East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors set to compete in cable TV series

East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors

Thanks to Kent Walker for the information about and photos of five East Cobb youth Ninja Warriors, including one of his own, who will be appearing next weekend on the first episode of the “American Ninja Warriors Junior” series on the Universal Kids cable outlet.

Kent says the five kids work out at Ninja Quest on Canton Road, and were among 6,000 applicants to make the initial cut.

Three are in the 13-14 age group, and two others in the 11-12 age group. They are Vance Walker and Luke Milman, who both attend Simpson Middle School. Ethan Bartnicki goes to Walton High School, and Brooks Bieber and Tate Allen are home-schooled.

Kent tells us that “A couple of them went really far in the competition. I can’t tell the exact outcome. There will be 20 episodes as the competition narrows down to one winner in each of 3 age groups.”

In other words, you’ve got to stay tuned. That debut episode is Saturday at 7 p.m.

Here’s more about the series from Universal Kids:East Cobb Youth Ninja Warriors 2

Gold Medal Winning Olympic Gymnast Laurie Hernandez will co-host American Ninja Warrior Junior with Matt Iseman and Akbar Gbajabiamila on Universal Kids, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment’s network for kids 2-12. This next generation of American Ninja Warrior marks the first time some of the show’s biggest fans can become part of this five-time Emmy nominated worldwide phenomenon. 

American Ninja Warrior Junior celebrates real kids taking on the iconic course with dedication and skill. Nearly 200 boy and girl Junior Ninjas from across the U.S. will face off on the same Head to Head courses in three age brackets: 9 & 10, 11 & 12, and 13 & 14 year olds. The courses will feature iconic Ninja Warrior obstacles, including Sonic Swing, Tic Toc, Spin Cycle, and the Warped Wall. Each age bracket will be mentored by All Star Ninja Mentors – Kevin Bull, Drew Drechsel, Natalie Duran, Meagan Martin, Najee Richardson, and Barclay Stockett. Three final winners (one per age bracket) will be crowned the first ever American Ninja Warrior Junior Champions.

“At Universal Kids, we see kids as they see themselves and want to share their stories,” said Deirdre Brennan, General Manager Universal Kids. “American Ninja Warrior Junior celebrates a kid-centric movement that everyone can be a part of and enjoy together. It will encourage and inspire all kids to push their limits and not shy away from challenges.”

“Over the last number of years, we have received an outpouring of letters and videos asking when is there going to be a Ninja show for kids? Well, the time is now! People are going to be amazed at how talented and dedicated these young ninjas are,” said Arthur Smith, CEO of A. Smith & Co. Productions and Executive Producer of the ‘American Ninja Warrior’ franchise. “They’re remarkable, and to know that they’ve been inspired by our show is immensely gratifying.”

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B’nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest open to middle school students

B'nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest

Thanks to East Cobb News reader Vic A. for passing along this invitation to middle school students: It’s the B’nai Brith Enlighten America essay contest, which the organization says is “designed to combat the issues of bigotry and prejudice, and encourages respect for all people.”

This year, the contest is expanding to accept essays on the topic of bullying. Cash prizes are $750 for first place, $500 for second place and $250 for third place. The winning student’s school also will receive $500;

Here’s more about what’s behind the initiative:

“The actions of bullying and tragic, horrific mass shootings in schools, nightclubs and other public gathering places are often brought on by bigoted, prejudicial attitudes that result from hatred and misunderstanding.”

Here’s more about what students will be writing about this year:

Our 2018 essay contest examines the words of George Washington in his letter to the Touro Synagogue, Newport, Rhode Island, 1790…when he wrote that ours is a government which “gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.”

We ask all contestants to write what they think the message of Washington’s letter means in our society today. Students should reflect on the significance of tolerance and equality by writing about issues of bigotry and prejudice, how those issues have been addressed (or not addressed) in recent years, and how they affect our quest for peaceful coexistence among our friends and neighbors, and throughout the world.

