Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Grand Junction Obituaries



JOHN NELSON

Memorial services for John Nelson, 88, of Grand Junction were April 17, 2010, at Slininger-Rossow Funeral Home in Jefferson with burial in Junction Township Cemetery at Grand Junction. Visitation was held the previous day at Slininger-Rossow Funeral Home in Grand Junction with a Masonic service held that evening.

John Allen Nelson was born March 4, 1922, in Greene County, Iowa. He was the son of Oscar “Ole” and Dora (Boston) Nelson. He graduated from Grand Junction High School in 1940. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II in the South Pacific.
John married Nina Rosella Coffin on March 14, 1947, at the bride’s home in Gowrie. John and Nina lived in Jefferson for three years and then moved to Grand Junction, where they raised their family.

John delivered grain with his father Ole and hauled livestock with his brother-in-law Earl Curry, and he also delivered eggs and cream for C&M Produce. He worked at Ford Dodge Laboratories, Martin Brother’s Gas Station and was a clerk at U.S. Post Office in Grand Junction. He delivered the Sunday Des Moines Register for many years. In 1969, after working with T.R. Watts and Sons Insurance, he purchased the business and began Nelson Insurance Agency. During that time he also had a home medical equipment business and sold real estate. He owned several rental properties in Grand Junction, Jefferson and Churdan over the years. John and Nina retired in 1986, selling the insurance business to McDonald Insurance in Scranton, and they spent the winter months in Mesa, Ariz.

John in survived by two sons, Bill Nelson, Shannon, Ill., and Jim Nelson, Jefferson; two daughters, Rosella Zimmerle, Adel, and Carol Gower, Lake City; 10 grandchildren; 8 great-grandchildren; and one brother, George Nelson, Des Moines.

Memorials are suggested to the Salvation Army or Stewart Memorial Community Hospice in Lake City. Services were arranged by Slininger-Rossow Funeral Homes of Jefferson and Grand Junction.

OTTOLENE DOWNS

Memorial services for Ottolene Downs, 102, of Grand Junction were held Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, at First Presbyterian Church in Grand Junction. Interment was planned for Memorial Park Cemetery in Sioux City for a later date.

Ottolene Ruth West Downs was born Nov. 25, 1907, at Ticonic, Iowa, the daughter of James C. West and Lora Elizabeth Forker West. She was the eldest of three children. Ottolene attended school in Onawa, Iowa, where she received normal school training in preparation to be a school teacher. She briefly attended college, and taught in a one-room country school during the Depression.

She married Frank Downs Jr. on June 18, 1931, in Monona County, Iowa, where Frank briefly ran a gas station. They moved to Bronson, Iowa, first renting and then buying a farm. In 1967 they moved to rural Rippey to be near their daughters. After Frank died, Ottolene moved to Grand Junction. In 2005 she moved to Regency Park in Jefferson.

Ottolene helped start the hot lunch program in the Bronson school. She served as 4-H committeeman, PTA officer, and was active in her church’s women’s organization. She enjoyed gardening, sewing, crocheting, repairing work clothes, tailoring and crafts.
She is survived by her daughters, Lora Lynette Downs Holz, Jefferson, and LaVaras Eloise Jewett, Grand Junction; grandchildren Kristi Holz, Afton; Robin Holz Searles, Altoona; Julie Holz Breshears, Davis City; Jeffery Myron Jewett, Mahomet, Ill.; and Jamie Rehak, Williston, N.D.; and 11 great-grandchildren.

MURIEL THOMPSON

Funeral services for Muriel Thompson, 91, were held Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009, at Slininger-Rossow Funeral Home in Jefferson. Interment was in Junction Township Cemetery at Grand Junction.

Muriel died Dec. 10, 2009, in her sleep in the Evangelical Free Nursing Home in Boone, where she had been a resident for three months. She was born Dec. 4, 1918, in Grand Junction, the daughter of Edgar and Hazel Crow Mack. She was the youngest of three children, with two older brothers, Vernon and Marshall.

Muriel graduated from Grand Junction High School in 1937. She attended Iowa State Teachers College for brief time before taking employment as a teletype operator for Western Union in Chicago and Des Moines.

She married Lowell Rhodes Thompson on Oct. 6, 1946, in Delta, Colo. The couple lived in Colorado before moving to Grand Junction in February 1949. The couple farmed northwest of Grand Junction near Spring Lake for several years and later southwest of Grand Junction. In February 1976, the couple moved to a farm west of Panora, where they lived until their retirement in 2005, when they moved to Ames.

Muriel was a homemaker and helped with livestock and gardening on the farm. She was a Stanley Home Products representative for 35 years, earning several recognitions and awards. She was a lifelong member of the First Presbyterian Church in Grand Junction and active in UPW and church circles. She was also a member of the U-Go-I-Go Club of rural Grand Junction.

She is survived by her children, Robert Thompson, Ames; Linda Thompson, Urbandale; and Kent Thompson, Humboldt; two grandchildren, Ryan and Robin Thompson; and a sister-in-law, Joyce Mack, Grand Junction.

VERDA EILBERT

Verda Eilbert, 86, died Jan. 13, 2010, at Regency Park Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Jefferson. Funeral services were Monday, Jan. 18, 2020, at First United Methodist Church in Grand Junction. Verda’s body was donated to the University of Iowa Anatomical Gift Program, with future burial in Junction Township Cemetery at Grand Junction. Services were arranged by Slininger-Rossow Funeral Homes of Jefferson and Grand Junction.

