New Teacher 2024 Luncheon at Grace Church in Geneseo - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current


New staff members in the Geneseo School District were honored on Aug. 8 at a luncheon at Grace United Methodist Church. The 2024 luncheon was the 44th year for the church to host new teachers and administrators to the district.

The new staff members include:

-ELEMENTARY: - Jennifer Nelson, first grade, Northside;
Rachel Oeder, third grade Northside; Kaitlyn Peters, third grade Millikin; Emily Ryerson, fourth grade, Northside; and Haley Tromblee, vocal music, Millikin.

Additional new staff in the Geneseo School District are, in front from left, Nora Minnaert, Shay Moorman, Shelly Britt; in back, Megan Miller, Julie Stevens, Michelle Westerdale and Tayloran Atwell. Photo by Claudia Loucks

-MIDDLE SCHOOL: - Tayloran Atwell, science; Shelly Britt, English; Nora Minnaert, science; Shay Moorman, art; and Kimberly Vandewoestyne, physical education/health.

Also, new as Geneseo School District staff are, in front from left, Philip Casarotto, Kaitlyn Peters, Haley Tromblee; in back, Matt Furlong, Kimberly Vandewoestyne, Hannah Hutton and Janea Oaks. Photo by Claudia Loucks

-HIGH SCHOOL: – Angelia Baumgartner, science; Matt Furlong, social science; Quincy McSweeney, science; Megan Miller, physical education; Janea Oaks, CARES Classroom; Calla Ritchie, English; and Michelle Westerdale, counselor.

New staff in the Geneseo School District are, in front from left, Emily Ryerson, Jennifer Nelson, Calla Ritchie; in back, Tricia Hull, Rachel Oeder, Quincy McSweeney and Angelia Baumgartner. Photo by Claudia Loucks

-HENRY/STARK: - Philip Casarotto, teacher; Tricia Hull, Life Skills teacher; Hannah Hutton, speech; Christine Rogers, CC teacher; and Julia Stevens, social worker.

Richmond Hill Players Comedy Opens Aug. 15 - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Geneseo’s Richmond Hill Players continue their 2024 season with “The Money in Uncle George’s Suitcase,” a comedy by Pat Cook. The show will be presented Thursdays through Sundays, Aug. 15-25, in the Barn Theatre at Richmond Hill Park, Geneseo.

Joe DePauw, Geneseo, directs the show.

ABOUT THE PLAY

When Uncle George invites his whole family up for a weekend of fun at his rustic cabin, he actually wants them together so he can read his will. But between the bequeathing and his rambling stories, George drops the bomb that somewhere on the property is a suitcase holding four hundred and eighty thousand dollars!

Violet Runty, at right, shows her parents, David Shaffer and Dana Skiles the dog that Uncle George whittled for her, in a scene from “The Money in Uncle George’s Suitcase,” which opens Aug. 15 at the Barn Theater in Geneseo. Contributed Photo

What follows is a hilarious farce of pettiness, slander, and greed. The relatives end up wrestling each other, falling down the stairs, and getting stuck in the furniture.

“Yep,” said George as he’s seen carrying a shovel out the front door. But George’s gift is much more important that mere money, even though the relatives don’t see it that way – at first.

The cast features Bruce Carmen, Alex Claus, Dana Skiles and Violet Runty, all of Geneseo; Elizabeth Pyle, Cambridge; Mandi Wilson, New Windsor; David Shaffer, Moline, and Valerie Painter, Toulon.

Alex Claus, left, Bruce Carmen, and Elizabeth Pyle are among the cast members of “The Money in Uncle George’s Suitcase.” Contributed Photo

The staff includes stage manager Elizabeth Shaffer, Moline; light and sound designer/operator Jennifer Kingry; set builder Mike Skiles, Geneseo, and set builder Jim Skiles, Colona.

On Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, the doors open at 6:30 p.m. with the show beginning at 7:30 p.m. Sunday shows are 3 p.m. matinees with the doors opening at 2 p.m.

Reservations are recommended and can be made by calling the Richmond Hill box office at 309-944-2244 or by visiting the website at rhplayers.com.

Late seating is not permitted; no one will be admitted to the theater after the show has started.

Admission to all performances is $12.

An audio description performance will be held Friday, Aug. 16. Richmond Hill also offers Assistive Listening Devices (ALDs), which can be requested at the time reservations are made.

Farrell Dad and Daughter Duo Capture Golf Championship in Ireland - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Submitted Photo

Allison (Farrell) Cooney didn’t just submit the winning entry into a contest that sent her and her Dad, Ron Farrell, to Ireland to play together in a golf tournament, but they also won the tournament.

