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College students celebrate physics at Howard Elementary School

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Courtesy of Brandy NikaidoUC Merced physics student Laura Miller explains to Howard Elementary School students how quadcopters can be used for research.
Fourteen University of California, Merced, students celebrated National Physics Day at Howard Elementary School this week, demonstrating a quadcopter and why measurements matter in science.
About 40 second-grade students learned the importance of precise and accurate measurements with length, liquid volume, weight and temperature in hands-on classroom activities.
The students from various engineering and science-related professional organizations volunteered as part of UC Merced’s Young Engineer and Scientist (Y.E.S.) Academy, which seeks to nurture enthusiasm for science, technology, engineering and math in younger students.

Two Chowchilla residents killed in fire

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Two longtime Chowchilla residents were killed after being overcome by smoke inhalation in a structure fire on Humboldt Avenue. The Madera County Coroner’s office identified the men as Orville Arms, 87 and Steven Silva, 65.
The fire occurred 10:30 p.m. April 18.
The 1,600-square-foot wooden frame home was built in the 1950s and sustained major damage.Chowchilla Fire Chief Harry Turner said the cause of the fire is under investigation but is believed to have started in an occupied front bedroom. There were also no smoke detectors found at the house, he said.
“One occupant, the son of the property owner, got out and was trying to put out the fire with a garden hose, when neighbors called for help. When we got there the two front bedrooms were fully involved and we were told there were two victims still trapped in the house. Our primary objective was to get in as quickly as we could to search the house.
One victim, the 87-year-old, was found on the floor of the kitchen and the other 65-year-old “was found in the bedroom of origin (of the fire),” Turner said.
“If you are asleep you don’t smell smoke,” he said, and people also don’t understand how rapidly toxic smoke from household items burning in a fire can spread and kill.  The residents were also apparently attempting to extinguish the fire themselves before they called 911, a common but hazardous practice, according to Turner. The family’s dog also died in the fire.
The home was about a half mile from the Chowchilla fire station, Turner said.
“It was 8 minutes from the time we got the call to when the fire engine arrived on the scene. The (unknown) delay in reporting didn’t help matters any. Any minutes could have helped both the victims and the house. Operable smoke alarms would have also likely changed the outcome,” Turner said.
Turner encouraged all residents to check their smoke alarms, and in the event of a fire get outside as quickly as possible and call 911.

Coarsegold rodeo to return in rival events faceoff

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The Coarsegold Rodeo Assocation may not host its namesake event next weekend, but that doesn’t mean the show won’t go on. Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds and area volunteers will host the yearly tradition May 5-7.
Confusingly, that means the new rodeo will take place on the same days as the former organizer’s new rodeo-free Gold Rush Days at Coarsegold Historical Village, 35300 Highway 41. Entry to the rival festivities will be free, but parking will be $3 to benefit Yosemite High School Football Boosters.
Those seeking rowdy livestock and cowpokes will need to head instead to the Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds, 44777 Rodeo Grounds Lane. Admission will be $15 for those 13 and older, $5 for ages 6-12, and free for anyone younger.
Established in 1974, the rodeo grounds were taken on by new owners, father and son Keven and tanner Tweed, in 2016, according to Sierra News Online. The rodeo assocation put on its regular rodeo there in 2016, but on Jan. 31 announced a “new direction” – raising funds for grants and scholarships with a non-rodeo event at a less costly venue. The Coarsegold Rodeo Grounds stepped in with the help of volunteers to organize a rodeo of its own.
The rodeo kicks off 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday with educational Heritage Days for area students. Saturday begins California Cowboys Professional Rodeo Assocation’s events with slack and Exceptional Kids Rodeo at 
10 a.m., gate opening at 
3:30 p.m., mutton busting at 5 p.m., grand entry and rodeo at 6 p.m. and 8-11 p.m. dancing to the Larry Keyes Band. Sunday starts with Cowboy Church and Breakfast at 9 a.m., gate opening at 11:30 a.m., crowning of rodeo royalty at noon, mutton busting at 
12:30 p.m. and grand entry and rodeo at 
1:30 p.m.
For information on the Coarsegold rodeo, visitwww.cgrodeogrounds.comonline. For information on Gold Rush Days, visitwww.coarsegoldgoldrushdays.com.

Hundreds join for steak, Christian fellowship

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Super-sized steak and potato meals filled 375 Valley bellies before the men were “fed” by the Christian music of the 53:5 Band and preaching of Senior Pastor Jim Cecy, of Campus Bible Church in Fresno.
“Pastor came to me and said I think you should go into ministry. And I said to him … I don’t want to be paid to be good. I just want to be good-for-nothing,” Cecy said Monday to much laughter. “And I really was.”
Cecy, founder of Jaron Ministries, urged the sixth annual Men’s Steak Night crowd to create a influential legacy of godliness regardless of personal history. “I don’t care what you came out of. I don’t care if you’ve been in jail (or) you own a jail. I don’t care. What I care is what you’re going to do with your life from this day forward … You fulfill the purpose of God in your generation,” he said.Attendance at the outdoor gathering dropped from 515 in 2016 this year, said Geoff Tipton, head of Men’s Ministry at Grace Community Church, “largely due to a cold, very windy day.”
Several ministries took part in the Men’s Steak Night. Jerry King of Grace Community Church led the 53:5 Band, which takes its name from Isaiah 53:3. Members included Nick Tolmachoff, Dave Pinske of Madera Rescue Mission, Don Caballero of The Clay church in Merced and Taylor Beakes of Harvest church in Madera.

Madera mayor to host Day of Prayer

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Madera will join more than 40,000 other National Day of Prayer observances in the United States by holding its annual Mayor’s Prayer Breakfast on May 4 in Hatfield Hall at the Madera District Fairgrounds, 1850 W. Cleveland Ave.
Advance tickets are $15 and can be purchased from the Madera Chamber of Commerce, 120 N. E St., call 673-3563, or online atmaderachamber.com. This event is usually a sell-out and no tickets are available at the door.
This year the theme is “For your great name’s sake! Hear us ... forgive us ... heal us!” selected by the National Day of Prayer task force.
It follows the scripture from Daniel 9:19 that reads, “Oh, Lord, hear. Oh, Lord, forgive. Oh, Lord, listen and act! For your own sake, do not delay. Oh, my God, for your people and your city bear your name.”
“This verse serves as a focus for every follower of Christ to join together, lift their hearts and voices to him,” according tonationaldayofprayer.org.
Keynote speaker for the event is Fresno radio personality Jim Franklin, host of “Jim Franklin Live,” on KMJ 1680 and 580 AM. He serves as senior pastor at the Cornerstone Church in Fresno.
He founded Cornerstone Community Care, a nonprofit organization that has provided backpacks and school supplies to underprivileged children through its Project Student Aid. His Feeding Fresno projects have provided tons of food to the needy through the years, according to his biography.

