Archive for Local News

‘Ribs 4 Kids’ dinner fundraiser returns Aug. 2

“Ribs 4 Kids,” the popular drive-through dinner fundraiser for the Boys & Girls Club of Whittier, is back but will only be making one appearance in 2013 on Friday, Aug.2.

The concept for this fundraiser is a pretty simple one; sell something people want, make it easy, and reap the benefits of making a donation to a worthwhile cause.

For the price of $25, patrons receive a dinner that includes a full rack of ribs barbequed on site by Steve Hernandez of Steve’s BBQ in Uptown Whittier, a serving of potato salad, cheesy garlic bread and a Coca Cola product. Each meal is designed to serve two people.

Beverages are donated by Coca Cola Refreshments, and all of the food is prepared by Steve’s BBQ. While this is already a delicious meal at a great price, the icing on the cake is the fact that the entire dinner is done in a drive-through on-site at the Boys & Girls Club, so all you have to do is pull in the driveway and your meal will be handed to you and you will be sent on your way home.

While pre-sales are encouraged, dinners will also be available for purchase the night of the event. Tickets are available online at www.bgcw.org, at the Boys & Girls Club of Whittier front desk, 7905 Greenleaf Ave., or by calling Amanda at (562) 945-3787, ext. 113 or by e-mail at Amanda@bgcw.org. On Aug. 2, dinners will be available for pickup from 4 to 6:30 p.m.

This week’s homily by The Rev. Thomas M. Boles, P.h.D.

Novelist A.J. Cronin had been in practice as a physician for almost 10 years when he developed a gastric ulcer that required complete rest.

He went to a farm in the Scottish Highlands to recuperate. He says, “The first few days of leisure were pleasant enough, but soon the enforced idleness of Fyne Farm became insufferable. I had often, at the back of my mind, nursed the vague illusion that I might write. I had actually thought out the theme of a novel, the tragic record of man’s egotism and bitter pride.

Upstairs in my cold, clean bedroom was a scrubbed deal table and a very hard chair. The next morning I found myself in this chair, facing a new exercise book, open upon the table, slowly becoming aware that, short of dog-Latin prescriptions, I had never composed a significant phrase in all my life.

It was a discouraging thought as I picked up my pen. Never mind, I began. Even though Cronin struggled to write 500 words a day and eventually threw his first draft on the farm’s trash heap, he finished Hatter’s Castle. The book was dramatized, translated into 22 languages, and sold some five million copies. The world had lost a physician, but gained a novelist.

YOU CANNOT WIN IF YOU DO NOT BEGIN

Now therefore perform the doing of it;
that as there was a readiness to will,
so there may be a performance also
out of that which ye have.

2 Corinthians 8: 11

Annual backpack give-away set Aug. 10

Ready for school?

The annual Backpack Give-Away will take place from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013 at Lee Owens Park on Greenleaf Avenue in Whittier.

Members of the Hispanic Outreach Taskforce (HOT) want to make sure every student in attendance receives a backpack and all the school supplies needed to start the new school year.

In order to achieve its goal HOT needs help with donations of school supplies like notebooks, pens, pencils, paper, three-ring binders, rulers, pencil boxes to include inside the backpacks.

Supplies for the backpacks should be delivered to Community Grace Brethren Church, 8109 Greenleaf Ave., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 6-8.

A community walk is set at 10 a.m. at Lee Owens Park to pass out fliers notifying residents of the Backpack Give-Away.

In addition at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 8, volunteers are needed to fill the backpacks at Grace church. At least 20 volunteers are needed.

There is still time to reserve a booth for the event. A limited number of 10 by 10 canopies are available. E-mail james@hotoutreach.org or call James Arenas at 562-789-0550 or 951-545-1270 for more information or to reserve your space.

 

Learn ins, outs of health care reform

Want to know what pending health care reform will mean to you? Join Congresswoman Linda Sanchez and state Assemblyman Ian Calderon for a free community series, “Health Care Reform & You” from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 27, 2013 at the Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave. in Whittier.

