Notebooks

Cedar Rapids and Iowa City have been targeted by a restaurant that hopes to find its niche within Iowa’s meat-and-potatoes culture.

Mixed, which specializes in customized salads and wraps, is seeking franchise partners in both cities, along with Des Moines, Ames and Sioux City. The company debuted in Sioux Falls, S.D. in 2010 and opened its second location in Omaha last week.

Founder Cole Shawd said he hopes to sign agreements to open up to 10 stores in Iowa this year, and another 20 stores in 2014.

“We’re looking to keep the momentum going,” Shawd said. “It’s very doable. We’re shooting for the sky.”

Billed as a “fast-casual” restaurant, Mixed offers 27 dressings and more than 45 toppings, including buffalo chicken, teriyaki shrimp and garbanzo beans. The stores also bake their own croutons. Soups, paninis and other sandwiches are also available. The typical cost per customer is $7 to $9, Shawd said.

No specific locations have been identified in Cedar Rapids or Iowa City.


In case you’re interested, here’s a look at the most recent correspondence between the Iowa Department of Education and the Iowa City Community School District regarding the latter’s diversity policy.

First, here’s the district’s response to the department’s request for additional information on implementation of the policy, which aims to balance the population of students qualifying for free and reduced-price lunches throughout district schools:

ICCSD Response March 2013

And here’s the department’s March 8 reply:

DE Response to ICCSD Holland Letter 3 8 13


Iowa City native Paul Nelson. (image from Web site for Jeopardy! TV show)

Iowa City native Paul Nelson. (image from Web site for Jeopardy! TV show)

By Diana Nollen/ SourceMedia

Iowa City native Paul Nelson’s quest for the right questions came to an end in today’s (2/22/13) semifinal round of the “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions.

Nelson, 24, a former U.S. Senate aide now in the U.S. Navy’s Officer Candidate School in Newport, R.I., finished in third place after missing the Final Jeopardy category on Italy, where the correct answer was Umbria. He wagered half of his $4,000 earnings.

He and second-place winner Jason Keller didn’t stand a chance against Keith Whitener, who ran away with the Double Jeopardy round, racking up $32,400 in today’s play. He had the right answer, but bet nothing, so takes the full amount into the Tournament Finals, which begin Monday.

Keller, a tutor from Highland Park, N.J., earned his Tournament of Champions spot with $213,900 in previous winnings, while Whitener, a research chemist from Charlotte, N.C., qualified with $147,597 in prior earnings.

Back in November, Nelson won $54,900 in first-place finishes, plus another $2,000 for finishing second in his final fall appearance.

Tournament of Champions semifinalists win $10,000.

At one point in today’s play, Nelson apologized to his “granny” in Canada for missing the answer Georgia Strait in previous play — since he’s crossed the strait at least four times when going to visit his grandmother. He is the son of Scott and Tracy Nelson of Iowa City.

“Jeopardy!” airs at 11:30 a.m. on KWWL Channel 7 in the Corridor.


"Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (left) is shown here with Iowa City native Paul Nelson, who won $54,900 playing "Jeopardy!" in November 2012. Nelson will compete in the game show's Tournament of Champions, which begins airing Feb. 13, 2013. (Jeopardy Productions photo)

"Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (left) is shown here with Iowa City native Paul Nelson, who won $54,900 playing "Jeopardy!" in November 2012. Nelson is competing in the game show's Tournament of Champions, which begins airing Feb. 13, 2013. (Jeopardy Productions photo)

By Diana Nollen/ SourceMedia

Iowa City native Paul Nelson came from behind to stage a triumphant, yet conservative, win in today’s “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions quarterfinal round. He advances to the semi finals with $15,800 in his victory till.

Nelson, 24, who is now in Officer Candidate School in Newport, R.I., began his “Jeopardy!” odyssey with six episodes that aired in November. His $54,900 earnings qualified him for the tournament, which was taped in mid-January and began airing today (2/13/13). He actually won another $2,000 in November when he placed second to end his winning streak.

Today’s opponents included Stephanie Jass, a history professor from Michigan, who is the show’s all-time highest winning female, at $147,570; and Jason Shore, a medical student from Plano, Texas, $85,200.

