John R. McLure Update

Here is a news article that shows how West High rates in comparison to 1) other schools nationally and 2) other schools in Iowa.

http://www.press-citizen.com/story/news/education/k-12/2014/08/27/west-high-school-city-high-school-rankings-top-daily-beast/14707051/

The West High Marching Band has new uniforms this year. The marching band will wear these proudly at the home football game this Friday night, provided that the game does not get rained out.

West High’s baseball team made it all the way to the state championship this past summer, but unfortunately we lost the final game. (Hey… being #2 in the state ain’t bad!)

Another bit of news related to the local school district: Budget cuts have caused some changes. A bunch of faculty and staff positions have been cut. The teaching of German is being phased out; there are no new first-year students entering the pipeline for German. The only German classes being taught are for those students who have already been studying German. The entire German program will be discontinued district-wide once these remaining students finish out.

That’s all the news for now.

– John R. McLure

Mike Mellecker Update

Dave

How things going? Thank you for keeping everyone informed on what is going on with the class of 73, I enjoy your updates.

I received this from the new athletic director at West. I’m hoping that you can pass it on to everyone else or add it to the web site. The tournament proceeds go back to Club West and helps it athletes. It is open to anyone who wants to enter.

Thanks again,

Mike Mellecker

Ed Barker’s Donation to West High

Dave Kacena wrote:

Dave,

Nice article in this morning’s Press Citizen about Ed Barker donating $270,000 to West High earmarked for new soccer field.  That was the amount that he earned while principle at West.

We talked to Ed, and he wanted to clarify what was printed in the article:

“In the event yesterday at West High I stressed that Iowa City has three wonderful high schools, Tate, City High and West High.  I didn’t want to downgrade either of those schools ….”

“Tate High School is the school that developed from a program we started at West which at first was called Room 20.  It was for students who had a hard time fitting into a regular high school program. It then developed into a separate high school called the Community Experimental Educational Center (CCEC).  A few years a go a new building was constructed and the school was renamed Tate.”

Ed, thanks for giving us what the broadcaster Paul Harvey would have called “The Rest of the Story.”

Sheila Potter Cole Florence Coapstick Update

Hi Dave,

I was perusing the Iowa-City Press Citizen site and noticed an obit for Florence Coapstick and thought the name was familiar.  After checking the ’73 yearbook I found her I remembered that she had been a secretary in the office at West High, the attendance secretary as I remember (since I had some dealings with her over a skipped class or two).  Just thought the West High “family” might want to know.

Sheila (Potter) Cole

Webmaster’s note: We’ve linked to Mrs. Coapstick’s obituary here

Arnie Moore Shares West High 40th Anniversary

Hi Dave,

Survived another storm, just a lot of rain and wind. We did get two extra days off from school but with the weather no riding and no golf, just sitting around the house watching the Olympics.

Attached is the Press-Citizen article that tells of West’s 40th anniversary since it opened.  Rather interesting. Please pass it on. Hope everyone enjoys it

Arnie

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August 19, 2008

40 years since the rise of Troy

Rob Daniel
Iowa City Press-Citizen

The year 1968 was a turbulent one.

Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy were assassinated within a few months of each other. The Vietnam War was raging, and in the last week of August, police in Chicago put down violent protests at the Democratic National Convention.

It was in the midst of this, on Sept. 3, 1968, that West High opened its doors for the first time.

Built for about $5 million, the new school was the new home for 1,099 students, among them 500 seventh- and eighth-graders, according to a Press-Citizen story.

It had been designed to ease growth at the 29-year-old City High building and the 9-year-old South East Junior High, said Ed Barker, West High’s first principal.”

The idea was to have a 7 through 12 building until a new junior high could be built in Coralville,” said Barker, referring to Northwest Junior High’s opening in 1972.

Since then, the Iowa City School District has made three additions to the West High building and surrounding campus, including a new auditorium and football field in 1994 and a ninth-grade wing in 2005. The auditorium was built as part of an $11.1 million bond issue approved in 1991 while the football field was built using $350,000 raised largely from fundraisers by parents, said Jerry Arganbright, who has been principal since 1984. The fundraiser, he said, was a sign of the Iowa City area accepting West High on its own merits.

“It took the community a long time to come to terms with Iowa City having two high schools,” said Arganbright, who is the school’s third principal. Barker, who was principal for 11 years, was followed by Duane Carnes. “Those facilities are there because the west side community came together.”

Building a new school community took work. One decision that helped, Barker said, was getting would-be seniors from City High involved. During the 1967-68 school year, after coming to Iowa City from Boone where he had been the high school principal, Barker met periodically with juniors who were the leaders of clubs. Those leaders helped with a flag-raising ceremony on the first day of classes at the new school in September 1968.

