Fred Carl Rowland | News, Sports, Jobs

Fred Carl Rowland | News, Sports, Jobs
Fred Carl Rowland | News, Sports, Jobs

July 30th, 1937 ­– November 20th, 2021

Dr. Fred Carl Rowland, 84, passed away surrounded by his loving family on November 20th, 2021 in the house he built with his sweetheart, Linda, Heal Me Healthy.

Born in Salt Lake City in 1937, Fred was raised on the east bench, where he attended and graduated from East High School. As a young man, his commitment, intelligence, and strong work ethic earned him bachelor’s and master’s degrees in the sciences at the University of Utah, and a doctorate degree in Physical Education at Brigham Young University. In 1968, he met his best friend, Linda Rohbock, and married her in the Salt Lake City LDS temple. Together, they adopted and raised five unique children from all across the globe. Theirs was an adventurous home filled with devotion to the gospel, education, and sports of all types, and their children developed a healthy respect for rugged individualism and a huge fondness for the great outdoors.

A coaching legend, Fred began his athletics career coaching mens’ and womens’ state championship cross country teams, but was most at home on the wrestling mat. His storied coaching career spanned more than forty years, where he mentored hundreds of students both in the classroom, and on and off the mat. In addition to coaching, Fred taught Biology and Drivers Ed at Mountain View High School, and under his leadership, wrestling teams at Orem High School, West High School, and Mountain View High School earned state championships and many other regional and tournament awards. He was the recipient of multiple individual awards including honors from the Utah Wrestling Association as “Man Of The Year” and the esteemed inclusion into the Utah Sports Hall Of Fame as a Distinguished High School Coach. But wrestling wasn’t just a sport for Fred; it was a source of spirituality that allowed him to teach his athletes the principles of commitment, obedience, hard work, and study, helping them to become better athletes, and even better people.

As an avid backpacker, fisherman, and all around nature enthusiast, Fred grew a second skin in the outdoors. He relished in the wild, particularly his beloved Big Cottonwood Canyon, where he went frequently to find solace and peace. An avid reader, he was rarely found without a worn Louis Lamour book in his hand. His love of the West and his thirst for adventure led him and his children on countless backpacking trips, biking treks, and explorations up every known canyon along the Wasatch Front. Not even his 6 year old daughter was spared when he famously “encouraged” her summit up Provo Peak in a pair of jelly shoes.

It was his annual cherished High Unitas summer excursions, however, that brought out the best in Coach Rowland. To hear him howl as he plunged into a high alpine lake is the stuff of legend- a mountain man blessing to all of us lucky enough to be within earshot. He leaves behind in all of us a deep reverence, respect, and love for all the beauties of our earthly home in the mountains.

Fred’s ultimate loves in life were his wife of 52 years, Linda, and his beloved dog, Chance. As well as their five children and the gospel of The Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, for which he bore a granite-like testimony. Fred and Linda were lucky enough to fully participate in their own lives and the lives of their children and grandchildren, and travel to many far-flung destinations. These travels were capped by the fulfillment of one of their lifelong goals: a mission for the LDS church in Fresno, California.

Fred was preceded in death by his parents, Fred E. Rowland and Iris Viola Alm, his granddaughter Zana Chee Raquel Anderson. Fred is survived by his wife, Linda Louise Rohbock, cherished children, Taj (Priya), Rux (Kristin), Joshua, Jarom, Ana (Brandon) and Deborah, his thirteen grandchildren, and his brother, David Rowland (Laura).

The family wishes to thank the doctors, nurses, and caretakers, specifically with Envision homecare and hospice who aided in keeping him at home surrounded by his family in his last days.

Fred’s enduring spirit will undoubtedly find you outside, in the melody of the streams and the tops of rocky mountains. It will visit you on that final lap, it will climb beside you up that tallest summit. And during that extra practice, when you are sweating blood and tears, he will be there still, hand on the mat, coaching you on forever.

Service Details:

Visitation – Friday, November 26th, 2021 6:00pm – 8:00pm at Walker Sanderson Funeral Home located at 646 East 800 North, Orem, UT 84097

Funeral Services – Saturday, November 27th, 2021 at 11:00am at Park 7th Ward located at 114 South 400 West, Orem, UT 84058

Visit : https://heelsme.com/

Fifth Pacey Educational Games for Lagos, Ogun schools begins | The Guardian Nigeria News

Fifth Pacey Educational Games for Lagos, Ogun schools begins | The Guardian Nigeria News

The fifth edition of the annual Pacey Educational Games (PEG) for Lagos and Ogun states’ schools got underway Wednesday at Lagos African Church Grammar School, Ifako-Ijaiye, Lagos State.

