Archive for Local News

Whittier sports briefs for July 9, 2013

‘Titan-ic’ golf tournament

Pioneer High’s football program is presenting its second annual golf tournament, which is slated for an 11 a.m. start on Friday, July 19, at Montebello Golf Course, 901 Via San Clemente in Montebello.

Dinner will also be offered. The cost is $125 per person with $40 for dinner only.

The event will feature raffles, closest-to-the-pin and longest-drive contests, silent and live auctions, and a Par 3 challenge.

To register, call 562-698-8121, Ext. 5425 or e-mail at phs.football@wuhsd.org. All proceeds go to support the Pioneer Titan football program.

Swimming at Whittier College

Whittier College, 13406 Philadelphia St. in Whittier, offers open pool hours from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday at the Lillian Slade Aquatics Center located on campus.

For information, visit www.wcpoets.com/information/Athletic_Facilities/slade_aquatics.

Lil All Stars Basketball

The Lil All Stars Basketball program will give youngsters an opportunity to learn the basic fundamentals, rules and organization of basketball.

Classes are scheduled Saturdays from Aug. 3 to 24 at the Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave.

Children ages 3 to 4 can sign up for either the 8:30 or 9:20 a.m. class while youngsters ages 4 to 6 can register for either the 10:10 or 11 a.m. session.

Parents must remain in the gym for the entire duration of class. Participants must bring a basketball.

The fee is $50 for residents and $55 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Adult softball

Whittier Adult Softball offers men’s and coed leagues this summer.

Open registration is under way and will be accepted until 4 p.m. Friday, July 19.

Play will start on Wednesday, July 31. Leagues will play at York Field, 9119 Santa Fe Springs Road. A fee of $490 includes games, balls and awards.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Beginning skateboarding

Children ages 6 to 17 can register for a beginning skateboarding program offered by the city of Whittier.

The five-class session will run Saturdays from 9 to 10:30 a.m., Aug. 10 to Sept. 7, at Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave.

The fee is $107 for residents and $122 for nonresidents. Students must wear a helmet, elbow and knee pads, and bring their own skateboard.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Summer swim lessons

The city of Whittier offers summer swimming lessons at both Palm Park, 5703 Palm Ave., and La Serna High School, 15301 Youngwood Drive.

Registration is under way for any open session. It is recommended that participants sign up at either the Palm Park pool or La Serna pool.

The city’s swimming lessons are based on the American Red Cross LEARN TO SWIM program. It teaches aquatic and safety skills in a logical progression.

For class schedules and more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Take a dive at Palm Park

Two more diving class sessions, open to children ages 5 to 17, are scheduled for Palm Park.

The next Monday through Friday class is slated from July 15 to 25. Another session is scheduled from July 29 to Aug. 8. The fee is $47 and the resident discount fee is $42.

For class schedules and more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Recreational swim

Palm Park offers recreational swimming until Aug. 25. Recreational swimming will also be offered on Aug. 31, Sept. 1 and 2.

The program is scheduled from 1 to 3 p.m. Monday through Sunday. The fee is $2. No swimming is slated for Aug. 16, 20 and 23.

An adult must accompany any child under age 7.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Family fitness and health

The city of Whittier will offer a family fitness and health class this summer.

Parents can bring their son or daughter to work out together for a healthier and better lifestyle. There will be different options available for adults and kids. The same parent and child partners must attend. Children must be at least 8 years old.

One more session is scheduled from Aug. 14 to Sept. 11 at the Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave.

The fee is $35 for residents and $40 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Beginning gymnastics

This program, open to ages 8 to 18, includes warm-up exercises for conditioning and flexibility, as well as floor exercises and balance beam work. Instruction also will be given on other apparatus, including mini-trampoline, bars, vault and tumbling.

The Tuesday session is slated from 6:30 to 7:25 p.m. Aug. 6 to Sept. 10 the at Parnell Park Activity Center, 15390 Lambert Road. The fee is $59.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Schmischke takes reins at Soroptimist Club

On July 1, 2013, Soroptimist International of Whittier outgoing club President Kathy Dowling (Remax Community Realty/Escrow) officially handed over her duties to incoming President Petra Schmischke (Friendly Hills Bank).
Schmischke will be president for the 2013-2014 year and represent SIW at the local, national and international levels. Her first official luncheon meeting will be at noon on July 9, 2013, at the Radisson Hotel Whittier, 7320 Greenleaf Ave.,
Everyone is welcome. The cost is $15 per person.
“As President of Soroptimist International of Whittier I want to continue our efforts to improve the lives of women and girls in our communities,” Schmischke said. “Our club and its 60 members work tirelessly to raise money in order to make a difference.  Through programs like the Women’s Opportunity Award, Scholarships, Lois Neece and Violet Richardson Awards and our own Women in Need program we are able to support individuals and organizations locally and around the world. I look forward to an exciting and successful year.”

