Around the Lompoc Valley

Cabrillo sports physicals

The Cabrillo Athletics Department, in conjunction with Valley Medical Group, will be holding its annual sport physicals for all incoming and returning athletes for the next school year, 2012-13.

The sport physicals will take place on Wednesday, May 30 beginning at 6 p.m. in the Valley Medical Group offices located at 136 N. 3rd St. in Lompoc.

All students interested in participating in athletics at Cabrillo High School must have a sport physical on file in order to compete. Interested athletes should bring with them their completed physical forms and $5 to cover the cost of the physical.

Physical forms may be picked up at the Cabrillo High School athletics office, the Cabrillo attendance office, Vandenberg Middle School. They can also be downloaded from the Cabrillo athletics website.

All proceeds from the sport physicals will be donated by the Valley Medical Group to the Cabrillo Athletics Sports Medicine Program.

Lompoc Babe Ruth clinic

Lompoc Babe Ruth is scheduled to host a baseball clinic on Saturday, May 26 at George Meyer Field in Lompoc.

The clinic is free to all current Lompoc Babe Ruth players and there is a fee of $20 for out of town or non-current players who would like to participate.

Former Lompoc Babe Ruth players who have continued their baseball careers at the college or professional level will be the instructors at the clinic. Current players will be able to learn all aspects of the game that will be important for their development.

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Around the Lompoc Valley

Tar Heel of the Week: Jerry Wallace oversees change at Campbell

BUIES CREEK -- A decade ago, Jerry Wallace sat under a tree awaiting Campbell Universitys graduation ceremony, marveling at how much he had enjoyed his first year back in the classroom after more than 20 years as an administrator there.

He had no concern for the frantic preparations inside; his own plans included a monthlong beach vacation starting the next day. But that night, Campbells president paid him a visit. He was gravely ill and wanted Wallace to be the next leader of the private Baptist college.

Youve rested long enough, Wallace recalls then-president Norman Wiggins telling him.

Indeed, Wallace, now 77, hasnt rested much since. In 2003, he became the colleges fourth president, and in nine years he has overseen massive changes - including the addition of what will be the states second-largest medical school when it opens next year.

The school recently got the accreditation it needed to start recruiting its first class of students, and its 96,000-square-foot home is rising along U.S. 421 near Campbells main campus. It will be the first new medical school to open in North Carolina in 35 years and the first to train doctors of osteopathy, who tend to focus on primary care.

Wallace conceived the idea of a medical school only two years ago and championed it as a way to grow much-needed family doctors in the rural areas, where many of its students will train at area hospitals.

The $70 million project, funded with private donations, loans and cash reserves, will be the capstone of a tenure in which Wallace also revamped the universitys campus, moved its law school to downtown Raleigh, and added a series of new programs.

None of this has been easy, he says of the changes at Campbell. We have had our work cut out for us, but the good Lord has provided.

Campbell Trustee Bob Barker says the university has made tremendous progress under Wallace and credits Wallace with many of the strides the school made while he was provost under Wiggins.

He is just an innovative person, says Barker, a Campbell alumnus and owner of a Fuquay-Varina-based supply company. He amazes me all the time with how he comes up with these ideas and carries them through.

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Tar Heel of the Week: Jerry Wallace oversees change at Campbell

Sparks High Hall of Fame

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LaMerne Kozlowski, 75, class of 1955, is one of the inductees into this years Sparks High School Hall of Fame.

LaMerne Kozlowski (Class of 1955)

LaMerne Kozlowski was born LaMerne Sommerhalder on March 20, 1937 in Eugene, Ore. She moved to Sparks in 1947. She attended Robert Mitchell Elementary School and Sparks Junior High, and she graduated from Sparks High School in 1955. She took two years of criminal justice at Truckee Meadows Community College. LaMerne married Gene Kozlowski on March 3, 1956 and had five sons: Mike, Casey, Kris, Todd and Scot. LaMerne was the PTA president at multiple schools, and the president of the Sparks Advisory Council. LaMerne worked a total of nine years with Jacks Carnival. Along with Bill Vallandingham, she developed a bicycle safety program that extended to all of Washoe County for which she received an award from the Washoe County Teachers Association.

