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Puzzler answers; Win a prize
Young Saint Louis.com
wants to help you have fun with math. And, you might also
win a prize.
(To
meet Mr. Math Puzzler, click
here.)
Starting this
month, a series of Math Puzzlers will be included in each
edition of YSL.com. These are for your entertainment.
This is not a class assignment. But, we hope you'll have fun
figuring out the answers.
If you want to
submit your answers, we'll publish next month the names of
those who answered all questions correctly. Also, we'll get
an explanation of all the correct answers.
As an ADDED
BONUS, we'll put all the correct entries into a hat and
draw for three $10 gift certificates from Borders Book Stores.
A note:
We've made these Math Puzzlers challenging, especially for
younger kids. We don't mind if you get help from a parent
or older brother or sister. We encourage you to make this
a family activity, if you'd like.
Here's how to
enter:
- Print out
the following entry form.
- Fill out your
name, address and telephone number.
- Give your
answers to the six Math Puzzlers.
- Put your completed
entry into a stamped envelope.
- Mail your
entry to:
Math Puzzler Contest
Young Saint Louis.com
7733 Forsyth Blvd., Suite 1450
Clayton, MO 63105
- All entries
must be postmarked by the 15th of the month to be eligible
for a book prize.
----------Clip
here to make entry----------
Entry
for September, 2001, Math Puzzler Contest:
Name: _________________________________________
Address: _______________________________________
City:_____________________,
State:______ ZIP_______
Contact phone
no.(____)____________________
The
Math Puzzlers
(Sept. 2001)
1. Which of the
following is the odd one out?
A. CUBE
B. SQUARE
C. SPHERE
D. CYLINDER
E. OCTAHEDRON |
Answer:___________
2.
If you divide 552 by 1/4, and then divide the result by half
of the original figure, what is the result?
Answer:___________
3. What is the
answer if, from the numbers below, you multiply by five the
number of even numbers that are immediately followed by an
odd number?
4
7 8 5 3 1 9 7 8 4 4 7 8 9 2 3
Answer:___________
4. What number
should replace the question mark?
5----4 6----7 8----4 9-----3
| | | | | | | |
| 27 | | 40 | | 71 | | ? |
| | | | | | | |
7----6 9----7 5----9 5-----4
Answer:___________
5. Find X.
8 x 7
------------- = X
2/7 - 2/1
|
Answer:___________
6. Find the secret
number by using the six clues.
a. It is
a four-digit whole number.
b. It is greater than 4,000.
c. The sum of its hundreds digit and its ones dig is 9.
d. Twice its tens digit is 2 more than its thousands digit.
e. The sum of one-fifth of its hundreds digit and two-thirds
of its ones digit is 6.
f. Its tens digit is 1 less than its thousands digit. |
Answer:__________
Mr. Math Puzzler
Wayne
Hesse believes math can be fun for all
Teacher Wayne
Hesse has a poster at the front of his 8th grade homeroom
at Green Park Lutheran School in south St. Louis County. It
says: "Math Is Fun."
He's the school's
7th and 8th grade math teacher. He admits his students don't
always agree with the "fun" part.
But, during his
25 years as an elementary and middle school teacher, he's
collected a bunch of toys as well as riddles and puzzles to
show the "fun" of math. A lot of these exercises
are done without having any grading involved.
Young Saint Louis.com
heard about Mr. Hesse's activities last school year. We asked
him if he'd share some of his riddles and puzzles with the
kids who look at our website. He agreed to become Mr. Math
Puzzler.
Then, we decided
to make up a contest and ask kids to submit answers. We'll
check the answers and list all the kids who answered them
correctly. Also, YSL.com will put all the correct entries
into a hat and draw for three $10 Borders Book Store gift
certificates.
YSL.com
asked Hesse to make the contest questions difficult but try
to include an element of "fun."
Hesse uses his
toys, riddles and puzzles as extra-curricular activities for
his students.
Kids who complete
a regular assignment earlier than others can choose from among
50 manipulative toys or from a box of printed riddles and
puzzles. Also, he might make a riddle and puzzle for weekend
assignments but not grade the answers.
"I want them
to put in serious time but I don't want them to worry about
a grade," he said. He also urges the kids to involve
their parents in the weekend activities.
Hesse is a guy
who does other things besides math. For one thing, he enjoys
riding his motorcycle long distances. "I enjoy riding
more than when I get to the destination," he said.
This summer, he
took a ride all the way to northern Michigan and back...in
one weekend.
He also enjoys
heavy lifting, such as when he works on a delivery truck for
a friend who has a furniture store.
It seems logical
that a guy who can have fun lifting furniture also could find
ways to have fun and games with math.
Hesse hopes his
riddles and puzzles will help kids develop an ability to find
solutions in a logical manner.
He said, "Kids
are very resourceful in finding answers to the riddles and
puzzles, even if the way they do it is different than I might
do. But, if their way also is logical, that's fine."
