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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File Backup Files Subseries: Chron File, 1989-1993 OA/ID Number: 13809 Folder ID Number: 13809-006 Folder Title: Academic Decathlon Champions 4/23/92 [OA 7572] [2] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 26 22 4 6 04/16/92 11:36 P01 UNITED *** STATE US_AD ACADEMIC DECARION R UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON FAX COVER SHEET FAX: (310)809-4111 DATE: 4/16/92 TO: THE WHITE HOUSE ATTN: MICHELLE NIX FROM: FRANN SHERMET WE ARE TRANSMITTING 5 PAGE(S) TO YOU INCLUDING THIS PAGE. IF YOUR COPY IS UNCLEAR, PLEASE TELEPHONE OR FAX. MESSAGE: ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ARE THE ASTERISKS. THANK you 04/16/92 11:37 P02 The following is a roster of the top three championship teams from the United States Academic Decathlon who will be visiting the White House on Thursday, April 23, 1992. First Place Team is from J. Frank Dobie High School in Houston, Texas Honor Wayne Vuong Scott Seago Massoud Javadi Scholastic Larry Tooley Paul Lapuyade Jeffrey Chung Varsity Daniel Ramirez David Norman Joshua Mathis Coaches Catherine Haney Richard Golenko Principal Jerry Ross Speer Superintendent, Pasadena ISD Larry Richard Vaughn State Director Dr. C. Lee Meyer Pres. - Texas Academic Decathlon Tom Moseley 04/16/92 11:37 P03 Second Place Team is from Mountain View High School, Mesa, Arizona Honor Paul Hlavacek Tyson Rogers Daniel Arai Scholastic Nat Clarkson Andrea Jackson Renee Larson Varsity Christine Roorda Soren Ragsdale Gina Parizek Coach Mary McGovern Principle James E. Curlett Superintendent Dr. James K. Zaharis State Director Anita Lohr 04/16/92 11:37 P04 Third Place Team is from Whitney Young Magnet High School, Chicago, Illinois. Honor Sarah Bush Damien Sullivan Allen Cheng Scholastic Jon Piechowski Kelly English Michael Sleet Varsity Mitchell Rovner Jason Steffensen Gregory Rudnick Coach Larry Minkoff Principal Powhatan Collins Superintendent Ted D. Kimbrough Co-State Directors Roger Prietz Sandra Gass 04/16/92 11:38 P05 Top Ten Overall Winners SCORE 1. NAME OF HIGH SCHOOL 1001 49,710 2. Texas / J. Frank Dobie 49,475 Arizona / Mountain View 3. 48,500 Illinois / Whitney Young Magnet 4. 48,340 California / El Camino Real 5. 46,810 Ohio / Willoughby South 6. 46,325 New Jersey / Northern Valley Old Tappan 7. 46,215 Indiana / Bloomington South 8. 46,120 Wisconsin / University School of Milwaukee 9. 46,055 Alabama / Indian Springs 10. 45,540 Idaho / Boise 04/16/92 11:56 P01 ACADEMIC STATE UNITED *** USEAD DECUMENT ® UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON FAX COVER SHEET FAX: (310)809-4111 DATE: 4/16/92 TO: THE WHITE HOUSE ATTN: MICHALLE NIX FROM: FRANN SHERMET WE ARE TRANSMITTING 2 PAGE(S) TO YOU INCLUDING THIS 'AGE. IF YOUR COPY IS UNCLEAR, PLEASE TELEPHONE OR FAX. MESSAGE: ANN JOYNT Executive Director 04/16/92 11:57 P02 APR 15, 1992 ACADEMIC DECATHLON Page 1 10:30 am UNITED STATES COMPETITION **** OVERALL WINNERS **** *** OVERALL STUDENT WINNERS *** Based on 10 events HONOR DIVISION Gold 9,100 Tyson Rogers Arizona Mountain View H.S. Silver 8,895 Mit Robertson Mississippi Tupelo H.S. Bronze 8,875 Massoud Javadi Texas J. Frank Dobie SCHOLASTIC DIVISION Gold 8,460 Andrea Jackson Arizona Mountain View H.S. Silver 8,450 Renee Larson Arizona Mountain View H.S. Bronze 8,430 Brian Lazarus California El Camino Real H.S. Jonathan Brumley Alabama Indian Springs H.S. VARSITY DIVISION Gold 8,265 Joshua Mathis Texas J. Frank Dobie Silver 8,205 Gregory Rudnick Illinois Whitney Young Magnet Bronze 7,900 Daniel Ramirez Texas J. Frank Dobie THE WHITE HOUSE (Hinchliffe/Nix) WASHINGTON April 15, 1992 10 a.m. DECATHLON Draft One PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: ACADEMIC DECATHLON CHAMPIONS THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1992 ROSE GARDEN ps: --science award winners --teacher of the year 1991 academic decathlon NEED: Super Quiz questions --winners names, anecdotes, etc. taken a position on America 2000? --how many Am 2000 states now -- 43? --quotes: study, education, competition, etc. --# h.s. competing PEARCE: --6 out of 8 years work all year Wade McIntyre -- "He was very charming and very nice. " -don't use "Your lives and your accomplishm can become." FAX INFO: -10-event sholastic competition 9 students; --ecology and environment Super Quiz: Habitat Earth 3500 teams in 49 states and DC -- target 50 for next year --goal: to improve status, recongition, and popularity of academic endeavor in every h.s. in US lets h.s. improve academic image and spirit; increase community involvement with academics; create local educational partnerships with corporations and service organizations. most prestigious h.s. academic comp. in US almost exclusively funded by corporate contributions since 1982 important: broad spectrum of topics studied; and includsion of B and C or below students --6 exams; speech; interview; essay; super quiz -- like running for President? --to be successful, all members of team must commit selves to program --message Decathlon sends is very important -- personal dedication, effort and teamwork lead to success --created a new kind of hero --strong commitment by all to maximize potential of every student --a New Kind of Campus Hero; Reach for the Stars; Cheering for Academics SPECIFICS: G=goal In indo Am 2000 26 Quotations on Education and political neutrality will not be partisan or enemy of any class, creed, party, or faction. JAMES, WILLIAM I take it that no man is educated who has never dallied with the thought of suicide. The whole drift of my education goes to persuade me that the world of our present consciousness is only one out of many worlds of consciousness that exist. Education is the organization of acquired habits of action such as will fit the individual to his physical and social environment. JAMESON, ANNA The true purpose of education is to cherish and unfold the seed of immortality already sown within us; to develop to their fullest ex- tent, the capacities of every kind with which God who made us has endowed us. JEFFERSON, THOMAS The commonwealth requires the education of her people as the safe- guard of order and liberty. Above all things, I hope the education of the common people will be attended to; convinced that on this good sense we may rely with the most security for the preservation of a due degree of liberty. The tax which will be paid for the purpose of education is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests and nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance. JOHNSON, LYNDON BAINES The American people, among their notable contribution to the arts and crafts of civilizations have insisted that education not be the prized possession of the few. JOHNSON, OWEN All education does today is develop the memory at the expense of the imagination. JOHNSON, SAMUEL I hate by-roads in education. Education is as well known, and has long been as well known, as ever it can be. Education 39 For since every household is part of a state, and these relationships are part of the household, and the excellence of the part must have regard to that of the whole, it is necessary that the education both of the children and of the women should be carried on with a regard to the form of the constitution, if it makes any difference as regards the goodness of the state for the children and the women to be good. Now each man judges well the things he knows, and of these he is a good judge. And SO the man who has been educated in a subject is a good judge of that subject, and the man who has received an all- round education is a good judge in general. ROGERS, WILL There is nothing so stupid as the educated man, if you get off the subject he was educated in. Nothing will kill the movies except education. ROOSEVELT, THEODORE Education must light the path for social change. The social and economic problems confronting us are growing in complexity. The more complex and difficult these problems become, the more essen- tial it is to provide broad and complete education; that kind of edu- cation that will equip us as a nation to decide these problems for the best interest of all concerned. Our ultimate security, to a large extent, is based upon the individual's character, information, and attitude-and the responsibility rests squarely upon those who direct education in America. The educated scamp is a scamp still and all the more dangerous to the community. ROSENBERG, ALFRED For decades education in Germany has been looked on merely as a means of increasing knowledge. Instead of this, National Socialism has decreed education to be the strengthening of character. ROSENKRANS, KARL The nature of education is determined by the nature of mind that it can develop what is in itself only by its own activity Educa- tion is the influencing of man by man, and it has for its end to lead him to actualize himself through his own efforts Man, therefore, Ref: PN6081 K47 WH QUOTABLE QUOTES ON EDUCATION AUGUST KERBER Wayne State University A Savoyard Book 1968 WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS DETROIT Education THE JEFFERSONIAN CYCLOPEDIA 274 2388. EDUCATION, Devotion to.-A much poetry should not be indulged. Some system of general instruction, which shall is useful for forming style and taste. Pope, reach every description of our citizens from Dryden, Thomson, Shakespeare, and of the the richest to the poorest, as it was the ear- French Molière, Racine, the Corneilles, may liest, so will it be the latest of all the public be read with pleasure and improvement. The concerns in which I shall permit myself to French language. become that of the general take an interest. Nor am I tenacious of the intercourse of nations, and from their ex- form in which it shall be introduced. Be traordinary advances, now the depository of that what it may, our descendants will be all science, is an indispensable part of educa- as wise as we are, and will know how to tion for both sexes. * * * The ornaments, amend and amend it, until it shall suit their too, and the amusements of life, are entitled circumstances. Give it to us then in any to their portion of attention. These. for a shape. and receive for the inestimable boon female. are dancing, drawing, and music. The the thanks of the young and the blessings of first is a healthy exercise, elegant and very the old, who are past all other services but attractive for young people. Every affec- prayers for the prosperity of their country, tionate parent would be pleased to see his and blessings for those who promote it.-To daughter qualified to participate with her JOSEPH C. CABELL. FORD ED.. X. I02. (M., companions, and without awkwardness at 1818.) least, in the circles of festivity, of which she occasionally becomes a part. It is a neces- - EDUCATION, Discipline and.-See sary accomplishment, therefore, although of DISCIPLINE and UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. short use; for the French rule is wise, that 2389. EDUCATION, Drawing.-I have no lady dances after marriage. This is been quite anxious to get a good drawing founded in solid physical reasons, gestation master in the military or landscape line for and-nursing leaving little time to a married the University [of Virginia]. It is a branch lady when this exercise can be either safe or of male education most highly and justly innocent. Drawing is thought less of in this valued on the continent of Europe.-To country than in Europe. It is an innocent JAMES MADISON. FORD ED., X, 360. (M., and engaging amusement, often useful, and 1826.) a qualification not to be neglected in one who is to become a mother and an instructor. Mu- EDUCATION, Elective Studies.-See sic is invaluable where a person has an ear. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. Where they have not, it should not be at- - EDUCATION, European.-See tempted. It furnishes a delightful recreation SCHOOLS. for the hours of respite from the cares of the day, and lasts us through life. The taste of 2390. EDUCATION, Female.-A plan of this country, too. calls for this accomplish- female education has never been a subject of ment more strongly than for either of the systematic contemplation with me. It has others. I need say nothing of household occupied my attention so far only as the edu- economy, in which the mothers of our coun- cation of my own daughters occasionally re- try are generally skilled, and generally care- quired. Considering that they would be ful to instruct their daughters. We all know placed in a country situation, where little aid its value. and that diligence and dexterity in could be obtained from abroad. I thought it all its processes are inestimable treasures. essential to give them a solid education, which The order and economy of a house are as might enable them. when become mothers, to honorable to the mistress as those of the farm educate their own daughters, and even to di- to the master, and if either be neglected. rect the course for sons, should their fathers ruin follows, and children destitute of the be lost, or incapable, or inattentive. * means of living.-To N. BURWELL. vii, IOI. A great obstacle to good education is the or- FORD ED., x, 104. (M., 1818.) dinate passion prevalent for novels. and the time lost in that reading which should be in- - EDUCATION, Fostering Genius.- structively employed. When this poison in- See 2398, 2399, 2400. fects the mind it destroys its tone and revolts 2391. EDUCATION, Freedom and.-If a it against wholesome reading. Reason and nation expects to be ignorant and free. in a fact, plain and unadorned, are rejected. state of civilization, it expects what never Nothing can engage attention unless dressed was and never will be.-To CHARLES YANCEY. in all the figments of fancy, and nothing so vi, 517. FORD ED., x, 4. (M.,1816.) bedecked comes amiss. The result is a 2392. EDUCATION, Freedom, Happi- bloated imagination, sickly judgment, and ness and.-No other sure foundation can be disgust towards all the real businesses of life. This mass of trash, however, is not with- devised for the preservation of freedom and happiness. * * * out some distinction; some few modelling Preach a crusade against their narratives. although fictitious, on the ignorance; establish and improve the law for incidents of real life, have been able to make educating the common people. Let our coun- them interesting and useful vehicles of a trymen know that the people alone can pro- sound morality. Such. I think, are Marmon- tect us against the evils [of. misgovernment]. tel's new Moral Tales. but not his old ones, -To GEORGE WYTHE ii, 7. FORD ED., iv, which are really immoral. Such are the wri- 268. (P., 1786.) tings of Miss Edgeworth, and some of those 2393. EDUCATION, Friends of.-A wise of Madame Genlis. For a like reason, too, direction of [the force friendly to education] 275 THE JEFFERSONIAN CYCLOPEDIA Education will insure to our country its future prosper- country, for teaching Greek, Latin, geography, ity and safety.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. vii, and the higher branches of numerical arith- 189. FORD ED., x, 167. (P.F., 1820.) metic. Of the boys thus sent in any one year. 2394. EDUCATION, Good Government trial is to be made at the grammar schools and.-No one more sincerely wishes the one or two years, and the best genius of the spread of information among mankind than whole selected, and continued six years, and I do, and none has greater confidence in its the residue dismissed. By this means twenty of the best geniuses will be raked from the effect towards supporting free and good gov- rubbish annually, and be instructed at the ernment.-To HUGH L. WHITE. v, 521. (M., 1810.) public expense, so far as the grammar schools go. At the end of six years instruction, one- 2395. EDUCATION, Higher.-I do most half are to be discontinued (from among anxiously wish to see the highest degrees of whom the grammar schools will probablv education given to the higher degrees of be supplied with future masters) and the genius, and to all degrees of it, so much as other half, who are to be chosen for the su- may enable them to read and understand what periority of their parts and disposition, are to is going on in the world, and to keep their be sent and continued three years in the study part of it going on right; for nothing can of such sciences as they shall choose, at Will- keep it right but their own vigilant and dis- iam and Mary College. * * * The ul- trustful superintendence.-To MANN PAGE. timate result of the whole scheme of educa- iv, II9. FORD ED., vii, 24. (M., 1795.) tion would be the teaching all the children of 2396. The greatest good [of the State reading, writing. and common arith- the people] requires, that while they are in- metic; turning out ten annually of superior structed in general, competently to the com- genius, well taught in Greek, Latin. geog- mon business of life, others should employ raphy, and the higher branches of arithmetic; their genius with necessary information to turning out ten others annually, of still su- the useful arts. to inventions for saving la- perior parts, who. to those branches of learn- bor and increasing our comforts. to nourish- ing, shall have added such branches of the ing our health. to civil government, military sciences as their genius shall have led them science, &c.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. vii, 187. to; the further furnishing to the wealthier FORD ED., x, 166. (P. F., 1820.) part of the people convenient schools at which their children may be educated at their own 2397. When sobered by ex- expense.-NoTES ON VIRGINIA. viii, 388. perience, I hope our successors will turn FORD ED., iii, 251. (1782.) their attention to the advantages of education. 2399. I mean of education on the broad scale, and I have sketched and put not that of the petty academies, as they call into the hands of a member a bill, delineating themselves, which are started up in every a practicable plan, entirely within the means neighborhood, and where one or two men, they [the Virginia Legislature] already have possessing Latin and sometimes Greek, a on hand, destined to this object. My bill knowledge of the globes, and the first six proposes: I. Elementary schools in every books of Euclid, imagine and communicate county, which shall place every householder within three miles of a school. 