For more information call Caren Grisham at 562-400-6955.

Kids test football skills at Pioneer camp

Pioneer High School coach Chuck Willig speaks to participants during the Titan Youth Instructional Camp, which was held Saturday, June 29 and Sunday, June 30 at the Sierra Education Center.

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By Eric Terrazas
www.411whittier.com

WHITTIER — About 130 youngsters looking to improve their football skills took part in this year’s Titan Youth Instructional Camp on Saturday, June 29 and Sunday, June 30, 2013 at the Sierra Education Center.
The event marked the second year of Pioneer High School’s youth football camp, which was open to children ages 7 to 14.
The camp gave kids an opportunity to participate in drills such as speed and agility training, along with position training.
Chuck Willig, who is entering his second season as Pioneer’s head coach, helped organize the event.
“It’s nice to see our kids coach the little kids,”? Willig said. “?Our coaches work with the older kids. Playing football is a lot of fun when everybody is excited to be here. That’s the fun part.?”
Three of the children who tested their football prowess included the Hala brothers that include Touanga, 11, Sione, 10, and Rodney, 9.
“They put you in certain spots to find out what you’re good at,”? Touanga said. “?They put you into different groups and work on your basic mechanics, and how you can improve.,” Sione said, “?It gives us a chance to workout and improve.?”
Rodney added, “?I’m going to like the one-on-one (drills). It’s fun.?”
Two of Willig’s younger brothers, Matt and Greg, also served as camp instructors. All three were star football players at St. Paul High School in Santa Fe Springs. Matt, who played collegiately at USC, went on to play 14 seasons in the NFL that included stints with the New York Jets, Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers, St. Louis Rams, San Francisco 49ers and the Carolina Panthers.
Matt Willig spoke to the young participants during a break from workouts. The former Trojan offensive lineman stressed the importance of academics among other things during his speech.
“?You’ve got to be good kids in the classroom,”? Matt Willig said. “?If you want to do something, hold on to that dream. Tell yourself you can because you can do it.?”
This year’s camp took place at Sierra because construction will soon begin on Pioneer’s new football stadium, which is scheduled to be completed for the 2014 season. According to Pioneer’s football website at http://www.wuhsd.org/phsfootball, the new stadium will feature a state-of-the-art synthetic turf field, all-weather track, two-tier bleachers on the home side, locker rooms, weightroom, coaches’ offices, meeting rooms and a press box.
Chuck Willig said that putting together the camp takes a team effort.
“It’s fun for everybody,”? he said. “?Being able to have my brothers here is fantastic as well. It’s a family atmosphere. A lot of parents put in a lot of time in this. The parents do such an amazing job.?”
eterrazas@411whittier.com

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

While doing research for a doctoral thesis, a young man spent a year with a group of Navajo Indians on a reservation in the Southwest. He lived with one family, sleeping in their hut, eating their food, working with them, and generally living their life.
The grandmother of the family spoke no English, yet a very close friendship formed between the grandmother and the doctoral student. They seemed to share the common language of love and they intuitively understood each other.
Over the months he learned a few phrases of Navajo, and she picked up words and phrases in English.
When it was time for the young man to return to the university and write his thesis, the tribe held a going-away celebration for him. It was marked by sadness since he had developed a close relationship with all those in the village. As he prepared to get into his pickup truck and drive away, the old grandmother came to tell him goodbye.
With tears streaming from her eyes, she placed her hands on either side of his face, looked directly into his eyes, and said, “I like me best when I’m with you.”
True friendship is letting those around you not only “be themselves” but “be their people” by knowing what you are by what they see, not by what they hear.
Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

Matthew 5:16

Summer Basketball: La Habra Lady Highlanders win a close one over Whittier Christian.

Lady Highlanders win 31 to 27 vs. Whittier Christian in a nail-biter June 24, 2013 at Wilson High School in Hacienda Heights.

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Whittier Christian and La Habra girls basketball teams finished neck-and-neck on Monday, June 24, 2013 at Wilson High School in Hacienda Heights. La Habra was down 13 to 10 at the half but was able to extend the lead by as much as eight points early in the second half. Whittier Christian closed the gap to one point in the final minutes but wasn’t able to stop the Lady Highlanders, who ended up winning 31 to 27.

Tom and Virginia Boles given highest honor by the YMCA

Virginia and Tom Boles share smiles in their La Habra home of 55 years on June 13, 2013. They both were recently awarded the 2013 Myron Claxton Distinguished YMCA Service Award for their many years of contributions to the ‘Y.’

