Preview of Course Corrections
My latest book shares some fiction, some philosophy, and some Merced County History
I hope you will enjoy my new book Course Corrections, available through LuLu.com.
In the book, I take my passion for the game of golf and share about thirty stories of my experiences, my imagination, and my philosophy behind the game.
If you’re a golfer or have a golfer in your life, this may be something to pick up.
If you appreciate local history, there are a few stories sprinkled in the book about Merced County and golf. Here’s a sample from the chapter on the man who led a historic military mission back in the late 1950s that started right here in Merced County. His connection to golf is a course in Riverside County that bears his name.
In the history of local golf courses, very few people will know or even care about the General Old Course in Riverside, California.
The course is on the site of the former March Air Force Base. The base was renamed March Air Reserve Base in the 1990s as part of the Base Realignment and Closure Act (BRAC) that was designed to improve Defense Department efficiency. March now houses Air National Guard, Army, Navy, and Marine reserve units.
The land has since been put to new military uses in the ever growing southern California region.
But the golf course that was on the base still stands.
It’s named after Lieutenant General Archie Old.
It was named to honor the man who played a key role in a little known military milestone from more than sixty years ago.
That milestone was the first ever around-the-world non-stop flight by an airplane. It is known by the mission’s name: Operation Power Flite. It happened in January of 1957. The mission made possible the first-ever around-the-world flight of a jet without landing to refuel.
Operation Power Flite, and I note the Air Force used the spelling of the word that the rest of us spell as “flight”, began at Castle Air Force Base in Atwater, Merced County deep in the center of the Central Valley of California. .
A contingent of three aircraft took off from Castle on a cold January morning.
One plane developed mechanical troubles and had to land. A second plane left the group, as planned, over Great Britain.
The third made it around the world. Thanks to aerial refueling, the jet could keep going for the forty-five hours it took to circle the planet.
Although the jets started from Castle, the mission didn’t end there.
Foggy conditions in Merced County led to the decision to land at March Air Force Base.
Behind the controls for the landing was Lieutenant General Archie Old.
Operation Power Flite was an important chapter in our nation’s military aviation history.
In the middle of the Cold War, the United States wanted to send the message that it could scramble a group of aircraft from any place in the world within minutes, and keep those planes flying for as long it would take. It was the kind of deterrent many thought would keep the Soviets at bay.
The 1957 mission was considered by military experts to be a significant development in aviation.
The role Castle Air Force Base played in the nation’s defense is documented at the Castle Air Museum.
The Museum created a small display area within its’ permanent collection to commemorate Operation Power Flite.
The story of this history making flight made the cover of Life magazine on January 28, 1957.
The story took up over a dozen pages in that week’s issue. The pages are so large that it’s impossible to copy a single page on a regular eight-by-eleven or eight-by-fourteen inch copy machine.
Magazines were much bigger back in the 1950’s; not only in the size of the pages, but also in the influence wielded in our society.
Magazines back then were a big deal. Life magazine, especially the cover story on Life magazine, was a really big deal.
If you read the rest of that chapter, you’ll learn what’s in the future for that golf course.
That chapter is available for a free preview right now on the book preview page.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He will be the featured speaker at the annual meeting of the Merced County Historical Society in February.
Two Greeting Cards
Simple expressions of seasonal joy, appreciated by the recipient
I’m a big fan of greeting cards.
I have fond memories of my mother sending cards for birthdays, Christmas, Valentine’s Day, St. Patrick’s Day, Easter, and Thanksgiving. She’d buy most of them from the card rack at the local store in my home town.
In my college years, I grew to appreciate cards from home that would arrive at my dormitory mailbox.
Mom kept on sending them through my adult years. My dad, brother, and sister continue to do the same thing.
In a day and age of email greetings and Facebook birthday wishes, the card, especially with a few words written on the inside, carries a lot of good feelings for me.
Talking about greeting cards with a friend at the coffee shop the other day reminded me of two particular cards and how each helped me through a couple of rough spots in my life.
In my early years as a working professional, I had been on the job for several months. I thought I was doing rather well when my boss called me into his office.
“We’re going to make some changes that involve you,” was how he started the conversation.
I walked out of the office with something he called a promotion and what I called a new area of responsibility.
It was a low point in the early part of my career. Other than my wife, I only shared my disappointment with one close friend. It was in late April when I called to tell him about my plight.
A week later, a Mother’s Day card arrived in my mail. It was from my friend. On the inside of the card he wrote “I got this for my Mom, but I think you need it more than she does right now.”
Those were the perfect words to say to a friend, and here I am nearly forty years later thinking about that day.
As things turned out, my new duties led to a very fruitful career path in the management ranks. It was indeed one of the best things that ever happened to me professionally.
Flash forward to thirty-plus years later where I found myself choosing just the right birthday card to send to another friend.
As mentioned earlier, cards are pretty important to me. I found the perfect card to mail my friend in a couple of months for his birthday.
One month later, I almost forgot about the card when I reviewed some email while away on vacation with my family. There was a message from someone I did not recognize.
The subject line displayed my friend’s name.
I read about the unexpected passing of my friend in an email message. I was in shock. I immediately called his family to express my condolences.
After hanging up the phone, I remembered that birthday card I had so carefully chosen for his special day. Upon my return from vacation, I pulled out that card, wrote my reflections about my friend, and sent it to his family.
Those two cards were special because they were for a specific occasion.
What made them even more meaningful is not what was depicted on the card, but rather the handwritten comments inside.
One was received and remembered.
The other was sent and provided an outlet to let a family know how I felt about the loss of their son, my good friend.
So as you can see, I’m a big fan of greeting cards.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He will soon publish Course Corrections, a book about his experiences with golf.
Nut Harvest Time in Merced County
Growers are pleased with the production, concerned about prices and water
It’s been a good season for almonds and other nut crops in Merced County. With most of the harvest on the way to processing, growers are back in the orchards pruning to give the trees a better shot for a more productive season next year.
While the official numbers are not in on the harvest of 2019, current trends point to another good season for almond growers.
According to the Merced County Agriculture Commissioner’s 2018 report, the almond harvest including hulls was valued at about $460 million. Over one-hundred thousand acres were in use that year.
Pistachios and walnuts came in at $27 and $16 million respectively.
There was even a Nut Festival in October
This first-of-its-kind event was organized to celebrate the nut industry in Merced County, to educate the community on just how big the business is, and to establish a mechanism to give back to area non-profits that help young people.
“We are a major player on the world stage with these commodities,” said Necola Adams who headed up the Festival. “We needed to celebrate this!”
In a report to the Board of Supervisors, and available to the public at the county’s website (https://www.co.merced.ca.us/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/810) Agricultural Commissioner David A. Robinson stated the 2018 almond acreage was down a little over one-percent by about six thousand acres.
That decrease is part of an overall decrease in farm acreage in the year attributed primarily to falling commodity prices
Still, overall agriculture in Merced County had a gross value of three-and-a-quarter billion dollars according to the report.
Nuts, particularly almonds, are a big piece of Merced County’s agricultural market.
Commissioner Robinson’s report to the Board of Supervisors makes it clear that while almond acreage and prices are down, the crop remains number two in the County’s top fifteen commodity rankings.
Milk continues to be the County’s top commodity.
“Commodity prices are affected by trade and are linked together,” Commissioner Robinson says.
Merced County almonds and walnuts are exported all over the world.
The Commission report states that phytosanitary certificates, relating to the health of plants with respect to the requirements of international trade, have been issued worldwide.
Japan, India, and Mexico are the top three countries in terms of the number of certificates issued.