We welcome Wayne
Hesse to YSL.com and hope you have fun with his Math
Puzzlers.
News
You
learn about history
while watching future unfold
Metro area kids
are invited to eavesdrop on local planning for a 2003-2005
Lewis and Clark Bi-Centennial Expedition. They can learn important
history lessons too.
The preliminary
activities for the expedition already have started. And two
local websites will keep you up to date all during the school
year.
One of sites is
run by the University of Missouri-St. Louis' College of Education.
It's called Corps of ReDiscovery and you can reach it at www.urbanachievement.org/lc/
You can urge your
local school to take an active part in planning lessons concerning
the original Lewis and Clark expedition some 200 years ago.
That started from St. Louis and explored the Missouri River
basin.
Eventually, Lewis
and Clark got all the way to the Pacific Ocean.
Jim Sturm is a
teacher in the Clayton schools. He's helping recruit schools
to take part in the UMSL program. He's already written a sample
lesson plan for the website. It will help teachers and students
plan their own history and science projects.
He's interested
in signing up schools all along the route of the original
Lewis and Clark journey. Last month, he visited an Native
American school in Pierre, S.D., to get those students involved.
Another Clayton
teacher, Scott Mandrell, is planning to take a two-year leave
of absence in 2003-2005. He will portray Meriwether Lewis
during the re-enactment of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
The other website
is for the Discovery Expedition of St. Louis. That's the group
that includes boatbuilder Glen Bishop. He makes full-size
replicas of the keelboats and other craft the original explorers
used to travel up the Missouri River.
That website is
www.lewisandclark.net.
Both websites
already include a day-by-day diary and pictures from a recent
trip by the keelboats crews in costume on the Missouri River
through South Dakota. That August trip ran into huge man-made
obstacles the original Lewis and Clark expedition didn't see.
The U.S. Corps
of Engineers has built giant dams on the Missouri to attempt
to control flooding.
As a result, the
present-day expedition had to portage around the Big Bend,
Fort Randall and Gavin Point dams.
The diary by Scott
Mandrell, in costume as Meriwether Lewis, is already on both
websites along with pictures. Mandrell is trying to write
his diary with the same style the original Lewis used in the
early 1800s.
He even signs
off his diary entries with: "Your obedient servant, Scott
Mandrell as Captain Meriwether Lewis."
Carl Hoagland
is the director of UMSL's E. Desmond Lee Technology and Learning
Center. That center is the host for the Corps of ReDiscovery
website.
He said kids can
get involved in the website when their schools register with
the center. Teachers can get information by e-mailing Jon
Basden at jbasden@mac.com.
Basden is a graduate student who is in charge of the UMSL
website.
Here's an example
of a lesson plan written by Clayton teacher Jim Sturm which
is already on the UMSL website.
The lesson proposition
is: President Thomas Jefferson asks an aide to advise him
whether he should support the Lewis and Clark expedition.
He also wants advice on how to hide expedition expenses because
Congress already has passed the current federal budget.
Students in a
class would be divided into smaller groups to investigate
different aspects of the problem. Those include:
- Assessing
the military value of the expedition.
- Create a map
of the United States for the year 1800.
- Develop a
transportation timeline for the expedition. (Remember:
there are no highways, railroads or motorized land vehicles
at this time.)
- Assess living
conditions in the 1800s.
- Detail what
sort of preparations are needed for the expedition.
- Jefferson
also wants background checks on Meriwether Lewis and William
Clark.
Another source
of local information about Lewis and Clark is the Lewis and
Clark Center in St. Charles. That website is at www.lewisandclarkcenter.org.
Of course you
can survey this sites, along with other weblinks, just for
your own fun also.
Nation
Kids
find a perfect audience to read to: Dogs
Kids in Utah
and Oregon are getting a chance to practice their reading
skills on an audience that always pays attention and never
criticizes the way they read.
The perfect audience
is a dog, preferably one who's sort of a "couch potato."
(For
a related story from St. Louis, see sidebar below.)
At weekend library
reading programs, kids get to read a book to a dog that has
been specially trained to be an attentive audience. The training
makes sure the dog likes children, will pay attention and
show interest while the kids are reading.
But, they never
complain, even if they've heard the same book a number of
times.
Sandi Martin of
Salt Lake City is the founder of the Reading Education Assistant
Dogs (R.E.A.D.) program.
She said, "The
ideal dog is one that's comfortable around children, even
a lot of children. And they should be a couch potato so that
it's okay even if the child lays on them while he or she is
reading to them."
Before going to
a reading, the dogs even get cleaned up and dressed up for
the occasion. Each dog gets a special anti-dandruff shampoo
and wears special red bandannas. Their adult handlers that
come along also have special red T-shirts.
Martin is a nurse
and has used animals in therapy with children who have medical
problems. "We know how animals can benefit medically
challenged patients," Martin said.