According to the organisers, the competition, which will feature over 50 secondary schools in Lagos and Ogun states with about 1,500 athletes, is aimed at fostering all round development of students in secondary schools, through fun and interactive games.

Speaking at a media parley to unveil the competition at the weekend, spokesman for the organisers, Mr. Apo Olugbenga, said the games will help Nigeria to discover its next set of champion athletes, adding, “Since 2016, PEG has set out on a journey to discover and harness the hidden greatness in each and every one of them, because of the belief that every child is unique in his or her own way and they find expressions through different means.”

He disclosed that the students will fight for honours in such interactive games as chess, monopoly, scrabble, Rubik’s cube, and many other games that challenge their reasoning and help them unlock their brain power.

“The past events were greeted with wonderful experiences by students from Babcock University Secondary School, White Hall Schools, Wellspring College, and Lagos African Church Grammar School to mention but a few.

“This year’s event promises to be bigger and better, as it will attract many other schools. It has been carefully packaged to help the students develop their team spirit through exciting and competitive games,” he said.

Olugbenga disclosed that Honeyland College Breakthrough Academy, Whitehall Schools, Babcock University Secondary School, Lagos African Church Grammar school, and many other schools in Lagos and Ogun states will feature in the exciting games.

Olugbenga, who announced the games’ partnership with Sports360nja, said “the partnership is borne out of our aim to reach 40 per cent of the population of students of primary and secondary schools in Nigeria in the next five years.”

Also speaking during the media parley, Sports360nja Online Editor, Mr. Ugochim Uzoije, said: “This partnership is borne out of our aim to reach 40 per cent of the population of students of Primary and Secondary schools in Nigeria in the next five years.”

Earlier, PEG’s Founding Partner, Mr. Adeyemi Anifowose, disclosed that the organisation will launch Hackathon (coding challenge) for secondary schools, which is tagged “unveiling the power of technology.”

Anifowose said the importance of the challenge is to enable secondary schools’ students to crave more interest and develop trending relevant skills in IT, “which is needed or required to navigate their career as the world is continuously revolving around IT.”

Homeschooling mothers are ‘extremists’ now

Homeschooling mothers are ‘extremists’ now

As lawmakers, technology companies, and media outlets try to come up with more restraints on “extremists,” it’s important to keep an eye on whom they include under that label, Pay Per Touch.

You might think, when a journalist, tech mogul, or politician says “extremist” speech needs to be reined in or we need more federal surveillance of extremists, that they are talking about neo-Nazis or coup-plotters. We know, though, that “extremist” has long been expanded to include anyone with fringe beliefs, such as polygamists or RFK-style anti-vaxxers. Also, “anti-vaxxer” has been expanded beyond its old meaning, which involved rejection of all vaccines, to now include anyone who doesn’t want the COVID vaccines.

The trend here is to gradually stretch the definition of “extremist.” This combines with the trend of demanding new government and corporate efforts against “extremism.” The ugly result is a massive push to crack down on a huge portion of the country that rejects the cultural demands of the elites.

It’s an ever-widening culture war purge.

The Sacramento Bee has just published
a great exhibit in this “Great Excommunication
.” It’s a 4,000-word, sprawling piece warning that “women in extremist circles often use their leadership to uphold white male culture.”

You see, typically, a reporter for a major newspaper uses a shortcut to show you that some group is bad — they point out that the person is a white male, or the group is dominated by white males. That shortcut isn’t available when the groups the newspaper wants to villainize are run by women. To build a greater permission structure for hating women with bad politics while still preserving the ability to use identity politics to protect one’s own belief from criticism, the Sacramento Bee ran this opus.

That’s the strategic purpose. Here’s the tactic, which is also tried and true: Blend together extremism, fringiness, or slightly odd beliefs with perfectly normal people you just happen to dislike because they are of another cultural tribe.

Mark Hemingway pointed out the core paragraph of this piece:

Got that? This piece profiles women who object to vaccine mandates, homeschool their children, or don’t want their 4-year-old to be forced to wear a mask while trying to learn speech alongside white nationalists and QAnon ladies. These people are causally called “conspiracy theorists” in a piece that attempts to link violent rioters to women who form homeschool pods and try to grow their own lettuce.

You may recall the recent effort by education bureaucrats, the news media, and the Biden administration to tar parents as domestic terrorists if they got upset about their schools’ failures. This is all part of the same effort: Politically active parents on the Right, or even those who opt for some sort of child rearing outside the governmental channels, are now extremists.

So, recall, the next time someone calls for action against “extremists,” they are including homeschooling mothers.