Cooney won the contest, sponsored by Women’s Golf Digest and Carr Golf through the social media platform Instagram, and she and her Dad received an all-expense entry into the tournament held at the Dooks Golf Club and the Waterville Golf Links in Kerry, Ireland.

There were 32 father and daughter from five countries – United States, Canada, Ireland, England and South Africa, competing in the three-day tournament.

The festivities were held July 15-18 and included three tournament rounds, July 16-18….”All rounds were played together in two different formals, best ball or alternate shot,” Cooney explained.

She shared the first day was a four-ball format, the second day a Scotch Foursome format and the final day a Four-ball format.

“The scoring format was Stableford which is a points based scoring based off the score relative to par,” she said. “We were 19 over par for the three-day score and scored 89 points.”

They each won trophies for their winning efforts.

In addition to the tournament, Cooney and her father were able to explore Dublin for two days prior to the golf tournament and she said, “We were able to take in all of the popular sites and enjoy some local food. The tournament provided a driver form Dublin to Waterville for the tournament, and on the way we were able to drive the ‘Ring of Kerry’ and see much of the countryside.”

“The Carr Golf Family took incredible care of us from the moment we arrived in Ireland,” she said. “They coordinated transportation, accommodations, meals, etc., to make our experience memorable. The Father Daughter World Invitational is truly a world-class event that we will remember for the rest of our lives.”

She shared the link to next year’s event and added, “in case anyone is interested in attending: https://carrgolf.com/tournaments/world-invitational-father-daughter-golf-tournament.

When asked about special memories of the trip, Cooney said going into the third and final round of the golf tournament, she and her Dad were sitting in fourth or fifth place…”We were within reach of first but knew we would need a solid final day to win the gross. On the back 9 of the final day my Dad nearly made an albatross. The tap in eagle gave us some momentum going into the final stretch. On the last day my Dad made a 12 ft. birdie putt to give us the win by one.”

She also commented, “We met so many incredible people through the event that share the same love for the game. We spent quite a bit of time with a family from England and South Africa. The people we met made the memories that much sweeter.”

Cooney offered a special tribute to her Dad when she said, “You don’t get many opportunities to do a trip of this magnitude with your Dad or Daughter. Golf is such a big part of both of our lives it was incredibly special to share this experience together. My Dad has done a lot to help me succeed in the game of golf. I know I would not be where I am today without his love and support. Winning this trip was the perfect opportunity for me to give back just a small piece of what he has given me.”

We asked Cooney’s Dad, Ron Farrell of Geneseo, to share some comments, and he said he felt “like a winner before we even left for the trip, and I told myself to simply just try to enjoy every aspect of it.”

The trip was a “once in lifetime experience,” he said. ‘I’m fortunate to have two great kids and to be able to spend a week with one of them overseas is something I never dreamed of. Everything about the experience was truly unbelievable.”

Submitted Photo

He commented that the Links style Golf courses, Carr Golf and Golf Digest “treated us to a spectacular and professional-style tournament. Allison is an exceptional player and carried the team (her father) for the majority of the three-day event, although I did have a chance to contribute on the back nine of the last day…Shooting the low gross score of the tournament was ‘icing on top’ of an already special week.”

Her Dad is right when he refers to Allison as “an exceptional player.”

Golf has long been a big part of the Farrell family as parents, Ron and Lisa Farrell, and sister, Ashley, are avid golfers.

After graduating from GHS in 2012, Cooney earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Business in Supply Chain Management from Western Illinois University, Macomb, before joining the work force in 2016. She also was on the golf team at Western.

While a student at GHS, Cooney played on the golf team and earned a spot at State in her senior year where she placed in the top 25 golfers.

She was the assistant golf coach at GHS from 2016 until 2023, when she and her husband, Robert Cooney, moved to North Carolina, where they live near Raleigh. She continues to play golf recreationally and said she and her husband play golf together several times a week.

In addition to playing golf, she also volunteers at a local golf course with the First Tee program…”I am helping teach five and six-year-olds skills they can use on the golf course as well as in life,” she said.

Submitted Photo

Allison’s Entry in Golf Contest – Why She Wanted to Play Golf with Her Dad in the Event

“At the age of 8 my Dad introduced me to the game of golf and sparked a life long passion. He has always, and will always, be my favorite golf partner. He started as my swing coach, and over time, those roles have reversed. I played college golf. 80 collegian rounds and my Dad never missed a swing. Since those days we've completed our "Spectator Grand Slam" to watch all four of the Men's Majors together. The feat was achieved at St. Andrews where my Dad took me on a golf trip of a lifetime to Scotland. I have since moved away from our hometown to pursue my dream of working in the golf industry. This means fewer rounds of golf together but makes the rounds we get that much more meaningful. Golf is much more than a game to both of us, but a way of life. Watching, playing, working, coaching - golf is always at the center of what we do together. Winning this would allow me to give my Dad just a small piece of what he has given me these past 20 years.” 

