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Woman’s Club Scholarships Part 2 | Columnists

Last week we wrote about three of this year’s Woman’s Club Scholarship recipients, and this week we happily spotlight the other five. As Club President Mayra Lindsay and scholarship committee chair Patricia Bowles emphasized at the awards luncheon, all eight are exceptional young people with bright futures ahead. Sofia Abbondati was born in Buenos Aires […]

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Last week we wrote about three of this year’s Woman’s Club Scholarship recipients, and this week we happily spotlight the other five. As Club President Mayra Lindsay and scholarship committee chair Patricia Bowles emphasized at the awards luncheon, all eight are exceptional young people with bright futures ahead.

Sofia Abbondati was born in Buenos Aires and moved with her family to Key Biscayne ten years ago. She played high school water polo and worked at the Beach Club. She enjoys taking walks on the beach and sums up her affection for the Key in four words: “I love it here!” Sofia is graduating from MAST Academy and will attend Purdue University, where she plans to study biomedical engineering. She looks forward to all the new opportunities college will provide.and ultimately hopes to attend medical school.

Amandine Paran honed her leadership and project management skills during high school by working at the Beach Club, coaching youth volleyball, and serving as captain of her high school volleyball teams. Last year, she and her sister spearheaded a project to collect and clean bottle caps that were recycled into a bench, promoting awareness about single-use plastics along the way. Amandine is graduating from MAST Academy and will attend Florida State University, where she plans to study business management.

Eduardo Ignacio Solorzano moved with his family to Key Biscayne from South Carolina eleven years ago. He played varsity water polo and tennis, which he also coaches. He combines his love for the outdoors with his mechanical inclination by riding and repairing mountain bikes. Last summer he put his CAD (computer-aided design) skills to work during an engineering internship. Eduardo is graduating from Coral Gables High School and will attend Purdue University, where he plans to study mechanical engineering.

Lorenzo Tamayo worked as a tutor in high school and played for the Key Biscayne Rugby Rats. In his free time, he plays tennis and goes to the beach as often as he can. Lorenzo is graduating from MAST Academy and will attend the University of Florida, where he plans to major in mechanical engineering and technology. In addition to focusing on his studies, he aspires to become a better cook while at college.

Jake White has lived on Key Biscayne his entire life and is grateful to the community for shaping him into the person he has become. He takes inspiration from his late grandmother, Helen White, crediting her with teaching him to believe in himself and to stand up for what he thinks is right. Jake is graduating from MAST Academy and will attend Purdue, where he plans to study industrial engineering. He is looking forward to college life in Indiana but is a little concerned about the cold weather and says he will miss his mom’s good cooking.

Sofia and Eduardo were unfortunately unable to attend the awards luncheon and are not pictured here.


For the last #lighterside column, click here.



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Jesuit’s Grant Valley turned tragedy into triumph on the track in 2025

Jesuit’s Grant Valley turned tragedy into triumph on the track in 2025 Published 7:00 am Tuesday, June 24, 2025 1/3 Swipe or click to see more Grant Valley (1094) of Jesuit approaches the finish line during the 4×400 meter relay at the OSAA 6A State Track and Field Championships at Hayward Field on the campus […]

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Jesuit’s Grant Valley turned tragedy into triumph on the track in 2025

Published 7:00 am Tuesday, June 24, 2025

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Grant Valley (1094) of Jesuit approaches the finish line during the 4×400 meter relay at the OSAA 6A State Track and Field Championships at Hayward Field on the campus of the University of Oregon on May 31, 2025. (John Lariviere/ValleyTimes)

You don’t need to tell Jesuit’s Grant Valley that Hayward Field is a special place; he’s well aware. But while some high school athletes’ nerves get the best of them when running on the facility’s hallowed grounds, the recent Crusader graduate said the enormity of the place has a way of easing him before and during competition.

“For me, it’s almost more calming to be on that track,” Valley said. “There’s so much around you that it feels like it takes some pressure off the race and you can enjoy all the fans and how beautiful it is. It kind of takes away the stress of actually running.”

That’s good news for University of Oregon head track & field coach Jerry Schumacher and the program in general, for this past week Valley committed to running for the Ducks this fall.