Police: Madera seen as ‘good home base’ for prostitution

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For The Madera TribuneA house suspected by Madera police of being a brothel.
By the time Madera Police Sgt. Josiah Arnold and the officers of the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) rolled in on the suspected brothel at 1025 Nebraska Ave. on Madera’s east side, they had already put in two months of detective work in June and July of 2016 in their probe of the house.
“During the investigation, we saw a man who would go into the back gate, and into the back door of the house, and stay there for no more than 15 minutes,” Arnold said. “And we would see dozens of guys a day.”
In the course of their investigation, SIU had spotted women being taken to and from the Fresno bus station. They also found business cards for the brothel.
“The business cards were various, innocent-looking business-type things,” Arnold said. “But when we called the number, we would ask the guy: ‘Hey, we’re interested in a woman,’ or ‘having sex with a woman,’ the guy would tell us ‘okay, come to the red house on Nebraska Avenue and Cleveland Avenue, and for $40 you can have 15 minutes.’”
Finally, in July, a search warrant was issued, and the officers made their entrance into the red house.
Inside, they found two young women who were involved in prostitution, one of them hiding in a closet from the police.
They also found a client who had solicited services from the women, along with Jesus Raimundo, 43, their suspected pimp. Police placed Raimundo in cuffs and escorted him out of the house in sweltering summer heat. As for the two prostitutes, they were placed in a victim advocacy home after their rescue. Their nightmare was over.
This brothel, however, was just one case of many in the human trafficking problem that has plagued the country, and has found its way into the Fresno-Madera area.
“In Madera alone, you will find at least 20 to 40 prostitutes walking the streets,” said Madera Police Sgt. Daniel Foss. “If you go inside the bars, you’re going to find quite a bit more. If you go online, for the Fresno-Madera area, it’s hundreds, if not thousands, every single day (that) are posted.”
According to Foss, Madera, which sits between between the major trafficking and prostitution hubs of Los Angeles and San Francisco, has become a significant spot for prostitution due in part to a lack of resources designed to combat the issue.
“It’s just (seen as) a good home base. We don’t have a whole lot of programs, a whole lot of vice units, or programs like that,” said Foss. “so it’s a good area where  you’re going to make okay money, but you’re not going to have the heat on you really bad.”
The primary users of prostitution in Madera are seasonal workers in the fields, but Foss says the clients can come from all walks of life.
“We’ve seen all manner, including college professors, business owners … Doctors, I’ve seen a medical doctor engaging in prostitution,” Foss said, “so we’ve seen everything.”
According to the Child Rescue Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to preventing and combating child sexual abuse, human trafficking can generate approximately $150 billion in illegal gains per year nationwide. One in six runaways will later become sex trafficking victims, with the average age of a girl entering into prostitution being 13. The life expectancy for a victim is placed at roughly seven years, despite the saying that prostitution is a “victimless crime.”
“Right now, it’s the most dangerous job in America,” Foss said. “More prostitutes die than in any other profession, so they need help, they need support.”
Foss, a veteran with the Madera Police Department, also runs Overcoming Limitations through Intervention, Values, and Empowerment (O.L.I.V.E.), an organization dedicated to helping victims of prostitution and human trafficking leave that life. His organization, which officially became a nonprofit last March, has already seen some success, and Foss said several victims have been rehabilitated, while seeds were planted in others.
And while there may be hope for those aided by Foss’s organization, and for those girls rescued in the Nebraska Avenue brothel, there are still more women and girls held captive — forced to sell their bodies in a modern form of slavery.
It includes enslavement not only of young girls from other countries who are brought here, said Fresno Police Sgt. Curt Chastain, a member of the department’s vice unit. “It’s also children who were raised here, that you and I went to school with.”

Alleged school predator still on payroll

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Madera South High teacher drawing pay and benefits
A Madera South High School teacher accused of sexual misconduct with a student is drawing near to his first anniversary of drawing full pay and benefits after being removed from the classroom.
Ruben Castrejon was placed on paid administrative leave in May 2016 after renewed allegations that he perpetrated illegal sexual improprieties against a former MSHS student.
Madera police investigated the allegations in 2016 and turned the case over to District Attorney David Linn, who told the Tribune he could not press the case because the statute of limitations had expired. Former Madera Unified School District superintendent Ed Gonzalez met at least twice with Linn to discuss the district’s options.
At the time of his departure from MUSD, Castrejon remained uncharged and in receipt of his pay and benefits.
Board President Al Galvez and Interim Superintendent Todd Lile both acknowledged at Tuesday night’s school board meeting that Castrejon was still on administrative leave.
The 2016 investigation of Castrejon came after several years of relative silence in the school district. The spotlight was once again thrown on the teacher when former Madera South teacher Leslie Swan renewed her charges against Castrejon at the May 24, 2016, school board meeting.
Police reports show that Castrejon was the subject of investigations in 2007 and 2012 for illegal sexual activity with students. These cases hit a dead end when the victims refused to cooperate. By 2016, however, two former MSHS students identified Castrejon as the perpetrator of sexual crimes.
Castrejon began his employment with MUSD in 1998. He taught regular Spanish classes and a class for native speakers. In 2014, Castrejon earned $100,848.48 in pay and benefits, according to Transparent California.

