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May 18th, 2012Posted in Youtube Channel | No Comments »
PREP NOTEBOOK: Coach cautions Warren: Talent just part of equation
May 18th, 2012From a talent standpoint, Warren High may very well have the most of the four teams left in the CIF-SS Division III boys volleyball playoffs. That doesn’t mean the Bears are a lock to win the title, and coach Brad Simons is making sure his players know that.
Simons won two CIF titles when he played at Huntington Beach, but he said the Oilers weren’t necessarily expected to win.
“We beat teams we should not have beaten, but we played together,” said Simons, who added that’s why he has been “trying to guard against overconfidence” with this team.
Warren (30-3) is the No. 1 seed. It will play host to Camarillo (25-7) tonight at 7 in the semifinals. The Scorpions are not a top-four seed, but they were ranked sixth in the final Division III poll released May 5, so they are not slouches.
On paper, the Bears are favored. But they still have to play the match in a focused and intense manner, because that is almost certainly what Camarillo is going to do. Last year, the Scorpions played eventual champion Valley Christian in the semifinals. They lost the first two sets, but made it tough on the Crusaders by winning the third before losing the fourth.
Simons said he wasn’t able to get anyone to scout Camarillo’s home match against South Pasadena in the quarterfinals, but he did get some word-of-mouth scouting reports. Also, he said one of his players has been reading up on the Scorpions in their local newspaper.
“One of their players
said that no matter if they are up 18 (points) or down 18, `We treat it like the score is 0-0,”‘ Simons said. “That tells us their ideology is they play hard no matter what and don’t give up and play together.
“They have a strong team attitude and we have to match that or we could be in trouble.”
Camarillo is led by Evan Yoshimoto, a 6-foot-5 senior opposite. He had 24 kills and four blocks in Saturday’s victory over South Pasadena. Junior Owen Yoshimoto, a 6-2 outside hitter, is another to watch. He had 10 kills and six aces Saturday.
Senior middles Jake Maulhardt (6-6) and Jordan McGinley (6-3) are also formidable.
Warren has been led by the foursome of Nick Alvarez, Dean Kendall, Alfonso Mata and Josh Nehls. Cristian Cuevas has been doing a fine job of setting them.
Robbins signs
Victor Robbins of Compton High on Monday signed a national letter-of-intent to attend Oregon State on a basketball scholarship.
Robbins, a 6-foot-5 forward, averaged 17 points, nine rebounds and four assists in helping the Tarbabes to a second-place finish in the Moore League as well as the quarterfinals of the CIF-SS Division II-A playoffs. Robbins was named first-team all-league and first-team All-CIF. He was also named first-team Dream Team by the Press-Telegram.
Just minutes before he signed on the dotted line, Robbins spoke in proud tones.
“Well, today means a lot,” he said. “It’s an exciting moment, actually. I feel good.”
Robbins said he is hopeful to eventually land in the NBA. For now, playing in the Pac-12 is a thrill. He said other schools like Gonzaga and Washington were after him as well. But whereas Gonzaga in particular intimated he might have to redshirt, OSU will likely give him a chance to play as a true freshman.
“Gonzaga wanted me to probably redshirt,” Robbins said, “so I made my decision with Oregon (State) because they told me I’d be able to make an impact as soon as I come into the program.”
– Robert Morales
More signings
Over the past few weeks, more local student-athletes have signed their college letters-of-intent.
At a recent ceremony at Wilson, 28 athletes were honored for their accomplishments.
They included golfers Andrew Morgan (California), Chase Nicolai (LMU) and Alexis Hayes (Sonoma State), football players Brett Harper (Pomona-Pitzer) and Colby Weist (Southern Missouri State), baseball players Chase DeJong (USC) and Matt Heavin (Chapman), soccer players Deanna Empleo (Concordia), Ryan Napolillo (Redlands) and Spencer Aiken (Cal Poly Pomona), girls volleyball star Rebecca Strehlow (UCLA) and tennis player Jessica Cedillo (Westmont College).
Others included softball players Hannah Duarte (UC San Diego) and Loren Stavrou (Farleigh Dickinson), track athletes Ashley Peoples (LBCC), Aqeelah Muhammad (California), Ashley Warren (Shaw University), Anna Hernandez (UC San Diego), Sarah Ruegg (Hawaii) and Chaylene Bruggeman (LB State), water polo players Nathan Golla (Cal Poly SLO), Thomas Martinho (UC Santa Barbara), Nick Hoy (Pepperdine), Willis Allen (Chapman or Loyola Marymount), Ryan Bixby (UC Santa Barbara) and Dustin Boren (Cal Maritime), swimmer Austin McNicholas (UC Santa Cruz) and sailer Marissa Golison (St. Mary’s College of Maryland).
At St. John Bosco, three athletes signed last week. Accomplished runner Danny Martinez signed with Portland, and soccer stars Derek Vogel (Naval Academy) and Willie Lopez (San Diego Christian College) also made their choices.
Also, Los Alamitos’ Megan Carroll, a member of the Long Beach Junior Crew Association, has accepted a scholarship to row at Gonzaga.
Badminton champs crowned
Moore League players were featured in three of the five title matches at the Southern California High School Badminton Individual Championship Tournament at San Gabriel Valley Badminton Club last week.
However, only the Millikan mixed doubles pair of junior Peter Hor and sophomore Samantha Soeun was able to take home a championship. The Rams won three-setter against Mira Costa’s Chad Naramore and Danica Chong 11-2, 12-13, 11-4.
It was the first Southern California title for Hor, the Moore League singles and mixed doubles champ who made the semifinals in singles and mixed doubles last season.
In the girls doubles final, Kat In and Amanda Phou of Poly were defeated by Sherie Chow and Kelly Truong of San Marino 11-1, 11-3. It was just the second loss of the year for In and Phou, who finished the season with a 33-2 record.
