February 9, 2012

Drake soccer team to wrap up spring schedule

The Drake men’s soccer team will close out a brief spring schedule with an exhibition against the Des Moines Menace on Saturday night. Members of the Premier Development League, the Menace open their regular season next Wednesday night.

Drake coach Sean Holmes says they are allowed to play five dates every spring and they try to play local games to keep withing their budget. He says it will be a good way for his team to head into the summer, as it is the last chance for the guys to put an impression in the coaching staff’s mind.

Drake graduated six seniors last year and they are looking to fill in the holes from that NCAA tourney team.

Drake made it all the way to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament last year.

Vietnam vets honored at state capitol ceremony

A ceremony in Des Moines today honored Iowa’s Vietnam War Veterans. The third annual recognition event was held in front of the Vietnam Memorial on the State Capitol grounds. Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs Executive Director Patrick Palmersheim told the crowd their service was a reminder that freedom has a cost.

“As we remember our Vietnam Veterans today, let us console the grieving and protect their legacy. How else can we, the living, repay such a debt? Let us remember the 869 Iowans that are listed on this wall who have paid the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom,” Palmersheim said. Jim Cash of Ventura, Iowa served in Vietnam from June of 1967 to June of ’68.

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DOT getting annual traffic count survey underway

The Iowa Department of Transportation is getting its annual traffic count underway — with the focus this year on the southeastern part of the state. The D.O.T.’s Mark Hansen says they try to cover one fourth of the state each year. They use several methods to count the traffic. He says some temporary employees will actually sit at intersections and count traffic, while they also use electronic portable devices where black tubes are spread across a roadway to count the cars.

While they are counting the traffic volume, Hansen says they have another tool that gives them a visual record of the roadways. Hansen says they have a photolink van that travels the roadways and takes pictures linked to a G.P.S. system.

He says they look at guard rails, sign age, shoulders and pavement condition, so they have a track record of what the roads looked like years ago compared with now. Hansen says the counting and pictures allow them to know which roadways need work due to their condition and use.

“We like to view it as a wise investment for determining where we should spend the taxpayer dollars,” Hansen says. Approximately 40 temporary summer employees and several permanent staff members will be involved in the traffic monitoring programs.

Paddy O’Prado may race in Preakness

The Iowa-connected horse that finished third in the Kentucky Derby may run in the Preakness. 

Des Moines attorney Jerry Crawford formed Donegal Racing and invited friends to join two years ago after he purchased the horse named Paddy O’Prado.  Crawford, one of 10 Iowans who invested in the horse, flies out of Des Moines this afternoon, to watch the horse train in Kentucky.

“I’m eager to see him with my own eyes tomorrow, maybe also Sunday, but at least tomorrow,” Crawford says.  “And then, after evaluating how he seems to be doing and how ready he seems to be, we’ll make a decision on the Preakness.” 

The Preakness will be run on Saturday, May 15 in Baltimore, Maryland at the Pimlico Racetrack.  The horses run a mile and three-sixteenths race, slightly shorter than the mile-and-a-quarter track at Churchill Downs.  Crawford says the length of the track is neither better nor worse for his horse.

“He’s a pretty push-button horse. He can run on the front.  He can come from behind,” Crawford says. “That’s a more speed-favoring track, so if he does run I think you’ll see him a little closer to the front than you did in the Derby.” 

 The Preakness is the second stop in horse racing’s so-called “Triple Crown.”  Crawford says the team hasn’t decided whether the horse will run in the Belmont Stakes on June 5.

“Oh there’s always a chance. I would say the odds are against it, but you have to wait and let the horse to tell you,” Crawford says. “Their very good about communicating how they feel. They do it through their personality, through the way they eat or don’t eat and through the fluidity they show you on the track and I feel a special responsibility to all of our horses to let them tell us rather than us saying, ‘We want to be in this race, so you’re going there.’” 

Some horses show nerves at “showtime,” but Crawford says Paddy O’Prado seems to enjoy the crowd at the Derby. “Not only was he calm, he was cocky.  He kind of loved the attention and after the race — if you watch what we call the ‘gallop out’ which is the horses, once they get past the wire — he just kept going,” Crawford says.  “…He’s kind of what we call a throw-back horse.  He’s an old-fashioned horse bred to run a long, long ways.  He has a huge heart — we’ve measured it, so we know — and that usually leads to endurance.”

Crawford initially thought Paddy O’Prado would skip the Preakness and run in the Belmont Stakes.

“I knew he could run a mile and a half, which you have to do at the Belmont, and I thought it would be nice to givehim five weeks to fully recover but what everybody’s telling me is forget about fully recovering, we’ve already gone through that phase,” Crawford says, with a laugh.  “You know these are the three, cornerstone races available in any horse’s entire career if you add in the Breeder’s Cup Championship and so his value as a stallion will be determined in significant measure by how he does in either the Preakness or the Belmont.”