Longtime lovebirds made a career giving back to community

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By Tim Traeger

Editor

411whittier.com

WHITTIER — If you want the ultimate sendoff when your mortal coil escapes this earth, look no further than the Rev. Thomas Boles. If volunteerism is your passion, look no further than Tom’s wife, Virginia.

A multiplatformed businessman in everything from embalming, mergers and acquisitions, sales (of anything) and community service, Tom recently added another feather to his gently graying cap – the 2013 Myron Claxton Distinguished YMCA Service Award from the YMCA of Greater Whittier. Involved in the ‘Y’ for 80 of her 88 years, Virginia was equally honored.

“I have really not met anyone in Whittier who works so tirelessly on behalf of so many good causes than Tom and Virginia,” said Mike Blackmore, president and CEO of the YMCA of Greater Whittier. “The YMCA has been a huge beneficiary of their time, talent and treasure. But the thing that makes me feel the best is that both Tom and Virginia grew up in the YMCA. Virginia attended our very own YMCA Camp Arbolado when she was a little girl and Tom with the ‘Y’ in Columbus, Ohio. So even though I did not know them personally the first 70 years of their lives, I know that the ‘Y’ was there helping to raise solid citizens just like we endeavor to do today. I count Tom and Virginia as two of YMCA’s and Whittier’s best friends.”

“It was fun to be involved in the ‘Y’,” Virginia said. “And know that you were trying to make the community a better place for youths. It’s amazing how many kids come to the ‘Y’ now. Little guys and older people, there’s something there for everybody. I was just happy to be part of that. I was proud to be on the board.”

Although Tom Boles, 86, was honored for his commitment to the YMCA, his experience as a minister is his current claim to fame. When someone who has ever heard him deliver a eulogy needs someone to officiate over a funeral service, the phone rings.

“There’s a lot of people that after they hear Tom give a service, they say they would like Tom to do my service,” Virginia said inside their palatial four-story, four-bathroom home in La Habra.. “There’s been people from the Friends Church and Presbyterian Church that have their own ministers who still ask Tom to come in and do it. People from the Shrine.”

Virginia guessed her husband of 33 years has performed at least 80 final sendoffs, many to important community leaders like former Whittier Mayor Delta Murphy and former columnist and former Whittier Daily News editor Bill Bell.

“In addition to weddings and baby blessings. It’s just kind of amazing how these people come out of the woodwork and ask him. Whether it’s a funeral or a wedding or whatever,” Virginia said.

While Virginia – a third generation Whittierite – is a staunch supporter of the Assistance League of Whittier, the Whittier Historical Society, the YMCA and myriad other philanthropic groups, her husband comes with his own impressive resume. Tom runs a ministry on Skid Row, pastors to two local churches and holds down the religious fort at PIH Health, formerly known as Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, and was knighted by the Greek Orthodox Church. When he was potentate of the Shriners in the greater Los Angeles area, he oversaw 25,000 members. In addition he helped form the Whittier Area First Day Coalition, a homeless shelter, alongside the late community icon and oil man Ed Shannon. He is a former president of the Rio Hondo Symphony.

Tom Boles was born in Shadyside, Ohio. The future man of God got his early beginnings in Columbus. At the age of 4, the giddy red-head was tap dancing for pennies. Literally.

“I started performing in Shadyside when I was quite young. I was 4 or 5 years old when I got my first stage appearance at a Masonic lodge. I was a tap dancer. All of my performances were from Pittsburg to Whitting, W.Va.  and the Ohio Valley.

“It was Vaudeville,” Virginia interjected.

“I stayed in show business until high school in Columbus,” the reverend said. “What we got paid was from what people threw up on the stage, which was basically pennies. In those days pennies bought a lot. Ten pennies bought a loaf of bread. Ten pennies bought a quart of milk. Pennies counted and my mom (Irene) made sure I picked every penny up,” Tom Boles said.

“It was tough. We had to watch the food. A can of beans had to last two nights. A loaf of bread had to last a week. A quart of milk had to last three days. We always had enough to eat though. I don’t remember ever being hungry. I know my mom had to be measuring everything to make it last,” he said.

Boles took dancing lessons from Mary Elizabeth Vasic, who trained Bill “Mr. Bojangles” Robinson. “That was kind of her fame,” Boles said.

In an antiquated form of day care, Irene had to make sure her only son wasn’t goofing off after school.

“She had to make sure I went some place. I either had to go to the YMCA or my church. And sign in and stay there until she got out of work.”

Tom Boles entered the U.S. Navy right out of high school. He was sworn in and served aboard the military transport ship the USS Admiral Simms, AP 127, in 1945.

“We weren’t in any sea battles because we were always hiding from the enemy,” Boles said.