Verda Culley Eilbert was born near Rippey on Nov. 5, 1923, to William and Bertha (Kinkead) Culley. She was a 1941 graduate of Grand Junction High School. After graduation, she moved to Chicago to make her home with her brother Gerald and his family. She worked there as a secretary for the Motorola Company for five years. On June 16, 1946, she married Francis Eilbert, and they made their home on the family farm near Grand Junction, where they resided nearly 60 years. Due to declining health, they moved to Regency Park in Jefferson in 2006.

Verda was preceded in death by her husband, Francis; son, Chris; parents; and her siblings: Gerald, Loren and Darwin “Tommy” Culley and Nadine Wessling.

Survivors include her daughter, Cheryl Armstrong, Pembroke Pines, Fla., and son, Craig Eilbert, Marion; daughter-in-law, Mary Eilbert, Wellsburg; and grandchildren: Jill Eilbert, Grand Junction; Jacob Eilbert, St. Paul, Minn.; Jessica Eilbert, Indianola; Catie Eilbert, Marion; and Elyse Eilbert, Suwanee, Ga.

VERNA MAE WISE
Funeral services for Verna Mae Wise, 83, of Grand Junction were Tuesday, March 9, 2010, at the First United Methodist Church in Grand Junction. Interment was in Beaver Cemetery at Beaver. She died Friday, March 5, in the Greene County Medical Center in Jefferson after living in Regency Park in Jefferson for a little over a year.

Verna Mae Wise was born Sept. 15, 1926, in Perry to Charles and Wilda Faye Harvey. She graduated from Perry High School in 1945. She married Paul Wise on April 7, 1946, in Grand Junction where they spent the rest of their married life. They farmed in the early years of their marriage, and then moved into town in 1962 when Paul worked for the Iowa Department of Transportation.

Verna Mae was a CNA at the Ogden Manor in Ogden and for many years wrote a column for Globe-Free Press in Grand Junction and later the Jefferson Herald. She was a member of the Legion Auxiliary, First United Methodist Church of Grand Junction, and United Methodist Women.

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Paul; sons Donald Wise and David Wise; daughter-in-law Marcia Wise; brother, LeRoy Harvey; and an infant sister.
Verna Mae is survived by her sons, Daniel Wise, Jefferson; Douglas Wise, Omaha; Dennis Wise, Lorena, Texas; daughter-in-law, Diane Wise, Jefferson; 22 grandchildren; and 8 great-grandchildren.

PAULINE ARNES

Pauline Arnes, 85, died March 27, 2010, at the Israel Family Hospice in Ames. Funeral services were March 31 at Carson-Stapp Funeral Home in Ogden with Rev. Paul Evans officiating. Pauline’s wishes were to be cremated with burial at a later date in Grand Junction.

Pauline Arnes, daughter of the Lloyd and Ada (Blake) Warner, was born Oct. 10, 1924, in Carroll. She graduated from Grand Junction High School in 1945 and attended Iowa Lutheran Hospital School of Nursing in Des Moines in the Cadet Program during World War II.

Pauline was a labor and delivery room nurse for 38 years, working for Boone County Hospital in Boone and St. Joseph’s Hospital in Orange, Calif. After retiring, she lived in Enid, Okla., and was actively involved in Sr. Ambucs, AARP and Community Methodist Church.

She is survived by her children, Barbara Sanden, Ogden, and Mike Arnes, Plymouth, Minn.; five grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren.

Friday, May 14, 2010

EG Heads to Guthrie for District Meet

TOP PERFORMERS MOVE ON TO STATE @ DRAKE



East Greene tracksters head to Guthrie Center today for the district track meet. The Hawks will be facing stiff competition in one of toughest of the state’s 12 district meets in Class 1A.

In addition to East Greene and the host school, Guthrie Center, other girls and boys teams competing in the co-ed district meet are Adair-Casey, CAM (Anita), Coon Rapids-Bayard, Des Moines Christian, Earlham, Griswold, Madrid, Orient-Macksburg, Van Meter, Woodward Academy (boys only) and Woodward-Granger.

The Hawks went head-to-head with seven of those teams in the recent West Central Conference meet, which Madrid won going away. EG and Madrid both competed in the district at Southeast Webster-Grand at Burnside last year. Madrid won that district and then went on to win the state meet in Des Moines. So this will be a very tough district as Madrid looks even stronger than last year. Griswold is another strong team, having finished fifth at the state meet last year and winning several large meets this year, including the Western Iowa Conference meet, its fourth conference crown in the last five years.

EG will get a good look at three of next year’s Rolling Hills Conference competitors in Adair-Casey, CAM and Orient-Macksburg at the meet today. Woodward Academy, which is strong in several boys sports, rounds out the 13-team field on the boys’ side.

The first- and second-place winners will advance to the state meet at Drake Stadium in Des Moines on May 21 and 22.

In the girls meet, the same event is called a regional, and the winner of each event in the regional advances (12 total) to the state meet in Des Moines along with the 12 next best performances among all the regional competitors.

The Hawks tuned up for the district with meets last Thursday at Ballard (Huxley) and on Tuesday at Southern Cal (Lake City), a co-ed meet. Madrid was in the field with the Hawks in Class B at Ballard and won the event by one point over Roland-Story. It was a very competitive field with the returning state 1A champion (Madrid) and three solid class 2A teams—West Marshall, Roland-Story and South Hamilton.