Nelson was trailing at the start of today’s Double Jeopardy round, but rebounded at the end with a Daily Double correct question that pushed him ahead with $15,800. His opponents were tied at $13,000.

They all played it safe with their Final Jeopary wagers, hoping to stay in the running for a wild card position if they didn’t win the match. For the first time, Nelson nailed the final answer, but bet $0. Actually, they all nailed the right question (Who is Ramses, in a Rosetta Stone answer), but Jass bet nothing and Shore bet just $1,000, which wasn’t enough to overtake Nelson.

Nelson, former Senate staff aide for Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), is the son of Scott and Tracy Nelson of Iowa City.

“Jeopardy!” airs at 11:30 a.m. weekdays on KWWL (Channel 7) in the Corridor. Quarterfinal action continues tomorrow (2/14/13).


Congratulations to Joan — a wonderful photographer!

From a press release:

The Minneapolis Institute of Art recently purchased three of the photographs of women taken in the 1960s by Joan Liffring-Zug Bourret of Iowa City.

The three are silver prints of “Women’s Club Bowling,” “Bridesmaids” and “Grandmothers and Wedding Guests,” all taken in Cedar Rapids.

“Joan’s photographs offer a rare glimpse into the important civic activities of women during a historical period — all too recent — when their contributions to society were overlooked, if not invisible,” said David Little, curator of photography for the Minneapolis Institute of Art. “Joan captures the hidden labor and pleasure of women with a loving humor that just makes viewers smile.”

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City has two of Bourret’s photographs in its collection: “Nan Wood Graham” and “The Junior League Christmas Party.”

The photographs in both museum collections were taken in Cedar Rapids except for the one of Graham, which was taken in her home in Riverside, Calif.

Ten of Bourret’s photographs are in the exhibition, “The Restless Spirit: American Art from the Collection,” opening Feb. 16, 2013, at the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art. The museum has 261 of Bourret’s photographs in its collection, according to curator Sean Ulmer.

Many of Joan’s women photographs are in her autobiography, “Pictures and People: A Search for Visual Truth and Social Justice,” which won first place in the Benjamin Franklin Contest of the Independent Publishers of America last June.

 


"Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (left) is shown here with Iowa City native Paul Nelson, who won $54,900 playing "Jeopardy!" in November 2012. Nelson will compete in the game show's Tournament of Champions, which begins airing Feb. 13, 2013. (Jeopardy Productions photo)

"Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (left) is shown here with Iowa City native Paul Nelson, who won $54,900 playing "Jeopardy!" in November 2012. Nelson will compete in the game show's Tournament of Champions, which begins airing Feb. 13, 2013. (Jeopardy Productions photo)

By Diana Nollen/ SourceMedia

Iowa City native Paul Nelson will be back at the button, hoping to come up with the right questions in the “Jeopardy!” Tournament of Champions. Taping started in mid-January and the episodes begin airing Feb. 13, 2013.

Nelson, now 24, had a successful six-episode run on the venerable game show back in November, winning $54,900. (He won another $2,000 for finishing second in his final appearance.) He was a legislative correspondent in Sen. Chuck Grassley’s Washington. D.C., office at the time. He is now in the U.S. Navy’s Officer Candidate School in Newport, R.I., and is in a communications blackout, according to his father, Scott Nelson of Iowa City.

Among Nelson’s opponents is Stephanie Jass, a history professor from Michigan, who is the show’s all-time highest winning female, at $147,570. They will be vying for these prizes:

Champion: $250,000

1st runner-up: $100,000 (or the player’s two-day finals total, whichever is larger)

2nd runner-up: $50,000 (or the player’s two-day finals total, whichever is larger)

Semifinalist: $10,000.

“Jeopardy!” airs at 11:30 a.m. weekdays on KWWL (Channel 7) in the Corridor.