And in the boys doubles final, Wilson’s Bill Tran and Henry Srun were edged by Shawn Wong and Yuan Wang of Mira Costa 11-7, 11-8.
605 Hall pass
The 605 All-Stars Hall of Fame will add longtime Dominguez High football coach Willie Donerson, former Paramount coach Art Tavizon and ex-Paramount standout Michael Fletcher among others in this year’s class.
The induction ceremony is Thursday, beginning at 6 p.m., at the Rio Hondo Events Center. Tickets, which can be purchased at the door and includes dinner, are $25.
Donerson has coached the Dons for the past 28 years, winning 18 San Gabriel Valley League championships and claiming three CIF-SS crowns in five championship-game appearances during that time. His overall record is 228-110-3.
Tavizon, who has been coaching high school athletes in the area since 1970, served as offensive and defensive coordinator at Morningside, Lynwood and Wilson before becoming the head coach at Paramount from 2003-2006. He is also an official and has been a board member of the 605 All-Stars since 1999.
Fletcher was among the best players in the nation during his career at Paramount. He was named to several All-America teams among other prestigious accolades, including 605 All-Star Game MVP in 1995. He moved on to Oregon and then spent nine years in the Canadian Football League, winning two Grey Cups and being named the CFL’s Defensive Player of the Year in 2005.
ESPN analyst and former NY Giants linebacker Antonio Pierce will be a guest speaker on behalf of Fletcher, a high school teammate.
Also to be inducted is longtime football official Lou Willhite.
The 45th 605 All-Star Football Classic is slated for June 2 at Cerritos College. Jack Mahlstede of Santa Fe High will guide the East team while Derek Brown of Bellflower High will guide the West. Team rosters will be announced later this week.
– Dave Werstine
‘Rabbits hop to title
It might have been a sign from the baseball gods that the 2012 season was Poly’s for the taking when the Jackrabbits won their first outright Moore League title since 1968 on a night they were held hitless through the first 10 innings.
Wilson’s Chase DeJong threw the CIF-maximum 10 innings, striking out 12 and not giving up a hit.
Poly’s Chris Castellanos had an unusually high strikeout total of 13 and went nine scoreless innings despite surrendering seven hits.
DeJong tripled to lead off the top of the 12th and his pinch-runner scored on a ground out, but Wilson failed to pushed home a second runner who reached third with one out.
Peter Fierros was able to shut down a threat after replacing Julian Griego.
Xavier Lavalle’s two-run, walk-off double down the right-field line scored Jeff Turley and Fierros, but the drama began with Turley’s at-bat.
Wilson reliever Mike Semonsen thought on two separate occasions he had struck out Turley and jumped off the mound both times. Turley reacted in disbelief to the umpire’s first call in the same at-bat. Semonsen’s strike zone seemed to shrink immediately after showing his displeasure with the umpire.
Griego then hit a line shot back up the box that nearly struck the Wilson pitcher and set the stage for Lavalle.
After Griego scored just behind Turley, the initial celebration began at home plate in a human pile. But the Poly players and coaches visited every corner of Blair Field after one of the most notable games in Long Beach prep baseball history.
No one begrudged the Jackrabbits an extended victory lap, for nine U.S. presidents had come and gone since their last outright championship.
Castellanos, Lavalle and Fierros all served as heroes and cemented their place in Poly baseball history.
“It couldn’t possibly have been a more dramatic way of winning this school its first championship in 46 years,” an excited Lavalle said.
“We won a game in which Chase DeJong was great and threw a 10-inning no-hitter, and we somehow found a way to answer their one run in the top of the 12th with two of our own in the bottom of the 12th. I can’t begin to tell you how exciting this is.”
DeJong’s numbers don’t lie
Despite his individual pitching record this season, DeJong (5-3) has been even better than during his junior year in which he was named the Dream Team Co-Pitcher of the Year.
He’s been the most hard-luck pitcher this year, losing three 1-0 games, including two in which he had 12 strikeouts.
DeJong had to go 8 2/3 scoreless innings two weeks ago to beat Lakewood and Shane Watson, and threw those 10 no-hit innings Thursday night.
Wilson scored zero runs in each of his three losses, and in four games versus Lakewood and Poly, the Bruins offense failed to score in 31 of 32 innings versus Watson and Castellanos.
To put things in perspective, during his junior year, the 6-foot-4 right-hander had 98 strikeouts and a 1.17 ERA. This season he lowered his ERA to 0.82 and has fanned 103 batters in just 72 innings.
DeJong’s career-best 103 strikeouts are even more impressive, considering he threw in three CIF-SS Division I playoff games a year ago to reach his total of 98, and has at least one more postseason appearance left this week to add to his tally.
The Bruins certainly are not the area’s best team, but a strong argument could be made that no one dominates like DeJong.
“I’m not as mad as many expected after a tough loss last Thursday, because we still have at least another game to play and I feel like I’ve done everything I could to help my team win games,” DeJong said.
Griffins flying high
Los Alamitos didn’t just win a Sunset League baseball championship in coach Matt Nuez’s maiden season, the Griffins did so by winning nine of their final 10 league games to enter the playoffs on a high note.
Los Al (19-8, 11-4) swept Marina, Huntington Beach, Newport Harbor, Fountain Valley and then split with Edison in the final week of the regular season.
Sophomore ace Jacob Nix (8-0) continues to be as good a story as anyone in the area, but Los Al also has gotten solid pitching from Michael Farris. The bats of Mick Schroeder, Cody Marshall, Dan Austin, Pat Ivison, Frankie Padulo, Chat Katz and Andrew Yazdanbakhsh also have made contributions in as dramatic a one-year turnaround as any team in the area.