After leaving the Navy, Boles briefly attended pre-med school at Otterbein College in Ohio on the GI Bill. He hated every minute of it. So in 1948 at the behest of a friend, Boles decided to hitchhike from Ohio to Los Angeles and enroll in embalming college. His first job laid the foundation for his eventual arrival in Whittier. He worked at Vosque Mortuary on Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles.

“God it was awful. We had murders on our front porch. We had a woman raped on our front porch. Right next door was a beer joint. One day they blew it up with a cocktail bomb. I just wanted to get out of there,” Tom Boles said.

So he took a job at Swert-Barber Funeral Home on the corner of Philadelphia Street and Pickering Avenue, where the Mosaic Gardens complex now stands, working for Ruth Barber.

About this time he met his first wife, Barbara Bragg. They were married for 26 years and had four children, one deceased, before she died in 1976. Barbara’s grandfather was one of the original settlers of Whittier. Boles has seven grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.

“L.D. Proud helped start the Quaker Church,” Tom Boles said. “His homestead was right where the YMCA is now, on the corner of Pickering and Hadley. “

After a six-year stint in embalming, Boles built wooden shipping boxes for Holmes and Narver, Inc., worked for the Fluor Corp. in purchasing, Honeywell Inc. selling military electronics and the Worthington Corp. selling pumps and cryogenic valves. He later bought businesses selling eyeglass frames and stainless steel kitchen units.

In the early 1970s Tom started his own business, Sun Union Inc., buying and selling companies large and small.

“I was very lucky. I loved sales. I worked hard. I got up early in the morning. Nothing was handed to me. I was the only salesman I know who wore a hat, suit and a tie. The receptionist would always remember the guy who was wearing the hat,” he said.

“I’ve had a lot of jobs,” he said.

Virginia Boles was born at Murphy Memorial Hospital in Whittier, is on the “Y’ Prayer Breakfast committee and helped plan the new ‘Y’ building on Hadley Street following the 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake. But that’s just the tip of her volunteerism iceberg.

Following high school, Virginia attended UC Berkeley and graduated with a degree in dental hygiene. She worked for a plethora of dentists before devoting her time to giving that time away for worthy causes.

She has served as chairman of the Hathaway Museum board in Santa Fe Springs and is on the board of the Whittier Historical Museum, which her mother, Leona, helped found. The Leona Myer gift shop inside the museum on Newlin Avenue is named after Virginia’s mother, who attended a one-room schoolhouse, the Little Lake Schoolhouse, in Santa Fe Springs. Virginia is also a driving force behind the Assistance League of Whittier.

“When my mother passed away in 1986, I took some time off from each of the (dentist) offices and the more I took off, the more I liked it,” Virginia said. That’s where her volunteerism kicked into overdrive.

“I guess it was then that I started doing a lot of volunteer work in Whittier,” Virginia said. “I joined the Assistance League and the PEO (Philanthropic Educational Association) and the ‘Y’ board and I became involved in the (Whittier Historical Society) museum and several other things. So from 1987 to now it’s just been doing volunteer work and helping the community advance.

“I hope I’ve been able to do some good,” she said. “I enjoy volunteer work and it keeps me busy. I have piles of papers everywhere.”

Like mother, like daughter.

“My mother used to say she wished she had more money so she could give it away,” Virginia said. “She did a lot of good.”

Tom was the last dental patient of the day when he first asked Virginia out on a date.

“I was kinda lonesome so I asked her if she’d like to go out and have a drink. She said, ‘I don’t drink.’ So let’s go have a cup of coffee. ‘I don’t drink coffee.’ I was reaching for something. So I said let’s go have a dish of ice cream. And she said ‘yes.’

“So we went to have a dish of ice cream and I was taken by everything. She was world-traveled. She’d been to every continent in the world. Interesting to talk to,” Tom said of Virginia.

“That one dish of ice cream led to another dish of ice cream.  Then we went to Maldonado’s in Pasadena. Then finally one day I said ‘I think we ought to get married.’ And she said, ‘OK.’”

“I lived on Ocean View Avenue,” Virginia recalled. “I rented an apartment that belonged to the Kirkwoods of the Kirkwood Tire Company on Greenleaf. He asked me and I said yes. It just developed from there and here we are 33 years later.”

Following a successful career in business, what finally brought Tom Boles to the Lord?

“I had a calling,” he said. “I was 68 years old. It happened one night. I was upstairs, sleeping in bed, I heard this voice, ‘go back to school to prepare yourself and follow Me.’ I got to thinking that that must be God talking to me. The Lord telling me to go back to school. Do something. Follow Me.”

The next morning Boles called Fuller Seminary in Pasadena. He got in his car and drove to Pasadena. Even without the prerequisite college degree, the enigmatic Boles talked his way into the master’s program.