Martin said, "A
couple years ago, I woke up one night at 2 a.m. with the idea
that animals also could help kids with their reading. Reading-challenged
kids have many of the same emotional problems as do medically-challenged
patients."
She made an appointment
at the Salt Lake City Public Library to explain her idea.
She offered herself and her Portuguese water dog named Olivia
as a "listener."
Dana Tumpowsky
was the library's community relations manager. After Martin
explained what she had in mind, Tumpowsky said she thought,
"This woman's crazy."
But, Tumpowsky
was soon convinced.
The first reading-to-dogs
sessions were at the city's main library. They involved six
therapy dogs, two hours each week for four weeks in a row.
Each kid got one dog to read to for up to 30 minutes.
Now, the main
library and all five branches have what are called "Dog
Day Afternoons" programs every Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m.
The program has
been getting national attention. Last month, the Wall Street
Journal featured an article about the spread of the program
to Oregon. At Gresham, Ore., the Multnomah County Library
has adopted the program.
In addition, Martin's
program has been used for a 16-month reading test at Bennion
Elementary School in Salt Lake City. There, 10 "at risk"
kids who all were reading "below level" were given
a chance to read one-on-one to a dog for 30 minutes each week.
The adult dog
handler helps to check on the kids' ability to pronounce words
or to comprehend what they read.
But, Martin said,
"When checking on comprehension, the handler will ask,
'Do you think your dog understands that. Tell her what it
means.'" When there is a question about what a word means,
the handler will ask the child to read the dictionary meaning
to the dog.
Martin said, "All
the kids made reading progress. And four of the 10 earned
Triple A Awards at their school. Those are awards to children
to earn top grades in science, math and reading."
In the school
program, the kids get an incentive for reading the books.
"After a child reads 10 books, they get to pick out a
book for themselves. Then, the dog autographs the book with
a paw print," Martin said.
But, Martin said
her program isn't just for kids with reading problems. She
said the idea of reading to a dog can help all kids enjoy
reading more.
In the library
reading sessions, the kids are encouraged to sit close to
the dog and even pet it while reading. The petting seems to
act as a natural tranquilizer for high-strung kids.
That close contact
by many kids is why it's important that the dog be a "couch
potato" who likes to sit quietly and pay attention to
the show.
For more about
the R.E.A.D. program, you can log on to the Therapy Animals
website at www.therapyanimals.org.
Then click on to the R.E.A.D. icon on the left aide of the
home page.
|
St.
Louis has therapy animal programs also
St. Louis
has a number of programs that use animals as therapy
for both kids and adults.
There's
one program where handicapped kids are given horseback
rides.
But, the
local program closest to the Utah reading program involves
greyhound dogs. The Rescued Racers organization takes
greyhound dogs to libraries and schools. Adults then
read books about greyhounds, after which the kids pet
and touch the dogs.
Leann Forister
is the founder of the Rescued Racers program . Her group
gets greyhounds after they can no longer race and finds
them good homes.
She said
the greyhounds are ideal house pets because they are
patient with kids.
But, this
program involves adults reading to the kids while the
dogs are nearby.
For more
information about the Rescued Racer program, log on
to the website at www.rescuedracers.com.
|
Books
This
month's book reviews
Sisters
become world's top tennis players
If you like to
read the life stories of famous sports figures, you will like
this book. Especially, if you are interested in tennis, you
will find the story of the two sisters, Venus and Serena Williams,
a book you will want to read.
The book, "Venus
and Serena: The Grand Slam Williams Sisters," emphasizes
the many accomplishments of these two young tennis stars.
They are the first sisters to be ranked among the best players
in the world. They are the first sisters to have both won
a Grand Slam singles championship. Venus, the older sister,
won the 2000 Wimbledon championship, at age twenty. Serena,
the younger sister, won the U.S. Open Championship in 1999,
at age eighteen. And the book, new as it is, does not reflect
what the girls accomplished in 2001.
The young women
have drawn even greater attention throughout the world because
they are African American girls. Their father, Richard, was
the one who developed their skills. He has been their main
coach and teacher on the road to their becoming tennis champions.
Richard was the son of a Louisiana sharecropper and grew up
in a life of hard work and poverty. He studied tennis on his
own and, although he never played, he was able to coach Venus
when she showed an interest in tennis. Then, to his surprise,
Venus' younger sister, Serena, showed very early that she
wanted to play, just like Venus. Both girls loved the game
and from an early age showed unusual talent.
Only one player
can be ranked number one in women's tennis. Interestingly,
both Williams sisters have the skills to make it. One of their
hardest jobs is when tournament competition leads to their
having to play each other for a championship. The book explains
how they can be loving sisters, who support each other, yet
can compete without reservation, when they have to play each
other in a tournament.
Because the sisters
are still so young, there is still a lot yet to be written
in this story about these two champion athletes. Already,
they are famous celebrities and are role models for thousands
of female athletes around the world.