Algra leads VC to Olympic title
Dylan Algra has been nothing short of dominant for Valley Christian en route to the Crusaders’ first Olympic League title since 2006. On the mound, Algra went 7-0 with a 1.00 ERA in league play. At the plate, he hit .346 with 16 RBIs.
The Crusaders had a balanced attack all year. Cal State Fullerton-bound Shane Stillwagon (.517), Patrick Avila (.379), Brian Burgin (.344), Clayton Granch (.350), Tyler McLurg (.329) and Connor Buckley (.409) all played big roles in earning a championship.
– Brian Reed-Baiotto
Championship run?
The Poly girls will be seeking their fifth consecutive Southern Section Division I track and field championship at Mt. San Antonio College on Saturday. Senior Traci Hicks and sophomores Ariana Washington, Hollie Harris and Kymber Payne should lead the way.
Hicks qualified for the finals in the 100, 100 hurdles, long jump and as a member of the Jackrabbits’ 4×100 relay with seniors Tori Myers, junior Diamond Thomas and Washington that has run 46.04 for the fastest time in the state.
Washington, Harris and Payne have qualified in three events each for the Jackrabbits, who have entrants in nine of 16 events.
Washington ran a state-leading 23.82 in the prelims at Trabuco Hills High last Saturday and qualified in the 100. The 100 final will feature four area entrants – Hicks and Washington, and Jordan junior La Troya Franklin and Paramount senior Shadonna Hunter.
Harris was the top qualifier in the 400 in a season-best 56.34 in the prelims. Harris also qualified in the triple jump and in the 4×400 relay with Payne, sophomore Janice Lane and junior Ratanya Washington.
Payne advanced to the finals of the 100 hurdles and 300 hurdles for the second year in a row.
– Kirby Lee
Artesia: coaches wanted
Artesia High is searching for head coaches for its boys varsity basketball, tennis and wrestling teams. Applicants should send a resume, cover letter and three letters of reference.
For more information, contact Artesia athletic director Joe Veach at (562) 926-5566, ext. 21675 or at joe.veach@abcusd.k12.ca.us.
Ex-Monsoon giving back
Former Mayfair star and current NFL safety Alterraun Verner will hold a free camp for all youth football players in the area June 30.
The event begins at 8 a.m. at Mayfair High and will be coached by Verner and area coaches. Awards for students with proof of a 3.0 GPA or higher will be available.
– David Felton
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Sideline Chatter: Montclair High baseball players can make their own history
May 18th, 2012If the current Montclair High Mountie baseball players know anything about the legendary Clary Anderson, it is probably more about his tremendous football coaching success than his string of winning teams with the diamond sport at the Woodman complex.
When MHS journeys to Bears & Eagles Riverfront Stadium for this Sunday’s 5:30 p.m. championship of the 80th Greater Newark Tournament against Nutley, it will be not only a trip down “memory lane” for a number of former Mounties and ardent fans from the era that produced Clary’s best teams of the 1960s, but also an opportunity for the current MHS ball players to create their own updated piece of history in the rich annals of New Jersey’s oldest high school baseball tournament.
It’s well known in this community that Montclair has not made an appearance in the GNT finals since 1969, and has not won the tournament since 1963, both years in which it was a statewide invitational featuring the very best teams from throughout the Garden State.
The GNT went from an enduring nine-inning ball game to the modern-day seven innings for high school baseball in 1970 and also made the switch in venues for the latter stages of the tourney from the old Newark Schools Stadium with its short porch in left field to the spacious Doc Goeltz Field in Verona where the semifinals were once again staged this past Saturday on a beautiful spring afternoon for baseball enthusiasts to enjoy taking in the 2012 Final Four as fifth-seeded Nutley surprised top-seeded and defending champion Seton Hall Prep, 9-1, in the first semifinal of the day, and then the second-seeded Mounties won their “rubber” match with third-seeded Millburn, 4-2, behind the strong pitching of senior left-hander Elliot Gertner and a very timely two-run double from Sam Ackerman during a big 3-run fourth inning for MHS.
This is the 40th season that the GNT is an Essex County-only affair as the switch from a statewide invitational was made in 1973, but that does not take away from the many great tournaments the Essex baseball enthusiasts have enjoyed in the past four decades nor detract from the everlasting memories of a rich history that can be recalled by many still with us.
The fathers of nearly all current Mountie players had not even reached high school when the Mounties last won the GNT in ’63, defeating St. Benedict’s Prep, 6-3, in the final, with a memorable Anderson-coached team that was led by the likes of ultra-talented lead-off man Buddy Fortunato (center field), strong-hitting first baseman Tommy Wilson, terrific team leader Sandy Sands (shortstop), third baseman Bill Spiedel, second baseman Charlie Wingfield and one of the state’s very best pitchers in big (6-4, 250-pound) left-hander Art Thompson, who possessed one of the best pickoff moves in the history of New Jersey high school baseball in addition to being so difficult to get a hit off of.
The ’64 Mounties, with additional standouts including catcher Earl Williams and outfielder Ron Burton, almost made it two GNT titles in a row over St. Benedict’s; however, the locals relinquished a 5-0 lead entering the eighth inning and wound on the short end of a 6-5 final score.
Williams, who would go on to be the National League Rookie of the Year with the Atlanta Braves in 1971, came in to relieve Thompson on the mound in that ’64 GNT final. Unfortunately, neither Mountie pitcher was able to hold off the persistent Grey Bees.
Mid-60s stars from New Jersey such as outfielder Elliott Maddox and pitcher Al Santorini of Union and outfielder Richie Zisk of Parsippany all made their way eventually to the big leagues.
The ’69 Mounties made it back to the GNT final, only to lose to Morristown, as current MHS assistant coach Angelo Intile, another outstanding hurler in Montclair lore, did not have his best stuff against a talented Colonials lineup as Mo-Town left-hander Pete Helt, one of the state’s best, emerged as the winning pitcher that day.