The greatest threat to the burgeoning nut industry in Merced County is water.
But prices, trade regulations, and urban growth will continue to inflict pressure in the sector.
“Commodity prices and water availability are an ongoing concern for growers of all commodities including almonds,” Commissioner Robinson said.
Necola Adams with the Nut Festival says that’s exactly why informing the community about this important part of agriculture is necessary. “We also needed to educate the community on who we are, and the process it takes from tree to table.”
The County’s first Nut Festival program speaks to growing the now one-day event into a three-day affair with attendance crossing over the 100,000 mark over the next several years.
The Festival’s challenge, like most of the nut industry in the region, puts a lot of hope in maintaining the Central Valley’s role as a leader in the world markets.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He will release Course Correction, a book about golf, in December.
Returning from the “You Can Never Go Home” Tour
A visit to the place where I first worked forty years ago.
Someone once told me the house where you grew up stops being your home once you get your own place.
Those words rang true during my recent visit to my native upstate New York. Since leaving my childhood home after graduating from college, there have been more than a half-dozen places I have lived and worked.
The first of those places I would call home was a ten-unit apartment building in Johnson City, New York, a suburb of Binghamton where I started my television news career four-decades ago.
I paid $120 a month. It was ten minutes from work, five minutes from the shopping mall, and three hours from the small town I called home.
On my recent visit back to upstate New York to visit family and friends, I made a detour to get another view of that apartment, the place where I started work, and the familiar surroundings that were part of my life four decades ago.
The first surprise I experienced upon crossing the Johnson City limits was finding that the apartment building no longer existed.
Someone in the neighborhood saw me peering out my rental car window and asked me what I was doing.
I explained how I once lived in the building that sat on the property. This person explained that the apartment building was torn down many years ago.
A discount store that was less than one-hundred yards from the rear of the building was also gone.
The former store property was converted to a parking lot.
I then drove to the Catholic Church that was off a traffic circle less than a mile away.
I remembered walking to Mass on many occasions, even for Midnight Mass at Christmas. The building remains, but another faith community occupies the space.
Someone explained to me that after a flood a few years ago, the building was sold to a Christian college next door so the college could expand.
The next stop on my “you can never go home again” tour was the television station where I worked for two years.
The call letters and building remain the same, but a lot has changed in forty years. For starters, the station changed affiliations from NBC to Fox more than twenty years ago.
I reconnected with the station manager who was working at the station as an advertising sales representative when I worked there forty years ago. Another department head I worked with was out of the office while I was visiting.
The news team I was part of numbered about five in 1979. Today, there are over a dozen working journalists.
The set where I anchored the late news is gone, replaced by a green wall and floor. The set is now electronically generated so that it looks like a contemporary and colorful background.
News Director Suh Neubauer took me around the facility. I met some members of her news team. Other staffers were either out in the field gathering news or coming in later in the day for the evening shift.
She gave me a microphone flag; a plastic covering that fits over the top of a hand held microphone to identify the station.
I was surprised when I realized that with over thirteen years in the television news business, I never collected even one mike flag.
My Fox 40-HD NEWS flag sits proudly on a shelf in my den.
Thanks to the invitation of a local Rotary Club, I was able to share some of my reflections from my day back to where it all began.
The Vestal Rotary Club welcomed me as I recounted my connection to their community.
Rotary Clubs do a lot of good in their communities and worldwide through the Rotary Foundation. As a former Club President, I have seen the power of an energized club like the one in Vestal, New York.
My last stop was the Vestal Public Library, where I donated a copy of my book Stand By, Camera One.
Head librarian Carol Boyce is adding the book about my experiences in the area to the Library’s local author collection.
Carol was also a great source of local history and caught me up on some of the changes in the community over the years.
As I left the Binghamton community on that rainy fall afternoon, I was satisfied that I made the detour.
The community gave a lot to me back in the late seventies and early eighties.
A lot has changed, just like a lot has changed in my life.
I think you can go home again, but I suggest my low impact version.
My effort was deliberate: stay just a few hours, enjoy the memories, and don’t be surprised as you learn how the rest of the community has moved on.
Remember, you’re now just a visitor.
I was glad to be their guest for a few hours on a rainy October day.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He is working on a new book to be published in December.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He is working on a new book to be published in December.
Central Valley is Prominent in Country Music
PBS Documentary References California Influences
For eight nights in September, Public Television aired the Ken Burns documentary Country Music. It was a comprehensive timeline of the evolution of this genre. From the roots in Irish folk songs to the stages of twenty-thousand seat arenas, the program held true to its intention of telling the story of a truly American art form.
California’s Central Valley played a significant role in the story of country music, and the documentary features a few vignettes of pivotal players.
The Valley’s connection to the bigger picture of country music starts with the influx of migrants from the Midwest during the dust bowl.
The program begins with the group known as Maddox Brothers and Rose. The Maddox family came to the west as a migrant family looking for work. The documentary quotes Don Maddox, the only surviving member, telling the story of hearing a country song on the radio as the family picked vegetables with other migrant workers.
In the documentary, Maddox talks about finding a better way to earn a living, telling the interviewer, “We thought, maybe we can form a group so that we can get out of the fields.”
The Maddox Brothers and Rose eventually settled in Modesto, and went on to be a successful act in the late 1940s and 1950s.
The music of what was then known affectionately as a Hillbilly band enjoyed a resurgence in recent years.
Reissues of their music have opened up the Maddox Brothers and Rose to new audiences. In addition to being interviewed in the Ken Burns program, Don Maddox has made sporadic appearances at different venues.
In 2012, he performed on the highly regarded music program “The Marty Stuart Show”.
The development of the Bakersfield Sound is detailed in the broadcast. The program includes a segment on Buck Owens, the singer who, along with Merle Haggard and others, established what most identify as the Bakersfield Sound.
Buck had a prosperous career that included dozens of hit records in the 1960s and 1970s, a big television profile from his years co-hosting the music/comedy show Hee Haw with Roy Clark, and a retirement that featured him and his band The Buckaroos performing regularly at his night club “The Crystal Palace” in Bakersfield. Buck passed away in 2005.
The late Merle Haggard’s story is poignantly on display in a few sections of the program.
The viewer learns the well documented back story of Haggard’s troubled Central Valley childhood that took him to youth detention centers and would eventually take him to an adult prison sentence at San Quentin.
There in the prison, he attends a Johnny Cash performance and commits himself to turn his life around. Through his music, his poetic lyrics of hard times and redemption, he becomes a star and ultimately a legend in the field.
Helping tell these stories is country music singer and songwriter Bill Anderson whose interview reflections are sprinkled throughout the sixteen hours of the documentary.
Bill returned to the Central Valley a couple of years ago for a performance at Modesto’s Gallo Center.
At that time, he shared with me some of his encounters with these Central Valley music legends.
Of the Maddox Brothers and Rose, Bill talked about knowing the group in the 1960s, telling me “I knew Rose rather well and was acquainted with Fred Maddox. Rose ran a nightclub in Ocean City that I performed at back in the sixties.”
For my book, 9 From 99, Bill Anderson told me about meeting Buck Owens on a flight from Los Angeles to Nashville. “We got into a debate about whether singers should only record songs they wrote as opposed to including songs from other writers,” he recalled. “It didn’t take me long to realize I was in the presence of a man who knew who he was and where he wanted to be in his life.”
Bill was performing with Merle Haggard the night Merle played Okie from Muskogee before a live audience for the first time. “I talked to him about it after the show,” Bill said. “Merle said he wasn’t sure how audiences would accept the song given it had patriotic overtones. I told him not to worry.”