2. District this as the sum of science. They commit their pupils to the theatre of the world, with colleges, which shall place every father within just taste enough of learning to be alienated a day's ride of a college where he may dis- from industrious pursuits, and not enough to pose of his son. 3. An university in a healthy do service in the ranks of science. * * * and central situation, 'with the offer of the I hope the necessity will at length be seen of lands, buildings, and funds of the Central establishing institutions here, as in Europe. College, if they will accept that place for their where every branch of science useful at this establishment. In the first will be taught day, may be taught in its highest degree.-To reading, writing. common arithmetic, and JOHN ADAMS. vi, 356. FORD ED., ix, 464. general notions of geography. In the second, (M., July 1814.) ancient and modern languages, geography fully, a higher degree of numerical arithmetic, 2398. EDUCATION, Jefferson's Bills mensuration, and the elementary principles on.-The bill [on Education in the Revised of navigation. In the third, all the useful Code of Virginia] proposes to lay off every sciences in their highest degree. To all of county into small districts of five or six miles which is added a selection from the elemen- square, called hundreds, and in each of them tary schools of subjects of the most promising to establish a school for teaching reading, genius, whose parents are too poor to give writing. and arithmetic. The tutor to be them further education, to be carried at the supported. by the hundred, and every person public expense through the colleges and uni- in it entitled to send their children three years versity. The object is to bring into action gratis, and as much longer as they please, that mass of talents which lies buried in pov- paying for it. These schools to be under a erty in every country, for want of the means visitor who is annually to choose the boy of of development, and thus give activity to a best genius in the school, of those whose par- mass of mind, which, in proportion to our ents are too poor to give them further educa- population, shall be the double or treble of tion. and to send him forward to one of the what it is in most countries. The expense grammar schools, of which twenty are pro- of the elementary schools for every countv. posed to be erected in different parts of the is proposed to be levied on the wealth of the Education THE JEFFERSONIAN CYCLOPEDIA , 276 county, and all children rich and poor. to be good principles. If this period be suffered educated at these three years gratis. * * * to pass in idleness, the mind becomes lethar- This is, in fact and substance, the plan I pro- gic and impotent. as would the body it in- posed in a bill forty years ago, but accom- habits, if unexercised during the same time. modated to the circumstances of this, instead The sympathy between body and mind dur- of that day.-To M. CORREA. vii. 94. (P. ing their rise, progress, and decline, is too F., 1817.) strict and obvious to endanger our being 2400. EDUCATION, Jefferson's Ex- misled, while we reason from the one to the planation of.-The general objects of this other. law are to provide an education adapted to As soon as they are of sufficient age. it is the years, to the capacity, and the condition supposed they will be sent from the grammar of every one, and directed to their freedom schools to the university. which constitutes and happiness. Specific details were not our third and last stage, there to study those proper for the law. These must be the busi- sciences which may be adapted to their views. ness of the visitors entrusted with its execu- By that part of our plan which prescribes tion. The first stage of this education being the selection of the youths of genius from the schools of the hundreds. wherein the great among the classes of the Door, we hope to mass of the people will receive their instruc- avail the State of those talents which nature tion, the principal foundations of future or- has sown as liberally among the poor as the der will be laid here. Instead, therefore, of rich, but which perish without use, if not putting the Bible and the Testament into the sought for and cultivated. But of all the hands of the children at an age when their views of this law none is more important, judgments are not sufficiently matured for none more legitimate, than that of rendering religious inquiries. their memories may here the people the safe, as they are the ultimate. be stored with the most useful facts from guardians of their own liberty. For this pur- Grecian, Roman, European and American pose the reading in the first stage, where history. The first elements of morality, too, they will receive their whole education, is may be instilled into their minds: such as, proposed, as has been said, to be chiefly his- when further developed as their judgments torical. History, by apprising them of the advance in strength, may teach them how to past, will enable them to judge of the fu- work out their own greatest happiness, by ture; it will avail them of the experience of showing them that it does not depend on other times and other nations; it will qual- the condition of life in which chance has ify them as judges of the actions and designs placed them, but is always the result of of men; it will enable them to know ambition a good conscience, good health. occupation, under every disguise it may assume; and and freedom in all just pursuits. Those whom knowing it, to defeat its views. In every either the wealth of their parents or the adop- government on earth is some trace of human tion of the State shall destine to higher de- weakness, some germ of corruption and de- grees of learning will go on to the gram- generacy, which cunning will discover, and mar schools. which constitute the next stage, wickedness insensibly open, cultivate and im- there to be instructed in the languages. The prove. Every government degenerates when learning Greek and Latin, I am told, is going trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The into disuse in Europe. I know not what their people themselves, therefore, are its only safe manners and occupations may call for; but depositories. And to render even them safe, it would be very ill-judged in us to follow their minds must be improved to a certain their example in this instance. There is a degree. This indeed is not all that is neces- certain period of life. say from eight to fifteen sary, though it be essentially necessary. An or sixteen years of age. when the mind. like amendment of our Constitution must have the body is not yet firm enough for laborious come in aid of the public education. The in- and close operations. If applied to such, it fluence over government must be shared falls an early victim to premature exertion; among all the people. If every individual exhibiting, indeed, at first, in these young which composes their mass participates of and tender subjects, the flattering appearance the ultimate authority, the government will of their being men while they are yet children, be safe; because the corrupting the whole but ending in reducing them to be children mass will exceed any private resources of when they should be men. The memory is wealth; and public ones cannot be provided then most susceptible and tenacious of im- but by levies on the people. In this case every pressions; and the learning of languages be- man would have to pay his own price. The ing chiefly a work of memory, it seems pre- government of Great Britain has been cor- cisely fitted to the powers of this period, rupted. because but one man in ten has a which is long enough, too, for acquiring the right to vote for members of parliament. The most useful languages. ancient and modern. sellers of the government, therefore, get nine- I do not pretend that language is science. It tenths of their price clear. It has been is only an instrument for the attainment of thought that corruption is restrained by con- science. But that time is not lost which is fining the right of suffrage to a few of the employed in providing tools for future opera- wealthier of the people; but it would be more tion; more especially, as in this case, the effectually restrained. by an extension of that books put into the hands of the youth for this right. to such members as would bid defiance purpose may be such as will, at the same time, to the means of corruption.-NoTES ON VIR- impress their minds with useful facts and GINIA. viii, 388. FORD ED., iii, 252. (1782.) 277 THE JEFFERSONIAN CYCLOPEDIA Education EDUCATION, Languages and.-See of their own country, to rescue it from the LANGUAGES. degradation of becoming the Barbary of the 2401. EDUCATION, Large Cities and.- Union, and of falling into the ranks of our I am not a friend to placing young men in own negroes. To that condition it is fast populous cities, because they acquire there sinking. We shall be in the hands of the habits and partialities which do not contrib- other States, what our indigenous predeces- ute to the happiness of their after life.-To sors were when invaded by the science and DOCTOR WISTAR. v, 104. FORD ED., ix, 70. arts of Europe. The mass of education in (W.. 1807.) Virginia, before the Revolution, placed her with the foremost of her Sister Colonies. 2402. EDUCATION, Law and.-Laws What is her education now? Where is it? will be wisely formed, and honestly adminis- The little we have we import. like beggars, tered, in proportion as those who form and from other States; or import their beggars to administer them are wise and honest: whence bestow on us their miserable crumbs. And it becomes expedient for promoting the pub- what is wanting to restore us to our station lic happiness that those persons. whom nature among our confederates? Not more money has endowed with genius and virtue, should from the people. Enough has been raised be rendered by liberal education worthy to by them, and appropriated to this very ob- receive, and able to guard the sacred deposit ject. It is that it should be employed under- of the rights and liberties of their fellow standingly, and for their greatest good.-To citizens; and that they should be called to JOSEPH C. CABELL. vii, 186. FORD ED., X, that charge without regard to wealth, birth or 165. (P.F., 1820.) other accidental condition or circumstance; 2408. Six thousand common but the indigence of the greater number dis- abling them from so educating, at their own schools in New York, fifty pupils in each, three hundred thousand in all; one hundred expense, those of their children whom nature has fitly formed and disposed to become use- and sixty thousand dollars annually paid to the masters; forty established academies, with ful instruments. for the public, it is better that such should be sought for and educated two thousand two hundred and eighteen pu- at the common expense of all, than that the pils; and five colleges with seven hundred and eighteen students; to which last classes happiness of all should be confined to the weak or wicked.-DIFFUSION OF KNOWLEDGE BILL. of institutions seven hundred and twenty FORD ED., ii, 22I. (1779.) thousand dollars have been given; and the whole appropriations for education estimated 2403. EDUCATION, Material progress at two and a half millions of dollars! What vs.-People generally have more feeling for a pigmy to this is Virginia become, with a canals and roads than education. However, I population almost equal to that of New hope we can advance them with equal pace- York! And whence this difference? From To JOEL BARLOW. v, 217. FORD ED., ix, 169. the difference their rulers set on the value of (W.. 1807.) knowledge. and the prosperity it produces. 2404. EDUCATION, Military instruc- But still. if a pigmy. let her do what a pigmv may do.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. vii, 188. tion.-We must make military instruction a FORD ED., x, 167. (P.F., 1820.) regular part of collegiate education. We can never be safe till this is done*-To 2409. EDUCATION, The People and.- JAMES MONROE. vi, 131. (M., 1813.) Above all things, I hope the education of the common people will be attended to; convinced 2405. EDUCATION, Municipal govern- that on their good senses we may rely with ment and.-Education is not a branch of mu- the most security for the preservation of a nicipal government. but, like the other arts due degree of liberty.*-To JAMES MADISON. and sciences, an accident only.-To JOHN FORD ED., iv, 480. (P., 1787.) TAYLOR. vii, 17. FORD ED., X, 51. (M., 2410. 1816.) [To give] information to the people *** is the most certain, and - EDUCATION, National University. the most legitimate engine of government.- -See UNIVERSITY. To JAMES MADISON. ii, 332. (1787.) 2406. EDUCATION, Neglect of.-If the 2411. The diffusion of in- children * * * are untaught, their igno- formation, I deem [one] of the essential prin- rance and vices will, in future life cost us ciples of our government and, consequently, much dearer in their consequences, than it [one] which ought to shape its administra- would have done, in their correction, by a tion.-FIRST INAUGURAL ADDRESS. viii, 4. good education.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. FORD FORD ED., viii, 5. (1801.) ED., x, 99. (1818.) 2412. Enlighten the people 2407. EDUCATION, New York vs. Vir- generally, and tyranny and oppressions of ginia.-Surely Governor Clinton's display of body and mind will vanish like spirits at the the gigantic efforts of New York towards the education of her citizens will stimulate the In Congress edition: (ii, 332,) Educate and in- form the whole mass of the people. Enable them to pride as well as the patriotism of our Legis- see that it is their interest to preserve peace and order lature, to look to the reputation and safety and they will preserve them. And it requires no very high degree of education to convince them of this. Jefferson was the first to suggest military train- They are the only sure reliance for the preservatior, ing in the schools.-EDITOR of our liberty."-EDITOR. Education THE JEFFERSONIAN CYCLOPEDIA 278 dawn of day.-To DUPONT DE NEMOURS. sary; and all knowledge which is not in- vi, 592. FORD ED., x, 25. (P. F., 1816.) nate, is in contempt, or neglect at least. Every 2413. Nobody can doubt my folly must run its round; and so, I suppose, zeal for the general instruction of the people. must that of self-learning and self-sufficiency; Who first started that idea? I may surely of rejecting the knowledge acquired in past say. myself. Turn to the bill in the Revised ages, and starting on the new ground of in- Code, which I drew more than forty years tuition.-To JOHN ADAMS. vi, 355. FORD ED., ago, and before which the idea of a plan for ix, 464. (M., 1814.) the education of the people, generally, had 2420. EDUCATION, Suffrage and.- never been suggested in this State. There There is one provision [in the new constitu- you will see developed the first rudiments of tion of Spain] which will immortalize its in- the whole system of general education we are ventors. It is that which, after a certain now urging and acting on: and it is well epoch, disfranchises every citizen who cannot known to those with whom I have acted on read and write. This is new, and is the fruit- this subject, that I never have proposed a ful germ of the improvement of everything sacrifice of the primary to the ultimate grade good, and the correction of everything imper- of instruction. Let us keep our eye steadily fect in the present constitution. This will on the whole system.-To GENERAL BRECK- give you an enlightened people, and an en- ENRIDGE. vii, 205. (M., 1821.) See PEOPLE. ergetic public opinion which will control and 2414. EDUCATION, Perversion of enchain the aristocratic spirit of the govern- power and.-The most effectual means of ment.-To CHEVALIER DE OUIS. vi, 342. (M., p:eventing the perversion of power into tyr- 1814.) anny are to illuminate, as far as practicable, 2421. EDUCATION, Suitable.-Promote the minds of the people.-DIFFUSION OF in every order of men the degree of instruc- KNOWLEDGE BILL. FORD ED, ii. 22I. (1799.) tion proportioned to their condition, and to 2415. EDUCATION, Power and.-All their views in life.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. the States but our own are sensible that vii, 189. FORD ED., x, 167. (P. F., 1820.) knowledge is power. The Missouri question 2422. EDUCATION, System and.-The is for power. The efforts now gener- truth is that the want of common education ally making in all the States to advance with us is not from our poverty. but from the their science is for power, while we are sink- want of an orderly system. More money is ing into the barbarism of our Indian abo- now paid for the education of a part than rigines, and expect like them to oppose by ig- would be paid for that of the whole, if sys- norance the overwhelming mass of light and tematically arranged.-To JOSEPH C. CABELL. science by which we shall be surrounded. It vii, 188. FORD ED., x, 167. (P.F., 1820.) is a comfort that I am not to live to see this. -To JOSEPH C. CABELL. FORD ED., x, 155. 2423. EDUCATION, Taxes for.-The (M., 1820.) tax which will be paid for the purpose of education is not more than the thousandth 2416. EDUCATION, Progress through. part of what will be paid to kings, priests -I look to the diffusion of light and educa- and nobles who will rise up among us if we tion as the resource most to be relied on for leave the people in ignorance.-To GEORGE ameliorating the condition, promoting the vir- WYTHE. ii, 7. FORD ED., iv, 269. (P., 1786.) tue, and advancing the happiness of man.- To C. C. BLATCHLY. vii, 263. (M., 1822.) 2424. If the Legislature would See 2386. add to the literary fund a perpetual tax of a cent a head on the population of the State, it 2417. EDUCATION, The Republic and. would set agoing at once, and forever main- -I have two great measures at heart, without tain, a system of primary or ward schools, which no republic can maintain itself in and an university where might be taught, in strength. I. That of general education, to its highest degree, every branch of science enable every man to judge for himself what useful in our time and country; and it would will secure or endanger his freedom. 