Making rules for the rest of us

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Is it so unfair that people who don’t play the game get to make the rules? How many of the voters that passed the recent $2 a pack tax increase on cigarettes were smokers? I am convinced not too many.
The opposition is spending a great deal of money buying television commercial time to air anti-tobacco advertisements. Thank goodness for the buttons that change the channels. I use the same button when the abused animals and sick children ads come on.
The passage of California Vehicle Code Section 27803, a mandatory motorcycle helmet law in California in 1992, ruined much of the joy of motorcycle riding. The feeling of wind in your hair and even the bugs in your teeth were part of fun.
According to www.victimslawyer.com “the passage of a mandatory helmet law in California in 1992 was followed a year later by a 37 percent decrease in the number of motorcycle-related deaths in the state. The risk of suffering a head injury in a motorcycle accident decreases by 69 percent when helmet use is mandatory for all riders and passengers.”
I would bet the legislators that passed these laws never swayed on the back of an iron horse.For many years my mother worked as a nurse in the emergency room at the Dearborn and the Madera County hospitals. Anytime a victim of a motorcycle accident was brought in for treatment she would lecture my brothers on the dangers of the motorcycle. I don’t think it ever occurred to her to include me in her diatribe. Neither brother ever rode or owned motorcycles.
The first time Fred and I pulled into her driveway on the back of his Harley, sans helmets of course, she realized her mistake. She was not happy.
At age 20, I borrowed money from my future mother-in-law and bought my first motorcycle. It was a small Honda 125-CC. I named it buzzy because the motor sounded like a ticked-off swarm of bees. I wanted a Harley because they were American made and the coolest bikes on the market. The smaller Harleys of the era were made in Italy and those little spaghetti bikes were none too reliable. I considered a Harley Sportster, but at 1,000-CC it seemed wiser to start small. My second bike was a 185-CC Honda Twinstar that had more power and was better on the highway.
I never even owned a helmet. What the law doesn’t address is the adverse effect of helmets on the rider’s peripheral vision and hearing ability on the road.
There are many insulting euphemisms for motorcycle helmets such as brain buckets and skid-lids. There are others that aren’t fit to print in a family newspaper.
It was a dark day when I used my Honda motorcycle as a trade-in for a Honda lawnmower. As the owner of the Honda shop rolled my bike away, I had tears running down my face and decided I was officially old.
There are two states without helmet laws, Iowa and Indiana. California is one of 19 states that require all riders to wear helmets. The other 30 states have some form of mandatory helmet imposed on riders under the age of majority.
Legislators love to enact public safety laws because it makes them appear to be accomplishing something for our tax dollars.
Watching CSPAN as a group of skinny old white guys make policy decisions on women’s health issues is infuriating. The ones that espouse the will of the almighty as their rationale for defunding Planned Parenthood and religious objections to funding various forms of contraception never have to worry about getting pregnant. Erectile dysfunction should also be viewed as the will of God and yet funding Viagra prescriptions is still eligible under most health plans.
Have a great weekend.

California’s dilemma: Divide or secede?

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California’s future: Partition, secession, or continuation. We Californians seem to be a restless breed, unlike — say — Iowans or Nebraskans. To begin with, most of us moved here from somewhere else. We were lured by a dynamic economy, fantastic vistas, wonderful weather, or a love of earthquakes. California, it seems, has something for everyone.
By contrast, who would ever move to either Iowa or Nebraska by choice? Failing a “relocation subsidy” of a million dollars or a gun to my head, I really can’t see myself as a happy resident of Des Moines or Lincoln. But still, I’d have to weigh all that money or a longer life against sub-freezing temperatures half the year and no ocean. Moreover, the glow of golden corn on the cob becomes somewhat dull compared to the glories of the Golden State: Yosemite National Park, Disneyland, giant redwoods, Golden Gate Bridge, Hollywood, and the Fresno River bed, which still has a few puddles. Yet, with all this, some people want to change our state by dividing it or converting it to an independent country.Partition
That idea of partitioning California is not new; the first division of the territory occurred right after the Mexican-American War in the middle of the 19th century. At that time, Alta California (the upper section) was ceded to the United States as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and Baja California (the lower portion) remained under the control of the Mexican government.
Five years after statehood, the California Assembly decided that representation in Congress was too small for such a large chunk of the country, and the state capital was too remote from the geographical extremes. So, in 1855, the plan was to create the State of Colorado from the southern border to Monterey on the coast, Merced in the valley, and part of Mariposa in the mountains.The State of Shasta would be fashioned from the counties of Del Norte, Siskiyou, Modoc, Humboldt, Trinity, Shasta, Lassen, Tehama, Plumas, and parts of Butte, Colusa, and Mendocino. Only the mid-section would be California. The bill failed in the Senate because of certain issues, like the southern states’ desire to admit “Colorado,” to the union as a “slave state” under the provisions of the Missouri Compromise. (During that time, the current State of Colorado was part of various U.S. territories: New Mexico, Utah, Kansas, and Nebraska.)
Toward the end of the 19th century, there was serious discussion about dividing the state at the “natural boundary” of the Tehachapi Mountains. But that debate ended with the construction of the Ridge Route (today, Interstate 5) through the Tejon Pass.20th Century
During the 20th century, there were at least three major attempts to divide the state into smaller units, but each died before leaving the legislature. Some folks wanted to divide the state in half horizontally; others vertically (creating an East California and a West or Coastal California).
The last plan of that century was submitted by Assemblyman Stan Statham who proposed that each county should vote on a referendum that would create three states: North California, South California, and Central California. That bill, too, died in the Senate.Jefferson
In the 21st century, we’ve witnessed the resurgence of the potential State of Jefferson, a mostly rural area that would be carved out of northern California and southern Oregon. The appellation “Jefferson” was chosen because of our third president, who sent Lewis and Clark on their expedition to the Pacific Northwest in 1803. It is rumored that Jefferson, himself, envisioned a “Republic of the Pacific,” in contradistinction to the prevailing sentiment of manifest destiny.
If Jefferson were to come into existence, it would be composed of the eight counties in Oregon that are clustered around the state’s southern border and perhaps as many as 21 counties of California that lie north of Sacramento. The area would have a smaller land mass than West Virginia and, according to the 2010 Census, would have a population of less than 500,000 — tiniest in the union.Although several counties in California have officially petitioned for recognition of the new state, no county in Oregon has taken that initiative. Perhaps the new impetus has been spurred by the effects of the 2016 election in which Hillary Clinton dominated in California, but was “trumped” in the vast majority of the counties that would constitute Jefferson.Calexit
In January of this year, a proposal for California to secede from the United States was submitted to the Secretary of State’s Office. Borrowing from Great Britan’s “Brexit” from the European Union, supporters of the petition dubbed the possible secession, “Calexit.”
The movement’s leaders, Jed Wheeler and Marcus Ruiz Evans, believed that California would be better off going it alone as a separate country. After all, during at least the past two decades the state would have been among the wealthiest nations in the world (bouncing around between the fourth largest and the seventh largest economies). As Wheeler told Mark Z. Barabak of the Los Angeles Times, “We can solve our own problems and don’t need to wait on a government 3,000 miles away.”
This is far from an original idea. The Lompoc Record states, “We did a little research and discovered that in the past 160 years-plus there have been more than 200 attempts at secession or some other geo-political shakeup or bifurcation. None of those efforts came close.”
The latest secessionist attempt needed nearly 600,000 signatures to get on the November ballot and claimed to have “thousands of volunteers in 82 chapters across the state,” which had such variations in reporting to Sacramento that there was no certainty in the actual number of qualified signatures that had been collected. Evans told the L.A. Times, “Some are mailing them in. Some are holding them. Some are taking them directly to their county registrar of voters.”
Apparently, the sum of all methods was insufficient, and the petition was withdrawn on April 17. It probably didn’t help that Louis Marinelli, one of the founders of the movement, relocated to teach English in Russia, where he appeared at a Kremlin-backed pro-secession conference in Moscow.While California may not be devolving into separate states or leaving the rest of America, California residents are leaving California in greater number than are other people moving to the Golden State, according to the latest Census Bureau estimate. Is this a trend reversal?

