Jane Cotterell, George Dane, Hani Elkadi, Bob Elliott, Bump Elliott, Shirley Frauenholtz,
Annie Gardner, Christine Grant, Dale Hibbs, Loren Horton, Glenn
Jablonski, Roy Justis, Nancy Kaiser, Grace Katzenmeyer, Gary Kellogg,
Noah Kemp, Jae-On Kim, Hubert Krotz,
Marguerite Kuebrich, Ethel Madison, Jane McCune, Betty McKray, Bob Oldis, Grace Olmsted,
Joe Panozzo, Marge Penney, Dianna Penny, John Raffensperger, Mary Beth Schuppert,
Marvin Sims, Art Small, Madge Thornton Created by the Iowa City
Press-Citizen
Copyright 1999-2008
... don't lose sight of the journey.
Jane Cotterell
- Age: 82.
- Born: Aug. 6, 1925, in
Hollywood, Calif.
- Moved to Iowa City in:2002.
- Family: Two daughters,
nine grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired from
operating a dance studio.
- Greatest accomplishment:
She refuses to take credit for it, but she is very proud of her
two daughters, whom she calls "truly wonderful women."
A piano sits in the corner of Jane Cotterell's living room. The
winter light from the woods out back filters in like a fog. Her cat,
Honey, curls up on a deck chair nearby, oblivious to the
conversation.
Music and dance always have been a part of Cotterell's world.
She was born in Hollywood (yes, that Hollywood) and lived in both
southern and northern California, and her love of the arts
accompanied her to Iowa when she moved to be closer to her daughters
and their families.
She taught ballet, modern dance, cotillion, ballroom and social
dancing. She knows some of the professional dancers on the TV show
"Dancing with the Stars."
"I thought the dancing was beautiful," she said. "But it becomes
a life-and-death matter. Who is going to win?"
She is encouraged that such shows have revitalized dancing. She
observes the dancing is more athletic, but it also has evolved into
more of an "in-your-face" performance.
"I sort of feel like that is unfortunate in a lot of ways," she
said.
At 82 she remains graceful in thought, style and movement. Her
advice flows naturally from her own passion.
"Goals are certainly important and necessary, but you shouldn't
lose sight of the journey," she said. "That has been very helpful to
me in my adult life. Sometimes you end up in a different place than
you thought you were going to be."
— Susan Harman
Be around good people.
George Dane
- Age: 85.
- Born in: Janesville, Wis.
- Family: Wife Marjorie,
daughter Janet, son Bob, daughter Mary Jo, son Bill and seven
grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired.
- Hobbies: Tinkering.
If you ask George Dane for one piece of advice, you'll get three.
But pressed to choose one motto, the 85-year-old will tell you
simply: "Be around good people."
"Find out where the good people are," Dane said.
For Dane, that happened by staying in Iowa City and having his
family close by. Life is richer surrounded by people who love you,
he said.
One of the most profound experiences in Dane's life occurred
while he was deployed overseas during World War II. He jokingly
described it as an "all-expense paid tour of Western Europe," but
also soberly talked about the 65 young men from his high school
class who never returned home.
"I didn't know them all, but I knew most of them," Dane said.
"They never had a chance to do anything for the community, to have
jobs, kids. They were cut in their prime. So as long as people
thought I was capable, I wanted to give something back."
As a result, Dane spent more than three years in active duty and
another 30 years in the Army Reserves. He also helped organize the
Military Affairs Association of Johnson County to assist veterans.
Aside from the military, Dane said he has tried to serve his
church.
For eight years, he led the finance committee for First United
Methodist. He became the first chairman who was not a minister.
Although he moved into Oaknoll Retirement Community several years
ago, Dane hasn't been able to sit still. He said he can't help but
"tinker" and continues to find things to fix or try to improve.
Reflecting on his life, Dane said the most important standard has
been one thing: "'Did you do the right thing when it's the right
thing to do and not because someone is peeking over your shoulder?"
he said.
Dane said he hoped he passed the test.
— Hieu Pham
... follow your passion.
Hani Elkadi
- Age: Hani said he thinks
a person's age is private, like religion. "I don't think age has
this importance."
- Born: In Istanbul,
Turkey.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
First in 1981, permanently in 1983.
- Family: Wife Ewa Bardach;
daughter Nina Bardach Elkadi, a second-grader at Horn
Elementary; dog, Cookie, a toy poodle.
- Occupation: Art and
science teacher at Elizabeth Tate High School in Iowa City.
- Greatest accomplishment:
I'm working on being the best father I can be."
Hani Elkadi describes his life as a search with a constant
mission for learning.
"I believe I will die as a learner," he said. "When you stop
learning, you stop life."
His life has taken different turns, spending years in medicine as
a surgeon, but now teaching art and science at Elizabeth Tate High
School.
Although some believe going into different fields shows a lack of
focus, "I think life is broader and wider than what we try to make
of it," Elkadi said.
That's why his advice is to follow your passion, not focus solely
on competition or the cost of living.
"If you follow your passion, you're going to be successful, and
if you're successful, you're going to be happy," he said.
In the beginning, Elkadi didn't follow his passion, instead going
toward what he called the "call of duty."
His love was art, but "art was not the best way to serve your
people," he said.
So he started studying medicine, becoming a surgeon for
international health organizations, serving areas of war, famine,
flood and drought.
He came to Iowa to be a part of the Writers' Workshop, but
continued in medicine.
He was selected University of Iowa College of Medicine Teacher of
the Year from 1985 to 1987, has published nearly 30 books and has
illustrated medical atlases.
He decided to leave medicine at his peak and went back to his
passion.
"If I had to advise somebody to do something, follow your
passion," he said. "In other words, follow your heart first and then
the mind later."
He said he believes that art was the reason why he was a
successful surgeon, because it is an application of humanity and
feeling, a combination of thinking and emotion.
"The biggest lesson that I learned from my life is that art is
the basis of science," he said. "People who value art are people who
really know how to deal with problems with life."
— Rachel Gallegos
... listen twice as much as you talk.
Bob Elliott
- Age: 72.
- Born: June 19, 1935, in
Chicago.
- Moved to: Ainsworth in
1945; Iowa City in 1965.
- Family: Wife Maggie, one
daughter, one grandson.
- Occupation: Retired from
ACT in 1998.
- Interesting fact: Bob was
born at home because his mother had whooping cough and was
turned away from the hospital.
Never one to pat himself on the back, former newspaper man, ACT
employee and Iowa City councilor Bob Elliott claims to have very few
words of wisdom.
However, spend a few minutes with him and you'll find that wisdom
is something he has no shortage of, whether it's quoting Shakespeare
or 19th century poets.
While Elliott seems to have gained a plethora of good advice in
his 72 years, one nugget of wisdom may explain why he's learned so
much.
"You have two ears and one mouth for good reasons," Elliott said.
"You should listen twice as much as you talk."
The practice of listening more than talking has served Elliott in
a number of his endeavors over the years. Early in his career,
Elliott was a sports reporter. For 30 years, from 1968 until his
retirement in 1998, Elliott used those skills working in human
resources for ACT. Several years after his retirement, Elliott
turned his ears to the community, serving one term as an Iowa City
councilor.
While much of the knowledge he's gained he seems to have gleaned
from his parents, Elliott keeps his ears open to virtually anyone,
picking up words of advice as he goes.
"I think you have to learn constantly," Elliott said. "I think
life is filled with a continuity of learning experiences."