Thanks to the Bakersfield Sound, Central California was well represented in the PBS series Country Music. And thanks to the would-be historians of the genre, like Marty Stuart and Bill Anderson, who gave their time to the Ken Burns team to share their reflections, the story of Country Music now has been told.
California’s Central Valley and its’ contribution to the growth of country music, remains a big part of that history.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He recently completed another presentation on workforce improvement using his book Soft Skills for Hard Times as a source authority.
Merced, an International Rest Stop - Buses bring worldwide visitors and their wallets
After seeing to it that his passengers are safely off the bus, Juan speaks with pride about his job as a motor coach driver for a travel company.
“We like stopping in Merced,” he says.
Frequently, huge tour buses stop for a rest break at a few Merced area supermarkets.
Those buses are loaded with visitors, many from other countries. All of them are passing through town as they make their way to Yosemite National Park.
On a recent Saturday morning, visitors from three bus tours made their last stop before Yosemite at the Raley’s supermarket in north Merced.
One group was visiting from France.
Another group was from Taiwan.
Juan’s bus was a little late making it to the parking lot at Raley’s. The California Highway Patrol was pulling all motor coaches off a section of Highway 99 near Merced for a safety check.
“We passed,” Juan said of the impromptu inspection by authorities. “But that’s because our company has strict rules about keeping our buses safe.”
It’s the hope of tourism professionals in Merced that local businesses capture as much of the economic windfall as possible from a tour bus. The Visit Merced website displays plenty of information about activities motor coach visitors might experience while in the County.
The Merced California Tourist Information Center on 16th Street has all kinds of brochures, and they assign staff to help answer questions about the area.
But these visitors know exactly where they are going.
Yosemite is world renown as a destination anyone should experience.
“We’ll take them up there, and they’ll have a great time,” Juan says.
Drivers like Juan say the stop in Merced is perfectly timed.
“The prices here are better than what they see in the park,” Juan said. “Up there, a typical meal, say hamburger and fries, might run them twenty dollars. Here, they get different things and can save a lot.”
The visitors seemed impressed with the vast selection of foods and beverages than line the shelves.
One group of about six Taiwanese visitors gathered in front of a beverage refrigerator case discussing, in their language, what might be the best one to buy.
The group seemed oblivious to the other shoppers who were trying to pass by. Eventually, I caught their eye and smiled.
They immediately formed a single line to allow shoppers to pass.
According to the Ontario Motor Coach Association, an international organization for the industry, a bus filled with visitors can bring over fourteen-thousand dollars in economic benefit per day to a community.
That calculation takes into account spending on hotels, meals, admission fees, and souvenirs.
Even a small slice of that economic pie will suffice for restaurants, supermarkets, or a reasonably priced attraction such as Castle Air Museum in Atwater or the Fossil Discovery Center just over the southern Merced County line in Fairmead, Madera County.
The National Parks Service reports that Yosemite alone accounted for nearly seven-hundred million dollars in economic benefit to California just three years ago.
It won’t be long before Yosemite becomes a billion-dollar a year attraction.
That suits drivers like Juan just fine. He plans on retiring in a couple of years, but he says he may stick around part time after that.
“I love this work,” Juan says.
And with that, he finishes his cigarette.
He’s back to work, tending to his passengers on their way to Yosemite, just seventy miles away from the City of Merced.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced. He’s written about California in two books: 9 From 99-Experiences in California’s Central Valley and California Back Roads-Stories from the Land of the Palm and the Pine.
Both books are available at Lulu.com
For more information about Yosemite, the Merced Tourist Information Center and other attractions, go to: www.visitMerced.com
For more information on the economic impact of Yosemite, go to: www.nps.gov For information on the motor coach industry, go to www.omca.com
Merced County’s Elevator Speech
Most of us are familiar with the term “elevator speech”.
It’s grown to mean how we explain a detailed concept in the amount of time it would take to ride an elevator up or down several floors.
Here’s the scenario.
Someone walks into an elevator and stands next to a friendly-looking stranger. As the doors close, this person strikes up a conversation. You don’t have much time to answer.
You want to make a good impression.
That’s the idea behind the elevator speech.
You have just a few moments to cut to the most important aspect of the question, and you have to leave an impression with the person you are talking to.
The five-year strategy document prepared by the County Economic and Community Development department contains the elevator speech about Merced County.
The document was prepared by the Community Economic Development Strategy committee or CEDS.
In Merced County, a CEDS Steering Committee has representatives from six cities and two from the County. The CEDS Committee is the Workforce Investment Board where I serve as Vice Chair and served as Board Chair a few years ago.
In order to get federal economic development funding, a CEDS document needs to be in place. The 2019-2024 CEDS is fifty pages long. It has an executive summary, sections on such topics as demographics and transportation, and a breakdown of seven primary locations for industrial growth. There’s a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) recap, and the section called “Action Plan”.
That Action Plan is the elevator speech for Merced County.
In just three pages, the reader can see the top three priorities for economic development in our community. Broken down in three sections, this action plan/elevator speech should serve as a quick front-and-center awareness statement for Merced County.
The Elevator Speech
- Grow our Economy- create local jobs by helping existing businesses and bringing in new companies.
- Enhance our Competitiveness- prepare the County for business investment by addressing real estate infrastructure, improving the permit process, and developing business parks.
- Develop our Talent- work with business and education to create a work-ready labor force
If you can articulate these three statements, in your own words, to someone who wants to know more about doing business in Merced County, you will have mastered the elevator speech.
So how do you tell this elevator story?
Here’s a quick primer. Grow our Economy. We can begin by saying we’re working hard to create local jobs.
Point to last summer’s effort to save hundreds of jobs at Foster Farms in Livingston. That effort didn’t just happen. A number of key organizations, like the City of Livingston, Merced County, and the State of California stepped up to do what they could do to keep Foster Farms from moving most of their chicken processing operation out of state.
Several months after the deal was made, the company announced further expansion plans in Merced County.
Enhance our Competitiveness.
We can talk about how local governments are working to make it easier for businesses to start, expand, and grow. We need to remind people there is now a one-stop permitting center inside the Merced County Government Center on M Street in Merced.
Develop our Talent.
We can point to the Career and Technical Education (CTE) efforts going on right now in the Merced Union School District. Every student, not just those on the CTE track, now are required to take two courses that are designed to prepare for the workforce. This makes sense when you hear how employers are looking for workers who are prepared for work. It makes even more sense when we realize that just about every college student holds a part time job while pursuing their degree.
All of this rolls up into the Strategy document. When it is formally adopted by the Board of Supervisors, it will be on the County’s website.
The words matter.
The actions matter even more.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced. For the past thirteen years, he has served on the Merced County Workforce Investment Board including two years as chairman.
For the past eleven years, he has written an annual assessment of Labor in Merced County; first with the Merced Sun Star and now with MercedCountyEvents.com
Gilroy Grieves
Life resumes in community scarred by shooting
July 28 is a date that will forever be remembered in the community of Gilroy in Santa Clara County.
On that day, this city of just under sixty-thousand located on the other side of the western Merced County border, endured a tragedy many will never forget.
The story is familiar to most of us. A man enters the Gilroy Garlic Festival and pulls out a gun. Shots are fired.
Two children and one adult are killed while more than a dozen others are injured.
Police were able to fire and hit the shooter, who then shot and killed himself.
The story shocked the nation. But Gilroy’s brush with a deadly gunman was knocked off the front pages shortly after in the wake of shootings in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio.
Gilroy is known to most Californians as “that garlic place”.