EG scored 7 points with the 4 x 200 finishing fifth just behind Madrid. The three 2A teams swept the first three places in the 4 x 200 with West Marshall edging out Roland-Story at the tape for the win and both teams breaking the meet record.

Madrid took the 4 x 100 in another fast field as the Tigers (43.86) and the second- and third-place finishers, Roland-Story (43.89) and South Hamilton (44.03), all broke the meet record.

EG’s 4 x 100 relay finished fifth (48.96) and the 4 x 400 relay was sixth (4:11.75). Also finishing sixth were Reed Ostrander in the long jump (18-5.25) and Schyler Bardole in the shot put (39-8.5).

Jefferson-Scranton rolled to the title in Class A with 159 points, well ahead of runner-up Boone with 103.

Team scoring in Class B @ Ballard: Madrid 145, Roland-Story 144, West Marshall 120, South Hamilton 76, Woodward-Granger 49, Southeast Webster 13, EAST GREENE 7.

The Hawks finished 9th among 11 teams at Southern Cal with 22 points. The 4 x 100 relay improved its time to 47.96 for fifth with Woodward Academy wining the event in 44.66 and three Twin Lakes Conference teams finishing in the next three spots.

EG fared well in the field events as Wes Onken was third in the discus (129-02), Bardole fourth in the shot put (40-10) and Ostrander fifth in the long jump (17-4).

Bardole’s fourth place in the 100 meter dash (11.43) and Zach Hiller’s fourth place in the 200 meter dash (23.85) rounded out the scoring for the Hawks.

Boys team scoring @ Southern Cal: Woodward Academy 92, Manson-Northwest Webster 85, Prairie Valley 82, Rockwell City-Lytton 81, Southern Cal 69, Alta 44, Southeast Webster-Grand 35, Newell-Fonda 25, EAST GREENE 22, West Bend-Mallard/Twin River Valley 15, Paton-Churdan 8.

The Hawkettes were also in the field at Lake City and Bobbie Halterman took second in the 3,000 meter run (12:36.1) to give the Hawkettes 8 points. Stephanie Thompson of Paton-Churdan was fifth in the same event. PC’s Jaclyn Baldwin had a good showing with first place in the 100 meter dash (13.46) and fifth in the 400 meter dash (1:08.87). PC scored 14 points to finish just ahead of EG in eighth place in the nine-team field.

PC’s Taylor King had a mirror finish to Halterman, as he took second in the boys distance event, the 3,200 meter run (11.17.21), to give PC its eight points on the boys’ side.

Girls team scoring @ Southern Cal: Manson-Northwest Webster 177, Southern Cal 127, Guthrie Center 81.5, Rockwell City-Lytton 53, Southeast Webster-Grand 49.5, Alta 46, Newell-Fonda 29, Paton-Churdan 14, EAST GREENE 8.

EYE ON GJ SAYS: Halterman has really improved her times in recent meets and could contend for the top spot today at Guthrie and move on to state. She finished fourth at the conference meet behind Gabi Wilson of Des Moines Christian and two Panorama runners. The latter two will be in the 2A district, leaving Wilson and Halterman the top two place finishers among the eight West Central teams that are in the field at Guthrie. Wilson had a considerable lead over Halterman at that meet, 11:46.01 to 13:15.38 but Halterman has really dropped her time in just a week with her 12:36.1 showing at Lake City on Tuesday. The fastest time at the Rolling Hills Conference meet on May 3 on the same track was 12:33.86 by Chansea Nelson of Elk Horn-Kimballton/Exira but EHK/E is in the district meet at Audubon. Griswold does not have a threat in the 3,000 so it should come down to Halterman and Wilson. Hopefully it will be a fast pace, so if Halterman should come in second or third, she could still qualify with a good at-large time.

The Hawks are solid in several key sprint events, but unfortunately, in each of those events Madrid has dominated. The Madrid-EG finish of fourth and fifth places in the 4 x 200 at Ballard was separated by five seconds, so EG has a pretty big gap to fill to catch up to the Tigers today in the district. Neither EG or Woodward Academy were in the field at Southern Cal on Tuesday so it’s hard to determine how Woodward Academy might fare in the event.

Woodward Academy will be solid competition to Madrid in the 4 x 100 as its time at Lake City is less than a second slower than Madrid’s time in Huxley. EG was three seconds behind Woodward Academy (47.67 to 44.66) and Madrid had a full five-second advantage over the Hawks at Ballard last week. In the conference meet, it was Madrid, Earlham, Panorama and EG taking the top four spots, so with Panorama out of the mix it looks like Madrid will be the heavy favorite with a number of teams jockeying for second place and the right to move on to state. Adair-Casey posted a time of 47.26 in winning the 4 x 100 in the Rolling Hills meet on the Guthrie track. Underwood won the Western Iowa Conference meet in 44.99 and Griswold was third with a time two seconds slower. So look for AC and Griswold to be in the mix for second place along with EG, Earlham and Woodward Academy.

