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Slideshow: Eight teams compete in women’s hockey tournament

The Juneau Jamboree women’s hockey tournament enjoyed its 10th year of competition at the Treadwell Ice Arena. Players came mostly from Juneau, but some traveled from Homer, Anchorage, Fairbanks and even Montana for an eight-team, three-day event. It’s the first tournament at Treadwell this year and represents growth in women’s hockey. The tournament featured six teams last year.

All photos by Steve Quinn

Home pool advantage

 

Swimmers practice at Dimond Park Aquatic Center for the Alaska Swim-Dive Championships held in Juneau Nov. 8 & 9. Photo by Rosemarie Alexander.

When Juneau’s new Dimond Park Aquatic Center was still in the formative stages, the ability to host state high school statewide swimming and diving meets was a major selling point.

Pool requirements are different than the last time Kodiak High School swim coach John Lindquist was in the capital city  for a swim meet.

“My last state meet was in Juneau in 1980,” when Lindquist was in high school.

That was at Augustus Brown pool downtown.  It is too small to host a state meet now, because pools must have at least 8 lanes,  a deck and audience seating. Until Juneau’s new Dimond Park Aquatic Center opened in 2011, Bartlett High School in Anchorage had the only pool big enough to accommodate a state championship.  (Ketchikan recently opened an 8-lane pool.)

The Alaska School Activities Association accepted Juneau’s bid for the 2013 Swim-Dive State Championship in January. But planning started when  the new pool was still in the development stage.  In fact, Glacier Swim Club’s Max Mertz spent years working on the pool project. The ability to host such a meet was always a top selling point.

“Really it started back  in 2006-2007.  We told everybody we’d work to get the meet here. We started in earnest probably about two years ago. We wrote a proposal, presented it about a year ago to the ASAA board.  They bought off on it, decided to let us host it, so we’ve been kind of working it for the last year to put it on,” Mertz said. 

More than 300 swimmers and divers, representing 25 Alaska high schools, came to Juneau for the state championship.  An estimated 200 parents and volunteers were here, too.

Isaiah Vreeman is state championships director for the Alaska School Activities Association.  He called it exciting to be able to hold the meet outside Anchorage.  Not only does a pool have to have eight lanes, “it has to have adequate deck space.  That’s why Max and some of his crew put together this platform that you see on the deck, which is phenomenal.  It has to have a lot of seating,” Vreeman said.

Home pool

Thunder Mountain  High School swimmer Trevor Jones appreciated the home pool advantage.

“Whenever we travel to Anchorage there’s more than six teams from Anchorage and numerous teams in the Anchorage area where they don’t have to go and stay in a hotel and be roomed out.  They can just sleep in their own bed and have homecooked meals. When you have home-field advantage that comes all to us, so that’s just a huge deal for Juneau swimmers,” Jones said.

(L to R) Kenny Fox, Trevor Jones, and Thane Reishus-O’Brien placed second in the 200 Medley Relay. Photo by Rosemarie Alexander/ KTOO.

It did pay off for Juneau swimmers. Juneau Douglas High School girls edged out an  Anchorage team, Dimond High School, by three points to win the meet.

Jones and other Thunder Mountain swimmers Kenny Fox, Thane O’Brien, and Josiah Loseby placed second in the 200 Medley Relay.  The entire THMS boys team placed fourth in the meet.

A number of swimmers from both Juneau high schools had personal bests.

Training

When it comes to training, all the athletes spend hours in the pool each day.

About 4 hours a day,” said  Tahna Lindquist.  She and Ila Hughes swim for Kodiak High School.

“In the morning we swim and then after school,” Hughes said.  The swimmers get to the pool at 6:15 a.m.

Jason Wilson coaches the Thunder Mountain swim team.

“You know what, people don’t understand the type of work that swimmers and divers put in,” he said. “We swim everyday six days a week.”

Then there’s cross-training after school every day.

“Sprints, squats, push-ups, sit ups and core work,” Wilson said.

And weight lifting.  “On Saturdays we lift from 10 to 11,” THMS swimmer Trevor Jones said.

Like most of the youth at the statewide meet, the 16 year-old has been swimming competitively for ten years.  He believes the hard work is worth it.

“Just the thrill of being in the pool and racing with other people and getting good times.  Everything about it is just a great essence.”   

 

100,000 Imagination Library books given in Southeast since 2006

First Lady Sandy Parnell presents the 100,000th Imagination Library book to Alden Scott Talbot and his family. Photo by Rosemarie Alexander/KTOO.

A young Juneau family has received the 100,000th book from the Southeast Alaska Dolly Parton Imagination Library.

First Lady Sandy Parnell on Friday presented the “Little Engine that Could” to Alden Scott Talbot, his mother, Marlowe Dunker, and father, Tony Talbot.  Alden was born Oct. 10th and is already enrolled in the Imagination Library through the Association for the Education of Young Children – Southeast Alaska.

“I think  that nothing really says I love you quite the way that cuddling up together and reading a good book does,” Parnell told the crowd gathered at the Juneau Arts and Culture Center.

The Imagination Library sends free books to children from birth to age 5. It was started by the Country-Western singer in 1996 in her home state of Tennessee.  It is now nationwide as well as in Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia, and depends primarily on local funds.

