Tag Archive | "mhs"

Rotary adds pavers to MHS

Rotary adds pavers to MHS

Last month’s Interact and Rotary-sponsored Mammoth High School patio project added 47 more pavers with names of students and local businesses. Pictured: Rotarians Rich Boccia, Byng and Joanne Hunt, Laura Brinker, Earl Henderson, Josh Brinker.

(Photo: Geisel)


Posted in NewsComments (0)

Big game tonight

Big game tonight

Photo: Cheryl Hogan

The Mammoth Huskies take on the Bishop Broncos at Bishop High School tonight, beginning with JV at 4 p.m. and followed by Varsity at 7 p.m.

Posted in Arts and Life, Sports/OutdoorsComments (0)

Senn recognized

The National Society of High School Scholars (NSHSS) selected Mammoth High School senior Jolene M. Senn for membership over the summer.

NSHSS selects students based on a combination of test scores and grade point average.

Membership in NSHSS entitles qualified students to enjoy a wide variety of benefits, including scholarship opportunities, academic competitions, member-only resources and much more.

Senn, who carries a 4.167 GPA, is interested in Forensic Science and Criminal Justice, and plans to apply to Cal Lutheran, UC Santa Cruz and UC

San Diego to further her studies next year.

 




 


 

Posted in NewsComments (4)

MHS football opens at home versus Whittier

MHS football opens at home versus Whittier

Pictured: Coach Marty Thompson (center) was out lining the field Thursday morning following his graveyard shift at the P.D. He’s flanked by fellow coaches John Trujillo (left) and Lyn Morris. Thanks to Alpine Paint for donating the paint.

Underkoffler will start at Quarterback

The Mammoth High school football team, coming off a 5-5 season in 2011, opens the new season Friday, Aug. 24 at home versus Whittier Christian.

Per usual, it’s a numbers game for Head Coach Marty Thompson, but fortunately, he’s got a large enough roster to play.

Twenty-one kids will suit up for Friday’s 7 p.m. tilt.

One who won’t is Senior Co-Captain Matt Graef, who is battling cancer. This has dealt an emotional and physical blow to Thompson and the team.

“He’s the hardest worker I had,” said Thompson. “He was in the weight room all the time, studying film … “

If fans would like to support Matt, they can donate money for a 44-MAG wristband, available at the game or through Coach Thompson at the Mammoth Lakes Police Dept.

Matt Graef, MHS football

The Matt Graef wristband

On the reverse side of the wristband, the message reads “Fight the Good Fight,” and that’s certainly what Graef’s teammates intend to do in his absence this year.

The key skill players on offense are tailback Tyler Wormhoudt (switched from quarterback), fullback Dennis Orrick (who plays linebacker on the other side of the ball), and quarterback Lucas Underkoffler.

Both Orrick and Underkoffler are juniors.

Senior Pablo Apodaca is also one of Thompson’s best players, anchoring a small, but fast and athletic line.

Lack of size up front, however, has caused Thompson to alter the playbook somewhat. You’ll see more zone-blocking schemes out of Mammoth as opposed to linemen being assigned to block a particular man on a play.

The challenge Friday night will be to match up with a Whittier team that not only carries twice as many players, but is also partial to the no-huddle offense.

Look for Whittier to throw the ball a lot, especially to #3, Bronkar, their star receiver, who has apparently already committed to play Division I football at the Air Force Academy next year.

Thompson hopes the altitude will slow Whittier down – that and his “skiers.”

“Our skiers are our toughest players,” said Thompson, noting that Wormhoudt, Underkoffler and Nick Domico are not only great athletes, but they’re in tremendous shape.

They’ll have to be to keep up with Whittier on Friday.

Game time is 7 p.m. at Gault-McClure stadium.

 

Posted in Arts and Life, Sports/OutdoorsComments (0)

Money: always something to cheer about

Money: always something to cheer about

Mammoth Lakes’ Noon Rotary Club recently contributed $500 to the Mammoth High School Cheer Team to help purchase uniforms and support transportation to away games. (Photo courtesy ML Noon Rotary)


Posted in Arts and LifeComments (0)

MHS Class of 2012

MHS Class of 2012

One group shot of the 2012 graduating class at Mammoth High School, with future plans listed in parentheses. Pictured from left: Ashley Meads (Paul Mitchell), Katie Yanez (Cerro Coso – Criminal Justice), Meagan Ross (Undecided), Mishelle Fiebiger (UC Santa Cruz – Human Biology), Jamie Hicks (Truckee C.C. – Health), Makie Dawson (Korea Exchange Program), Kendall Tani (UCLA – Biology), Jessie Harris (UC Santa Cruz – Anthropology)

This year, The Sheet joined forces with Roberto’s Cafe owners Joanie and Dan Schaller in offering $1,500 worth of academic scholarships to the Mammoth High School Class of 2012, which graduates on Friday, June 15.