Editor's Corner: ‘Dangerous ideas and invaders’

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There is a loose but nevertheless determined confederacy in the making that is attempting to undermine the government of the United States and set up rump mini-governments consisting of special interests and foreign invaders in its place.
This confederacy is largely the brainchild of the ultra-liberal establishment, although some ultra-conservatives are in on it as well. It takes care to present itself as legal, and in fact masquerades as law-abiding and establishmentarian, but is anything but that. Even some levels of the judicial system are in on it.
It is not unlike the communism and fascism of the first half of the 20th century. The fascist and communist leaders were able to convince ordinary people they were being led down the right paths, but those paths led to death and destruction, with nearly 100 million outright murders and several wars over several decades being the result.
A good example of how this is working in the present millennium is the readiness with which supposedly ordinary people embrace idiotic ideas as being wise. Young men and women on college campuses are using violence to keep people with whom they claim not to agree from speaking, even though these students may not know who those people are or understand what they are trying to say. These young people threaten violence to keep people with whom they don’t agree from speaking in public on certain campuses, even in California, which was once the envy of the world for its freedom-loving universities.
Just one woman, Ann Coulter, an arch-right-wing commentator, sends some of these students into paroxysms of Nazi-like threats and demonstrations akin to the burning of books in the 1930s. This is even though none of these goofballs would have been required to attend her planned lecture. She is just one woman armed only with her ideas. But nothing scares a modern college student these days like an idea or two that he or she has been told is bad.
And these universities which attract and harbor these pathetic burners of their parents’ money have themselves become pits of administrative misbehavior, stealing money from students and the taxpayers in order to line their own pockets and fatten their own pensions.
And these people want to convince others they are the smart ones, the ones entitled to make the laws of the land and ignore the will of the people.
Then there are the outright lies, the right-is-wrong and wrong-is-right sorts of lies that are being codified into law by an electorate that has sold its votes to the advertisers willing to spend the most on television time so they, the voters, don’t have to be bothered to think about anything except what’s for dinner.
The marijuana laws are a perfect example. Marijuana use has been legalized to some degree in most states — but it still is illegal throughout the land. The federal drug laws on marijuana haven’t changed. It remains a controlled substance, the use of which is a felony.
This puts the marijuana-loving states, including California, at high risk, because they rely on the tacit agreement of the federal government not to enforce federal laws prohibiting this drug. That cannot stand, because federal laws must be enforced equally throughout the land. Even Harvard lawyers understand that. Eventually, the federal government will have to legalize marijuana nationwide or shut down all marijuana operations in all states. The Congress has lost its way on this.
Few in Congress want to say yes or no on marijuana. They are afraid they might lose a vote or two, depending on what side a voter’s preference might fall. When it comes to marijuana, there is no there, there. The only guideline for most members of Congress is hypocrisy and the extreme danger that at some point foreign marijuana interests will assert themselves and invade the U.S. in order to gain dominance of the market. Some say that already is happening. We see many signs of it here in California, even in our own San Joaquin Valley.
But we already may have lost the anti-crime war in California. We have replaced determinant sentencing, which worked by keeping criminals off the streets for prescribed amounts of time, with early release, that has put crooks back into your neighborhoods. These moves have been sold as compassionate attempts at rehabilitation of prisoners, but ask your friendly neighborhood cop if that is working. And there is no compassion for the crime victims.
Sheriffs who attempt to work with federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers risk being confronted by their colleagues in other local enforcement agencies over local laws that prohibit cooperation with federal authorities to send illegal immigrants back to their countries of origin. This is insanity. We are the most generous of countries in our immigration laws, yet we are condemned for attempting to enforce our own borders and protect our own citizens, including those citizens who are legal immigrants.

Letter: Climate change is the accurate term

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Channel 18 (PBS) aired a documentary on the Tuolumne River, “From Glacier to the Golden Gate.” This river was made by glacial action, as was Yosemite. If not for climate change we wouldn’t even know they were there.
The Italian Alps yielded bodies from World War I when the glaciers melted. Bodies that were on the surface 100 years ago were covered by ice and snow to create a frozen tomb ... until they melted. Five airplanes crash-landed on Greenland in World War II. They were covered with 200 feet of ice. Once again they were on the surface 80 years ago. The earth is ever changing.
Some don’t want it to. They create the Chicken Little theories to support their wants.
Gov. Brown supports clean air and organic food. Does he know that organic farmers are burning the weeds and polluting the air so they don’t use herbicides?
The world is changing. Populations are growing. Organics won’t feed the world. It’s just a folly. Like global warming and California High-Speed Rail.
— Bill Hoffrage,Madera