The series will address the Affordable Care Act, health insurance options, how to get financial help to buy health insurance, how to enroll in health insurance, imminent changes to Medicare and Medi-Cal and more.

Major sponsors for the series include PIH Health, Kaiser Permanente, Rose Hills, Cancer Action Network and AppleCare.

Parking is free.

For more information, call Ernesto Morales at 562-463-4553 or visit Events@RoseHills.com

Martial arts legends come together in Whittier

Aikido Ai of Southern California, located at 6725 Comstock Ave. in Whittier, hosted gathering of top masters and grand masters to demonstrate Limalama on July 14.

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By Robert Rosenblatt and Eric Terrazas

Staff Writers

www.411whittier.com
WHITTIER – The world of the Polynesian martial arts came together July 14, 2013 at the Aikido Ai of Southern California dojo located at 6725 Comstock Ave.

Richard Nunez, a Whittier resident and one of the founders of the first Limalama association, sponsored a gathering of top masters and grand masters to demonstrate Limalama, which is a unique hybrid style of self-defense.

The event also featured a graduation ceremony for different ranks from first-degree to ninth-degree black belt. Honorees in attendance included black belt Hall of Fame masters from Mexico and California.

Fabricio Gomez of Tijuana Limalama presented a strong exhibit of the street-fighting style in front of an audience that packed the studio. Gomez was promoted to ninth-degree black belt by Grand Master Nunez. Nunez and Solomon Kaihewalu are the last two surviving original members from the first Limalama association, which started the system of martial arts known worldwide as the inside, close, in-your-face style of Limalama.

Limalama is a Polynesian style of martial arts that feature elements of boxing, judo, aikido, kung fu, kickboxing and open-handed techniques. In addition to Nunez and Kaihewalu, the first Limalama association also featured Tino Tuiolosega, John Marolt, Sal Esquivel and Haumea “Tiny” Lefiti.

One of the graduates was Bob Brown, a Whittier resident who was promoted to seventh-degree black belt. Brown is a former United States Secret Service agent and worked as a detective with the Pasadena Police Department. He is a master weapons instructor in knife and stick fighting and helped guard Presidents Ford and Reagan, serving as their driver and last line of defense.

Another honoree was Mario Vasquez, a Whittier resident who was promoted to fifth-degree black belt.

“It felt good,” Vasquez said of his achievement. “It was something I worked hard for – putting in the hours and the days.”

Alfred Urquidez, the youngest brother of martial arts legend Benny “the Jet” Urquidez, also attended the event. Alfred, who holds a sixth-degree black belt in Kenpo-Shotokan, still teaches in Arleta.

Gabriel Zayas, who holds an eighth-degree black belt, was also in attendance. Zayas is the founder and CEO of the International Polynesian Martial Arts Organization, and owns 20 schools of Limalama in Mexico and two schools in Los Angeles.

Zayas and Nunez will help host the 13th annual international “War of the Warriors” martial arts championships, which will be presented by the International Polynesian Martial Arts Organization. The event is scheduled for Sunday, July 28, 2013 at the DoubleTree Hotel, 13111 Sycamore Drive in Norwalk.

For more information on the “War of the Warriors,” call 323-789-6825 or 323-216-7372. For more information on Aikido Ai of Southern California, call 562-696-1838.

@411whittierspts on twitter

 

Poets looking toward bright future with new aquatic center

Whittier College’s Lillian Slade Aquatics Center opened in February 2012 as part of a $9 million renovation project of the Graham Athletic Center.

 

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By Eric Terrazas

Sports Editor

411whittier.com

WHITTIER – A scorching summer is well under way and one area pool that is attracting its share of attention is Whittier College’s Lillian Slade Aquatics Center.