However, Elliott said he's not one to give out advice unless it's
requested.
"I try not to give out advice or make suggestions unless they're
asked for," he said.
And while listening twice as much as he talks seems to have
served Elliott well in his life, he admits that sometimes, he has a
hard time following his own advice.
"I find that hard to practice sometimes because I enjoy talking,"
he said.
— Lee Hermiston
... be the things that you say.
Bump Elliott
- Age: 83.
- Born: Bloomington, Ill.
- Hobbies: Following UI
athletics.
- Family: Wife Barbara,
sons Bill and Bob, daughter Betsty, seven grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired UI
athletics director.
- Interesting fact: Bump's
favorite singer is Frank Sinatra.
Despite his accomplishments, Bump Elliott has largely been a man
without a plan.
"I aspire to be successful at the moment, at the time," said the
former coach and retired University of Iowa athletics director. "I
don't try to make longterm goals; I tried to act right at the
moment."
Elliott, 83, was the chief administrator of UI athletics for 21
years.
In his tenure, the program won 41 Big Ten championships and 11
NCAA titles. He also hired notable coaches such as Hayden Fry, Dan
Gable and Tom Davis.
Now retired, Elliott lives in Oaknoll Retirement Community with
his wife of 54 years, Barbara. He said he follows UI athletics,
attending as many games as he can.
"In my life I've been very fortunate and very lucky. Both things
have gone well, with my family and my profession," he said.
But his personal and professional successes are attributed to
more than pure luck - in both areas, Elliott said he has tried to
set an example.
"I felt that words are sometimes OK but not meaningful if you
don't live the part," he said. "It was important for me to be the
things that you say."
Those things include taking responsibility for his actions,
respecting others and - perhaps most importantly - looking for
goodness in people.
Elliott grew up a star athlete in his high school in Bloomington,
Ill. In his senior year, he decided to join the Marine Corps and was
called to active duty a year later.
After being discharged, Elliott attended the University of
Michigan, where played fullback on the football team. He made the
All-American team and was voted Most Valuable Player in the Big Nine
Conference to win the Chicago Tribune Silver Football trophy.
After graduation, Elliott said he didn't know what to do with his
life. As a result, he ended up in athletics. He became an assistant
backfield coach at Michigan and later was hired to be the assistant
coach at Oregon State.
As a coach, Elliott said he realized what he liked doing and what
he was good at, which was helping young people.
"Athletics is a lot of talking. They say a lot of things about
making the man or the woman, that kind of thing," he said. "I wanted
to do less talking and set an example."
— Hieu Pham
... live virtuously, with honesty and integrity.
Shirley Frauenholtz
- Age: 72.
- Born: Feb. 24, 1935, in
Clinton.
- Moved to West Liberty: 51
years ago from Princeton.
- Family: Husband Bob, two
children and two grandchildren.
- Occupation: House wife.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Being married 50 years.
For West Liberty resident Shirley Frauenholtz, some of the most
poignant words of advice she ever received came from a friend.
Frauenholtz, 72, attends a Christian fellowship group for an hour a
week at Simpson Nursing Home. That's where she met Wanda Elder, 90.
Being around Elder has changed her life, she said.
"She said one day, 'Choose carefully how you live your life, as
it may be the only Bible some people will ever read,'" Frauenholtz
said. "I think it kind of made me think about the life I live and
want to live."
Frauenholtz said she can't explain why the words have so much
meaning for her or why Elder - whom she just met not long ago - has
had such an impact on her.
"It just struck a chord with me, I think," she said. "She's just
got the most wonderful outlook on life. She's just such a kind
person."
Frauenholtz said she hopes she has taught the people in her life
to live virtuously and with honesty and integrity.
"I think you should live your life with the values that you can
pass to your children and grandchildren so they can look up to you,"
she said. "I think it should be practiced in your everyday lives."
Frauenholtz said being a good parent is one way people can have a
big impact on their legacy, if they choose to have children.
After her son was born, her mother came to stay with her a week.
When it was time for her mother to leave, Frauenholtz said she
remembers exactly what she said.
"She stopped at the gate and turned to me and said, 'Shirley, a
good mother has to have all the patience in the world,"' she said.
"Children need your love and patience the most when they are acting
up and being the least loveable."
But, Frauenholtz said, being an example to someone else means
being OK with making mistakes.
"Everyone can have a weakness," she said. "No one lives a perfect
life. Sometimes we get too critical of other people's lives. We're
not the judge."
— Kathryn Fiegen
... make the most of what's available.
Annie Gardner
- Age: 55.
- Born: Aug. 16, 1952, in
Grenada, Miss.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
2003.
- Family: Sons Wally Brown
and Martiza Anderson, and seven grandchildren.
- Interesting fact: Gardner
loves to travel, enjoys jazz music and used to compete in
several bowling leagues.
When the love of Annie Gardner's life moved to Iowa City, she was
not far behind.
"I was in love with my grandson," Gardner said. "When they moved
up here, I just had a fit."
Gardner, 55, followed her first grandson and his mother when they
left Chicago four years ago for Iowa City. Gardner knew she could
thrive in a new environment.
Her most valued advice is to make the most of what is available.
"There are so many things that are offered to you," Gardner said.
"If you take them and work with them, you'll be pretty good."
Gardner, who seems to know or meet someone everywhere she goes,
found a network of local support in the Neighborhood Centers of
Johnson County.
"I got to know a lot of nice people," she said.
She met the kind of people who help out in a crisis, such as the
morning Gardner woke up in pain so great she could not walk.
The pain she felt was rheumatoid arthritis, chronic arthritis
that occurs in joints on both sides of the body. People from the
centers ran errands for her and took her to appointments during her
worst times of sickness.
Gardner can no longer work in daycare like she used to. Yet she
refuses to let her ailments defeat her. Gardner worked with a job
coach to find a job safe for her condition.
"If I can work, I'm going to work," said Gardner, a cafeteria
attendant for a year now at Goodwill Industries of Southeast Iowa.
Each morning, she prepares the cafeteria, which she refers to as
"my kitchen," for employees and helps those with disabilities
prepare their food.
Gardner continues to devote a large part of her life to children.
Known to many as "Miss Annie," "Granny Annie" and "Old Lady," she
has volunteered at Halloween parties, filled children's
back-to-school bookbags, and prepared food for cookouts at the
neighborhood centers.
Each time Gardner visits the centers, she meets new people. "In
most ways, that's good, because you get all kinds of information,"
she said.
"It's the listening to people - not thinking that you know so
much that you can't listen or learn something every day," she said.
— Megan Carney
... pursue something that makes you happy.
Christine Grant
- Age: 71.
- Born: May 26, 1936, in
Bo'ness, Scotland.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1969.
- Family: Family info goes
here.
- Occupation: University of
Iowa associate professor, Department of Health and Sports
Studies; retired UI women's athletics director.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Being at the forefront in the push for gender equity.
Despite everything she has accomplished, former University of
Iowa women's athletics director Christine Grant will tell you that
she's never worked a day in her life.
"I read some place that if you have a job that you love, you'll
never work a day in your life," Grant said. "And I have loved the
jobs I've had."
Grant said too often young people are driven by the desire to
make money. She said it's better to pursue something that makes you
happy.
"I can't imagine having done that, no way," Grant said. "You may
have money, but you're not rich."
Grant was born and raised in Scotland and started playing
competitive sports when she was 11. She knew almost immediately that
sports would be her calling in life.