2. To rescue us from the tax of toryism, fanaticism, divide every county into hundreds, of such and indifferentism to their own State, which size that all the children of each will be within we now send our youth to bring from those reach of a central school in it.-To JOHN Ty- of New England.-To CHARLES YANCEY. vi, LER v, 525. FORD ED., ix, 277. (M., 1810.) 517. FORD ED., X, 4. (M., 1816.) 2418. EDUCATION, Safety in.-The in- - EDUCATION, Technical.See 2396. formation of the people at large can alone make them the safe. as they are the sole de- 2425. EDUCATION, Tyranny and.- positary of our political and religious free- Enlighten the people generally, and tyranny dom-To WILLIAM DUANE. v, 541. (M., and oppressions of body and mind will vanish 1810.) like evil spirits at the dawn of day.-To 2419. EDUCATION, Self-sufficiency DUPONT DE NEMOURS. vi, 592. FORD ED., x, and.-Our post-revolutionary youth are born 25. (P. F., 1816.) under happier stars than you and I were. - EDUCATION vs. VICE.-See 2406. They acquire all learning in their mother's 2426. EDUCATION, The Wealthy and. womb, and bring it into the world ready made. -What will be the retribution of the wealthy The information of books is no longer neces- individual [for his support of general educa- E300 2 J43 1967 V.I WHRC t: THE Jeffersonian Cyclopedia A COMPREHENSIVE COLLECTION OF THE VIEWS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON Classified and Arranged in Alphabetical Order Under Nine Thousand Titles RELATING TO GOVERNMENT, POLITICS, LAW, EDUCATION, POLITICAL ECONOMY, FINANCE, SCIENCE, ART, LITERATURE, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, MORALS, ETC. EDITED BY JOHN P. FOLEY WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JULIAN P. BOYD VOLUME ONE "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."-Thomas Jefferson NEW YORK / RUSSELL & RUSSELL ECONOMIC REFORM EDUCATION of this country. This stability should not be fos- he must go in simply as an American; and silization. (Second Annual Message, Washing- when he is once in, he will speedily realize ton, December 2, 1902.) Mem. Ed. XVII, 167; that he must work very hard indeed, or he will Nat. Ed. XV, 144. be upset by some other American, with no education at all, but with much natural capa- ECONOMIC REFORM. Economic reform city. His education ought to make him feel must have a twofold object; first to increase particularly ashamed of himself if he acts general prosperity, because unless there is such meanly or dishonorably, or in any way falls general prosperity no one will be well off and, short of the ideal of good citizenship, and it second, to secure a fair distribution of this ought to make him feel that he must show prosperity, so that the man of the people shall that he has profited by it; but it should cer- share in it. Introduction to The isconsin tainly give him no feeling of superiority until Idea by Charles McCarthy. (Macmillan Co., by actual work he has shown that superiority. N. Y., 1912), P. X. In other words, the educated man must realize that he is living in a democracy and under ECONOMICS. See MORALITY. democratic conditions, and that he is entitled to no more respect and consideration than he EDITORS. The editor, who stands as a judge can win by actual performance. (Atlantic in a community, should be one of the men Monthly, August 1894.) Mem. Ed. XV, 52; to whom you would expect to look up, be- Nat. Ed. XIII, 37. cause his function as an editor makes him a more important man than the average merchant, EDUCATED MEN. See also CITIZENSHIP; the average business man, the average profes- CIVIC DUTY; DEMOCRACY. sional man can be. He wields great influence; and he cannot escape the responsibility of EDUCATION. Education must be twofold. Of wielding it. If he wields it well, honor is his course if we do not have education in the beyond the honor that comes to the average school, the academy, the college, the university, man who does well; if he wields it ill, shame and have it developed in the highest and wisest should be his beyond the shame that comes to manner, we shall make but a poor fist of Amer- the average man who does ill. (At Milwaukee, ican citizenship. But such education can Wis., September 7, 1910.) Mem. Ed. XV, 459; never be all. It can never be more than half, Nat. Ed. XIII, 546. and sometimes not that. Nothing can take the place of the education of the home; and EDITORS. See also JOURNALIST; PRESS. that education must be largely the unconscious influence of character upon character. (Before EDUCATED MEN-OBLIGATION OF. It Minnesota Legislature, St. Paul, April 4, is an evil thing for any man of education to 1903.) Presidential Addresses and State Papers forget that education should intensify patriot- I, 289. ism, and that patriotism must not only be shown by striving to do good to the country from A literary education is simply within, but by readiness to uphold its interests one of many different kinds of education, and and honor, at any cost, when menaced from it is not wise that more than a small percentage without. Educated men owe to the community of the people of any country should have an the serious performance of this duty. (The exclusively literary education. The average man Bachelor of Arts, March 1896.) Mem. Ed. XV, must either supplement it by another education 236; Nat. Ed. XIII, 178. or else as soon as he has left an institution of learning, even though he has benefited by it, The educated man is entitled he must at once begin to train himself to do to no special privilege, save the inestimable work along totally different lines. (At National privilege of trying to show that his education University, Cairo, Egypt, March 28, 1910.) enables him to take the lead in striving to Mem. Ed. XVIII, 622; Nat. Ed. XVI, 45I. guide his fellows aright in the difficult task which is set to us of the twentieth century. A utilitarian education should (At University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, undoubtedly be the foundation of all educa- February 22, 1905.) Mem. Ed. XV, 348; Nat. tion. But it is far from advisable, it is far Ed. XIII, 505. from wise, to have it the end of all education. Technical training will more and more be EDUCATED MEN IN POLITICS. An edu- accepted as the prime factor in our educational cated man must not go into politics as such; system, a factor as essential for the farmer, [147] EDUCATION EDUCATION the blacksmith, the seamstress, and the cook, definitely understand that a man may be well as for the lawyer, the doctor, the engineer, trained in book-learning and yet, in the proper and the stenographer. Side by side with sense of the word, and for all practical pur- the need for the perfection of the individual in poses, be utterly uneducated; while a man of the technic of his special calling goes the need comparatively little book-learning may, never- of broad human sympathy, and the need of theless, in essentials, have a good education. lofty and generous emotion in that individual. (At semicentennial celebration, founding of Only thus can the citizenship of the modern Agricultural Colleges, Lansing, Mich., May 3I, state rise level to the complex modern social 1907.) Mem. Ed. XVIII, 185; Nat. Ed. XVI, needs. 141. No technical training, no narrowly utilitarian study of any kind will meet this second class, EDUCATION-IMPROPER USE OF. Edu- of needs. In part they can best be met by a cation is of good chiefly according to the use training that will fit men and women to appre- you put it to. If it teaches you to be so puffed ciate, and therefore to profit by, great poetry with pride as to make you misestimate the and those great expressions of the historian relative values of things, it becomes a harm and the statesman which rivet our interest and and not a benefit. There are few things less stir our souls. (Presidential Address, American desirable than the arid cultivation, the learning Historical Association, Boston, December 27, and refinement which lead merely to that intel- 1912.) Mem. Ed. XIV, 14; Nat. Ed. XII, lectual conceit which makes a man in a demo- 12-13. cratic community like ours hold himself aloof from his fellows and pride himself upon the I doubt if there is any lesson weakness which he mistakes for supercilious more essential to teach in an industrial democ- strength. (At the Harvard Union, Cambridge, racy like ours than the lesson that any failure February 23, 1907.) Mem. Ed. XV, 488; Nat. to train the average citizen to a belief in the Ed. XIII, 564. things of the spirit no less than the things of the body, must in the long run entail mis- EDUCATION-PROGRESS IN. Our prog- fortune, shortcoming, possible disaster upon the ress in educational efficiency must come from Nation itself. It is necessary that we should two sources: from the great natural leader who see that the children should be trained not happens to be an educator, and from the ordi- merely in reading and writing, not merely in the nary citizen who to common sense adds some elementary branches of learning strictly so de- power of vision, and who realizes the relation fined; but trained industrially, trained ade- of the school to society. In pedagogy as in quately to meet the ever-increasing demands of every other walk of life great natural leaders the complex growth of our industrialism, are scarce. Therefore the ordinary citizen of trained agriculturally, trained in handicrafts, vision and common sense must concern him- trained to be more efficient workers in every self with the changing problem of the school, field of human activity. But they must be and must insist that pedantic tradition does trained in more than that or the Nation will not keep our schools from performing their ultimately go down. They must be trained in full public service. Foreword to Democracy's the elementary branches of righteousness; they High School by William D. Lewis. (Houghton must be trained so that it shall come naturally Mifflin Co., Boston, 1914), P. vi. to them to abhor that which is evil, or we never can see our democracy take the place EDUCATION, INDUSTRIAL. Industrial which it must and shall take among the nations training, training which will fit a girl to do of the earth. (Before Religious Educational As- work in the home, which will fit a boy to work sociation, White House, February I2, 1908.) in the shop if in a city, to work on a farm if Presidential Addresses and State Papers VII, in the country, is the most important of all 1652-1653. training, aside from that which develops charac- ter; and it is a grave reproach to us as a nation EDUCATION-FUNCTION OF. Education that we have permitted our training to lead should not confine itself to books. It must train the children away from the farm and shop executive power, and try to create that right instead of toward them. We should try to pro- public opinion which is the most potent factor vide the many with training in their profes- in the proper solution of all political and social sions, just as the few, the doctors, the ministers, questions. Book learning is very important, but the lawyers, are trained for their professions. it is by no means everything; and we shall In other words, the school system should be never get the right idea of education until we aimed primarily to fit the scholar for actual [148] EDUCATION EDUCATION life rather than for a university. The excep- tional individual, of the highest culture and form of industrial school, as to the means by most efficient training possible, is an important which it may be articulated with the public school system, and as to the way to secure for asset for the state. He should be encouraged and his development promoted; but this should the boys trained therein the opportunity to not be done at the expense of all the other acquire in the industries the practical skill individuals who can do their work best on which alone can make them finished journey- the farms and in the workshops; it is for the men. (At semicentennial celebration, founding benefit of these individuals that our school of Agricultural Colleges, Lansing, Mich., May system should be primarily shaped. (Letter to 31, 1907.) Mem. Ed. XVIII, 175; Nat. Ed. XVI, 132. Herbert Myrick read at Springfield, Mass., No- vember 12, 1908.) Good Housekeeping, De- EDUCATION, LIBERAL. A cultural educa- cember 1908, P. 626. tion must include the classics. It must not be Our industrial development based only on the classics. The Greek literature depends largely upon technical education, in- is one of the two noblest literatures in the cluding in this term all industrial education, world, the other being the English. Latin litera- from that which fits a man to be a good ture as such does not stand in the same rank mechanic, a good carpenter, or blacksmith, to with Greek; but it possesses an immense im- that which fits a man to do the greatest en- portance because the Latin civilization is the gineering feat. The skilled mechanic, the skilled direct ancestor of modern Occidental civilization, workman, can best become such by technical and because the Latin tongue was for fifteen cen- industrial education. The far-reaching useful- turies the cultural tongue of Europe. With one ness of institutes of technology and schools of or the other, and if possible with both, of these mines or of engineering is now universally two classic languages and literatures every liber- acknowledged, and no less far-reaching is the ally educated man should be familiar. He effect of a good building or mechanical trades- should also be familiar with at least one of school, a textile, or watchmaking, or engraving the great modern culture languages, such as school. All such training must develop not French, Italian, German, Spanish or Portu- only manual dexterity but industrial intelli- guese, each of which has a noble literature. gence. In international rivalry this country does Every liberal course should also include a wide not have to fear the competition of pauper sweep of general history and pre-history, for a labor as much as it has to fear the educated liberal scholar should certainly have vividly in labor of specially trained competitors; and we mind the tremendous drama of man's progress should have the education of the hand, eye, through the ages. A competent knowledge of and brain which will fit us to meet such compe- science must also be part of any really liberal tition. (Sixth Annual Message, Washington, education. But this does not mean the science December 3, 1906.) Mem. Ed. XVII, 437-438; taught in order to turn out a commercial chem- Nat. Ed. XV, 373. ist, an engineer or an electrician. It means that the man of liberal education should be a man .To train boys and girls in merely literary accomplishments to the total who in addition to a broad classical training exclusion of industrial, manual, and technical also possesses so broad a scientific training that training, tends to unfit them for industrial the primary facts of the universe in which we work; and in real life most work is industrial. live are vivid in his mind and form an integral The problem of furnishing well-trained portion of his stock of knowledge. The man craftsmen, or rather journeymen fitted in the with such broad liberal training is perhaps not end to become such, is not simple apt to be a technical expert in any special voca- and much care and forethought and practical common tion; for his training stands outside the most sense will be needed, in order to work it out direct line to pecuniary reward. Yet he has a in a fairly satisfactory manner. It should ap- great place to fill, for he has been fitted to peal to all our citizens. become a leader in public thought, and a true I am glad that societies have already been interpreter to the people of the development formed to promote industrial education, and and meaning of our civilization in its most that their membership includes manufacturers important aspects. (Statement sent to Confer- and leaders of labor unions, educators and pub- ence on Classical Studies, Princeton University, licists, men of all conditions who are interested June 2, 1917.) Value of the Classics. (Prince- in education and in industry. It is such coopera- ton University Press, 1917), PP. 137-138. tion that offers most hope for a satisfactory solution of the question as to what is the best EDUCATION, SUBSIDIZED-ABUSE OF. By gifts to colleges and universities they [149] EDUCATION EFFICIENCY [wealthy men] are occasionally able to subsi- most certainly ignorance tends to prevent his dize in their own interest some head of an being a good citizen. No nation can per- educational body, who, save only a judge, manently retain free government unless it can should of all men be most careful to keep his retain a high average of citizenship; and there skirts clear from the taint of such corruption. can be no such high average of citizenship There are ample material rewards for those without a high average of education, using the who serve with fidelity the Mammon of un- word in its broadest and truest sense to include righteousness, but they are dearly paid for by the things of the soul as well as the things of that institution of learning whose head, by the mind. (At University of Pennsylvania, example and precept, teaches the scholars who Philadelphia, February 22, 1905.) Mem. Ed. sit under him that there is one law for the rich XV, 346; Nat. Ed. XIII, 504. and another for the poor. (To Charles J. Bona- parte, January 2, 1908.) Mem. Ed. XXII, 5I5; EDUCATION FOR LIFE. We of the United Nat. Ed. XX, 443. States must develop a system under which each individual citizen shall be trained so as to be EDUCATION AND DEMOCRACY. A real effective individually as an economic unit, and democracy must see that the chance for an fit to be organized with his fellows so that elementary education is open to every man and he and they can work in efficient fashion to- woman. This is the first essential. But it is also gether. This question is vital to our future essential that there should be the