He graduated with his master’s in theology in 2000 while at the same time earning a bachelor’s degree from Trinity College online. The lifelong learner went on to get his doctorate in ministry from Trinity and earned a Ph.D. in theological studies from Edinberg Seminary in Cleveland. He currently is studying the Dead Sea Scrolls, the history of Judaism, the New Testament and comparative religions online through North Carolina University.

Yet for all his love for learning, Tom Boles’ enduring fascination remains with Virginia.

“I couldn’t live without her,” Tom said.

“And versa-visa,” Virginia quipped.

“Like he says, you dirty the clothes and I wash them. I cook the dinner and he eats it.”

Amen to that.

Tim Traeger is a Whittier resident and former editor of the Whittier Daily News. Write to him at editor@411whittier.com or call 626-646-7352.

Whittier Sports Briefs 6/25/13

Youth football camp

Pioneer High School, 10800 E. Benavon St. in Whittier, will host its Titan Youth Instructional Camp.

The camp, open to children ages 7 to 14, is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, June 29 and Sunday, June 30. The cost is $35 per camper.

The price includes lunch, T-shirt, individual camp awards and visits by former NFL and college players. The camp features combine testing, speed and agility training, football position training, and individual and group work.

For more information, call 562-698-8121, Ext. 5425 or visit www.wuhsd.org/phsfootball.

 

Whittier Area Youth Soccer

Whittier Area Youth Soccer will accept registration from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, June 29, at Parnell Park, 15390 Lambert Road in Whittier. The registration fee is $120.

For more information, visit www.eteamz.com/ways/.

Tennis lessons

The city of Whittier offers a beginning youth tennis course for children ages 7 to 15.

The session, which consists of 10 classes, is slated from 6 to 7 p.m. Mondays and Fridays, July 1 to Aug. 2, at Palm Park, 5703 Palm Ave.

Class structure provides instruction in basic groundstrokes, serve, net play and game scoring. A racket is provided for participants. The fee is $102 for residents and $117 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Skateboarding

Children ages 6 to 17 can register for the city of Whittier’s beginning skateboarding class.

The Saturday program is slated from 9 to 10:30 a.m. June 29 to July 27, at Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave. Students must wear helmet, elbow and knee pads, and bring their own skateboard.

The fee is $107 for residents and $122 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Aerobiz

This class, offered by the city of Whittier, features aerobic dances, kickboxing, sports drills and interval training.

The program, open to ages 15 and above, is scheduled from 6:15 to 7:15 p.m., Thursdays from June 27 to Sept. 12 at Palm Park.

The fee is $32 for residents and $37 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Youth soccer

Lil All Stars Soccer is offered to children ages 3 to 6.

Each participant will learn the basic fundamentals, rules and organization of soccer.

The first three weeks will be broken into skill drills such as basic dribbling, passing and control drills, throw-ins, corner kicks, how to trap the ball, offensive and defensive positions, and more, along with team concept. The final week will be a scrimmage to imitate a game situation.

Parents must stay at park for the entire duration of class. Participants should bring a soccer ball.

Four Saturday sessions, which are scheduled from June 29 to July 27, will be offered at Michigan Park, 8228 Michigan Ave. in Whittier. Children ages 3 to 4 can register for either the 8:30 or 9:15 a.m. Class. Youngsters ages 4 to 6 can sign up for either the 10:10 or 11 a.m. session.

The fee is $50 for residents and $55 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Summer swim lessons

The city of Whittier offers summer swimming lessons at both Palm Park, 5703 Palm Ave., and La Serna High School, 15301 Youngwood Drive.

Registration is under way for any open session. It is recommended that participants sign-up at either the Palm Park pool or La Serna pool.

The city’s swimming lesson program is based on the American Red Cross LEARN TO SWIM program. It teaches aquatic and safety skills in a logical progression.

For class schedules and more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Diving at Palm Park

Three more diving class sessions, open to children ages 5 to 17, are scheduled for Palm Park.

The next Monday through Friday class is slated from July 1 to 12. The next two sessions are scheduled from July 15 to 25 and from July 29 to Aug. 8. The fee is $47 and the resident discount fee is $42.

For class schedules and more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Recreational swim

Palm Park offers recreational swimming until Aug. 25. Recreational swimming will also be offered on Aug. 31, Sept. 1 and 2.

The program is scheduled from 1 to 3 p.m. Monday through Sunday. The fee is $2. No swimming is slated for Aug. 16, 20 and 23.

An adult must accompany any child under age 7.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Family Fitness and Health

The city of Whittier will offer a family fitness and health class this summer.

Parents can bring their son or daughter to work out together for a healthier and better life. There will be different options available for adults and kids. The same parent and child partners must attend. Children must be at least 8 years old.