Underwood was also the winner in the 4 x 200 relay at the WIC meet. Griswold though does not appear to be strong in that event but is pretty significant in the 4 x 400 and 1,600 medley relays. Orient-Macksburg won the 4 x 200 relay in the Rolling Hills meet at 1:40.72 so they will be a team to contend with for the Hawks, who ran 1:40.2 in their conference meet on the same track a day later. Madrid was disqualified in that event and Earlham and Guthrie Center finished 1-2 with times of 1:36.27 and 1:36.38. Panorama and West Central Valley finished 3-4 so they will not be a threat since they are in the 2A district at Tri-Center (Neola). EG will also have to contend with Woodward-Granger. EG had the advantage at the conference meet by 1.18 seconds and stayed ahead in the “battle of the Hawks” at Ballard but the difference had been whittled down to just .05 seconds.

Onken in the discus, Bardole in the shot put, and Ostrander in the long jump have all performed well this season with high placings in most meets, but again, Madrid has solid performers in all these events. Madrid’s Eric Simmons and Brock Hinkel were second and third in the conference meet in the discus. The winner was Seth VandeVoort from Des Moines Christian and the fourth place thrower was Andrew McCune from Woodward-Granger. Onken finished fifth, nine feet behind the WG thrower, so he will really need to uncork a all-out effort to finish first or second and move on to state.

Bardole will again be going up against Simmons and Tyler Ahrens of Madrid in the shot put. They took second and fourth in the conference meet and WG’s McCune’s third, just ahead of Colton Greer of Coon Rapids-Bayard (44-2.5) and Bardole (43-3.5) in fifth and sixth places among the 19 throwers. The winner was from Panorama, so that could be an advantage to one of the next five placings. Simmons made it to state last year and he threw 48-11 at the conference meet with the other four all within a 2.5-foot range of each other, from 45-10 to 43-3.5. Dayton Amdor of CAM is also solid as he won the Rolling Hills shot put crown at 46-10, and Demetrius Lloyd of Woodward Academy was second at Southern Cal on Tuesday at 43-0.5 while Bardole was fourth at 40-10.

Ostrander was just three inches from taking second at the conference meet. Madrid’s Nick Elfcamp, who is also a sprinter, took the event with a leap of 20-05 followed by Danny Clinton of DMC (18-11), Kaden Bruden of Van Meter (18-10.5 ), and Onken (18-8). Brendon McGinnis of Earlham and Jorge Spears of Woodward Academy are also competitive in this event. Elfcamp finished sixth at the state meet last year.

Jessie Priest will be going up against Michael Plasencia of Van Meter and Jeremy Johnson of Madrid in the 400 meter dash. Bardole ran a fast 11.42 at Lake City Tuesday after running 12.24 in the conference meet a week before, a time topped only by district competitors Louie Wickett of Madrid and Josh Arment of DMC. However, two of the three faster times at Lake City were posted by runners from Woodward Academy and AC’s Josh Cummings won the 100 at the RHC meet in 11.8, so Bardole will need to show even more improvement in this very strong field today at Guthrie. Wickett, who place sixth in the 100 at the state meet last year, won the conference meet in 11.21 and then posted an 11.16 at Ballard, good for second behind Aaron Arment of West Marshall, a 2A school.

While Madrid looks to be the hands-down favorite among the boys with most likely Griswold to finish second and Woodward Academy to take third, the situation is not nearly as clear-cut on the girls’ side. In a WIC meet sweep, Griswold also won the girls’ title, but Woodward-Granger has been particularly strong all season, finishing just 17 points behind WCC track power Panorama, the closest any team has come to the Lady Panthers in years. Earlham and Guthrie Center have also had strong meets this season, as had Des Moines Christian. So look for WG and Griswold to go head-to-head for the team championship.

While all eight 1A teams from the West Central are competing at Guthrie and the two 2A schools are at Tri-Center, the eight track teams in the Rolling Hills are all over the map. While CAM, AC and Orient-Macksburg are at Guthrie, Glidden-Ralston, Elk Horn-Kimballton/Exira, and Walnut are at Audubon. Paton-Churdan heads to Burnside to compete with the same Twin Lakes 1A teams that were in Tuesday’s Lake City meet (SWG, RCL, MNW and Southern Cal) along with seven teams from north central and northern Iowa and Colo-Nesco from the other side of Ames. Iowa Christian/Ankeny Christian (a shared program) heads to Martensdale-St. Mary’s along with Grandview Park Baptist of Des Moines. The rest of the field is from southern Iowa.

Jefferson-Scranton will be among the favorites in an eight-team boys 3A district meet in Atlantic after winning the Heart of Iowa-Large and several other large meets with 3A teams this season. Perry will compete in the 3A district at Dallas Center-Grimes, and Ogden will host Prairie Valley (Gowrie) and 10 other teams in a 2A district meet.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

EG Girls Make Mark at WCC Track Meet



HAWKS SCORE 21 POINTS FOR 9TH PLACE

Both East Greene track teams showed improvement at the 2010 conference track meet in Guthrie Center yesterday.

The Hawkettes got on the board with 4 points to take ninth of 10 teams. EG got the upper hand over Coon Rapids-Bayard, which failed to score points at the meet and ended up in last place. West Central Valley finished just ahead of EG with 10 points.

The Hawks were greatly improved over last year, scoring 21 points to take ninth, also finishing ahead of CRB (8) and just behind WCV (28). Last year EG scored just 8 points for ninth place.

Freshman Reed Ostrander and senior Jessie Priest had the best showings for the Hawks in the individual events, each with a fourth-place finish. Ostrander went 18-08 in the long jump and Priest posted a 54.73 in the 400 meter dash. Wes Onken was fifth in the discus (134-7.5), Schyler Bardole was fifth in the 100 meter dash (12.24) and sixth in the shot put (43-03.5), and Priest was sixth in the 200 meter dash (24.67).