The decision to do so was a tad difficult because Valley had previously been committed to Southern Oregon University where he was slated to play football for the Raiders. But in the end, while he had and continues to have the utmost respect for Raiders head coach Berk Brown, when the chance to compete for the Ducks presented itself, it was a no-brainer for Valley.

“It was kind of an easy decision,” Valley said. “I had a really good conversation with coach Schumacher and I really felt like he wanted me. I felt like he was knowledgeable and knew what he was talking about. But at the end of the day, if you get an opportunity to run at Oregon, you can’t pass up on that.”

Valley’s road to Eugene wasn’t an easy one, however, for no one has been more surprised by his sudden emergence as one of the state’s historically best sprinters than he has.

To start the season, Valley had no expectations. He’d never broken 11 seconds in the 100 meters, and his times alone were by his own admission pedestrian as he prepared for his senior campaign. But three months later, he owns gold medals in the 100 meters, 200 meters and 4×100 relay from the state track and field championships, and a state record in the 200 (20.86) to go with the state’s third fastest 100 (10.36).

“The last three months have been awesome,” Valley said. “I love my teammates, love my coaches, and going out to the track every day wasn’t even hard. Then I was making all this progress and I was like, ‘let’s keep going.’ I’m just continuing to get faster, and I’m really excited to see what the future holds.”

To understand just how far Valley has come, it’s not the future one should look toward, but rather the past.

In September of his junior season, Valley broke both his tibia and fibula in a football game against West Linn. The break was so bad that doctors told him that had he not taped his ankles prior to the game, the break would likely have been of the compound variety which could’ve meant muscle and nerve damage.

But don’t kid yourself, the injury was still serious and resulted in the junior having a metal rod and four screws placed in his leg and knee. From there it was a lot of rehab, some walking, ultimately some jogging, and even another surgery to remove a screw that was rubbing on a tendon in his knee before he stepped back on the track that following spring.

He didn’t compete initially, but as the season progressed he did step between the lines, even running at state as part of the Crusaders’ 4×100 relay team that placed 13th.

Things continued to progress over the summer, and then this past fall it was back to the football field for the first time since his injury.

It would’ve been natural for anyone to have had a level of trepidation stepping back onto the field of play, but Valley said he was comfortable from the jump.

“I wasn’t really hesitant,” Valley said. “I was more hesitant during rehab and stuff, but to get back on the field, I never really thought about it. I was just like, ‘let’s play.’”

And play he did, well enough to earn an offer from Southern Oregon to continue his exploits on the gridiron at the next level. But before that there was his final track campaign, which was really at the onset little more than an opportunity to enjoy what little he had left of his high school athletic career.

“That’s the thing, I was training for football, and a lot of the stuff I was doing didn’t really translate to track,” Valley said. “I’m a football player, but it was my senior track season and I was finally healthy, and I just wanted to go out and run, have fun and see what I could do.”

Valley opened his own eyes early in the season when he broke 11 seconds for the first time (10.89), did even better while winning at the Oregon Relays in Eugene (10.69), then came his record-breaking 200 meters at Sunset to close the regular season.

“That was the most surreal moment because it was the most unexpected thing,” Valley said. “Those meets really don’t matter, and I dropped a crazy time. That was crazy.”

But not as crazy as the accomplishments in the wake of what had been both a traumatic and debilitating injury just 18 months prior.

Valley, however, looks at it now as less of a setback, and more of a setup for what was ultimately bigger and better for the state champion sprinter.

“I look at it more like a learning experience,” Valley said. “I think it taught me a lot about hard work and how much work it takes to get back. I think I really became a better athlete after my injury.”

Oregon agrees, and both the school’s coaches and Valley himself think his best years are still yet to come.

“They (Oregon coaches) think my ceiling is really high, and I agree,” Valley said. “I haven’t ran any indoor track and never had track specific weight lifting programs. I’ve just been a high school track guy. I really think my ceiling is super high and I’m just going to get faster, especially at Oregon where I’ll get the best training in the world. I think I can do some really cool stuff.”

Now, with his high school career in the rearview mirror and a collegiate one approaching, Valley said that while he’s excited for what’s to come, he couldn’t be happier with how it all ended at Jesuit.

“To win state as a team, both boys and girls, that’s only happened a couple times,” Valley said. “Even at Jesuit, we win a lot of state titles in all sports, but being able to do that in my senior year feels really good.