She remains involved in SHS, having attended all 11 of the Quarter Auctions and served on the Hall of Fame Committee for three years. Her volunteer activities extended to sorting books for Friends of Washoe County. LaMerne worked in the post office, for Shellys Hardware and as a vault supervisor at Sierra Sids Casino. Since casinos werent really her thing, she started working for the state in the welfare department. She worked there for 17 years until retiring from Investigations in 2002.

Now she spends her time supporting her favorite hockey team, the Pittsburg Penguins, camping at Pyramid Lake with her family and friends, playing cribbage and bunco with friends, reading crime novels and attending Broadway Comes to Reno. Her favorite musical artist is Neil Diamond and she loves to travel. Most of all shes proud of her children and grandchildren and the people theyve become.

Marvin Moss (Class of 1948)

Marvin Moss was born on May 27, 1930, in Ogden, Utah. He moved to Sparks at the age of six months with his parents George L. and Veda Moss. He attended Sparks High School from 1945 to 1948. Moss was senior class president, on the Debate Team and the Boys Glee Club, part of the Boys Block S, and involved in a variety of theatrical events. He earned three letters in sports: football, basketball and track. Moss graduated in 1948 in the top five of his class. Afterwards, he attended the University of Nevada, Reno, where he joined the ROTC team and earned his BA in history.

Marvin Moss served two years with the United States Army as an officer in South Korea, 28 years in the U.S. Army Reserves and retired as a full colonel. He also taught as a member of the Command & General Staff College. In 1954, he became a sixth-grade teacher at the Sparks Intermediate School. In 1959 he earned his masters in education and became the principal of South Side Elementary School. The next year he became the principal at Veterans Memorial Elementary School. Moss became the assistant superintendent for the Washoe County School District in 1975 and, in 1982, he earned his doctorate in education. That same year Moss was appointed as superintendent; Moss was twice named Outstanding School Superintendent in Nevada.

Moss is a devoted father and husband. He married his high school sweetheart, Barbara Albee. They had eight children. Moss later married Dixie Moss, and now has two step-sons with her.

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Sparks High Hall of Fame

Doc repays parents’ love with honours

HER parents noble move to sell a family property to put her through medical school was the best gift ever for Dr Siti Fatimah Zahra Razali.

And in return, the 24-year old from Negri Sembilan, toiled hard and burned the midnight oil to pursue her medical degree.

Her hard work and sheer determination eventually paid off when she emerged as the best Malaysian medical student upon completing the twinning programme with Universitas Sumatera Utara (USU) and Allianze University College of Medical Sciences (AUCMS).

Dr Siti Fatimah, who was recently honoured at a Doctors Oath-taking ceremony in AUCMSs main campus in Kepala Batas, north Seberang Prai, said she attributed her success to her parents sacrifices.

My parents sold a piece of land belonging to the family to ensure that my dream of becoming a doctor can be fulfilled.

I am extremely grateful for their sacrifices and it is time for me to repay their kind deeds now, she said.

Dr Siti Fatimah was among 57 graduates who recently completed the programme where the students had their pre-clinical studies for two-and-a-half years in USU, Medan, Indonesia and their clinical studies for two years at AUCMS branch campus in Kangar, Perlis.

Her mother, Kholilah Amin, 49, a secondary school counselling teacher, said it had always been her daughters dream to have the title of Dr before her name, be it as a medical doctor or as a doctorate (PhD) certificate holder.

Another top student, Dr Nareshraja Janardanan said he had always fancied a career as a medical practitioner since he was young.

My parents not only inspire me, but they are also the driving force behind my success.

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Education foundation honors alumni, former staff

By MARLA K. KUHLMAN

ThisWeek Community News Wednesday May 9, 2012 2:33 PM

The Gahanna-Jefferson Education Foundation (GJEF) celebrated alumni and district builders of excellence May 4 by introducing and inducting the 2012 Cornerstone and Alumni Hall of Fame awardees.

The Gahanna Lincoln High School (GLHS) Alumni Hall of Fame was created to recognize graduates who, through their performance and achievement, brought credit and honor to themselves and to GLHS, said Dale Foor, GJEF president.