Crawford is a prominent Des Moines attorney who is active in Democratic Party politics.  He’s also been in the horse business, buying his first race horse three decades ago.  Paddy O’Prado was in a group of eight colts that Crawford bought in the fall of 2008.  Crawford is perhaps a bit giddy when talking about this year’s racing season and Paddy O’Prado’s success.

“I’m a farm kid from Iowa and I grew up loving horses and I’ve loved horses my whole life,” Crawford says.  “It has been the dream of a lifetime and I’ve been able to share it with my friends and my family.” 

The 10-person ownership group Crawford heads is also known by the name “Derby Dreams.”  Paddy O’Prado is trained by Dale Romans in Kentucky.  The Baltimore Sun is already reporting that Paddy O’Prado will run in the Preakness and that Kent Desormeaux, the jockey who rode the horse to third in the Derby, will ride him in the Preakness.  Desormeaux has jockeyed two other horses to victory in the Preakness.

Federal commission proposes settlement for Atalissa bunkhouse men

A federal commission has ruled the mentally retarded men who lived in a crude “bunkhouse” in the eastern Iowa town of Atalissa had at least one million dollars of their pay siphoned off by the Texas company that ran the bunkhouse. In February of 2009 state officials removed the 21 men who still lived in the old elementary school that had been converted into a bunkhouse for mentally retarded men.

The men had worked at the turkey processing plant in nearby West Liberty. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found the Texas company known as “Henry’s Turkey Service” that ran the bunkhouse collected the men’s wages and gave little of it back to the men.

The City of Atalissa charged the company six-hundred dollars a month to rent the school building. The federal agency found the company made about $10,000 a month in housing charges collected from the men’s paychecks.

The federal agency also found the men were paid far below minimum wage — an average of 41 cents an hour — to work at the plant. They often performed jobs for which other workers were paid $10 an hour. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has proposed a cash settlement for the mentally retarded men who lived at the bunkhouse.

Cedar Rapids schools look to close minority gap

School districts across the state are looking for ways to help minority students catch up with their white classmates. In Cedar Rapids, school leaders met with community members Thursday at the African American Museum to talk about how to help minority and low-income students do better. Kathleen Conley is principal at Wilson Elementary in Cedar Rapids.

“When we look at all students, the achievement is pretty good. When we look at individual students, there are some gaps,” Conley said. Overall, minority and low-income students in Iowa are not scoring as high on exams, getting as involved in sports and activities or even graduating at the same rate as their Caucasian, middle-class classmates. Cedar Rapids Schools Student Equity Director Aaron Green says all students face challenges that could prevent them from reaching their potential – but some face more than others.

“We believe strongly that it’s not just the school system, it’s the whole community that it takes to close that gap,” Green said. The district has tried to recruit more minority staff members in the past…even taking trips to cities like Detroit and St. Louis. But, they’ve only had limited success. Officials believe community conversations could help them get better results in the future. Twenty years ago, only one in 20 Iowa students was a minority. Today that number is about one in six. According to the Iowa Department of Education, minorities represent only 2% of the state’s K-12 teachers.

By Mark Geary, KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids

Iowa Dental Foundation next free clinic set for Cedar Rapids

The Iowa Dental Foundation will hold its third “Mission of Mercy” (MOM) free dental clinic in November in Cedar Rapids. Dentist Richard Hettinger of Sioux City is chair of the event and says they had looked at Cedar Rapids before the last MOM event in Newton two years ago.

Hettinger says they were looking at Newton and then the flooding happened in Cedar Rapids and he looked into doing the event in Cedar Rapids.

“I talked to people in Cedar Rapids and they were just so bound up with just trying to dig out that they didn’t think they could mount an effective event,” Hettinger says. He says things have improved and they will take the event to Cedar Rapids on November fifth and sixth.

“Certainly the reconstruction is not finished, they are still working all over town, but a few more people can see the light of day and we can mount a very effective event here,” Hettinger says.

Dental professionals from across the state donate their time during the two days to provide all kinds of free dental work to the people who attend the clinic. Hettinger says they also need some volunteer help to make the event run. He says there are a lot of things that need to be done during the event, and they have more non-dental volunteers than they do professionals. Volunteer work includes feeding everyone, taking care of kids, cleaning up, sterilizing instruments, and a number of other things.

Hettinger says the volunteers have provided an estimated one-point-four million dollars in free dental care to nearly three-thousand patients in the first two clinics. He says the volunteers get a payback too. “The main thing that seems to happen at these events is that everybody smiles,” Hettinger explains, “the patients are smiling because they are being taken care of by some of the kindest people in the state, the people providing the care are smiling because they get to do what they love to do every day for people who truly need it and appreciate the fact that we’re doing it.”

For more details on the November clinic, go on-line at: www.IowaMOM.org.