“Then, committing to Oregon which is like a dream, it’s beginning to feel like all my injuries and surgeries were for a reason.”



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Trinity alum Puttin named new volleyball coach  

Molly Puttin | Trinity High School When Trinity High School volleyball coach Ken Uhlir died suddenly in April, athletic director Ken Trendel said during the ensuing coaching search, that he hoped to find someone “who’s passionate of both Trinity and volleyball” like Uhlir was.  Turns out, the school didn’t have to go far to find […]

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Molly Puttin | Trinity High School

When Trinity High School volleyball coach Ken Uhlir died suddenly in April, athletic director Ken Trendel said during the ensuing coaching search, that he hoped to find someone “who’s passionate of both Trinity and volleyball” like Uhlir was. 

Turns out, the school didn’t have to go far to find a replacement. Molly Puttin, a 1993 Trinity graduate and former player who has been Uhlir’s assistant the past 11 years, was announced as the new head coach on June 12. 

“Throughout the interview process, it became apparent that Molly possesses the best qualities to lead our program and help continue the traditions laid by Coach Ken over the past 11 seasons,” Trinity athletic director Ken Trendel said in a press release. “As an alumna of both Trinity High School and our volleyball program, her passion for Blazer volleyball will undoubtedly help as we continue to build our program.” 



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City of Welch to host July 4th Beach Bash

Welch, WV (WOAY)- Get ready to celebrate the Fourth of July, Coal Town style!  The city of Welch invites you to its Beach Bash on Friday, July 4th.  The festivities kick off at 1:00 pm Eastern at Martha Moore Park, featuring free watermelon, bounce houses for the kids, and beach volleyball. Enjoy a lineup of […]

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Welch, WV (WOAY)- Get ready to celebrate the Fourth of July, Coal Town style! 

The city of Welch invites you to its Beach Bash on Friday, July 4th. 

The festivities kick off at 1:00 pm Eastern at Martha Moore Park, featuring free watermelon, bounce houses for the kids, and beach volleyball.

Enjoy a lineup of local vendors and food trucks, entertainment from Mr. Bill DJ, and a special live performance by Detour at 7:00 pm. 

Don’t miss the grand finale: a spectacular fireworks show that will light up the night sky! 

Bring your lawn chairs, your friends, and your festive spirit  

And good news, if you’re a vendor, registration is free! 

Sponsored Content





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Georgia women’s track and field earns multiple post season honors after national championship season | Georgia Sports

Georgia women’s track and field added another round of recognition to its record-setting season with multiple honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association and The Collegiate Women Sports Awards. The news was announced on Thursday and Friday.  Aaliyah Butler, a junior sprinter for the Bulldogs, was named the winner of […]

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Georgia women’s track and field added another round of recognition to its record-setting season with multiple honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association and The Collegiate Women Sports Awards. The news was announced on Thursday and Friday. 

Aaliyah Butler, a junior sprinter for the Bulldogs, was named the winner of the Honda Sport Award for Track & Field. Buter becomes just the second Bulldog ever to win this award and was selected by administrators from over 1,000 NCAA member schools.

“I am so honored to receive this award and have my name mentioned with winners of the past, including the great Bulldog Kendell Williams,” Butler said.  “This helps show me the hard work and dedication that I’ve put in is paying off”

The CWSA has been awarding the Honda Sports Award to the top female athlete in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports for 49 years, and the winners of each sport become finalists for the prestigious Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year and the 2025 Honda Cup, which will be presented during the live broadcast of the Collegiate Women Sports Awards on June 30, at 7 p.m. on CBS Sports Network.

After winning the program’s first NCAA outdoor team title and its first SEC championship since 2006, the Bulldogs had senior high jumper Elena Kulichenko named South Region Women’s Field Athlete of the Year, Caryl Smith Gilbert selected as Women’s National Coach of the Year, and Karim Abdel Wahab honored as Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year.

Kulichenko played a key role in Georgia’s national title run, winning her third career NCAA high jump championship and her first outright. At the national meet in Eugene, Oregon, she cleared 1.96 meters on a perfect series of five attempts, separating herself from the field in one of her most efficient performances to date. The senior from Odintsovo, Russia, also finished second at the SEC Championships and posted one of the nation’s top marks earlier in the season at the Tiger Track Classic in Auburn, Alabama. 