2017 All-Madera Tribune 
girls soccer team

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Wendy Alexander/The Madera TribuneMadera South’s Gigi Gutierrez (ABOVE) was the team’s leading scorer, but also played a number of roles for the Stallions, including forward and sweeper. Madera midfielder Mia Alvarez (BELOW) was adept at scoring from long-range. Taking a free kick from 35-yards out was no problem for Alvarez. Both were named The Madera Tribune’s girls soccer Co-Most Valuable Players.
Most Valuable Players
Gigi GutierrezSenior Forward 
Madera South
Mia AlvarezJunior Midfielder Madera
Although Madera South got the better of Madera High this season, both Gigi Gutierrez and Mia Alvarez proved to be important players for their respective teams. Gutierrez’s nose for goals, leading her team all season, or Alvarez’s deft touch in the midfield contributed to success for both teams. They share the award this season for representing Madera with the utmost skill and sportsmanship.
Gutierrez was easily the most important player on the pitch for the Stallions. Her ability to play anywhere on the pitch allowed her coach to plug her in wherever the team needed her. Her goal scoring and clinical vision carried an already potent Stallions front line. Gutierrez was the County/Metro Athletic Conference Most Valuable Player, rightfully so for her exceptional performances on the pitch.
With a calmness and first touch above the rest, Alvarez was the queen maestro of the Coyotes midfield. Her quick decisions and burst of speed gave her defenders fits all season. Although a midfield player by trade, Alvarez was adapt in getting up field and taking shots on goal. As a junior, Alvarez looks forward to next season where she’ll be able to set the league on fire one last time. She was a first team All-CMAC selection.The Team
Sabrina IbrahimSenior Midfielder Madera South
Ibrahim combined immense pace and strength this past season to help lead her team and grab a spot on the first team All-CMAC. Playing as a midfielder, Ibrahim’s ability to play distribute the ball in the right situations added an edge to a player already a step ahead of everyone else.Raina WristenSenior Forward 
Liberty
Earning a spot on both the North Sequoia All-league and All-Madera lists, Wristen continues to show how great an athlete she is. After winning the NSL MVP last year, Wristen did only what a competitor like her could do, win it again. Although Wristen led her team to the section championship for the third straight year, her willingness to keep improving was evident all season, improving her goal tally by six to 33 goals and she dished out a team-high 19 assists, as well.Brooke GillSophomore Forward Madera
Gill combined her attacking mentality and her ability to create chances from the up front for an all-around performance finishing with five goals in 18 matches, landing her a spot on the All-CMAC first team. Her partnership with Co-MVP Alvarez proved to be a perfect match.Morgan DurazoFreshman Midfield Liberty
After winning Underclassmen of the Year in the NSL, Durazo earns a spot on the All-Madera Tribune team after scoring nine goals and setting up an impressive 16. Her ability to work with her teammates in the midfield allowed Wristen and her other teammates to reap the benefits. Only a freshman, Durazo looks to be a force for years to come.Penelopi LeachFreshman Midfield Madera
Being only a freshman, Leach played in 26 games this season, scoring two goals. But it was her teamwork and work rate for such a young player that showed her importance. Her development is key if the Coyotes expect to contend next season. Leach is a future star for the Coyotes.Julie MarroquinJunior Midfield 
Madera South
Marroquin earned herself a spot on the All-CMAC first team for her leadership and versatility. She was not only a rock in the midfield but also a strong presence in the back. With fellow leader Maria Leal, she proved to be an important asset all season.Yvette ZunigaJunior Defender Madera
The junior was featured in 21 games, scoring one goal to go along with her defensive efforts. Her tough tackling and awareness helped her become a constant for the Coyote defense. Her efforts landed her on the All-CMAC first team.Noemi CabelloSophomore Defender Madera
Cabello proved to be a warrior on the pitch after featuring in 24 matches. Her lone assist doesn’t tell the whole story. Her ability to facilitate in the midfield along with her teammates showed her importance to the team. Defensively she was strong and flexible while offensively she was a handful, giving her a place on the All-CMAC second team.Anyssa GarciaJunior Defender Madera
Featured in over 20 games and scoring three goals, Garcia was voted to the first team All-CMAC. Her ability to defend with strength but also get up the field gave her team a dynamic option on the pitch. Although her goal scoring threat was not there every game, Garcia made the most of her chances, landing her a spot on the team.Yuliana LomeliSenior Defender Madera South
Earning a first team spot on the All-CMAC list, Lomeli proved to be a valuable asset on the pitch. Focusing more on the defensive side, Lomeli was a rock in the heart of defense. Lomeli acted quick and purposefully to clear the danger from her back line. Her quickness was evident throughout the year, giving the Stallions comfort knowing Lomeli always had their back.Maria LealSenior Defender Madera South
Leal was a leader in the back for the Stallions. The senior made the first team All-CMAC proving her discipline and focus on the pitch. Her effort and strength was a concise entry presence in the back all season.Gabriela JaimeJunior Defender Madera South
Jaime’s immense pace and hard work both on and off the pitch landed her a spot on the All-CMAC first team. Her tough approach to the game showed week in and week out. Jaime looks to instill the same mentality for her senior season next winter.Jessica DiazSenior Goalkeeper Madera
Diaz produced some eye-popping saves this season. Although more known for her ability in the water, Diaz showed that she was reliable with multiple match winning saves. She recorded a high of 66 saves and no doubt kept her team in a few games.

