May 21, 2012

Fire destroys historic shool in Lowden

A weekend fire destroyed a historic school house in the eastern Iowa town of Lowden. No one was injured in the 4th of July fire at the old Trinity Lutheran School, which was built in 1920. It was turned into an apartment building when the school closed in 1982.

Charlene Bachmann was the last person to teach in the school. "I really enjoyed teaching here," Bachmann said Sunday as she looked at the charred remains. "The building will be gone but the memories will still be here." Kirk Steinke attended school at Trinity Lutheran and was one of the firefighters responding to the scene. He says it was difficult watching childhood memories go up in flames.

"In a way, it’s gonna be worse now seeing how long it’s going to take to tear it down," Steinke said. "It’s been around a long time." Trinity Lutheran Church Reverand Victor Young says the community can be proud of what took place in the old school. "(People have) very fond memories and are very thankful for the good education they received. A lot of fun things happened here and of course people remember those all of those good times," Young said. "Buildings come and buildings go, but what’s more important is what happened in the building during the years of service."

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

 

Hawaiian arrested in Cedar Rapids for driving stolen Illinois car

Cedar Rapids police working the scene of a one-vehicle crash that killed a man wound up arresting a woman driving a stolen car.

On Sunday morning, a 61-year-old Cedar Rapids man driving on Highway 30 in the Cedar Rapids area was killed when his pick-up went off the road. He wasn’t wearing a seat belt and was ejected from the truck.

Police parked two squad cars as a barricade in order to divert traffic off Highway 30 and around the wreck. Two officers were directing traffic, too, but according to cops the driver of a white 1993 Buick Century "decided the flashing red lights did not apply to them" and drove around the squad car barricade — toward the accident scene.

The driver — 39-year-old Cheryl Marie Rosenberg — then realized her error and stopped. Police discovered she was driving a car that had been stolen from Quincy, Illinois. According to cops, when asked why she failed to stop for the flashing red lights or the two officers who told her to stop, she said: "I’m not from around here." Rosenberg is from Hawaii.

She’s been charged with second-degree theft, failure to comply with a police order and driving without insurance.

Fireworks a big draw for baseball

The July fourth holiday means fireworks and big crowds for professional baseball teams in Iowa and fans will have a number of chances to catch and game and celebrate Independence Day. The Sioux City Explorers will offer fans two chances to watch fireworks after American Association games against St. Paul on Friday and Saturday night.

Explorers general manager Shane Tritz says the fireworks have become an annual part of the celebration in the Siouxland area. He says they requested to be home on the 3rd and 4th as it’s a tradition they want to continue.

Tritz says The two nights will feature the biggest crowds of the season as they sell out for the 4th. He says some teams don’t want to be in town for the 4th as their town has a fireworks display that could trump the one at the ballpark. So, he says some teams want the date, others don’t.

The Burlington Bees will offer a fireworks display after Saturday night’s game against Wisconsin. Bees general manager Chuck Brockett who says the Midwest League tries to ensure that every team gets either the third or fourth for a home game as they can get big crowds.

Brockett says it’s important to have the 3rd or 4th as crowds have not been good on the 5th. Brockett says the Bees will offer just one of several fireworks displays in the area.

The Quad Cities River Bandits will have a fireworks display after tonight’s game against Burlington. The Clinton Lumberkings will offer fireworks after tomorrow night’s doubleheader against Kane County. Fans are invited to remain in the stadium after the Cedar Rapids Kernels take on the River Bandits on Saturday night to watch the fireworks offered by the city.

The Iowa Cubs close out a brief homestand this evening against Oklahoma City and will have fireworks for the second straight night. 

Witnesses say plane that crashed in northwest Iowa had engine trouble

Witnesses say a plane that crashed near Sheldon last month had an engine problem. Three men from Wisconsin died June 23 when the single-engine Piper crashed during a flight from Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, to a hunting trip in South Dakota.

A preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board says two witnesses saw the plane at a low altitude and described the engine as "coughing , sputtering and missing." They also reported the engine quit, restarted and quit again. About five minutes later, they heard sirens and emergency vehicles.