Kippy Breeden Long-Time Volunteer with John Deere Classic - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Even though it has been a few weeks since the John Deere Classic Golf Tournament, memories of the tournament are still fresh in the mind of Kippy Breeden, who has been a volunteer with the tournament since 1987.

Breeden became involved with the tournament when a friend, Cris Nelson, was chairman of the transportation committee for the tournament, and was in need of volunteers to drive the PGA pros and their families for what was then the Hardees’s Classic and was held at Oakwood Country Club in Coal Valley.

“She said it would be a lot of fun and that’s how it all started for me,” Breeden added.

She has always been part of the transportation committee for the tournament, became co-chair in 1995, and was appointed to head chair of the transportation committee in 1999, the same year the tournament was renamed to the John Deere Classic.

“I have seven co-chairs that help organize 113 volunteers, she said.

Breeden reminisced about the early years of her volunteering and said, “In the beginning the transportation committee was located in the pool house at Oakwood. They then got us construction trailers and different committees were assigned to them. We would pick up anywhere from 30 to 50 courtesy cards from different Chevy dealers in the Quad Cities. Those were used cars and the vehicles had many miles on them, they even had the crank roll-up windows. We would pick up the vans from Orby’s. We would park the vehicles under the big Oak trees at Oakwood Country Club, and one year we had a terrible storm and it blew all the acorns of the trees and every car ended up with damage, that looked like damage from hail. That was an expensive insurance claim.”

Fast forward to current day tournament and Breeden said, “Now we pick up 189 cars from Smart Lexus in Davenport for the pros and our volunteers use them for shuttles, and we get 20 vans from Enterprise to be used as evacuation vehicles on the course and 11 display cars for advertisement for Lexus.”

Breeden also explained the requirements of becoming a volunteer and said the training involves reviewing the protocol to be used when driving the pros, their families, the media and caddies…”There are topics about the position that cannot be discussed for safety concerns for the golf pros and their families. We have procedures for drivers taking turns and running errands for the tournament. Most of the training is done the first day of a volunteer’s work schedule and then the routes are distributed for driving media and caddy shuttles. We also go over what hotels and private housing the pros are using for accommodations.”

Volunteer training begins the Thursday prior to the tournament and the volunteers work until the Tuesday after the tournament….”We run three shifts at the course, starting at 5 a.m. and continuing until 10 p.m.,” she explained. “We have two shifts at the airport that start at 6 a.m. and run until the last flight arrives at night.”

“The volunteers do a variety of errands from taking a person from the medical trailer to their car, to picking up items for the John Deere Classic to driving a pro from Moline to Chicago O’Hare Airport to catch a flight to the next tournament and everything in-between.” she added.

And it isn’t just the 13 to 14 days of preparation before, during and after the tournament, Breeden said she and her volunteers do a lot of preparing throughout the year…”and there is a lot of hard done by the volunteers during the tournament.”

“We are responsible for millions of dollars by keeping track of where and who has the cars,” she said. “One time a pro took the car he was using to O’Hare and left it unlocked in the short-term parking lot with the keys under the floor mat and never let us know what he had done. It took us 24 hours to track him down and find out what he had done with the car when it was not returned to us at the course.”

In spite of the problems that may arise, Breeden said, “I really love doing this job because of the friendships I have made over the years with the volunteers, the golf pros and their families, and seeing amazing golf and the number of charities this event helps. It really is very rewarding. I work very long hours every day, but I can’t imagine missing out on the fun!”

When she isn’t working and when the weather is nice enough, Breeden can be found playing golf herself, and she shared that her Dad started her golfing when she was a teenager.

Kippy Breeden with Jordan Spieth at the John Deere Classic. Photo Submitted

Jordan Rahn Forever Young Run in 2024 - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Race information: Jordan Rahn Forever Young Run – Saturday, Aug. 24, 5 K at 8 a.m. and one-mile run/walk at 9 a.m.
Where: Veterans Memorial Park, Atkinson.
Registration: Online at www.jordanrahnforeveryoungrun.org
Katie VanAntwerp is race director, and can be contacted at ktvanantwerp@gmail.com.

Lola and Ryan Rahn, Atkinson, stand by the kayak to be awarded to a participant in the 2024 Jordan Rahn Forever Young Run on Saturday, Aug. 24. The 10th annual event is in memory of their son who died in 2013.