While Kulichenko was racking up points on the field, Smith Gilbert was steering the entire operation. In just her fourth year in Athens, she led Georgia to 73 points at nationals, a 26-point margin over the next closest team. She also oversaw four individual NCAA champions and 10 total scorers at the national championship meet. Smith Gilbert added the 2025 championship to her trophy case, which included two prior national titles at the University of Southern California in 2018 and 2021. 

Abdel Wahab’s sprint and hurdle group scored nearly half of Georgia’s points at nationals, demonstrating the exceptional performance of his athletes across multiple events. He joined the Bulldogs’ staff in 2023 after five years coaching at South Carolina, where he built one of the nation’s top sprint programs. His extensive experience developing sprinters and hurdlers has been a key part of Georgia’s rise to its championship level this season. For his efforts, he was named Women’s Assistant of the Year by the USTFCCCA. 



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Volleyball Season Tickets on Sale for 2025 Campaign

Story Links New Season Tickets | Season Ticket Central CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – New season tickets for Fighting Illini volleyball’s 2025 campaign are available as head coach Chris Tamas enters his ninth season at the helm at Illinois. Season tickets start at $60 for all home matches. General Admission, Sideline Reserved, and a limited number of Prime Reserved Season Tickets are […]

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New Season Tickets | Season Ticket Central

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – New season tickets for Fighting Illini volleyball’s 2025 campaign are available as head coach Chris Tamas enters his ninth season at the helm at Illinois.

Season tickets start at $60 for all home matches. General Admission, Sideline Reserved, and a limited number of Prime Reserved Season Tickets are also available.









Ticket Type Price
Prime Reserved – Public $145
Prime Reserved – Faculty $116
Sideline Reserved – Public $135
Sideline Reserved – Faculty $108
General Admission $60

SINGLE MATCH TICKETS | Single Match tickets for Illinois volleyball will go on sale in August. Fans will be able to purchase Single Match tickets to all home matches via FightingIllini.com or by calling 866-ILLINI-1 (866-455-4641), or in person at the Illinois Ticket Office located in the west lobby of State Farm Center.















Ticket Type Price
Prime Reserved $20
Premium Match Prime Reserved $25
Sideline Reserved $15
Premium Match Sideline Reserved $20
General Admission $12
Premium Match General Admission $15
General Admission – Youth $7
Premium Match General Admission – Youth $8
Group Rate (15 or more – general admission only) $7
Premium Match Group Rate (15 or more – general admission only) $8
Illinois Students (with I Card) FREE



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Why We Didn’t Have a DIY Beach Wedding

Welcome to Beach Week, our annual celebration of the best place on Earth. Before my fiancé became my husband—in fact, even before he became my fiancé—we spent a lot of time on and around an 18,600-acre Missouri reservoir known as Mark Twain Lake. We invited friends to join us on the pontoon boat for charcuterie […]

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Welcome to Beach Week, our annual celebration of the best place on Earth.

Before my fiancé became my husband—in fact, even before he became my fiancé—we spent a lot of time on and around an 18,600-acre Missouri reservoir known as Mark Twain Lake. We invited friends to join us on the pontoon boat for charcuterie and cocktails, we took the kayak and the stand-up paddleboard into coves, and we spent many hours enjoying both the sand and the not-quite-surf at John F. Spalding Beach.

Which is why, as soon as we knew we were planning a wedding, we asked ourselves what it would take to host it there.

“Imagine the two of us,” Larry said, “saying our vows on the beach at sunset.”

The iconic cliché of the sunset ceremony—and you’ll have to forgive us, we were newly engaged—quickly expanded into what we hoped would become an extended beach party. Having the event at Mark Twain Lake would make it a destination wedding, in the sense that the lake is far enough away from everything else that even our local guests would have to set aside the entire day to attend, and so we began thinking of activities that would make the trip worthwhile.

“We could rent a few extra kayaks,” I said, “or play beach volleyball.”

“And we can get a bunch of stuff going on the grill!” Larry was very enthusiastic about the possibilities. “Our beach wedding would be about bringing the people we love to this place that we love, so they can love it too.”

