Nov 24

Christmas is not saved (in the temporal sense)

A more weighty matter than yesterday…

The Iowa Conference of the United Methodist Church has banned in-person worship until January 10.

No candles for Advent (which starts Sunday). No Christmas caroling. No children’s Christmas program. No Christmas Eve candlelight service. No Epiphany.

Now, I say “no” very loosely here. Live-streamed pastor-led videos can still happen. Theologically, of course, the Christmas story is still there, congregations or no.

But you probably get what I’m saying.

This was posted earlier. I didn’t mean that, as you might tell by the introduction. I’ve re-timed it.

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Nov 23

Christmas is saved (temporarily)

After the news that Apple was going to be the exclusive streaming home of Peanuts specials, including those that had aired on broadcast TV for decades, there was a backlash, here included.

Apple listened, at least a little. “A Charlie Brown Christmas” will be shown this year on PBS without commercial interruption. (“A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving” aired last night.) This is especially nice because for years if not since ABC took over the showings, commercial breaks have been inserted where they were obviously not supposed to go.

By all accounts, this appears to be a one-shot deal. Many stories about it continue to ignore the fact that streaming services are unavailable to millions of Americans at any price. Maybe if Linus’ message about what Christmas is all about becomes the highest-rated PBS show of the week, someone will (re-)reconsider, and yes I am quite aware of the irony.

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Nov 20

All-State, No-State

Right now, Iowa’s best high school singers and musicians are supposed to be at Hilton Coliseum for All-State. A month ago they found out they would not be. The All-State honor was bestowed as if they would have performed, including to three students from South Tama, but there will be no concert. There will be no honor bands for other students, either.

Last weekend was supposed to be the Cedar Rapids Festival of Trees. I am supposed to be a month in on trying to fly through my winter’s bane, “Sleigh Ride”. I am not. My band should be preparing for performances at multiple nursing homes. One of them has been drowning in coronavirus cases.

I fear for the long-term damage this effective ban on group music will do to the arts, not just concert bands but church choirs and school musicals and community theatre. You can’t Zoom your way through “South Pacific.”

(P.S. Traer’s ecumenical Thanksgiving Eve service has been called off.)

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Nov 18

Video drive across I-74 bridge

From WQAD.

Strangely, the I-74 Bridge website stopped updating months ago. The webcams are stuck on June 1.

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Nov 16

‘Butter Cow Lady’ statue needs to be restored

In Toledo, on a hill just north of the US 63/Business 30 intersection, is a non-butter sculpture from Iowa State Fair Butter Cow sculptor “Duffy” Lyon. It is of a cow and her calf. The Aug. 10 derecho ripped the calf’s head off. The KCRG story, which I can’t embed, says that all the pieces have been found, but now the statue needs to be restored and preserved, and that cost will run into the tens of thousands of dollars.

See also this story from Radio Iowa.

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Nov 13

Iowa-bound I-74 bridge opens today

It’s happening! (To steal the first line from KWQC’s story.) (WQAD’s story above.)

The Iowa-bound/westbound/northbound I-74 bridge was expected to open early this morning. This replaces the 1935 bridge, the original of the twin bridges.

Hopefully next November we can have a dedication ceremony.

(Wait, Friday the 13th? In a year like this? Better send an army of black cats across it first.)

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Nov 11

Iowa’s 1920 Highway System: Plymouth County


July 17, 2020: The loneliest intersection of 1920. IA 29 ended here; IA 27 went east and west.

Western Iowa had nearly all of the primary numbers, save for 28, in the 26-through-37 span. As far as I know, it just sort of happened. Three of those routes were predominantly in Plymouth County.

  • IA 27 covered what’s now the westernmost part of cross-state IA 3 because the auto trails had enormous pull at the time. The Hawkeye Highway veered southwest from Le Mars to Sioux City, leaving a gap in the county. In Akron, 27 met IA 12 and both ended.
  • IA 29 spent a lot of time getting out of Sioux City, but after that was all in Plymouth County, not touching any other town. This was the “Perry Creek road”, as it stayed close to the creek halfway into Liberty Township. It passes 2 miles east of the extinct map dot of Adaville, which today is only a church, and 2 miles east of the extinct map dot of Ruble, which today is an abandoned business building, an abandoned one-room schoolhouse, and one house, and is not to be confused with the town of Struble elsewhere in the county.
  • IA 30 started with a lot more corners between Moville and Kingsley than IA 140 has today. Its endpoint could be considered “just outside” of Remsen at the time, but one could see the town from the intersection. But in 1919-20, there was a lot of flip-flopping as to whether 30’s north-south segment from Kingsley would be where 140’s is, or a mile west. Also, straightening the Hawkeye Highway to avoid downtown Remsen and Marcus appears to have been a last-minute change but I have no set date.

IA 29’s endpoint in this group deserves a little more discussion. In every other route, numbers were extended, sometimes by great distances, redundantly along other roads so every endpoint was in a town. With 29, that wasn’t possible without taking a giant turn toward either Le Mars or Akron. Brunsville, 5 miles east, had “Gas and oils” and a blacksmith in 1912, according to Huebinger’s Automobile and Good Road Atlas of Iowa.

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Nov 10

Alex Trebek, 1940-2020

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Nov 09

License Plate Letters – KAT


August 16, 2000: Shadow had the run of the corn crib — run of the farm, really — and we threw her kibble from a big bag bought at the elevator. She purred very loudly and enjoyed climbing onto my shoulder after being picked up. Shadow was a good kitty.


October 20, 2018: Washta. Second appearance on the blog.


October 23, 2019: Albion.

Anyway, we got into the K’s before 2020 closed out.

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Nov 06

Label-o-matic

Labels are important when creating maps. This is an obvious truth, but I have a habit of missing the forest for the trees. Thus, when I created highway chronologies, I didn’t really consider the idea that my maps could be disassociated from their context and appear as standalone images elsewhere. This dawned on me after discovering that my 1925 map of Waterloo-Cedar Falls made it into a National Register of Historic Places application for “Historic and Architectural Resources of Downtown Waterloo” (very large PDF).

Naturally, I am thrilled by this recognition and citation. However, it’s also a reminder that I have to be on my game. I have now gone through all of those maps and squeezed in a notation about what metro area is being featured, rectifying the oversight of (gulp) nearly 15 years ago in some cases. Similarly, I squeezed in a title in the maps for Iowa’s four-lane highway progress while updating the 2019-and-beyond section.

I’ve also fixed some glaring and not-so-glaring typos on assorted 1920 system pages, clarified IA 40 in St. Ansgar, and added notes to IA 10 and IA 26 in light of newly seen construction documents.

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