Victoria Rowell, actress, performer, author, foster care advocate

Victoria Rowell

Tuesday night’s Smart Talk appearance by Victoria Rowell impressed the Des Moines Civic Center crowd with an inspirational personal story, a stirring journey complete with a ‘call to arms’ for all. Want to make a difference in other people’s lives, or in your own life? Victoria Rowell, movie and TV star, dancer, writer and philanthropist, had some Smart Talk for you. Raised in foster care through her childhood, by her description she still is in the foster care program, playing forward the nurturing she received. She started the non-profit Rowell Foster Children’s Positive Plan in 1990, fighting for foster children all over the world – “a world without borders”- as she described it. She talked of a “pandemic in the foster care system”, encouraging that we all can do something and make a difference, no matter how small.

Victoria Rowell carries more that a “celebrity endorsement” for her charities. She has lived the life, and today her organization supports the gamut of direct services for foster children – in fine arts, higher education, healthcare, financial literacy, reunification programs, cultural enrichment, and resources family support. It’s no wonder Ms. Rowell has received the United Nations Association Award for her work in human rights and world peace. She’s what you call a player.

This last year Rowell she shared her story with the world with her award winning book, The Women Who Raised Me, [4] a journal dedicated to the many role models in her foster care. “Growing up in foster care, I was never meant to be raised by one mother, but by many,” Rowell has said. Rowell received an NAACP Image Award in 2008 for Outstanding Literary Work by a Debut Author, for The Women Who Raised Me, and has been honored with multiple NAACP Image Awards in her career.

But it wasn’t all serious talk Tuesday night, and there were and plenty of questions about her role as Drucilla Winters on The Young and the Restless, [6] and whether she would be returning to that role soon. The Daytime Drama Diva was also a Prime-time star on Diagnosis Murder [7] with Dick Van Dyke for 7 years, and has guest-starred on The Cosby Show, The Fresh Prince of Bel Air and has a recurring role in the series Noah’s Arc. And Ms. Rowell is currently co-producing an HBO movie based on that award winning homage to The Women Who Raised Me. And Ms. Rowell also has an impressive list of film credits, [8] including Eve’s Bayou, Leonard Part VI, The Distinguished Gentleman, and Dumb and Dumber.

But what impressed Tuesday most was the personal message to the audience about not selling yourself short. “Don’t self-edit” as she put it – we all have something to offer to people in need, be it assisting someone for “a day or a week, or with a couple of bags of groceries”. She charged the audience to chase personal passions and dreams – do not hold them in – manifest them. Great encouragement from an award winning dancer who received a prestigious dance scholarship at age 8 – by learning dance from a book, one of many her foster mother showed her and by watching the June Taylor Dancers [9] and the Ted Mack Amateur Hour [10] shows on TV!

Photo by flickr by Dasruets

Article written by David Borzo

Iowa Cubs home opener 2009

Everything is right for the Iowa Cubs home opener.

Just remember who you got to see last year, and don’t forget who has played in Des Moines in the past few years: Geovany Soto, the 2008 NL Rookie of the Year; Ryan Theriot; Micah Hoffpauir; Koyie Hill; Felix Pie; Eric Patterson. The Des Moines Register reports 15 returning starters from last season. It looks like we will be seeing Jason DuBois and Jeff Samardzija in Des Moines, at least for a while this year.

If you like baseball, it’s the place to be this weekend!

photos by flickr by Justin Brockie and Tim Patterson

Mormon Tabernacle Choir

I was in Salt Lake City for a national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Now while I love chemistry, the best moments of my visit were musical. On Sunday March 22, 2009, I heard The Mormon Tabernacle Choir as part of the 4149th broadcast of Music & the Spoken Word.

What a great moment! The Mormon Tabernacle Choir sang with a spiritual power that transcended religion.

  • The late President Ronald Reagan called them America’s Choir.
  • Since July 15, 1929 each broadcast of Music & the Spoken Word has begun with the words, “From the crossroads of the West, we welcome you to a program of inspirational music and the spoken word.
  • The general public is welcome in the Mormon Tabernacle as the choir performs for the broadcast, and the Purple Wren and I were two of them.
  • You can get an impression of the choir by listening on YouTube, for example, to Consider the Lilies.

You can also hear broadcasts of Music & the Spoken Word around Des Moines too.

In the metro, early risers are in luck. KCOB in Newton (95.9 FM and 1280 AM) broadcasts the half hour program at 7:00 am on Sundays. The closest Iowa stations are

  • Atlantic KJAN (1220 kHz on your AM radio) at 10 am on Sundays
  • Cedar Rapids WMT (600 kHz on your AM radio) at 10 pm on Sundays
  • Newton KCOB (1280 kHz on your AM radio or 95.9 MHz on your FM radio) at 7:02 am on Sundays
  • Oskaloosa at William Penn KIGC (88.7 MHz on your FM radio) at 9 am on Sundays
  • or you can find the others from Bonneville Communications

I know that I heard hundreds of radio broadcasts as a child because my father loved the music. I saw a few more broadcasts on black and white television. So when I walked into the tabernacle for the first time in 2009, it all looked very familiar. It should. The Tabernacle has been there (of course remodeled some) since 1867. The Tabernacle is known for its acoustics, but I was unprepared for the power and quality of music – an organ with 11,000 pipes; 360 disciplined, well-rehearsed voices (They rehearse or perform on 180 days/year). It was quite a thrill. If you are in Salt Lake City on a Sunday, don’t miss it.

Find a local Church of Latter Day Saints.

photos by Jim Lindberg

Neighborhood cleanup days 2009 (SCRUB)

Has anyone ever told you, “Clean up after yourself?” or “Get that thing out of here!”? Lately?

Want to get rid of it free? I have just the information you have been waiting for!

SCRUB Days are times and places that you can drop off stuff that you (or your loved one) want to be gone. It could be

  • old furniture
  • trash containers
  • tires (off the rims)
  • TVs, computers
  • even old appliances like refrigerators, air-conditioners, stoves, microwaves, furnaces, freezers, water heaters, etc.
  • check out the list of what you can and can’t drop off

The eagerly awaited SCRUB days calendar has arrived. The City of Des Moines posted it as of April 3, 2009! I’ve been waiting, and I know you’ve been waiting too so here are the days and locations by neighborhood:

April 18, 2009, 7 am until noon

May 16, 2009, 7 am until noon

June 20, 2009, 7 am until noon

July 18, 2009, 7 am until noon

August 15, 2009, 7 am until noon

September 19, 2009, 7 am until noon

October 17, 2009, 7 am until noon

Where else and when can you get rid of these nonhazardous materials other than the SCRUB day sites?

You have to haul it to a different site, and it is only open and free to you on those Saturdays listed above from 7 am until 1 pm.

What about yard waste?

Some of you may remember the time when you could drop off yard waste. Well, you can still do that free too but not at the SCRUB days sites. You have to haul it to a different site, and it is only open and free to you on those Saturdays listed above from 7 am until 1 pm.

What about toxic and hazardous materials? I have just the right information for you! Check it out.

There were SCRUB days last year too. You might remember the 2008 post.

photo by flickr by epcrossing and bisonbison