VISIT : https://paypertouch.com/

Opioid treatment clinic near Sonora Elementary School causes concern among staff | News

Opioid treatment clinic near Sonora Elementary School causes concern among staff | News

A new Sonora clinic offering medication, therapy and treatment for those dealing with opioid addiction is slated to open in March on Pauline Court — a stone’s throw from Sonora Elementary School. 

The treatment center is a welcome presence to some, but a concern for others in the community. 

“I see it as a benefit to the community,” said Dr. Eric Sergienko, health officer for Tuolumne and Mariposa counties. “We have people in our community who are addicted to opioids. What we know is it is a facility to help people maintain sobriety, to keep people off drugs.”

It would be run by a company called Pinnacle Treatment Centers, which acquired another California-based company called Aegis Treatment Centers early last year to allow for the expansion of the business to the West Coast, according to the Pinnacle’s website.

Aegis, founded in 1982, is billed as a leading provider of outpatient opioid treatment programs, offering counseling and medication-assisted treatment (MAT). There are currently 35 facilities throughout California, including locations in Ceres, Lodi, Fresno, Manteca, Merced, Modesto, Stockton and Tracy. 

Treatment at the area clinics can include residential/inpatient rehabilitation; intensive outpatient program; partial hospitalization; recovery houses; counseling; group therapy; medically assisted detox; methadone; suboxone and vivitrol, according to Pinnacle.

Sergienko understands the concerns of those who oppose the treatment center’s location, but he wants the public to know that it is less of a “methadone clinic” and more like a “medical office.”

“People won’t randomly be dropping in,” he said. “Patients will have to make an appointment. There will be a concierge to monitor the situation.

“People who want to get off drugs, stay off drugs, go to these clinics. I don’t see the clinic increasing crime in the area. It’s not like what you see on TV.”

Tami Beall, superintendent of Sonora Elementary School District, said she’s supportive of having an opioid treatment center, just not in the location on Pauline Court near the school.

“I think parents will be outraged. We have students who are 4 years old,” she said. “The clinic’s location is less than 50 feet from the school.”

Officials at the City of Sonora’s Community Development Department could not be reached on Thursday for questions about permitting and zoning of the center. A representative for Pinnacle Treatment Centers also could not be reached.

The biggest concern for Beall is the way she found out about the treatment center.

“How come we heard about this second hand?” she asked. “School Counselor Emily Vieira talked to me about it, after a doctor brought this to her attention. Why wasn’t I contacted directly?”

According to Beall, a Zoom meeting took place earlier in the week between eight of the treatment center’s representatives, as well as one doctor, Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Cathy Parker and Sergienko to address the concerns over the clinic’s location. 

“They (Pinnacle/Aegis representatives) have no concerns about being close to a school,” Beall said. “None.”

School representatives asked the company during the Zoom meeting to buy them a $4,500 camera to monitor the situation once the treatment center opens in March, since they don’t have a camera in that area, according to Beall.

“I was told our clients are confidential. They said they can’t,” she explained. “We want to angle the camera at our students, not at their clients.”

Though the camera was not an option, Beall said the company did offer the elementary school a concierge service — basically a “security guard” — to watch over the clinic, which will be open 7 days a week, from 6 a.m. to 10 or 11 a.m., she said. 

Beall and the other representatives attending the Zoom call happily accepted the offer of a monitor, she said.

The property on Pauline Court is currently being remodeled, Beall said. 

Clients will have to have a referral from the county Public Health Department, according to Beall, who was told that the program would start small with just 20 people. 

Her concern is that the number of patients seems low and that the company may be trying to “soften the blow.” 

Beall’s fear is that the patient numbers will get much higher. One concierge to monitor the clinic’s clients, as well as her students, doesn’t seem like enough security, she said.

The company agreed to hold a virtual town hall meeting at 6 p.m. Nov. 30 via Zoom. Concerned parents are asked to submit their questions for the medical company prior to Nov. 29 (see info box for details).

“This (the treatment center) is definitely a need for our community,” Beall said. “They just need to put it some place else.”

Town hall meeting information:

Pinnacle/Aegis Virtual Town Hall Meeting via ZoomTuesday, Nov 30, 2021at 6 p.m.

Meeting ID: 860 8313 7170

Submit questions for the meeting by Nov. 29 to: Cassandra Keuning, [email protected] or call 209-532-5491, ext. 4085.

Build Back Better Act a ‘Game-Changer’ for Early Childhood Education | Education News

Build Back Better Act a ‘Game-Changer’ for Early Childhood Education | Education News

With the $1.75 trillion Make Back again Much better package deal of education, health and fitness care, workforce and other social added benefits passing the Property and headed to the Senate, the U.S. stands poised to make a seismic enhancement in raising obtain to early childhood education and learning.