This year's awardees include:

* Brad W. deSilva, M.D., an assistant professor with the OSU Medical Center (GLHS class of 1994).

* Connie DeJong, an Ohio State University arts scholar coordinator and executive director of the Global Gallery (GLHS class of 1990).

* Matthew John Markling, former member of the Lakewood (city) Board of Education and general counsel for the Ohio Educational Service Center Association (GLHS class of 1989).

The Cornerstone Award is an annual recognition of builders of excellence, Foor said. Recipients must have been associated with the school district for a minimum of 10 years as an employee or in other official support roles. People may be nominated or inducted posthumously.

This year's recipients are:

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Education foundation honors alumni, former staff

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Published 11:10am Tuesday, May 8, 2012

The 544 Education Foundation Board honored Gary Clambey and Anthony Preus as their 2012 Distinguished Alumni during a ceremony Monday night at Kennedy Secondary School.

Clambeys career in science and education traces its roots to time spent growing up on a family farm, attending a rural elementary school and spending hours in the science alcoves of the Fergus Falls Library.

A 1963 graduate of Fergus Falls High School, he attended Fergus Falls State Junior College, North Dakota State University (BS and MS) and Iowa State University (Ph.D.) He was a preventive medicine specialist with the U.S. Army Medical Department and has spent nearly 40 years teaching more than 11,000 students at NDSU at the graduate and undergraduate levels.

Clambey has earned multiple awards for teaching and service contributions, including NDSUs Distinguished Educator Award.

He and wife Susan, a 1965 FFHS graduate, have two sons, Eric and Bryce.

Preus, Class of 1954, was the first Rhodes Scholar from Fergus Falls. He graduated from Luther College and attended Trinity College, Oxford, on a Rhodes Scholarship, earning a second BA and an MA.

He continued at The Johns Hopkins University, writing his Ph.D. dissertation on Science and Philosophy in Aristotles Biology. Since 1964, he has taught at Binghamton University in Binghamton, N.Y., where his areas of specialty and research include ancient Greek philosophy, classical languages and medical ethics.

Preus is secretary of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy and has edited and written numerous works, including The A to Z of Ancient Greek Philosophy. He is married to Meredith Pell Preus and has three children, Christian, Alexander and Caroline (Linka).

The two men were inducted into the Fergus Falls High School Hall of Fame Monday night during the Senior Recognition/Hall of Fame Banquet at Kennedy Secondary School.

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Senator Arlen Specter Honored for his Support to Expand Mental Health Care

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical Center and Weill Cornell Medical College Present Public Service Award

Newswise NEW YORK (May 8, 2012)- NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical Center and Weill Cornell Medical College presented their annual Public Service Award to Senator Arlen Specter yesterday for his sustained efforts to increase support for biomedical research and enhance mental health care services at their reception during the 2012 American Psychiatric Association Meeting in Philadelphia.

The annual award honors a member of the American community for his or her contributions to psychiatric medicine and mental health. Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman, psychiatrist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center and president-elect of the American Psychiatric Association, and Dr. Jack Barchas, psychiatrist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical College, presented Senator Specter with the Public Service Award.

"We recognized Senator Specter with this award because of his longstanding interest and unflagging support for health care and research" says Dr. Lieberman, who is also chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. "He has been a visionary and a champion of the biomedical research community and mental health care services, and led the effort to double the National Institutes of Health budget from 1998 to 2008."

"We are very pleased to honor Senator Specter for his unwavering support to expand mental health care for veterans and for his profound commitment to medical research," added Dr. Barchas, who is also the chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. "His influence in this area has been extraordinary, and we look forward to his continued support for mental health programs."

During his tenure as a senior member of the Appropriations Committee in the United States Senate, Senator Specter led the fight to increase funding for the National Institutes of Health to expand medical research. In addition, he signed a bill to provide autism treatments for military personnel and their families under the TRICARE health program and co-sponsored a bill to improve and enhance mental health care benefits for returning veterans.

In addition to the Public Service Award, the Departments of Psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center and Weill Cornell Medical College presented three department awards.

Dr. Lieberman honored Dr. Deborah Cabaniss, clinical professor of psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and the director of psychotherapy training in the Department of Psychiatry with the Columbia Alumni Award, for her extraordinary commitment to psychiatry residents and to the educational mission of the department.