Controversy
and middle grade kids
doing a classroom newspaper
Cara Landry is
a fifth grader who printed her own newspaper. She loved doing
it and knew she was good at it. Cara was in a new school and,
even though she had to print her newspaper by hand, she produced
one and pinned it up on the bulletin board. To her surprise,
the other kids read it and really liked what she was doing.
Her teacher, Mr. Larson, who drank coffee and read newspapers
all day long, was surprised by one of Cara's editorials criticizing
his lazy approach to teaching. He felt guilty because he knew
Cara was right. He decided to encourage the class to produce
a classroom newspaper and named Cara to edit it. The class
decided to keep calling it "The Landry News" because
it was Cara's idea in the first place.
Surprisingly,
Mr. Larson started giving out assignments that the kids really
bought into. With help from the school librarian, the kids
composed a weekly newspaper on the computer and printed out
hundreds of copies. The whole school started reading it, as
well as the parents at home. The principal, Dr. Barnes, had
been looking for an excuse to fire Mr. Larson. He saw the
newspaper as a chance to get rid of a teacher he didn't like.
He was looking for just one story to appear that would give
him a reason. Well, as you would guess, that story did show
up in "The Landry News."
The rest of the
book deals with "freedom of the press" issues as
Mr. Larson and "The Landry News" go on trial before
the School Board. There are a number of plot twists before
the issue of freedom of the press for a fifth grade newspaper
is finally resolved. It turns out Cara learned a lot and so
did all the fifth graders, along with Mr. Larson and Dr. Barnes.
For any kids who
think they would like to be a newspaper reporter, this is
a must read book.
A
mystery with a real cool New York
juvenile solver of mysteries as a hero
Peter Christian
Hawke is seventeen years old high school junior who likes
to be called just P.C. Hawke. He has just recently lost his
mother. His father is a famous archeologist, who is head of
that department at the New York City's Museum of Natural History.
Since his father has just left to carbon-date some bones in
Sumatra, P.C. can use his father's museum office as a hangout.
While P.C. is in his dad's office, one of the museum's bug
researchers is murdered. The custodian, a friend of P.C.'s,
is caught with his hand around the victim's neck. P.C. knows
his friend didn't commit the murder, but he can't prove it,
nor does he know who the real killer is.
The story's plot
involves P.C. Hawke and his friends in trying to catch the
murderer while saving an innocent man from being convicted.
One obstacle is a tough police lieutenant, who is in charge
of the investigation. She thinks P.C. and his friends are
spoiled kids who should just stay out of the way. She is not
in the least interested in P.C.'s theory that some kind of
hypnosis was involved in the crime and that the killer was
trying to cover up the theft of a priceless necklace.
It wouldn't be
a good mystery thriller unless the real killer has it in mind
to kill the meddling kid who is about to mess up his perfect
crime. And the killer almost does end P. C.'s sleuthing career.
How
about a series combining catastrophe, science fiction, and
futurism, all rolled into one?
"Remnants"
is the first book in a series called "The Mayflower Project."
The author is K. A. Applegate, who is also author of the "Animorph's"
series, which seems to add a new book every time you go to
the bookstore.
The year is 2011.
An asteroid large enough to destroy all human life is about
to impact the earth. About eighty people have been selected
to be placed in a capsule and rocketed into space. They are
the only hope for a renewal of human life.
What makes the
story interesting is the strange collection of people that
have been picked to make the voyage. The main character in
the book is a fourteen-year-old, named Jobs, who is a computer
whiz and a genius. It appears that the villain will be Yago,
who happens to be the teen-age son of the president of the
United States, but unfortunately, is also evil and a danger
to others. The last hours of other characters are explored,
as they are all being rushed to the launching pad. In the
case of one pair of characters, they are trying to figure
out how to sneak aboard, since they have not been invited.
The launch is
a dramatic event to read about. Book # 2 in the series is
called "Destination Unknown."
Health
Eyesight
problem doesn't stop young wrestler
Ten-year-old Kyle
Bradley can't see well enough to recognize his wrestling opponents.
But, that doesn't keep him from pinning most of them.
Ten-year-old Kyle
has a degenerative eye disease called retinoschisis. That's
a genetic disease for which there is no treatment or cure
and eventually may lead to blindness.
But, the fifth
grader at Fairmount Elementary School in St. Charles County
wanted to participate in athletics.
"I couldn't
play baseball but the doctor said I could play soccer and
participate in wrestling," he said.
So far, he's doing
just fine, thank you.
Earlier this year,
he earned All-American status by finishing third in the USA
National Championships. He wrestled in the 65-pound weight
class for 10 years olds. After losing one match, he fought
back to win six matches in a row to get third place.
The last day of
the tournament was on his birthday, April 1.
Then, on Memorial
Day Weekend, he wrestled in three different styles at the
Tulsa (OK.) Ironman Championships. He finished first in freestyle
and third in Greco-Roman and folkstyle wrestling.