Two Wednesday sessions are scheduled for the Whittier Community Center, 7630 Washington Ave. The first program is scheduled from July 3 to 31, followed by a second session that will run from Aug. 14 to Sept. 11.

The fee is $35 for residents and $40 for nonresidents.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

 

Beginning gymnastics

This program, open to ages 8 to 18, includes warm-up exercises for conditioning and flexibility, as well as floor exercises and balance beam work. Instruction will also be given on other apparatus, including mini-trampoline, bars, vault and tumbling.

The Tuesday session is slated from 6:30 to 7:25 p.m. Aug. 6 to Sept. 10, at Parnell Park Activity Center, 15390 Lambert Road. The fee is $59.

For more information, call 562-567-9430 or visit www.WhittierRec.com.

Murphy Ranch All-Stars start on impressive note

By Eric Terrazas, www.411whittier.com

Murphy Ranch Little League All-Star starting pitcher Austin Rosario winds up against the West Yorba Linda All-Stars on June 23, 2013. Rosario earned the victory in Murphy Ranch’s 10-5 victory in a winner’s bracket game at the District 56 tournament in Fullerton.

FULLERTON – The Murphy Ranch Little League All-Stars started quickly and didn’t look back in its opening game June 23, 2013 at the District 56 major division (ages 11-12) tournament.

Jacob Garcia, Brett Shryne and Alex Flores paced a balanced offensive attack that helped spark Murphy Ranch to a 10-5 victory over the West Yorba Linda All-Stars.

Eight players drove in at least a run for Murphy Ranch, which raced out to a early 4-0 lead in the top of the first inning.

Garcia collected a team-high three hits, which included a run-scoring triple. Flores’ two-run homer and Shryne’s two-hit performance also lifted Murphy Ranch.

Murphy Ranch starting pitcher Austin Rosario earned the win by scattering six hits and striking out five in 4 1/3 innings.

Murphy Ranch advanced to a winner’s bracket game against East Fullerton, which is scheduled for 5:45 p.m. Saturday, June 29, at the Fullerton Sports Complex.

“Our goal number one is completed,” Murphy Ranch manager Brent Anderson said of his team’s triumph. “Jacob Garcia and Alex Flores led our team on offense. We’re going to take it easy and get some rest, regroup and get back at it.”

Anderson added on West Yorba Linda, “They played us tough and they had their share of hits. The difference was pitching – we outpitched them.”

Garcia started the game’s scoring when he delivered an RBI triple to center field, which drove in Shryne.

After Garcia scored on Bennett Thurman’s bunt single, Flores cleared the bases by blasting a two-run homer to right.

Leading 4-1 after two innings, Murphy Ranch took control by scoring five unanswered runs during the next three innings.

Andrew Maguire’s third-inning double set the stage for Justin Gomez’s one-run single.

Colin Mercado and Shryne each added to Murphy Ranch’s lead by producing back-to-back run-scoring hits in the fourth inning.

Evan Sipple’s lead-off single set the table for Rosario, who drove home Sipple with his base hit to right. Rosario then scored when Luke Garcia reached on a fielder’s choice.

Sipple completed Murphy Ranch’s scoring when he came through with an RBI single during the sixth.

West Yorba Linda showed some fight during its last at-bat in the sixth, scoring three runs. Spencer Vossman collected two RBIs to pace West Yorba Linda’s offense.

Ten Murphy Ranch players combined for 14 hits.

Hacienda Heights 7, Whittier 6

The Whittier All-Stars came up on the short end of a roller coaster opening-round game June 22, 2013 at the District 56 major division tournament.

Matthew Raffety played the heroic role for the Hacienda Heights All-Stars as he delivered a walk-off three-run homer in the sixth.

Chris Perez and Gabriel Gandara each delivered a base hit to set the stage for Raffety, who finished with five RBIs.

“It felt good,” Raffety said of his game-winning hit. “I knew people were on base. I tried to hit a home run and I did it for my team.”

Hacienda Heights manager Claudio Contreras added, “It’s a good win to start. It was the best win this year.”

After falling behind 4-0 after two innings, Whittier regrouped and scored six unanswered runs.

Joseph Ramirez started Whittier’s rally by hitting a three-run homer during the third inning.

Whittier then took a 5-4 lead on Trevor McNary’s fourth-inning run-scoring bunt single.

Jason Flock then increased Whittier’s advantage with an RBI bunt single during the sixth.

“The kids did not lay down,” Whittier manager Bob Small said. “I’m really proud of them. They gave 110 percent.”