The Hawks had good showing all the way around in the sprint events as the 4 x 100 meter relay (48.06) was fourth and the 4 x 200 relay (1:40.2) was fifth. The competition was stiff in all the sprint events, which included top runners from Madrid, last year’s 1A state champions. Madrid won the 4 x 100 relay in a new conference and stadium record (43.97) and is on the same pace that earned them the runner-up spot in last year’s 4 x 100 relay at state (43.73). Madrid’s Louie Wickett won both the 100 and 200 yard dashes, but Madrid was disqualified in the 4 x 200 relay.

As expected, Madrid won the team championship with 140 points, upending Panorama, the reigning champion since 2007 and owner of 14 West Central Conference titles.

FINAL TEAM STANDINGS: Madrid 140, Panorama 112, Earlham 62, Van Meter 53, Des Moines Christian 50, Guthrie Center 49, Woodward-Granger 47, West Central Valley 28, EAST GREENE 21, Coon Rapids-Bayard 8.

Bobbie Halterman picked up EG’s points in the girls meet with a fourth place finish in the 3,200 meter run (13:15.38). The Hawkettes also had entries in the 100 meter dash and 100 meter hurdles.

Panorama continued its streak of West Central track championships, winning its 16th conference crown and 13th in a row with 141 points. Woodward-Granger put up the biggest challenge to the Lady Panthers in quite a few years with 124 points. Panorama swept all four sprint relays in the girls’ side of the meet: 4 x 100, 4 x 200, 4 x 400 and 800 medley.

FINAL TEAM STANDINGS: Panorama 141, Woodward-Granger 124, Earlham 102, Guthrie Center 71, Van Meter 60, Des Moines Christian 54, Madrid 37, West Central Valley 10, EAST GREENE 4, Coon Rapids-Bayard 0.

GOLF TEAMS IN CONFERENCE MEETS

East Greene’s boys and girls golf teams both placed eighth and ninth in their respective conference golf meets on Monday.

The boys team score of 392 put them ahead of Madrid and West Central Valley. Josh Neese and Jessie Priest tied for top honors for the Hawks at 92 in 18 holes at the Woodward Country Club. Rounding out the team scores were Harrison Johnston 101, Zach Hiller 107, Alex Gordon 108, and Zach Beyerink 120. The top four scores counted for EG’s total score.

Panorama upended Coon Rapids-Bayard for the league title, the first time in three years CRB did not take the crown. Earlham took second with CRB third.

FINAL TEAM SCORES @ WOODWARD: Panorama 335, Earlham 346, Coon Rapids-Bayard 350, Des Moines Christian 356, Guthrie Center 365, Woodward-Granger 365, Van Meter 379, EAST GREENE 392, Madrid 415, West Central Valley 427.

The girls teed it up at Coon Rapids for the conference golf tourney with the host Crusaders coming out on top. EG placed ninth among nine full teams as West Central Valley did not field a complete team of four golfers to be counted in the team scoring.

FINAL TEAM SCORES @ COON RAPIDS: Coon Rapids-Bayard 440, Madrid 442, Panorama 462, Van Meter 466, Des Moines Christian 472, Woodward Granger 472, Guthrie Center 475, Earlham 512, EAST GREENE 779.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Spring Sports Head Down 'Home Stretch'

CONFERENCE TRACK, GOLF MEETS THIS WEEK

East Greene closes out is final spring season in the West Central Conference this week with golf and track meets.

The Hawk and Hawkette track teams head to Guthrie Center tomorrow, May 4, for the conference track meet and the EG golf teams tee off today at the conference golf meet in Woodward. The track teams will return to Guthrie Center on Friday, May 14, for girls and boys district track action.

The EG boys are looking to move up in the team standings at the conference track meet. Last year EG scored 8 points for ninth place. The Hawks have some very good showings in meets this year, with upper division finishes in their own Hawkette/Toyne Relays meet held in Jefferson and at the Wildcat Relays hosted by Glidden-Ralston in Carroll. EG has founded it a little tougher going however in larger meets.

During a busy five day-stretch from Friday, April 16, and ending Tuesday, April 20, the Hawks finished fourth of eight teams at the Glidden-Ralston meet; seventh among nine teams at Southeast-Webster Grand Relays in Burnside; and third of eight teams at their own Toyne Relays in Jefferson.

EG crowned two champions at the G-R meet with Wes Onken winning the discus (126-7) and the 4 x 200 relay of Tyler Gathercoal, Aaron Lyons, Tom Beger and Schyler Bardole taking first with a time of 1:41.43. Freshman Reed Ostrander was second in the long jump (18-4) and the 4 x 100 relay (Jessie Priest, Gathercoal, Beger, Bardole) was runner-up to Adair-Casey (46.59) at 48.18.

The 1600 meter medley relay (Ostrander, Lyons, Priest, Tyler Cooklin) finished third at 4:14.89 as did the shuttle hurdle relay (Gathercoal, Beger, Cooklin, Ben Most) in 1:11.66 and Zach Dearborn in the high jump (5-6). EG secured fourth-place finishes in 4 x 800 meter relay, 100 meter dash (Bardole), shot put (Bardole) and 4 x 400 relay. Most rounded out the scoring with sixth in the 110 meter high hurdles (18.97).