My mother, who probably loves us more than anybody, was less enthusiastic about the possibility of spending her oldest daughter’s wedding day playing beach volleyball. She suggested that, since we were still very early in the planning process, we might want to consider having a more traditional kind of beach wedding with a ceremony and dinner and dancing because that’s what has been proved to be the most enjoyable for everyone involved. In fact, we might even want to go back to our original plan, which was to have our wedding in our backyard garden. Hadn’t we been talking about that ever since we bought the house?

The truth is that my mother is right about most things—and we did in fact have our wedding in the backyard, but not before we figured out all of the reasons why a beach wedding was wrong for us.

Here’s what we learned. 

Not everybody loves the beach

Some of the people we loved thought that a day full of swimming and kayaking and grilling was a great idea, but those were the people who had been coming to the lake with us for years.

The rest of the people we loved were perfectly willing to come to this place that we loved, if that was where we wanted to have our wedding, but they very quickly let us know that they probably wouldn’t love the beach as much as we did—especially if they were required to participate in sports and activities.

“Can we just come for the sunset ceremony?” they asked.

“Sure,” I said, reassuringly. “Come whenever you like.”

Some people may want formal wedding photos 

Once we agreed that none of our guests would have to get into a kayak unless they really wanted to, and that anybody who wanted to come just for the sunset ceremony was welcome to do so, my mother asked the next important question: “Are you going to be wearing a swimsuit in your wedding photos?”

I told her that I probably would end up wearing my swimsuit during the ceremony if it came at the end of a daylong beach party, since it wasn’t like Larry and I were going to be able to shower and change and style our hair. Then my mother asked me if there weren’t any showers at the beach and I said of course there were, but they were beach showers.

It quickly became clear that many members of my family wanted to use the wedding as an opportunity to take the kinds of photos that could only be taken when everyone is gathered together. The various family groupings, all of the siblings together, the big picture with everyone in it and so on. From there it made sense that Larry and I should think about how we might look presentable, in the sense that whatever photos we took would live on various mantels for decades, and that we should make sure that everyone else had the opportunity to look their best as well.

“I have this white eyelet lace sundress that I wore when Larry and I bought our house,” I said, “and I told him I wouldn’t wear it again until we got married in the backyard, but I could wear it on the beach instead and we could do the more traditional kind of wedding with a dinner and a ceremony and dancing.”

Beach wedding logistics are difficult  

As Larry and I put our minds toward having a traditional wedding on a Midwestern beach, the logistics of how everyone would enjoy the day became more and more complicated. “We still need to confirm whether we need a permit,” I said, “and if we’re having a formal dinner we’ll probably want to rent a shelter house, and we may want to do the thing where you rent a bunch of chairs and tie ribbons around them and arrange them in rows on the sand.”

“Can we get by without renting chairs if we keep the ceremony short and get everybody back to the shelter house for dinner as quickly as possible?” Larry asked.

“Probably,” I said, optimistically. “We’ll also want to rent the shelter house for at least one day before the wedding, because I want to power wash the entire thing beforehand. Those places are full of spiders. Does that mean we’ll need to rent a power washer?”

And suddenly we were talking about budgets and bunting and staple guns and Pinterest boards and whether we’d need to give each guest a pocket-size thing of bug spray with a ribbon tied around it; how we would keep the food at a safe temperature and whether we’d need to assign one of our guests the job of remaining at the shelter house during the ceremony to keep the squirrels off the crudités.

Then we started thinking seriously about the logistics involved in getting people from the shelter house to the beach, including the difficulties that might come up for guests who have specific mobility needs, and then I said the sentence that ended the entire project:

“Larry, when they come back from the ceremony, they’re going to have sand in their shoes.”

“What do you mean?”

“If we want to do a formal beach wedding at sunset and then dinner and dancing afterward, people are either going to have to wear their dress shoes onto the beach and then back up to the shelter house, or they’re going to have to leave their shoes at the shelter house and make their way across the parking lot barefoot, or maybe they’ll carry their shoes, who knows, but either way they’re going to get sand on their feet, and that means they’ll be uncomfortable during the dinner and dancing.”

So we had our backyard wedding instead—which was exactly the kind of wedding Larry and I had been talking about ever since we first bought our house. We had been so enamored of the beach-wedding-at-sunset image that we forgot what should have been obvious. We kept the parts of the beach wedding that we liked, including the part where my sister brought over a bunch of lawn games for the kids to play, and added the parts that my mother knew would be best for everyone, such as formal photos with the extended family.



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