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I keep looking up

As kids, my neighborhood friends and I would stand beneath our town’s water tower and marvel at it like it was the Eiffel Tower. We would wonder what the view looked like from the top. This was before camera drones, of course, back when children were forced to suffer through the burden of imagination. In those days, the water tower was the tallest thing around, and in a small town, that qualified as entertainment.

On family road trips after dark, my brother and I were equally mesmerized by the blinking lights atop the local radio tower. To kids whose worldview stretched roughly to the county line, those flashing red bulbs might as well have been signals from another planet. Truth be told, they are still kind of fascinating.

In Guthrie County, we generally don’t stack buildings on top of one another. We have plenty of room to spread out — plus a healthy respect for tornadoes. As a result, most buildings here are built wide instead of tall.

One major exception is 801 Grand in downtown Des Moines. At 630 feet and 45 stories, it remains Iowa’s tallest building. Construction began in 1989 and wrapped up in 1991, around the same time I moved to Des Moines to work downtown. Each evening, I would stop in a nearby parking ramp and watch the tower rise higher into the skyline. It was the same sense of wonder I had as a kid staring up at the town water tower, only now with hard hats and steel beams.

Before 801 Grand claimed the title, the Ruan Center held the crown at nearly 460 feet. Built in 1975 by Ruan Transportation, the high-rise sits at the slightly ominous address of 666 Grand Ave. in Des Moines. In 1975, I was still more impressed by radio antennas than office buildings, but the Ruan Center must have looked futuristic in its day.

Today, Iowa’s skylines — and plenty of rural landscapes — are dotted with cellphone towers. According to Airwave Advisors, the United States had more than 417,000 mobile wireless cell sites in 2020. Companies such as American Tower Corporation, Crown Castle and SBA Communications have turned towers into big business.

The scenery has changed over the years. Water towers may still dominate the rural skylines, but radio towers now compete with cellphone arrays and blinking aviation lights. Meanwhile, some things never really change. The kid in me still looks up.

Have a terrific Tuesday, and thanks for reading.

 

Shane Goodman
Editor and Publisher
Times Vedette digital newsletter
shane@gctimesnews.com

641-332-2707

Charger boys finish 3rd at WCAC meet; Schneider and shuttle hurdle are conference champions

By Cyote Williams | Times Vedette

The ACGC boys track and field team scored 87.5 points at the West Central Activities Conference meet at home on Tuesday, May 5. Des Moines Christian won the meet, scoring 151.5 points. ACGC won two events at the meet. One was by Brexton Schneider in the 110-meter hurdles. His teammate, Morgun Nolte, placed second. The boys also won the 4×110-meter shuttle hurdle with Schneider, Nolte, Collin Stringham and Thomas Skram.

Silver medals won at the meet were by Talon Noland in the 400-meter run and the sprint medley relay team of Joe Crawford, Schneider, Skram and Kaden Sorensen. Bronze medals were won by Preston Kent in the 3,200-meter run and the 4×200-meter relay team of Crawford, Skram, Sorensen and Ryan Martens.

Panorama boys golf places 4th at WCAC meet, Galvan medals 

By Cyote Williams | Times Vedette

The Panorama boys golf team hosted the West Central Activities Conference meet on Tuesday, May 5. The Panthers placed fourth, shooting 338. Des Moines Christian won the meet, shooting 309. Panorama’s Brayden Galvan was the medalist for the meet, shooting 74, two strokes better than Des Moines Christian’s Braden Shontz.

Other Panorama scores from the conference meet were 83 by Bryce Dawes, 89 by Cole Carstens, 92 by Jaxson Stauffer, 94 by Mason Cates and 97 by Casey Young. 

The boys next meet is the Kuemper Invitational on Saturday, May 9. The boys travel to face Carroll, Clarinda, Denison-Schleswig, Earlham, Hamburg, Harlan Community, Humboldt, Kuemper Catholic, OABCIG, Spencer, Spirit Lake and Webster City.

Panorama boys place 3rd at Panorama Coed Invite, win 3 events

By Cyote Williams | Times Vedette

The Panorama boys track and field team scored 99 points at the Panorama Coed Invite on Thursday, May 7. Earlham won the meet scoring 132 points. Panorama finished the night with three golds: Corbin Deardorf in the 400-meter run, Syler Shaffer in the 400-meter hurdles and Reed Draper in the long jump.

Silver medals were won by the distance medley relay team Draper, Cruz Crandall, Hunter Kempf and Bladyn Wearmouth. Bronze medals were earned by Shaffer in the 100-meter dash, Shaffer in the 110-meter hurdles, Crandall in the long jump and Cristian Monrroy-Nunez in the shot put.

The Panthers next meet is the Merritt-Charger Invitational at ACGC. The boys compete against ACGC, Audubon, CAM, Earlham, Madrid, Ogden, Treynor, Underwood, Van Meter and West Central Valley.

Photos by Betty Cooper
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Photos by Mark Reno
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