Science magazine editor holds Madera close

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For the Madera Tribune
Kelly Beatty stands with a group of mostly amateur astronomers in front of a telescope at Cerro Tolo Inter-American Observatory after spending 10 days with the group recently.
It has been a long time since Kelly Beatty, senior editor at Sky & Telescope Magazine, walked out to his backyard on Road 24 in Madera to view the night sky.
As a young boy, he would take his little telescope out on his dad’s peach ranch, look up and wonder what was happening up there.
“You have to imagine being able to walk outside at night, look up and see the total canopy of stars,” Beatty said. “It makes you think big thoughts.”
Although Beatty, 65, has lived in Massachusetts for 43 years, he still thinks of Madera as home base.
“It’s where my roots are. It’s where I’m grounded in,” Beatty said. “It’s where I was raised and got my values.”
Beatty lived in Madera until he left for college at the California Institute of Technology. Beatty said although he understands multiple levels in astronomy, his specialty is planetary science.
“My job, as a science writer, is to read the scientific paper, understand what’s going on, and then turn around and spit it out for public consumption,” Beatty said.
Tom DaSilva, owner of Lee DaSilva Observatory in Madera, first subscribed to the magazine when he was a little kid. He said Beatty writes wonderful articles.
“He’s really a worthwhile guy to read,” DaSilva said. “He’s, by far, my favorite author in that magazine.”
Sky & Telescope is not just a science magazine. Beatty said it is associated with all things astronomy, even organizing stargazing tours in different countries.
“I think my biggest accomplishment is that I ended up doing, as a career, what I dreamed of doing when I was young,” Beatty said. “I have been doing this for 43 years. I still enjoy every minute of it.”While he had an interest in astronomy, he needed people to support and encourage him along the way, Beatty said. He especially values the support of his sixth grade teacher at Howard Elementary School, Ronald Rockholt Sr.
“He went out of his way to help me,” Beatty said. “He was sort of instrumental on making sure I got a kick start in the direction that I wanted to go.”
Rockholt, 88, arranged for telephone interviews with scientists at NASA and put them on speaker phone in the classroom.
“He did a lot of stuff for his students,” DaSilva said. “He did amazing things that you don’t find nowadays.”
During a speech at Fresno State University nearly 20 years ago, Beatty called Rockholt onstage to share that an asteroid was named after the teacher who inspired him.
“It is a marvelous privilege, very humbling,” Rockholt said of having an asteroid named after him. “That was more than anything I was honored for as a professional teacher.”
Rockholt said that with the credential that came from the International Astronomical Union, Beatty wrote a personal note saying, “Mr. Rockholt you’ve given me enough inspiration to last a lifetime.”Beatty said Rockholt influenced a lot of people. “I respect him so much.”
Beatty said Madera was a great community to grow up in and believes that’s still the case. He comes to visit Madera about once a year.
“Driving through the valley is always very nostalgic to me,” Beatty said. “It’s kind of hard wired in me. There’s some things you just don’t forget.”
Megan Trindad is a student in Gary Rice’s community journalism class at California State University, Fresno.

Warm California temperatures expected to accelerate snowmelt

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PHILLIPS STATION, Calif. (AP) — Melting of this year's massive Sierra Nevada snowpack will cause California rivers to surge and possibly overflow their banks well into the summer this year, officials said Monday.
Among the first to be affected will be the Merced River running through Yosemite National Park, which is expected to hit flood stage by mid-week with waters rising a foot above its banks, forecasters warned.
Large amounts of water are being released from reservoirs downstream from the Sierra Nevada to lower their levels in anticipation of the heavier-than-normal melt off of snowpack, which is nearly double its normal size.
Reservoirs on tributaries of the San Joaquin River have been lowered and authorities will continue lowering their levels through June to avoid the possibility of using spillways for emergency water releases, reservoir managers said.
People who flock to the Tuolumne River for recreation should be prepared for rapid and dangerous river water, said Calvin Curtis of the Turlock Irrigation District.
"The water is going to be fast. It's going to be colder than it has been," he said.
The snowmelt flows downhill during warm months into reservoirs and canals, which supply one-third of the water used by residents of the most populous U.S. state. It also irrigates crops in the nation's most productive farming state.
The heavy snowpack today blanketing the 400-mile (644-kilometer) long Sierra Nevada stands in contrast to two years ago when barely any measureable snow remained at this time of year amid California's drought, state water managers said.
The California Cooperative Snow Surveys Program on Monday measured that snowpack contains nearly twice the amount of water typically found in the snow at this time of year.
While the heavy snow and its high water content will help prevent water shortages that California residents endured over the last several years, the tough winter was cruel to mountain wildlife — killing off bighorn sheep and lengthening hibernation periods for bears.
During California's drought, the iconic Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep moved from lower elevations higher up into the mountains in search of food, said Jason Holley, a wildlife biologist for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
But the heavy snow may have killed 100 of the 600 or so bighorn, he said.
"They've triggered some avalanches," Holley said. "Others got caught in areas with no natural food."
The snowdrifts have also kept many bears hibernating in the remote wilderness inside their dens one month longer than normal because food is still scarce, Holley said.
Hikers heading to the mountains are sure to find damaged roads leading to prized campgrounds that may not be repaired until next year, said Stanislaus National Forest officials.
In Yosemite National Park, rangers warned that visitors will need to be careful when they are near swift-flowing rivers and waterfalls with much higher water flows than normal.
Inexperienced hikers heading into the mountains should be prepared for snow lasting longer than normal this spring and should hike with more experienced people or consider heading to coastal mountains not covered in snow, said Kathryn Phillips, director of the Sierra Club California.
"Not only is it technically difficult, it is pretty uncomfortable," Phillips said. "If you've never done it before, go with somebody who has."
Smith reported from Fresno, California.

California mammoth snowstorms take toll on Sierra wildlife

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FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — California's mammoth snow drifts, a welcome sight following five years of harsh drought, have killed off dozens of endangered bighorn sheep, lengthened hibernation for bears and should cause some hikers to think twice before seeking high Sierra adventures, officials say.
Frank Gehrke, chief of the California Cooperative Snow Surveys Program, heads out Monday for the final manual measurement of the wet season, which is expected to set a record.
"We've gone from flat-out dry conditions to just an overabundance of moisture," said Doug Carlson, a spokesman for the California Department of Water Resources. "It shows the incredible variation of California's weather."
Nearly twice as much snow as normal blankets the 400-mile (644-kilometer) Sierra Nevada, even up from April 1, the beginning of spring when it typically starts melting off. It's a stark contrast to two years ago at the peak of drought when barely any measureable snow remained, state water managers say.
Officials are seeing the broad effects of this year's monster snowdrifts.
The iconic Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep, which butt their coiled horns on rocky cliffs, have not fared well. During the drought, they migrated to lush mountain peaks of the southeastern Sierra for food.
When harsh snowstorms came, more than 100 of the 600 protected animals may have perished, he said.
"They've triggered some avalanches," said Jason Holley, a wildlife biologist for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. "Others go caught in areas with no natural food."
The Sierra snowmelt crashes downhill during warm months into reservoirs and canals, which supply one-third of the water used by residents of the country's most populous state. It also irrigates crops in the nation's most productive farming state.
The snowdrifts have kept many bears in the remote wilderness tucked in their dens one month longer than normal because food is still scarce, Holley said.
People venturing into nature will find that rain and snow damaged some mountain roads leading to prized campgrounds, which may not be repaired until next year, officials in the Stanislaus National Forest reported.
Rangers at Yosemite National Park, which draws millions of visitors a year, warn of danger from icy-cold, swift-flowing rivers and waterfalls. Forecasters warned Sunday that they expect the Merced river within the park to hit flood stage at midweek, as warm weather melts the snow upstream.
Adventurers setting out with backpacks into the Sierra wilderness should be prepared for the snow to hang around longer into the season, said Kathryn Phillips, director of the Sierra Club California, which leads thousands of backpackers a year into the wilderness, including the Sierra Nevada.
Inexperienced hikers should join those who are more seasoned, or seek an escape into coastal mountains that aren't covered in snow, she said.
"Not only is it technically difficult, it is pretty uncomfortable," Phillips said. "If you've never done it before, go with somebody who has."