As an alternative, you may select a quote attributed to a local community leader or another American President. Or, use an event in your life or an event in history.

Tell us why you chose your quote or event, and its relevance to the issues of bigotry or prejudice.

We encourage students to consider the following, and express their thoughts via their contest entries:

Are Washington’s words and thoughts applicable today? How? Where? Why?

Are there corresponding responsibilities that we share today?

How do violent “hate crimes” incited by bigotry affect the victims? The perpetrators?  Everyone else?

The organization is also looking for donors and sponsors, including local business owners, to make contributions for the prize money. If you’re interested, contact Art Link, Program Chairman, at ReadThisNow@yahoo.com, or call 770-807-5113.

The Enlighten America contest rules page has plenty more on what you’ll need to do to sign up, and where to send your completed work.

The contest is open to students who attend public or private schools or who are home-schooled in Cobb, Fulton, DeKalb, Clayton, Douglas, Forsyth and Hall counties.

Eligible students must be in 7th or 8th grades by next month and must be attending by February 2019. The deadline to submit an essay is Nov. 16.

More youth and school news

 

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Sandy Plains Prowlers baseball team reaches finals of Cooperstown tournament

Sandy Plains Prowlers baseball team

In the days before former Atlanta Braves star Chipper Jones was preparing for his Baseball Hall of Fame induction, the Sandy Plains Prowlers baseball team was there, in Cooperstown, N.Y., participating in the Cooperstown Dreams Park baseball tournament.

Team manager Mike Tamucci got in touch with us to share the information below and the photos from the Prowlers’ run through the 104-team tournament.

They were runners-up, playing before 2,000 fans at the Little Majors Stadium in Cooperstown. He says it’s “the pinnacle of the 12-year-old travel baseball season.”

Here’s more from Mike explaining how the Cooperstown tourney unfolded for the Prowlers between July 20-27:

The Prowlers went 6-0 in pool play and outscored their opponents, 104-11, against teams from six different states, to earn the number one seed. On championship Thursday, the Prowlers won four-straight games and hit 18 home runs to beat the 32-seed from New Jersey, 17-seed from Maryland, 8-seed from California, and 5-seed from Wisconsin. In the semifinals, the Prowlers overcame a four-run deficit in the bottom of the fifth and scored 11 runs, including three-straight home runs, to earn the victory. For the tournament, the Prowlers hit 38 home runs and outscored their opponents, 157-22.

The Prowlers were the first team from Sandy Plains Baseball to earn a number one seed and play in the championship game in the 32-year history of Cooperstown Dreams Park. The Prowlers finish the season with a record of 65-11 and five tournament championships.

The Prowlers are seen below with the Dreams Park finalist trophy. Front Row: Brett Armstrong, Braden Gabel, Adam Little, Griffin Tamucci, Collin Trevison, and Ben Garvis. Back Row: Coach Ryan Tamucci, Coach Mike Tamucci, Kent Schmidt, Oscar Alfaro, Coach Darren Little, Dorian Harper, Pascal Trevison, William Petteys, Coach Brian Gabel, and Coach Bill Garvis.

Sandy Plains Prowlers baseball team

Do you have news to share with the East Cobb community about your organization? Send it to us and we’ll get out the word! It can be anything, from a sports team to a church or faith community, civic or neighborhood association, school or more.

E-mail us at editor@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll post it. Feel free to send photos, graphics or flyers.

More sports stories

 

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East Cobb Robotics information meetings slated for August

The East Cobb Robotics club is inviting high school students to two informational meetings next month as a new school year and a new slate of group activities are about to begin.

Here’s how the club’s getting out the word for prospective new members:East Cobb Robotics Team 11096

Are you a creative writer, web or graphic designer, social media expert or video editor?

Are you interested in community service, marketing or running a small business?

If you want to sharpen your skills and round out our successful team we’re in need of your talent and passion! We’re East Cobb Robotics, a community robotics team (and small business!) made up of public, private, and homeschooled high school students across East Cobb. Building and driving the robot is only a small part of what makes us successful. We have the engineering and programming part handled (you’ll never have to pick up a wrench!), but we need YOUR unique skills to help us grow!  We can help sharpen those skills while gaining real life experience in a fun, team atmosphere.

