Wednesday, August 20, 2014

A road trip to see an incredible learning center

By Jeff Orvis

This week, there have been several Facebook photos of kids getting ready for their first day of school. Most of these pictures have been posted by proud parents who are probably also silently breathing a little sigh of relief that they don't have to find something for their youngsters to do five days a week, at least until the first school holiday.

It's been a few decades since my two took those early steps off to school. I suppose this would be an opportunity to get all teary-eyed with melancholy, wondering where all the years went. But with more than 35 years in the community news profession, I was privileged to live these days over and over again with members of the community in which I lived.

For more than 17 years, my first stop away from home was in the progressive town of Independence, IA. When I moved there, we had a discount store (not Wal-Mart), a fast food place, a couple of grocery stores and a thriving downtown. I had to drive 15 miles north to Oelwein to get a taco, but that was no big problem.

The town also had four public school buildings, with another elementary school located seven miles south in the town of Rowley. It was also home to a smaller, but wonderful Catholic school for grades K-12.
All four of the public school buildings in town appeared to be in good condition. They were well kept and at least sufficient for the students. In the first few years I was there, the district built a stand alone administration building on the campus of an elementary and middle school.

In the subsequent years, it became apparent that the high school was in definite need of improvement. Because of a lack of undeveloped property, there was little room for expansion. The track team, for example, had to go across town to run on the cinder track. The football field was on the high school campus, but no room for a track. Classroom space was at a premium and there were already a couple of portable classrooms being used when I arrived in 1977.

The district's patrons came to realize that something had to be done. I was happy to serve on one facilities committee. We took a couple of trips to high schools in Eastern Iowa looking at how they improved their buildings. Indee had no theater, for example. So we considered how we might renovate the gym to make it a theater, since there was already a stage at one end of the room.

I left that city in 1997 and the high school problem had not yet been resolved. In the following few years, an attempt was made to pass a bond issue for a new high school. It failed, then failed again and again and again. Finally, after at least five tries, it passed. And that leads to where I spent a recent afternoon.

Since it has been several years since I lived there, I realized that some of the teachers I remembered were retired and unfortunately, a few have passed away. One of my good friends is Loren Pink, who is the districts juvenile court liaison officer. That means he is paid through a combination of district and court funds and is in charge with steering wayward students back onto the right path. I knew I wanted to stop by and at least leave him a message if he was busy. As luck would have it, I arrived just as the students were dismissing and he met me at the front door, which shocked both of us. He became a very good guide.

It had been at least two or three years since I had last traveled to Independence. The last time I was there, the city had a new Fareway grocery store, new Wal-Mart on the south side of town and a new movie theater. But the same high school was in full use.

The school board was able to obtain several acres of land on the southwest edge of town, near the Mental Health Institute and near the Middle School campus. After more than $22 million later, the district is in its second year in a magnificent building that includes classroom wings for the junior high and high school students, a big commons area, a towering glass-enclosed entrance atrium with enough space to make one wonder how soon a Starbucks stand would be included. The gym, actually it's more like a field house, has room for three full basketball courts and seats 2,000. The weight room would make many small colleges envious and the wrestling room is one of the biggest I've ever seen, room enough for three full-size competition mats side by side. The community finally has a professional quality theater, which seats 700. The district also received a federal grant of more than $700,000 to include safe rooms to provide safe shelter in the event of bad weather. Pink said in a recent drill, the entire student body was able to find room in the safe room area, with room to spare.

While the building was completed a year ago, crews just recently completed work on the field turf installation on the football field, which is surrounded by an all-weather track. Makes me wish Coach Lyle Leinbaugh, former athletic director, track coach and football coach, was still alive to see these improvements. One of the best features of the new complex is its location. Pink pointed out that there is plenty of room for future expansion in at least two directions.

As students prepare for a new school year, unfortunately there are still many in this state and around the country who will be going back to antiquated buildings, with poor heating and cooling systems, crumbling walls and some with steps that would be very challenging to physically challenged students. The school I attended, Pleasant Valley, is a growing district that is so far keeping up with technology and educational standards. Independence has made a definite commitment with its new facility, after years of uncertainty. 
And in the past five years, Belle Plaine has addressed facility issues with wonderful improvements to its two attendance centers.