In the Missouri
Show-me Games, he finished first in his wrestling class and
then was a member of the Ultimate Machine soccer team that
took first place honors.
In wrestling,
Kyle usually can't see well enough to recognize his opponent.
"I can't see people's faces, but I remember what clothes
they are wearing," he said. And he recognizes movement.
Wrestling is a
hand-to-hand sport where touch and feel is more important.
And, in soccer,
he said, "I can see the white ball against the green
grass."
Asked about his
biggest problem in wrestling, he said, "I can't see the
scorer's table or the time remaining." He said his coach
or father. Randy, shout to him during the match.
Kyle has some
role models in sports. On of his favorites is Erik Weihenmayer.
He's the guy who recently completed a climb of the world's
tallest mountain, Mount Everest. Erik is blind with the same
disease that Kyle has.
Kyle's mother,
Annette, recently bought Kyle a copy of Weihenmayer's inspirational
book. It's titled, "Touch the Top of the World."
Right now, Kyle's
eyesight is stable. But, he has only 20-80 vision in his right
eye and 20-100 in his left eye. Normal vision is 20-20.
He has to use
special magnifiers and large print books for his school work.
He's also working hard to become a touch typist so he'll be
able to handle a computer even if his eyesight gets worse.
Asked about future
goals, he said, "I want to wrestle in the 2012 Olympic
Games."
He isn't worried
about his future size. The slender Kyle said, "All of
the good wrestlers are small anyway."
One of his favorite
wrestlers is Sammie Henson, who went to school in the Francis
Howell School District, where Kyle lives. Henson is a world
champion wrestler and also is small.
Kyle has been
playing soccer since he was five but didn't start wrestling
until three years ago. He has a regular conditioning program
but has stayed away from weight-lifting. Many doctors and
trainers usually discourage weight training for kids until
the "growth plates" on their bones are done growing.
His conditioning
consists of running two miles a day and then doing 100 situps
and pushups each day. He usually splits the situps and pushups
to 50 of each in the morning and 50 more at night.
"I also got
a 'power tower' for my birthday a year ago," he said.
That allows him to vary some of his exercise routine. He also
does "leg raises" on the fireplace hearth. They
help lengthen and strengthen his Achilles tendons.
Another role model
for Kyle is Olympic wrestler Brandon Slay. Asked what he likes
about him, Kyle said, "He's a Christian."
Kyle has copied
Slay's habit of stenciling a Bible verse on his wrestling
knee pads.
Kyle's verse is
Psalms 144:1. It says, "Blessed be the Lord, my rock,
who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle."
Lifestyle
Kids
help make a neighborhood garden
A group of city
kids and their Big Brothers, Big Sisters partners have made
a new neighborhood garden from a litter-filled vacant lot.
How they did it
is a good example of cooperation among groups trying to improve
neighborhoods in the City of St. Louis.
The kids and adults
from the Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri did
the first work on the garden. The garden site is in the Benton
Park West neighborhood in south St. Louis.
After getting
the garden established, the Big Brothers, Big Sisters group
turned it over to neighborhood residents. They will maintain
it and develop it further.
But, the Big Brothers,
Big Sisters kids and adults plan to come back in the fall.
They'll help residents plant flower bulbs that will bloom
next spring.
Fourteen-year-old
Thaddeus Smith is one of the neighborhood kids who also worked
on the garden in the beginning. His mother, Tamya, is one
of the neighborhood residents who have agreed to keep up the
garden.
The Benton Park
West garden isn't a vegetable garden. Rather, it is an ornamental
garden with statues, walkways and seats set among the borders
of herbs and decorative plants.
Thaddeus is a
ninth grader in Lindbergh High School. He, his father and
mother joined with 30 adult-kid pairs from Big Brothers, Big
Sisters to make the garden.
Since his mother
is the garden's caretaker, Thaddeus said he sure he'll be
working on garden improvements in the future. One improvement
will be the addition of a wrought-iron fence.
Neighbors also
want to put in a permanent water source so they can keep the
garden green and growing. Right now, a next-door neighbor
lets gardeners hook their watering hose to a faucet at the
house.
Tajuani Shelton
is the program manager for Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Eastern
Missouri.
She said the group's
kids and adults did more than work on the garden. They also
brought money.
The group received
a $2,500 grant from Team St. Louis. That's part of the St.
Louis 2004 organization that's planning a big 100th anniversary
celebration of the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair and Olympics.
Team St. Louis
gives mini-grants to groups for local community development
projects. The Benton Park West garden project is just the
type of effort that group likes to support. And Big Brothers,
Big Sisters was the right type of group to get the money.
(If you'd like
to know more about Team St. Louis grants, log on to the St.
Louis 2004 website at www.stlouis2004.org.)
The money helped
provide decorative extras for the garden, such as an arched
trellis, a concrete serpent and other statuary along with
seats where visitors can relax in the shade.