If this is you, please come to one of our Information Meetings to learn more and see how we can help each other learn and succeed.

Fall Info Meetings:
Mountain View Library
3320 Sandy Plains Rd, Marietta, GA 30066
Wednesday, August 8, 2018  7:00pm – 8:00pm
Saturday, August 11, 2018  11:30am – 12:30pm

Questions? Email us at info@EastCobbRobotics.org or visit us online at www.EastCobbRobotics.org.

 

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Wheeler F1 racing team prepares for its first international competition

Wheeler F1 racing team
From L-R, Wheeler F1 racing team members Shivam Patel, Michael Jin and Arul Gupta. (East Cobb News photo by Wendy Parker)

Members of the Wheeler F1 racing team had barely gotten off the plane after winning a national competition in June when they knew what they had to do next.

“We were on cloud nine for about three hours,” said Arul Gupta, the executive manager and marketing director of the AeroFlow Racing team, which includes five students who attend the Wheeler STEM Magnet School.

They’re spending what’s left of their summer redesigning their foam and light plastic miniature vehicle for the F1 in Schools world competition in Singapore in September.

They know they have to step up their game in marketing, project management, promotions, community outreach and fundraising—the other components of the entrepreneurially-constructed F1 in Schools concept—in facing the global elites of the circuit for the first time.

There’s little time to waste.

“We’re doing prototypes now” for the cars they want to take to Singapore, said Michael Jin, the manufacturing engineer for Aeroflow Racing.

At the F1 in Schools National Finals in Austin, Texas, their car posted a time of 1.3 seconds along a track of 24 meters, or 78 feet (as they demonstrated in April at the Wheeler STEAM Symposium), the best time of all the cars there.

In Singapore, Gupta said, “1.3 isn’t going to cut it.” He figures Aeroflow needs to cut it down to 1.1 seconds to have a shot against the elite teams, especially those coming from Australia and Britain, the hotbeds for F1 in Schools.

The AeroFlow team scored around 920 points out of a possible 1000 in all phases of the national competition, which included teams with ages ranging from 9 to 19.

While team members are proud of that, they know that most of the 40 teams heading to Asia are more experienced than AeroFlow, which was formed in the fall of 2016. The global competition, Gupta said, is also “much more rigorous” in judging.

“They don’t grade just how fast your car goes,” he said. “They judge design, marketing, social media strategy, all of that.”

The AeroFlow team even had to design and update its own website as part of the competition.

Wheeler F1 racing
The victorious Wheeler F1 racing team car at the U.S. Nationals. (AeroFlow Racing photo)

Last year, the Wheeler students finished fifth in their maiden national competition. “We wanted to the best we could,” said Gupta, who lives in the Pope High School district and who like his fellow AeroFlow team members commutes to classes at Wheeler. “It gave us a better idea what we had to improve upon.”

The speed of the car had to get better, and they decided making it as light as possible was the key.

Getting that weight to 50 grams, the minimum allowed in F1 in Schools, is an exacting and time-consuming task.

That task fell largely to Jin, who lives in the Walton High School district. “When you’re making a car, getting the design right is so important,” he said. “Adding a couple of coats of paint can make a big difference.”

The construction includes forming the car body out of a foam block, then adding plastic components that include the wheels and other elements that enhance speed.

As they were evolving their model over the last school year, the AeroFlow team members consulted with Georgia Tech aerospace engineering professors who advised them on lift and downforce.

“The car’s acting almost like a rocket,” Gupta said.

“The real difficulty is getting the right finishing on it,” Jin said, with the ideal being “a perfectly smooth surface.”

Added Gupta: “It should be smooth as glass,” with a glossy look.