The facility, which opened in February 2012 as part of a $9 million renovation project of the Graham Athletic Center, is the home of the college’s water polo, swimming and diving teams. The aquatics center also hosts programs that serve the community, including an annual summer camp.

The center features a larger pool, which measures at 43 meters by 25 yards, seating for 500 spectators, a four-color video display scoreboard, five banks of lighting, locker rooms for the Poet men’s and women’s teams, and administrative offices.

In addition to the pool, the expanded Graham Athletic Center also features a welcome center and a Hall of Fame conference room.

Whittier College Aquatics Director Justin Pudwill, who coaches both the men’s and women’s water polo teams, believes the year-old facility will help the Poets attract more talent. During the 2012-13 season, both the Poet men and women took third place in the SCIAC (Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference). The Poet men finished 11-20 overall and 6-5 in the SCIAC while the women turned in a record of 17-19 and 7-4.

“We have one of the nicest pools in our conference,” Pudwill said. “It’s very fan-friendly, which is cool. It definitely helps out our recruiting. I think our student body will enjoy it.

“We were on the road for two years – that’s when construction was happening. Last year was our first full year. Both our men and women finished third (last season). We’re hoping to do better this year.”

According to Pudwill, the center also hosts a “series of summer camps that run from the middle of June to the first week of August.”

One such session is the annual summer swim club, which started June 10 and will conclude on Aug. 4. The club runs from 2 to 7 p.m., Monday through Friday, and from noon to 6 p.m. on weekends. The cost was $90 for individuals, $180 for families up to five members, and $200 for families with more than five members. For afternoon only, the fee is $250.

For information on the Lillian Slade Aquatics Center, call 562-907-4271 or visit www.wcpoets.com.

@411whittierspts

 

Plymouth Church in need of donations

The Plymouth Church family is in need of the items listed below.
Please bring those items to church no later than this Sunday, July 21, 2013

6 large bags of mini marshmallows
4 large blocks of mild cheddar cheese
6 large containers of regular or blueberry cream cheese
16 bags of croutons
3 packages of craft single slices of cheese, 50 count or more
20 bags of plain bagels, 8 -10 count
10 large containers of blueberries
10 large containers of raspberries
4 large containers of raisins
14 loaves of white bread
12 containers of non-dairy whipped topping
12 cantaloupes
10 large containers of grapes
5 blocks of ham
3 bags of plastic cups, 100 count or more

The church also needs volunteers on Sunday after church and Monday morning, July 22, to help set up the main scenery in the fellowship hall and the amphitheater.

John Kerry’s big lie spans decades

By Alex Ferguson
On April 23, 2013, the L.A. Times printed an op-ed column by Johah Goldberg titled, “Right Wing’ Doesn’t Equal ‘Terrorist.’” Startling as this title was, it didn’t begin to compare to one of his closing sentences which alleged that, “Secretary of State John Kerry belonged to a group – Vietnam Veterans against the war – that once discussed assassinating American politicians.”
Notice that he said “group,” not “peace group.” Check the videos of those long-ago anti-war demonstrations and you may notice a faction waving Vietcong Communist flags; that would be the VVAW. Far from being for peace, they were a Maoist revolutionary cadre dedicated to bringing the war home to the streets of America.
John Kerry was a founding leader of this murderous band of degenerate traitors. His second in command was Black Panther Al Hubbard, a former Air Force sergeant who claimed to have been a captain and to have been wounded flying a mission over Vietnam. Like many of the so-called witnesses.
In Jane Fonda’s infamous “Winter Soldier” propaganda orgy, Hubbard was a complete fraud. He had never been to Vietnam, and he had never been wounded.
Of course John Kerry was the biggest liar of all. He lied to Congress about his personal knowledge of war crimes, about the supposedly disproportionate casualty rate among African American soldiers, about U.S. troops ignoring the humanity of the Vietnamese people because they were “Orientals,” about the alleged “falsification” of body counts and so forth and so on.
Why not? He had previously lied about his “wounds” and the exploits that supposedly caused them.
And that takes us back to the Kansas City steering committee meetings of Nov. 12-15, 1971, at which the VVAW voted on whether to kill pro-war American politicians, or to kidnap them and use them to extract concessions from the government.
Naturally, John Kerry lied about his participation in these diabolic deliberations, but author Gerald Nicosia located several witnesses who saw him there and unearthed pertinent FBI archives that ended all doubt.
Somewhat sympathetic toward Kerry and his activities, and being a man of integrity, Nicosia notified Kerry’s camp of the impending release of his discoveries. He even supplied a Kerry campaign messenger with copies.
“And then, on March 25, approximately 4,000 of the FBI documents – perhaps hundreds of them on Kerry himself, in folders that I had already bookmarked – were stolen from my home; a burglary that remains unsolved, but about which I have my own suspicions, and which I definitely believe to have been politically motivated.”
Remember back when Sarah Palin accused Barack Obama of “palling around” with terrorists?
Apparently, as the Rev. Jeremiah Wright so eloquently put it, “The chickens have come home to roost.”
Alex Ferguson is a longtime Whittier resident.