The plane touched down in a cornfield, traveled through the field about 100 feet and hit a ditch near a gravel road before nosing over. 

O’Brien County sheriff’s office identified the men as 64-year-old Francis Allegretti of Cambridge, Wisconsin; 60-year-old Thomas Boos of Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin; and 65-year-old Malcolm McMillan of Milton, Wisconsin. The plane’s owner was also from Milton, Wisconsin, but he was not on the flight.

Time catches up to Fayette World War II reunions

Time has finally caught up to a unique group of students from tiny northeast Iowa high school. Some 150 students who attended Fayette Consolidated High School during the World War Two years of 1941 to 1945 started meeting as a group in 1968. After 31 years of reunions –the one they held in early June of this year is expected to be their last.

Eighty-four-year-old Tom McGee, a 1943 graduate, says age has taken its toll and fewer classmates have been able to make the reunions held every two years. While the reunions are ending their stories will live on in a documentary McGhee is putting together. McGee says having five different classes come together like this was a little out of the ordinary.

McGee says they were unusually well bonded as a group out of high school and the bond continues today. He says they were “unusually successful” in their service in the war and their careers afterward. McGee says the group is a microcosm of what Tom Brokaw called “The Greatest Generation.” McGee says their success in life came out of a tough beginning.

“We weren’t really a very lucky generation, we were children during the Great Depression,” McGee says, “all during the depression, we did not have sufficient funds for all the things we would like to do. One of the results of that is we had to look at the basics, we had to decide what it is we were gonna buy, food, clothing, shelter.” He says that caused them to look at the resources they had in a very conservative way.

McGeee says a sense of duty caused them to join up to fight in World War Two. He says many students volunteered before they were 18 after getting their parents permission. McGee graduated high school at 17 and he says many like him joined the service right after graduation. McGee says the war opened up new experiences for the small-town kids.

“A farm boy who probably would never have gone anywhere but to a neighboring farm, or something of that nature, suddenly had been in SanFrancisco or Hawaii, lots of different places in the world,” McGee says. McGee says they were children who went to war and had matured tremendously after seeing the horrors of war. He says that maturity made them take advantage of the G-I bill and they went to college and were serious about it and got on with their lives.

McGee now lives in Ames and is a professor emeritus at Iowa State University. He says several other members of the class went on to great careers after the war, including the late William Andres, the former chairman and C.E.O. of Dayton Hudson Corporation.

He plans to donate a copy of the documentary on the Fayette war years students to the state historical society once it is complete. 

Gun control group disbands after losing funding

An Iowa group once active in lobbying for gun control has disbanded after losing a major grant. The November 1st coalition began after the November 1, 1991 shootings on the University of Iowa campus and was later renamed Iowans for the Prevention of Gun Violence.

U-I professor Rex Honey served on the board of directors and hopes to revive the group. “I will try in autumn to get some students involved at the University of Iowa, given that the campus was what started our organization in the first place,” Honey said. “So, it’s not that we don’t think there’s an issue any longer.”

Honey says most recently the group has relied on volunteers to lobby the legislature. “There was a grant with the Joyce foundation for a period of close to a decade from the mid 90s well into this decade, and that funding did end,” Honey said.

“That meant we could no longer hire staff, so everything was done on a volunteer basis.” The organization recently helped stop a bill to loosen restrictions on county officials who issue gun permits.

Honey says the recent tragic death of Aplington Parkersburg football coach Ed Thomas shows the need for a comprehensive look at the relationship between mental illness and gun violence. The 1991 shootings on the U-I campus left six people dead, including the gunman who shot himself. 

Name of pilot released in fatal Latimer crash

Authorities have released the name of the pilot killed in Friday afternoon’s plane crash in rural Franklin County. He is identified as 44-year-old David Colgazier of Latimer.

Colgazier was operating a single engine Cessna plane when it crashed two miles north of Beed’s Lake State Park near Hampton. A spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration said the crash is being investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board. There are no further details into the cause of the crash.