She eventually moved from Scotland in the early 1960s to Canada,
where she got involved with field hockey. Grant had been living in
Canada for just a year when she was asked to coach the Canadian
National Field Hockey team.
"We knew we needed to start a national organization, the Canadian
National Field Hockey Association, because Canada had pockets of
field hockey all over, but there was no organization," she said.
"And I helped organize a national organization, and I thought,
'Boy, isn't this terrific?'"
Grant then was named Canada's promotions director for field
hockey. It was the start of a career in sports administration that
ultimately led to Grant being hired as the first women's athletics
director at UI.
"I had no intention of becoming an athletic director," Grant
said. "It just worked out that way."
Grant attended summer school at UI in 1968 and then became a
full-time student in 1969.
She was finishing her Ph.D. when she was hired as the women's
athletics director in 1973. She then spent nearly three decades
building the Iowa women's athletics program into a Big Ten power,
while also leading the push for gender equity and being a
spokeswoman for Title IX.
Grant has received numerous awards and honors in throughout her
career. In 2007, she was named as one of the top 100 Influential
Sports Educators in America by the Institute of International Sport
and received the NCAA President's Gerald R. Ford Award, which honors
an individual who has provided significant leadership as an advocate
for intercollegiate athletics.
"I think I've made a little bit of a difference with regard to
educating people about the fairness of equal opportunity," Grant
said.
— Pat Harty
All children can learn.
Dale Hibbs
- Age: 67.
- Born: May 31, 1940, in
Omaha, Neb.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1974.
- Family: Wife Kristin
Hibbs, sons Jonathan and Matt.
- Occupation: Part-time
government and economics teacher at Regina High.
- Interesting fact: Dale is
training for a mixed martial arts cage fight.
Dale Hibbs said he has taught just about every kind of student
during his 42 years in the classroom.
He taught in poor neighborhoods in his hometown of Omaha, Neb.,
and in Waterloo. He taught students from wealthy families in
Rochester, Minn. He taught children of factory workers in Newton,
and farmers' children in Eagle Grove. He taught a variety of
children during 29 years at City High, and religious students during
the last two years as a government and economics teacher at Regina
High.
He has determined one thing from his experiences: All children
can learn.
"I've taught about every kind of kid on the planet," said Hibbs,
67. "All kids can learn."
Three things are universal when it comes to teaching, Hibbs said.
First, every child needs to know who is in charge.
"They need to know where the boundaries are," he said.
Second, a teacher has to make teaching relevant to what is going
on in the students' lives, he said. A teacher needs to bring home a
lesson to students, such as those on military actions approved by
the government since World War II. "They need to know the president
can kill you," Hibbs said.
Finally, a teacher needs to have good examples along with his
lessons, he said. As an example from his own life, Hibbs showed how
he coached a boxer in Cedar Rapids on different fighting techniques,
and how amazed he was when they worked.
"All of a sudden, I understand geometry," he said. "I understand
angles."
Hibbs said he was able to use his experiences as a state
legislator in the 1970s and as a lobbyist in Washington, D.C., to
teach government.
"When you teach government out of the book, it's not true at
all," he said. "I've been really lucky because a lot of the examples
I can use. You make education relevant."
— Rob Daniel
... learn something you never knew before.
Loren Horton
- Age: 74.
- Born: March 16, 1933, in
Hopeville.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1969.
- Family: Wife Carol.
- Occupation: Retired from
Iowa State Historical Society in 1996.
- Greatest accomplishment:
He has written five books, including three on the history of
Iowa.
Loren Horton has spent his life educating others, and it should
be no surprise that knowledge is what he most wants younger people
to appreciate.
"Take every opportunity to learn something you never knew
before," he said. "I tried to learn what was being taught in school.
But there's a lot of things you can learn from other people, too."
Horton spent 24 years as senior historian and field
representative at the State Historical Society of Iowa, driving
25,000 miles per year around the state.
"I drove a lot of small roads and met an awful lot of interesting
people," he said.
One thing he learned over those years was that people can be
positive or negative role models.
"You can take a positive thing and use some imitation," Horton
said. "Or it can be a negative thing, that you want to avoid another
person's mistakes."
Horton earned bachelor's and master's degrees at the University
of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls when it was still called the Iowa
State Teachers' College. He came to Iowa City in 1969 to earn a
Ph.D. and then taught for 17 years at various levels from junior
high through college before joining the historical society.
Retirement may have slowed his car, but not the man. Horton is an
active member of the Johnson County Conservation Board and the
Police Citizen's Review Board. He's also served time on the Johnson
County Historic Preservation Commission, the Iowa City Riverfront
Commission and the Iowa City Planning and Zoning Commission.
And he's active in programs at the Senior Center, frequently
giving lectures there.
"I try not to get bored," he said. "There are hours in the day
you have to be something. It might as well not be sitting around and
staring at the walls."
— Jon Klinkowitz
Read the comics. Stay away from credit cards.
Glenn Jablonski
- Age: 90.
- Born: June 2, 1917, in
Big Rapids, Mich.
- Moved to Iowa City: for
graduate school in 1948.
- Family: Wife Sally, sons
David, Joel, Daniel, Aaron and Carl (deceased), daughter Elise
Karpan.
- Interesting fact:
Jablonski served as choral director of City High for 29 years.
Each day, Glenn Jablonski makes it a point to read the comics.
"It is where the real truth is," said Jablonski, 90.
Comic writers tell things the way they are, Jablonski said of why
he's a fan.
His favorite comic, hands down, is Walt Kelly's "Pogo."
The most popular quote of Pogo, a possum, is: "We have met the
enemy and he is us."
Jablonski said his advice to people of any age is to read the
comics.
Another one of his favorites is the often-political comic,
"Doonesbury," by G.B. Trudeau.
A close second nugget of wisdom, Jablonski says, is to stay away
from credit cards.
Though the retired City High choral director, who still sings
with the Voices of Experience at the Senior Center, does have a
card, he pays it off each month.
He's seen too many people get caught in the credit card trap and
not be able to dig themselves out.
"It is so easy to spend more than you make," said Jablonski, who
lives in Iowa City. "If you do that, it is disaster."
He urges people to drop the "keeping up with the Joneses"
mentality.
— Deanna Truman
Stay active, keep moving.
Roy Justis
- Age: 67.
- Born: July 20, 1940, in
Baltimore, Md.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1969.
- Family: Wife Rita, four
children, six grandchildren.
- Occupation: Adjunct
journalism professor at UI and sports marketer with UI athletic
department.
- Interesting fact: He met
his wife, Rita, when both had the lead roles in the Cedar Falls
High School musical "The Emperor's New Clothes." The couple
married in 1960.
Roy Justis said there are two things that have kept him going
during his 67 years: Staying active and keeping moving.
"That's easy to say if you have your health," said Justis, former
long-time radio host at KXIC 800-AM. "A lot of people, when they get
older, think it's their time to relax."
He kept moving when he first started his broadcasting career at
the age of 16 in Cedar Falls. Even after majoring in business at the
University of Northern Iowa, he remained in radio, eventually
landing at KXIC in Iowa City. During his 37 years there as program
and news director, he hosted the popular "Roy Justis Morning Show."
He retired in March 2006 after a contract dispute with KXIC owner,
Clear Channel Communications.
However, during that time, Justis said he stayed active using the
talents he had and connections he had made.
"I was fortunate to be blessed with a voice that carried me
through," he said. "I got exposed to a lot of people who were movers
and shakers."