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“IN DEFENSE OF BROOKLYN” by Murray Goodwin – November …
May 18th, 2012
[Note: If it can be proven that the following editor's note isn't the greatest editor's note of all time I will gladly eat not just my own hat but any additional hat presented to me.]
EDITORS’ NOTE!
ONE DAY not long ago, an arrow sped through an open window of the HOLIDAY editorial rooms, bedded itself in a desk top, and stood there quivering before the startled eyes of the editor. Attached to it was a letter, a letter born of a Brooklynite’s bitter hurt at the story Manhattan Holiday, in the October issue of HOLIDAY, and the snubbing it contained of the writer’s beloved borough. We had of course known all our lives of the feud that existed between Brooklyn and Manhattan, warmest rivals among the five sister boroughs of Greater New York. We know how Manhattanites tend to ignore Brooklyn, and snub it, and how Brooklynites grow sullen and hurt under such cavalier treatment. Knowing this, we have made it a firm part of HOLIDAY editorial policy never to say anything against Brooklyn, just as we never say anything against MOTHER, or FREE ENTERPRISE. We do not believe our article insulted Brooklyn, but perhaps we did somewhat neglect her. In fairness, therefore, we are printing hurt Brooklyn Citizen Goodwin’s letter. Further, we have even made the courageous editorial decision to show actual pictures of Brooklyn.
The Editor,
HOLIDAY Magazine.
#
DEAR SIR:
I have always been the jolly type who joins in the laughter when William Bendix, portraying the movie version of a typical man from Brooklyn, simply massacres the King’s English. And I chuckle from the paunch when a top-drawer comedian refers to Brooklyn as somewhere you cannot get to or from without a visa. We Brooklynites have come to expect unusual remarks about our borough, for Brooklyn is unique. In fact, although an occasional cruel twit might raise our hackles, we rather enjoy the unpleasantries about Brooklyn, for these remarks set us apart as people; even though, in some cases, when strangers learn that you originate from somewhere in between Coney Island and Red Hook, their eyebrows shoot up and they fall back a pace or two, waiting expectantly for you to do something incredible.
But the unkindest cut of all to a sane, normal, even intelligent person who happens to prefer to live out his days across the river from Manhattan, is when an article dealing with New York City mentions Brooklyn in only the most casual manner—which is precisely what happened in HOLIDAY. Who is to blame? Is it ignorance on the part of the writer? Or perhaps some fiendish editor sitting with scissors poised, ready to swoop with a low growl at the mere sight of the word? Or is it that the shadow of Brooklyn hovers menacingly over Manhattan’s wonderful skyline, dulling some of its lustre?
Invaders from Gotham
No matter how one may account for it, a simple fact remains: Brooklyn and Manhattan are irretrievably linked together; physically, by bridges, tunnels and ferries; spiritually, by and event which took place on a windy day in 1898. For that was the day when, grudgingly, Brooklyn surrendered her sovereignty and became the Borough of Brooklyn in Greater New York. Previous to that, Brooklyn had been many things and of many names. The early Dutch settlers, in 1645, refereed to her fondly as Breuckelen, after which she was known successively as Brockland, Brocklin, Brookline, and finally, almost eagerly, Brooklyn. In 1816, Brooklyn proudly became an incorporated village, and in 1834, a city. This pleasant state of affairs lasted until almost the turn of the century, when greedy politicians and their ilk made Greater New York a legal fact simply by adding Brooklyn to their cozy little union. How uneasily they must sleep! For today, the child almost rules the parent. And no matter how many intellectual backs are turned upon this premise, the facts are much too obvious to be concealed. (The real damage however, was done in 1883, when the Brooklyn Bridge was completed. Its construction was supervised through a telescope out of a Brooklyn Heights window by engineer Washington A. Roebling, who, having sustained a serious injury, was unable to be on the spot. The opening of this remarkable all-granite bridge allowed Manhattanites to visit Brooklyn with convenience and carry back with them the innovations and comforts which were commonplace in Brooklyn.)
Brooklyn’s population alone, with more than two and one half million warm and human souls, outnumbers any of the boroughs which form the city of New York, out-peopling Manhattan by a margin of several hundreds of thousands. And why did the writer wish to hide the fact that Brooklyn sprawled quietly and soberly over eighty-one square miles? Is it because such wealth of territory dwarfs the meager twenty-two square miles called Manhattan?
Home, Sweet Home
Walt Whitman described Brooklyn as “the city of homes and churches.” And it is true. View any Brooklyn-bound rush-hour subway crowd. The workday is at its fever-wracked end. Fathers, husbands, wives and loving children are anxious to reach the comfort and solace of their families. They want to take their ties off and open their collars. They want to get into their slippers. They want to listen to their radios; to laugh with the high-priced comedians, to weep with the maudlin true-life-story actors. To outsmart the experts. And what is happening in Manhattan across the river at the precise moment? Bartenders are setting them up again. Showgirls are tiredly getting into their muslin and crepe de Chine for another gay evening of smiling at out-of-town buyers on the loose. Waiters are moodily turning the tablecloths and breathing on the silver. Manhattan flexes its muscles for a night of gaudy and artificial fun, while the good burghers in Brooklyn relax and act with quiet dignity like human beings. For Brooklyn has a heritage of culture and charming society to uphold. It was of national importance when men like Henry Ward Beecher mounted the pulpit of Brooklyn’s Plymouth Church and gave forth a fiery sermon damning slavery. The effect is still felt on every young student today, for the colony’s first free public school was opened in Brooklyn in 1661, fathering the modern-day public-school system in New York City. These are facts not easily overlooked.