amplest op- progress, and public attention should be fo- portunity for every kind of higher education. cussed upon it. Surely it is eminently in accord The education of the mass, while the most im- with the principles of our democratic life that portant problem in democratic education, is in we should furnish the highest average indus- no way or shape by and of itself sufficient. trial training for the ordinary skilled workman. Democracy comes short of what it should be But it is a curious thing that in industrial train- just to the extent that it fails to provide for ing we have tended to devote our energies to the exceptional individual the highest kind of producing high-grade men at the top rather exceptional training; for democracy as a per- than in the ranks. Our engineering schools, for manent world force must mean not only the instance, compare favorably with the best in raising of the general level but also the raising Europe, whereas we have done almost nothing of the standards of excellence to which only to equip the private soldiers of the industrial exceptional individuals can attain. The table army-the mechanic, the metal-worker, the land must be raised, but the high peaks must carpenter. Indeed, too often our schools train not be leveled down; on the contrary they too away from the shop and the forge. (At semi- must be raised. Highly important though it is centennial celebration, founding of Agricultural that the masons and bricklayers should be ex- Colleges, Lansing, Mich., May 3I, 1907.) cellent, it is nevertheless a grave mistake to Mem. Ed. XVIII, 172; Nat. Ed. XVI, 130. suppose that any excellence in the bricklayers will enable us to dispense with architects. Out- EDUCATION. See aslo CHINA; COLLEGE; look, February 18, 1911, P. 344. LABOR-TRAINING OF; NORTHWEST ORDI- NANCE; PUBLIC SCHOOLS; SCHOOLS; TEACH- EDUCATION AND THE NATIONAL ERS; TEACHING; UNIVERSITY. GOVERNMENT. The share that the National Government should take in the broad work of EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO. See education has not received the attention and the NEGRO; TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. care it rightly deserves. The immediate respon- sibility for the support and improvement of EFFICIENCY. We have no higher duty than our educational systems and institutions rests to promote the efficiency of the individual. and should always rest with the people of There is no surer road to the efficiency of the the several States acting through their State nation. (Before Ohio Constitutional Conven- and local governments, but the nation has an tion, Columbus, February 21, 1912.) Mem. Ed. opportunity in educational work which must XIX, 165; Nat. Ed. XVII, I2I. not be lost and a duty which should no longer be neglected. (Eighth Annual Message, Wash- EFFICIENCY-REWARDS OF. Normally ington, December 8, 1908.) Mem. Ed. XVII, the man of great productive capacity who be- 623; Nat. Ed. XV, 530. comes rich by guiding the labor of many other men does so by enabling them to produce more EDUCATION FOR CITIZENSHIP. Educa- than they could produce without his guidance; tion may not make a man a good citizen, but and both he and they share in the benefit, [150] R63 Wilke /THEODORE ROOSEVELT CYCLOPEDIA EDITED BY ALBERT BUSHNELL HART Professor Emeritus, Harvard University AND HERBERT RONALD FERLEGER Roosevelt Memorial Association FOREWORD BY WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION ROOSEVELT HOUSE NEW YORK CITY sexual assault in connection WITH at- deceit and sexual depravity tugged tacks on other prostitutes. The most The Dallas Morning News: Judy Walgren The epidemic, which appeared on Peru's quietly against the public persona of recent indictment, one of aggravated Slaying suspect Charles Albright northern coast in January, has spread to neigh the amiable 57-year-old. sexual assault, was returned Thurs- (foreground) is shown in court boring Ecuador, Colombia, Chile and Brazil. Mr. Albright, indicted in the third of the three slayings on April 18, is Please see RECORDS on Page 6A. April 8 for a pretrial hearing. Four people in New Jersey who ate crab mea illegally imported from Ecuador contracted cho Bush welcomes Pearce team U.S. Iraq with By Michael Wine Invice WASHINGTON - officials expressed Thursday over Presi Hussein's accord with and said the Bush a was committed to bi for Kurdish refugee Iraq. The American re Iraqi-Kurdish agr nounced Wednesday paralleled that of the gees themselves. Sin to the mountains, the insisted that they wil Iraq until Mr. Huss power, and they repe: tence Thursday. The American ske Hussein's intentions Associated Press dent when the White had ordered about 3 President Bush visits Thursday with members of the Na- ored in a ceremony at the White House. The students are to leave the vicinit tional Academic Decathlon championship team from (front row, from left) Christine Liu, Eugene Cheng and northern Iraq town n Richardson's J.J. Pearce High School. The team was hon- (rear left) Francis Wilde. (Story on Page 21A.) lition forces are setti: ven for Kurdish refu School dress rn high school. Dates Capitol Hill. In addition, the candio ameron, was Ustazudin, a 9-year-old patient at the Scottish Rite Hospital from Parin Vil- Despite the large number of can- speeches often depict the educa rs poised to go didates, many of the campaign pro- crisis as a state and local prot lage, Afghanistan, gets help Thursday from Tim Mason. The forward for the nouncements about education cen- requiring only minimal feder that Cameron Southern Methodist University basketball team was with other athletes par- ter on common themes. In forums, Please see EDUCATION on Page aster morning, ticipating in games at the hospital. ng at the coun- S raised - and was held. st-to-goodness, S welcome. "It City's convention center :aid, "but what of the column expansion begins today ried it among his unit swept By David Jackson January 1994, just in time for a series Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News of large conventions already sched- City officials will break ground Fri- uled, officials said. day on a $113.2 million project to en- City officials said the expansion is he sand collec- large the Dallas Convention Center, needed to keep Dallas competitive one of the city's costliest public works with other cities, such as San Fran- n Karen Gray endeavors. cisco and New Orleans, that are en- ntagon inviting The $92.2 million expansion will larging their facilities to attract con- f to join their run to the west of the existing center ventions. The Dallas Morning News: Jus The Society of along the Jefferson Street viaduct, op- "If we're going to keep the big ones, posite the Reunion Arena parking ga- d, one of Gen. we're going to have to expand," said The remains of the Austin Street Shelter will soon make way for the D rage. The plan also calls for a $21 mil- Assistant City Manager A.C. Gonzalez, Convention Center expansion, a $113.2 million project that includes a after entering lion heliport. bottle of souve- who supervises operations at the Con- port. The new section of the Convention Center is set to open in Jan The opening of the new part of the Convention Center is scheduled for Please see CONVENTION on Page 24A. 1994, in time to host a series of large conventions already scheduled. rote about Mr. as founder and INSIDE ernational, the five. HAILED BY THE CHIEF Fund for teen Texas Commerce Bank has estab- Bush honors Pearce's championship academic team at White House lished an account to accept dona- tions for Veronica Hinojosa, a 16- 0 trickle in for utual search for By Carl P. Leubsdorf Related photo. 1A The victorious students, who re- year-old Garland honor student Washington Bureau of The Dallas Morning News turned home after Thursday's cere- who was seriously injured in an ity. Thanks-Giv- WASHINGTON - President Bush wished his son George's Texas mony to a rousing welcome from auto accident In February. rally in the vot- Pearce classmates at Dallas/Fort Page 22A. zed effort, I sus- on Thursday hailed the National Ac- Rangers baseball team "might be vely spot. ademic Decathlon championship achieving the same kind of success Worth International Airport, said continues to in their field." their White House visit was worth Mayoral proposal team from Richardson's J.J. Pearce Richardson school district teams the hard work. and I still have High School as "our newest Ameri- A bill that would create a strong- have won the competition six times "It's what we've been working kicking myself can heroes," saying the students' mayor system of government is re- ay. success "stirs my Texas pride." in the plast seven years. Five of for all year," said Wade McIntyre, ferred to a House subcommittee this newspaper, those victories were by Pearce, one of several team members who In a lighter moment at the White after sponsoring Rep. Steve Veronica Hind House Rose Garden ceremony, he which on Monday regained the also competed last year. He said the boretum." Wolens said that Dallas is "para- crown it surrendered last year to team "had been thinking, 'If we just is recove S - what a time told Pearce's students, teachers, lyzed" by its current form of gov- sponsors and principal that he district rival Lake Highlands. Please see BUSH on Page 24A. ernment. Page 22A. from an accide schools The Dallas Morning News: Marco A Ruiz fessional" filings, the order said. The judge ordered Ms. Hunter to appear at a May 10 hearing at which Bush hails Pearce team he will decide whether to fine her for violating federal rules of civil procedure and standards of legal Continued from Page 21A. practice. unveiled education strategy and to keep studying some more and some hail the "decathletes" as mes- Ms. Hunter said Thursday that more, we'll be able to win and then sengers for the cause of excellence she couldn't comment on the order. we'll be able to meet the in education. "I just have to stand by what I've president.' "Your lives and your accom- filed," she said. Another two-year team member, plishments speak to other kids the She is the state's lead attorney in Craig Macaulay, agreed that meet- way no words from a government the class-action lawsuit involving ing the president "was a lot of the or even a teacher can," he said. four of the state's 13 schools for the incentive." The team knew that last "These kids look at each of you, and mentally retarded. The suit began year's winners went to the White they see themselves. They look at in 1974 when attorneys for resi- House, he said. you, and they see what they, too, dents at those schools sued the The two seniors, who served as can become." Texas Department of Mental Health team spokesmen, said they enjoyed The students, meanwhile, gave a and Mental Retardation over their meeting Mr. Bush, who chatted lot of the credit for their success to, care and treatment. with the group and autographed their coaches, Dorcas Helms and In 1987, Judge Sanders held the their championship banner after Linda Berger. state in contempt of a settlement his formal remarks. Pearce's Christine Liu was voted agreement in the case. The judge di- arp "On TV, he seems kind of de- the nation's outstanding varsity stu- rected the Florida sociologist moni- tached," Craig said. "When you're dent in the competition, which in- toring the case to conduct annual t persuaded we need right up with him, he's just a regu- cludes both written and oral ques- reviews of the schools in Fort tue. Government at lar person." tions in a variety of academic fields. Worth, Denton, Austin and San An- has an insatiable appe- Wade agreed, adding, "He was But she said the victory was "re- tonio. 1. very charming and very nice." ally a team effort." Last year, a Philadelphia attor- Bullock has pushed for a The nine Pearce students, their Also on the winning Pearce team ney representing the current 2,000 e tax, saying it is needed two coaches and the principal were were Francis "Frank" Wilde, Misty plaintiffs said the state was not sential human services, in the capital for three days after Karin, Aime VonBriesen, Eugene complying with the agreement and education reform bill they won the competition Monday Chen, Chen Pin "Dardy" Chang and asked the judge to again hold the e sales and property in Los Angeles. The victory capped Kevin Barenblat. department in contempt. A hearing is one of 10 states with- a competition that included teams School principal Kirk London on the matter is scheduled May 28 al state income tax. from 3,500 schools across the na- said Pearce's repeated success in in Dallas. ut, the state's chief reve- tion. the 10-year-old competition "The issue of the assistant attor- told the task force that The Pearce group's Washington stemmed from several factors. ney general's conduct must be low in total tax burden itinerary included meetings with "We have a successful school dis- resolved before the May 28 hear- ents. But he said that be- Texas' two senators, Democrat trict," Dr. London said. "Because of ing," Judge Sanders' order said. e relatively high sales Lloyd Bentsen and Republican Phil that, we attract a lot of business and "Zealous advocacy simply cannot be ople are paying a larger Gramm. industry. They tend to bring in allowed to escalate into combative, ir income in taxes than The president took the occasion smart children. And we have excel- oppressive behavior that under- to put in a plug for his newly lent faculty with a lot of stability." mines the system of justice." THE PLAINS NEW VISIONS ON THE OLD FRONTIER A Special Section on Sunday, April 28 ring the past year, Dallas Morning News photojournalist Catharine Krueger and reporters Steven H. Lee and Thomas G. atts have crossed nearly 15,000 miles of the Great Plains, interviewing and photographing more than 400 of its people. E PLAINS: NEW VISIONS ON THE OLD FRONTIER, a full-color special section in The Morning News on Sunday, April recounts those travels, showing a mosaic of economic distress and inspiring determination in the region that accounts for nearly one-third of the nation's agricultural products while supporting just five percent of its people. Don't miss the enlightening articles and extraordinary photographs in this 20-page special section. Only in tis make Red File THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON WAY MEMORANDUM JaNe TO: SHERRIE ROLLINS FROM: KATHY SUPER SUBJECT: APPROVED PRESIDENTIAL ACTIVITY EVENT: Ceremony for Academic Decathalon Champions DATE: Thursday, April 23, 1992 TIME: 11:15 a.m. DURATION: 15 minutes LOCATION: Rose Garden ATTIRE: Business Suit REMARKS REQUIRED: Brief Remarks MEDIA COVERAGE: Open FIRST LADY PARTICIPATION: Is Invited ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: CONTACT: TELEPHONE: NOTE: PROJECT OFFICER, SEE ATTACHED CHECKLIST Chief of Staff John Gaughan Sherrie Rollins Deb Anderson C. Boyden Gray Susan Porter Rose Paul Bateman Ede Holiday Dorrance Smith Phil Brady Janet Johnson Tony Snow Sandy Bushue Ron Kaufman USSS-PPD Nick Calio Bill Kristol Davis Valdez David Demarest Lower Press Office Gary Walters Debra Dunn Tim McBride WHCA Audio/Visual Bill Farish Ed Murnane WHCA Operations Laurie Firestone Gregg Petersmeyer Rose Zamaria Marlin Fitzwater Patty Presock AJM 3/4/92 UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON SCHEDULE OF EVENTS - 1992: AS OF 2/14/92 THURSDAY, APRIL 9 REGISTRATION 1:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Ballroom Fireplace Foyer "IDAHO WELCOMES YOU" 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside Ballroom Strolling Dinner State Directors Meeting 8:00 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Red Lion Riverside FRIDAY, APRIL 10 CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 7:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Red Lion Riverside - Northstar Room REGISTRATION 8:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Red Lion Riverside - Ballroom Fireplace Foyer MEDIA ROOM 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside USAD BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING 8:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Red Lion Downtowner - Teton Room, + Albion and Aspen (8:30 - 10:00) COACHES BRIEFING 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Red Lion Riverside - Northstar Room STUDENT ESSAY WRITING 9:30 a.m. - 10:20 a.m. Red Lion Riverside - Laurel, Ponderosa, and Tamarack Rooms INTERVIEW JUDGES ORIENTATION 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Red Lion Riverside - Ponderosa Room SPEECH JUDGES ORIENTATION 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Red Lion Riverside - Tamarack Room BOARD OF DIRECTOR'S LUNCH 12:00 noon - Red Lion Downtowner VOLUNTEER LUNCH 12:00 noon - 12:45 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Juniper Room SPEECH AND INTERVIEW CONTEST TIME SCHEDULE 1:00 p.m. - 2:10 p.m. 27 Speech rooms w/ 3 judges + timer 2:20 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. 