Agriculture is the backbone of this community with rich soil and ideal growing conditions that produce a bounty of vegetables and fruits.
Roadside stands selling everything from avocados to zucchini, and yes even fresh garlic, are a common site. Today, those vegetable stands remain.
Visitors stop by to pick up whatever is in season.
Some go about their tasks.
Others can’t help but ask the local residents about the tragedy.
The community of Gilroy is coping with the loss of part of that small town feeling many residents have grown to appreciate in recent years.
The annual Garlic Festival was more than something people from outside the area came to see. It was something that defined the community.
“Not only did it raise money for local charities, many non-profits raised funds from the influx of visitors to the festival,” a local resident told me on a recent visit.
Tens of thousands of visitors came to the Festival every July.
Organizers had worked tirelessly over the years to tweak the logistics of moving thousands of people from designated parking areas to and from the Festival site.
Security has been a priority in recent years, and a strong law enforcement presence at the site was noted as a factor that likely kept the number of deaths to three.
So now, one day at a time, residents touched by the shooting and its aftermath are getting on with their lives.
Some are going to the park, others are taking in a shopping trip, and others are just staying home.
Life may never be quite the same, but it goes on. “It’s really important that we have the Garlic Festival again next year,” one local resident said.“It means so much to us.”
Throughout the City on the mid-August afternoon when I walked along the streets, there was a sense that residents are moving on with life.
No one talked about it, but there seemed to be a feeling that the community must get past the tragedy, eventually.
Maybe just not today. Not yet.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced. His book California Back Roads is available at Lulu.com
Volunteers Get the Best Gift
Summer Enrichment Programs End in Merced with Happy Kids and Delighted Helpers.
Ask any non-profit organization how valuable their volunteers are, and you’ll get an earful of praises.
Most of the kind words can be summed up in one sentence: We couldn’t do it without them!
That’s the case for the Summer Enrichment and Reading Program organized by Harvest Park Educational Center, a Merced-based non-profit organization that is sponsored by Valley Harvest Church.
When Esmeralda Ramirez decided to devote part of her summer helping young people, she knew it might be hard.
“I wondered what it might be like, and wondered whether I was up to it,” she says.
Esmeralda got everything she hoped for during her time working with young learners.
“It’s really encouraging to see these kids be excited about learning.”
We heard about the organization’s program last year and shared the story of children getting immersed in exposure to such STEM areas as science, technology, engineering, and math.
Those lessons continued in this latest version of the program, but there were some changes.
“We added a reading program this year,” says Managing Director Gloria Morris.
“We acquired a nationally acclaimed program called “All About Reading” and introduced it to the students in the afternoon session.”
Volunteers helping out include a reading specialist, a parent, a high school student who was served by the program when she was younger, and four college students.
Magdalena Valdez is another college student who made the most of the five weeks she had with the children in the program.
“I created lesson plans and served as the lead intern in charge of pre-K through third grade,” she says. Like everyone touched by the program this summer, the time went by quickly.
“The summer just flew by,” Magdalena says. “I can’t believe it.”
Lily Ketchum and her daughter Jaime continue to give their time almost every year. “Jaime participated as a student in 2008,” Lily says. “And now she’s back as a volunteer.” Betty Jackson-Yilma helped pilot the “All About Reading” component to this year’s program.
“The improvement in the student’s reading comprehension has been gratifying,” she says.
“But to see their desire to read, to want to read more and more, is really satisfying to me as an educator.”
Colleges represented with interns this year were UC Merced, Merced College, UC Stanislaus, and San Jose State. Melissa Chavarria is pursuing a children development college curriculum.
She came to the program because service in a child development program was a course requirement.
She’s leaving her volunteer post with a great deal of satisfaction. “Working with the children opened my eyes a little,” she says. “Now I know I can handle it.”
If there is such a thing as a winner in an effort like the Summer Enrichment and Reading Program, one needs to look no further than the smiling faces of participating children.
Most of them greeted me with a smile when I entered the classroom. One of them made his way up to me and shook my hand.
He was seven years old. Managing Director Gloria Morris confirms reading skills have increased, character development is becoming more prominent, and children are having a good time.
“We are pleased with the results from this year’s program.”
While the volunteers are praised by the staff that puts on the program, they in turn give kudos by heaping lots of admiration to the team that makes it all possible. One of the volunteers said it best with just a few words.
“I couldn’t get over how caring the staff is toward us and toward each other.”
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
You can read about some of the places he has traveled in the golden state in his book California Back Roads, available at Lulu.com
An Apollo 11 Scrapbook
My Grandma Newvine would save clippings from local newspapers and put them into scrapbooks back in the 1960s and 1970s.
That’s where I got the idea, when I was twelve years old, to collect stories about the mission of Apollo 11 that took Americans to the moon.
Back then, scrapbooks were nothing like what you might see now at a local crafts store.
The scrapbooks from my grandmother’s era were made with thick construction paper and cardboard covers. No stickers or 3-D accruements from the hobby store.
My scrapbook from 1969 includes articles from the days leading up to the launch from the Kennedy Space Center and into the first days of the mission.
All the clippings were from our daily newspaper from northern New York State: the Watertown Daily Times.
The Times arrived every evening, hand delivered by our paperboy.
The newspaper price in 1969 was ten cents.
Sprinkled among the clippings in my space scrapbook are articles about the preparations for the historic launch. There are several stories about the first two days of the mission as the astronauts were heading to the landing spot named the Sea of Tranquility.
There are plenty of sidebar stories.
I clipped pictures with captions featuring Buzz Aldrin and his family. There’s a photo of his son with a caption suggesting that the young boy may be the most popular child in school.
Barbara Aldrin, the wife of Buzz, is shown in a photo unfurling the American flag. Buzz is highlighted from a demonstration the astronauts did inside the orbiter midway to the moon.
I wonder whether I just favored features about Buzz Aldrin, or whether Neil Armstrong, who was noted for his desire for privacy, asked NASA to downplay stories about his family to the media.
There’s a small glossary of acronyms NASA used throughout the mission. In the days long before computer graphics, the paper had artist renderings of how the lunar module would separate from the command module for the moon landing and subsequent rejoining of the mother vehicle.
President Nixon’s phone call to the astronauts is the subject of one of the clippings, and there’s a story that reports NASA may move the actual first steps on the moon from 2:21 AM Eastern Time on Monday, July 21, back to a more viewer friendly time on Sunday evening.
And that takes me back to Sunday July 20, 1969
My family had planned to spend the better part of that Sunday evening at the Port Leyden Firemens Field Days in my hometown. The mix of rides, games, and carnival food was a big part of the summertime tradition.
When we learned the actual walk on the lunar surface would take place on Sunday evening, the Newvine family left the field days earlier than in previous years.
We went home, gathered around our television set, and watched the coverage.
“That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”
Neil Armstrong’s words were about as clear as a voice on a long-distance phone call. The image of his stepping on the lunar surface was hard to make out in black and white. But there was no doubt both Armstrong and Aldrin made it.
Astronaut Mike Collins orbited the moon until it was time for Neil and Buzz to reconnect and head home.
I couldn’t wait for the next day’s newspaper to arrive so that I could begin clipping the stories of the moonshot.
There is was in glorious black and white: mankind’s great achievement. We were eyewitnesses.
The scrapbook stayed with me for all the moves made after I graduated from college and went out on my own.
The covers were lost somewhere over the past five decades. The scotch tape that held the clippings had long lost its’ stickiness. The pages from the actual landing and subsequent return to Earth are missing.
But I wouldn’t have it any other way. I’ll never forget how the US race-to-the-moon ended.