Rural Iowa is an aging population. With a tough economy, the thought of any tax increase for new school facilities can be a tough sell. I am nearing retirement age and with no immediate hope of school-aged grandchildren, it might be logical that I would also be hesitant to favor school improvements. But I've spent so many years in so many schools that I am aware of just how important it is to make comfortable, functional centers for learning.

Congratulations to the folks in Independence for finally allowing for the construction of this wonderful new building. If you ever visit the school, take a few moments to stop and look at a large plaque near the front entrance where dozens of contributors are listed. It takes a village to raise a child. That kid going through the front doors of the school today might be your heart surgeon in the future!

Friday, August 8, 2014

We cheered for them on Saturday, will we see them on Sunday?

By Jeff Orvis

Ever since they pulled on the pads for their first youth league competition, they've been the big men on campus. They were the best on their junior high teams and that's how they made the high school varsity. They were the best on their high school teams and among the best in town, if the town was Chicago or New York. College coaches spent time in their living rooms, trying to impress them, as well as the parents.

They may have gotten some indication of the level of competition for attention when they were in the midst of the college recruiting process. But even then, there were well over 200 football programs that may have courted them.

The greatest dose of humility that many of these young men face comes when they play their last college football game. If they are really, really good, they may get a call from one of 32 NFL teams, either during the draft or immediately after when the free agent signing period begins.

If the call comes and they receive the invitation to preseason camp, reality slaps them in the face when they become just one of up to 100 young men with the same experiences, the same dreams.

The state of Iowa has never been considered the hotbed of prep football talent. But it does have several great college programs, including three state universities, with wonderful coaches. If the coaches are as good at salesmanship as they are in teaching gridiron fundamentals, they convince a fair number of those best in their high school kids to come out to Ames or Iowa City or Cedar Falls.

This story is about the select few of those young men who take that next step toward earning a living chasing that dream. For several years, as a newspaper and then online columnist and now as a blogger, I have marked this time of year with a look at the preseason rosters of the 32 NFL teams. From those rosters, I've discovered 54 players who played their college ball in the state of Iowa. As is usually the case, 34 of those players played for the Iowa Hawkeyes. There were 15 who played at Iowa State, three at Northern Iowa and one each at Drake and Coe. Twenty-two of the 32 teams have one or more players with Iowa ties. Buffalo, the New York Jets, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Green Bay, Carolina and Tampa Bay have four each.

There are 11 rookies in this group. The player with the greatest longevity is Atlanta's Jonathan Babineaux, a 10-year veteran from Iowa. Players with nine years experience include Drake place kicker Billy Cundiff of Cleveland, Chad Greenway of Iowa and Minnesota and Iowa State's Tim Dobbins of Atlanta.

With nearly a month until the start of the regular season, some of these players will stay on regular roster, some will sign with the practice squad, some will be cut and look elsewhere and a few will have to start on their next careers. The following is a list of those players, with their uniform numbers, names, positions, ages, height and weight, years of pro experience and their colleges.

