JIM DE BOOM -- Community & Clubs
I missed Thursday’s Goofoffers Reunion and Friday’s National Day of
Prayer Breakfast. I write this from St. Louis Park, Minn., where my
father died Monday at the age of 92.
I caught a flight from LAX at 5 p.m. Monday to help my brother with
funeral arrangements. Dad had been in a convalescent home since his colon
cancer surgery in mid-January and never fully recovered.
My wife Barbara and daughters Stacy and Jodi are here for the services,
which were held Friday.
What great memories I have of Dad. He never belonged to a service club,
but it is from him that I learned of service. He helped our church,
Aldersgate United Methodist, sponsor refugees from Cuba and the Baltic
states, and their families, to settle in St. Louis Park.
As a young father, he started and served as the leader of a Cub Scouts
pack and a Boy Scouts troop, retiring from the Boy Scouts at the age of
88. He served as a Sunday school teacher and as superintendent of the
Sunday school at Aldersgate. For 20 years, he chaired the church’s blood
bank.
He had one job in his life, that of a credit manager of an artificial
limb company in Minneapolis. That’s where he got the brace for his badly
deformed leg, which was crippled by polio when he was a youngster.
Polio didn’t stop him from being a successful businessman, family man and
church and Scout leader. I remember our Sunday afternoon family drives,
the weekends at the family cabin at Lake Ida, Minn., the trips to visit
his brothers and sisters on their farms in Iowa.
At the de Boom family reunions, he was the hit of the day when he made
hats out of newspapers or led the gathering in any number of games, skits
and tricks. His nieces, nephews, and grandnieces and grandnephews would
always crowd around him for the next story.
My brother LeRoy graduated from high school in 1952 and had accepted a
scholarship to Harvard. But when he got polio a couple weeks before
departing for the East Coast, Dad was a man of encouragement when we were
all discouraged.
While LeRoy spent what seemed like years in Sister Kenny Institute in
Minneapolis, Dad was finishing off the attic so I would have a room,
since I wouldn’t be sharing a bedroom with LeRoy anymore.
When LeRoy enrolled at the University of Minnesota, Dad would come home
during the day, lift LeRoy into the car and drive him to the university
with Mom so LeRoy could attend classes.
Despite his disability, LeRoy received his associate’s degree and became
an accountant.
Mom and Dad provided LeRoy with daily assistance, and then LeRoy looked
after them, their health and finances. LeRoy still lives in the family
home of some 50 years.
Dad would say the best birthday gift he ever received was his
granddaughter Jodi, born on his 70th birthday. When anyone would ask Dad
his age in recent years, it was always the same age as Jodi.
Stacy and Jodi will always remember the visits to St. Louis Park and the
walks with Grandpa to the local playground park, learning how to chew
sunflower seeds and pump on the swings.
Dad had a good life and I, along with LeRoy and literally hundreds of
others -- including many former Boys Scouts, now adults -- are better for
having been touched by his life.
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS THIS COMING WEEK:
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m. -- The Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club meets at the Balboa
Bay Club
6:30 p.m. -- The Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club will meet at the
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m. -- The South Coast Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center
Club; the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club meets at the University Athletic
Club.
Noon -- The Exchange Club of Orange Coast meets at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
6 p.m. -- The Newport Balboa Rotary meets at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht.
THURSDAY
7:15 a.m. -- The Costa Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club meets at
Mimi’s Cafe.
Noon -- Kiwanis Club of Newport Beach-Corona del Mar meets at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht; the Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club meets at the Holiday Inn;
the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor meets at the Riverboat Restaurant;
the Newport-Irvine Rotary Club meets at the Irvine Marriott Hotel.
* COMMUNITY & CLUBS is published every Saturday in the Daily Pilot. Send
your service club’s meeting information by fax to (949) 660-8667, e-mail
to o7 [email protected] or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol St., Suite
201, Newport Beach 92660-1740.
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