The scrapbook was my “Google” of the moonshot several decades before we ever heard of search engines.
The Apollo scrapbook belongs to me, but the idea of keeping up a collection of articles about this historical event came from my Grandma Newvine.
Thank you Grandma.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He wrote two books about his hometown of Port Leyden New York: Growing Up, Upstate and Grown Up, Going Home. Both are available at Lulu.com
Sidelined by a Sidewalk- How a Simple Fall is Taking Me Off Track This Summer
I won’t be playing golf for a while.
A fall on a north Merced sidewalk on a recent summer Sunday morning has taken my activity down a few notches.
There we were: one moment taking in the serenity of a walk together. The next moment changed everything.
Immediately upon hitting the ground, pain shot up from my foot to my hip. I felt numbness in the first minutes following the fall.
The thought that I might suffer some paralysis actually crossed my mind.
My wife was with me and as soon as she felt I could be left alone, she went back to our house to get a car. By the time she returned ten minutes later, I was standing and walking slowly.
During the wait, three motorists passed by me as I was writhing in pain.
No one stopped.
She took me home, and took care of me for the next couple of days. Slowly, walking became easier.
After a couple days rest, some over-the-counter pain relief medication, and treatments of heat and cold to my upper leg, my doctor confirmed our earlier diagnosis.
I suffered a severe sprain of the upper thigh.
But for the next few weeks, I am what you might call sidelined. No daily runs in the morning Merced sun.
Golf might resume when it stops hurting as I take my driver stance. I resumed work after a day-and-a-half sick time. I hate taking sick time.
It’s easy to blame myself for not being fully aware of my surroundings.
I slipped on a light layer of sidewalk mud before several years ago. While the earlier fall was not nearly as severe as this latest one, I dropped my guard and did not anticipate a safety hazard.
Whoever is responsible for watering that particular section of grass should share some responsibility. There are no homes directly on the street, but rather a cul-de-sac divided by a wall.
According to the City of Merced, watering is permitted on Sundays. Their website reads: “Addresses ending in even numbers may water on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Addresses ending in odd numbers may water on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays. Watering is allowed before 9 a.m. and/or after 9 p.m. on those days.” The houses across the street had odd numbers.
That would make the side I was on the even side; meaning the sprinklers should not have been on.
But regardless of whether this was the correct day use irrigation, the water in this section was clearly on longer than it needed to be. If mud forms on the sidewalk, water may be forcing dirt from the grass to the pavement.
No one is suing anybody. I hope to continue making progress so that I can eventually resume my daily runs and weekly golf outings.
I sent an email to the City telling them about my concerns. I got a prompt response telling me they would look into it.
They followed up a few days later.
They also directed me to a new app called Merced Connect, available at Google or Apple Playstore, where citizens can report things like the water issue and follow the progress on these issues.
But I urge everyone to check into areas where irrigation systems push dirt onto sidewalks. Adjust the watering times if necessary. Be a good neighbor.
I’ve already forgiven whoever was responsible, especially me. I’ve also forgiven the three motorists who passed by me when I was on the ground and nearly in tears with pain from that fall.
And every morning, I get into my golf stance. Once I can swing without pain, I’m back on the golf course.
It’s safer there.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His murder mystery Ten Minutes to Air is available at Lulu.com
Speed Dating with Community Information- Cramming Two Weeks of Radio Programming into One Afternoon
I welcomed the opportunity to fill in again for host Roger Wood for the KYOS public affairs program Community Conversations.
It was my hope that interviewing local people for a couple of hours might help me develop an idea or two for future Our Community story columns.
The segments were recorded at such a fast pace, that it felt like speed dating.
Eight segments, each running about nine minutes, are recorded at the KYOS studios during an afternoon session.
The segments are stacked to make two full-hour programs. With commercials and station announcements added to the stack, we walk out of the studio knowing that two hour-long shows are “in the can”. In broadcasting, that phrase means the shows are done.
The purpose of Community Conversations is to hear from local non-profits, government, and others about fund raising events, issues of concern, and services available to people.
The audience gets informed through listening to the weekly broadcast (7:00-8:00 AM Saturday).
As the fill-in host, I got my information first hand and crammed into a two-hour window as we recorded the interviews.
The person heading up the Atwater Fourth of July celebrations stopped by to tell us what’s new and different about this year’s event.
Atwater has been doing this since 1962, so there’s not much new. But the reminder was still worth the effort.
By the way, Fourth of July fireworks begin at Castle at dusk.
Admission is ten-dollars a carload.
(Details at Atwater4thofJuly.com)
Merced’s Police Chief once again sat behind the guest microphone.
He offered an update on how the City’s illegal fireworks enforcement will roll out this year.
Two representatives from the Merced County Historical Society described the upcoming exhibit Shaping Justice: A century of Great Crimes in Merced County.
The exhibits are always interesting, and this one sounds like it will be in that same category.
Three of the guests touched on the importance of STEM or science, technology, engineering, and math curricula.
Each interviewee came from different organizations and each highlighted summer enrichment events. But as the interviews unfolded, I couldn’t help but see the connection as they described how these programs continue in the direction of more science, technology, engineering, and math for our students.
One guest, from the Merced County Office of Education, added an “A” to form the acronym STEAM.
The “A” is for arts. The other guests were from Merced City School District and Merced Union High School District.
Two UC Merced professors chatted about the Extension Program teacher training offerings available to local educators.
The pair, now in their third decade as a married couple, brought some variety to the usual format of host talking to guest.
It was a refreshing mix of guest talking to guest and then talking to host. Speaking of variety, we broke with the regular format again with a monologue by yours truly. I spoke to the audience about my writing of this column and the ten books I’ve written over the past decade.
I read from California Back Roads and Stand By, Camera One.
The City of Merced’s Assistant to the City Manager discussed upgrades to Applegate Park, and a local band leader rounded out the interviews to tell listeners about a big band concert soon coming to the Merced Theatre stage.
It was a jam packed afternoon as KYOS audio engineer Casey Stead recorded my interviews with these local folks.
The content for Community Conversations is assembled with the help of the public information departments of the City of Merced, County of Merced, County Office of Education, and host/producer Roger Wood.
I just happened to be the lucky fellow who spoke behind the microphone on a warm summer afternoon.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book Stand By, Camera One is available on Lulu.com and Amazon
Ben, the Birdhouse Man of Merced
On most Saturday mornings in the Savemart parking lot in Merced, you might find a man selling birdhouses and dog houses from the back of his pick-up truck.
Meet Ben Franco, a retired truck driver who has turned his spare time into productive work.
He builds birdhouses that are now in dozens of backyards throughout Merced.
When Ben retired, he traded in his trucker’s log book for a workbench.
He spends many hours every week designing, building and selling bird and dog houses. “It gets me out of the house,” Ben says about his pastime.
Ben has a lot of stories to tell about his birdhouses. He says the folks at Savemart know he’s out in their parking lot and he says they don’t seem to mind.
“This keeps me busy,” he says.
As well as keeping himself occupied, Ben experiences the joy of knowing a customer is buying a well build birdhouse.
One of those customers is Keith Visher of Merced. I came across Keith and Ben on the Saturday before Mother’s Day. Keith was looking over the selection before picking out the perfect birdhouse for his mom.
“Mom had two birdhouses,” Keith told me. “Summer weather destroyed the one in the backyard, and the one in the front had seen better days.” Keith paid Ben twenty dollars, and was on his way.
Before working as a truck driver, Ben was in the military and stationed in Germany in 1957 and ‘58. When I asked him about his time in Germany, he took a few moments to tell me a couple of stories.