Four months after his retirement, he became an adjunct professor
in the University of Iowa's School of Journalism and Mass
Communication. He also does public relations and marketing work with
the UI athletic department, interviewing athletes for the
department's Web site.
"This way mom and dad can hear them online," he said.
Justis also occasionally picks up vehicles sold at auction,
recently driving to Indianapolis. He said his work post-KXIC has
kept him going.
"Keeping your mind active keeps you active," Justis said. "I'm
not sitting down."
— Rob Daniel
... always tell the truth.
Nancy Kaiser
- Age: 71.
- Born: Jan. 4, 1937, in
Clarion.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1993.
- Family: Husband Glenn,
sons Michael, Mark, Christopher, and daughter Lisa.
- Occupation: Retired from
teaching special education in 2002.
- Greatest accomplishment:
"Helping raise four successful children with the help of my
husband. I think that's a big achievement."
Nancy Kaiser was in elementary school living on a farm in Wright
County near Clarion when she learned a lesson she passed on
throughout her career in teaching.
She thought back to a time when she broke a spring on a saw that
her father had borrowed from a friend.
"My father was a strong disciplinarian and I was scared to
death," she said. "I not only broke something that he was using, but
it was a friend's. I was scared."
She contemplated not telling him, but figured once he found the
broken spring, she would wind up in even more trouble. So the moment
he pulled in the drive that afternoon, she ran up to his car.
"I remember it so clearly," she said. "I ran and told him, and I
didn't get in trouble. It seemed to me that he respected the fact
that I was honest and didn't lie to him, and it paid off. I always
tried to tell my students and my children, too, not to lie because
you have two problems, you're in double-trouble. It's best always to
tell the truth. Even if you're going to get in trouble, it's better
than getting in trouble twice - once for the deed and once for not
telling the truth."
Kaiser started teaching as a 19-year-old in a two-room country
school in Galt. She later spent 17 years staying at home to raise
her four children before returning to teaching in 1982, splitting
time as a special education teacher at Northeast Hamilton and Dows
before arriving at West High in 1993.
She said she hasn't often told the story about breaking the
spring on the saw, but the importance of telling the truth is a
lesson she has stressed to her students.
"My father's reaction showed that he respected me because I was
brave enough to tell him the truth," she said. "I tried to teach my
students that people respect them if they were truthful, even if it
seemed easier to lie."
— Andy Hamilton
... appreciate your friends.
Grace Katzenmeyer
- Age: 77.
- Born: Mercy Hospital in
Iowa City.
- Family: Son Chris,
daughter DeeDee, six grandchildren.
- Occupation: Works
parttime at the University of Iowa Library
- Greatest accomplishment:
Her work as a librarian.
In January 1936, Grace Katzenmeyer started kindergarten at
Longfellow Elementary School.
She made a lot of new friends, but she became especially close
with three other girls in her kindergarten class.
More than 70 years later, nothing has changed. Katzenmeyer and
her three former kindergarten classmates - Barb Feeney, Mary Elaine
(Poggenpohl) Oxford and Lois (Dunlap) Beasley - still live in or
near Iowa City and are as close as ever.
They also added a fifth friend to their group when they met Betty
(Brenneman) Raher in the seventh grade.
"We included her even though she didn't start kindergarten with
us," Katzenmeyer said.
The group still meets regularly to celebrate each other's
birthdays. And rarely does a day go by when they don't talk to each
other on the telephone.
Their friendships have withstood the test of time and distance.
Katzenmeyer moved away from Iowa City from 1959 to 1980, but she
never lost touch with her friends.
She learned early in life that few things are more precious than
having friends. Her advice to the younger generation is to
appreciate your friends because life is much better with them.
"Especially (because) women end up alone a lot," said
Katzenmeyer, who has been married before, but is now single. "We
really care about one another as friends."
That was apparent after Katzenmeyer was diagnosed with cancer in
2000. Barb Feeney and her late husband, Richard, did all they could
to help out.
"The first surgery I had, Barb and her husband drove me there at
5 in the morning over to the university hospital and Burlington
Street was a sheet of ice," Katzenmeyer said. "And they stayed with
me.
"And then I had a second cancer surgery and Barb was there. She
was the first one I saw when I woke up."
Katzenmeyer said the group often reminisces about their childhood
days growing up in Iowa City. Many of the things they talk about
happened more than 70 years ago.
"Oh my goodness, we still talk about some of the things that
happened in kindergarten," Grace said. "I can remember Mary-Elaine,
when I was crying in kindergarten, she put her arm around me. And I
can remember her telling the other kids, 'Grace doesn't like the way
her hair looks.'
"My mom had braided my hair that morning and the braids were too
tight."
— Pat Harty
... get the best education possible.
Gary Kellogg
- Age: 68.
- Born: April 9, 1939, in
Strawberry Point.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1965.
- Family: Wife Catherine,
son Alan, 40, daughter Julia Jordan, 25, five grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired as an
accountant for Fansteel-Washington Manufacturing.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Serving in the U.S. Air Force.
For somebody who never finished college, Gary Kellogg still
managed to earn a comfortable living as an accountant.
After serving in the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s, Kellogg began
working his way up the employment ladder. He overcame not having a
college degree to become a controller for a large corporation. But
Kellogg wouldn't recommend that today because the job market is too
competitive.
"I think during the times that I grew up, (employers) didn't put
as much emphasis on it," Kellogg said of having a college degree.
Kellogg said it now would be virtually impossible to follow the
path he took as an accountant without a college degree.
"Even while I was working, I was a controller for a company and
my peers had CPAs and MBAs and that type of thing," Kellogg said.
"It's become considerably more competitive now."
That's why Kellogg wants kids to stay in school and be motivated
about academics, because these days what you know is more important
than who you know.
"The first thing I would strongly recommend would be to maximize
your effort in school academically and get the best education
possible," Kellogg said.
Kellogg attended several colleges throughout the country while he
served in the Air Force, including Coe College, the University of
Maryland and McNeese State in Louisiana. But he never found enough
time to finish his degree.
"I bounced all over the place," he said. "I was stationed in the
Air Force, and then when I got out I was a part-time student. I went
to night school for I think 12 to 13 years. And I worked full time."
Kellogg regrets that his circumstances kept him from being able
to attend college on a full-time basis directly out of high school.
"Growing up, we had financial restraints, and when I got out (of
the Air Force), we didn't have the resources," Kellogg said.
— Pat Harty
... manage your lifestyle to fit your income.
Noah Kemp
- Age: 62.
- Born: April 25, 1945, in
Kalona.
- Has lived in: Kalona his
whole life.
- Family: Wife Linda,
daughters Sara O’Donnell, Rachel Knebel and Katie Miller, and
two grandchildren.
- Occupation: Owns three
Professional Muffler shops in Iowa City and Cedar Rapids.
- Greatest accomplishment:
“The best thing I ever did was marry my wife.”
He can’t prove it, but Kalona resident Noah Kemp said that if you
do without extra things in life for three years, you are ahead of
the game financially.
“I can’t document this,” he said. “But you can be ahead of the
ball over people who maximize their borrowing limits. You cannot
borrow your way out of debt.”
Kemp, 62, is a local business owner who said managing finances is
a necessary part of life, but it doesn’t have to be a complicated
one.
“If your out-go exceeds your income, then you have a problem,” he
said. “Most people try to manage their income to try and fit their
lifestyle, and that’s backwards. You need to manage your lifestyle
to fit your income.”
Kemp said when he was younger, it wasn’t so hard to not spend
money. There wasn’t much to begin with, he said.