Friday’s event was a kick off to raise $15,000, which would provide books to one thousand Southeast Alaska pre-school children for five years.  Program costs are $30 per child per year, or $150 for one child for the entire five years.

More than 2,000 Southeast children are currently enrolled in the program, which started in the region in 2006.

Best Beginnings, a public-private partnership that advocates statewide for pre-school programs, helps Alaska communities start the Imagination Library program.  Best Beginnings is based in Anchorage.

Mayor Merrill Sanford, and Madeline and Dori Germain read a proclamation for Imagination Library Week in Juneau. A cardboard Dolly Parton looks on.

Barbara Brown is Best Beginnings’ Imagination Library project manager.  She brought a life-sized cardboard Dolly Parton to Juneau, which stood on the stage for the event.

“Flat Dolly has been to the glacier and the governor’s mansion, and the legislature.  Flat Dolly is really covering a lot of ground,” she quipped. She said the real Dolly Parton has promised to visit the state sometime to promote the program.

Brown says communities that decide they want to start an Imagination Library will get support from the organization to start and maintain the program.

“And we tell people this is not just a book delivery program.  It is ‘a get the whole community excited about reading to our children’ program,” she said.

Brown said more than 21,000 children in 110 Alaska communities get a free book each month from the Imagination Library.

Nov. 10 to 16 is Dolly Parton Imagination Library Week, as proclaimed by Juneau Mayor Merrill Sanford. The mayor and two Imagination Library “graduates,” Madeline and Dori Germain, read the proclamation at the book presentation.

 

Juneau’s Filipino community plans relief efforts for Typhoon Haiyan victims

Filipino Community Inc flag
Juneau’s Filipino Community Inc. celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2006. Photo by Casey Kelly/KTOO.

Juneau’s Filipino community is pulling together to help the victims of Super Typhoon Haiyan, which hit the country early Friday morning.

Thousands are feared dead and injured from the storm, one of the most powerful ever recorded. According to news reports, at least 300 people are confirmed dead on Samar Island in the central Philippines. Another 10,000 people are believed to have died in Tacloban city on Leyte Island, near Samar.

The storm knocked out power and communications to much of the central Philippines. Dante Reyes is president of Juneau’s nonprofit Filipino Community Inc. He’s from Aklan province, where close to 10,000 homes were destroyed.

“We’re still waiting for some reports coming in from our relatives and from some of our friends what happened to them, or are they okay, or fine or something like that,” Reyes says. “So, it’s really hard.”

Filipino Community Inc. held a membership meeting on Saturday, where Reyes says they decided to cancel the organization’s free Thanksgiving Day meal. Instead, the group will donate the $3,000 dollars budgeted for the event to relief efforts. In addition, there will be a fundraising dinner on Saturday November 23rd at the Filipino Community Hall downtown on Franklin Street.

“We will be having the traditional American and Filipino dishes,” he says. “So we will have turkey for sure. We will have a Filipino kind of beef steak – we call it Bistek. So we’re planning to have a community-wide fundraiser for the event. And hopefully we can raise money to help the victims of the typhoon.”

He says the meal will cost $15 per single adult, or $25 for a couple, and $5 for children. More details will be available as the event gets closer.

Reyes says anyone who wants to offer to help can contact him on his cell phone at 321-6235.

Alaskan Hotel fire caused by smoking debris

Alaskan Hotel, 167 South Franklin Street. (Photo by Lisa Phu/KTOO)

An early morning fire at the Alaskan Hotel on Saturday caused about $2,500 in damage, according to Juneau Fire Chief Rich Etheridge.  Hotel guests were evacuated, but allowed to return in about an hour.

Etheridge says the fire was caused by carelessly discarded smoking materials.

A little after 1 a.m., Capital City Fire and Rescue responded to a report of smoke in the 100-year-old hotel at 167 South Franklin Street in downtown Juneau.   Etheridge says fire crews from all CCFR districts responded.

He says the fire was found in the  concealed wall spaces  and support structure at the front of the building.

Fire crews opened up the wall from the basement and building exterior, put out the fire and removed the charred wood.

He says the 45-room wood-framed hotel has a number of void spaces, where fires can travel throughout the building undetected.  He says Saturday morning’s fire was very similar to one that occurred on Nov. 11, 2002, which was also caused by discarded smoking materials.

No injuries were reported.

Juneau hosts statewide swim and dive meet

Swimmers practice Friday morning at Dimond Park Aquatic Center for the Alaska Swim-Dive Championships. Photo by Rosemarie Alexander.

Juneau-Douglas High School girls are the winners of the swimming and diving state championships held Friday and Saturday at the Dimond Park Aquatic Center. They edged Anchorage’s Dimond High School by three points.

On the boys’ side, Dimond High swimmers are repeat state champions, with Sitka High School coming in three points behind to take second.

Both competitions came down to the last race – the 400 freestyle relay.

More than 300 high school athletes, representing 25 high schools  competed in Juneau this weekend in the statewide championships for swimming and diving.

Juneau’s new 8-lane, Olympic-size pool at the Dimond Park Aquatic Center made it possible for the capital city to hold a state meet, traditionally held at Bartlett High School in Anchorage.

Isaiah Vreeman is the State Championships Director for the Alaska School Activities Association.

 Bartlett’s been the only facility in the state to be able to host state championship swimming ever, so to have another facility to come on line, being in Juneau, it’s very exciting.

 

 

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