Actually, the original number was $1,000 but once you start reading essays and gain an appreciation for the fine young people in our community … the number was bound to drift upwards.

Bryson Blake is the youngest son of the late Rick Blake, who passed away the summer after Bryson’s freshman year.

Bryson plans to attend Cerro Coso this summer and fall before transferring to the University of San Diego to attend school with his elder brother Kenden.

Kenden, by the way, has committed to rejoining the football team. He has two more years of eligibility left.

Bryson, meanwhile, hopes to walk on to the golf team.

Bryson has worked two jobs throughout high school in addition to being a student-athlete.

Roberto’s Cafe/Sheet scholarship winners Bryson Blake, Marcos Humes and Kendall Tani

What impresses me most about Bryson is his maturity, the way he can look you in the eye, and his continuing commitment to make his father proud.

His essay made Joanie cry. Enough said.

Marcos Humes was a former member of the Mammoth Freeride Ski Team, but injuries and a recent surgery have changed his focus.

He plans to enroll in the Exercise Science Program at Northern Arizona University with the goal of becoming an Occupational Therapist.

What Marcos has an abundance of is potential, and he really seems to be getting his act together. What struck me about him when I finally met him was his positive spirit. He definitely has the temperament to help people. His chosen field appears to be a good match.

Kendall Tani just flat out wrote the best essay we received, and as a newspaper publisher, I have a weakness for good writing.

Kendall was the Class Valedictorian this year, and plans to attend UCLA. Her dream: to become a Forensic Pathologist.

The time commitment: 8 years of additional schooling followed by more years of fellowships and internships.

Kendall, however, is not daunted by it. In fact, she has a keen sense of humor.

“I may not become a doctor, but I will have the medical knowledge to care for my parents and the skills to perform their autopsies when they die of heart attacks due to my incurring massive debt,” she wrote in conclusion.

 

Miguel Flores 

Miguel Flores has been drawing his whole life. And if a $40,000 scholarship is any indication, it appears he’s gotten pretty good at it.

Flores attended the California State Summer School for the Arts last summer in Valencia for one month. At the end of his stay, he was rewarded with a $40,000 grant to apply towards college matriculation.

This coming fall, Flores will enroll in the Fine Arts program at UCLA.

While Mammoth High School may not have offered all the art classes he wanted, Flores is lucky enough to live in the Eastern Sierra where great artists like Lori Michelon reside and teach.

Flores took two of her classes at Cerro Coso.

Flores has been in the High School’s AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination) program since his freshman year, and enjoyed his time at MHS. “Everyone for the most part is nice. Mammoth is a great place to grow up. There’s not a whole lot of bullying. It’s a nice environment to learn. And some teachers really challenge you,” he said, mentioning Cheryl Hart (Science) specifically.

Flores was also a fan of Spencer (Spanish), Cooper (English) and LeFrancois. Another favorite (Wilson) has moved away.

A member of the Honor Society, Miguel also helped out the Drama Dept. during his high school career, building sets and doing makeup.

His favorite classmate: Keila Yanez

Sheet: What do you think of Liz Garcia?

Flores: She wants to be a mechanic and she’s totally awesome.

 

Liz Garcia

Liz Garcia 

Liz Garcia does not appear in any of the group shots this week because she happened to be in Fremont checking out WyoTech.

She liked what she saw.

Garcia will enroll in a 14-month auto mechanics program at WyoTech this fall. Her dream: To work on high end and/or classic cars.

She will join a student body that is just 8% female.

Her inspiration is a familiar name around these parts – Tom Gault. She took auto shop from him freshman year (before he retired and the school eliminated the program).

Garcia has two cousins who own a shop in Merced as well as a cousin who owns an auto shop in Mexico, so clearly mechanical aptitude runs in the family.

Garcia played both Varsity Basketball and Varsity Soccer. She served as one of the captains and was a teammate of Sandy Grimaldo’s (see below).

Favorite class: Ceramics with Mr. Cohen

 

Sandy Grimaldo 

Sandy Grimaldo is one helluva soccer player. And she wants to take her soccer as far as she can go.

She will attend Santa Barbara City College this fall with the hopes of ultimately transferring to a four-year school with a Division I program.

Born in Mexico, Grimaldo moved to Mammoth Lakes when she was 10 years old and learned English when she arrived.