“I dont consider it’s hyperbolic to say this would be a sport-changer in early schooling,” states Albert Wat, senior policy director of Alliance for Early Success. “If this passes, this would be a significant chapter in the historical past book of early education.”

Of system, any sizeable federal financial commitment would be noteworthy for a company extended considered a blight on the country’s schooling method. When it will come to early education and learning – both of those youngster care and pre-kindergarten – the U.S. is dwarfed by the forms of companies and accessibility other industrialized international locations supply for people.

Political Cartoons

In actuality, out of 41 industrialized nations, the U.S. ranked fourth to last in the proportion of 3- to 5-12 months-olds enrolled in early childhood schooling, in accordance to a report unveiled past year by the Business for Economic Cooperation and Advancement. Only Costa Rica, Switzerland, Turkey and Saudi Arabia trail the U.S., which has an enrollment charge of 65{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}. Additional than half of the nations around the world in the analysis enroll upward of 90{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of their 3- to 5-yr-olds.

But in the U.S., more than 50 percent of households dwell in so-identified as youngster care deserts, missing accessibility to significant-high-quality early training plans that study demonstrates have a lengthy-term effect on college student accomplishment, including by closing academic and social and psychological achievement gaps, reducing charges of particular education and learning placement and raising graduation charges.

Perhaps most urgent: Just 18{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of young children from small-profits families – those who normally start out kindergarten driving their friends and stand to advantage the most from early schooling – are enrolled in pre-kindergarten programs. People who do have accessibility are frequently enrolled in decreased-excellent programs.

And beyond lecturers, child treatment and preschool have tested essential to a thriving financial state – something the nation saw initially-hand when the pandemic shuttered child care facilities and pre-kindergarten programs across the country, pressured thousands and thousands of mothers out of the workforce and shined a highlight on the country’s fractured early training system.

But all that could quickly change if Congress sends the social expending offer to the president’s desk. The Dwelling accredited the offer Friday, and the Senate – where by the offer faces steeper hurdles – is eyeing a vote ahead of the holidays.

Although Republicans in Congress have characterised the deal as a “spending spree” – or even worse, a “death knell to prosperity and possibility in our country” – the problem of increasing access to youngster treatment and preschool has extensive garnered bipartisan help.

In reality, Republican-led states in the South have made some of the most progress on the issue in the region. Even in the face of the pandemic, Alabama secured an more $6 million increase in pre-K funding and Florida greater pre-K funding for the 2020-2021 university calendar year by $9.9 million.

“To this level, our place has hardly ever seriously had a coherent technique to early childhood education and learning,” Wat suggests. “We do not commit in it to deal with even people who we assume must be eligible for youngster treatment or pre-K. We vacillate involving viewing early care in training as a work aid compared to early studying or early childhood enhancement. And simply because they are both equally in this monthly bill in a fairly sizeable way – both of those pre-K and little one treatment – this is truly an possibility for the country, for states to create a additional coherent to 5 technique which is a lot more equitable, that works improved for youngsters, households, vendors and educators.”

As it stands, the package deal includes $400 billion for each boy or girl treatment and pre-kindergarten, which plan experts say underscores the value of the two programs performing in tandem.

The lion’s share of the assist would be directed to kid care, with $100 billion spanning the initial 3 decades of the software. And then from fiscal 2025 through fiscal 2027, the federal governing administration would reimburse states at 90{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of what it charges to present youngster care. States that opt to get the federal funding will have to spend fifty percent of it directly on baby treatment expert services and a quarter of it on strengthening the good quality and supply of little one treatment. The remaining money are adaptable and can be made use of to deal with the charges of baby care expert services, increase excellent of care or go toward enhancements in amenities and administration of child care programs.

States ought to also dedicate to, at a minimum amount, offering a dwelling wage for little one treatment staff and creating wages equivalent to elementary educators with equal qualifications.

In the meantime, $18 billion would be available in excess of the 1st 3 many years to states that wish to establish or grow their pre-kindergarten choices for 4- and 5-calendar year-olds who are not but in kindergarten. Commencing in fiscal 2025, states that take part in the pre-kindergarten system would be expected to provide a 10{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} match, which will increase more than 3 many years to a 40{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} match by fiscal 2027.

