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Boys Baseball beat longtime rivals Randolph

April 27, 2012 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Isabela Aznar

Staff Writer

It is safe to say that Randolph and SLA are rivals on the baseball field.

“We lost to this team 3 times before (stretching back since the 2010 season)” Said Coach Doug Herman on the bus ride to the field. “If we win this game, we make our chances of making it into the play offs go up.”

On April 10th, The Rockets had their annual match against Randolph. All the boys on the bus listened intently as Mr. Herman gave his traditional speech that he gives before every game on the bus ride over to the field.

As well as the traditional pep talk on the bus from Coach Herman, He carries a tradition with the team of finishing a BLT (Bacon, Lettuce, Tomato) Sandwich before the beginning of every game for good luck,

As soon as The SLA Rockets arrived at the field, Senior and Team Captain Ian Mcclendon led them through a quick and thorough conditioning.

And then continued on with Coach Herman to talk to the refs.

“Baseball is a game the of inches,” McClendon said, referring to the fact that precision and timing is everything in the game, you have to stay focused and play close attention to everything that’s happening.

“Mental lapses and timely errors on our part have always led to their wins, but not this time” Coach Herman stated, referring to Randolph’s winning streak against SLA.

Based on this year’s game, however, the team was on point and completely aware of what was going on.

“Baseball has taught me how to work hard,” right fielder and Senior Blasé Biello said. “Especially going from bench warmer to assistant captain.”

The team tied together very nicely, and exemplified great teamwork together; always supporting each other, giving each other pep talks, and keeping focus on the game.

“I’d say that the biggest moments of the game were our five run 3rd inning and holding them to just one run in the 5th when it was 8-3,” said Coach Herman. “We held the momentum as a result and broke it open in the bottom of the 5th inning to push it to 14-4 and winning by Mercy Rule,” which involves having a 10 run lead after 5 innings.

The team was proud and exauhsted coming back on the bus to SLA.

“We had a strong offense,” First baseman and senior Thomas Nicolella said about their performance. The entire team was proud after they had their well deserved victory.

 

Game Highlights by Coach Herman

Bottom of 3rd (SLA)

Ian McClendon (Batting 3rd and playing Center Field) bombed one to left for a triple scoring Stephen White (2 hitter and Short Stop).

Jeffrey Schwartz (4th and playing Catcher) stole and was scored on a hit and run play when Abe Musselman (5th and in Left Field) smacked one down the third base line.

Still no outs, but Randolph’s 2011 All-Star Pitcher Justo Rodriguez finally induced Raekwon Smith (6th and 3B) to pop up to Short, and TJ Nicolella ( 7th and 1st base) to line out to 1st.

SLA tacked on one more when Jhonas Dunakin (8th and 2B) looped a single to center, stole second and third and then scored when the umpire called Rodriguez for a Balk (a Balk is when the pitcher “deceives” the runner instead of pitching to the batter).

SLA scored 5 runs on 5 hits with 3 Stolen Bases.

 

Top of 5th (Randolph)

I sent Jeff back out for another inning to “get one out” since he threw a lot of pitches in the third. He walked the first batter, then hit the second so I pulled him and gave Allen Harmon his first relief appearance of the year.  The kid has gas, can change speeds and is developing a curve.

We had a 4 run lead, but they had the bases loaded.

Allen Harmon landed a solid strike against one of Randolph’s hottest hitters on the first pitch, and struck him out swinging three pitches later.

In a quick and dramatic fashion Allen dispensed with there clean up hitter on three pitches to get out of the jam.

The team mobbed him in the dugout. I know from personal experience that it is something that he will remember for the rest of his life.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Sports, Uncategorized

Locker Talk: If you could make a class at SLA, what would it be?

April 20, 2012 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Caption
Sports history. – Sam Sirocman
Caption
"Culinary class." – Junior Symone Smith, "Anthropology." – Junior Matt Ferry
Caption
"Auto shop." – Ron Harper
Caption
"Napping class." – Senior Basheer Lewis
Caption
"Woodshop." – Freshman Nomi Martin-Brouillette
Caption
"How to be normal." – Senior Tyler Hankison
Caption
"Photography class." – Freshman Aaron Tang
Caption
"Medicinal biology." – Sophomore Jameka Lee
Caption
"Fashion class." – Sophomore Sarena Shuman, "DJ class." – Sophomore Roger Bracy
Caption
"French." – Sophomore Jhonas Dunakin
Caption
"Graphic design." – Senior Briana Stroman
Caption
"Pony Studies." – Rita Willard
Caption
"Meditation class." – Sophomore Mike Hall
Caption
"Wine and cheese class." – Junior Tucker Bartholomew
PreviousNext

 