A middle child (“the funny one” she says), Sandy was raised by a single mother. “She got me through everything,” says Grimaldo.

Sandy has matured a whole bunch since her freshman year, and credits soccer (she started playing in tenth grade) and the influence of her coach Tom Cage as inspiring her to dream bigger dreams.

Not only did Cage speak to the Santa Barbara coach on her behalf, but he even drove her to take her SATs.

She also says the awards she’s received in soccer (league MVP her senior season) have contributed to her self-confidence.

Outside of school, Grimaldo helps her mother take care of Alice Stapp. Kirk Stapp calls Sandy, “a superstar. She has ambitions. She breaks the mold.”

Grimaldo will be putting herself through school. When I asked her what type of work she would get, Sandy replied, “I’ll probably get a restaurant job … as a host. I like greeting people, I guess.”

Favorite teachers: Cooper and LeFrancois.

Favorite historical era: The Roaring Twenties. “I liked the dancing, the flappers, the freedom, the openness.”

Favorite work of literature:The Merchant of Venice.


Mishelle Fiebiger

Mishelle Fiebiger, the Senior Class Treasurer, heads off to UC Santa Cruz next year to study Human Biology. Her career aspiration: to become a pediatrician.

“I initially wanted to do Emergency Room work, but … I’m not sure I want to be around death every day. So I chose life instead.”

Mishelle will be clearly missed by her father Mike (owner of Alpine Garage). “He brought me Starbucks [to school] this morning and then he came back later to give me lunch money.”

Sheet: Your father calls himself the Human Versatel. Is this true?

Mishelle (smiling): Yeah. Kind of. He likes to make everyone happy and he doesn’t like to say no.

Then Mishelle added, “I’m really independent, although that last story doesn’t make it sound like it. I’ve been working since I was 14 (Restaurant Lulu, Angel’s Restaurant, Babysitting). Like my dad, I like to be around people.”

This summer, Mishelle will shadow Dr. Kristin Wilson at Mammoth Hospital, part of her indoctrination into her chosen field.

At Mammoth High, Fiebiger’s favorite teachers were Glenn Kenny (A.P. English), Deidre Buchholz (Math) and Erin LeFrancois (U.S. History and Government).

What did she think of her experience at Mammoth High School?

On the positive side of the ledger, there is an ease and a cohesion to the class. Fiebiger said she has friends who attend Bishop High School and her experience is that the Bishop student body is more segregated and fragmented.

On the downside, you take the same classes with the same people over and over again. “I know what they think,” she says. “I know what bugs them.”

 

Back row from left: Marley Herrera (Undecided), Joseph Rudolph (Cerro Coso - Transition Program), Jonny Lopez (Tahoe C.C. - Radiology Tech), Ethan Schultz (Northern Arizona Univ. - Mechanical Engineering). Front row fron left: Perla Gastelum (Cerro Coso), Clare Peckenpaugh (Univ. of Denver - Statistics), Rebecca Nelson (Arizona State Univ. - Life Sciences).

Back row from left: Rolando Guzman-Rangel (Cal Maritime - Electrical Engineering), Wendy Solorio (College of the Desert - Nursing), Jesus Leon (Cerro Coso - Kinesiology), Daniela Delgado (Sacramento - Cosmetology). Middle row: Michelle Magdaleno-Vasquez (Santa Barbara City College - Pediatrics), Front row from left: Arely Bramona (Cerro Coso - Dentistry), Sandy Grimaldo (Santa Barbara City College - Linguistics), Juan Carlos Gonzales (Cerro Coso - Undecided), Armando Alvarado (Tahoe C.C. - Firefighter), Stacy Hernandez (College of the Desert - Criminal Justice)

 

Back row from left: Angelica Garcia (College of Southern Nevada), Ana Godinez (Cerro Coso - Nursing), Mimi Lemus (Cerro Coso - Business), Manuela Murguia (Cerro Coso - Business), Middle row from left: Jenni Villalpando (Fresno State - Nursing), Jazmin Solorio (Cerro Coso - Nursing), Maritza Cortez (Cerro Coso - Nursing). Front row from left: Maria Ramirez (Cerro Coso - Spanish), Perla Espitia (Cerro Coso - Nursing), Jo-Jo Medina (Cerro Coso - Nursing), Vanessa Rodriguez (Cerro Coso).