Iowa NFL connections

Buffalo Bills

22
Fred Jackson
RB
33
6-1
216
8
Coe

84
Scott Chandler
TE
29
6-7
260
8
Iowa

82
Tony Moeaki
TE
27
6-3
252
5
Iowa

46
Deon Broomfield
DB
23
6-0
206
R
Iowa State

New England Patriots

52
James Morris
LB
22
6-2
240
R
Iowa

New York Jets

76
Markus Zusevics
OT
25
6-5
300
3
Iowa

59
A.J. Edds
LB
26
6-4
256
4
Iowa

53
Jeremiah George
LB
22
5-11
234
R
Iowa State

41
Jeremy Reeves
DB
24
5-7
176
1
Iowa State

Denver Broncos

50
L.J. Fort
LB
24
6-0
230
1
Northern Iowa

Oakland Raiders

43
Jansen Watson
DB
23
5-9
177
R
Iowa State

San Diego Chargers

78
Chad Rinehart
OG
29
6-5
321
7
Northern Iowa

Baltimore Ravens

65
Reggie Stephens
C
26
6-3
321
2
Iowa State

61
Brett Van Sloten
OT
23
6-5
300
R
Iowa

72
Kelechi Osemele
OG
25
6-5
330
3
Iowa State

73
Marshal Yanda
OG
29
6-3
305
8
Iowa

Cleveland Browns

71
Ahtyba Rubin
DE
28
6-2
325
7
Iowa State

58
Christian Kirksey
LB
21
6-2
235
R
Iowa

8
Billy Cundiff
PK
34
6-1
212
9
Drake

Houston Texans

87
C.J. Fiedorowicz
TE
22
6-6
265
R
Iowa

66
Conor Boffeli
OG
22
6-4
304
R
Iowa

52
Jeff Tarpinian
LB
26
6-3
240
4
Iowa

Indianapolis Colts

11
Josh Lenz
WR
23
6-0
194
1
Iowa State

35
David Sims
DB
27
5-10
207
2
Iowa State

Jacksonville Jaguars

2
Ricky Stanzi
QB
26
6-4
228
4
Iowa

Tennessee Titans

23
Shonn Greene
RB
28
5-11
233
6
Iowa

97
Karl Klug
DE
26
6-3
278
4
Iowa

Dallas Cowboys

49
Casey Kreiter
C
23
6-1
250
R
Iowa

59
Anthony Hitchens
LB
22
6-0
235
R
Iowa

Philadelphia Eagles

64
Matt Tobin
OT
24
6-6
303
2
Iowa

61
Julian Vandervelde
OG
26
6-2
300
3
Iowa

54
Jake Knott
LB
23
6-2
243
2
Iowa State

24
Bradley Fletcher
CB
28
6-0
200
6
Iowa

Washington Redskins

73
Adam Gettis
OG
25
6-2
305
3
Iowa

76
Jake McDonough
DE
24
6-5
280
1
Iowa State

San Francisco 49ers

69
Carter Bykowski
OT
24
6-7
306
1
Iowa State

Detroit Lions

71
Riley Reiff
OT
25
6-6
313
3
Iowa

Green Bay Packers

75
Bryan Bulaga
OT
25
6-5
314
5
Iowa

76
Mike Daniels
DE
25
6-0
305
3
Iowa

33
Micah Hyde
CB
23
6-0
197
2
Iowa

40
Tanner Miller
DB
22
6-1
211
R
Iowa

Minnesota Vikings

87
Allen Reisner
TE
25
6-3
255
4
Iowa

52
Chad Greenway
LB
31
6-3
237
9
Iowa

27
Shaun Prater
CB
24
5-10
190
3
Iowa

Atlanta Falcons

95
Jonathan Babineaux
DT
32
6-2
300
10
Iowa

44
Pat Angerer
LB
27
6-0
236
4
Iowa

52
Tim Dobbins
LB
31
6-1
234
9
Iowa State

Carolina Panthers

15
Marvin McNutt
WR
25
6-2
225
2
Iowa

91
Colin Cole
DT
34
6-2
330
8
Iowa

56
A.J. Klein
LB
23
6-1
245
2
Iowa State

30
Charles Godfrey
FS
28
5-11
210
7
Iowa

Tampa Bay Bucs

82
Brandon Myers
TE
28
6-3
256
6
Iowa

94
Adrian Clayborn
DE
26
6-3
280
4
Iowa

-
James Ruffin
DE
27
6-4
263
1
Northern Iowa

29
Leonard Johnson
CB
24
5-10
202
3
Iowa State

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Some pleasant summer memories before the video game era

By Jeff Orvis

The first of August. It's a time when kids are probably dreading heading back to school, even as they wake up each day wondering how they will fill the time and not be bored. Parents meanwhile are counting the days until their little darlings are placed in the capable hands of educators, so that for a few hours each day at least, curing boredom won't be the parents' problem.