Whittier will next play against West Fullerton in an elimination game scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 25 at the Fullerton Sports Complex.

eterrazas@411whittier.com

‘Mr. Whittier’ hits century mark

Hubert Perry gets a little assist from son Mark in blowing out the candles on Hubert’s 100th birthday cake on Saturday, June 15, 2013, at PIH Health, formerly Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital. The centenarian was instrumental in founding the area’s largest hospital back in the 1950s.

 

‘Mr. Whittier’ hits century mark
Nixon schoolmate, Poet proponent and PIH cheerleader feted for longevity, business acumen
By Tim Traeger
Editor
www.411whittier.com
Banker, visionary and community icon Hubert Carver Perry can now scribe another moniker on his extensive resume. He’s a newly minted centenarian.
For those unfamiliar with the term, it means 100. A Ben Franklin. A C-note. A milestone not many of us will ever see. Yet it’s what is tucked within those 100 years that makes many in-the-know call Perry “Mr. Whittier.”
Hubert didn’t create Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, now simply PIH Health and the largest and most influential employer in Whittier. But his father, Herman, did. Morphing what was once a sadly underserving Murphy Hospital into a state-of-the-art medical facility, Mr. Whittier parlayed his business acumen gleaned from Whittier College and Stanford into a unique strategy of replacement depreciation that padded the hospital’s bottom line and provided the capital necessary to not only grow the 50-acre facility, but save it from insolvency in the early 1970s.
Perry celebrated his special birthday proper on June 11 but was feted by hundreds of his PIH family on Saturday, June 15, 2013, appropriately in the Hubert C. Perry Health Pavilion dedicated in his honor in 1994. However Mr. Whittier is no one-trick pony. Perry went to Whittier High and Whittier College on a first-name basis with classmate Richard Milhous Nixon, this nation’s 37th president. He has served on more boards than a tap dancer, namely representing Whittier College and the Richard Nixon Library Foundation. He served on the PIH Board of Directors for more than 40 years and as its chair from 1976 to 1984. At the ripe age of 100, Perry still serves on the PIH Health Foundation and PIH Health Physicians Board and most recently helped the hospital consolidate and integrate each of its many entities into a single master brand.
“Of course people know that Hubert is closely associated with PIH, Richard Nixon and his library as well as Whittier College. But what people don’t know is that Hubert, as a vice president of Bank of America, was instrumental in financing much of the development of East Whittier and Friendly Hills” said Whittier Councilman Joe Vinatieri.
“My dad came (to Whittier) because my grandfather was a preacher at Friends Church. He came to Whittier in 1905 and I came because he came,” Perry deadpanned from his immaculate ranch-style home on Mar Vista Street.
“I was born at home. We didn’t have a hospital in those days.”
Perry began his professional career with Bank of America in downtown Los Angeles. He took four years off in the early 1950s to serve in the U.S. Navy based out of Coronado in San Diego. Upon his return and for the next 30 years, Mr. Whittier brokered aircraft loans to California companies like McDonnell Douglas. He finished his career in 1975, retiring as regional vice president overseeing Bank of America’s main L.A. branch as well as 83 other B of A locations.
“Hubert Perry has been a staunch supporter of PIH Health since before it opened its doors. He was part of the grass-roots effort, in 1955, to build a new hospital that could better serve the Whittier community,” said PIH Health President and CEO James R. West. “Mr. Perry is one of the most committed individuals to the success of this hospital and his community. He was responsible for pioneering a financial policy which funded historical and replacement depreciation of hospital equipment. PIH Health was the only hospital at the time to implement such a policy. The benefits of the funded depreciation policy have helped fund PIH Health’s ever-expanding healthcare services and continue to protect PIH Health’s financial future.”
Perry earned his bachelor’s degree in business at Whittier College and a master’s in business at Stanford in 1947. He met and married Louise Bacon in 1949 during an alumni dance. He proposed, and she accepted after their first date. They were together for 71 years before she died in 2010. The couple had four children, Lee, Mark, Brian and Ellen. Perry has seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
The lucid centenarian uses a cane to steady his balance and relies on care-giver Chanelle Johnson, of Fullerton, to drive him to functions around town. Perry doesn’t let the weight of time slow his pace. Mr. Whittier can often be seen at the Nixon library in Yorba Linda and at various important events around town.
Perry met his current sweetheart, Alli McClean, at First Friends Church, where his grandfather was a Quaker pastor upon arriving in Whittier.
“This was a Quaker community until very recently,” Perry said.
What made him get involved in the business of creating a hospital?
“Presbyterians knew how to run hospitals, so we gave them control of the board. We did not have an emergency department because the old Murphy Hospital, which was donated by Simon Murphy to the city of Whittier, didn’t have an emergency department. It had 10 acres so my dad and Dr. Raymond Thompson went out and walked the thing one afternoon and my dad came home that night and some neighbor called and chewed him out for having a hospital in a residential area. And he was right,” Perry said. “My dad had a massive stroke that night and died.