The Jordan Rahn Forever Young Run continues to be a celebration of life in memory of Jordan Rahn, son of Ryan and Lola Rahn of Atkinson, and a means to help children in foster care.

The annual event is a result of the tragedy that claimed the young life of Jordan Rahn, who died unexpectedly in October of 2013, at the age of 19 while playing football with friends.

Proceeds from the upcoming 10th annual Run, in memory of the Rahn’s son, will be used to benefit children in foster care, including Foster Hope, which was founded by the Rahn couple in April of 2017. The race was not held in 2020 which makes 2024 the 10th year for the JRFYR.

Katie VanAntwerp, race director, said, “Because we did not have a race in 2020, this makes this year’s race our 10th event and we are hoping that this will be the biggest celebration yet.”

Registration is underway for this year’s Jordan Rahn Forever Young Run which is Saturday, Aug. 24, and Tuesday, Aug. 13, is the last day to register at the lower rate, and the last day to receive a T-shirt with registration. The 5K Race will begin at 8 a.m. and the one mile race kicks off at 9 a.m., both from Veterans Memorial Park in Atkinson.

Prizes include:

-5K Overall Male/Female winners will receive $100 cash.

-One Mile Overall Atkinson Resident Male/Female winners will receive $50 Village of Atkinson gift certificates.

Again this year, a race participant who is 18 years of age or older, will be given the choice of a kayak or $300 cash. There also will be bikes awarded to one boy and one girl who participate in the Run and are 12 years old or younger. A Fit Bit will be awarded to a participant who is 13 to 17 years old. The prizes will be awarded in random drawings and winners must be present to win the prizes.

Activities are planned in Veterans Park after the race. There will be a Post Race Party and Beer Tent in Veterans Park

-Margaritas will be available to purchase for adults 21 years of age and older.

-Live music by Shaun Easton from 8 a.m. to 12 noon.

-Live music by John Heasly from 12 noon to 2 p.m.

-Free kids’ games from 10 a.m. to noon.

-Gaga Ball

-Emily’s Face Painting from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

-Kid’s Inflatables from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

-FOAM Party for kids from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.

-Emily’s Face Painting from 9:30 to 12:30 p.m.

-Sol’s Legacy Ministries minis from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

-Miller’s Petting Zoo from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

-Tiny Tail Exotics form 10 a.m. to noon.

-QCCAN Therapy Dogs from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

-Tropical Sno Cambridge from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

-Atkinson Booster Club Cookout opens at 10 a.m.

-Fuego Taco from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. or until sold out.

-Sourdough BAE Booth.

All proceeds benefit children in foster care through Foster Hope.

As a result of that first race, Lola Rahn was able to connect with several foster care parents and she and her husband started a foster parent support group, Foster Hope that meets in Foster Hope offices located in the former Atkinson Grade School, 107 South State St. The couple also hosts several appreciation events for foster families.

Foster Hope is a 501-c3 non-profit organization and Rahn said, “Our mission is to educate, inspire and support the foster care community. Educate by providing a place for foster parent trainings, including CPR classes; Inspire by providing a place for our support group meetings; support by being able to meet the immediate needs of a foster family after they receive a child in their home such as providing them with diapers, clothes, cribs and other necessary items.”

More information about Foster Hope is available on Face book page at Foster Hope-Quad Cities Area.

Sugar Maple Ladies Host Golf Outing - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Forty-two golfers from four area golf clubs, representing 14 area communities, took part in the recent Golf Outing hosted by the Sugar Maple Ladies Golf League. The event was held at Sugar Maple Golf Club, Geneseo, on July 15, a day referred to by many of the ladies as “the hottest, most humid day of summer.”

A total of $2,354 was presented to the Trinity Health Foundation, which is part of the Ladies League’s five-year pledge of $7,500, to “Swing Fore the Cure.”

According to Jean Hahn, who served as co-chairperson of the recent event with Nancy Stover, the funds raised locally will be used to purchase a named infusion chair for the expansion of the Trinity Cancer Center in the Quad Cities, which is designed to make cancer treatments more available locally.

This year’s theme for the outing was “Butterflies and Birdies” – Butterflies symbolize hope.

Cancer survivors who took part in the recent outing hosted by the Sugar Maple Ladies Golf League include from left, Carol Brunner, Barb Specht, Vicki McVietty, Sheila Cromien, Kathryn White, Carole Flowers, Sharon Yoder, Donna Gradert. Phyllis Heckman and Vickie Farrell also are survivors, but are not in the photo. Contributed Photo

In addition to the golf outing, 10 of the golfers, who are cancer survivors, received special recognition. Fused glass butterfly plant stakes were created by 10 members of the Sugar Maple Ladies, under the direction of local glass artist Marie Skiles, and those stakes were presented to the 10 cancer survivors.

