didn’t get in teaching for the honors, but it’s sure nice for people to notice you’ve been doing a good job,” Heston told GoKnoxvilleTV.

What does the winner of America’s Favorite Teacher get?

Besides the feature in Reader’s Digest, one teacher chosen as America’s Favorite Teacher will receive a $25,000 cash prize, a trip to Hawaii and an opportunity to speak at a school assembly with popular science educator Bill Nye.

How would Matt Heston spend America’s Favorite Teacher prize money?

If he wins the contest, Heston said he would allocate $10,000 of his winnings to his daughter’s college fund, $10,000 to start a scholarship for Knoxville High School students pursuing education careers and use the remaining $2,500 to treat his wife to a vacation.

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To vote for Heston, visit his page at the America’s Favorite Teacher website.

Cooper Worth is a service/trending reporter for the Des Moines Register. Reach him at cworth@gannett.com or follow him on X @CooperAWorth.



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