Letter: Things you need to know before you go to the DMV

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If you have any business with the DMV, make an appointment before you go.
Here is what you don’t know about what happens without an appointment. First, you line up early outside. We were the 5th person in line.  Now remember, on Wednesdays DMV opens at 9 a.m.
Don’t line up at 8 a.m. Once you finally get through the door, get your needed paperwork filled out, then go back to the front desk with completed paperwork, you are given a number — ours being G002.
Now, you think you’re on track of getting out of the building with your quest accomplished. Not so. All letter and numbers were being called over and over — but no Gs.  After sitting for an hour waiting, we decided to find out why no Gs were being called.
Well, Gs are no appointments — so, this means you will sit and sit and wait, waiting until all appointments are seen.
Maybe you might get your turn by 4 p.m.
Now if it’s after 4:30, no testing is given.
Save yourself some time and elevated blood pressure and make an appointment!
— Christine Hayes,Madera

Letter: A very happy ending for a dog and its owner

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This is a great happy ending from the Madera County Animal Shelter that I just had to share.
This story started with a little black and tan dog that was brought into the shelter as a stray with no ID or microchip. The dog was acting strangely, as if it had a neurological disorder. The dog was rushed to Madera Veterinary Clinic for assessment.
The veterinarians concluded that the dog had gotten into some medication or chemical, and had a very negative reaction. The dog was spinning in circles, unsteady, and wobbling instead of walking. Over time the dog seemed to slowly improve. No one came to claim the dog, but rescue groups were hesitant to take a dog with these serious problems.
Amazingly, a young woman came in after an extended vacation and was looking for her lost dog. She had an older picture of the dog as a puppy. Animal Services Supervisor Cindy Avila thought the dog looked familiar, and took her to where the neurological dog was housed.
The tears started flowing when Maria Palocioz saw her lost dog. Maria called her name “Chata” and the dog perked her ears and connected with her owner. Even though the dog was still wobbly, the affection poured out of the dog, equal to the tears of the grateful owner. Chata couldn’t stop wiggling and looked adoringly at her owner. They were connected to each other physically and emotionally.
Smiles were certainly abundant throughout the entire shelter as reuniting and re-homing animals with owners is an incredible experience for all staff and volunteers.
— Kirsten Gross,Executive director,Madera County Animal Services

Chicken barbecue planned for May 21

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Courtesy of James CavalleroFrom left, Madera Italian Catholic Federation members Gary Cavallero, Jeff Bottorff, Art Berryman, and Cari and Mark Beveridge prepare for a BBQ Chicken Takeout Dinner set for May 21.
The Madera Italian Catholic Federation plans to hold a BBQ Chicken Takeout Dinner on May 21st at the Italo-American Club, 331 S. D St.
The dinner includes half a barbecued chicken, Italian green beans, salad, a roll and dessert. Takeout hours will be 3-5 p.m.
Tickets are $15 and can be purchased at Massetti Brothers Appliances and St Marello Bookstore.  No tickets will be sold at the door.
For ticket information, call Jennifer at 978-4750 or Elsie at 674-8201.

Madera almost died in infancy

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Courtesy of the Madera County Historical SocietyThe Madera Sugar Pine Lumber company was the economic force that brought Madera into the 20th century after the town almost died in its infancy in the 19th century. By the time the Great Depression shut down its mills in 1933, agriculture had emerged to give Madera the strength it needed to survive.
Although the search for precious metals brought the first pioneers to what is now Madera County, that quest does not account for the establishment of civilization in this area. More than picks and shovels were needed to lay a foundation here.
It was the lumber industry that gave the local economy its first permanent base. In the process, the town of Madera was born, but for a while it was just barely alive. Twice its heartbeat almost ceased, and it was only through the courage of a handful of citizens that it was resuscitated.
The need for lumber became apparent right after the gold rush. In the spring of 1857, a number of Chinese miners living near Coarsegold were in dire need of material for their sluice boxes. C.P. Converse had established a small mill in Crane Valley (present day Bass Lake), but he was unable to turn out any significant supply of lumber until he could find feed for the oxen that were needed to drag the timber to the mill.
Not to be denied, the Chinese miners went to work. They cut as many logs as were needed, snaked them to the mill by hand, and as fast as the board was cut, a man would shoulder a load and start for the mines. Within a day or two, the sluice boxes were in operation in the camp, some 15 miles away.
It was the railroad, however, that gave impetus to the creation of a bona fide lumber enterprise in Madera County. In August 1873, just a year after the building of the Southern Pacific Railroad through the San Joaquin Valley, a group of Merced businessmen began surveys to determine the practicality of a logging venture to be situated high on the slopes of the western Sierra. If the timber could be cut and brought to the valley, it could be distributed via the rails all over the state.
On Feb. 8, 1874, a company was formed for precisely that purpose. The newly constituted California Lumber Company announced it was building a mountain lumber mill near Fresno Flats and a V-flume to connect the mill with the railroad in the Valley.
This amazing project was carried out within two years. Retail yards and a box factory were erected at the flume’s valley terminus on 40 acres of land donated by Isaac Friedlander, and the town of Madera was laid out. Within a year, however, the California Lumber Company was in deep trouble. The devastating drought of 1877 created a panic throughout the entire San Joaquin Valley.
Lumber piled up in the Madera yards awaiting customers who never came. On Feb. 20, the short-lived operation was declared bankrupt, and its properties passed to a San Jose bank.
On May 21, 1878, the officers of the bank, led by a man with the unusual name of Return Roberts, incorporated another lumber company, the Madera Flume and Trading Company. This successor to the California Lumber Company continued the Madera logging operation and helped save the town from an early death. Two sawmills were created in the mountains, and soon lumber was once more making its way down the flume to the new little village of Madera. Adversity, however, remained poised and always threatened.
In 1881, a disastrous fire completely destroyed the lumberyards in Madera, and in the 1890s a nationwide depression put the Madera Flume and Trading Company on the verge of extinction. At that point, along came Elmer H. Cox, who with Roberts and Michigan lumber magnate, Arthur Hill, formed the third major lumber company in Madera. Under Cox’s astute direction, the Madera Sugar Pine Lumber Company was incorporated, and on May 8, 1899, it took over the assets of the Madera Flume and Trading Company.
The old lumber flume was rebuilt and extended. Techniques became more sophisticated as a logging railroad was pushed into the woods to enable loggers to cut timber a greater distance from the millpond. By the 1920s, seven locomotives were used to bring timber to the mill.
The Madera Sugar Pine Lumber Company existed for more than three decades and made money nearly every season. It harvested more than 50 million board feet of timber annually and continued to pump life into Madera County’s mountains, foothills and valley. Then in 1931, economic depression again raised its ugly head. Once more a nation-wide depression destroyed the market for lumber, and the last log was finally cut.
Although the Madera yards continued to function for two more seasons, the mountain camp was closed for good. In due time the locomotives, mill equipment, and other properties were disposed of, and the corporation known as the Madera Sugar Pine Lumber Company quietly disappeared. Today little remains of what was once the single most important economic force in Madera.
For more than 50 years the fortunes of Madera had been inextricably bound to lumber; from 1876 to 1933, the town was nourished by timber. To a large degree, it was the resiliency of that industry that kept the town alive. By the time the death knell sounded for the lumbermen, the farmers stood ready to fill the gap. Diversified agriculture took up where lumber left off.
Its eventual demise notwithstanding, the Madera Sugar Pine Lumber Company continues to be remembered. Its role in Madera’s history is too important to be forgotten. The legacy of its lumberjacks will always enrich her story.