“So we entered the market and bought 14 acres of surplus state school property – farm property along Washington Boulevard, which was a blessing in disguise because we have expanded that to 50 acres, more or less. And we’d buy more if we could acquire it. You would never recognize the hospital today compared to the original one,” Perry said. “Either in service, complexity or attractiveness or any measure you could have for hospital management. It’s a different institution today than it was then.”
Asked how it felt to turn 100, Perry said with a gleam in his eye, “I would have saved my money if I would have known I was going to live so long. I feel pretty lucky.”
Perry has had his share of health concerns. He’s fought cancer of the colon, prostate cancer, has had five bypass surgeries and a nasty bout with pneumonia after returning from a trip to China. So what keeps him alive?
“I think feeling those responsibilities to the hospital has kept me alive. I have a feeling the hospital needs me,” Perry said. “And that probably is fixed in my own imagination. But it does drive me. I don’t know what else it is. It can’t be my family because they pretty much take care of themselves. It can’t be my wife because she’s not here. So it’s got to be the problems of the hospital and finding ways to make it work. But it’s gone far beyond me and my limited knowledge of the industry.”
Is he “Mr. Whittier”?
“I don’t know about that, but I was here before any of them came,” Perry said of current city residents.
One of those residents, Ruth B. Shannon, has another name for Hubert Perry.
“He’s my captain. He taught me to sail,” Shannon said. “He’s Capt. Perry to me. He’s a very good friend. I take him to the Nixon library all the time. We’ve been special friends for a long time. He’s an icon. Anyone who lives to 100 years old is an icon. He’s quite amazing, for sure.”
Perry weighed in on one of the most controversial issues in Whittier, the proposal to drill for oil on seven acres in the Whittier Hills.
“We used to have oil here. And it looks like we might have it again, but it’s questionable. It was a terrific idea. I was raised with oil wells drilling up in the hills, 600 of them. Whittier has been an oil town for many years, including Santa Fe Springs. It was occupied by oil men like (Ed) Shannon.
“The people who are opposing it are opposing it for the wrong reasons. They say it will ruin their property. But it will add millions of dollars to the budget and keep taxes from going sky-high. And the city could do many great things with the revenue,” Perry said. He added that the future of Whittier could hinge on the outcome of the oil debate.
“I’m very much in favor of the oil income. And the cities, counties, states and federal government and schools – they don’t have any depreciation. They have no system for replacing their assets.”
And don’t get Mr. Whittier started on the subject of “Obamacare.”
“You don’t know what the future holds. You don’t know what’s coming down the pike with the federal government and the medical field,” Perry said. “No one knows what it is. No one’s even read the darned thing. The country will be broke before we can comply with that darned thing. It’s just a disaster waiting to happen.”
Over his 100 years in Whittier, Perry said his biggest disappointment was when Yorba Linda was tapped to house the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Birthplace.
“It was a Republican town at one time. We should have had the Nixon library. When they turned us down on that, I left the board of Whittier College. Whittier lost it before Yorba Linda got it. It wasn’t even considered. It was the liberal faculty at Whittier College. When they turned their back on Dick Nixon, I got out,“ Perry said.
Any sage advice for younger generations?
“I think you can go into any business, and the opportunities are just terrific. I don’t think most people have the foggiest idea what you go through when running a nonprofit business or a college or a hospital. I think if you just put your head down and go ahead and fight it out, and try and do the best you can, make the best decisions you can, you’ll find a way to be successful,” Perry said.
“Because anyone who goes to work in anything with a degree of sincerity has a chance to come out looking pretty good. I think it’s just a question of doing the right thing, whether it’s a college or it’s a grocery store, no matter what it is, or any other business. If I were anybody and wanted to do the job right, the opportunity would be terrific even for the average guy. I don’t think I’m any kind of a genius, it’s just a question that if you do the job and do what you’re supposed to do, watch everything, you’ll be a winner. Whether it’s a hospital or a newspaper or anything else, there’s lots of opportunity. And the opportunity I think we still have in this country is by going back to the free-enterprise system and not playing games with politics
“I don’t understand Obama.”
Tim Traeger is a Whittier resident and former editor of the Whittier Daily News. Write to him at editor@411whittier.com or call 626-646-7352.

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Welcome to 411whittier.com! In the coming days and months, I plan to use this site to highlight the positives of our Quaker town. My name is Tim Traeger, former editor of the Whittier Daily News, and I plan to cover items and people of interest the mainstream newspaper cannot or will not publish. We hope you enjoy the site as it grows and welcome comments to be sent to editor@411whittier.com. Happy reading!