Ninth Ward Alderman
Ken Ortmann got the city to put in a new sidewalk. City work
crews donated two big truckloads of wood mulch to make garden
pathways.
Also involved
in the garden project was Gateway Greening. That's a branch
of the Missouri Botanical Garden that gives advice and other
help in establishing community gardens. Kristen Lindner is
the volunteer coordinator for Gateway Greening and helped
with the Benton Park West project.
(For more information
about Gateway Greening, you can log on to its website at www.gatewaygreening.org.)
The garden project
needed plenty of cooperative effort because the original lot
was a mess. A building on the corner lot had been torn down
but the area was littered with weeds, bottles and broken concrete.
There was even an abandoned ping-pong table.
But, now the lot
is a beautiful addition to the neighborhood, which includes
a number of newly-built homes.
Big Brothers,
Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri usually involves one-on-one
friendships between an adult and a kids. They do things together.
Eleven-year-old
Terrase is a 6th grader at Dunbar Elementary School. His Big
Sister for the last two years has been Angie Tabash.
Terrase said,
"We go places together like a Rams football game or a
Cardinals baseball game. We also may go to a movie."
Angie said they
usually get together about twice a month for some special
outing.
Outdoors
Sisters
make jewelry like the Indians did
Sisters Ashley
and Sarah Brendel like to make homemade arts and crafts. Now,
they've learned how to make cordage jewelry out of native
Missouri plants.
While doing that,
they became subjects for a magazine article. They are featured
in the current Missouri Conservation Department's kids quarterly
magazine, OutsideIn.
(To see the
complete OutsideIn article, you can go to the department's
website at: www.conservation.state.mo.us.
Then, click on to the Kids section of the website.)
Fourteen-year-old
Ashley said, "I'm a craftsy person. I want to use things
that you don't have to buy. With cordage jewelry, you can
get the materials in the wild."
Nine-year-old
Sarah said, "I wanted to try to make something the way
the Indians did it in the old days."
They got their
chance to learn to make the unique jewelry during a demonstration
by Bill Davit of Washington, Mo. Davit worked for 30 years
for the Missouri Botanical Garden.
Although he's
retired now, he still gives demonstrations on how Native Americans
made all sorts of rope-like products from plants and trees.
An estimated 1,000 different plants found in North America
were used by Indians to make cordage products.
Some were dainty
things like the cordage jewelry and bracelets the Brendel
girls like.
But, others were
for bigger jobs. One reference book said Indians made fishing
nets that were strong enough to hold huge fish, such as the
river sturgeon. Those fish grew up to 18-feet in length but
the Indians' nets held them.
The local girls
met Davit at a Missouri Botanical Garden demonstration day.
They had come with their father, Ron Brendel, who was there
to show off snakes, lizards and frogs. He's a member of the
St. Louis Herpetological Society.
Ashley said, "Once
we saw Mr. Davit's display, we spent all day there working
on different types of cordage.
"He showed
us all the steps, starting with how to chop off the ends of
plants to get at the fiber."
Some of the common
plants that make good cordage include swamp milkweed, dogbane
(also called Indian hemp), rattlesnake master and stinging
nettle. Of course, when you harvest stinging nettle, it's
good to wear gloves because the nettles do sting the skin.
Indians used plant
cordage for such things as fishing line and nets, carrying
bags, shoes and even clothing.
They also used
cordage to make decoration on clay pottery. The Indians would
make a pot and, then while the clay was still damp, they'd
press their cordage to add texture to the pot's exterior,
Davit said.
One thing that's
often important is to dampen the plant fibers before you start
to weave them. That way, the fiber is more flexible when you
weave it but when it dries the cord is stronger.
Ashley said she
made a woven wooden basket the same way, "I dipped the
sticks into water to soften them so it was easier to weave
them together. But, once they dried, their crooked shapes
were wedged tightly together," she said.
Davit said many
plants make good cordage after they turn brown late in the
season. But, he said the yucca plant's fibers are the finest
when harvested while the leaves are green. Yucca isn't a native
Missouri plant but many homeowners use the spiky plant for
lawn decoration.
"You pick
the leaves when they are green. Then, you boil the leaves
for four hours along with wood ashes. Then, using a blunt
knife or a spoon, you scrap off the remaining green part.
What's left makes fine fibers," he said.
Ashley and Sarah
don't limit their activities to arts and crafts.
Ashley now is
a 9th grader at Incarnate Word High School. She plays soccer
on a club team and basketball at school. She hopes to be a
4th grade teacher when she finishes college.
Sarah is in 5th
grade at Russell Elementary School. She also plays soccer
and basketball. She hopes to be a medical doctor when she
is grown.
They are the daughters
of Ron and Cathy Brendel.
Reading
New
book clubs pair kids and parents
Fourth graders
Megan Schroeder and Andrea Malcolm liked the chance this summer
to team with their moms in a book club experiment.