27 Interview rooms w/ 3 judges 3:40 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside and Red Lion Downtowner Red Lion-Riverside--- Speech Rooms (9) Interview Rooms(18) Speech Rooms (9) Emerald 336 103 387 Garnett 339 109 487 Opal 385 121 309 Topaz 378 123 708 Cinnabar 373 126 478 Clearwater 436 127 473 Delamar 439 128 511 Liberty 485 209 611 211 Northstar 210 114 Red Lion-Downtowner Interview Rooms(9) Speech Rooms(9) Albion Coeur d'Alene 261 262 Aspen Suite 760 263 264 Spokane Suite 770 265 266 Bannock 270 267 268 Cascade 269 STATE DIRECTORS MEETING 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Red Lion Downtowner - Selway 45 Directors VOLUNTEER RECEPTION 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Tamarack Room 250 Volunteers, State Directors, USAD Personnel SPEAKERS SHOWCASE 7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Juniper, Ponderosa and Laurel Rooms BREAK AREA 8:15 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Northstar Room DIGNITARIES RECEPTION 8:30 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Red Lion Riverside - Clint Eastwood Suite 500 75 People: USAD Board, State Directors, Donors, Dignitaries SATURDAY, APRIL 11 LEAVE HOTEL 7:30 a.m. CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST & STUDENT ORIENTATION 8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. Boise State University - SUB Ballroom INFORMATION CENTER 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Boise State University ... MEDIA AREA 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Boise State University ... USAD BOARD AND STATE DIRECTORS MEETING 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Boise State University Special Events Center TESTROOM PROCTOR ORIENTATION 8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Boise State University ... TESTING 9:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Boise State University ... Rooms: (9) First Objective Test - 9:00 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. Second Objective Test - 9:35 a.m. - 10:05 a.m. Break - 10:05 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Third Objective Test - 10:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Fourth Objective Test - 11:05 a.m. - 11:35 p.m. LUNCH 11:35 p.m. - 12:35 p.m. Boise State University - Ballroom Fifth Objective Test - 12:40 p.m. - 1:10 p.m. Sixth Objective Test - 1:15 P.m. - 1:45 p.m. SUPER QUIZ STUDENT ORIENTATION 1:45 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Boise State University - Ballroom 2:00 p.m. - 2:10 p.m. Parade to Pavilion 2:10 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Team Lineup in Auxiliary Gym SUPER QUIZ PROCTOR ORIENTATION 1:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Boise State University Pavilion SUPER QUIZ 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Boise State University Pavilion BARBECUE AND DANCE 6:30 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Old Penitentiary SUNDAY, APRIL 12 CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 7:00 a.m. - 7:45 a.m. Red Lion Riverside - ... TOURS: See attached Schedule USAD "THANK YOU" RECEPTION 4:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Boise Convention Center - Cottonwoods AWARDS BANQUET 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Boise Convention Center Golden Eagle and Flying Hawk Eyries by April 15, 1991 I am pleased to send greetings to all those gathered to celebrate the Tenth Anniversary and National Finals of the United States Academic Decathlon. Congratulations to all those students who participated in this year's competition and especially to the 1991 USAD National Championship Team. The message that this Decathlon sends to all young Americans is a very important one -- it says that personal dedication, diligent effort, and teamwork lead to success. Indeed, such academic competi- tion has created a new kind of hero among American youth today. It is heartening to see youngsters wearing varsity letters for scholastic achieve- ment, and I am delighted to hear of students gathering to cheer on classmates who are striving to excel in the educational arena. These developments suggest that we have begun to see positive changes in attitudes toward scholastic endeavors at every level. Vital to reaching our National Education Goals is a strong commitment -- by students, parents, teachers, and public officials alike -- to maximizing the potential of every student. You, our State and National champions in the Academic Decathlon, have obviously made such a commitment, and I commend your example. I also thank your parents, your coaches, and the generous sponsors who made this exciting event possible. Mrs. Bush joins me in sending our best wishes for your continued success. God bless you. GEORGE BUSHA 910415 CA. 1 041095 ME002 May 4, 1989 Dear Young Friends: I am pleased to add my congratulations to those of your parents, teachers, classmates, and friends on winning the National Academic Decathlon. You can be proud of your achievement which reflects hard work, respect for learning, and self-discipline. Your school and community share in the joy of your triumph. I'm certain that in the days to come your example will inspire others to follow in your academic footsteps. Mrs. Bush joins me in sending our warmest wishes for every future success. Sincerely, A GEORGE BUSH The National Academic Decathlon Winners Taft High School 5461 Winnetka Avenue Woodland Hills, California 91364 GB:NT:CH:jt (5PMNA) TO BE FAXED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE: To: Mr. Gary Chiate (213) 552-7542 FAX - (213) 552-7648 890504 C 0 from ORM UNITED STATES ACADEMIC US_AD DECATHION ® January 9, 1992 RECEIVED JAN 13 REC'D Kathy Super Deputy Assistant to the President SCHEDULING for Appointments and Scheduling OFFICE The White House Washington D.C. 20500 Dear Ms. Super: It was a great honor to the United States Academic Decathlon last April when President Bush welcomed the national championship team from J. J. Pearce High School in Richardson, Texas to the White House Rose Garden. The United States Academic Decathlon, the largest and most prestigious scholastic competition for high school teams in the country, is particularly proud of its non-elitist nature. (Teams are made up of 3 A students, 3 B students, and 3 C or below students.) The President's welcome, therefore, reinforced the underlying message of the Decathlon to all students: that great things can be accomplished by commitment, perseverance, and teamwork. In April of 1992, the National Finals of the United States Academic Decathlon will be held in Boise, Idaho, where we will be celebrating our eleventh successful year. We are very hopeful that our national championship team may once again visit the White House to meet the President. The announcement of the championship team will be made at 3:00 p.m. on Sunday April 12, 1992. We would be able to have the students in Washington at anytime on or after April 15th. We sincerely appreciate your consideration of this request. Very truly yours, Ann Joynt Executive Director Amrilis & >AnA a APA (Fran SAOS 1moth) ANN JOYNT Executive Director 11145 183rd STREET P.O. BOX 5169 CERRITOS, CA 90701-5169 (310) 809-4995 FAX (310) 809-4111 April 12, 1992 MEMORANDUM FOR BETH HINCHLIFFE FROM: MICHELE NIX SUBJECT: ACADEMIC DECATHLON CEREMONY On Thursday, April 23, at 11:15 a.m., POTUS will address approximately 200 people at a Rose Garden ceremony for the National Academic Decathlon Champions. We should mention that America was launched a year ago this month -- April 18, 1991. Mention the goals. Mention the failing education system that needs our help. Mention Teacher of the Year as an example of the power of education. Mention number of states adopting America 2000. Perhaps a reference to the futures of these kids (i.e., Think about the futures that you want for yourselves. Think where will you be in the year 2020? Will you be driving in a solar-powered car that doesn't rob the ozone? Will our nations schools be good enough when you enroll your 10- year old for her first day of fourth grade? etc.) We need to think of jokes early. Maybe a final line for the Pres can be: "Remember, study hard and one day you'll grow up to be President." (Or some twist on that.) I've included the following: Past speech (1991 remarks) Background on Decathlon organization Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet (George Bush Library) Document No. Subject/Title of Document Date Restriction Class. and Type 01. Memo Michele Nix to Beth Hinchliffe, re: Academic Decathlon 04/12/92 P-6, (b)(6) Ceremony; personal information redacted. (1 pp.) Collection: Record Group: Bush Presidential Records Office: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File, Backup Subseries: WHORM Cat.: File Location: Academic Decathlon Champions 4/23/92 [2] Date Closed: 11/29/2004 OA/ID Number: 07572 FOIA/SYS Case #: Re-review Case #: 2004-2265-S P-2/P-5 Review Case #: MR Case #: Appeal Case #: MR Disposition: Appeal Disposition: Disposition Date: Disposition Date: RESTRICTION CODES Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)] Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)] P-1 National Security Classified Information [(a)(1) of the PRA] (b)(1) National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA] P-2 Relating to the appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRA] (b)(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an P-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(a)(3) of the PRA] agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA] P-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or (b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA] financial information [(a)(4) of the PRA] (b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial P-5 Release would disclose confidential advise between the President information [(b)(4) of the FOIA] and his advisors, or between such advisors [a)(5) of the PRA] (b)(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of P-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA] personal privacy [(a)(6) of the PRA] (b)(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA] C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of (b)(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of gift. financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA] (b)(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information MORE INFO Expected to be at the ceremony: Mr. William Tokishi, VP of American Honda Corp. ; Ken Barun, Executive Director of McDonald's Children Whatever; Jill Von Dalden, Community Relations Director for TRW; Linda Tucker, VP of Motorola Corp in Chicago These people are reps of corporate sponsors (Dalden is director of the Ac Decath group). They provide money for trips, hotel costs, etc. for the competitions. This year's winner of the Kristen Caperton Award for Inspiration and Courage goes to Rhondee Johnson, a junior at Benjamin Banneker HS in Washington, DC. P-6, (6)(6) She participated in the Nationals. She also participated in a speech showcase at the event and impressed one of the judges - - who recommended she be a candidate for the award. Rhondee won the Kristen Caperton Award and receives a $10,000 scholarship from Morris-Knutson (I have to verify that corp name). The Decathlon group doesn't really have an official slogan or motto. They use à few -- Reach for the Stars. A New Kind of Campus Hero. (And the most well-known) Cheering for Academics The theme of this year's Super Quiz was Habitat Earth (Ecology and the Environment). I talked to the coordinators of the competition and she is faxing me some anecdotal material later today. She's also faxing sample questions from the competition, names of winners, etc. #spila 30,000 9 teams 5 regional 750mless - / small - Univ. Saled of milwarkee, luz N.S, - S.E Nathen Valay Reguine, old Tappan, NJ S,E, - alabama - Andran Spmga Seral, Pelham M.W. - Willoughby South H.S., Ohio Central Nebrasta, Papillon- LaVista H.S., Papillon 14th 85 you any West - CA, El Camine Real, Wordland Hills, CA Schdenty winnon - lall 9there) $3,000 / Typelo, MS mit Robertson are overall 90% $5,000 Corporate - Ken Barron, Sxee. Dis, Remard meb Chitdren Charities - Willy Tokeshi, am, Honda mater (d. Contibutor hand A - Don Treban, Predential life Am. - Linda tucher, Matorola - Nurthing, TRW John Castellani Danie McGath Jill Van ? - Head of Contro DRW Wash, Hilton, - Wed. 04/20/92 09:20 P01 UNITED STATE US_AD ACADEMIC DECARRION * R No UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON FAX COVER SHEET FAX: (310)809-4111 DATE: 4/20/92 TO: THE WHITE HOUSE ATTN: BETH HINCHCLIFFE FROM: FRANN SHERMET WE ARE TRANSMITTING / PAGE(S) TO YOU INCLUDING THIS PAGE. IF YOUR COPY IS UNCLEAR, PLEASE TELEPHONE OR FAX. MESSAGE: ADDITIONAL CORPORATE SPONSON Also USAD BOARD MEMBER LARRY GANZELL SCANTRON CORP THANK you ANN JOYNT 2 Evenutive Director 04/20/92 15:12 P01 UNITED STATE US_AD ACADEMIC DECARION * * ® UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON FAX COVER SHEET FAX: (310)809-4111 DATE: 4/20/9r TO: THE WHITE HOUSE ATTN: BETH HINCH CUFFE FROM: FRANN SHERMET WE ARE TRANSMITTING 4 PAGE(S) TO YOU INCLUDING THIS PAGE. IF YOUR COPY IS UNCLEAR, PLEASE TELEPHONE OR FAX. MESSAGE: THIS 15 RHONDEE JOHNSONS SPEECH FOR WHICH MARY CUNDINGHAM AGEE'S EDUNDATION AWARDED HER A $10,000 SCHOLARSHIP. SHE 15 FROM GANNEKER HIGH IN D.C. BUT WILL BE UNABLE TO ATTEND ON THURSDAY 04/20/92 15:12 P02 Jeanie sat on the edge of the tub washing out some clothes. Suddenly, a man pulled out his gun and shot her in the head. Jeanie's killer carried her out of the bathroom to the hall of her apartment. Her children were asleep at the time and her mother was watching TV, so no one heard the shot. A neighbor saw Jeanie's killer placing her body in the hallway. She was rushed to the hospital. Jeanie lived only for another week.- Philadelphia, 1983. Jeanie, whom I barely knew, was my aunt who had just died and left four beautiful children behind. I was eight years old at the time and one hundred miles away, oblivious to the pain my cousins were bearing and the drastic changes that would come into my life. It was decided that the four children would live with by grandmother. However, several months later she died. The doctors said she had been extremely depressed and had given up on life. No one in my family wanted the additional responsibility of four children and rather than leave them to the foster care system, my mother opened up our home to them. I now accepted the fact that we had nine permanent children in our household. In a characteristic child-like way, I began to feel selfish. I couldn't have as much of my mother's attention and I didn't want to accept added responsibility. Somehow, I sensed my mother's worry that maybe there wouldn't be enough to support all of us. I even told my cousins that I wished they would go back home. Angry and self-centered as only a child could be, I can't begin to imagine how much I had hurt my cousins after all they had been through. Then came Extended Page 2.1 APR-20-92 MON 18:22 COLLEGEOFARTS&SCIENOES FAX NO. 2028064562 P.04 the crushing blow, which seemed to have ended my once happy life. My father left home. I blamed my cousins for this because I knew he had discouraged my mother from inviting them to live with us. I became increasingly angry at my mother and threatened to run away. This is the rippling effect of drugs and violence in our community. It goes beyond what the public sees on the evening news. Violence does not end with death. A family's life is touched in every way. Every time there is a. violent death, society pays for it either through the foster care system or through education. Taxpayers must pay for jails and for more policemen to patrol the streets. My aunt's killer without ever meeting me has affected every aspect of my life. The addition of four children has caused significant financial strain, not to mention the emotional drain on my mother. However, the verdict isn't in yet. What will we learn from this cruel twist of fate? Will we children all be marked for life because we feel cheated? Or will we someday be able to look at my mother's totally selfless response and know that we have truly witnessed love in its finest sense. However, I will always be curious about the personal and long- lasting effects that will grow out of one person's willful and mindless act. WAKE UP AMERICA!! Realize that drugs and violence affect everyone in our community. We cannot continue to ignore the problem. We cannot continue to support cosmetic solutions. We must all join forces quickly to resolve this dilemma for who knows, directly or indirectly, the next tragedy could strike Extended Page 2.2 APR-20-92 MON 16:23 COLLEGEOFARTS&SOIENCES FAX NO. 2028084562 P.05 you, or you, or you! 04/20/92 13:44 P01 UNITED US AD DECATHING STATES ACADEMIC *** R UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON FAX COVER SHEET FAX: (310)809-4111 DATE: 4/20/92 TO: THE WHITE HOUSE ATTN: BETH HINCHCLIFFE FROM: FRANN SHERMET WE ARE TRANSMITTING 3 PAGE(S) TO YOU INCLUDING THIS PAGE. IF YOUR COPY IS UNCLEAR, PLEASE TELEPHONE OR FAX. MESSAGE: How THE REGIONALS ARE CONFIGURED AND TOP TEN SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS -ALL OF WHOM WILL BK PRESENT. 