Tournament of Champion contestants are:

Colby Burnett, a high school World History teacher from Chicago, $100,000

David Gard, a retail horticulturist from Jamaica Plain, Mass., $84,700

Stephanie Jass, a history professor from Milan, Mich., $147,570

Jason Keller, a tutor from Highland Park, N.J., $213,900

Dave Leach, a game merchant from Atlanta, Ga., $98,054

Dan McShane, a bartender from West Islip, N.Y., $62,001

David Menchaca, a law student from Long Beach, Calif., $115,503

Kristin Morgan, a NASA strategic analyst from Huntsville, Ala., $69,098

Paul Nelson, former senate staff aide for Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) from Iowa City, $54,900

Joel Pool, a real estate developer from Oakland, Calif., $116,800

Patrick Quinn, a high school German teacher from Chesterfield, Mo., $100,000

Jason Shore, a medical student from Plano, Texas, $85,200

Monica Thieu (college champion), a psychology student from Dallas, Texas, $100,000

Keith Whitener, a research chemist from Charlotte, N.C., $147,597


Rep. Dave Loebsack

Second District U.S. Rep. Dave Loebsack, an Iowa City Democrat, has been appointed to  the House-Senate conference committee that will negotiate the final details of the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act.  The committee will assemble the final legislation from the bills that were previously passed by the House and Senate.  The final product will then be voted on by Congress, before going to the president.

Loebsack is a member of the Armed Services Committee.


IOWA CITY – Iowa City is looking for ways to make parking more convenient downtown, and it wants ideas from the public.

The city will host two public input sessions in December to get feedback on new ideas that include limited free parking in ramps and the use of smart-meter technology that would accommodate payment by credit cards and mobile devices, according to a news release.

The meetings are 10:30 a.m. to noon Dec. 10 and 1:30 to 3 p.m. Dec. 12 in meeting Room A of the Iowa City Public Library, 123 S. Linn St.

From Dec. 12 through Dec. 21, comments will be taken at www.icgov.org/downtownparking.

City staff already has met several times with representatives from the Iowa City Downtown District, according to the release.


Iowa City native Paul Nelson. (image from Web site for Jeopardy! TV show)

Iowa City native Paul Nelson. (image from Web site for Jeopardy! TV show)

By Diana Nollen/ SourceMedia

Iowa City native Paul Nelson has done the seemingly impossible. He ended a six-episode run on “Jeopardy!” without answering correctly any Final Jeopardy question.

The key to his success? Conservative wagers. Even on his sixth and final try, he bet no money. He might have won yet again, except opponent Jake Ayers, a law student from San Diego, knew the final question in the popular TV game show where answers are given in the form of a question.

The final category was “Biographies About Authors,” and Oscar Wilde was the answer. Nelson, who has peppered his appearances with humor, wrote: “Who is Dolly Parton?” saying he just wanted to hear host Alex Trebek say that out loud.

Had Ayers missed the question, his wager of $9,301 would have landed him in second place. Instead, that where’s Nelson landed, adding $2,000 to his winnings, bringing his six-day total to $56,900.

Nelson, 23, is a legislative correspondent in Sen. Chuck Grassley’s Washington office. He is the son of Scott and Tracy Nelson of Iowa City.

Scott Nelson is more thrilled with his son’s conduct than with his earnings.

“Aside from Paul exercising his God-given abilities, we are proud of his character and how he presented himself in the national spotlight,” Nelson said. “He was the first competitor to step off the podium and congratulate the others.”

 


'Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (right), joins Iowa City native Paul Nelson in the winners circle on the television game show. Nelson's two-day earnings total $29,200. (Jeopardy Productions Inc. photo)

'Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek (right), joins Iowa City native Paul Nelson in the winners circle on the television game show. Nelson's two-day earnings total $29,200. (Jeopardy Productions Inc. photo)

By Diana Nollen/ SourceMedia

Iowa City native Paul Nelson did it again.

He defended his “Jeopardy!” crown in an episode that aired at 11:30 a.m. Monday (11/5/12) in Eastern Iowa. With a $15,200 win, his two-day total jumped to $29,200.

Nelson, 23, a legislative correspondent in Sen. Chuck Grassley’s Washington, D.C., office, again knew most of the questions to political answers in the long-running game show where contestants supply their replies in question form.

He was in the lead with $18,600 going into the Final Jeopardy category: Broadway Musicals. With a conservative wager, he managed to pull out a $15,200 win even though he erred by writing down “Les Miserables” instead of “Chicago” for the longest-running American musical in Broadway history.

His formidable opponents were law school student Shari Dwoskin of Montreal and retired paralegal Bobbi Hiltibidal of Topeka, Kan.

To see how Nelson fares on Election Day, tune in to “Jeopardy!” at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday (11/6/12) on KWWL Channel 7.