East Hills Library offering Veteran’s Oral Histories

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The St. Joseph Public Library East Hills branch will host one local, retired veteran who specializes in interviewing and writing stories of veterans’ oral histories.

Retired Colonel, Milt Toratti, who is also a Vietnam veteran and author has written numerous veteran oral histories.

Adults are invited to attend the program to hear some of the stories at 2 p.m. on Saturday, June 7 at the East Hills Library, located at 502 N. Woodbine Rd.

The presentation will be followed by a book signing, where proceeds will go to benefit the Cameron Veterans Home.

For more information or questions, those interested are encouraged to contact Elizabeth Murray at (816) 236-2136.

Persons with disabilities who wish to participate in the program should contact the ADA coordinator at (816) 232-4038. Log on to sjpl.lib.mo.us for more information about other library services and programs.

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Idaho Falls apartment fire displaces three families

Curtis Jackson

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI)—Three families were displaced Thursday night after a structure fire broke out near Lomax and the 100 block of Higbee Avenue.

According to the Idaho Falls Fire Department, the fire started in the kitchen of a main floor apartment and quickly spread to the unit above.

The basement apartment suffered smoke and water damage.

No injuries were reported, but the full extent of the damage is still being assessed.

The fire was reported at 9:13 p.m. on May 29, 2025.

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ABC-7 at 4: Making Sense of a Mixed-Up Economy: Risks, Opportunities & Smart Planning

Nichole Gomez

El Paso, TX (KVIA-TV)- The economy is shrinking, inflation just won’t go away, trade war talk is still going on—but somehow, the stock market is up. What should we make of all this? Financial expert Brian Mirau is here to help us make sense of the confusion—and share some smart opportunities for retirees.

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Shifting Seasons: The climate crisis in Central Oregon’s native nations

Shannon Brady

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Oregon’s changing climate is already impacting ecosystems and communities, especially here in Central Oregon. Traditional food gatherers of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs say things are changing quickly.

Laurie Danzuka says, “All the places I used to go when I was younger, we no longer go to those places.”

Starla Green, another traditional food gatherer, lives on the Deschutes River and spoke about the changes to the river and fishing practices. She said: “For the fish, the water temperatures, it affected the fish…The fish counts have gone down in years past. Growing up, people would bring us 100-200 salmon at a time to take care of, to preserve, to put away. Now, we’re even lucky to get 10 or 20.”

Not all communities experience climate change equally. Indigenous and rural communities are often more vulnerable, socially, geographically and economically, and feel the impact sooner and more severely.

Other members of the tribes shared concerns with KTVZ news about water quality and availability, growing seasons, and changes to the river.

The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs are working to protect their lands and traditions through sustainability and conservation efforts through their Conservation Lands Program.

As the climate continues to shift, adaptation and resilience will be key for communities across the globe .

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Good Vibes Only: From CEO to the Classroom

Rosemary Montañez

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA)–Teachers play a pivotal role in shaping the success of their students’ education and overall lives long after the school bell rings. 

Jesus Alvarez, also known as Jesse, had an unconventional journey to the classroom. He went from being a prominent businessman to teaching students at Irvin High School. And he told ABC-7 he has no plans to stop. 

“I really enjoy helping students. You know, to me, their minds are perfect for them to acquire their knowledge. That is going to help them be successful. That’s nothing more that I want. But for kids to be successful,” Alvarez said. 

The classroom wasn’t his office. In the 1980s he started his own refrigeration company that became a multi-million dollar business. Years later he founded a successful bank. 

But from one day to the next, he left everything behind and took on the role of educator. 

Alvarez said many of his students are curious as to why he pivoted from his successful business career. 

“A lot of the kids ask me, you know? And some, some kids don’t believe it, you know? ‘What are you doing here? If you did all that? What are you doing here?’ I said, ‘You know what? Because not everything is about money.’ You know, that’s what I enjoy doing; to me this is my my life. To me it’s my life’s blood to be teaching,” he said. 

Alvarez teaches business and entrepreneurship classes at Irvin High School. Students are taught how to start and run their own business. Alvarez said these are real-world skills they’ll use one day. 

“The kids are hungry to learn, you know, especially things that are going to make a difference in their lives. You know, they want to make sure that, that, what they learn is going to make them successful.”