04/20/92 13:44 P02 UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON NATIONAL FINALS APRIL 10-12,1992 BOISE, IDAHO REGIONAL DIVISIONS FOR OVERALL TEAM AWARDS NORTHEAST SOUTHEAST MIDWEST Maine Maryland Minnesota Vermont West Virginia Wisconsin New Hampshire Virginia lowa Massachusetts North Carolina Illinois Connecticut South Carolina Indiana Rhode Island Georgia Ohio New York Alabama Michigan Pennsylvania Kentucky Missouri New Jersey Tennessee North Dakota District of Columbia CENTRAL WEST Mississippi Alaska Louisiana Hawaii Nebraska Washington Kansas Oregon Arkansas California Oklahoma Nevada Colorado Idaho Texas Montana New Mexico Utah Wyoming Arizona 04/20/92 13:45 P03 APR 15, 1992 ACADEMIC DECATHLON Page 1 10:30 am UNITED STATES COMPETITION **** OVERALL WINNERS **** *** OVERALL STUDENT WINNERS *** Based on 10 events HONOR DIVISION Gold 9,100 Tyson Rogers Arizona Mountain View H.S. Silver 8,895 Mit Robertson Mississippi Tupelo H.S. Bronze 8,875 Massoud Javadi Texas J. Frank Dobie SCHOLASTIC DIVISION Gold 8,460 Andrea Jackson Arizona Mountain View H.S. silver 8,450 Renee Larson Arizona Mountain View H.S. Bronze 8,430 Brian Lazarus California El Camino Real H.S. Jonathan Brumley Alabama Indian Springs H.S. VARSITY DIVISION Gold 8,265 Joshua Mathis Texas J. Frank Dobie Silver 8,205 Gregory Rudnick Illinois Whitney Young Magnet Bronze 7,900 Daniel Ramirez Texas J. Frank Dobie Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet (George Bush Library) Document No. Subject/Title of Document Date Restriction Class. and Type 02. List Re: Attendees from United States Academic Decathlon at 04/21/92 P-6, (b)(6) Rose Garden Ceremony; Social Security information. (7 pp.) Collection: Record Group: Bush Presidential Records Office: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File, Backup Subseries: WHORM Cat.: File Location: Academic Decathlon Champions 4/23/92 [2] Date Closed: 11/29/2004 OA/ID Number: 07572 FOIA/SYS Case #: Re-review Case #: 2004-2265-S P-2/P-5 Review Case #: MR Case #: Appeal Case #: MR Disposition: Appeal Disposition: Disposition Date: Disposition Date: RESTRICTION CODES Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)] Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)] P-1 National Security Classified Information [(a)(1) of the PRA] (b)(1) National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA] P-2 Relating to the appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRA] (b)(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an P-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(a)(3) of the PRA] agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA] P-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or (b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA] financial information [(a)(4) of the PRA] (b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial P-5 Release would disclose confidential advise between the President information [(b)(4) of the FOIA] and his advisors, or between such advisors [a)(5) of the PRA] (b)(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of P-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA] personal privacy [(a)(6) of the PRA] (b)(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA] C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of (b)(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of gift. financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA] (b)(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet (George Bush Library) Document No. Subject/Title of Document Date Restriction Class. and Type 03. Memo Re: Spelling Corrections on [Adademic Decathlon winner] n.d. P-6, (b)(6) names; personal information. (1 pp.) Collection: Record Group: Bush Presidential Records Office: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File, Backup Subseries: WHORM Cat.: File Location: Academic Decathlon Champions 4/23/92 [2] Date Closed: 11/29/2004 OA/ID Number: 07572 FOIA/SYS Case #: Re-review Case #: 2004-2265-S P-2/P-5 Review Case #: MR Case #: Appeal Case #: MR Disposition: Appeal Disposition: Disposition Date: Disposition Date: RESTRICTION CODES Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)] Freedom of Information Act - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)] P-1 National Security Classified Information [(a)(1) of the PRA] (b)(1) National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA] P-2 Relating to the appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRA] (b)(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an P-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(a)(3) of the PRA] agency [(b)(2) of the FOIA] P-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or (b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute [(b)(3) of the FOIA] financial information [(a)(4) of the PRA] (b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial P-5 Release would disclose confidential advise between the President information [(b)(4) of the FOIA] and his advisors, or between such advisors [a)(5) of the PRA] (b)(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of P-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of the FOIA] personal privacy [(a)(6) of the PRA] (b)(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA] C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of (b)(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of gift. financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA] (b)(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information 04/21/92 13:23 P02 3 ? Student spokespersons from the top three teams: Spench For Texas: Danny Ramirez, Russ Since ad? For Arizona: Chris Roorda [RUR da] For Illinois: the Greg Present Rudnick acartfand br parid can Rhandy? 2 Fran armel maet to 10:35 - Ann Joint Plane? - Scholarship? 155, 2nd, 3ʳᵈ Place teams WAVES - Keams -5 Reaking? 8 APR-21-1992 12:28 FROM J.FRANK DOBIE HIGH SCHOOL TO 12024562461 P.01 HI Beth - 4/22-6PM & I just be you PASADENA J. INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT po 11111 BEAMER ROAD, HOUSTON, SCHOOL TX 77083 FRANK DOBIE HIGH interested in FAX COVER SHEET seeing FAX # (713) 481-1125 TO: President Bush Scheduler gane COMPANY NAME: DATE SENT: 4-21-921 NUMBER FROM: Cathy or Haney- Coach National academic Decathlon REMARKS: presentation Might be beneficial for President Bush PAGES INCLUDING COVER SHEET 3 winners Ceremony on april 23,1992 at Garden 11:00 A.M to students in Rose CONTACT: any further IS NOT information RECEIVE OR please advise MELEISSA CREEL AT (713) 481-3000. IS NOT LEGIOLE. PLEASE APR-21-1992 12:28 FROM J.FRANK DOBIE HIGH SCHOOL TO 12024562461 P.02 Coach Catherine Haney, United States History Teacher, tried a different motivation after the state win. Each student wore a button with the message, "ROSE GARDEN OR BUST,' in Dobie's orange and white colors with a longhorn, the school mascot. We gave these pins to family and friends for addi- tional support. While driving to the regional competition, team members were shocked to see a dead COW in a field along the road, an un- usual sight for suburban Pasadena, Texas. Another dead COW was spotted on the drive to the state competition at A & M, and the students called it a lucky charm. Imagine the team's shock to see a dead COW on the city streets of Boise on the day of the awards banquet! They decided it must be a lucky sign, for sure! Whether potatoes, pins, cows, or simply lots of dedicated study time, the Dobie team is proud is proud to be tops in the nation in 1992! MASSOUD JAVADI plans to study international relations at either Rice University or Harbard. SCOTT SEAGO plans to become a chemist at either MIT, University of California at Berkeley, or Rice. WAYNE VUONG will major in computer science at Rice University. LARRY TOOLEY will major in art and creative writing at De Pauw University. PAUL LAPUYADE will major in law at the University of Texas. JEFFREY CHUNG will major in computer science at the University of Pennsyl- vania. JOSHUA MATHIS will study political science at Le Tourneau College. DANIEL RAMIREZ will study law or medicine at Texas A & M University. DAVID NORMAN will study family counseling at Abilene Christian College. APR-21-1992 12:29 FROM J.FRANK DOBIE HIGH SCHOOL TO 12024562461 P.03 J. FRANK DOBIE HIGH SCHOOL ACADEMIC DECATHLON TEAM - 1992 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS!!!!!!!! The first place national winner of the Academic Decathlon competition for 1992 is a team from J. Frank Dobie High School in Houston, Texas. The school, while located in Houston city limits, is a part of the Pasadena Independent School District. Theeschool was named for folk writer and Texas historian J. Frank Dobie, also an English pro- fessor at the University of Texas at Austin. Since win- ning the national competition, the school has received a letter from Dudley R. Dobie, Jr., representing the Dobie family. He wrote that the inscription on J. Frank Dobie's tombstone in the state Cemetery in Austin states, "I have come to believe that a liberated mind is the supreme good of life on Earth," and called the Dobie students' academic honors a tribute to this concept. Dobie High School, home to 2100 students in a middle class area of southeast Houston, has a diverse population. The 1992 Academic Decathlon Team is quite international in spirit, with 2 Chinese members, one Hispanic, one Iranian, and one son of a French immigrant. Coach Richard Golenko, Latin teacher, gave each team member a large Idaho potato as "inspiration" after the big win at the regional competition in Port Arthur, Texas in January. Each team member was to carry the potato at all times as a reminder that we wanted to reach the national level of com petition in Boise, Idaho. It must have worked, because the team defeated last year's national championship team at the state competition at Bryan and Texas A. & M University in February. TOTAL P.03 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release April 23, 1992 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT TO ACADEMIC DECATHLON CHAMPIONS The Rose Garden 11:18 A.M. EDT THE PRESIDENT: Welcome all. And first, may I greet our distinguished number two over at the Energy Department, David Kearns, coming down here from a fantastic leadership role in American business to help us in this important America 2000 education program. So I'm delighted he's with us here today. I want to salute the President and the Board of Directors of the U.S. Academic Decathlon -- all of them -- thank particularly all of the corporate sponsors who make so much of this possible. And also single out Danny Ramirez, Chris Roorda, and Greg Rudnick, standing up here with me today; salute the coaches and the friends. And most of all, a warm Rose Garden welcome to our newest American champs, newest American heroes, if you will -- the 1992 Academic Decathlon Champs, the team from J. Frank Dobie High in, yes, you guessed it, Houston, Texas. Now, where are they? Stand up. (Applause.) And they've got a good front-row seat, too. Thank you, guys, and welcome. It's a great feat for my hometown -- the highest score, I'm told, in the history of the competition. And I'm very proud to welcome you all here. I hear that you wore "Rose Garden or Bust" pins. They work. And I'm wondering if you have an extra one for the fall. (Laughter.) Congratulations also to our Silver and Bronze medalists from Mountain View High in Mesa, Arizona; Whitney Young Magnet High in Chicago; our regional winners from New Jersey, Alabama, Ohio, Nebraska and California; our small school winner from Wisconsin; and our 10 individual student scholarship winners -- nine from our top three winning schools, and then Mit Robertson here from Tupelo, Mississippi. Welcome all. I want to send special good-luck wishes to those who will represent us at the International Decathlon in a couple of weeks -- the Academic Decathlon, that is. And since you're the star decathletes, tell me who is going to win at Barcelona -- Dan or Dave? (Laughter.) You've all done something remarkable. And this year's contest began with 30,000 -- more than 30,000 students at 3,500 schools coast to coast. And now it's just you. And not only did you work all year to conquer environmental science in a range of 10 categories, you also survived the blizzard of 25,000 pieces of test paper out in Boise. And I was impressed by your Habitat Earth Super Quiz questions like this one: "In a molecule of methane, the carbon atom is at the center of what?" For you out there in the press -- (laughter) -- the answer is "a tetrahedron with four s-p-three bonds." Did you get that one down? I'll be glad to repeat the question -- never mind. (Laughter.) That was easy. Not! Actually, pretty tough. But I know a category I could enter: computers. I was just in there with Secretary Kearns talking about it. I've been learning how to work MORE - 2 - one because one of our education goals is that nobody is too old to learn. I wrote my first program a while ago. I'm not sure what happened to it. It was called "Michelangelo." (Laughter.) Now, you kids here today represent every team member from across the country. And I want to tell you and them what all of you have done for America. You've shown that great things can be achieved by commitment, perseverance, hard work and, yes, teamwork. And I salute you, and I envy you. And you've found the sheer joy of learning, beginning to understand the world. One day a scientist will discover the cure for cancer, the cure for AIDS. Other people will find new ways to feed the hungry. And there will be writers whose wisdom will touch lives. And right now, those men and women are kids in our classrooms or maybe even sitting right here in the Rose Garden. Remember, study hard and one day one of you might grow up to be president. But let's face it, even then you'll never make as much money as your dog. (Laughter.) Millie, who normally comes to events like this, but she used to just roll over on the grass, and now all she rolls over is her money market account with -- in the street. But, look, you've shown your peers that it is as exciting to root for an academic team as an athletic one. And that's a point I wanted to make for our entire country. You've shown that it takes skill, stamina and intensity to achieve in the classroom as well as in the stadium. And you've given them a priceless gift, your peers: the belief in their ability to reach out and shape their own lives. There is a new century coming, one with absolutely unlimited horizons. And we must make sure all our children enter this new world equipped with the skills that will let them dream dreams and know they can make them come true. One of the things that impresses me most about this Decathlon is that each team is made up of A, B and c students. And there's a great lesson there. What matters is simply that each kid be the best that he or she can be. As George Patton said, "If a man has done his best, what else is there?" We don't want the moon for our kids. We want something more important: a future. And so one year ago, I unveiled America 2000, our long- range strategy to achieve our six national education goals. And it's a challenge posed to each of us in communities throughout America to literally reinvent American education. It urges us to reach deep within ourselves to find answers so that our kids can reach for the stars. Changing our attitudes about education is too important to wait or waste a generation. To be competitive in this changing world, we must realize that we succeed economically at home; if we're to do that, we must lead economically abroad. Open markets, free trade, they mean jobs for American workers and economic growth for American companies. But we must be prepared to compete, ready to take advantage of these high-tech opportunities in the global marketplace. We know our economic health, our economic survival, depend on how we educate ourselves to face the challenges of a new century. So we've set these six education goals to reach by the year 2000 -- when today's third and fourth graders will be taking part in this event, this Academic Decathlon by then and you all know these goals. One of them, the first one: Our kids will start school ready to learn. That's more than Head Start. Head Start's a part of that. Our high school graduation rate must be 90 percent. The third - 3 - one: Our students will be achieving world-class standards. And then fourth: We'll be first in the world in science and math, a particularly important one. And then the fifth one: Every adult will be literate. No one is too old to learn. And sixth: Every American school must be safe, must be disciplined, must be drug- free. In other words, an environment where people can learn. You will help us meet those challenges. Real excellence demands commitment from everyone as we create a new generation of American schools that demands more of the same choices of schools -- public, private or religious -- for middle class and poor Americans that wealthier families already have. Give them a chance to choose. It demands new creative partnership among parents, teachers, businesses and kids like the community involvement that encourages this Decathlon and the local and national corporate partnerships that fund it. And by the way, I want to give a special note to the corporate sponsors with us today, whose leadership and vision make this Decathlon possible. This bond, really I referred to it earlier -- but this bond between industry and the individual is the keystone of the American spirit. The country needs to follow this decathlon's example in all these areas because for our future every citizen must now help every community develop a plan of action. All ready 43 states and over 1,000 communities across this country have answered the call and have joined America 2000. This isn't Democrat or Republican or Liberal or Conservative. It is literally a move to revolutionize education. And together we are reinventing American education, neighborhood by neighborhood, community by community all across this country. And at the heart of it are you students, you kids, a new kind of campus hero. With the good values you learn from discipline determination. From a sharp mind that is not wasted on drugs and from the confidence and pride that comes from proving yourselves. And you will help this America 2000 dream come true. For a great example of this we don't have to look further than a woman who is not with us today, D.C.'s Rhondee Johnson, a junior at Benjamin Banneker High who just won the National Academic Decathlon's Kristen Caperton Award for Inspiration and Courage. She takes her school responsibilities so seriously that she's helping her team at a track meet right now instead of joining us. And we all hope she wins the blue ribbon, but she's certainly winning it in life with her example. Rhondee's lived with the tragedy of violence. When her aunt was killed, her four children came to live with Rhondee's family, making eight year-old Rhondee the oldest of nine kids in a single-parent household. She takes on a parent's duties and she still manages a 4.0 average. She is an inspiration, accepting responsibilities and challenges and still striving to excel. She and all of you give a 1990's example of how Abraham Lincoln defined his own life when he said, "I do the very best I know how, the very best I can. And I mean to keep on doing SO until the end." I am proud of the message all of you winning decathletes send, that personal dedication, effort and teamwork lead to success. And when one of you bright young people solve the problem of who created "Michelangelo," just remember --, my name is Dana Carvey. Thank you all very much for coming. Congratulations, and may God bless you all. (Applause.) END 11:31 A.M. EDT US_AD 1991 - 1992 STUDY GUIDE UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON SUPER QUIZ TOPIC HABITAT EARTH us AD FORM THE TEAM THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE IN YOUR SCHOOL. An STATES ACADEMIC USAD ACADEMIC XUNITED DECAT STATES DECATHLON US PENDEMIC FUNITED ARD I TEAM STATE CADEMIC !AD DEL Creates a positive school image Creates academic role models PUTTED Changes student attitudes Involves the community A DECATHLON TEAM IS SKILLS THAT WORK IN OVER 30,000 STUDENTS MADE UP OF CORPORATE AMERICA COMPETE NATIONWIDE. 