Karen Taylor of Sheffield received a prize for the lowest score, one over part; Vickie Farrell, Libby Trego and Jan VanKerrebroeck also were recognized for earning Birdies during the golf round. Winners of special events during the round received hand-made potted plant motif kitchen towels.

The outing included nine holes of golf, a salad luncheon provided by members of the Sugar Maple Ladies Golf League, and an array of gifts given by members and businesses and gift certificates donated by local businesses.

Hahn expressed appreciation to the businesses and listed them: Sugar Maple Golf Club, Trinity Health Foundation, Country View Golf Club, Baker Park Golf Course, BEMER Health & Wellness -Julie Thiel, Kent Johnson (manager GEN-AIR, INC.), Village Florist, Village Home Stores, Pampered Chef (Beth Ford Consultant), Geneseo Chamber of Commerce, Cerno’s Bar & Grill, Culver’s, The Cellar, Dairy Queen, Geneseo Fareway, Four Seasons, State Street Café, Sunrise Café, Wal-Mart.

“It was a very successful event,” she said. “Special thanks to all who had a part in our Outing: Sugar Maple Golf Course, Sugar Maple Ladies League members, employees of Sugar Maple, and the Bag Boys (husbands and other men) who handled clubs and food for our members and guests.”

The special event prize winners at the “Swing FORE the Cure” golf outing hosted by the Sugar Maple Ladies Golf League are, from left, Pat Warren, Sonja Everett, Carole Flowers, Karen Taylor, Joan Windisch and Erna Miller. Contributed Photo

Lucille Ball Presentation July 31 at Geneseo Library - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Leslie Goddard, a gifted, award-winning historian, author, actress and lecturer who has been presenting on topics in American History and women’s history for more than 20 years will be making her debut presentation as Lucille Ball at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, July 31, at the Geneseo Public Library. The presentation is free and open to the public.

Lucille Desiree Ball was an American actress, comedian, producer, and studio executive, and was recognized by Time as one of the most influential women of the 20th century for her work in all four of these areas.

Contributed Photo

In the 1950’s, she captured the hearts of television audiences across the nation. Off-screen, she and her real-life husband launched their own television studio and pioneered new technologies. Unbeknownst to her viewers, however, the day-to-day struggles of living your life on TV took a toll on the couple’s marriage.

A former museum director, Leslie Goddard holds a PhD from Northwestern University as well as master’s degrees in museum study and in theater.

She is known nationally for her work in bringing women’s history alive through her portrayal of famous women such as Eleanor Roosevelt, Jackie Kennedy, artist Georgia O’Keefe, actress Bette Davis, and Chef Julie Child and others. She also has portrayed Betty Crocker, lectured on the history of the Barbie doll and on the life of airline stewardesses in the 1960’s in her portrayal as “Pan Am Betty.”

Goddard presents more than 400 performances and lectures each year to public libraries, professional associations and colleges/universities. She has served on the board of the Illinois State Historical Society, the Illinois Association of Museums and the Civil War Round Table of Chicago.

She is the author of three books on Chicago history: “Remembering Marshall Field’s,” “Lost Chicago Department Stores,” and “Chicago’s Sweet Candy History.”

Contributed Photo

International Thanksgiving Fellowship Program July 23 Ice Cream Social - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Andrea Hogue, left, and Margaret Hitzhusen, board members of the Geneseo International Thanksgiving Fellowship Program, are in charge of the July 23 Ice Cream Social at Geneseo City Park.
Desserts and ice cream will be served, beginning at 6 p.m., with music by the QC’s Big

River Brass Band beginning at 7 p.m.

Dessert donations are needed for the ice cream social and anyone interested in donating a baked item or in making a monetary donation is asked to contact Hogue at 309-945-2537

The 40-member BRBB plays in the style of European brass bands and draws literature from classic crass band repertoire, and classical, jazz and pop arrangements.

Since 1960 the Geneseo International Thanksgiving Fellowship Program has arranged home stays and professional educational appointments in the Geneseo and surrounding areas, including the Quad Cities, for short term international visitors and students. The GITFP board also works with International House in Chicago to arrange for interested guests and pairs them with hosts in our communities.

The Geneseo International Thanksgiving Fellowship Program returned last year with 10 guests, after a three-year hiatus as a result of the pandemic.

There is a need for host families for Nov. 27-Dec. 1 of this year. Questions and application information is available from Marcia Helke at 309-944-4486 or at gitfp60@gmail.com.