Alvarez only had plans to teach for five years, but this school year marks his 15th year in the classroom. A golf enthusiast himself, he also coaches the award-winning golf team at Irvin High.

Alvarez said teaching at Irvin has blended his two passions: teaching and golf. 

“You know, people has asked me, ‘When are you going to retire?’ I said, ‘I’m still enjoying it.’ I still enjoy it, I love it, I still see the kids, you know, my kids learn, you know, they pay attention.”

Alvarez said he is proud to know he has inspired students and the next generation of business leaders in our community. 

“They’ll come hug me and say, ‘Thank you for what you did for me. You know, it helped me a lot in my life’, and that many times sometimes brings tears to my eyes because I says, ‘Wow.'” 

Alvarez also spearheads a program at Irvin High where students learn how to file taxes and they even become certified by tax professionals!

Alvarez said he also enjoys traveling and is looking forward to doing just that this summer!

If you have a Good Vibes Only story idea, email news@kvia.com.

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Lincoln University names first director of new Security Sciences Institue

Madison Stuerman

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Lincoln University announced the hiring of its first director of the new Security Sciences Institute on Friday.

The university hired Adrian S. Petrescu as the SSI director, according to a news release.

Petrescu’s role will be to oversee the certificate program and related activities, recruitment and advising students in the programs.

The release states Petrescu’s experience includes a law degree from Creighton University, a doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh and two master’s degrees from his home country of Romania.

“Petrescu’s extensive background in interdisciplinary sciences, journalism, management, public policy, law and international relations will serve Lincoln well at the institute,” a spokesperson for the University said in the release.

Petrescu will also develop a plan for SSI partnerships within the professional community of applied security sciences.

“The institute shall and will serve as a hub of active research and training and learning for the community of applied security sciences professionals in Missouri and the region and nationally,” Petrescu said in the release.

The Security Sciences Institute was launched this spring and focuses on emergency medical technician (EMT), cybersecurity, geospatial information systems (GIS), and mental health for first responders certificate programs.

The new building is currently under construction and is expected to be open in Fall 2026.

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Contact in the Desert returns to Indian Wells

Allie Anthony

Indian Wells Calif. (KESQ) – The world’s largest UFO convention is coming back to the Coachella Valley.  Contact in the Desert brings together researchers, authors, scientists, and seekers to explore some of the most profound questions facing humanity today.

Over 2,000 attendees can expect an agenda of keynote presentations, panels, and workshops from leading experts in their fields, fostering vibrant discussions that bridge science, philosophy, and the unexplained.

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PG&E reporting power outages in the Castroville area

Victor Guzman

CASTROVILLE, Calif. (KION-TV) — PG&E is reporting more than three thousand people are without power in the Castroville area this morning.

The outages stretch outside of Castroville into the edge of Marina, Salinas and Prunedale.

PG&E reports the outage was first indicated around 4 a.m.

Power is expected to be restored around 11 a.m..

The cause of the outage is only listed as an “unplanned outage.”

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Concerns about deer/auto crashes increase along Highway 115 south of Colorado Springs

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Vehicle collisions with deer can often result in injuries, and occasionally deaths, to both drivers and animals.

However, Brandon Hystad has experienced two such crashes since Thanksgiving and although he and his passengers weren’t hurt, the cars he drove at the time didn’t fare well.

“In the first one, last November, I totaled my car when a deer came out of nowhere,” he said, recalling the incident from the driver’s seat of his new car. “All I know was that the air bags deflated and the car automatically braked.”

That was on southbound Highway 115, traveling up a steep hill near the Pawnee Avenue intersection overlooking Fort Carson.

“At the first of May, I was driving my girlfriend’s car when I saw a deer in the left turn lane while I was in the left through lane,” Hystad said. “I slowed down and was just about to pass it when it suddenly ran in front of me and I hit it.”

That impact was on southbound 115 near the intersection of Cheyenne Meadows and Star Ranch roads, just within the city limits.

“It caused $10,000 in damage to the vehicle and it’s still in the shop,” Hystad said.

He wonders why there are so many deer in the area.