“One day when we were off duty, a friend suggested we fly to Spain. We did and when we landed, we were questioned by the French police because we were in uniform. The police officer asked me my name and I told him ‘Franco’. He got real serious with us because of General Francisco Franco.”
General Franco was the Spanish dictator at the time. After a few tense moments with the French policeman, Ben and his friend were on their way.
Another interesting story from his service days that came to Ben’s mind was when he and his buddies recognized actor Jack Palance. Ben says the actor was not pleasant to the soldiers. Palance at first refused to pose with the uniformed soldiers for a photograph.
“He was there with his wife,” Ben said. “She pulled him aside and after she talked to him, he came back to us and said he’d stand next to us for picture.” Ben laughs, “We told him never mind, we don’t want a picture anymore.”
Ben says it takes him a little over an hour to assemble each birdhouse.
Dog houses are larger and require a little more time. He uses pieces of lumber and other building material he has acquired over the years.
For Ben, building and selling birdhouses gives his retirement greater meaning. He enjoys seeing a satisfied customer.
He’s a happy man, even if he is doing it in part to get away from his spouse’s honey-do list.
“My wife will find me something to do around the house if I’m not busy,” he says.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His latest book, Stand-by, Camera One is available on Lulu.com .
79/19-40 Years of Life on the Job
Milestones have always been easy for me to write about.
The basic format is to find a point in time that goes back in multiples of five years, recall what how I felt about it then, and end with what I feel about it now.
Okay, maybe there is a little more to it than that when recalling milestones.
Forty years ago this month, I graduated with my Bachelor’s degree from Syracuse University, began a career in television news, and started four decades as a working professional.
There was a lot of stuff going on in the weeks leading up to graduation. In April, I ended a ten-week internship with a television station. Copies of a video audition tape of stories I reported during that time were being sent to stations all over the eastern United States in hopes of landing a job.
During the week of finals, I had an interview with station WICZ in Binghamton. The news director seemed impressed with the audition tape, but the station was still another two weeks away from making a decision.
One week after graduation, the job was offered and accepted. For the next year and a half, I reported news, anchored newscasts, hosted a daily public affairs segment, and even tried my hand as a substitute for the station’s hunting and fishing feature.
Along the way, I got the opportunity to work on the local segments of the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy telethon and helped call the play-by-play for a local tennis tournament.
I also got married during that time and accepted posts at four other television stations over the next fifteen years.
Two daughters also arrived during that time. At that point, the press card was retired. I made the transition to the next career of running chambers of commerce in three cities.
Chambers help local companies succeed by providing networking opportunities, presenting training programs, and advocating on behalf of the business community before local and state government.
After thirteen years of meeting government officials, creating programs to foster leadership, and handing out dozens of plaques honoring business owners, another opportunity crossed the path.
The current job combines the experience from the two previous careers to help local governments lead their communities toward greater energy efficiency.
It’s been a pleasure to honor local business owners who lead the way in their communities.
Along the way, most of the spare time has been put to use to keep writing as a big part of my life. There have been about two-hundred columns posted to this website and about a dozen essays published in local newspapers in California and New York.
Thanks to a fellow attendee at a workshop in Fresno thirteen years ago, the discovery of on-demand publishing helped produce a few books along the way.
I am humbled by the acceptance of my writing efforts. It has been an amazing four decades as a working professional.
There have been many highs, a few challenges, and an incredible number of great people that have crossed my path.
It’s amazing to think that the journey started just a short forty years ago.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His latest book, Stand By, Camera One is available at Lulu.com and through Amazon.
Spring Clean-Up Days, another springtime ritual in Merced
You know springtime has arrived when you’re making a second or third trip to the home improvement center to pick up additional bags of mulch for the lawn.
It’s spring when you realize that there is now nothing keeping you from yard work and sprucing up the curb appeal of your home.
The City of Merced, like many communities, kicks-off the season with Spring Clean-Up days.
This year, two sites received the junk that’s been lying around in garages, along the back fence, or even inside the homes of City residents.
For employees in the City’s Public Works Department, it’s an all-hands-on-deck activity.
You might even call it the Super Bowl of trash removal.
“I’ve never heard our Spring Clean-Up called the Super Bowl before,” says Mike Conway, Assistant to the City Manager. “But that's pretty cool.”
Pulling off this annual rite of spring takes careful planning and admirable coordination.
According to Refuse Lead Equipment Operator Danny McComb, Clean-Up Days are a top priority.
“Planning begins several months prior to the clean-up dates,” he says. “Refuse Division has sufficient staffing to operate the equipment. Additional staff from Parks, Water, Sewer, and Streets sign up to work the event to complete a total of sixty.”
Behind the scenes, staff coordinates with metal recyclers, the Mattress Recycling Council, tire recyclers, and others to make sure the proper trucks and bins show up at the right sites on the right days.
There are plenty of details.
There’s coordination with the landfill, organizing lunch for the workers, and making sure there’s plenty of water throughout the four days and at both sites (Merced College and Merced County Fairgrounds).
It’s estimated about six-thousand vehicle loads come into a Clean- Up Day site every spring.
That’s a lot of stuff.
Especially when you consider the population of Merced is eighty-thousand.
Approximately seven-hundred, eighty tons of trash is transferred from homes to the dumpsters and trucks at the Clean-Up Day sites.
SPRING CLEAN-UP ESTIMATES
- 6,000 Vehicle loads
- 780 Tons of trash
- 145 Tons of metal
- 60 Yards of Brush
- 1,885 Mattresses
- 5 Trailers of Tires
- 4 Trailers of e-waste
The most common things seen by the workers at Clean-Up Days include televisions, mattresses, barbecue grills, fence wood, and furniture.
The most unusual thing ever brought in to Clean-Up Day was a ski boat.
But that depends on what your definition of unusual might be.
Workers have seen empty metal urns turned in for recycling.
Even a mannequin was brought in one time.
“Steve,” my wife Vaune reminds me a few days after the first day of spring. “We’ve got to start thinking about Clean-Up Days.”
The Clean-Up Day adventure begins in our household with the annual consolidation of junk in our garage.
My wife and I make up piles. One is for items still usable that might be suitable to donate to charity. One is for items that get a reprieve for at least another year.
A third pile is for items that will be loaded into our SUV for Clean-Up Day.
So call it a ritual of springtime, or maybe a rite of home ownership.
Whatever you wish to call it, Clean-Up Day is a time of renewal, of a fresh slate, and perhaps most importantly an organized garage.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book, Stand By, Camera One is now available in a special hardcover edition as well as the softcover version.
Two-room Schoolhouse is Part of a Bigger Picture for Students
How the Venice school in Tulare County Helps Home School Families
It’s an ordinary old time school house. It looks like something you might have seen on the television series Little House on the Prairie or When Calls the Heart.
Except, this school house is real. Not only that, this school house is still being used to educate students.
In Tulare County, a two-room school house continues to serve students. The tale of this school house tells a much bigger story about education in the Central Valley.
Sometimes while driving around the back roads of California, one can come across a building that looks as if it was an old school house from many years ago.
Some of these buildings have been modified for other uses. Others have been abandoned.
The Venice School’s history goes back to 1898 when it opened as a rural school.
Farm families needed a school for their children. The Venice School, both rooms, filled that need.
The family that owned the building and land deeded it to the local district with the express condition that it remains a school.
According to a stone monument on the property placed by the historical organization E Clampus Vitus, the building reverted to the owners when the school closed in 1957.
It reopened as a private school in 1996, and eventually was repurposed as a library for the Eleanor Roosevelt Learning Center (ERLC).