Front: Deslie Garcia (Cerro Coso - Medicine), Middle: Tony Villa (Mesa College - Architecture), Leslie Garcia (Cerro Coso - Art), Back row fron left: Walter Perez (Cerro Coso - Criminal Justice), Alex Carrillo (Cerro Coso - Law Enforcement), Juan Partida (Cerro Coso - Undecided), Jesus Hernandez (work)

Back row, from left: Eli Martin (Cerro Coso - Business Mgmt.), Jonah Salgado (Cerro Coso - Undecided), Raul Vargas, Daniel Rousek (Cerro Coso - Computer Science), Bryson Blake (Cerro Coso then transferring to the Univ. of San Diego), Lalo Alejandre (Cerro Coso). Seated from left: Oscar Hernandez (Cerro Coso), Robbie Escallier (Northern Arizona Univ. - Nursing), Ryan Gellar (Cuesta College - Psychology), Alex Picken (UC Santa Cruz - Anthropology). Lap: Juan Maldonado (San Bernardino City College)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


MHS class of 2012

From left: Marcos Humes (Northern Arizona Univ. - Physical Therapy), Carsen Philbrook (Undecided), Madeline Riffel (Univ. of Vermont), Miguel Flores (UCLA - Fine Art), Kelsey Blanche (Cerro Coso - Child Development), Ashley Garrison (Northeastern Wisconsin Techmical College - Teaching), Dallas Polis (Miramar College - Fire Academy), Shaw Busby (Cuesta College - Engineering).

Posted in Arts and Life, NewsComments (0)

Baseball bids adieu to senior players

Baseball bids adieu to senior players

Pictured from left to right: Head Coach Scott Luke, Rolando Guzman, Dallas Polis, Ryan Geller and Assistant Coach Dan Polis.

The annual MHS baseball alumni game was held on Saturday, May 12 marking the end of the 2012 season and final high school game for three MHS seniors; Ryan Geller, Rolando Guzman and Dallas Polis.

The annual fundraising golf tournament is being held at Sierra Star Golf Course on Sunday, May 20. Come register a team between 7:30 – 9 a.m. to contribute.

Posted in Arts and Life, Sports/OutdoorsComments (0)

MHS student hacker arrested

On May 11, a 15-year-old Mammoth Lakes High School student was arrested following an investigation into alleged hacking of the school’s computer system for the purpose of changing student grades. Officer Andy Lehr, the School Resource Officer, became aware of the crime approximately one week ago and after interviewing several students, identified the subject and determined that he was changing the grades for other students for money.

The student, whose name will not be released due to his age, was arrested for 502 of the Penal Code (Unauthorized Access to Computers, Computer Systems, and Computer Data) and 460 PC (Second Degree Burglary) and released to his parents. He was cited back to Juvenile Court. -Press Release

For more information see Lunch’s report from last Friday’s paper.

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Peeps show

Peeps show

Mammoth High School students held a Pop Culture Diarama competition last month using Peeps marshmallow candy. First place honors went to “Peeptanic” by Ruby Villalpando, Perla Esptitia, Maria Lopez & Erica Maravillas! (Photo: Geisel)

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Not so easy A

One student has been suspended thus far and an investigation is ongoing into a computer hacking scandal at Mammoth High School.

A student has apparently been able to hack into the school’s computer system and change fellow students’ grades in exchange for money.

In an email to staff this week, Mammoth High School Principal Gabe Solorio wrote, “I’ve had two teachers possibly have their grades compromised (assignments were added and possibly test grades changed) but we do not know who, how, or when and CBT (Carmichael Business Technology) is looking into this also. I don’t know if they’ll be able to track it back or not. I’ll keep you posted if I get information. Please do not give your passwords to students or have them written down where they can be seen. These kids are very savvy and who knows how the gradebook was compromised.”

While Solorio said the issue came to his attention at the end of last week, The Sheet spoke to one teacher who said that he/she had informed Solorio that there might be a problem more than a month ago.

The teacher said he/she overheard a group of students talking about other kids paying for grades, stopped to talk to the students and confirm what was being said, and then immediately related this conversation to Solorio.

The going rate for a grade change? Apparently just $10. Editor’s note: Clearly, the school might wish to offer an Introduction to Economics class. 

Out of curiosity, the teacher then went back to his/her own gradebook from the first semester to see if any grades had been altered. The teacher has a suspicion that one grade may have been changed.

So here’s the problem with going to a small school if you’re a computer hacking entrepreneur. When something like this comes up, it’s hard to hide.

The Sheet interviewed several students after school let out on Wednesday, asking, “Which of your fellow students is most capable of hacking a computer system?” In response, the same name came up every single time.

A teacher verified that this student had been busted previously for taking down firewalls on the school’s library computers. Firewalls had been placed on websites like YouTube and Facebook to ensure that the kids would actually use the computers for school-related purposes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in NewsComments (0)