“And when my friends were going out to eat, I couldn’t so often,”
Kemp said. “I didn’t suffer.”
Kemp said as he got older and was building his business, he made
financial decisions carefully and slowly.
“You have to be prepared for opportunities,” he said. “The last
shop I opened, I looked for three years for the right opportunity.
There was a time where I was afraid to take the risk and I lost
phenomenal opportunities. It was a lesson, and no one ever said
education is cheap.”
Kemp said he worries that there is no financial management
education for young people. The only people teaching are telling
kids how to borrow, he said.
“I’m scared for them,” he said. “Kids expect what their parents
have today, and it doesn’t work that way.”
Just knowing how to handle money isn’t enough, though, he said.
Kemp said faith has gotten him through many of life’s ups and downs,
even if there were no dollar signs attached. “I have a great faith in God, and I think with that faith I have
to credit some of that success, if it is success,” he said.
— Kathryn Fiegen
... do more than what's expected of you.
Jae-On Kim
- Age: 70.
- Born: Jan. 11, 1938, in
South Korea.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1971.
- Family: Wife Sukie,
daughter Miera, son Jonathan, and two grandchildren.
- Interesting fact: Kim is
70 years old, but only 69 by legal documents.
Jae-On Kim does not strive to do what is expected of him. He
seeks to do more.
"Learn to think independently, seeing things and doing things a
little bit beyond what's conventionally expected of you," said Kim,
a sociology professor at the University of Iowa since 1970.
Born in 1938 in a South Korean village where many children were
buried before their first birthdays, Kim has always risen above
expectations.
Kim's parents waited nearly six months to register him as a baby
until they were sure he would survive. That's why Kim has several
birth dates: His actual birthday (Jan. 11), his registration date
(May 27), and the date his parents celebrated his birthday on the
solar calendar (Dec. 11).
At 24, Kim moved to the United States as a graduate student and
set high goals for his education and career.
"Intellectual independence comes from studying, observing and a
great deal of reflection as well," he said.
After earning his master's degree in 1964 from Southern Illinois
University, Kim went to the University of California-Berkeley.
There, he completed his Ph.D. and met his wife, Sukie.
After marriage, the Kims waited several years to have children,
which was unconventional in Kim's family. Sukie gave birth to a baby
girl in 1972, followed by a son, Jonathan.
The Kims' daughter, Miera, now with two children of her own,
lives just several blocks from Kim's office in Iowa City.
"That's the best part of my life right now," Kim said of his
grandchildren, ages 5 and 3. "Learning to appreciate what you have
is one of the good things you can acquire in your life."
It is the same with people, he said. "You always deal with the
positive side of people you meet and you're going to be OK," Kim
said.
Kim gained insight about people from years studying, researching
and teaching sociology. He has contributed to more than 17 books and
has written at least 24 scholarly articles. In addition, Kim is
director emeritus of the UI Center for Asian and Pacific Studies.
Besides a "minor" goal to continue to promote cultural and
economic exchanges between the UI and countries in East Asia, he
said he has no major ambitions left to fulfill.
"I had a very satisfactory life," he said.
— Megan Carney
... treat others like you want to be treated.
Hubert Krotz
- Age: 81.
- Born: Nov. 21, 1926, in
Washington County, south of Riverside.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1948.
- Family: Son Michael,
daughters, Sherry, DeeDee and Tammy.
- Occupation: Retired from
the painting business in 1999.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Working in the painting business for about 60 years and living
here for about the same amount of time.
Hubert Krotz's handiwork can be seen in various locations
throughout Eastern Iowa.
"There are not too many things I haven't touched in my lifetime,"
said Krotz, 81.
In the painting business for about 60 years, his work can be seen
from his and other mobile homes in the Bon-Air Mobile Home Lodge to
painting projects for Hotel Roosevelt in Cedar Rapids.
His advice is to "treat other people like you would like to be
treated."
"I've always tried to be a gentleman with everyone else. Ladies
as well as men," he said.
He said he hopes his legacy will be that others will continue to
act and serve as he has throughout his life.
"I've always had a very positive attitude about everything,"
Krotz said.
That type of outlook is something he said is important for people
to have, to pull them through the tough times.
He said he is grateful for his family - the years he took care of
his wife, who died from cancer, and his children who now take care
of him.
He said he developed a vast number of friendships thanks to his
work and working with people.
When he bought his mobile home 30 years ago, he wanted a deck and
carport, so he built them himself.
When others in the mobile home park saw his handiwork, they asked
him to build theirs as well. He estimated he did projects for about
15 other homes in the park, not including the painting he did inside
many more.
His work in life has not been to get rich, but rather to satisfy
people, he said.
— Rachel Gallegos
... be faithful, friendly and forgiving.
Marguerite Kuebrich
- Age: 99.
- Born: August 1908 in
Cosgrove.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1930.
- Occupation: Retired from
Mercy Hospital.
- Interesting fact:
Marguerite was a twin.
Each year, Marguerite Kuebrich helps fund a child's Catholic
education.
But Kuebrich, an Iowa City resident for 78 years, would never
tell you that.
After the death of her sister in 1999, Kuebrich established the
Stella and Marguerite Kuebrich Scholarship for students of Regina
Catholic Education Center.
Kuebrich, 99, has exhibited generosity throughout her life, but
she does not like to boast about her former career at Mercy
Hospital, her past volunteer duties at St. Mary's Catholic Church or
years she spent caring for her sick parents.
Kuebrich and her sister, Stella, lived together and actively
supported Catholic education for years. All of Kuebrich's siblings,
including a brother who was a priest, are now deceased.
Kuebrich has sat through many funerals, but throughout all the
high and low points of life, Kuebrich tries to "be faithful,
friendly and forgiving."
Kuebrich has depended on her faith to get through difficult
times, including several serious surgeries. "Lots of times, I've had
to trust in God," she said.
Kuebrich has belonged to St. Mary's Catholic Church since her
family moved to Iowa City in 1930. Each day, Kuebrich walks the
several blocks from her home at Ecumenical Towers to the church for
Mass.
Kuebrich loves when friends call or stop by her apartment, where
she has lived for nine years.
"We are really one family," she said. "It's a good place to
live."
Kuebrich can socialize with neighbors in the dining hall if she
wants, or she can fix her food in her cozy apartment. Kuebrich is
glad to be self-sufficient.
"I have had a long, fulfilling life," she said. "I am able to
live independently, and I am still breathing."
She continues to amaze people with her intense faith, kindness
and modesty.
Although she does not try to be, she is different. She possesses
a rare combination of selflessness, strength and humility.
"It's great to be unique," Kuebrich said.
— Megan Carney
... don't take life too seriously.
Ethel Madison
- Born: In Memphis, Tenn.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1966.
- Family: Husband Eugene,
three children and six grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired from
Evert Connor Center for Independent Living in 2002.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Established federal funding to start the Center for Independent
Living in Iowa City, and raising three "terrific" children.
Ethel Madison knows how to have a good time.
The retired director for the Evert Connor Center for Independent
Living spent years trying to make life easier for those with
disabilities. It taught her to enjoy what she has.
"My motto is that people should not take things too seriously,"
Madison said. "Considering with people with disabilities, people
that seem to have so many barriers, you look at the things that you
have and compare it with people that don't have those things.
"You've got so much, but there are so many people still
struggling for the basics . housing, transportation, goods and
services. All the things you whine and complain about are not that
big."