3 A HONOR students Teamwork 3B SCHOLASTIC students Competitiveness ANNUAL SCHEDULE 3C VARSITY students Communication in junior or senior year. All students Self-Assurance MAY Study Guide released compete in all ten events. Students in each category compete only against JUNE, JULY, AUG NATIONAL FINALS students in that category. Research and reading by 1991 - California large group PROGRAMS ARE IN 44 STATES 1992 - Idaho SEPT Practice Test Booklet AND WASHINGTON, D.C. 1993 - Arizona released; teams formed NOV Local competitions TEN EVENTS A BROAD ARRAY OF AWARDS FEB Mathematics Science In each event, there are gold, silver, and Regional competitions Economics Language and Literature bronze medals in each category. There MAR State competitions Fine Arts Social Science are also team awards in the Super Quiz Speech Interview and for overall ranking. In addition, APR National finals Essay Super Quiz there is a small-schools division. 2 Academic Decathlon National Championship Team from Richardson, Texas, receives congratulations from President and Mrs. Bush. Photo: Susan Biddle, The White House AMERICA'S #1 SCHOLASTIC COMPETITION FOR HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS Each team is made up of nine students: 3 A students, 3 B students, and 3 C students. The Academic Decathlon works to motivate all students by conveying this message: Study and perseverance bring rewards. Photo: Don Bernstein 3 How CAN YOU GET INVOLVED IN THE ACADEMIC DECATHLON? Students, Teachers, Schools 1. Call your state director (see opposite page) for an application form and competition dates and locations. 2. If there is no director in your state, call the USAD office. 3. Select a coach. 4. Contact the USAD office to order Study Guides at $1.00 each. 5. Get together interested junior and senior students with a range of Business and c. helping to support the grade point averages. Community Leaders competition by sponsoring a 6. Begin general research and banquet table, trophies, or reading according to Study Guide 1. Call your state director to volun- medals; outlines. teer your service and support. d. becoming a board member 7. Recruit faculty and community 2. Ascertain dates and locations of and regular ongoing sponsor co-coaches. competitions and schools involved. of the Academic Decathlon in 8. Select the nine students for the 3. Volunteer by your area. a. helping with the competition 4. If you or your company would team. as a judge, proctor, or like to be involved at the national 9. Prepare and practice. chairperson; level, call the USAD office or send 10. Compete. b. helping to coach a team; in the coupon below. PLEASE SEND ME INFORMATION ABOUT THE UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON Name Address City, State, ZIP Phone PLEASE CHECK student educator ACA business community person STATES US SPIN SEND TO United States Academic Decathlon P.O. Box 5169 Cerritos, CA 90703-5169 OR CALL (213) 809-4995 Don Bernstein 4 ACADEMIC DECATHLON STATE ASSOCIATIONS AND DIRECTORS ALABAMA ILLINOIS NEBRASKA SOUTH DAKOTA Dale Hill Roger Prietz John Anstey John Christiansen 1001 George Wallace Drive Illinois Acad. Dec. Assoc. Nebraska Acad. Dec. Assoc. South Dakota Acad. Dec. Gadsden State College 211 S. Laflin 2175 N. 124th Ave. Cr. Supt. of Public Schs. Gadsden, AL 35999 Chicago, IL 60607 Omaha, NE 68164 Mitchell, SD 57301 (205) 549-8375 (312) 997-3712 (402) 554-2534 (605) 995-3010 ALASKA INDIANA NEW HAMPSHIRE TENNESSEE Gladys Foris Gerald Kolter Walter Borkowski James Swain Alaska Acad. Dec. Assoc. Indiana Sec. Sch. Admin. Assoc. Exeter H.S. State Dept. of Education P.O. Box 301 7960 Castleway Dr. 30 Linden St. Cordell Hull Building Juneau, AK 99802 Indianapolis, IN 46250 Exeter, NH 03833 Nashville, TN 37243 (907) 463-5812 (317) 576-5400 (603) 778-7772 (615) 741-0878 ARIZONA IOWA NEW JERSEY TEXAS Anita Lohr Dick Wiederhold William Cobb Lee Meyer Pima County Schs. Winterset Comm. Schs. Acad. Dec. of New Jersey Harris County Dept. of Educ. 130 W. Congress St. 302 W. South St. 125 John St. 6300 Irvington B Tucson, AZ 85701 Winterset, IA 50273 Ridgewood, NJ 07450 Houston, TX 77022 (602) 740-8451 (515) 462-2718 (201) 652-3350 (713) 694-6300 CALIFORNIA KANSAS NEW MEXICO UTAH Judy Combs Rosemary Moran Toni Martorelli Carla Brooks California Acad. Dec. Assoc. Wyandotte County Albuquerque Public Schs. Dixie H.S. P.O. Box 28859 3600 Springfield 725 University Blvd., SE 350 E. 700 South Santa Ana, CA 92799 Kansas City, KS 66103 Albuquerque, NM 87125 St. George, UT 84770 (714) 755-1423 (913) 677-2232 (505) 842-3758 (801) 673-4682 COLORADO LOUISIANA NEW YORK VIRGINIA Kay Lorenz Barbara Gillis Nancy Lederer Bob Marshall Colo. Acad. Dec. Assoc. Louisiana Acad. Dec. Assoc. BOCES #1 Fairfax County Sch. Dist. Box 11 Northwestern St. Univ. 41 O'Connor Rd. 3705 Crest Dr. Black Hawk, CO 80422 Nachitoches, LA 71497 Fairport, NY 14450 Annandale, VA 22003 (303) 582-5550 (318) 357-5246 (716) 377-4660 (703) 698-7500 CONNECTICUT MAINE NORTH CAROLINA WASHINGTON William P. Coan Ron Moody Riley Bratton Dick Kistler Conn. Acad. Dec. Assoc. Maine Acad. Dec. Assoc. Independence H.S. Timberline H.S. Weston H.S. Blue Rd. 1967 Patriot Dr. 6120 Mullen Rd. Weston, CT 06883 Monmouth, ME 02459 Charlotte, NC 28212 Lacey, WA 98503 (203) 222-2535 (207) 933-2948 (704) 343-6900 (206) 493-2941 DELAWARE MASSACHUSETTS OHIO WEST VIRGINIA Peggy Dee Henry Lukas, Principal Bill Kraus Connie Strickland Dept. of Public Inst. Massachusetts Acad. Dec. Assoc. Lakeland Comm. College West Virginia Acad. Dec. Assoc. P.O. Box 1402 Marblehead H.S. Rts. 90 & 306 668 Elk Estates Dover, DE 19903 Marblehead, MA 01945 Mentor, OH 44060 Elkview, WV 25071 (302) 739-4667 (508) 631-0900 (216) 953-7106 (304) 548-6238 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MICHIGAN OKLAHOMA WISCONSIN Doris Trabue Tim Quinn Ivalene Neptune Meg Olejniczak Washington, D.C., Public Schools Northwest Michigan College Eisenhower H.S. CESA #7 45th & Lee Sts. NE 1701 E. Front St. 5201 W. Gore Blvd. 2280A S. Broadway Washington, D.C. 20019 Traverse City, MI 49684 Lawton, OK 73505 Green Bay, WI 54304 (202) 724-4934 (616) 922-1010 (405) 355-9144 (414) 448-5355 FLORIDA MINNESOTA OREGON WYOMING Peggy Cole/Ron Dennis Dee Steele William Lakes Greg Tatham Putnam County Schools Owatonna Public Schools Oregon Acad. Dec. University of Wyoming 200 S. 7th St. 515 W. Bridge St. 26908 Hwy 20 at Cline Creek P.O. Box 3066 Palatka, FL 32177 Owatonna, MN 55060 Eddyville, OR 97343 Laramie, WY 82071 (904) 329-0605 (507) 451-9513 (503) 265-9281 (307) 766-3763 GEORGIA MISSISSIPPI PENNSYLVANIA CANADA Howard Stroud Buddy Wagner David Emery Aileen Munro Clark County School Dist. Mississippi College Methacton Senior H.S. Memorial Comp. H.S. 500 College Ave. P.O. Box 4063 Kriebel Mill Rd. Box 760, 5116 55th Ave. Athens, GA 30610 Clinton, MS 39058 Fairview Village, PA 19403 Stony Plain, AL (404) 546-7721 (601) 925-3353 (215) 489-5043 Canada TOE 2G0 (403) 963-2255 HAWAII MISSOURI RHODE ISLAND Joan Yanagi Randy Wortman Judy Edsal UNITED STATES State Dept. of Education Southwest H.S. Rhode Island Dec. Assoc. ACADEMIC DECATHLON P.O. Box 2360 6512 Wornall Rd. 3288 Post Rd. Ann Joynt Honolulu, HI 96804 Kansas City, MO 64113 Warwick, RI 02886 Executive Director (808) 396-2530 (816) 871-0900 (401) 732-1100 11145 183rd St. Cerritos, CA 90701 IDAHO MONTANA SOUTH CAROLINA Jerry Helgeson Rich Wilson Neal Martin Frann Shermet Idaho Acad. Dec. Assoc. Fergus H.S. South Carolina Acad. Dec. Assoc. Executive Coordinator 4600 McMillan Rd. 201 Casino Creek Dr. Coker College P.O. Box 5169 Meridian, ID 83642 Lewistown, MT 59457 Hartsville, SC 29550 Cerritos, CA 90703-5169 (208) 939-1404 (406) 538-2321 (803) 383-8126 (213) 809-4995 5 " The Academic Decathlon is one of the finest examples of an effective corporate- education partnership that exists today. Utilizing very reasonable dollars, the United States Academic Decathlon has created a program that stimulates learning and the promotion of skills critical for the business world throughout the high schools of America. " Bruce W. Ferguson President, United States Academic Decathlon Director of Human Resources Kenneth Leventhal & Co. UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON BOARD OF DIRECTORS Dr. Alex Aloia Bruce W. Ferguson John J. Moeling, Jr. B. Franklin Reinauer II Loyola Marymount University Kenneth Leventhal & Co. Scientific American New Jersey Robert Broaddus John H. Foley Dr. Arnold C. Oates Suzanne Roberts CappCare Foristall Co. Texas A & M University Santa Monica Marilyn Bush Lawrence Ganzell Dr. Alfonso B. Perez Robert Suarez Los Angeles U.S.D. Scantron Los Angeles Raytheon Company Dr. Arnold Chandler Joe Johnson John S. Peterson, Esq. Jill von Delden Wisconsin Department of Education The Telein Group Victory Holding Co. TRW, Inc. Dr. Richard Cooper Anita Lohr Dr. Robert Peterson Franklin R. Wurtzel, Esq. Occidental College Arizona Academic Decathlon Founder Home Savings of America Louis Davis Dr. C. Lee Meyer Dr. Paul Possemato Ann Joynt Los Angeles Texas Academic Decathlon Los Angeles U.S.D. Executive Director UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON CORPORATE SPONSORS AAA American Ronald McDonald LENNOXIndustries Inc. Children's Charities® Airlines Established Kroc American Airlines Lennox Heating and Air Conditioning Ronald McDonald ARTHUR ANDERSEN Children's Charities ANDERSEN CONSULTING Arthur Andersen & Co., S.C. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN E D. C. Heath The Psychological Scientific American HEATH and Company Corporation TRW The Krausz Companies, Inc. Raytheon A Company Called TRW Krausz Companies, Inc. Raytheon Company TRW, Inc. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The United States Academic Decathlon and D.C. Heath and Company would like to thank the many artists and photographers whose work appears on the pages of the Study Guide. Much of the artwork and photography that is shown within can be found in the following D.C. Heath textbooks: Math CONNECTIONS, ALGEBRA I, Heath SOCIAL STUDIES, Heath BIOLOGY, Heath CHEMISTRY, Heath ENGLISH, ECONOMICS FOR DECISION MAKING, THE CHALLENGE OF DISCOVERY Series. Cover photography for the Study Guide was created by Ralph Mercer of Boston. The bird on the cover was used courtesy of Timothy J. Santel, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "Clouds" on pages 2-23 are from WestLight. Maryanne Curran Project Coordinator Marianna Frew Palmer Editorial Services Lisa Fowler Designer Peggy Curtis Production Coordinator Printed on recyclable paper 6 BOISE: AN ENVIRONMENT TO EXPERIENCE Experience Boise's unique environment at the 1992 United States Academic Decathlon competition. As Idaho's capital city, Boise enjoys a rare blend of exciting urban activities and the easily accessible great outdoors. A scenic 20-mile riverfront pathway through the heart of the city is the perfect place for walking, running, biking, skating, and skateboarding. A city of the 90's, Boise's urban amenities include such sights and attractions as the World Center for Birds of Prey, the Morrison Center for the Performing Arts, and the sprawling MICRON MVS high-tech complexes and numerous corporate headquarters. The state of The Peregrine Fund, Inc. Idaho also offers outstanding opportuni- ties for white-water rafting, hiking, and World Center fishing and is home to Sun Valley, Hells for Canyon, and the Bruneau Sand Dunes. Birds of Prey THE COMPETITION SITE Rocky Mountain Peregrine Falcon Program Idaho's largest university is ideally located along the banks of the scenic Boise River. HOST HOTEL Situated on the banks of the Boise River and the city's renowned Greenbelt, the Red Lion Riverside offers great river views, fine restau- rants, a full fitness center, and a swimming pool. "The city of Boise is proud to be the host city for the 1992 United States Boise State University Academic Decathlon national champi- onships. The Academic Decathlon is an outstanding program, and the commitment and dedication necessary to achieve your goals in this competi- tion will serve you well in future activities and careers. Good luck to each participant, and I look forward to seeing you in Boise!" Mayor Dirk Kempthorne Mayor Dirk Kempthorne 7 ECONOMICS Paul Silverman/Fundamental Photographs I. Basic concepts 26% II. Microeconomics 30% A. Scarcity A. Law of demand 1. Four basic questions 1. Demand curves 2. Factors of production 2. Factors affecting demand curves B. Production possibilities frontier B. Law of supply 1. Trade-offs 1. Supply curves 2. Opportunity costs 2. Factors affecting C. Characteristics of a supply curves market economy C. Equilibrium price and 1. Economic freedom quantity 2. Private property 1. Surpluses and shortages 3. Economic incentives 2. Shifts in supply 4. Competitive markets and/or demand curves 5. Limited role of government III. Macroeconomics 30% C. Fiscal policy D. U.S. business 1. Government A. Circular flow 1. Sole proprietorship 1. Households and firms spending 2. Partnership 2. Taxes 2. Factor and product 3. Corporation 3. Gross national markets product E. Market structure B. Money and business 4. Business cycle 1. Pure competition 1. Money supply 5. Inflation 2. Pure monopoly 2. Federal Reserve 3. Oligopoly 3. Monetary policy 4. Monopolistic IV. International competition economics 14% A. International trade 1. Comparative ROFFILF McDonald's advantage 2. U.S. trade partners McDonald's 3. Trade restrictions and protectionism B. Other economic systems 1. Socialism 2. Communism James Holland/Stock, Boston 8 MATHEMATICS I. General math 10% D. Complex numbers IV. Trigonometry 10% A. Applications involving 1. Operations with A. Right triangle integers, fractions, complex numbers relationships decimals, and percent 2. Complex numbers as roots of equations B. Trigonometric functions B. Basic counting C. Inverse trigonometric techniques III. Geometry 34% functions 1. Multiplication principle A. Right triangles D. Graphs 2. Permutations and 1. Pythagorean theorem E. Identities combinations 2. Special triangles F. Equations C. Probability of equally likely events B. Coordinate geometry 1. Midpoint V. Differential 2. Slope calculus 10% II. Algebra 36% 3. Distance formula A. Basic limits A. Solving equations - 4. Parallel and polynomial perpendicular lines B. First and second 1. Linear and 5. Quadrilateral derivatives and their quadratic properties graphical interpretation 2. Higher order a. Quadratic form C. Plane and solid figures C. Equation of tangent line b. Remainder and 1. Area of triangles, D. Velocity and factor theorem quadrilaterals, and acceleration circles c. Rational roots 2. Area and volume of E. Maxima and minima theorem prisms, pyramids, B. Solving inequalities cylinders, spheres, 1. Linear and and cones quadratic 3. Properties of similar 2. Absolute value figures C. Functions: rational, 4. Properties of circles it exponential, and a. Angle measures MRC logarithmic b. Tangents, M- M+ 1. Domain range secants, and 2. Composition intersecting 3. Inverses chords 4. Graphing 5. Images under ON/C rotations, reflections, translations, and dilations The use of calculators will be permitted. FINE ARTS Pete Saloutos/The Stock Market MUSIC AND ART C. Voices and orchestral ASSOCIATED WITH instruments NATURE, RESOURCES, D. Definitions AND THE ENVIRONMENT 1. Programmatic music 2. Absolute music I. General knowledge about music 10% II. Area of concentration: A. Properties of a musical music associated with tone nature, landscape, 1. Pitch and environment 40% 2. Duration A. Romantic ideal in 3. Volume music: programmatic music 4. Tone quality 1. Composers' stated use of B. Elements of a piece of nonmusical associations music through the following: 1. Rhythm a. Title 2. Melody b. Story 3. Texture c. Literary inspiration 4. Tone color d. Place or people 5. Form e. Myth or legend f. Nature: birds, trees, animals, water, storm, etc. g. Emotions such as joy, sorrow, love, hate, peace 2. Symphonic poem 3. Programmatic suite B. Biographical summary of composers in IIC Pueblo Indian figurine of a storyteller and her listeners Guy Monthan, U. of Arizona Press Adrian Boot/Retna 10 C. Background and D. Recognition of selected 5. Space recognition of selected works 6. Perspective/ works* 1. Neil Diamond: dimension 1. Claude Debussy Captain Sunshine 7. Variation (1862-1918): La Mer - 2. Manhattan Transfer: 8. Light Dialogue of the Wind Jungle Pioneer 9. Contrast and the Sea 3. Rush: Red Tide 10. Emphasis 2. Ferde Grofé (1892- 11. Balance 1972): Grand Canyon * Any or all of the music may B. Techniques and Suite be ordered on cassette from 3. Alan Hovhaness processes the Wherehouse in Hollywood, 1. Painting - oil, (1911- ): And God California. A price list and order watercolor Created Great Whales form may be obtained from your 4. Ottorino Resphigi state director. 