Andrea Hogue shared some comments about her family’s experience in hosting with the program and she said, “In our experience in the four times hosting, our family has made bonds that have lasted years with German, Chinese and Japanese students and young professionals. We hear from them regularly. It helped my kids understand the world is bigger than just us in our community.”

Margaret Hitzhusen added, “It gives us an opportunity to learn about other cultures and to showcase our wonderful community.”

Taylor Zvonic Receives Park District RESPECT Award - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Taylor Zvonic, Day Camp Manager for the Geneseo Park District, recently received the District’s RESPECT Award:

-R – Recreational, Health & Wellness Opportunities.

-E – Excellence.

-S – Safety.

-P-Positivity.

-Equitable – Creating an environment of inclusion for the whole community.

-C – Communication.

-T – Teamwork.

The letter of nomination for Zvonic, written by Nathaniel Hines, Recreation Program Manager for the Park District, states: “As the Day Camp Manager, Taylor has consistently demonstrated qualities that make her an outstanding leader and a true asset to our organization.”

“One of Taylor’s standout qualities is her ability to create a sense of community within the Day Camp. She goes above and beyond to create a welcoming environment where every camper feels valued. Taylor’s dedication to ensuring that each child’s experience is positive and enjoyable speaks to her commitment to the well-being of our campers. When looking at the Day Camp, you would be hard-pressed to find anyone who cares about the institution more, or who has contributed more to it……The experiences that she leads in facilitating clearly have a lasting impact on our campers that will last a lifetime.”

Zvonic is a 2022 graduate of Geneseo High School and will be a junior at Bradley University in Peoria, where she is majoring in Kinesiology and Health Sciences.

Kent Lassman, GHS Graduate, Swims the English Channel - BY Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Nearly two and one-half years ago, Kent Lassman made a decision to try to swim the English Channel. His determination became a reality on June 11 when he joined the elite group of swimmers to successfully complete the 21-mile swim.

It took him 13 hours and 27 minutes to complete the long-distance challenge across the body of water located between England and France, a feat that less than 1,900 people have been able to accomplish in the last 150 years. The swim is not only a physical challenge, but also a mental challenge that requires positive thinking.

More than two years of preparation began in 2021 for Lassman, including signing a contract with a boat captain for June of 2024, the date he planned to swim the Channel.

“The captain sails those waters every day and he looks at weather reports, water currents and more,” Lassman said.

The weather was forecast to include a “little bit of rain and a little bit of bumpiness, but would calm down…The water would be great, according to the experts, but we were all wrong. If you are lucky, the current is behind you pushing you forward and I did not have that at all,” he said.

“We left from Shakespeare Cliff in Dover, England - the harbor we came out of. I got on the boat in Dover Harbor and was taken out of the harbor to below Shakespeare Cliff, about 100 yards out…I jumped off the side of the boat and swam to shore, climbed out of the water onto a rocky beach, turned around to face the boat and raised my arms in the air to signal the crew in the boat that I was clear of the water, not standing in the water. A handheld spotlight was shining on me to illuminate me as I swam to the shore. When I dropped my arms, the stop watch started. There was about one and one-half minutes of ceremony before the actual swim started.”

Lassman’s swim began at 2:07 a.m., England time, on Tuesday, June 11. The boat crew consisted of the captain, a first mate, one official observer, and two others who are Lassman’s friends.

“When I start swimming it is the boat crew’s job to navigate me,” he said. “They are in charge of everything but the swimming; they are in charge of safety and navigation. If there is ever an emergency I could swim to the boat or they could get to me.”

There are lights from the boar on Lassman while he is swimming in the dark, and he said, “I am trying to swim in a halo of light created by the boat. I am wearing goggles and there is also a light on the back of my head and on the back of my swim suit. That way, if I wander off from the boat, the crew can tell what direction I am going.”

It was predicted that the seas would be a little bumpy, but would calm down after 60 to 90 minutes and would be calm for about 15 hours, and there would be a light rain, a forecast that Lassman said was “completely wrong. There was no rain and the water became bumpier. In the morning there were waves, a current, a tide and a swell. The swell moves you up and down vertically and that was bad and made it so uncomfortable,” he said.

His food was prepared as a liquid, and Lassman described it as like “high end sugar water.”

He did feel sick from the turbulence of the water and he said he did not take the prepared liquid food, but was given some green tea with honey…’the crew is in charge and they knew what to give me.”

Of the 13 hours and 27 minutes that it took Lassman to swim the Channel, he said, "We had some pretty bad weather for about the first six hours….”I was expecting to do it in 14 hours so it was about what I expected, but I was prepared to go 30 hours if necessary, but I am glad I did not have to test the preparation. What happened was that we traveled about 33 miles and I only had to exert the effort of swimming for 21 miles because the current carried me some of the distance.”