Nor is the American premier of the hot dog to be lightly scorned. Here is a delicacy which brings enjoyment to all classes of people—the rich, the needy; the bright; the dull; the beautiful, the plain. Where was this savory social leveler first introduced to America? On a Brooklyn sand bar known as Coney Island, “the world’s largest playground.” A hearty German baker, Charles Feltman, is reputed to have laid the first made-in-America frankfurter tenderly between the fluffy halves of a soft roll, dabbing its succulent body with mustard, back in the happy days circa 1870. To this day, Feltman’s restaurant is renowned for its food and atmosphere.
Brooklyn’s Big Heart
Feltman’s is not the only Brooklyn restaurant of repute. Whenever the fishing fleet stands into Sheepshead Bay it brings tender morsels from the sea consigned to restaurants like Lundy’s, Villepigue’s, McGuinness’, and many another famous sea-food emporium. In these places lobsters, clams and crabs attain such heavenly flavor that many a guest has sworn his particular delectable was served wearing a halo.
Where in Manhattan can the hot and tired gentry plunge into the ocean from a six-mile-long frontage of beach? Seek high and low; you’ll find no spot in Manhattan which can offer so much comfort to so many people as can Coney Island. From Manhattan, from the Bronx, they pour into Brooklyn laden with children, paper bags, vacuum bottles, water-wings, patched inner tubes. In myriad tongues they sing their happiness at finding a square yard of tan sand to plump upon, just spitting distance from the surf, and where the sun may fall on them in warm embrace. Brooklyn, with a heart as big as its body, bids them all to try the breakers in the daytime, or seek a thrill at night aboard the giddy roller-coasters, giant swings, and midget dodgem cars.
Yet Coney Island, the “nickel empire,” is not the big borough’s only source of enjoyment. Brooklyn offers quieter and calmer ways to get more out of life. you prefer green and verdant thin Hop into a subway or bus or trolley car,and in less time than you can say “Leo, Durocher,” you find yourself outside the justly famous Brooklyn Botanical Garden. Go on in. It’s absolutely free, all fifty beautiful acres of it. Feast your eyes on the horticulture collections and plantings. Take your time viewing the Japanese landscape garden, probably the most celebrated in America. Cared for mainly by expert Japanese gardeners, these landscapes embody the religious and social traditions of Japan. But even if you cared nothing for the symbolism, you can’t help but be impressed by the sheer beauty of these gardens. Besides these Japanese “Niwa,” you’ll find other areas devoted to wildflowers, rock gardens, pools of graceful water lilies. The magnificent buildings spotted among the gardens contain still other collections, in addition to mountains of data on flora and fauna. This material is available to whomever wishes to peruse it.
A pebble’s heave from these gorgeous floral displays lies Prospect Park. Here, at your disposal, are 526 rolling lush acres of trees, green meadows and bluffs, containing picnic grounds, a zoo, a colorful lagoon, tennis courts and baseball diamonds for the young and athletic, bandstands where summer evening concerts surfeit the music-lover, parade grounds, and wide gravel walks. Why, it puts New York’s spindly little Central Park to shame; just a mere collection of thorns and fagots! The site of Prospect Park is steeped in American history. North of the zoo is the Battle Pass, appropriately marked by a bronze plaque which informs the curious that General Sullivan made his stand against the British here in the Revolution’s Battle of Long Island. Stroll north to Lookout Hill and pause a moment before the monument commemorating the bravery of the Maryland regiment which held the Hessians at bay in the same heroic battle. Wander southward along the East Drive, and you will bump into the Lefferts homestead, built in 1777 by Lieut. Peter Lefferts to replace his home which was burned to the ground by the British. Mount the steps and go in to see how graciously the early Brooklyn settlers lived the rich paneling, the sturdy trundle beds, the hand-hewn timbers in the attic.
Many Brooklyn homes today bear the same mark of graciousness. Flatbush, long a target for derision by screen and radio writers who likely never laid honest eyes upon it, is a most desirable place to live. There you will find Colonial homes set well back on shaded streets, with large, cool lawns leading to spacious porches. Roomy houses are separated by neatly trimmed privet hedges, something seldom seen in Manhattan outside of Central Park. (And at that, their purpose is to support a sign which admonishes, “Keep off the Grass !”) Even the apartment houses sprinkled in that area give a feeling of ease and comfort.
Rivaling the splendor of the mansions of Manhattan’s haughty Fifth Avenue, but without their ostentation, are the homes of Brooklyn’s “Gold Coast,” dotting the quiet, almost chaster streets of the Park Slope district, which have as the hub of their stately wheel the Grand Army Plaza entrance to Prospect Park. Farther west lies another fine old section of Brooklyn, where the staid, respectable and wealthy enjoy coming home after an arduous day in the coin-and-banknote section of lower Manhattan. Perching high on a bluff overlooking the East River is an old and distinctive section known as Brooklyn Heights. Apartment houses are sparse here, and what few are there accent comfort, not the salmon-packed condition of their tall stone-and-steel Manhattan brethren over the water. There has been extravagant talk of the view one may buy atop the Empire State Building, located somewhere in Manhattan. How dull and boring compared with the vista from any vantage point in Brooklyn Heights! And without the vaguest hint of commercialism attached. In Brooklyn it is free—the most breathtaking view in the world.
From these heights a man can see the startling panorama of Lower Manhattan, the sweep of Brooklyn Bridge, Governors Island, the Lady of Liberty and the odd-shaped wharves along the river.
In downtown Brooklyn you will find the shops, the first-run theaters, the civic buildings, the schools of higher learning such as Long Island University, Brooklyn Law School, St. John’s University, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, and Packer Collegiate Institute. Pratt Institute, one of the finest art schools in America, is located near this intellectual center, while the newer Brooklyn College is somewhat inland.