Dr. Barchas recognized Dr. Gerard Smith, professor emeritus of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, with the Weill Cornell Alumni Award for his pioneering work into the neurobiology of appetitive behavior.

Dr. Philip J. Wilner, vice president and medical director for behavioral health at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center and executive vice chair of the Department of Psychiatry and an associate professor at Weill Cornell Medical College also honored Dr. Mary Zanarini with the Award for Distinguished Achievement in the Field of Severe Personality Disorders from the Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) Resource Center at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Westchester Division. Dr. Mary Zanarini is the director of the laboratory for the study of adult development at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass., and professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Mass.

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Senator Arlen Specter Honored for his Support to Expand Mental Health Care

St. Joseph’s School of Nursing alumni gather for 100th annivesary of school’s opening

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St. Joseph's School of Nursing alumni gather for 100th annivesary of school's opening

People’s Pharmacy: Flatulence from high-fiber snack bar

Q: Recently, several of my friends and I had bouts of extreme stomach cramps, severe bloating and uncontrollable gas. The common culprit in all these cases turned out to be snack bars with extra fiber!

The common belief is that the chicory root in the bars is the culprit. There should be a warning on the box.

A: Chicory root contains inulin, which is frequently used as a fiber supplement in some processed foods, such as ice cream, dairy drinks and juice in addition to breakfast bars. Because it is indigestible, it doesn't raise blood sugar but it can cause gas (Journal of the American Dietetic Association, June 2010).

There are many causes of flatulence, ranging from your breakfast bar or bagel to cholesterol pills. Stealth fiber is in so many foods that it is hard to keep track.

Q: Do you know anything about a new blood-pressure drug called Tekturna? Three months after my doctor prescribed this pill, I developed the most horrendous deep cough.

I thought it was whooping cough. A chest X-ray showed my lungs were clear.

A: Tekturna is a relatively new and different blood-pressure medicine. Cough is considered a relatively rare side effect, but we have heard from other readers who also have experienced a terrible cough while taking this drug. Other side effects may include digestive distress, dizziness, weakness, gout, rash and kidney stones.

The Food and Drug Administration recently issued a warning that Tekturna should not be taken with drugs like Diovan, enalapril, lisinopril and losartan by people with diabetes. Anyone with reduced kidney function also should avoid such combinations.

Q: I almost died from an allergic reaction to lamb chops. I was surprised when my allergist asked about ticks, but told him I had gotten into a nest of seed ticks a year ago. Now I have to avoid all meat. I carry an EpiPen just in case I am exposed accidentally. I also have been avoiding cheese, since it is produced with the use of rennet, an animal product. Am I being overly cautious?

A: You are describing alpha-gal allergy, a condition that is initially triggered by a tick bite. People then develop a delayed allergic reaction to meat, including beef, pork, lamb and even venison or rabbit. Chicken, turkey and fish do not trigger the allergy, which can range from itchy hives to the type of anaphylactic reaction you experienced.

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People's Pharmacy: Flatulence from high-fiber snack bar

Brookline’s Douglas Hughes receives Distinguished Service Award

Brookline resident Douglas Hughes, MD, associate dean of Academic Affairs and professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine, has been honored with a Distinguished Service Award by the University of Missouri School of Medicine.

Hughes received a plaque at the MUSM alumni reception dinner in recognition of his long and continued service in violence and suicide research and prevention. The university recognized 10 alumni at the annual Medical Alumni Awards ceremony in St. Louis.

A graduate of the Class of 1981, Hughes has dedicated his medical career to emergency psychiatry, with much of his research and published works focusing on violence and suicide. He has consulted with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Defense on establishing national guidelines for suicidal and violent behavior.

In addition to having served as president of both the American Association of General Hospital Psychiatrists and the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry, Hughes has been on the editorial boards of various psychiatric journals. He has received numerous teaching honors including the Preclinical Sciences Award for Excellence in Teaching and BUSMs highest teaching award, Stanley L. Robbins Award for Excellence in Teaching.

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Brookline's Douglas Hughes receives Distinguished Service Award