The AeroFlow car turned in a time of 1.13 seconds at the Wheeler STEAM Symposium in April. (East Cobb News file photo)

The intricate attention to detail in F1 in Schools is paramount, but the rising Wheeler seniors on the AeroFlow team say they embrace the challenge that’s largely outside the classroom.

While they submit college applications (among the schools are MIT, Carnegie Mellon, Cal Tech, Stanford, Georgia Tech and Emory), they enjoy learning the well-rounded skills they have to develop.

“You get to be extremely hands-on,” said Gupta, who in his role works with Novelis, an aluminum products manufacturer that is AeroFlow’s main corporate sponsor.

Even the AeroFlow name came after a lot of thought among team members. “How can we be known for something that’s related to what we’re doing,” he said. “That sounds about right.”

Jin said he especially likes the chance to “simulate the real world” and “this shows what drives innovation.

“We feel like we’re in a pretty good place. We know what our competition is and what we are doing well.”

The other immediate challenge the AeroFlow team has is raising money to make the trip to Singapore.

They estimated that all their costs, from entry fees to air fare, food and lodging, will cost around $37,000.

Thus far, they’ve raised around $24,000, with less than two months before their trip.

The AeroFlow team has created a GoFundMe page to accept donations from anyone wishing to help out.

The Wheeler-based AeroFlow team members after winning the U.S. Nationals in Austin, Texas, in June. (AeroFlow Racing photo)

 

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Lutzie 43 Road Race returns to Lassiter High School Aug. 4

Lutzie 43 Road Race
Mike and Mary Lutzenkirchen, the parents of Philip Lutzenkirchen, at the 2017 Lutzie 43 Road Race at Lassiter High School (East Cobb News file photo).

The Lutzie 43 Foundation is once again holding the Lutzie 43 Road Race at Lassiter High School (here’s last year’s East Cobb News coverage).

The event honors the memory of Philip Lutzenkirchen, the former Lassiter and Auburn football star who died at the age of 23 in a 2014 drunken driving crash.

Both he and the driver of a truck that crashed near LaGrange on June 30, 2014 were intoxicated.

The foundation, headed by his father Mike Lutzenkirchen, raises funds and awareness to help young people with character development and making good decisions. He speaks often to youth groups around the South, including college athletic teams.

The Lutzie 43 Road Race is presented by Jim Ellis Kia of Kennesaw, and here’s what the foundation wants you to know about the event. The race proceeds benefit the foundation and the East Cobb Fellowship of Christian Athletes chapter:

Our race features a 5K race and one-mile kids’ fun run. The race starts and finishes at Lassiter High School’s Lutzie Field in Marietta, GA.

This race is for everyone! Bring your whole family, friends, dogs, and anyone who wants to have fun! Every runner gets an official race t-shirt!

Prices:
July 5-August 4
Students – $30
Adults – $43

Here’s more about how to sign up for the Lutzie 43 Road Race that includes a “virtual race” option for those who can’t make it in person, and a link to a t-shirt sale that’s raising funds for the foundation.

Here’s more about the Lutzenkirchen family and how they’ve used Philip’s death to help young people.

 

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Hyde Farm Nature Camp has openings for June session; ‘Hyde and Seek’ Artventure registration underway

Hyde Farm Nature Camp

Cobb PARKS is alerting us today that there’s still space available to attend the Hyde Farm Nature camp later this month.

It’s for rising third- through fifth-graders and takes place from June 18-22. The camp is an hour each day, from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., and the total cost per child for the week is $65.

Registration information is available on the poster below.

Hyde Farm also has some other day camps this summer in connection with The Art Place-Mountain View and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

The Hyde and Seek Artventure camps are for kids age 7-12. In addition to outdoor art sessions, campers will explore the Hyde Farm facility, hike to the Chattahoochee River and take in one of East Cobb’s most picturesque natural settings.

Those sessions cost $100 per child are from July 23-27 and are limited to 30 students each. One camp meets in the mornings, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the other in the afternoons, from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Parents must provide daily transportation to and from Hyde Farm (675 Hyde Farm Road).

