Local News
Mike Pound: Athlete organizing fundraiser for former coach
By Mike Pound
mpound@joplinglobe.com
If Mark VanSlyke is looking for some sort of proof that he’s making a difference on this earth, he probably doesn’t have to look much further than to Jacob Khan.
Jacob graduated last year from East Newton High School, where Mark works as a teacher and track coach. Jacob now is a freshman at Missouri Southern State University and a member of the school’s track team. On Wednesday, I grabbed a few minutes of Jacob’s time as he was hoofing it to track practice.
“Coach VanSlyke is the primary reason I’m running track (at MSSU),” Jacob said. “He’s going through some tough times right now, and I want to help him. I know he helped me through some pretty tough times in high school. This is the least I can do.”
What Jacob is doing is organizing a basketball tournament at East Newton, with the proceeds going to help out the VanSlyke family. Jane VanSlyke, Mark’s wife, has been battling breast cancer for some time now.
“She’s putting up a good fight,” Jacob said. “I just hope we can raise some money and ease their worries a bit.”
I don’t remember much about my freshman year of college. I remember I worked more than I studied and probably played more than I worked. I certainly know that I didn’t take the time to organize a fundraiser for anyone.
Jacob, as a student athlete, is taking a pretty full class load while spending several hours a day at practice. He said track practice normally gets under way with meetings at 2:30 p.m. The meetings are followed by conditioning drills and weightlifting sessions.
“I’m usually not finished until 5:45 or 6,” he said.
Sounds like a full day to me. It also sounds like the sort of day that would find a student searching for some downtime instead of putting together a benefit basketball tournament.
Jacob made it clear that he is not having to carry the whole load. Several of his former East Newton classmates have stepped up to help, as has Jake Holt, who also coaches track and teaches at East Newton.
“Coach Holt asked me if I needed some help, and he’s stepped in and taken on a lot of the responsibilities too,” Jacob said.
The basketball tournament is set for Friday, March 19. Teams should plan on showing up for registration at 4 p.m. The cost is $30 for a four-person team. The games will be played in a three-on-three format, and there will be brackets for men and for women.
If you would like to enter a team, you can call Jacob at 417-389-5951, or you can send him an e-mail at Khanj001@mymail.mssu.edu. The advance phone calls or e-mails, he said, will allow him and the other volunteers putting on the tournament to get a feel for how many teams to expect and how to set up the brackets. Winning teams will receive trophies and “bragging rights,” Jacob said.
So far, he said, 15 to 20 area teams have committed to playing in the tournament. He also has heard from teams from Springfield, Lebanon and beyond who plan on playing.
“The response, so far, has been tremendous,” he said.
I really don’t know Jacob, beyond what I picked up chatting with him on the phone. But he sounds like a pretty good kid. He sounds like a kid who realizes he got incredibly lucky in high school and wants to make good on that luck.
During our conversation, I asked Jacob what he is majoring in at MSSU.
“Physical education,” he said.
See, Jacob wants to be a coach when he graduates.
Just like Mark VanSlyke.
- Local News
-
-
Convicted killer in Sheldon murders commits suicide
Matthew Laurin seemed angry Wednesday morning when he woke up a convicted man headed toward a life behind bars. Laurin, 20, of Springfield, pleaded guilty Monday to the 2008 murders of Robert and Ellen Sheldon, of rural Carthage, and was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison with no chance at parole.
-
Demolition on former Chrysler plant begins
A former Chrysler plant in St. Louis County that once employed thousands of autoworkers is about to be rubble.
Demolition is under way on one of two side-by-side Chrysler plants in Fenton. -
Galena man bound over on charges related to police pursuit crash
Judge Robert Fleming on Wednesday ordered Kaston Hudgins bound over for trial on two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths last year of Teresa Kemp, 41, and her daughter, Taylor Kemp, 13. Both victims died of injuries they suffered when their car was struck by one driven by Hudgins, of Galena, who was being pursued by authorities.
-
Carl Junction school work scheduled to be done soon
Many of the upgrades and renovations taking place around Carl Junction schools will soon be done, said Superintendent Phil Cook. “Within a couple of weeks, everything should be completed, which gives us a week or two to get ready for school,” he said.
-
Seneca board places coaches on probation
The head coach and at least some members of the Seneca High School football coaching staff have been placed on probation after a school district investigation into a hazing incident last month. The Seneca Board of Education announced the probation via a press release issued Wednesday afternoon.
-
DC pushes female condoms to fight HIV epidemic
Charlene Cotton will talk to anyone about sex. Several days a week she stands behind a table decorated with a bowl of flavored condoms and safer sex pamphlets, calling to women passing on the street, “Come check out my table. Don’t be scared.”
-
Authorities identify murder victim; two facing charges in slaying
Authorities have identified 29-year-old Ian P. Monaghan, of Pittsburg, as the victim of a murder that took place Sunday in a field outside a trailer park in rural Pittsburg. Crawford County Sheriff Sandy Horton identified Monaghan after an autopsy and notification of the victim’s next of kin on Wednesday afternoon.
-
Motions argued in lawsuit against former administrator
Judge David Dally promised a ruling next week after motions were argued Wednesday in a lawsuit against Rita Hunter, former Jasper County public administrator, and St. John’s Regional Medical Center. The lawsuit was filed by Kenneth Hall, now of Monett, who contends that Hunter and St. John’s acted improperly in actions that made him a ward of the public administrator’s office.
-
Officials seeking financing to reopen Carthage plant
Chances are “better than even” that Renewable Environmental Solutions, the rendering operation that for years was the source of almost steady odor complaints, will resume operations, Mayor Mike Harris said Tuesday.
-
Crowder College’s MARET Center director resigns to take new post
When Dan Eberle steps down as director of Crowder College’s alternative energy programs, his one regret will be not seeing the completion of a $5 million building to house those programs. “I anticipate by the end of August we should have a green light to start on the MARET Center, (but) unfortunately I’m not going to be here,” Eberle said Wednesday.
- More Local News Headlines
-