This week’s homily by the Rev. Thomas M. Boles, Ph.D.

Several centuries ago, the Emperor of Japan commissioned a Japanese artist to paint a particular species of bird for him.
Months passed, then years. Finally, the Emperor went personally to the artist’s studio to ask for an explanation.
The artist set a blank canvas on the easel and within 15 minutes, had completed a painting of a bird. It was a masterpiece!
The Emperor, admiring both the painting and the artist’s great skill, asked why there had been such a long delay.
The artist then went from cabinet to cabinet in his studio. He pulled from it armloads of drawings of feathers, tendons, wings, feet, claws, eyes, beaks; virtually every aspect of a bird, from virtually every angle.
He placed these silently before the Emperor, who nodded in understanding. The magnificence of any “whole” can never be greater than the magnificence of any singular detail.
To have an excellent life, strive for an excellent year. Within that year, strive for an excellent month, and within that month, strive for an excellent day.
Within the day, strive for an excellent hour. An excellent life is the sum of many excellent moments!
IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS IN LIFE THAT DETERMINE THE BIG THINGS.
Thou hast been faithful over a few things,
I will make thee ruler over many things, enter thou into
the joy of thy Lord.
Matthew 25:21

Whatever it takes

Whittier Union High School District Superintendent Sandra Thorstenson addresses the Whittier Sunrise Rotary Club on June 18, 2013.