 

 

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Cobb Public Library summer reading program kicks off with Saturday celebration

Submitted information about the Cobb Public Library summer reading program:Cobb Libraries summer reading program

Bring your whole family to enjoy the Summer Reading Program Kickoff Party 5-7 p.m., Saturday, June 2, at the Switzer Library in downtown Marietta. This event is free and open to the public. Come dressed in your favorite dancing outfit from your favorite decade for the Decades Dance Party. The family-friendly DJ will be playing all the best hits from the ’50s to today. Cobb Police Department staff will bring police vehicles to explore. Enjoy kid yoga, balloon volleyball, arts, crafts and music-centered story time.

The Atlanta Dream will lead basketball drills and the mascot, Star, will be on-hand for high fives. The Atlanta Dream will also give away tickets to its Sunday, June 3, game to children who attend the kickoff party. Adults can purchase discounted tickets and half of the proceeds will go to the Cobb Library Foundation.

Here’s more information about the summer reading program, which continues through July 28. The four programs are early literacy, children, teens and adults.

The Switzer Library is located at 266 Roswell Street near downtown Marietta.

The June calendar of events at library branches in East Cobb includes movie screenings at Sewell Mill on Saturday, as well as a session on travel tips from AAA on Saturday at the East Cobb Library from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

 

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East Cobb Family Cub Scouting Packs to hold informational meetings next week

Jacqueline Alford, District Director of the Foothills District of the Boy Scouts America, sent us some information to pass along about two informational meetings they’re having next week in East Cobb regarding their first Family Cub Scouting Packs.

They’re for boys and girls who have completed pre-K through the 5th grade.

Pack 270 will hold an informational sign-up party next Tuesday, June 5, at the Emerson Unitarian Universalist Congregation (4010 Canton Road), at 6:30 p.m.

Next Thursday, June 7, Pack 518 will have a similar event, also starting at 6:30 p.m., at the Lutheran Church of the Incarnation (1200 Indian Hills Parkway).

Alford told us the family program has been around for a while, but has been expanded to include incoming kindergarteners and girls, who’ve been fully invited to join what’s also been renamed Scouts BSA.

She added:

A misconception is often that the Boy Scouts of America did this just to include girls, while that is true, it was more so to address the family as a whole. By opening the program to girls, families with boys and girls can now do the Cub Scouting together. Even before this announcement, sisters and cousins were going to Pack meetings and camp outs, but missed out on some of what the boys got to do. This now allows the girls to earn ranks and learn.

Because of this, there can now be three types of Packs: all boy Packs, all girl Packs, and family Packs (Packs with girls and boys, but Dens will be separated by gender).

The Foothills District includes around 25 or so packs of Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts in the East Cobb area.

For more information, email Jacquelyn Alford at jalford@atlantabsa.org or visit www.foothillsbsa.org.

 

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East Cobb Robotics to hold information meetings next week

We know it’s the week of spring break, but if you’ve been looking to get your high school-age child into a robotics program, East Cobb Robotics is having two information meetings next week. Here’s what they’re sharing with interested kids and parents about what they have to offer, and how you can get in touch:

We are SO much #morethanrobots! East Cobb Robotics is looking for students with a variety of interests to join our FIRST Robotics Competition team. Use your passion for Art, Programming, Writing, Marketing, Social Media, Website Design, CAD, Community Service, Business Plans, Photography, Video Editing, Engineering or Robotics to build Robots, Friendships and LIFE Skills.

Our FRC team is open to 9th – 12 graders. We accept public, private and homeschooled students.

Find out more by attending one of our informational meetings to see how you can SHINE!! Together we build amazing robots and good humans.

2018 SPRING FRC INFORMATION MEETINGS
When:
Tuesday, April 10, 2018 7:00pm – 8:00pm
Saturday, April 14, 2018 11:30am – 12:30pm

Where:
Mountain View Library (3320 Sandy Plains Rd, Marietta, GA 30066)

Please contact info@EastCobbRobotics.org with any questions.

 

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