“We knew the seniors wouldn’t be terribly enthused (about moving to the new school),” Barker said. “We worked real hard in having the seniors form the activities at the new school.”

The activities were few and far between for the first few years. Sports teams, which did not compete in a conference the first year, suffered through several losing seasons. There was no homecoming the first year, with students instead celebrating “The Rise of Troy.” The school also developed a domestic affairs week program, where speakers of different political stripes were invited to meet with students.

“There was some controversy because conservatives don’t like to have liberals talk to students and liberals don’t like to have conservatives talk to students,” Barker said about the program that ran for three years.

The politics of the time affected what students learned, said Ann Wallace, a 1974 West High graduate who lives in Iowa City with husband and fellow ’74 West High graduate, Bill Gay.

History and English literature were taught in the context of the political scandals of the time, such as the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam War. Pace chemistry, in which students worked through the course mostly on their own, also was the rage.

However, things soon began to change.

Sports teams that had suffered through losing seasons began winning state championships, starting with the boys’ basketball team in 1977. The school was building a strong debate program under the leadership of Dave Kanellis. The curriculum also grew from offering only one advanced placement English class in the early 1970s to more than 25 AP and honors courses this year.

“The curriculum is more challenging (now),” said Wallace, who has sent two children through West High and currently has a daughter as a junior there. “There’s way more opportunities for kids.”

The opportunities have helped students such as Tara Meade, 22, a 2004 West High graduate who graduated in music education from Luther College in 2008. She said the curriculum, along with high expectations in activities, have pushed West High students to achieve.

“I got a sense of pride in athletics,” said Meade, who was part of West High’s state championship tennis team in 2004. “It kind of gives kids a big head, but it makes you work hard.”

The school also is looking ahead. Now at its capacity of about 1,800 students and with continued growth in Coralville and North Liberty, the school could be split up in the coming years with the construction of a new high school. Arganbright said he hopes the right decisions are made on dealing with the growth.

“There’s unlimited potential in what our students can do,” he said. “We try to get better in everything we’re doing. You don’t want to take a strong high school and through some decisions with kids make it an average high school.”

Sheila Potter Cole Update

Hi Dave,

Thanks for all your work and posting to keep us alums in the know! Just wanted to pass along something from another West High Alum. I have a (much)younger brother, Jim Potter, who graduated in 1985 and now lives in the New Orleans area. Recently he had a article written in the Iowa City Press Citizen about the plight of the schoolchildren in Jefferson Parish where he and his wife Marykathryn are teachers. Marykathryn sent me this excerpt (below)

If anyone in the class of ’73 is interested in helping have them email to me scole55 AT cox.net and I can pass along information. Our family is truly thankful that Jim, Marykathryn and their son Jacob were able to evacuate safely and their home was spared.

Happy Autumn,
Sheila Cole

Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with ketchup.

Monday, October 3, 2005

Schools Helping Former Student
Iowa City Press-Citizen

A former Iowa City student who is a teacher in Louisiana is looking to his former schools to help hurricane victims in his new home.

Jim Potter, a 1985 West High graduate and a former student at Wood Elementary and South East Junior High, is looking for help for John Clancy Elementary in Kenner, La., and the surrounding schools of Jefferson Parish outside of New Orleans. Hurricane Katrina devastated the area on Aug. 29, and the Jefferson Parish Public Schools have been closed since then. They are due to reopen today, with about 600 students, plus an unknown number of students surrounding parishes whose schools have been closed for the year because of the hurricane, Potter said.

“We’re hoping to get an influx of their students,” he said. “They’ve discontinued the school district for the most part. Right now, we’re at a loss of what our enrollment is going to be.”

Potter’s home sustained little damage from the storm, as did Clancy Elementary. However, many of the students and the new students lost everything, including the clothes they are required to wear as part of the school’s uniform policy.

“Of course, the kids may not have anything,” Potter said. “But the school district is not going to make them buy new uniforms.”

To help them, Potter said he wanted to gather as many white T-shirts as possible from the schools he attended in Iowa City.

“It’s a sense of belonging and being uniform through the system,” Potter said about the uniforms. “We’re hoping to get as many as we can get. Whatever we get, we’re going to be doling it out everything.”

Potter said he hoped to use a print shop at a high school in Jefferson Parish to print Clancy Elementary’s logo on the donated T-shirts.

South East Junior High Principal Deb Wretman said her school has raised more than $6,000 in hurricane relief funds, donating the money to the American Red Cross. She said she did not know how much more students could give, but she was willing to use South East as a drop off point.

“I think it’s a terrific idea,” she said. “I said when we fill up a box, we’ll let Jim know. The sooner the better.”

Potter said two of his brothers who still live in the Iowa City area, Roger Litton and Jerry Litton, have persuaded their companies — Plumbers Supply and Contractors Tool and Supply — to donate the shipping of the shirts.

By Rob Daniel