Madison was born and raised in the South and grew up with great
music and great food. Her and her husband, retired University of
Iowa math professor Eugene Madison, moved to Iowa City in the
mid-1960s. They ran a local nightclub, the Boulevard Room, from 1973
to 1983 before Ethel joined the Evert Connor center.
When the director left, she moved in to secure funding to expand
the program to involve community outreach and education, and to
serve as an advocate for the rights of the disabled.
"I thought that was the coolest thing that I'd ever heard of, to
start a program like that," Madison said. "In 1994, we got federal
funds and I worked with the board to become an independent living
center. It allowed many more programs."
"When you live as long as I have, you find there are a lot of
things more serious and need a lot more attention than to be self
absorbed," she said. "You need to broaden your experiences."
Since retiring in 2002, Madison has done a lot of traveling.
— Jon Klinkowitz
... if you like your job, continue doing it.
Jane McCune
- Age: 70.
- Born: Grand Rapids, Mich.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1968.
- Family: Husband Robert
Wachal and three cats.
- Occupation: Realtor,
co-owner of Blank & McCune The Real Estate Co.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Starting a company in 1979 with another woman that has proven to
be very successful.
When Jane McCune and Jackie Blank were ready to start their real
estate business in 1979, they approached their banker, lawyer and
accountant.
"All of whom were men and all of whom advised us against it,"
McCune said. That, however, only made the two even more determined.
"We set out to prove them wrong," she said.
Almost 30 years later, McCune still co-owns the business she
loves, saying its success came from having "some very happy
clients."
Her advice to others is "if they like their jobs, continue doing
it."
At 70, she's at an age when many of her peers are retiring, but
she said she plans to keep working as long as she can.
If the person doesn't love the job they're in, she suggests
finding another or a different type of activity they enjoy and
volunteer.
"The point is to do something you love doing," she said.
Along with real estate, she spends her time as a member of the
board of directors for both the Johnson County Heritage Trust and
the Iowa City Animal Task Force, groups that match two of her
passions - nature and animals.
McCune said she grew up in a family that spent a lot of time
outdoors camping and fishing. Now she enjoys bird watching,
gardening and hiking; locally her favorite hiking spot is by the
reservoir.
She said her career continues to interest her because "everyone's
situation is unique."
"I enjoy the camaraderie with my colleagues, and I also enjoy
working with my clients," she said. "The problems are challenging
and the rewards are great."
— Rachel Gallegos
... always be active.
Betty McKray
- Age: 86.
- Born: Columbus City.
- Family: Daughters
Shannon, 55, and Erin, 52; son Lincoln, 50, and two grandsons.
- Hobbies: Genealogy,
family histories and "running things."
- Interesting fact: Betty
likes Harrison Ford movies.
Betty McKray said the key to happiness is to always keep busy.
"I've had a good life, and I think that has to do with always
being active," said McKray, 86. "I wanted to be a part of things."
McKray just finished two terms as chairwoman of the Resident
Council at Oaknoll Retirement Residence in Iowa City, where she
lives. She also has taught genealogy classes for Kirkwood Community
College and the Senior Center, and chaired the Iowa City Cable
Commission. For fun, she keeps tabs on the local theater scene.
"I think keeping busy makes you a part of what's going on," she
said.
McKray always has been goal-oriented, a trait she attributes to
having grown up the eldest of 10 children during the Great
Depression. Despite the family's hardships, McKray said her parents
always showed her that anything was possible with hard work and
perseverance.
"I'm very fortunate that I don't feel that I was deprived or
denied opportunities," she said. "My parents were really creative at
making do of things. We grew a garden for food, we raised fruit
trees and honey bees; we made ends meet."
McKray moved to Iowa City to attend the University of Iowa, where
she graduated with a degree in social work.
"I grew up thinking all I had to do was get to college. If I got
a diploma, I could do anything," she said.
McKray took a job in rural Johnson County after graduation but
soon joined the Womens Army Corp. For more than two years, she
interviewed recruits as a classifications specialist.
After the war ended, McKray returned to social work. She worked
for the University of Iowa until her retirement in 1985.
Seven years ago, McKray's husband died and since then she has
lived at Oaknoll. Her three children are spread across the country
but McKray said she doesn't get lonely.
When she isn't attending Resident Council meetings or teaching
people how to delve into their family histories, she is looking for
something else to occupy her time.
"You are never too old to be active," she said.
— Hieu Pham
... surround yourself with good people.
Bob Oldis
- Age: 80.
- Born: Jan. 5, 1928, in
Preston.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1932.
- Family: Wife Rosemary,
daughter Susan, deceased sons Robert and John.
- Occupation: Major league
baseball scout for the Florida Marlins.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Throwing out legendary base stealer Maury Wills twice in the
same game.
Bob Oldis was reflecting on 60 years in professional baseball
when he came to the conclusion that two fundamental principles
enabled him to have a prosperous career in the sport: Surrounding
himself with good people and taking advantage of his opportunities.
Oldis said those ideologies are lessons that people of all ages
can employ in any career path. In his case, he said his skills
improved greatly as a youngster when he competed against players
four and five years older, including his brother, Edward.
"I was lucky enough to play with people a lot older than me,"
Oldis said. "I wasn't very good, but I learned from older people.
You get better when you play with people better than you, and you're
never at the top of the ladder because you're learning things."
Oldis climbed the ladder into professional baseball coming out of
City High. He got his first big break in 1949 as a minor leaguer in
Emporia, Va. Oldis was a back-up catcher until the starter, a Cuban
named Orlando Echevarria, told the manager he wasn't feeling well
enough to play during a doubleheader on a hot summer day.
Thus, Oldis got his opportunity.
"In the second inning of the first game of the double-header,
believe it or not, I hit two home runs in one inning," Oldis said.
"In the fourth inning, (Echevarria) comes out and says, 'Coach, I
feel better.' (The manager) said, 'You just sit here. Bob will catch
both games.' From then on, I played pretty much the rest of the
season. Getting a break at the right time, that was a great break
for me."
Oldis reached the big leagues four years later with the
Washington Senators. He spent seven seasons in the majors, playing
for the World Series champion Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960, getting
three hits in one game off Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax and throwing
out legendary base-stealer Maury Wills twice in one game.
Oldis has been a professional scout for nearly 40 years,
currently working for the Florida Marlins.
— Andy Hamilton
A loose tongue will get you in a tight place.
Grace Olmsted
- Age: 83.
- Born: May 9, 1925, in
Washington.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1943
- Family: Husband Hank
Olmstead, died in 1984; one daughter, five sons, four
grandchildren, two step-grandchildren, three
step-great-grandchildren
- Occupation: Former
dietary supervisor, Von Maur sales associate, retired from
Hy-Vee in 1992.
- Interesting fact: Olmsted
has lived in the same house since graduating from the University
of Iowa in 1947.
Grace Olmsted enjoys a good conversation.
Topics range from her extended family, old stories about her
parents and grandparents and her experiences growing up in Iowa
during the Great Depression.
But one thing that you'll probably never hear coming out of
Olmsted's mouth is a single word of gossip or slander.
"A loose tongue will get you in a tight place," Olmsted said.
It's an old adage, but one that has stuck with Olmsted, a former
dietary supervisor. Olmsted said she was only about 10 years old
when her mother scrawled those words of wisdom into her autograph
book.
Olmsted, a 1947 graduate of the University of Iowa, said other
members of her family helped reinforce that message with similar
words most of us have heard at one point or another in our lives.