Sports history. – Sam Sirocman
"Culinary class." – Junior Symone Smith, "Anthropology." – Junior Matt Ferry
"Auto shop." – Freshman Ron Harper
"Napping class." – Senior Basheer Lewis
"Woodshop." – Freshman Nomi Martin-Brouillette
"How to be normal." – Senior Tyler Hankison
"Photography class." – Freshman Aaron Tang
"Medicinal biology." – Sophomore Jameka Lee
"Fashion class." – Sophomore Sarena Shuman, "DJ class." – Sophomore Roger Bracy
"French." – Sophomore Jhonas Dunakin
"Pony Studies." – Senior Rita Willard
"Graphic design." – Senior Briana Stroman
"Meditation class." – Sophomore Mike Hall
"Wine and cheese class." – Junior Tucker Bartholomew

 

Filed Under: Features, Uncategorized

A Guide to Backing up Computer Files

April 17, 2012 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Marina Stuart

Staff Writer

At SLA, laptops are used as textbooks, resources, media outlets, and of course, a means of saving school files.  However, these computers are used more than five days a week, for seven months, occasionally they break, or crash, or something is lost. Almost every student has had something bad happen to their computer. It is times like these when it is a good idea to have your files backed up somehow.

As a Freshman, you would hear this advice given by the Tech Teacher Ms. Hull, and teachers in other classes. However,only about a third of students actually back up their files — and they often pay the price. SLAMedia wants you to know that backing up your files is essential, and there is more than one way to do it.

1. Use an external hard drive. An external hard drive is like a giant usb drive, that can hold lots of word documents, music, or movies. Many people use external hard drives as a way to store documents when their computer are too full and they won’t lose everything. Senior Maxime Damis uses an external hard drive and says “I decided to use a 500 GB external, because i found it online and it was portable so it made sharing documents so much easier.”

One problem with an external hard drive is that sometimes they also break and you could lose all your work again. This all could also be done with just a large USB drive.  In addition to the external hard drive, you can use time machine. Time machine is on every Mac computer. Every time you plug in your external hard drive, it automatically syncs all of your work to the hard drive without you doing anything.

2. Use Dropbox. Dropbox is a online area where you can store up to 2 GB of work, for free. It is a downloadable folder that you can save anything to, and can access online if your computer crashes. It is one of the most common ways that people save files at SLA. Many students and teachers use dropbox.

3. Invest in media. This is the simple, not so efficient but productive way of saving your work. Use the media (ex. Facebook, Google Docs, YouTube, Flickr) as a way to save your work in a place where you can access it from anywhere, and if your computer crashes at least it is somewhere. However, the downside is that it is all public and often you can edit it easily. Also, you need to have an internet connection at all times and some of the websites are not available in school.

These ways will help anyone avoid the horror of losing all their schoolwork when their computer crashes. Computer crashes can happen to anyone, even freshmen with their new computers, though most commonly to juniors and seniors, whose computers are very old and slow.

In summation, back up your work. It’s not that hard.

 

 

Filed Under: Features, Uncategorized

SLAMedia TV: Poetry Slams at the Franklin

April 17, 2012 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

In our latest broadcast news segment, Ayanna Robinson covers the most recent PYPM poetry slam, held at The Franklin Institute on March 23rd.

Filed Under: A&E, Uncategorized

Parents Protest Budget Cuts with ‘Mock Bake Sale’

April 15, 2012 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Parents and students at rally outside City Hall

By Jenn Wright

Staff Writer

Members of City Council received a sweet surprise Thursday April 12th when parents of school district students hand delivered baked goods. Following, parents and students gathered at City Hall for a rally to talk about Governor Corbett’s $900 million education budget cuts.

Education Voters of Pennsylvania backed this “Not-a-real-bake-sale” with parents and the community who organized it. The message was, “There aren’t enough cookies in Pennsylvania.”

The two-part event began with the parents delivering cookies to the chambers of City Council with the intention of expressing dissatisfaction about the budget cuts.

Afterward, about sixty people gathered on the north side of City Hall for a brief rally.

People in attendance included Senator Vincent Hughes as well as Representative Eugene DePasquale.

“When someone says there’s not enough money in Harrisburg to fully fund public education,” Senator Hughes said, “they’re lying!”

“With a billion dollar gap, we can’t do it.” said Parent of two at Cook-Wissahickon, Rebecca Poyourow.

As a key organizer Poyourow gathered with parents from around Philly over the last month organizing the effort.

Parents who spoke expressed frustration about crowded classrooms, teaching layoffs and cuts to art, music and language classes.

Parent Sabra Townsend, whose child go to James Dobson Elementary, brought a flyer with her for an actual bake sale to support an after school math program at Dobson.

Not the first ‘Mock Bake Sale’ of its kind, similar types of event were held in Harrisburg and Shippensburg on Monday April 9th.

At the end of his speech Senator Hughes asked how much the cookies costed. Education Voters PA Executive Director Susan Gobreski answered, “How much do you wanna pay? 50 cents?”

Senator Hughes, after hearing the cookies were meant to be free, agreed, “Well, every little bit counts.”

Representative Jim Roebuck, the Democratic education chairman who is running again on April 24th, told the crowd that “You have my commitment as long as I am in Harrisburg.”

Contact Jenn Wright at jwright@scienceleadership.org

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized Tagged With: budget, budget cuts, city hall, mock bake sale, School District

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