The Learning Center is a complex of buildings on a country road east of the City of Visalia.
“We’re very proud of the two-room school house,” Learning Center Superintendent & Principal Daniel Huecker says. “And we’re extremely proud of the students, parents, and enrichment specialists of the Eleanor Roosevelt Learning Center.”
In the early part of this century, a handful of homeschooled families wanted a centralized resource to provide enrichment opportunities for their children.
In 2001, they formed the first charter school in Tulare County.
A few years later, a private school housed in the Willow building closed. The Learning Center took over the site east of the City of Visalia and has been using it and improving it ever since.
One of the buildings on that site was known as the old Venice School. The two-room schoolhouse was acquired by the Learning Center many years ago with a stipulation that it be used for educational purposes.
Over the years, portable classrooms have been added to the site.
Earlier this year, a permanent staff building was added along with a parent/classroom building as well as an outdoor assembly pavilion.
Superintendent Huecker emphasizes how important it is for homeschooled students to have a base to connect among one another.
“It’s important for the kids to get together,” he says. “It’s also important for parents to know they have resources available to assist in homeschooling their children.”
The Eleanor Roosevelt Community Learning Center serves two-hundred, seventy-five students from kindergarten through the twelfth grade.
All are homeschooled, and all are part of this unique educational resource.
Credentialed educators meet with parents regularly to assist in helping students succeed.
Center staff and parents work together on the creation of personal education plans.
The team at the Center also helps with the selection from over sixty enrichment programs available to students. Enrichment programs available to students include: robotics, woodshop, and drama.
The two-room school house is so important a symbol of aspirational leadership in education, the Learning Center uses it as a logo.
The Center staff is a resource for homeschool families four days a week; two days for elementary support and two days for secondary support.
Daniel says the Center’s role as a meeting place for parents is a key component in their children’s success.
“They have an opportunity to visit with other parents, compare ideas, and get support from a wide variety of educators,” he adds.
The two-room school house is so important a symbol of aspirational leadership in education, the Learning Center uses it as a logo.
Many decades ago, the Venice School opened to provide education for students living in rural areas.
The delivery of education has changed over the years, but with the repurposing of the Venice School as a library for the Eleanor Roosevelt Community Learning Center, there is a sense of turning back to the successful basics.
So that ordinary looking two-room school house may always remind you of a classic television show.
But in Tulare County, it represents a bold effort to support the efforts of families that choose to home school their children.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
You can read about some of the places he has traveled in the golden state in his book California Back Roads, available at Lulu.com
For more about the Eleanor Roosevelt Community Learning Center, go to ERCLC.org
Celebrating Central Valley Music Pioneers
Bakersfield Music Hall of Fame Honors Performers
For Kim McAbee-Carter, the founding of a Hall-of-Fame to honor musicians from Bakersfield made a lot of sense.
As a singer, she performed regularly at the Crystal Palace in Bakersfield singing alongside country music legend Buck Owens.
She sang with him right up to the last night he performed in his adopted hometown.
Buck died in 2006, and while the music went on over the years for Kim, a deep-seated idea to honor Bakersfield music performers continued to grow.
That idea has led to the creation, along with her husband, of the Bakersfield Music Hall of Fame.
The Hall of Fame honors the people who made Bakersfield proud.
It also contains items you might see in a music museum. And it is a venue for the performing arts.
“The Hall of Fame was started to promote the rich heritage of the not just country music, but all music,” Kim says. “We pay tribute to the local people who played a role in creating that music.”
While this Hall of Fame is a home for all genres of music, there’s no doubt the initial focus is on country.
To be specific: The Bakersfield Sound.
The Bakersfield Sound was a title given to the music pioneered by Buck Owens and the Buckaroos, his lead guitarist Don Rich, and the legendary Merle Haggard.
The Bakersfield Sound is described in my book 9 from 99, Experiences from California’s Central Valley as “Country, with an emphasis on electric guitars that sound as though the treble has been turned way up.” There are other definitions, but I’ll stand by mine.
The Bakersfield Music Hall of Fame is more than a tribute to the Bakersfield Sound.
In the inaugural class of seventeen Central Valley music artists, country accounted for the first five honored in 2017.
The honorees range from country, nu metal, opera, and beyond. To give each honoree an appropriate induction, the inaugural class was divided into three smaller classes.
The first five are: Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Bonnie Owens, steel guitarist Billy Mize, and singer songwriter of truck driving songs Red Simpson.
“The inaugural Class was broken into three sections so that we could spend time honoring each individual,” Kim says.
The honorees have been featured in original artwork. The original art hangs in the conference room of the Hall of Fame, but an enlarged life-sized version lines the walls in the public areas.
While this is first a Hall of Fame, there are interesting things to see throughout the facility.
There’s a piano that Buck Owens had made just for him. He used this piano on many of his recordings, and played it practically every day when he was performing in his later years.
“It’s a Knabe piano,” Kim says.
“In this style, two were custom made. Elvis Presley had his painted white and Buck had his painted black. We let the performers come and play on that piano. We roll it out on the stage.”
Kim also bought a jukebox that greets Hall of Fame visitors. The jukebox contains the hit records of the inducted artists.
In her office, she proudly displays a red, white, and blue guitar given to her by her former boss.
As a member of Buck’s band, the Buckaroos, she sang regularly with him on the road and at the Crystal Palace night club just off the Buck Owens Drive exit of California highway 99.
The Bakersfield Music Hall of Fame is also a performance venue.
Professional acts are booked to the Hall of Fame stage, local performances hold their shows there, and the facility is offered to other organizations for events and parties.
The place has been the scene for receptions and the Hall of Fame induction ceremonies.
“We’re very proud of what we are trying to accomplish here,” Kim says.
The history of American music can be told through many chapters. Cleveland’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tells the rock story.
Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame has grown from a modest beginning in the 1960s to a world repository for country music.
There are at least two states that have Jazz Hall of Fames. Near my hometown in upstate New York, there’s the North American Fiddlers Hall of Fame in Osceola.
This Hall of Fame is taking a different approach and calling out the significant contributions from some local musical contributors who either lived in or near Bakersfield, or who made the city their home later in life.
Kim McAbee Carter thinks it’s only right that Bakersfield have a place to honor these artists.
She believes her former boss, the late Buck Owens, would be proud of what she and the Fall of Fame leadership have done for Bakersfield.
“His thoughts would either be he thought about it first and then was glad someone else did it,” she says.
“I’d like to think he would be happy it was me.”
Steve Newvine lives in Merced
He first wrote about Bakersfield in his book 9 From 99, Experiences from California’s Central Valley, first published nine years ago.
To learn more about the Bakersfield Music Hall of Fame, go to
Celebrating Yosemite
Two exhibitions in Merced are focusing on our National Park and the Merced River
It’s not every day one gets an opportunity to see a free photography exhibit in the community. But this month is extraordinary. There are two exhibits running in March.
Both are free.
Both celebrate Yosemite and the Merced River. One River- two Perspectives features the work of local photographers Jay Sousa and Roger Wyan.
The pair has worked together in their separate photography businesses for many years. So coming together to jointly present this representation of the Merced River came naturally.
“My contribution to the exhibit features some of my favorite photographs from the Merced River and Yosemite,”
Jay Sousa told me on the KYOS Community Conversations program when I filled in for host Roger Wood.
“The region is beautiful for a photographer.”
While Roger Wyan agrees that the River and the Park are a natural fit for a nature photographer, his contribution to the Merced College exhibit was inspired by the great impressionist artists of France.
“I visited Paris recently, and was awestruck by the work of these wonderful impressionist artists,” he said.
