Friday,  Aug. 30, 2013 • Vol. 15--No. 46 • 14 of 33

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on April 1.
• Authorities say they discovered Holland was a convicted sex offender after police responded to a domestic complaint in March 2012.
• Holland was convicted of second degree rape in Brown County, South Dakota, in September 2003.
• Investigators say Holland and his wife had moved to North Dakota to operate Exclusive Tan in West Fargo. Holland failed to notify authorities of his new job, as is required for a registered sex offender.
• U.S. District Judge Ralph Erickson on Thursday sentenced Holland to seven months in prison, followed by seven months of home confinement.

Midwest hot, dry spell brings back drought worries
DAVID PITT, Associated Press

• DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- A growing season that began unusually wet and cold in the Midwest is finishing hot and dry, renewing worries of drought and its impact on crops.
• Temperatures soared to records in recent days in parts of the region, reaching nearly 100 degrees in some areas. The heat wave struck many farm states -- from the Dakotas to Wisconsin, down through Missouri -- that have seen too little rain this growing season.
• "It's about the worst case scenario we could have with these high temperatures and the lack of water with soil moisture declining," said Roger Elmore, an agronomy professor at Iowa State University.
• A wet, cool spring delayed planting and slowed crop growth -- but it also replenished soil moisture in many crop producing states, causing some of last year's widespread drought to retreat. The rain stopped in July in many of those states, however, and as the soil dried out, the heat set in and stressed corn and soybean crops.
• The southeast Iowa city of Burlington, which is surrounded by corn fields, had its wettest spring on record at 19.23 inches of precipitation, nearly 8 inches above normal. Yet it's now on track to have its driest summer on record, with only 3.86 inches so far, 8.41 inches below normal.
• Wayne Humphries farms about 1,000 acres about 45 miles north of Burlington at Columbus Junction. He grows corn and soybeans and raises hogs.
• He said he delayed planting by about 30 days because of wet fields and now is watching the lower leaves of cornstalks turn brown from lack of moisture. He hasn't seen a measurable rain for 30 days.
• Soybean plants are suffering too as seeds are developing in the pods.

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