Through the magic of way too many TV channels and reruns, I have rediscovered “The Waltons.” For those of you who may not remember 30-40 years ago, it was a show featuring a family of seven children, including an elder son who narrated each episode. The family lived on Waltons Mountain in West Virginia during and after the Great Depression. As the kids grew, their summers were filled with chores, including feeding and tending to some livestock, helping in their father's sawmill or their mother and grandmother with household chores. Free time was spent exploring the wonderful wilderness surrounding the homestead.

Naturally, being involved in the writing business for some years, I gravitated toward John-Boy, the elder son. I didn't have six brothers and sisters, one sister seemed to be enough when I was growing up. But in each episode, as John-Boy remembers different times of his childhood, it stokes the fire of my memory (how's that for fancy description) of what life was like for me way back in the dark ages growing up near the Quad-Cities.

I may be the only person you know who spent some of his formative years living on an estate. Before I started kindergarten, our family moved to an estate that had been developed by a local industrialist and was then the property of Alcoa, where my dad worked. There were two homes on the property. Before you jump to conclusions, let me explain that we didn't live in the 33-room mansion, but in a two-bedroom apartment over a three-car garage. From the attic to the basement, or sub-basement, this brick building had five floors. My bedroom overlooked the mansion and I was probably the only kid in Riverdale Elementary School with a tennis court in my front yard.

Our back yard was bordered by a ravine with thick woods. Over in the corner of the property, was what we called “the dump.” Years before, it was used to dump cement and other building materials from a nearby neighborhood that had been carved out of a farm. More on that neighborhood later.

Alcoa was in charge of general maintenance on the property. That meant that they cut down the diseased Dutch elms and scooped the snow from the drive leading up to the property from the highway. We were in charge of mowing our front and back yards. The tennis court was usable, but it was made out of cement slabs and you had to know how to gauge the bounces when the tennis ball hit the cracks. It was also a great place for yours truly to learn how to ride a bike. I don't remember when that great day came, but I know I was probably the last kid in my class to take those training wheels off the bike!

As I said, my dad worked at Alcoa in the metallurgical testing department and as the plant photographer. Mom stayed home until we reached junior high age. Besides taking good care of the house, she would sometimes go off for a couple of hours, wandering through our woods and bringing home buckets of wild black raspberries. There was probably some mushroom hunting involved at times, but I avoided those things. But Mom made the best jelly out of the berries and I just assumed that everybody had homemade jelly all winter.

For any younger readers out there, I should explain that this was an era before home computers, video games, 100+ channel cable TV or even color TV for that matter. But we looked forward to days like we've experienced around here for the past few weeks. We would finish breakfast, head for the door and Mom wouldn't see us until lunch time. When you have tennis to play, woods to explore, forts to build and sisters to torment, who needs video?

We had our share of wildlife around the house. We might see a deer or two each year, plenty of squirrels and birds and an occasional woodchuck. Why we never encountered a skunk in those woods I'll never know, but I'm eternally grateful! We also had a couple of cats who adopted us. In fact one of those cats led to my biggest mishap in those early years. Our apartment was reached by an outside wooden stairway. One day, I was sitting on the top step and leaned down to pet our cat on the next step. Next thing I knew, I was tumbling head-over-heels down about 14 steps. My sister ran over and just stared at me and I had to growl, “Go get Mom!” Somehow, I was helped up the steps and spent the rest of the day in bed. But I think I was good as new the next day – no broken bones!

When I was in junior high, we had an opportunity to move to a rental house, also owned by Alcoa, that was about a half-mile away. It meant a third bedroom and life closer to a real neighborhood. The final straw came when we began hearing a family of raccoons that had taken up residence in the attic of the apartment.
Life in the neighborhood originally known as “Pleasant Hills” was a different experience. It also gave us an opportunity to become friends with a family that resembled the Waltons, at least in the number of kids running around. But that's another story for the next time.

The point of all of this is if you are a parent or grandparent, there might be great value in jotting down memories of your own childhood. If you came from a stable, loving two-parent family, you were truly blessed. But even if you had your struggles, there had to be some good times to remember. Memories don't cost anything, especially the good ones!