“That inspired me to show a different perspective of the Merced River.”
Both photographers were pleased to share the exhibit space that generally features the work of just one artist.
Sharing was a challenge of sorts to appropriately showcase both photographers. Roger sums it up with just a few words.
“I think our work plays off one another well.”
Just as local photographers Jay and Ryan are showcasing their original work, there’s an exhibit of mostly original photographs, art work, and artifacts at the Courthouse Museum in Merced.
The Originals of Yosemite features original photographs and memorabilia all tied to the National Park.
The local photographers who offered originals for this exhibition include UC Merced Chancellor Dorothy Leland and Museum volunteer Donna Lee Hartman.
“We pulled a lot of stuff from our archives,” Donna Lee says.
“And several of our Historical Society Members loaned the cherished items for the exhibit.”
Beyond the photographs, there’s art work from local artists including a covered bridge painting by Vivian Knepel from 1980. Vivian turned 100 in January.
There’s a place setting from the dining room at the Ahwahnee Hotel (now known as The Majestic Yosemite Hotel), a scout outfit on the Museum’s mascot bear cub, and even some of Ansel Adams earlier works from before he became famous.
Most of the items are originals.
All of it well cared for by the Museum volunteers and staff.
Without realizing it, both the Merced College Art Gallery and the Merced County Courthouse Museum have turned this month into a salute to our two natural wonders: the Merced River and Yosemite National Park.
A visitor can see them both in one day. Both are free.
While the One River – Two Perspectives photographer exhibit at Merced College ends on March 21, the Originals of Yosemite will go on until early June.
It’s not every day one can experience so much local history, art work, and memorabilia.
Take advantage of it all. After seeing the photographs, art, and artifacts from these exhibitions, consider making plans to take in Yosemite National Park this year.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book is Stand By Camera One, a look back on his first year working as a television reporter four decades ago. It is available at Lulu.com
Research Week at UC Merced
Some amazing research going on at UC Merced is being celebrated with the whole community.
If I remember my fifth grade instruction at Port Leyden Elementary School correctly, the scientific method begins with an observation, and ends with drawing a conclusion.
That’s sort of what UC Merced has in mind for this year’s Research Week. Simply put, if the University can showcase the kind of research going on to the broader community, it can hope to foster stronger links with everyone.
The first week of March is traditionally Research Week on campus. The activity is an effort to bring the public in to the campus and to take a part of the campus to the community.
“We’re really excited about this,” David Gravano, Ph.D. told me on the Community Conversation’s radio program in early March. “Science is not confined to just our campus, or to just one group of people.”
Some of the activities during Research Week are eye-catching. There is a study into reusing organic wastes to improve ecosystems going on right now at the UC.
At the beginning of Research Week, interested community members had the opportunity to listen to an assessment of the future of safe drinking water in the Central Valley.
A campus Assistant Professor helped explain to the audience of students that safe drinking water is being threatened all over the world, including here in California.
Middle school students from all over Merced County are getting a chance to showcase their work and take tours of the University’s laboratories.
This is not the first time UC Merced has done a Research Week event, but this year was special because it included more venues throughout the greater community. The Sierra Nevada Research Institute presented findings on a number of projects at a luncheon on campus.
The schedule for the week included a core facilities lab tour on campus followed a community forum on nicotine and cannabis policy at the Downtown Campus Center, a STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fair, and an event called the Community Engaged Research Reception at City Hall.
Research Week wrapped with an Undergraduate Research Opportunity Center Scholar Panel where students can get feedback on their work.
“This is all about giving the public the opportunity to see the many innovative projects underway,” UC Merced’s Stephanie Butticci explained to me during the KYOS Community Conversations program.
“We’re welcoming the public to the campus, but being sure some of the activities take place in the community.”
The complete scientific method follows the observation step with research. After research, a hypothesis is drawn and tested. This leads to the conclusion.
Anyone with a passing interest in the research going on at UC Merced are likely impressed with the depth of study, the engagement of students in the process, and the outreach to the larger community.
The hypothesis has been tested, and the conclusion is clear: Research Week at UC Merced helps bring the best the university has to offer to the community.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His book Stand By Camera One is available now on Lulu.com
Returning to Radio
My active afternoon interviewing community leaders for a local public affairs show.
I got a head start on my bucket list recently when radio host Roger Wood asked me to fill in for him for his weekly public affairs show on KYOS in Merced.
The first job in broadcasting for me was in radio. I transitioned to television news where I worked as a reporter, anchor, producer, executive producer, and news director for five stations over fifteen years.
So my guest hosting stint on Community Conversations was a return to my radio roots.
And it was a real hoot. Roger sets up the interviews alongside his co-producers Mike Conway (Public Information Officer, City of Merced), Nathan Quavado (Merced County Office of Education), and Mark North (County of Merced).
Casey Stead from KYOS makes sure all the technical details are taken care of in his role as the engineer for the program.
Every two weeks, interview guests are brought in for individual eight-minute segments.
After four hours, two weeks of programs are recorded. The broadcasts air on Saturday mornings on AM 1480, and on the web at www.1480kyos.com
The first two interviews were with non-profit agencies with topics as diverse as cannabis and suicide prevention.
Next up was the new artistic director for Playhouse Merced who brought along two actors for the upcoming play Driving Miss Daisy.
Those interviews were followed by a conversation with two local photographers who are doing a joint exhibit at Merced College.
As the afternoon progressed, I spoke with a community leader pushing a workplace literacy initiative, two UC Merced staffers promoting Research Week activities on campus, and a volunteer from the Courthouse Museum who talked about a new exhibit called The Originals of Yosemite.
Merced Police Chief Chris Goodwin came into the station for an interview on what’s new in the department. What’s new is an ap that allows citizens to file crime reports from their computer.
With extra time to spare, I asked the Chief what has been the biggest change in law enforcement in his twenty-three years serving Merced; first as an officer and now as Chief. “Cameras,” was his answer. “They’re everywhere now. You see them at many of our intersections, on the bodies of our officers, and with members of the public as well.”
Fire Captain Josh Wilson from the Merced Fire Department was interviewed about a recent study of hazardous wastes that pass through our community from trains and trucks. “The study showed us the unique characteristic of the City’s main transportation thoroughfares,” Captain Wilson told me. “With two railroads and highway 99 all running parallel, this study helps us prepare for a potential incident that might include hazardous wastes.”
All of the interviews brought some new information to the table. As a columnist who has been writing about the community for several years, I learned a lot of new things. I also met some interesting people along the way.
Like Dave Gossman, a teacher at Atwater High School who spoke about the Future Farmers of America (FFA) chapter at the School.
Dave was one of three teachers in Ag when he started with the district sixteen years ago. Today, he’s one of nine teachers in that field. Even more impressive is the growth in numbers of students in the FFA at Atwater High.
Sixteen years ago, there were about 250 students in the program. Today, there are more than eleven-hundred students in the Atwater FFA. That, according to Dave Gossman, makes the Atwater FFA the largest single high school Ag program in the nation.
It was all pretty impressive. So much going on in our community and I had the privilege of hearing it first hand by making a brief, but memorable, return to radio.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book Stand-By, Camera One is about his first year working in broadcasting.
Steve’s Community Conversation segments air February 23 and March 2 on KYOS, 1480 and online at http://www.1480kyos.com/
The program airs at 7:05 AM every Saturday morning.
To explore Steve Newvine's complete collection of books, simply click on the link below.
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Steve is also open to delivering speeches for service club programs and other public speaking engagements.
Contact him at: SteveNewvine@sbcglobal.net