TEAM SCORING @ GR: Audubon 143, Adair-Casey 108.5, Glidden-Ralston 81, EAST GREENE 74, Ar-We-Va 71, Coon Rapids-Bayard 50, CAM (Anita) 14.5, Aurelia 12.

Points and high finishes were harder to come by at Burnside the following Monday. The meet included three teams from the Twins Lakes Conference and several tough north central Iowa teams. Bardole brought home second in the shot put with a toss of 42-1 to lead the Hawks. The 4 x 100 relay (47.74) finished third, just being edged out by Southern Cal (46.18) and Rockwell City-Lytton (47.05). Those three teams went head-to-head in the 4 x 200 relay along with Northeast Hamilton (Blairsburg). The same foursome as in the 4 x 100 (Priest, Lyons, Beger, Bardole) posted a very solid time of 1:39.85 in a tough field for fourth place. Southern Cal again came out on top at 1:36.43, just ahead of Northeast Hamilton (1:36.66) and Rockwell City-Lytton (1:37.46), but EG finished well ahead of conference rival Woodward-Granger (1:43.10).

EG coach Dean Lyons told the Jefferson Herald that the Hawks are putting particular emphasis on shaving times off the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relays and seeing improvement from Priest in the 400 meter dash.

EG fared well in the field events overall at SWG as Wes Onken (119-4) and Tory Beger (109-0) finished fourth and sixth in the discus, Reed Ostrander was fourth in the long jump (17-10), and Zach Dearborn took sixth in the high jump (5-8).
The Hawks also picked up points from sixth-place finishes in the sprint medley and 4 x 400 relays, Most in the 110 meter high hurdles and Bardole in the 100 meter dash.

TEAM SCORING @ SWG: Northeast Hamilton 130, Rockwell City-Lytton 110, Southern Cal 88, Woodward-Granger 81, CWL 45, Southeast Webster-Grand 38, EG 33, Glidden-Ralston 22, Coon Rapids-Bayard 7.

The spotlight shone brightly on the Hawks as they hosted their own meet the following night on the all-weather track in Jefferson. EG scored 82 points to take third, trailing only meet winner Jefferson-Scranton JV, 127.5, and Des Moines Christian, 121. As Jefferson-Scranton is a 3A school in track, EG technically finished as runner-up among the seven same-size schools competing at the Toyne Relays. All of the other schools in the meet were 1A, with the exception of Ogden, a 2A school. And the J-S competitors were formidable as the varsity Rams have won big meets this season against 3A competitors at Creston, Prairie Valley (Gowrie) and Jefferson, and finished second at Winterset, so the level of JV competition in a track squad of that size (50 members) is pretty solid.

EG scored points in all the field event and all the relays, with the 4 x 100 meter team taking first with a time of 47.99. Priest took second in the 400 meters (53.95) and the 4 x 200 meter unit (1:40.47) came in second to West Central foe DMC. The Hawks scored somewhat of a runner-up sweep in the field events, taking second in three of the four events. Finishing second were Bardole (41-9.5) in the shotput, Onken (126-2) in the discus, and Ostrander (18-9) in the long jump. Tory Beger was fifth in the discus (100-1) and Zach Hiller’s sixth in the shot put (34-9).

The shuttle hurdle relay (1:11.1) came in third with the distance medley (4:14.66), 4 x 800 (11:22.08) and 4 x 400 (4:26.21) relays each placing fourth. Bardole was fourth in 100 meter dash (11.9) and Most was sixth in the 110 meter high hurdles (19.15).

Paton-Churdan had good showings from Taylor King and Brandon Tilley. King won the 3,200 meter run (11:18.45) and was runner-up in the 1,600 meter run (5:16.7). Tilley finished fourth in the 800 meter run (2:24.14).

TEAM SCORING @ EG: Jefferson-Scranton JV 127.5, Des Moines Christian 121, EAST GREENE 82, Ogden 78.5, Glidden-Ralston 65, Coon Rapids-Bayard 32, Grandview Park Baptist (Des Moines) 24, Paton-Churdan 22.

The Hawk track team faced its toughest competition of the season last Tuesday in Audubon, tying for 12th place in very tough 13-team field. Griswold won the meet with 111 points followed by IKM-Manning at 101, Treynor 80.5, Tri-Center 51, Audubon 47.5, Guthrie Center 37, Adair-Casey 32, West Central Valley 25, Villisca 23.5, Walnut 22, Coon Rapids-Bayard 9.5, East Greene 9, CAM (Anita) 9.

It was the first meet of the season where EG placed behind conference rival Coon Rapids-Bayard, having finished ahead of the Crusaders in all three of its recent meets.

GIRLS TRACK: Heidi Kiner got a big win for the girls team in the Hawkette/Toyne Relays, breaking the tape in 18:31 to claim first in the 100 meter hurdles. Teammate Jessi Beaman was fourth in 19.83 in the same event. Kiner and Beaman teamed up with Tia Lowe and Bobbie Halterman to finish fourth (2:23.94) in the sprint medley relay. The 4 x 100 meter relay (Kiner, Molly Neese, Lowe, Beaman) took fourth (1:03.05) and Haltermann was fourth in the 1,500 meter run (6:04.1), two spots ahead of Stephanie Thompson of Paton-Churdan (7:22.62). Lowe rounded out the EG scoring with a sixth-place finish in the 400 meter dash (1:17.64).

EG finished fourth of six teams with 37 points, its best showing of the year.