Judy Gray is the
girls' teacher at Oak Brook Elementary. She signed up 15 kid-adult
pairs to take part in a new book club sponsored by Cooperating
School District (CSD). The summer club featured the famous
St. Louis kids' authors Pat and Fred McKissacks.
The kid and parent
read the same book and then discussed it. Later, they got
a chance to ask the McKissacks questions about how they write
their children's books. The McKissacks talked to club members
by way of two-way video conferencing.
The 85 kid-adult
pairs from eight different schools in the St. Louis metro
area took part in the summer experiment.
(Young Saint
Louis.com last month had a complete story about the CSD
book club experiment and a new writing program. To read that
complete story, just click
here.)
Gray liked the
idea of kids and adults reading the same book so much she's
offering two different clubs to her class this school year.
The first will
be in the CSD program which will feature other famous kids'
authors. The big book publisher, Scholastic, is providing
other authors to replace the McKissacks this school year.
The McKissacks
are going to conduct special writing classes for St. Louis
kids this year.
Gray's other book
club will feature just kids and parents reading the same book.
"A lot of parents wanted to read with their kids but
not do all the other stuff," Gray said.
They've already
got the first book selected. It's titled "The Dark-Thirty,
Southern Tales of Supernatural." That's another book
by Pat McKissack.
Teacher Judy Gray
also plans to feature books by the McKissacks in regular parts
of their reading classes.
Her fourth grade
literature segment involves reading books in a variety of
genre. The categories include folklore, realistic fiction,
fantasy, poetry, science fiction, informational non-fiction,
geography and historical fiction.
"We're going
to research to see how many different categories the McKissacks'
books fit into," Gray said. The McKissacks have written
over 100 kids books.
This emphasis
by Gray on the McKissack books fits well with another program
at the Parkway School District. Oak Brook is in that district.
Pat McKissack
will be the featured speaker at next spring's Parkway Young
Author Conference. Andrea will be an Oak Brook Elementary
delegate next March, Gray said.
The summer book
club selection was Pat McKissack's book, "Nzingha, Warrior
Queen of Matamba, Angola, Africa, 1595." In addition
to reading the book, the kids and parents were asked to do
research on present-day Angola. One of the research questions
was: Do present day Africans eat termites like they did in
olden days?
Each kid was to
have a question to ask the McKissacks in the last video-conference.
Megan's question
was: Did Nzingha stop writing her journal after she got married?
Pat McKissack wrote the book as a series of entries in a daily
journal by the warrior queen.
Megan said she
read the book faster than her mother, Barb Schroeder.
But, Andrea said
she and her mother kept pace with each other in reading the
book. That way they got a chance to discuss different parts
of the book as they went along.
Andrea said she
likes adventures and mysteries. She's especially interested
in the American Girl History Mysteries. One of those she liked
was "The Smuggler's Treasure."
Megan said she's
read all of the Harry Potter books. Her mother said, "She's
more likely to discuss the Harry Potter books with her older
sisters."
Both girls also
participated this summer in the St. Louis County Library's
Summer Reading Program.
Megan and Andrea
have another interest in common. Both said they'd like to
be fashion designers when they get older.
Andrea recently
got new Dream Doll Designers computer software. That allows
her to mix and match clothing styles. She also can change
size, shape and features of the model.
Both Megan's and
Andrea's moms said the best thing about the kid-adult book
club was the sharing they got to do with their kids.
Sports
Twin
wrestlers are very
competitive with each other
It isn't often
that an illness helps solve a family athletic problem. But,
it did for 11-year-old identical twins, Matthew and Nicholas
Lester.
Matt and Nick
have been wrestling since they were six and both have earned
All-American honors in youth tournaments. And, until this
summer, that meant they oftentimes had to wrestle each other.
Father Greg Lester
said, "Every time they wrestled each other, it was very
emotional--for them, for my wife and me and for their grandparents.
"They'd rather
lose to just about anyone than each other."
This summer, Nick
got sick for awhile and lost a few pounds. At the same time,
Matt had a little growth spurt and gained some weight.
That meant they
were entered last month in different weight classes for the
national State Games of America competition. Nick wrestled
in the 65-pound weight class while Matt was in the 70-pound
class.
Father Greg hopes
they'll be able continue avoiding each other in future meets.
So far, that hasn't
been too easy because the boys have weighed within a pound
of each other for most of their lives. They were born just
four minutes apart, which makes Matt the oldest. He's happy
to point that out to anyone who asks.
If you really
want an argument, just ask which of the two is the better
wrestler. To say they are competitive with each other is an
understatement.
Asked about their
wrestling start, Nick said, "We fought a lot when we
were young. My dad had been a high school wrestler. He thought
wrestling might cut down on our fights."
About the recent
change in weights, Matt said, "I eat more than he does.
That means I'll wrestle at a heavier weight."
Nick added, "That
way, we won't have to wrestle each other and argue about who
wins."