When asked about the reward of swimming the Channel, Lassman shared, “It is the satisfaction and the feeling of accomplishment and I saw some amazing marine life, including one shark and different types of jellyfish. Sometimes you don’t need a specific reason to do something, you do it just because. The challenge and the opportunity to experience something amazing is reason enough.”

He didn’t just see the jellyfish, but admitted that he was stung by some and did not blame the jellyfish, but said, “As much as we prepare and take safety measures, I was in their (the jellyfish) home. The ocean is their home, I was the visitor and the jellyfish let me know I was the visitor.”

Lassman also was asked what his thoughts were while in the water, and he said, “You have no idea what is going to go through your head when you are in the water. It is a beautiful thing any day of your life to watch a sunrise, and it’s an especially beautiful thing to watch a sunrise over the water. It’s altogether different and remarkable to watch it from being in the water because the sun lifts over the horizon, over the thing you are in and it is really wonderful and the colors are breathtaking.”

“My mind wandered. I thought about my kids a lot, When you are doing something like that, your mind goes to the things you love the most, it might be scripture, family, favorite meal, favorite memory and what went through my mind was that I thought a lot about literature. These jellyfish are very pretty and it’s not like seeing them in a book. Also, light under water refracts, when overhead things look closer. Early in the day the light comes in the water form the side and you see creatures and they are tremendously beautiful. No photo in a book could do justice.”

“You have no idea what is going to go through your head when you are in the water, you are in the wild and you are part of the world of the wild.”

“I was also thinking about the jellyfish,” he said. “There are six species of jellyfish common to the English Channel, one species is the Compass Jellyfish and that made me remember my 10th grade Geometry class with Mrs. Hahn, (Jean Hahn, now retired from GHS). It has been 35 years since I was in that Geometry class but I thought about how she used big wooden tools, like a compass, protractor. She had the giant size that held pieces of chalk and each of the students had small ones on our desks. She was the expert; she could do it without looking. That lady loved what she was teaching and that came through in her teaching. When I saw the jellyfish I knew the name of the Compass Jellyfish and suddenly I remembered being a kid sitting in a classroom learning Geometry when I would rather have been outdoors.”

HOW THE IDEA TO SWIM THE ENGLISH CHANNEL CAME ABOUT:

The idea to swim the Channel was an idea of Lassman’s in his childhood, and he explained....”When I was 13, I went to a swimming camp at Indiana University (Bloomington, IN) where I was among hundreds of kids who swam every day. One evening all of us were in the university cafeteria watching a documentary about a man named James Edward “Doc” Counsilman, a famous Olympic swim coach and Big 10 coach who set out to become the oldest man to swim the English Channel in 1979. The documentary ended, the light came on and there he (Counsilman) was standing in the room and answered our questions. I thought ‘how awesome,’ and that was the first time I had the idea.”

Growing up in Geneseo, Lassman spent lots of time in the summer at the Geneseo pool and was a member of a summer swim team coached by Dr. Bruce Fehlman and Dr. Max McCaw…”I was eight or nine years old and that is how I started swimming competitively,” he said. “Our family also was part of a group of six families who owned a recreational area with a lake outside of Geneseo where I first started swimming.”

Lassman said swimming has always been a love of his and a refuge…”It is something that makes me happy, helps to keep me healthy and gets me outdoors, where I love to be.”

His swimming became competitive when he became part of the Moline Blue Marlins. He said, “Only a handful of local kids did that and I swam with the club team until high school and when I got to high school I started practicing with the United Township High School Swim Team (East Moline). Even though I was not a member of their team, I could swim with them. I worked out with the team before and after school.”

He credited former GHS Athletic Director, the late Del Nicklaus, and former GHS principal Ted McAvoy, for making it possible for him to compete in the Sectional Swim Meets and represent Geneseo High School. He competed at the Sectional level all of his four high school years.

After graduating from GHS in 1992, when the school was named JD Darnall High School, Lassman moved to Washington DC and attended the Catholic University of America where he majored in philosophy and politics. He graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in 1996 and began working in Washington, DC.

A few years after graduating from college, Lassman completed The Great Chesapeake Bay Swim which he explained is a 4.4-mile swim near Annapolis in the Chesapeake Bay. He later became involved in triathlons in the area…”Eventually I was doing some big races that included swimming,” he said. That kept me in contact with the open water swimming community and as a result I did some ocean races near Ocean City, MD, and in 2016 I signed up to do the ‘Swim Around Key West,’ a 12 1/2 –mile swim. I just find myself doing the really interesting ocean swims.”