"My grandma said, 'If you can't say anything nice, don't say
anything at all,'" she said.
Olmstead admits that she likes to talk a lot, something she
picked up from her father, who she said was, "quite a talker." But
she's always careful about what she says and especially about what
she asks for.
Though she's been a widow for more than 20 years, Olmstead said
she'll never ask for help from her five children. It's a lesson that
she's learned from her father's experience. Once a prominent
electrician on the East Coast at the turn of the 20th century,
Olmsted said her father gave up his passion to help his father's
struggling Iowa farm. Olmsted said she thinks her father never got
over that decision.
And while she's not one to ask for much, Olmsted warned to be
careful to watch what you say, no matter what situation you're in.
"It can get you into difficulty because you can lose friends and
jobs if you said the wrong thing at the wrong time," she said.
— Lee Hermiston
Love your country.
Joe Panozzo
- Age: 81.
- Born: Jan. 13, 1927, in
Chicago.
- Moved to West Branch in:
2005.
- Family: Wife Josephine,
sons Joe and Angelo (deceased), three grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired as an
executive with Roper Corp. in Rockford, Ill., and Carnation and
Erie Foods in Rochelle, Ill., in 1995.
- Interesting fact: He
volunteered for the U.S. Army to fight in the Vietnam War in the
late 1960s in place of his son, Angelo. He was turned down due
to his age.
Joe Panozzo loves the United States of America so much he is
willing to fight for it.
The son of Italian immigrants, he was born in Chicago and spent
much of his childhood in Rockford, Ill.
In September 1939 when he was 12 years old, he and his family
moved to a small town near Vicenza, Italy. World War II was
beginning, and Benito Mussolini's fascist Italy was on the side of
Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany. Life immediately became difficult
when he and his brother were taken by the Italian police to be sent
to an internment camp because they were Americans. A well-placed
bribe from his father saved them from imprisonment.
When the U.S. entered the war in December 1941, Panozzo said he
went underground, and at the age of 14, he worked to smuggle
American and British pilots shot down over Italy out of the country.
"We were the 'Americanos,'" said Panozzo, now 81 and living in
West Branch. "It was a difficult life, but as far as I was
concerned, it was something I had to do."
In December 1943, Mussolini was overthrown, and Italy switched to
the Allied side. After the Allies won, Panozzo returned to the U.S.
in 1946.
He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1950 and sent to fight in
Korea. He spent 18 months there and got frostbite. The injury has
lingered ever since, but has not dampened his spirit or love for his
country.
"I have such a passion for our country," Panozzo said. "It's
beyond what you think a person who's been through two wars would
have."
He was honorably discharged from the Army in 1956 after receiving
a commendation from the British government for his work during World
War II. He returned to Rockford and embarked on his career as an
executive for several companies in Rockford and in Rochelle, Ill.,
of which he became the mayor from 1991 to 1995.
Panozzo wrote two books about his experiences: A recounting of
his experiences in Italy, "An American in Jeopardy," and the story
of his time fighting in the Korean War, "One Man's Journey to War."
"Love your country," he said. "That's all I care about."
— Rob Daniel
This is the only life you have, make it count.
Marge Penney
- Age: 64.
- Born: May 11, 1943, in
Bayonne, N.J.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1966.
- Family: Partner T.J. Lea.
- Occupation: Special
projects for James Investment Group.
- Greatest accomplishment:
She describes herself as a "lifelong feminist from a family of
feminists."
Marge Penney has reinvented herself a number of times. She's had
multiple careers. She has retired. She has unretired. She moved far
away from her roots in her early 20s and has stayed in the Midwest
ever since.
Yet she offers advice that she received from her mother
relatively recently in her life, at a time we euphemistically call
middle age.
"I can remember her saying this pretty clearly," Penney said.
"'Remember this is not a dress rehearsal. This is the only life you
have, so make it count.'"
Penney was about 50 years old at the time and contemplating what
she called "life changes." She talked with her 72-year-old mother
about it.
"They were changes I was interested in making, and I was uneasy
about doing it," Penney recalled.
Her mother, Claire D'Esposito, was encouraging her to trust
herself, that it was OK to undertake these changes.
"Honestly, I think that is important advice to people who have
reached middle age," Penney said. "That in youth in our culture we
are encouraged to take a chance and follow our dreams. Somehow that
slips away as you get older and you're supposed to be more careful
and cautious. Mother wasn't a great believer in careful and
cautious."
— Susan Harman
... never quit.
Dianna Penny
- Age: 67.
- Born: Nov. 15, 1940, in
St. Louis.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1958.
- Family: Sisters Jane and
Barbara, and brothers Nick, John and Joseph.
- Occupation: Secretary at
University of Iowa cardiovascular center.
- Interesting fact: Her
brother, John, is a jazz musician in Minneapolis.
Dianna Penny has lived a life of ups and downs.
She grew up, in her words, "black and poor" in central and
southern Illinois, following her minister father, the Rev. Fred L.
Penny, from church assignment to church assignment.
In each of those stops, she learned to raise chickens, a skill
needed to survive in a poor, rural environment. In Alton, Ill., she
and her growing family lived above a men's clothing store.
Despite the poverty, she said she never gave up pursuing
something more.
"I think the biggest thing is never quit," said Penny, now 67 and
living in Iowa City. "We were black and poor. But our day-to-day
lives were different. We had full, wonderful lives."
Penny, who now is a secretary at the University of Iowa's
cardiovascular center and a prominent member of Bethel African
Methodist Episcopal Church in Iowa City, said she learned how to
kill and cook a chicken by the time she was 9. While living in
Alton, Ill., her father hunted, bringing home meat.
The only entertainment in the house was an old radio, through
which Penny and her siblings developed a passion for music,
including opera and jazz.
"I was exposed to every type of music," Penny said. "Life was so
rich in other ways."
When the family home in Chester, Ill., burned down when she was
16 years old, she witnessed true generosity as the community rallied
around the family, providing food and clothing. Her high school
chorus director provided a new piano for her to replace the one lost
in the fire.
"That was a miracle," Penny said. "It was just ordinary people
putting on a class act. I said I'll never be afraid and I'll always
have faith after experiencing that."
— Rob Daniel
... always have several interests.
John Raffensperger
- Age: 67.
- Born: July 13, 1940, in
Waterloo.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1948.
- Family: Wife Sharon, two
children and three grandchildren.
- Occupation: Retired from
coaching track at City High in 2003.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Induction into the University of Northern Iowa Athletic Hall of
Fame.
John Raffensperger is best known as one of the greatest high
school track coaches in the state of Iowa. But there's more to him
than a clipboard and a whistle.
That's just what has made his life a success.
"I always had other interests," Raffensperger said. "You've got
to have some other things."
Although his greatest success came on the track, he diversified
from early on. He was a two-sport athlete in college at the
University of Northern Iowa, splitting time between the track and
the football gridiron. He also coached both sports at City High,
where he taught social studies for 36 years.
He also sang in choir during and after college and remains active
at the Johnson County Senior Center.
"I could forget the stress of coaching and everything else,"
Raffensperger said.
He retired from coaching in 2003 after winning 10 boys state
track titles with the Little Hawks. He didn't want to continue
coaching after retiring from teaching. But he has volunteered time
as an unpaid assistant for the University of Iowa men's track team,
working under his former star athlete, Joey Woody.
"It's been a good experience," Raffensperger said. "I was kind of
apprehensive at first. I was used to working with developing-aged
kids. But the more I'm around it, the more I see that kids are kids,
if they're 16 or 21."