Whittier native Thorstenson delivers poignant schools update

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By Tim Traeger
Editor
411whittier.com
WHITTIER – Whatever it takes.
That’s the mantra aptly delivered recently before about 25 members of the Whittier Sunrise Rotary Club at Friendly Hills Country Club.
Sandra Thorstenson, superintendent of the Whittier Union High School District, is the ultimate care-taker for five high schools, an adult school and literally thousands of students, teachers and staff in Whittier. She knows what is needed for students to succeed in a constantly changing world climate under stringent state guidelines while high-wiring under economic tightropes.
In the Whittier native’s message to Rotarians, she said the single biggest impediment to classroom success these days is that her instructors are forced to “teach to the test” under guidelines set forth by “No Child Left Behind” legislation.
“There were some really good things about ‘No Child Left Behind.’ There were some really horrible things about ‘No Child Left Behind,’” Thorstenson said on June 18, 2013.
“The whole teaching to the test thing, it is miserable. There is too much testing. It’s overkill. Accountability is important, and we believe in it and embrace accountability, but it’s overkill. When you think about the number of days the kids are actually testing and how much instruction they’re losing out on, it’s absolutely ridiculous.”
However the 12-year superintendant said there is hope, with pain.
“There are a group of districts in the state called CORE that have an application to waive ‘No Child Left Behind’ because it really is a huge waste of money right now. School districts can fall into PI, Program Improvement, because special-ed kids don’t meet the bar. You’re not going to be able to do that. Not every kid is going to be able to be above average. It’s statistically impossible. In the beginning, everyone was able to get over the bar. But every year the bar keeps growing higher, faster and faster.”
Thorstenson, who attended Bell Elementary, Dexter Junior High, Whittier High School and Whittier College, has been living in Whittier since she was 5. The former Sandy Sanchez has seen education morph over a successive career spanning decades with stints at Pioneer, Cal and Santa Fe high schools.
“I am a home-grown Whittierite,” she said.
“So you can’t have every single kid jump the same high bar. If you have a kid who’s disabled and you want them to jump over the same bar as a star athlete, it’s just not going to happen.
“So you have to put all this money into paying for things that are ridiculous and a waste of money. As miserable as ‘No Child Left Behind’ is now, the concept makes sense. But the devil is in the details and this is not serving the kids well now.
“New common CORE state standards are coming in. They are absolutely wonderful. Forty-five states have signed onto it. It’s going to be tough. Kids’ scores across the whole 45 states are going to drop. But that’s OK because test scores are not what matter most. Kids growing and learning and being better prepared for their future is what matters most.”
One might say the “CORE” of her message was enthusiastic hope.
“We’re going to have more kids ready for college and more kids ready for careers because the common CORE is so much better than what we have with ‘No Child Left Behind.’ Common CORE requires kids to think much more critically. To really analyze and interpret. To be able to apply their learning to lots of real-world applications. Right now there is too much testing and there’s too much having to memorize. Kids are not going to be able to use that in the future.
“Under common CORE, our test scores are going to drop. But it’s OK. As long as our kids continue to grow and they’re better prepared, that’s what matters most.”
Thorstenson’s district is the second largest employer in Whittier behind PIH Health, formerly known at Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital. The district employs 1,500 people, 1,200 of them full-time.
“Our demographics over time have really changed tremendously. My last name is Thorstenson but I’m not Norwegian. I happened to fall in love with a Norwegian boy a long time ago. I am 100 percent Hispanic. Our neighborhood was not very affluent. But what really mattered is we had a strong upbringing and very strong faith. And that’s what a lot of kids don’t have. Even if they do live in Friendly Hills, they might not have that tight family structure. It really doesn’t matter what the demographics are, if they have one healthy parent who is really committed to them, they’re going to be fine.
“But there are some kids who don’t have that. Our job, our purpose, is to ensure we make up for that. Some kids have huge opportunity gaps. We are working really, really hard to reduce those gaps. We are blessed in our district with the most amazing community with people like you, who are so service-oriented. We have all these churches, all these service clubs, we have all these non-profits.
“When I talk to my colleagues and I tell them about this interdependence we have in this community and how that really serves our kids, they marvel at that. Because it’s very unusual. I think that’s the reason we’ve been able to be so successful,” she said.
Indeed.
U.S. News & World Report has listed the WUHSD in the top school districts in the nation, doling out gold, silver and bronze metals. More than 4,000 school representatives from across the nation and the globe have visited to try and emulate its successes.
“You can’t just try to replicate this. It starts with the culture, the foundation. Make sure you have people who are collaborative, who share best-practices, who believe in kids,” Thorstenson said. “You’ve got to have quality staff. And to get the best staff, you have to offer competitive salaries. The third leg of the stool is you have to have a helpful, respectful culture. The (school) board, the administration and the employee administrations all work together. The results are seen in the kids’ achievement.”
Despite a disproportionate number of current students floating under the poverty line, Thorstenson said, “Everybody’s going to start at a different level. We don’t expect our brand-new teachers to be at the same level our more experienced teachers are. But we also want to see the same passion from both ends of the spectrum. We want to see the same commitment to continual growth.”
Tim Traeger is a Whittier resident and former editor of the Whittier Daily News. Write to him at editor@411whittier.com, call 626-646-7352 or Tweet to @411whittier.com