“Two and one-half years ago, in November of 2021, I decided I was going to try to swim the English Channel,” he said.

A month later he signed a contract with a boat captain to accompany him, and Lassman added, “I had two and one-half years to get ready for my swim.”

He became more focused on training, including traveling to California from Virginia to swim the Catalina Channel, a 21-mile swim, which Lassman said “is similar to swimming the English Channel.”

“I did the Catalina Channel swim to learn to swim at nighttime,” he explained. “There’s an ‘Oceans Seven,’ which is a list of seven challenging ocean swims around the world. Only about two dozen people in the world have done all seven. That is special in that each swim requires one skill set that makes it really difficult. That’s why I did the Catalina Channel swim to learn to swim at nighttime and to be really comfortable with that I had to learn to swim in cold water for hours on end, both requirements to swim the English Channel. Once I had that under my belt, I learned a few more skills.”

Lassman said the Catalina Swim and the English Channel are the most prestigious on the list of seven swims….”Both have the most history, like Mt. Everest, it takes a complete package of skills and luck, so if you get to do it, you are really happy about it.”

When Lassman was asked “What’s next?” he said, “Nothing is planned, but I will keep on swimming on a regular basis as it is part of my life. It’s my time, when I clear my head and I will be swimming as long as I am physically able.”

He and his wife, Dana Damico, live in Alexandria, VA, and the couple has two sons and two daughters.

Lassman is the son of Sheila Lassman, Geneseo, and the late Lee Lassman. He has a brother, Kurt Lassman, and two sisters, Kristine Hitzhusen, Geneseo, and Kelley Lassman, New York City.

Kent Lassman graduated from Geneseo High School in 1992 and currently is president of the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC, a think tank where the staff analyzes and makes recommendations regarding economic regulation. Contributed Photo

First Methodist Has A New Worship Director - By Claudia Loucks

By Claudia Loucks
Geneseo Current

Joel Simpson left a job in IT to become worship director at First Methodist Church in Geneseo.

He said just hours after posting his résumé online at the beginning of this year; he was contacted by the Rev. Chris Ritter, directing pastor at First Methodist.

“I had never even heard of Geneseo before, but things progressed through the interviewing and hiring process and a few short months and a big move later, here we are,” he said.

Joel Simpson is the worship director at Geneseo First Methodist Church. Photo Claudia Loucks

Simpson has been involved in music since his teen years and he explained. He was born and raised in a small town in northwestern Wisconsin and attended the local public high school where he was part of the jazz band program, and also played bass in his church’s youth worship band.

While a student at the University of Wisconsin-Superior, he played music for student organizations and at a local church where he said he was “challenged by the worship director to seriously think about a full-time career in music ministry.”

After earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree at UW-Superior, Simpson attended Hillsong College, Sydney, Australia, to study the Bible and learn about music and church leadership.

He then returned to UW-Superior to complete a Master’s Degree while working part-time as a music associate at one church and took on the role of leading Saturday evening services at a second church in the area.

After graduating, Simpson returned to his home church in Wisconsin where he became worship director…”A year later, I followed my full-time career in IT to Madison, WI, where I also served as a volunteer musician for a new church plant,” he explained. “After five years in Madison, my employer relocated me to Rochester, MN, to work on projects with Mayo Clinic, where my wife, Clarissa, was a nurse.”

In addition to his fulltime IT job, he joined the staff of a church in Rochester as music director.

It was during those years in Rochester when Simpson said the responsibilities and travel requirements for his tech job continued to increase and he added, “These changes, along with a growing family, made it increasingly clear to us that it was time to move on.”

In addition to guitar, Simpson also plays bass and drums and added, “I also play saxophone, but that likely won’t make an appearance at church.”

As worship director, he is responsible to plan the flow of services, handle oversight of the AVL systems, schedule the music and teach teams, create digital media and often lead the congregation in singing…”I also bring quite a bit of graphics and IT experience and will be using those skills, as well,” he said.

He and his wife have two children and Simpson said, “We are happy to call Geneseo our home. We love Jesus, we love the Church, and we are grateful for the opportunity to be part of the First Methodist family. The congregation and community here have been incredibly welcoming and supportive. The New Testament points out that we should always continue to gather as the church, that we should sing to one another and from our hearts to the Lord, and that we should encourage one another as we follow Jesus in the way we live. As the worship director at First Methodist, my prayer is that we will see that kind of passionate worship and encouraging fellowship in our congregation and community, and the fruit of God’s Holy Spirit at work in each of us.”