Frail and Flimsy Manhattan
There is much to tell about Brooklyn. Too much to go into one irate letter. There’s the Brooklyn Museum, for instance, with its world-famous collection of primitive arts and crafts; Erasmus Hall High School, the first Board-of-Regents-chartered secondary school in the entire city; Greenwood Cemetery, which more people prefer as their final resting place than any other in the city (among them De Witt Clinton, Horace Greeley, Henry Ward Beecher, Samuel F. B. Morse, to name a few); and, of course, there’s Lippy Leo and The Bums, the most famous baseball team in the world.
In other, and terser, words, Brooklyn is quite a place. True, like any large community, it has its slums, its shabby and seedy districts, its low-down bars, its smoky and dirty industrial centers, its percentage of honky-tonk, its share of crime and lawlessness. There is as yet no established heaven on earth.
Brooklyn is too big, too virile to be pushed around. And much too proud and accomplished to be ignored by Manhattan. For Brooklyn is the sturdy base upon which frail and flimsy Manhattan rests. And, if in the stealth of a dark and quiet night a bunch of Brooklyn boys were to snip the bridges which shackle Manhattan to us and let the whole dang island float off to sea and destruction, it would serve Manhattan right. It was bought in a crooked deal in the first place.
Yours sincerely,
MURRAY GOODWIN.
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2012 Scholarships Awarded |CentraCom News
May 18th, 2012CentraCom Interactive announces the winners of three $1250 scholarships to Snow College and three $500 scholarships to other schools. We received many applications from highly qualified candidates from each of our service areas.
Kassandra Brown
Kassandra is a graduating student from Rich High School with a current GPA of 3.99. She is a member of the National Honor Society and has been chosen as this year’s Valedictorian. She currently serves as the Drill Team Assistant Mistress.
In addition to her dedication to the Drill Team, she has attended college courses through Utah State University and received an Associate Degree in Science before graduating from high school.
Besides her scholastic work, she actively serves her community. She donated many hours to cleaning highways, helping Globus Relief provide medical supplies to third-world countries, helping provide Christmas gifts to under-privileged children and many hours mentoring an elementary student as part of the Youth and Families with Promise program.
She plans to attend Weber State University in pursuit of a degree in Radiologic Science, then continuing with a graduate degree in Diagnostic Medical Sonography.
Holly Ellsworth
Holly is currently a student at South Sevier High School. She has maintained a GPA of 3.92 and is a recipient of the Ameritus Knowledge Award. She also participates as a member of the school drama group where she has earned Superior Rating for Drama Competition.
She has volunteered many hours utilizing her talents in painting sets for local school plays as well as for community plays. She serves her community in many ways. Her involvement in a mixture of extra-curricular activities gave her an opportunity to serve and influence many people. She enjoys the opportunity to brighten the lives of community members in the assisted living facilities with artistic performances.
She plans to attend Snow College. There she plans to obtain a degree in Fine Arts with a teaching certificate. Her choice of attending Snow College will increase the scholarship by $750 for a total value of $1250.
Sara Fowles
Sara is a graduating student of North Sanpete High School and is the top student in the school. She has a GPA of 4.0. She is a member of the National Honor Society.
Sara enjoys many volunteer serving opportunities. She enjoys working with the public library reading program. Besides her involvement in serving the community, she spends many hours a week working as an Intern at the Mt. Pleasant Elementary School. This opportunity has given her great joy and satisfaction to see the children learn and grow. Working with the children has inspired her to become a teacher.
She plans to attend Snow College in pursuit of an elementary education degree. Her choice of attending Snow College will increase the scholarship by $750 for a total value of $1250.
Emma Lee
Emma is a graduating senior at Wasatch Academy. She has a GPA of 4.0. She has participated on the school’s robotics team and dance company. She is a member of the National Honors Society and student body council.
Emma is equally adept in the arts as well as the sciences. She enjoys art, dance, theatre, singing, creative writing and history. She loves to learn and spends her free time writing, reading and drawing. Emma finds great satisfaction serving others. As the Co-Organizer of Wasatch Academy’s annual Community Service Day, she led her classmates in serving the community.
She will be attending Southern Utah University this fall with an emphasis in fine art or performing art.
KyLee Morse
KyLee is a senior at Dugway High School and has maintained a grade point average of 3.96. She is a member of the National Honor Society. She serves as the student body Vice President. Not only will she graduate with her high school diploma but has taken many college courses such as English, Biology, Psychology, Sociology and Political Science.
KyLee is a member of the volleyball, basketball and Track & Field teams. She served her teammates as the captain of both the volleyball and basketball teams. She received Academic All-State for volleyball, basketball and Track & Field. She has attended many leadership conferences for the past several years including the prestigious Utah Girl’s State and Freedom Academy. She also volunteers many hours to mentor elementary students.
She will pursue a degree at Snow College in Behavioral Science with an emphasis in Sociology. She enjoys working with children and would like to help them overcome emotional, mental and physical trauma. Her choice of attending Snow College will increase her scholarship by $750 for a total value of $1250.
Katie Nielson
Katie is a senior at Dugway High School and has maintained a grade point average of 3.88. She has also completed many college courses. She is a member of the National Honor Society and serves as the president for that organization. She also is the Student Body President.
Besides the many leadership positions she has held, she is an accomplished musician. She plays the clarinet in the school’s state championship band. Katie is a member of the All-State Orchestra as first chair and section leader.
She will pursue a degree at Utah State University. She loves music and desires to use her talents as a speech and audiology health care professional. She plans to get a graduate degree in speech and audiology.
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Dr. James Larson retires from the Omaha Theater Company after 28 …
May 18th, 2012Dr. James Larson is retiring this spring after 28 years as artistic director of the Omaha Theater Company for Young People. Over the decades, many thousands of Omaha children received their introduction to live theater through their experiences at The Rose because of the leadership and commitment to accessibility of James Larson.