Both brothers
have set a goal of wrestling in the Olympic Games.
Nick said, "I
want to win the Olympics in 2008 when I'm 18. Then, I want
to win in four different Olympics."
Matt also wants
to in the Olympics but he's willing to wait until he's 22
before earning a gold medal.
Their plans for
college also center around wrestling. Among their choices
are Iowa State, Iowa, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. All have
powerful wrestling programs.
The boys wrestle
with two different programs. For in-state competitions, the
boys wrestle with the Bonhomme Wrestling Club. For national
tournaments, they wrestle with the Purler Wrestling Academy
team.
Their wrestling
coach is Nick Purler, who along with his twin brother, Tony,
were All-American wrestlers in Oklahoma.
The boys have
a varied conditioning program. They do several types of pull-ups,
from the standard, the wide, the backward and something called
the "commando." That's a pull-up where your hands
are in line on the bar and you lift so that your head goes
first on one side of the bar and then the other.
They've found
a way to get their running in without going outside when it's
too hot or too cold. They just double the number of "stairs"
exercises. This is when they run up and down the stairs between
the basement and the first floor.
A normal exercise
involves doing 23 round-trips on the stairs in six minutes.
If it's too hot or too cold outside, they double the "stairs"
to 46 round-trips.
So far, they haven't
limited their sports activities. They've also competed in
football, basketball, soccer and baseball. But, as they get
older they expect to cut back on the number of sports.
Nick said, "By
the time I'm a junior in high school, I'll only be wrestling."
Matt said, "I'll
play soccer and wrestling in high school but I'll only wrestle
in college."
The twins usually
have a good contingent of fans when they wrestle. In addition
to their parents, Greg and Tereasa, they have three other
siblings, Brent, 17; Tara, 5, and Ryan, 6 months. And then
there are also the grandparents and others.
Now that they're
wrestling in different weight classes, the family doesn't
have to have any divided loyalties. And, the twins won't have
to be too emotional at the end of a match.
Fun
& Games
Fun
& Games
Note
that the words used in Young Saint Louis.com
crossword puzzles are all taken from the articles appearing
in this months issue. When you have completed the puzzles,
you can click here
to find the answers!
Young Saint Louis.com
- September

| Across |
Down |
3.
fully tuned in
8. a calming influence
9. type, classification
10. woven plant fibers |
1.
decorative part
2. a motivator
4. one of a kind
5. watches performance
6. large fish
7. medical treatment |
Young Saint Louis.com
- September #2

| Across |
Down |
1.
listen in on
3. relive history
4. traced decoration
6. gradual worsening
8. gets in the way
9. front of fireplace |
2.
an early try
5. a representative
7. a reproduction |
Fall

|
Apples
Autumn
Bonfire
Cider
Cooler
|
Foliage
Football
Popcorn
Rain
Sweaters
|
Some back to
school jokes
What's the difference
between a teacher and a train?
The teacher says, "spit
out your gum" while the train says "choo, choo,
choo"!
Teacher: What
do we call the outer part of a tree?
Pupil: I don't know.
Teacher: Bark, silly, bark.
Pupil: Woof! Woof!
Teacher: When
do you like school best?
Pupil: When it's closed!
Teacher: Do you
want to borrow a pocket calculator?
Pupil: No, thanks. I already
know how many pockets I have!
Teacher: This
note from your father looks like your handwriting.
Pupil: Oh, yeah. He borrowed
my pen!
Teacher: If 1+
1 = 2 and 2 + 2 = 4, what is 4 + 4?
Pupil: That's not fair, you
answer the easy ones and give us the hard one!
Great news! Teacher
says we are going to have a test today come rain or shine.
So what is so great about that?
Look, it's snowing outside!
Dad, here is my
report card.
Well, there's one thing in
your favor son. With grades like that, you can't be cheating!
And just a
couple more
Why did the golfer
wear two pairs of pants?
Just in case he got a hole in
one!
Have you ever
seen a man-eating tiger?
No, but in the restaurant next
door, I saw a man eating chicken!
What kind of animal
do you never want to play cards with?
A cheetah!
End of torture
Answers
to Fun & Games
Note that the
words used in Young Saint Louis.com crossword
puzzles are all taken from the articles appearing in this
months issue.
Young Saint Louis.com
- September

| Across |
Down |
3.
fully tuned in
8. a calming influence
9. type, classification
10. woven plant fibers |
1.
decorative part
2. a motivator
4. one of a kind
5. watches performance
6. large fish
7. medical treatment |
Young Saint Louis.com
- September #2

| Across |
Down |
1.
listen in on
3. relive history
4. traced decoration
6. gradual worsening
8. gets in the way
9. front of fireplace |
2.
an early try
5. a representative
7. a reproduction |
Fall

|
Apples
Autumn
Bonfire
Cider
Cooler
|
Foliage
Football
Popcorn
Rain
Sweaters
|