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Mesa Beat


News and observations compiled by the Tribune’s Mesa reporters and editors


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Mesa’s Crismon Elementary earns funds to boost library

April 28th, 2009, 3:02 pm by Michelle Reese

This news came into the Tribune:

McDonald’s Owner/Operators of Arizona and the Arizona Parent Teacher Association (PTA) announced today that Mesa’s Crismon Elementary is a Readers Are Leaders Award winner, receiving a $1,000 grant for its school library.
Crismon PTA is one of 10 Arizona PTAs receiving $1,000 grants for its literacy programs from McDonald’s Readers Are Leaders Award program. The grant program provides funding for the books and reading materials for school libraries to enhance book collections and offer titles that kids will want to drop everything and read.
Applications were judged on creativity, ability to make good use of books, and solid strategy for long-term reading promotion activities.
Crismon PTA President Susan Hernandez stated that the school promotes reading and literacy primarily through its Accelerated Reading Program. The success of the program has encouraged the children to do research and learn more about various subjects.
Crismon Elementary plans to use the grant money to build its Accelerated Reading Program and purchase a variety of resource books that will inspire their students quest for knowledge.
McDonald’s and Arizona PTA began the grant program in 2007 and have since awarded $35,000 to Arizona PTA school libraries.

Dobson High senior wins state language competition

April 28th, 2009, 9:39 am by Michelle Reese

This news came into the Tribune:
Rebecca Evans, Dobson High senior, won the grand prize at the 20th annual Arizona Japanese Speech Contest, at the University of Advancing Technology. She won a round-trip plane ticket to Japan. Connor Sungino, Dobson junior, took second place in Category A (first-year level).

In the annual competition, high school and college Japanese language students write, memorize and present their own speeches to judges and an audience.

Next year’s contest will be at Dobson, the first time in the history of the contest that it will be conducted at a high school.

East Valley students cook up big culinary wins

March 30th, 2009, 9:31 am by Michelle Reese
Kolby Gessner, Basha High student; Monique Inguito, Queen Creek High student; and Katherine Sondergold, Dobson High student; have all won culinary scholarships to continue their education.

Kolby Gessner, Basha High student; Monique Inguito, Queen Creek High student; and Katherine Sondergold, Dobson High student; have all won culinary scholarships to continue their education.

This news came into the Tribune today:

Nine students attending the East Valley Institute of Technology (EVIT) Culinary Arts Program are reaping the rewards of hard work and dedication, taking home gold, silver, and bronze medals as well as thousands of dollars in scholarship money. 
Six of these students received awards in the Art Institute’s Regional Best Teen Chef competitions held on March 14 in Phoenix, Tucson and Las Vegas, winning three gold medals, two silver medals and one bronze medal.
Only days later, three additional students won the top three scholarship awards at the C-CAP (Careers through Culinary Arts Programs) breakfast for their competition held on March 21.  Monique Inguito, Queen Creek High School, won a bachelor’s degree scholarship of $85,000 to the Culinary Institute of America in New York; Katherine Sondergeld of Dobson High school was awarded a $40,000 full tuition scholarship to Johnson & Wales Culinary Institute in South Carolina; and Kolby Gessner, Basha High School, was awarded an Associates Degree scholarship of $48,000 to the Art Institute of Phoenix.
All of the top honors at the Best Teen Chef of Phoenix competition were taken by EVIT students with Jordan Sessions of Gilbert High School taking home gold, Kimberly “Bri” Hale with silver, and Jorge Zuniga, East Valley Academy with bronze.
Gabriela Chavarria, Highland High School, received first place gold and James Hubbard, McClintock High School, silver for the Best Teen Chef of Tucson while Brandon Cote, also of Highland, rounded it off by taking first place gold in Las Vegas.  All of the gold winners now have a chance to compete for the national title in Charlotte, North Carolina on May 9 where all competitors will go home with full or partial scholarships.  First place will get a full-ride scholarship to the Art Institute in the location they competed.  Second place will get half, third will get quarter, fourth-ninth will receive a $5,000 scholarship and all remaining finalists will receive $1,000 tuition scholarship.

Mesa Academy for Advanced Studies scores science wins

March 30th, 2009, 9:16 am by Michelle Reese

This news came into the Tribune today:

The Mesa Academy for Advanced Studies is in its second school year. We recently won the Arizona State Science and Engineering Fair Elementary Division for the second year in a row. Twelve of our elementary entrants placed in the top 4 places in the state science fair with a fifth-grade young lady winning the grand championship for the elementary division.

Our junior high had 13 place winners. Mrs. Merlene, our elementary sceince instructor took the state science teacher award. We also had several other awards that were awarded seperate from the AzSEF fair.

 

Teen donates silent mobiles to hospital

March 13th, 2009, 3:49 pm by Michelle Reese

This news came into the Tribune today:

Greg Farrow, of Gilbert, created and built sile mobiles for Banner Desert Medical Center.

Greg Farrow, of Gilbert, created and built sile mobiles for Banner Desert Medical Center.

Greg Farrow, 16-year-old Eagle Scout from Gilbert, donated 200 coloring books (English and Spanish), 30 mirrors and 30 silent mobiles to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Banner Children’s Hospital at Banner Desert Medical Center.