PC’s sprint medley relay team of Abby Koch, Makayla Minnehan, Taryn Jewett and Jaclyn Baldwin finished fifth (2:27.09) just behind EG. Baldwin took fifth in the 100 meter dash (13.75) and Minnehan was sixth in the 100 meter hurdles (21.61) to round out the PC scoring.

TEAM SCORING @ EG: Des Moines Christian 186, Ogden 166, Glidden-Ralston 83, EAST GREENE 37, Coon Rapids-Bayard 32, Paton-Churdan 14.

East Greene and conference foe Coon Rapids-Bayard have been going head-to-head this season with EG placing ahead of CRB in its own meet at Jefferson and at GR’s Wildcat Relays in Jefferson, but CRB came out ahead of the Hawkettes at SWG and an earlier season meet at Prairie Valley (Gowrie). EG’s season got off to a slow start with just 2 points scored at Gowrie, placing behind PC at 7 and CRB at 6. Halterman scored EG’s only points with fifth place in 3,000 meter run.

The Hawkettes have just a half-dozen team members and are limited to just five or six events per meet, so any points scored in the team standings are well earned. EG fared very well in the GR meet with 23 points to 12 for CRB, keeping the Hawkettes out of last place. Halterman was second in the 3,200 (13.07.4) and third in the 1,500 (6:04.53). The distance medley relay placed fourth, as did Lowe in the 400 hurdles. Kiner was sixth in the 100 hurdles.

TEAM SCORING @ GR: Audubon 185, Ar-We-Va 91, Adair-Casey and Glidden-Ralston 73, Aurelia 56, CAM (Anita) 43, EAST GREENE 23, Coon Rapids-Bayard 12.

The situation was reversed at Burnside with CRB scoring 19 points, ahead of CWL (Corwith) with 16 and EG in last place with 10. EG got points from Halterman finishing third in the 3,000, and sixth place finishes from Kiner in the 100 hurdles and the sprint medley relay.

TEAM SCORING @ SWG: Woodward-Granger 217, Southern Cal (Lake City) 138, Southeast Webster-Grand 62, Rockwell City-Lytton 56, Glidden-Ralston 45, Coon Rapids-Bayard 19, CWL (Corwith) 16, EAST GREENE 10.

Beyond tomorrow’s conference meet, the Hawks and Hawkettes will be looking for peak performances at the district meet on May 14. The top two finishers in each event of the boys district meet advance on to the 1A state track meet at Drake Stadium in Des Moines on May 22. In girls 1A track, each event winner of 12 regional meets advances to the state meet at Drake along with the next 12 best performances from among all 12 regionals. The girls state meet is run in conjunction with the boys meet in all four classes—1A, 2A, 3A and 4A.

BOYS GOLF: The Hawk golfers will be looking to improve on last year’s conference meet where they finished eighth among the 10 league teams, edging out Guthrie Center and West Central Valley (Stuart) and placing just behind conference newcomer Madrid.

EG has already notched a win over the Tigers, finishing second in a triangular on its home course at Lakeside Golf Course near Spring Lake. Woodward-Granger took first with 187, ahead of EG at 203 and Madrid’s 207. Josh Neese and Jessie Priest paced the Hawks with rounds of 48 followed by Zach Beyerink, 51, and Zach Hiller, 56.

The Hawks lost dual matches to Southeast Webster-Grand (178-194), Van Meter (187-228) and Guthrie Center (188-236). Josh Neese tied for medalist honors against Guthrie Center’s Patrick Ahrens and Zach Cain at 45 for the nine-hole round at Guthrie Center Golf Club.

Several of the Hawks’ top golfers are also on the track team, so the Hawks were a bit short-handed in a four-team tourney hosted by Southeast Webster-Grand at Dayton on April 20, the same night of the Toyne Relays. Prairie Valley won the meet with a 164 followed by SWG 174, Ogden 185, and EG 257. Neese paced the Hawks with a 52, followed by Zach Beyerink 54, Jacob Fester 60, and Brice Smith 90.

GIRLS GOLF: East Greene has just four members on the girls golf team and all but one are newcomers. It takes four golfers to combine for a team score and in some contests not all the Hawkette golfers are available. EG hosted Woodward-Granger and Madrid in a triangular on its home course, The Hill Golf Course at Grand Junction, on April 5 to open the season . WG won with a 219 followed by Madrid, 242, and EG, 329. Brandi Burrow and Kim Hatfield each shot 74 to lead EG. Leah Perry shot 78 and Tessa Lorentzen 103.

EG faced Van Meter on April 13 at River Valley Golf Course at Adel. The Bulldogs won the dual, 244-387. Hatfield led EG with 79, followed by Perry 88, and Lorentzen and Burrow both at 90.

EG took on SWG in dual at the Hill on April 14 with the Eaglettes shooting a 194, and two Hawkettes taking the course for EG. Perry shot 71 and Lorenzen 89. Hatfield and Lorenzen were on hand when EG hosted CRB on April 19 at the Hill. Hatfield shot a 68 and Lorentzen 114. CRB shot a 195.

The full Hawkette squad traveled to Guthrie Center on April 16, falling to the Tigerettes, 227 to 346.

EYE ON GJ SAYS: Coon Rapids-Bayard has dominated both boys and girls conference golf the last few years but the Crusader boys team will face a challenge this year from Panorama. CRB won both boys and girls conference titles last year and both squads made it through section and district play to advance to the state golf tournament.