Grace Community Church serves Madera

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Wendy Alexander/The Madera Tribune
Grace Community Church pastor Randy Brannon delivers a sermon.
Just under a mile from the intersection of Road 26 and Avenue 17 in Madera there’s a beige building that is easy to miss, blending in with the surrounding brown fields almost as though it was camouflaged intentionally.
At first glance, it would be hard to believe the building is a church that serves its community and the world. This is Grace Community Church.
Grace Community Church officially became a church in 1978. Before then, it was just a Bible study that met on a weekly basis. After the church was founded, the members met at a school for the next seven years. The worship center, where the church meets now, was not completed until 1985.Other buildings that serve the church followed, starting with the education building in 1989 and moving from there. Now, the church is large enough to host a small faith-based school along with its other ministries.
The school is not actually a part of Grace Community Church. It has a separate board and budget even though the two ministries share buildings.
The church is focused on outreach, both in the Madera community and worldwide. Nearly 20 percent of the church’s budget goes to missions, with missionaries stationed in places like Jerusalem and parts of Saudi Arabia.
However, the far-away mission fields are just that: far away. Senior Pastor Randy Brannon also wants his church to stay involved in what is happening in the immediate community.
Brannon does this by staying involved with the Madera Ministerial Association, which brings together all the churches of Madera in order to touch base and make sure the needs of the community are being reached.
“I call it the Church of Madera,” Brannon said. “It’s one church with many congregations. No one church can meet all the needs of every person.”
For 34 years, Brannon has led a Wednesday morning Bible study as his own way of keeping in touch with his congregation in a more personal setting. And on Sunday mornings, his spirit is one of purpose.
“We’re not interested in gathering just for the sake of gathering,” Brannon said.
He used the church’s mission statement as his own kind of mantra: bringing people to the knowledge and worship of Christ. Then he explained that he and his church work to achieve this goal in four ways: making Christ known, knowing Christ, being a caring family, and worshiping the Lord.
The first aspect, making Christ known, is exactly that: spreading the gospel in the community of Madera and worldwide so that more people choose to give their lives to Christ.
The second aspect, knowing Christ, was focused more on those who are already Christian. Brannon talked about deepening the faith of existing Christians so that they can lead by example in their communities.
The third and fourth aspects go together. Being a caring family to Brannon meant both one’s biological family and one’s Christian family: meeting the needs of those you care about and being mindful of where they are in life and what they may need. And worshiping the Lord referenced Sunday mornings, when the church family gathers together as a family to spend time in the Bible together.
Greg Perkins, both the youth pastor and associate pastor of Grace Community Church, focuses his ministry on the second aspect of how the church achieves its mission statement.
Perkins meets with the junior high and high school aged members of the church, and his goal is teaching them and helping them grow in their faith. He talks to them no matter where they are in life: from those who were brought by a friend and have no clue about Christianity to those raised in Christian homes wanting to deepen their relationships.
He talked about wanting to set an example for the youth that he interacts with on a weekly basis, giving them the tools to stand up for themselves in their faith so that they can “lead by example” wherever they are, even when people question them on things they aren’t sure about.
“I try to teach them that, just because you don’t know the answer, doesn’t mean there isn’t one,” Perkins said. He went on to talk about finding answers to questions that one is unsure about as a good tool for the youth in life in general, not just in their faith.
Wendy Henson works alongside Perkins, interacting with the youth before they reach him. She is the children’s ministry director, overseeing the children from birth to sixth grade.
“We have, like, 90 volunteers in children’s ministry,” Henson said. “Between 90-100. Wednesdays we probably run about 100 to 125 kids. Sundays maybe 40 to 50 each service. And I could be off a little bit.”
Henson manages this ministry alongside being a mother herself, with four children ranging from 9 to 13 years of age.
Belinda Potter, the church’s secretary, said the dynamic of the church makes it an easy place to work.
“I mean it sincerely when I say that we all just get together well and we love each other here, we do,” Potter said. “And there’s respect for each other and it’s just a pleasure. It really is.”
Lauren Mueller is a student in Gary Rice’s community journalism class at California State University, Fresno.
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