Raffensperger said his sense of humor also has been a key to his
happy life.
"Don't take yourself too seriously," he said. "If you take
yourself too seriously, you set yourself up for a fall."
— Jon Klinkowitz
... cultivate and nurture friendships.
Mary Beth Schuppert
- Age: 84.
- Born: Aug. 3, 1923, in
Omaha, Neb. Grew up in Holstein. Came to Iowa City in 1941 to
attend the University of Iowa. Received a bachelor's of arts in
speech and dramatic art.
- Family: Husband John
(deceased), sons David and Chris, daughter-in-law Shelia, five
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
- Interesting fact:
Schuppert is a founder of the Iowa City Community Theatre. She
served as the group's first president./li>
Life sure can get busy, but don't let it get so hectic that you
forget your friends. Thus is the advice of Mary Beth Schuppert.
"Make time for your friends and make time for them to come to
you," the Iowa City resident said.
"It is extremely important to cultivate and nuture friendships."
Schuppert, 84, says she is blessed to have so many good friends.
While she encourages the making of new friends, she urges people
not to forget childhood friends.
"You take them for granted, I think, when you are young,"
Schuppert said. "It is very important to keep them. "There is
nothing like an old friendship."
Many of Schuppert's Iowa City friends came about through her
involvement with the Iowa City Community Theatre. Schuppert helped
start the theater, which celebrates 53 years in 2008.
While she directed and acted in several of its productions, she
often had a more behind-the-scenes role.
She was more than glad to pull up her sleeves and do whatever
needed to be done for the theater.
"It wouldn't quite work if we all just acted and directed," said
Schuppert with a smile.
— Deanna Truman
The road to the finish line is often uphill.
Marvin Sims
- Age: 64.
- Born: Dec. 11, 1943, in
Sedalia, Mo.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1972.
- Family: Three children,
four grandchildren.
- Occupation:
Parapsychologist at University Hospitals
- Interesting fact: In the
late '60s, Sims performed on American Bandstand
Back when The Picador was known as The Pub, a young man named
Marvin L. Sims used to swing into town and entertain students with
his R&B music.
Nowadays, Sims, 64, is a parapsychologist at University
Hospitals. It's a far cry from touring the world playing music and
making records. Sims said getting out of the music business was the
hardest decision he's ever made. But looking back on that and other
challenges he's faced, Sims said it was for the best and led him to
develop his personal mantra: "The road to the finish line is often
uphill."
Sims said he hasn't always lived by those words, but came to the
revelation when he looked back on the challenges he bested that
eventually made his life better.
"Basically, it came from assessing my life and I had to beat a
lot of odds," he said.
Sims said he grew up in a segregated Missouri town where whites
lived on one side of the track and blacks on the other. But that was
normal for him. The challenges began in 1961 when one day after
graduating from an all-black school, he joined an all-white unit in
the U.S. Air Force. Sims spent six years stateside as an air traffic controller.
While stationed near Champaign, Ill., Marvin began performing R&B.
After the Air Force, his music career blossomed and at its height,
one of his albums, "Talking About Soul," sold 850,000 copies.
But then disco became a fad and R&B lost its popularity. Sims'
contacts in the music business stopped returning his calls. So, with
his children, dog and life possessions loaded into his car, Sims
came to the University of Iowa and started attending college on the
G.I. Bill.
"I knew I just couldn't be a bum," he said.
Despite the hardships of raising children, working and going to
school fulltime, Sims got his undergraduate degree. He went back to
school and got his master's degree in social work a few years later.
Now, Sims is helping others understand that challenges are just a
way to elevate your life.
"When I see how they deal with change, that is inspiring," Sims
said.
— Lee Hermiston
... recognize what you don't know.
Art Small
- Age: 74.
- Born: Oct. 14, 1933, in
Brunswick, Maine.
- Moved to Iowa City in:
1959.
- Family: Wife Mary Jo,
sons Peter and Arthur, and daughter Martha.
- Occupation: Retired from
Small and Haus law firm in 2000.
- Interesting fact: Art
graduated from the University of Iowa College of Law while
serving in the Iowa Legislature.
Through his years as an educator and 16 years in the state
legislator, one thing Art Small learned is the wisdom of recognizing
what you don't know.
"Acknowledge and recognize how little a person knows," the
74-year-old Iowa City resident said. "You might know a lot about one
subject, but that doesn't flop over to everything else."
People can't know everything. When they pretend to, it can have a
range of negative consequences that could be avoided by simply
exercising some humility, Small said.
Small, a Democrat, served in the Iowa House of Representatives
from 1971 to 1978 and in the Iowa Senate from 1979 to 1986. He
taught at St. Ambrose University and Purdue University and worked at
Westinghouse Learning Corp., owned a legislative news service and
has had a legal practice.
Working on the commerce subcommittee shortly after being elected
to the Iowa House, Small quickly learned a lesson in taking a
reserved approach, and found value accepting the knowledge of
others.
"Nothing ever happened (at first). We failed to bring consensus,"
Small said of the subcommittee. "It's not, 'Boom, here is the
answer.' It takes a bunch of groups working together . there is an
element of humility you learn that makes you a little more
cautious."
At the national level, President Bush's posture during the early
stages of the Iraq War and the infamous "Mission Accomplished"
speech were other examples of a person getting "tripped up" by
thinking he knows more than he does, Small said.
"At best, nothing happens," he said. "At worst, look at Iraq.
Thousands of people have lost their lives unnecessarily. He was not
only wrong about (weapons of mass destruction), he was wrong about
their culture. It was just one assumption after the other."
People should try to tone down their hubris and try harder to
work toward solutions, he said.
"No one knows a fraction of what they need to handle all the
problems they encounter," he said. "They need to work together."
— Brian Morelli
Believe in God.Madge Thornton
- Age: 87.
- Born: Nov. 20, 1920, in
Summerfield, La.
- Moved to Iowa City: six
years ago.
- Family: Son Edgar III,
daughters Madgetta and Jeannye.
- Occupation: Retired
teacher and librarian.
- Greatest accomplishment:
Becoming a Christian.
When Madge Thornton invites you into her Bickford Cottage
apartment, her words of welcome are "Come on in to the house of the
Lord."
That's because throughout her years of learning and living, it's
all been done "through the life of Jesus," she said.
"I don't know how to explain it to people because it has to be a
part of you," Thornton said. "It's a part of me."
She said she's trying to write about her life held together by
her belief in God and Jesus.
Thanks to a gift from her mother, she's lived her life by Psalm
27.
Her mother gave her the psalm to read every day. Thornton
remembers her mother saying that they were not "forsaking her" -
referring to a line in the psalm about being forsaken by your father
and mother, but being taken care of by the Lord. She is able to
recite it from memory.
"We were created by God, so you have to believe in God," she
said. "This is what has happened to our country. We don't believe in
God enough. We get away from God and everything falls to pieces."
She knows people can't make others listen to God, but encourages
others to think about what he has done.
"God made us and gave us the freedom to think," she said. "And we
don't think the right things all the time."
Thornton said she became a teacher partially because of what she
realized while growing up with 12 brothers and sisters.
"I had the mind to teach," she said. "We taught each other.
That's what we did. We taught all our life."
When she taught in the classroom, her favorite years were those
teaching second grade.
"By the time they're in second grade, they know how to write,
they know words," she said. "They're so loving. You can just
encourage them with what they know. It's so marvelous."
— Rachel Gallegos |