2. Photography - zone, tonal system (1879-1936): Pines of 3. Graphic arts - Rome III. General knowledge woodcut 5. Jean Sibelius (1865- about art 10% 4. Open-air painting 1957): The Swan of Tuonela A. Elements of 6. Bedrich Smetana composition and design (1824-1884): The Moldau 1. Line 7. Igor Stravinsky 2. Shape/form (1882-1971): Three 3. Color Japanese Lyrics 4. Texture THE Many legends have been written about Quetzalcóatl, this Aztec Indian god. Laurie Platt, Winfrey, Inc. Crossing the Ford, Platte River, Colorado, by Thomas Worthington Whittredge. The Century Association 11 IV. Area of concentration: 3. View of Toledo, El art associated with Greco (1541-1614) nature, landscape, 4. Nichols Canyon, and environment 40% David Hockney (1937- ) A. Major art movements and historical 5. Great Wave off perspectives relative to Kanagawa, Katsushika artists in IVC Hokusai 1. Environmental (1760-1849) sculpture/earth art 6. Grainstack at 2. Mannerism 3. Realism Sunset, Claude Monet 4. Impressionism (1840-1926) 5. Postimpressionism An Aztec 6. Fauvist 7. The Starry Night, Indian calendar 7. Hudson River School Vincent Van Gogh Norman Prince (1853-1890) B. Biographical summary 8. Half Dome and Moon, 11. Rain, Steam, and Speed: of artists in IVC Ansel Adams The Great Western C. Selected works (1902-1984) Railway, Joseph Mallord 1. Nevada Falls, Albert 9. Mist on Coast, Big William Turner Bierstadt (1830-1902) Sur, California, Eliot (1775-1851) 2. The Trees (Les Arbes), Porter (1901-1990) 12. View of Salisbury Andre Derain, (1880- 10. Spiral Jetty, Robert Cathedral, John 1954) Smithson (1938-1973) Constable (1776-1837) Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago 12 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE NONFICTION: BIOGRAPHY/ AUTOBIOGRAPHY/ESSAY I. Features of the nonfiction genre 16% A. Style 1. Thesis 2. Focus 3. Coherence 4. Diction 5. Sentence structure B. Reader's perspective 1. Author's bias 2. Date of writing 3. Scope Dian Fossey Peter Veit/DRK Photo 4. Significance 5. Purpose 6. Author's credibility D. Autobiography III. Essay: Henry David 1. Story of a person's Thoreau, Walden: C. Biography 1. Reconstruction of life written by Solitude; The Ponds; himself or herself Baker Farm the life of a real 10% 2. Individual's person 2. Life history interpretation of his IV. Biography: Farley or her own life Mowat, Woman E. Essay in the Mists 40% 1. Formal Warner Books, Inc. 2. Informal 666 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10103 (212) 484-3186 $8.21 II. Major environ- mentalist authors 20% V. Feature film: A. Buckminster Fuller Robert Redford, B. Rachel Carson The Milagro Beanfield War 14% C. Jacques Cousteau Movies Unlimited D. Jane Goodall 6736 Castor Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19149 E. John Muir (800) 523-0823 $19.95 F. Henry David Thoreau John Muir Holt Atherton Ctr. for Western Studies, U. of the Pacific, ©1984, Muir-Hanna Trust 13 UK SCIENCE BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY: II. Diversity 20% OCT 5, 1987 DAY 270 FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS A. Classification RELATED TO THE ENVIRONMENT 1. Systems 2. Nomenclature I. Ecosystems 40% B. Monerans and protists A. Structure C. Fungi 180 0 1. Abiotic and biotic D. Plants factors 2. Biological 1. Bryophytes 2. Tracheophytes organization 3. Biomes E. Animals a. Terrestrial 1. Sponges and b. Aquatic coelenterates 90 NI TO 4. Succession 2. Worms and SOUTH POLAR PLOT mollusks NASA B. Function 3. Echinoderms and 1. Feeding relationships arthropods 4. Chordates a. Food chains and webs b. Symbiotic relationships c. Pyramids (1.) Energy (2.) Biomass 2. Material cycles C. Balance and imbalance 1. Self-sustaining requirements 2. Imbalance a. Air b. Water c. Soil d. Population 3. Human influences a. Positive b. Negative Jeff LePore/ Photo Researchers, Inc. 14 III. Organic chemistry 40% 3. Compounds A. Classification of containing nitrogen a. Amines hydrocarbons b. Amino acids 1. Aliphatic a. Alkanes C. Organic reactions b. Alkenes 1. Oxidation, c. Alkynes combustion 2. Cyclic 2. Substitution a. Cycloalkanes 3. Addition b. Cycloalkenes 4. Esterification c. Aromatic 5. Saponification hydrocarbons 6. Fermentation 7. Polymerization B. Other organic a. Addition compounds b. Condensation 1. Compounds containing halogens 8. Cracking 2. Compounds D. Petroleum products and containing oxygen synthetics a. Alcohols 1. Petroleum products b. Aldehydes 2. Plastics c. Carboxylic acids 3. Synthetic rubber d. Esters E. Biochemistry e. Ketones 1. Carbohydrates f. Ethers 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic acids Rod Planck/Photo Researchers, Inc. Steve Kraesmann/ Rod Planck/Tom Stack & Assoc. Peter Arnold, Inc. 15 SOCIAL STUDIES GEOGRAPHY OF THE WORLD II. Physical geography of the world 10% I. Basic concepts in A. Elevation regions geography 10% throughout the world A. Map reading B. Major landforms 1. Scale 2. Longitude and III. Climatology 10% latitude A. Climate regions 3. Symbols throughout the world 4. Legend B. Natural vegetation B. Terminology regions IV. Political geography 50% A. Continents B. Countries Carl Purcell/Photo Researchers, Inc. C. All capital cities and other major world centers OFFICE OJAVE ESERT 0810100 Breck P. Kent 16 RISK ARCTIC OCEAN all V. Oceania 20% ALASKA A. All oceans, seas, bays, and gulfs B. Major waterways, rivers, and lakes Hudson ROCKY Bay C. Major ports NORTH olumbia GREAT PLAINS Great Lakes Ottawa Lawrence MOUNTAINS AMERICA HAWAII(U.S) Missouri River Colorado River River Ohio PLAINS APPA River ALAGHUAN MTS. Washington, D.C. CENTRAL PACIFIC Mississippi ATLANTIC Grande Gulf of Mexico Mexico City CARIBBEAN SEA BLACK HILLS Missouri Great Lakes REAT Great 2 Salt Lake GREAT River Ohio Arkansas River THE MOUNTAINS RAIN SOUTH AMERIC ASIN CENTRAL PLAINS Chesapeake Bay PLAINS River ATLANTIC Rio Grande River ATLANTIC OCEAN Red Donnelley Cartographic Services 17 SPEECH The students will be scored on First, there is a presentation of a Speeches must be the original their ability to do the following: 4-minute prepared speech. work of the student performing the speech and may have been 1. Organize ideas in a clear Rules: used for no other competition and logical pattern that is 1. Note cards may be used. other than this year's Academic appropriate for the 2. The speech may not be read. Decathlon. At the national speaker's purpose and is 3. The speech must be given finals, there is no required convincing to the audience while standing before the speech topic. At state and local 2. Express ideas using judges. competitions, the determination effective vocabulary and the 4. The speech must be no less of speech topics is made by the structures of the English than 31/2 minutes or more competition manager. Coaches language appropriate to than 4 minutes. should check with the appro- formal usage 5. No props may be used priate competition manager for 3. Present a physical image that aids the audience in the during the speech. possible topic designations or other local rules. acceptance of the spoken ideas Point System: A maximum of 4. Use voice (pitch, volume, 700 points can be earned. and flexibility) to establish and maintain maximum Second, there is a presentation of a attention 11/2- to 2-minute impromptu speech on one of three topics that In addition, the speech will be will be given to each student judged on the following: following the prepared speech. (Upon receipt of topics, one minute 1. Ideas, originality of will be allowed for mental prepara- thought, and sense tion prior to the presentation.) of value Rules: 2. Overall impression 1. The speech must be given At a scheduled time during while standing before the the competition, each student judges. will report to a speech room 2. The student may use notes in which the student will made on note cards. remain for a 7-minute period. 3. The speech should last A chairperson of the judges between 1 1/2 and 2 minutes. will give a brief explanation of the procedures to be Point System: A maximum of followed. 300 points can be earned. Rob Carlson 18 INTERVIEW ESSAY The students will be judged on In many competitions, the At a designated time during the their ability to do the following: students are asked to complete competition, contestants will an extracurricular activity form write an essay in response to a 1. Informally and orally that is then transmitted to the given prompt. They will be present ideas that are appropriate to the problems judges and is used to formulate allowed 50 minutes for the being considered positive and insightful questions. essay, which will be scored by trained essay graders in accor- 2. Listen to the ideas of others, The students are scored in the dance with a published rubric. evaluate the ideas, and adjust following categories: Traditionally the essay portion their responses accordingly VOICE PROJECTION of the Academic Decathlon has 3. Establish and maintain been left entirely to the local rapport with members of a Volume competition manager for conversational group Directness determination of topic and through voice, gesture, and Flexibility rubric. While the actual attitudinal posture Appropriateness prompts will never be released 4. Use voice, vocabulary, and NONVERBAL LANGUAGE prior to the competition, the language structures appropriate to informal oral Movement Rapport general topic area and the communication Appearance Gesture scoring rubric to be used Involvement should be made available to At a scheduled time during the coaches and students during LANGUAGE USAGE competition, each student will the preparation period. At the Grammar Enunciation report to a designated interview national finals, the essay topic room with a panel of two or Appropriateness will be associated with the three judges. There the student LISTENING SKILLS Super Quiz topic. Students will will remain for a 7-minute have a choice between either Appropriateness of period. The head judge will two or three prompts. At many responses make introductions and welcome Attentiveness local competitions, the essay the contestant. Questions and topic is based on the Decathlon conversation with the contestant ANSWERING SKILLS literature selections or is based will be generally limited to the Skills in answering on generic, universal truth following areas: questions prompts. Coaches should Clearness and 1. Extracurricular activities check with the appropriate 2. Selecting a college completeness competition manager for the 3. Career goals and college OVERALL EFFECTIVENESS topic and rubric designations and other local rules for the study Achievement of purpose 4. Preparation for the essay event. Interest Reception Decathlon 5. Experiences in the Point System: A maximum of Decathlon 1,000 points can be earned by 6. Values each team member in the 7. Most influential person interview. 19 10 SUPER QUIZ HABITAT EARTH C. Water quality and quantity 20% The interdependence of 1. Hydrological cycle organisms and their environment 2. Oceans 3. Rivers and lakes I. Development versus a 4. Groundwater sustainable society D. Climate 5% A. Air quality 10% 1. Global warming 1. Acid rain 2. Ozone depletion 2. Urban areas 3. Microclimate change 3. Indoor air E. Waste management 4. Health effects and cleanup 15% 5. Air pollution control 1. Solid waste/ B. Land use 20% domestic 1. Forests 2. Nuclear 2. Soils and agriculture 3. Hazardous 3. Wetlands 4. Medical 4. Mineral resources 5. Waste reduction and 5. Rangeland recycling 6. Wilderness R. Myers/Visuals Unlimited Jim McNee/Tom Stack & Assoc. Jim Solliday Biological Photo Service 20 II. Energy 15% III. Plants and Bibliography: animals 15% A. Traditional sources Daniel D. Chiras, Environmental Science, Addison-Wesley, 1991. 1. Fossil fuels A. Endangered and Addison-Wesley Higher Education 2. Hydroelectric power threatened species Publishing Group 3. Nuclear 1. Habitat One Jacob Way 2. Exploitation Reading, MA 01867 B. Alternative sources (800) 447-2226 $34.36 1. Solar B. Pest and predator control Scientific American Reader, 2. Wind "Managing Planet Earth." 3. Biomass C. Ecosystems and W.H. Freeman and Company 4. Conservation biodiversity 4419 W. 1980 South Salt Lake City, UT 84104 (801) 973-4660 $6.00 All orders must be marked U.S. Academic Decathlon. Key Tundra Coniferous forest Deciduous forest Grassland Desert Rainforest 21 determined locally, these criteria must be table, the school should contact the followed to ensure uniformity and equity Executive Director with full documenta- among all participants in the United tion for a ruling. TEAM SELECTION States Academic Decathlon. For alpha grades without numerical PROCESS 1. If a student receives an F in any equivalents, all A's will count 4.0 points, academic course, the F is counted in all B's will count 3.0, all C's will count 2.0, averaging the student's grades even all D's will count 1.0. Anything below The Team though no credit is given. When a course will be 0 points. A team consists of nine full-time students has been failed during ninth grade but from the eleventh and/or twelfth grades repeated prior to graduation, only the repeat grade is counted. When a course is Verification of Eligibility of the same high school. A full-time student is defined as a student who is failed in the tenth grade or later and is Each high school will submit official enrolled in four or more class periods per repeated, both grades will be counted in transcripts to verify eligibilty of team the GPA. day. Each team is made up of three Honor members. A committee at each competi- students, three Scholastic students, and 2. Incomplete or pass/fail grades are not tion level will verify all transcripts and three Varsity students as indicated by the counted in computing the GPA. Once a notify schools of any discrepancies. following grade point average definition: grade is given to remove an incomplete, The deadline for transmittal of these Honor 3.75-4.00 GPA then that grade will be used to determine documents will be determined for each the student's GPA. Scholastic 3.00-3.74 GPA contest. Varsity 0.00-2.99 GPA 3. Grades for the following academic courses shall be used in grade point Only students whose transcripts have Contestants may compete in a higher division than their own grade point computation for competition purposes: been received by the contest deadline academic business courses, art apprecia- will be eligible for participation in the average category but not in a lower tion, art history, computer science, competition. division. economics, English/language arts, foreign The winning team at each level within a Each team member competes in all ten language, humanities, journalism, state becomes eligible for the next level of events of the Decathlon and is eligible for mathematics, music theory, music competition. Local competition managers individual medals in all ten events. Only appreciation, music history, science, will certify the winning team and the six scores count for the final team speech, and social studies. Grades for all members' eligibility under the GPA standing in the competition-the top two other courses shall be excluded from the guidelines above. The championship Honor scores, the top two Scholastic GPA compilation unless written approval team from each state is eligible to scores, and the top two Varsity scores. is obtained from the USAD Board of participate in the national finals. The Therefore, schools may enter with fewer Directors. members of the team that participates in than nine members and still be eligible for 4. Community or college courses are the national finals must be the same team awards as long as there are at least included in the GPA only if high school members who participated at the state two Honor, two Scholastic, and two credit is given and the course is listed on event. If for any reason a member is Varsity members. the official school transcript. unable to participate, the state director should contact the USAD office for a 5. A grade, regardless of whether it is Computation of ruling. honors, regular, or remedial classification, Grade Point Averages will count the face value of the final grade Twelfth graders' GPA's will be based on as reflected on the official transcript. No Exceptions the fall and spring semesters of tenth and weighting of grades for honors classes eleventh grades, including summer will be included even if this is the local Any exceptions to these eligibility sessions preceding the tenth and eleventh district policy. The letter grade shown on requirements must be approved in grades. Eleventh graders' GPA's will be the transcript will be used in computing writing by the United States Academic Decathlon Board of Directors in advance based on the fall and spring semesters of GPA regardless of whether a plus or a of the submission date for entries. tenth grade, including summer school minus. preceding the tenth and eleventh grades. For numerical grades or alpha grades Participation in the United States with numerical equivalents, the following Academic Decathlon is open to all conversion scale will be used: students regardless of race, sex, religion, Considerations in the or national origin. Academic Decathlon 90-100 = 4 points GPA Computations 80-89 = 3 points The National Board of Directors of USAD 70-79 = 2 points has approved the preceding selection The following guidelines have been 60-69 = process for teams participating in adopted for USAD competitions and are 1 point Academic Decathlon events. Questions Under 60 = to be used to compute the official 0 points should be directed to Ann B. Joynt Decathlon grade point average. Regard- If a school or district varies drastically (213) 809-4995. less of the system used or the GPA from this scale in its normal conversion 22 UNITED STATES ACADEMIC DECATHLON PRODUCTS, 1991-1992 Product Cost Per Shipping Item/Set Per Item/Set FOR COMPETITION MANAGERS ONLY Medal Specify Gold, Silver, or Bronze; $ 6.50 $ .50 allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery. STATES ACADEMIC Pencils (set of 100) 25.00 4.00* Seals (set of 50) 25.00 1.50 us Certificates (set of 100) 50.00 4.00* Participation DECATHLON R STATES US Appreciation Procedure Manual 1991 35.00 4.00* Scantrons-Contact 1-800-SCANTRON or 1-714-259-8887 or your local Scantron representative. Scoring Software-Contact 1-805-665-9172. STREET USPADI ACADEMIC FOR COACHES AND TEAM MEMBERS Study Guides (min. of 10) Avail. 5/1/91 $ 1.00 $ 4.00* Practice Test Booklet 1991 Avail. 9/1/91 35.00 4.00* Two-Pocket folders 2.50 .25 Pin 4.00 .25 Ron Bouley $4.00 for first item or set; $2.00 for each additional item or set Item Cost Per No. of Items Total Item/Set SUBTOTAL Use additional sheet if necessary. California only - TAX SHIPPING Return with check or purchase order to TOTAL United States Academic Decathlon P.O. Box 5169 Cerritos, CA 90703-5169 1-213- 809-4995 23 Learning tak time. HEADERS Ko Introduction ction to English STATE AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENTS K''s pricte Editic UNITED STATES yellow see a Brief felawed Schools FO READER CO. brow DA D-C-HEATH&CO U.D. I see a flower The flower is yello a 1 9 see yellow leaf I nut 12 5 I see a green leaf The nut is brown. 9 see a brown leaf imoeba, and Paramecium rown nut THE COLORS OF LIFE Now each of the three five protists obt, method of protist Y 10 BIOLOGY BIOLOGY <<<<<<<< Who STATE ACADEMIC Winning takes learning. STA DEMIC It takes time to learn something Happily, it's time well spent. The D.C. Heath and Company well, to become the best. rewards of academic excellence 125 Spring Street, That's something everyone who are available to all who are Lexington, MA 02173 STATE US R participates in the United States willing to test their concentration 1-800-235-3565 Academic Decathlon knows and stamina, to take the time and appreciates. needed to be the best. To win at DCHeath learning, to win by learning. A Raytheon Company