“I feel like I’ve accomplished way beyond what I ever imagined,” said Larson, who turns 60 in September. “My kids are getting out of college, and I’ve got a couple young-adult novels I’m trying to finish up. It’s a good time.”
Larson was hired as artistic director of the Emmy Gifford Children’s Theater in 1984, when it was housed in a former movie theater at 35th and Center Streets. It moved to the former Astro Theater at 20th and Farnam Streets in 1995, greatly increasing its seating capacity and classroom space. It was renamed the Omaha Theater Company at The Rose. It has sold out season memberships the past three years. The company’s $3 million budget is 10 times what it was when Larson signed on.
Larson established a national touring program 20 years ago, taking shows to millions of patrons in large performing arts centers throughout the country. Larson has directed about 75 shows for The Rose including If You Give a Cat a Cupcake, Miss Nelson is Missing, and Pinocchio. He brought Max Bush’s Hansel and Gretel to the Brooklyn Academy of Music for a week in 1992. The Omaha Theater Company was honored with the Sara Spencer Artistic Achievement Award in 1990 from AATE.
He brought top playwrights and artists to Omaha, including Tony winner Mark Medoff, National Book Award winner Robert Bly, Pulitzer nominee Joe Sutton, director Everett Quinton (the former artistic director of the Ridiculous Theatrical Company and 5-time winner of New York Drama Desk Award), director Rob Urbinati, associate artistic director of Queen’s Theater in the Park in New York, and best-seller Stan Berenstain, creator of “The Berenstain Bears.” The Omaha Theater Company was the first theater to commission James Still to write a play and helped convince him to be a playwright. James Larson enjoyed his long relationship with playwright Virginia Koste for many wonderful years.
Himself a playwright, Larson adapted several books for the stage and toured them nationally, including “The Little Engine That Could,” Mercer Mayer’s “There’s an Alligator Under My Bed,” Beverly Cleary’s “The Mouse and the Motorcycle” and many more.
He built the theater’s extensive educational programs. “Every Single Child” provides drama outreach programs to every single child in over 66 local schools each year. Each grade gets a different experience, ranging from seeing a professional show at The Rose, to getting a drama workshop teaching acting skills, to using drama teachers to bring history to life, or bringing in a touring Theater in Education show to the school. Most schools serve low-income students and grants and foundations fund the programs so they are free to the schools to participate.
He started the youth theater program, now called Teens’n’Theater, in which teens do all the acting. Teens’n’Theater includes free annual programs serving Latino, African-American, and GLBT teens. The theater also added after-school and summer classes on Larson’s watch, plus the recent musical-theater Broadway at The Rose program. The education programs now serve students with autism, students who are deaf and hard of hearing, students with Downs Syndrome, and other special needs students. The theater also has an extensive scholarship program offering free drama classes to low income students and free drama programming afterschool at local middle schools.
Susie Buffett, chairwoman of the Rose Blumkin Performing Arts Center Foundation, which owns The Rose, said Larson used the theater’s move to larger quarters as an opportunity “to grow it into something really spectacular, and nationally known. One thing I like best about him is how much he cares about access for every person in the community,” Buffett said. “It’s a lot about inclusiveness, which is part of why I’ve gotten involved and stayed. It’s a theater but also a social-service organization. That’s due in large part to James.”
He got a degree in creative writing at the University of Iowa, then moved to Omaha to work on a master’s degree in theater. He later earned a doctorate at the University of Kansas and, for a year, taught children’s theater at New York University.
On a personal note, James Larson gave me my first job out of graduate school 15 years ago. He gave me incredible opportunities and support as a playwright (allowing me to adapt Where the Red Fern Grows, Old Yeller, The Misfits, Julie of the Wolves, If You Give a Cat a Cupcake, and more great books). He trusted me as an Education Director to run the program, hire the teaching artists, and train the interns as I saw fit. James Larson was amazingly supportive of Pride Players (the queer youth teen theater troupe I co-founded at the Omaha Theater Company) allowing the project to grow and flourish. He stood by the program from the beginning in 1999, even though it was an unpopular choice among some of our ticket buyers in the conservative state of Nebraska. James wanted the artistic staff to be both artists and educators and supported our artistic careers. I have been extremely fortunate to have worked with James Larson for the last 15 years.
Larson’s resignation is effective May 31, and a national search has begun for his replacement.
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The Predicted Effects of the Common Core: Implications for Next …
May 18th, 2012According to Achieve, the U.S. system of science and mathematics education is performing below par, and if something isn’t done, then millions of students will not be prepared to compete in the global economy. Achieve cites achievement data from PISA and NAEP to make its case that American science and mathematics teaching is in horrible shape, and needs to fixed.
The solution to fix this problem to make the American dream possible for all citizens is to write new science (and mathematics) standards. According to Achieve, quality science teaching is based on content standards “that are rich in content and practice, with aligned curricula, pedagogy, assessment and teacher preparation.
One could argue that quality science teaching is not based on authoritarian content standards, but much richer standards of teaching that form the foundation of professional teaching.
What ever standards are agreed upon, they ought to be based on a set of values that are rooted in democratic thinking, including empathy and responsibility. Professional teachers above all else are empathic in the sense that teachers have the capacity to connect with their students, to feel what others feel, and to imagine oneself as another and hence to feel a kinship with others. Professional teachers are responsible in the sense that they act on empathy, and that they are not only responsible for others (their students, parents, colleagues), but themselves as well.
Dual Forces of Standards and High-Stakes Testing
The dual forces of authoritarian standards and high-stakes testing has taken hold of K-12 education through a top-down, corporate led enterprise. This is very big business, and it is having an effect of thwarting teaching and learning in American schools. A recent study by Pioneer Institute estimated that states will spend at least $15 billion over the next few years to replace their current standards with the common core.