“I just moved back here last year after being away for 17 years,” Hystad explained. “Before I left, I rarely saw a deer. After the first crash, a state trooper said it was the sixth deer crash that he had responded to that evening. After that, it was almost a daily occurrence that I saw a dead deer, or somebody who had just hit a deer, and their car was wrecked and they’re on the side of the road.”

He and his mother — who initially contacted KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior about the trend — said that the crashes seem to happen at dusk, along a seven-mile stretch of the highway between Cheyenne Meadows/Star Ranch and Keeton Ranch Road.

“The deer are always moving west from Fort Carson, across the highway to where homes are,” she said. “Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) told me that people may be feeding them. It’s a dangerous situation.”

Gabriel Cosyleon, an environmental manager with the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT), said that he’s not aware of an unusually high number of deer-related crashes in the area.

But he confesses that vehicle collisions with deer and other animals along highway corridors such as Highway 115 and Interstate 25 are an issue for the agency.

In fact, when CDOT completed a project last year to improve Highway 115 between Rock Creek Canyon Road and the El Paso/Fremont County line, it included the creation of a wildlife passage under the Rock Creek bridge, and the installation of wildlife fencing a half-mile north and south of the bridge.

Cosyleon said that it’s not nearly enough to keep wildlife off the highway.

“We’ve found that a lot of animals are using that passage,” he said. “Not just deer. The key is making it as natural as possible. If it looks too much like a culvert or a man-made concrete structure, some wildlife won’t use it. But with the amount of wildlife that are moving across highways, we need a lot more pathways.”

Wildlife fencing is expensive, Cosyleon said, and obtaining permission to install it on Army or private property is difficult.

However, CDOT is currently building a $15 million overpass for wildlife crossings in I-25, south of the Greenland interchange in Douglas County; it’s part of the “Gap” project that widened the highway between Monument and Castle Rock.

The overpass is a collaboration with CDOT, the Federal Highway Administration, Colorado Parks & Wildlife and other local partners; it’s being constructed specifically for big game animals such as deer and elk, and will complete a system of other wildlife crossings that are part of the “Gap” improvements.

The wildlife passage under the Rock Creek Bridge cost $500,000.

“The number-one priority, I’d say we have right now, is the New Mexico state line near Trinidad,” Cosyleon revealed. “We have animals that are coming up from into Colorado and are being hit on the top of Raton Pass.”

Hystad said that he wasn’t aware of CDOT’s efforts to reduce auto/deer crashes but is glad the agency is doing what it can.

“I understand the challenges but I think more can be done,” he said. “Put up more deer crossing signs. Install more street lights that would make it easier for people to see deer ahead of time.”

The Highway 115 situation is the area’s first widespread concern expressed about deer since officials in Colorado Springs and Woodland Park had serious discussions between 2017 and 2019.

However, those officials couldn’t agree on whether they should reduce the local deer population, or how they’d do it — and the matter became less of a priority when the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in the spring of 2020.

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Cartoon inspired “Summerween” event making its Pueblo debut

Bradley Davis

PUEBLO, Colorado (KRDO) – A local haunted house director is hosting the first ever free “Summerween” in Pueblo, with costumes, candy, cosplayers, live DJs, food trucks, a magician, a ventriloquist and more coming to Lake Minnequa Park on Saturday.

Jared Perea is hosting the event as an extension of his fall haunted house, “Jed’s Haunted House.” Last year, he hosted the haunted house at the Pueblo Mall. He said the mall let him use the indoor space for free, as long as he made entry free for all patrons.

The event is inspired by the Disney show Gravity Falls, widely accepted as the first mainstream mention of the holiday, mashing up summer vacation with Halloween traditions. Perea said his kids are a fan of the show and gave him the idea.

Attendees are encouraged to show up in costume, similar to coming to a trunk-or-treat during the Halloween season. Holding to those traditions, the Pueblo Summerween will host a costume contest.

Pueblo Summerween is from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Perea said they have rented out the entire park, but you can find parking off of Palmer Avenue, right across the street from the Lake Minnequa Basketball Area.

It’s the second mention of Summerween KRDO13 was able to find in Pueblo. The Pueblo Art Alliance hosted a Summerween-themed First Friday Art Walk last July. The Gravity Falls Summerween episode first aired in 2012.

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