Ben's Lasting
Image
By Orlan Love
The Gazette
orlan.love@gazettecommunications.com

This
pencil sketch of 12-year-old cancer victim Ben Ries of rural
Central City, by Riverside artist Kreig Jacque, brought $8,500
at auction Saturday night to benefit the Aiming for a Cure
Foundation.
Riverside, IA. - March 21 -
An image of a beatific 12-year-old cancer
victim who loved God, dogs and people filled 800 eyes with
tears and raised $8,500 for the Aiming for a Cure Foundation
last weekend.
The pencil sketch of Ben Ries, who died
of brain cancer in 2006, walking with his favorite German short-haired
pointer
near the old barn on his family's rural Central City acreage,
with the hand of God extending toward him from a cloud, captured
the spirit of the boy and the foundation, said Steve Ries,
Ben's father and the founder of the annual effort to raise
money for the Children's Hospital of Iowa.
The drawing by
Riverside artist Kreig Jacque was bought during the Saturday
night auction at the Sheraton Iowa City Hotel
by Cedar Rapids dentist John McGrane, who donated it to
Steve and Jodi Ries and their daughter, Rachel.
Jacque said
the image occurred to him after he heard Ben's story during
a visit to the Rieses' Top Gun Kennel. When
Steve Ries asked him to donate a work of art for last
weekend's auction,
Jacque said he knew exactly what he wanted to do.
Jacque said
it felt good to hear Ries say "you nailed
it" and to see the sketch fetch $8,500 for such a good
cause.Last weekend's fifth annual Aiming for a Cure event grossed
nearly a quarter-million dollars for the Children's Hospital
of Iowa, said Lisa Baum, director of the Children's Miracle
Network, which raises money for the hospital.
"This event is truly a blanket of love for our pediatric
cancer patients and their families," she said.
The Rieses, facing
the prospect that Ben would likely die of cancer, started
the effort five years ago as a way to give
something to the University of Iowa institution that cared
for Ben.
Ries, who raises and trains German short-haired
pointers, organized the event around an activity he and Ben
greatly enjoyed — pheasant
hunting — and each year about 80 hunters pay to participate
in guided pheasant hunts and sporting clay shoots at the Highland
Hideaway Hunt Club near Riverside.One of those hunters, Dr.
Thomas Loew, a pediatric oncologist at Children's Hospital
of Iowa, said he greatly admires the Rieses' ability to set
aside their personal grief to help ensure other children don't
have to die like Ben.
Participants
in the fifth annual Aiming for a Cure fundraising event hunt
pheasants Sunday at the Highland Hideaway Hunt Club near Riverside.
From left are John McDonough of Hickory, N.C., Dwight Loew
of Richmond, Va., Dr. Thomas Loew of Iowa City and Stephen
Loew of Iowa City. They were among 80 people who hunted pheasants
and shot sporting clays at the club as part of an effort to
raise money for the Children´s Hospital of Iowa, where
Dr. Loew cares for cancer patients.
(Orlan Love/The Gazette)
"The death of a child is the hardest thing anyone has
to deal with. It breaks all the rules," said Loew, who
helped care for Ben during his many hospital stays and had
the daunting
task of telling his family he was about to die.
Loew, who hunted
last weekend with two brothers from Virginia and other relatives,
said Aiming for a Cure is, from his standpoint,
the ideal charity event. "It enables me to do something
I love with people I love, and it raises money to help sick
kids," he said.
Loew said doctors and researchers have
made great progress in treating childhood cancer. But, he said,
pointing to the
Aiming for a Cure logo on his hat, "We want a 100 percent
cure."
The shooting sports bring people together
for the weekend and contribute to the event's proceeds, but
the real
money is raised
through corporate donations and auctions of donated items
at the banquet.
A customized "Dream Bucks II" print by
Ankeny wildlife artist Larry Zach contributed $2,700 to the
live auction total
of $62,800, Baum said.
Corporate partners who donated at least
$3,000 each to the cause include Bob Dostal Memorial Golf Outing,
EMC Corporation,
Highland Hideaway Hunt Club, Hunter's Specialties, Johnson
Controls, Kent Feed Native Dog Food, Mossy Oak Brand Camo,
Overhead Door of Cedar Rapids and Iowa City, Proliant Health & Biologicals,
Van Meter Industrial and Wal-Mart Stores.