Authoritarian Standards. The movement to impose a common set of standards on U.S. schools began in 2009 at a Chicago meeting held by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers and individuals from the states, and Achieve, Inc. This group charged Achieve to develop and write common standards in mathematics and English/language arts. According to research report on the common standards by researchers at the University of Colorado, the development of the common core took a path that undermined one of the tenets of research, and that is openness and transparency. The writing was done in private, and there was only one K-12 educator involved in the process. According to the Colorado study:
The work groups were staffed almost exclusively by employees of Achieve, testing companies (ACT and the College Board), and pro-accountability groups (e.g.,America’s Choice, Student Achievement Partners, the Hoover Institute). Practitioners and subject matter experts complained that they were excluded from the development process.
Funding for the common standards was provided by the U.S. Department of Education, the Gates Foundation, and other foundations. Only one classroom teacher was involved in the review of the common standards, with nearly all reviewers being university professors. There were no school administrators in the review process.
The process used to create the common core was authoritarianism at its best. All of this was done by Governors and high ranking education officials, speaking for administrators and teachers in thousands of schools across the country. They were saying that there was something wrong withour schools, and that they have a solution to fix them: a single set of standards for the teaching of K-12 mathematics and English/language for all students regardless of where they live.
Hence the term we use to describe the first of dual forces at work in U.S. education is the authoritarian standards. Now for the second force, high-stakes testing.
High-stakes testing. High-stakes testing is any assessment process in which reliance is made on test scores to make critical educational decisions about students and schools. As teachers, we believe that assessment can be used in the service of students and their learning. Diagnostic and formative assessment strategies are more effective in helping students understand mathematics, English/language arts and science, than are summative high-stakes tests.
We can trace high-stakes testing to the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001. NCLB supports standards-based education reform based on the premise that setting high standards and establishing measurable goals can improve individual outcomes in education. The Act required states to develop assessments in basic skills. States were required to give these assessments to all students at select grade levels in order to receive federal school funding.
High-stakes testing, according to many teachers and researchers has had unintended consequences such as a narrowing of the curriculum, and undo attention to teaching-to-the-test.
Effects of Standards on Achievement
The Common Core State Standards and Next Generation Science Standards are theorized to improve learning because the new standards are superior to the existing state standards. Indeed, two groups that studied the state standards did conclude the that Common Core standards were of higher quality. A second improvement to learning is that expectations will be higher than those that currently exist in the Common Core and science. The claim here was that the states set their expectations too low, resulting in “inflated” results. And the third area of improvement in learning is that standardizing might lead to higher quality textbooks and other resources since they would only have to be aligned to one set of content standards.
According to the 2012 Brown Center Report on American Education, the Common Core State Standards will have little to no effect on student achievement. Author Tom Loveless explains that neither the quality or the rigor of state standards is related to state NAEP scores. Loveless suggests that if there was an effect, we would have seen it since all states had standards in 2003.
Quality. For example in the Brown Center study, it was reported (in a separate 2009 study by Whitehurst), that there was no correlation of NAEP scores with the quality ratings of state standards. Whitehurst studied scores from 2000 to 2007, and found that NAEP scores did not depend upon the “quality of the standards,” and he reported that this was true for both white and black students (The Brown Center Report on American Education, p.9). The correlation coefficients ranged from -0.6 to 0.08.
Higher Expectations. The higher a “cut score” that a state established for difficulty of performance can be used to define the rigor or expectations of standards. One would expect that over time, achievement scores in states that have more rigorous and higher expectations, would trend upwards. The Brown study reported it this way:
States with higher, more rigorous cut points did not have stronger NAEP scores than states with less rigorous cut points.
The researchers found that it did not matter if states raised the bar, or lowered the bar on NAEP scores. The only positive and significant correlations were reported between raising and lowering the bar and 4th grade math and reading. One can not determine causality using simple correlations, but we can say there is some relationship here.
Standardization. When researchers looked at data to find out if standardization would reduce the variation of scores between states, they found that the variation was relatively small compared to looking at the variation within states. The researchers put it this way (The Brown Center Report on American Education, p. 12): The findings are clear.
Most variation on NAEP occurs within states not between them. The variation within states is four to five times larger than the variation between states.
According to the Brown Report, the Common Core will have very little impact on national achievement (Brown Report, p. 12).
Effects. The researchers concluded that we should not expect much from the Common Core. In an interesting discussion of the implications of their findings, Tom Loveless, the author of the report, cautions us to be careful about not being drawn into thinking that standards represent a kind of system of “weights and measures.” Loveless tells us that standards’ reformers use the word—benchmarks—as a synonym for standards. And he says that they use too often. In science education, we’ve had a long history of using the word benchmarks, and Loveless reminds us that there are not real, or measured benchmarks in any content area. Yet, when you read the standards—common core or science—there is the implication we really know–almost in a measured way–what standards should be met at a particular grade level.
Loveless also makes a strong point when he says the entire system of education is “teeming with variation.” To think that creating a set of common core standards will reduce this variation between states or within a state simply will not succeed. As he puts it, the common core (a kind of intended curriculum) sits on top of the implemented and achieved curriculum. The implemented curriculum is what teachers do with their students day-to-day. It is full of variation within a school. Two biology teachers in the same school will get very different results for a lot of different factors. But as far as the state is concerned, the achieved curriculum is all that matters. The state uses high-stakes tests to determine whether schools met Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP).
As the Brown report suggests, we should not depend on the common core or the Next Generation Science Standards having any effect on students’ achievement. The report ends with this statement:
The nation will have to look elsewhere for ways to improve its schools.
Do you think that the common core and the Next Generation Science Standards will have little effect on students’ achievement? Where do we look to improve learning?
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Biography of Sandra Bullock
May 17th, 2012Actor, producer, and a winner of the Golden Globe and Academy Awards, Sandra Bullock is not an uncommon name. Get to know a little about the comedian that you adore, in this biography.
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