With help from his father, Ken, an engineer, Greg developed free standing silent mobiles for that would fit on both types of cribs and the bassinets used by the NICU.

The mobiles are made of a simple plastic holder with metal curved rod and soft, light hanging objects in bright colors.

“This project will make a lot of parents happy as it allows them to personalize their child’s crib and gives their babies something to focus on as they are getting stronger,” said Cheryl Alexander, clinical manager for the developmental program in NICU. “We are so excited to start giving these to our families.”

Alexander said it is important that the mobiles are silent, as NICU babies should not have loud noises and it is important that the mobiles are simple for the nurses and family members to install and clean.

Young boy marks end of cancer treatment with gift to caregivers

March 2nd, 2009, 10:01 am by Michelle Reese
The Shores family donated a gong to Banner Children's Hospital for children to ring when they complete cancer treatment.

The Shores family donated a gong to Banner Children's Hospital for cancer patients to ring as they complete their treatment at the Mesa hospital.

Spencer Shores, a pediatric cancer patient at Banner Children’s Hospital, wanted to do something special for the hospital when he came to the end of his treatment program, something he could share with other kids like him. So, Spencer and his family on Friday, February 27, donated a ceremonial gong that a child can ring when they’ve come to the end of their chemo/radiation journey. It will be a new tradition at the hospital.

Mesa students test their engineering skills

February 22nd, 2009, 2:32 pm by Michelle Reese
Lydia Hernandez and Izzie Magana built a motorized toy car in A World in Motion, with help from retired General Motors engineers and funding from SAE International.

Lydia Hernandez and Izzie Magana built a motorized toy car in A World in Motion, with help from retired General Motors engineers and funding from SAE International.

This news came into the Tribune this week:

Taylor Junior High is partnering with General Motors and SAE International in an exciting hands-on program called A World in Motion.

The students in Taylor’s Advancement Via Individual Determination program are following lessons developed by engineers. Seventh-graders are making toy gliders. Eighth- and ninth-graders are creating motorized toy cars.

In the toy car program, for example, the students are involved in writing proposals, drawing sketches, and working with models to develop a plan to meet a specific set of design requirements. Force and friction, simple machines, levers and gears, torque and design are the core scientific concepts covered in this challenge.

The glider builders are exploring the relationship between force and motion and the effects of weight and lift. Students are learning the relationships between data analysis and variable manipulations, and the importance of understanding consumer demands.

The objective of the eight-week program is to “be an engineer.” Students receive a request from a company to build the toys, then they must learn about the mechanics of the project, build a prototype, test and record their data, build a final model and present their project to the company and community representatives.

Six retired GM engineers have been working with the students to guide them and help them build and test the toys. The final presentation is set for 8 to 10:30 a.m. March 4 in the Taylor gym. The GM volunteers will be there as well as parents and other invited guests.

AWIM is designed to motivate the next generation to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math. SAE International provided the curriculum and materials, free of charge, to Karon Rascon, Taylor’s AVID program coordinator.

Buy a slice of pizza, help out a Mesa school

February 18th, 2009, 3:03 pm by Michelle Reese

Peter Piper Pizza at 1833 N. Power Road in Mesa will hold a fundraiser for several Mesa schools Thursday, Feb. 19. The event will be held 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. with 15 percent of the proceeds going back to four focus schools in the Mesa Unified School District.
Patrons just have to mention the fundraiser to restaurant staff.
Some school and city officials have announced they will be in attendance to support the effort, said Megan Pirehpour, transition facilitator with the district.

Sirrine student wins Mesa schools’ spelling bee

February 10th, 2009, 10:38 am by Michelle Reese

This news came into the Tribune today:

Rick Hewitt, a sixth-grader from Sirrine Elementary, won the District Bee this year, with David Gouldthorpe, a seventh-grader from Smith Junior High, second. 

Sixty-four students, in grades four through eight, qualified for the District Bee by winning their school bees.

Trophies were presented to the top five spellers. Third place went to Stapley Junior High’s Julia Guo, fourth place to Whittier Elementary’s Kurgan Freedle, and fifth place to Fremont Junior High’s Jeremy Adams. 

Qualifying for the Regional Spelling Bee were the top five spellers and: Chad Patterson,  Brimhall Junior High; Baylee Allred, Falcon Hill Elementary; Christopher Hui, Franklin West Elemetary; Trevan Christensen, Kerr Elementary; David Jaffe, Las Sendas Elemetary;  Bryce Gillen; Mendoza Elementary; Paige Heckel, O’Connor Elementary; Jenna Sweet, Poston Junior High; Autumn Reckards, Shepherd Junior High; and Ivana Crook, Taft Elementary. 

Westwood Class of 1969 plans reunion

February 10th, 2009, 10:36 am by Michelle Reese

Organizers of Westwood High’s 40th class reunion are eager to hear from alumni throughout the city, state and nation as soon as possible. The celebration will be 6-11 p.m. April 18, with a $10 cover charge.

Because the response has been very poor so far, the location was changed to Chet Arnett’s home, 525 N. Cherry, Mesa. E-mail contacts: mmetzger@radsafe.com, deedeezemail@msn.com.

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