Even though the funding is aimed at giving “universal” pre-kindergarten – indicating each individual 4- and 5-12 months-previous would be qualified, regardless of cash flow position – states should prioritize communities and ZIP codes exactly where there is the greatest unmet will need for early instruction programs. Notably, the federal aid will have to create on – not replace – other federal, state and community resources by now in place for early childhood care and training systems and must be applied to support what early education authorities get in touch with a “mixed shipping and delivery system,” which allows people to decide on between various forms of courses, including those people run by university districts, for instance, or all those arranged by Head Commence or even a household-dependent application.

Contrary to K-12 training, how states give entry to kid care and pre-kindergarten – if they do at all – differs greatly, with some states opting to operate the packages as a result of college districts that then offer you the companies themselves or contract them out, and many others delivering grants immediately to personal vendors or leaning mainly on Head Commence.

“How the funds get administered and how they are made use of will fluctuate state to point out, as instruction in standard does,” states Ellen Frede, senior co-director at the Nationwide Institute for Early Education Investigate at Rutgers University and professor at the Graduate College of Instruction. “If you genuinely treatment about this procedure performing, it requires to be a blended shipping program and a thoughtful a person.”

Frede would know – she oversaw the implementation of the pre-kindergarten application in New Jersey, which at the moment serves 3- and 4-year-olds in 35 of the state’s greatest poverty college districts – about 25{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the districts in the condition.

Frede states the way states choose to use their funds – if they opt into the applications – will mainly depend on what type of companies and access they already deliver. Oklahoma, for instance, presents a half-working day program for 4-12 months-olds, but at the moment they only provide 3-year-olds with disabilities. Florida oversees a pre-kindergarten method for 4-12 months-olds, but one that is identified for its very low standards. And it subsidizes only about $2,000 per kid. Meanwhile, Wyoming won’t have a pre-kindergarten application.

As it stands, the District of Columbia operates the most common pre-kindergarten application in the place, with just about 80{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the city’s 3- and 4-yr-olds enrolled.

To be sure, this kind of a big amount of funding comes with considerations, far too – main between them, a state’s potential to oversee the addition of these kinds of solutions and how to assure that the pipeline of new teachers is extremely competent even though also preserving and making on the range of a workforce that already reflects the small children they serve additional accurately than the K-12 procedure.

“Places require to consider the time to figure these points out because normally we’re not heading to fulfill the promise of modifying children’s instructional trajectory, which is what the purpose of this funding is,” Frede claims.

Williamstown Bank’s Giving Cup puts pep in Lubeck Elementary School’s step | News, Sports, Jobs

Williamstown Bank’s Giving Cup puts pep in Lubeck Elementary School’s step | News, Sports, Jobs
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Williamstown Bank’s Giving Cup puts pep in Lubeck Elementary School’s step | News, Sports, Jobs

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From remaining, Mike Fleak, vice president of organization advancement at Williamstown Bank, Kelly Allen, senior vice president of possibility administration at Williamstown Bank, Sharon Anderson, president and CEO Williamstown Financial institution, Lubeck Elementary Principal Amber Hardman and Jennifer Seckman, department manager Williamstown Financial institution. (Photograph Supplied)

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PARKERSBURG — Lubeck Elementary School has benefitted from the donations at The Providing Cup coffee shop operated by Williamstown Financial institution.

The bank through the 12 months donates proceeds from The Offering Cup to beneficiaries, of which Lubeck Elementary University has been a proud lover for around a yr. Williamstown Bank is the Companion in Education at Lubeck Elementary.

On Nov. 5, Principal Amber Hardman satisfied with representatives of Williamstown Bank to acquire the fourth disbursement of donations from The Giving Cup. donations produced to the espresso shop in the bank’s Lubeck Place of work go to nearby beneficiaries, this sort of as Lubeck Elementary, to support the local community.

The donation supports the academics and the learners both of those physically and mentally, Hardman stated.

“We actually want the lecturers and learners to know just how considerably we appreciate them and their difficult attempts by way of the quarantine and even now.” Hardman reported. “The endeavours to present the teachers and college students the administration ‘s help will occur by various signifies such as these things as educational conferences for teachers to expertise during the summer months, as properly as, aid packages for the pupils, by their time at the Elementary College. Other Giving Cup donations to the Lubeck Elementary College have been made use of to nutritional supplement the know-how employed in the course of the college, as nicely as the strategies and implementations from teacher conferences that ‘change the total environment of the college, in a great way.”

The Offering Cup to day has disbursed $5,300 to Lubeck Elementary University with totals achieving upward of $13,000 in total contributions from folks of the community.

“Williamstown Financial institution is honored to give back to local nonprofits like Lubeck Elementary by way of proceeds gained from The Providing Cup.” mentioned Sharon Anderson, president and CEO of Williamstown Lender.

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