Panorama has racked up a 23-4 record so far this year (based on wins in dual and triangular meets and overall tournament finishes) and is ranked 12th in Class 2A by the Iowa Golf Coaches Association. Panorama got the best of CRB in a head-to-head competition, 179 to 200, on Friday at Lake Panorama National. The Panthers also had a sizable advantage over CRB in the 12-team Panorama Invitational on April 24. Panorama took third with 156 while the Crusaders were eighth at 176.

CRB and Panorama have dominated the conference meet with the Crusaders winning eight championships since 1993 and Panorama winning five, all since 2000.

Just as CRB could be upended in golf today, the same fate could await Panorama in track tomorrow. The Panthers have breezed to the title the last three years, adding to the previous 14 West Central Conference crowns the school has won since it was formed in 1990. Panorama faced a challenge from Madrid in several meets last year, but the Panthers prevailed at the conference meet in Guthrie Center. Madrid is as strong this year as the team that won the state 1A title last year, if not better. The Tigers have taken team titles at Southern Cal and Colo-Nesco. When the Tigers and Panthers went up against each other April 20 at the Ballard Classic Relays in Huxley, Madrid came away with the Class B team championship with 148 points while Panorama was fourth in Class B with 60. The same scenario prevailed last Tuesday at the Bengal Relays in Gilbert with Madrid taking the crown among eight teams with 167 points and Panorama finishing fourth with 71.5.

EG will look to move up from last year’s ninth-place finish, two points behind Glidden-Ralston, since departed from the West Central, and five ahead of West Central Valley. GR has been replaced by Woodward-Granger, a solid track program. CRB, however, had one of its best track teams in years and scored 36 points for sixth place. The Hawks have been getting the edge over the Crusaders in most meets, so hopefully EG can keep that advantage and stay head of WCV while moving ahead of CRB in the standings.

Madrid should take the league crown while Panorama and Guthrie Center battle for second. What’s not clear is how the middle of the pack will shake out and how strong Van Meter and Earlham are this year. DMC had a 40-point advantage over EG at the Toyne Relays so it doesn’t look like the Hawks could leapfrog over the Lions. At the Ballard meet, Earlham was just 14 points behind Panorama with WG and WCV not that far behind. Comparatively, Van Meter scored 47 points at the Gilbert meet to finish sixth of eight teams, but in strong field.

Last year, EG scored in just three events and no higher than fourth in any of them. Bardole and Onken are both back in their field events, and the Hawks’ 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relays are looking solid. Priest is strong in the 400 and if some of the other events that the Hawks placed in can bring in some fifth or sixth places and the strong events can score close to the top, EG can certainly improve on last year’s showing.

The Hawks will need to do much better than they did among the 13-team meet last week in Audubon, where WCV was well ahead of them in the points tally and CRB was one-half point better, leaving the Hawks stranded at 9 points total, tying them with CAM for the bottom.

The EG girls will be looking to get on the board as they were blanked at last year’s conference meet. Hopefully, that can get ahead of CRB, which scored just 3 points last year to take ninth. The hurdlers and Halterman in the distance events look to the best bets to score points.

The same scenario holds true in girls golf as EG will be hoping to field a full team and get on the team leaderboard. CRB looks to maintain its dominant position in the West Central. Panorama is a solid team, but not much of a threat as CRB beat them soundly in dual match earlier this season. Panorama has never won a West Central girls golf title.

Panorama’s girls team will most likely be unchallenged to snare an unprecedented 12th consecutive West Central track championship and 15th overall. Woodward-Granger looked to offer some solid completion to Panorama’s win streak, trailing the Lady Panthers by just a few points in some key meets but as the season moved along, Panorama returned to form and posted a big 42 point advantage over runner-up WG in winning the Tigerette Relays at Guthrie Center. The Lady Panthers have also won meets at Carroll and Perry and its own Kim Janvrin Invitational in Panora, while finishing second at the Adel-DeSoto-Minburn and Dallas Center-Grimes meets.

This year’s boys conference golf meet will be interesting as last year Glidden-Ralston nailed down the runner-up spot, just 20 strokes behind CRB. With GR now in the Rolling Hills Conference, it will be interesting to see how new member Woodward-Granger performs. WG does have a 16-stroke advantage over EG from the triangular meet that opened the season, but that was early so it will be interesting to see if EG can close the gap. Neese has greatly improved from the beginning of the season. A senior, he will be looking to close out his golf career at EG with a good showing. Priest is also a senior and a good outing from him could help move the Hawks up in the team standings. The Hawks have a good sized squad this year so they can send out their top six golfers on the course at Woodward with the best four counting in the team score.

Guthrie looks improved over last year’s ninth place showing, so EG will most likely fall behind them, especially since the Tigers took the Hawks to task in their head-to-head matchup. EG will need to keep the edge it had over Madrid in their triangular at Lakeside earlier this year. Van Meter and Des Moines Christian fielded strong teams last year, placing fourth and fifth in the conference and then placing second and third in the sectional meet at Pleasantville, which advanced them on to the district meet. VM had a 40-stroke advantage over EG in their dual meet, so they look to be strong again this year. Not clear is how strong DMC is this year, or Earlham for that matter, and if WCV is improved enough to move up from last place.

Next year the Hawks and Hawkettes will move to the Rolling Hills and resume conference competition with old rivals Glidden-Ralston and Paton-Churdan.