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Major David Erickson — citizenship and leadership
Major David Erickson, of Knox, retired from a career in the military that taught him “we’re all much more alike than we are different.” He was stationed in Germany when the Berlin wall came down and soon after visited Prague. A Czech he met there was a boy when the Americans liberated Prague but told him the Russians rewrote the history books, removing the Americans’ role. “I never forgot,” said the Czech. Erickson now teaches Albany High School students in the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps. The battalion is named for Sergeant Henry Johnson, a young African-American from Albany who, during World War I, fought off a German raiding party in Argonne Forest, saving his unit. He was finally awarded the Medal of Honor in 2015. “I tell the kids one person can make a difference,” said Erickson. He stresses that the JROTC is not a military recruitment program but rather a citizenship and leadership program, run by the students themselves. It has both academic and fitness components. “Forty percent of my kids are true refugees,” Erickson said, noting they come from every continent except Australia and the South Pole. He tells several of their stories in this week’s podcast. Francis Hungman, a refugee from Burma, now Myanmar, walked through woods and was in a boat that almost sank. He led his team to a first-place win at a Fort Dix competition. Emmanuel Tay from Liberia was elected president at Boys’ State and remained friends with the Albany HIgh student who ran against him. Tay is now serving in the Marine Corps. Nevaeh Boyd, an Albany native, won an American Legion oratory contest, speaking about the Constitution. She hopes to be admitted to Siena or Saint Rose to become a teacher. His students learn to speak their views and to listen; they are diverse but learn to work as a team, Erickson said. He loves his work with students he calls “my kids” and says, “The future is bright.”
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Daughter and mother coach dragon-boat paddlers
31:33Anna Judge and Louisa Matthew realize they live in an ageist and sexist society — but, with generous spirits, they are paddling against the current. The mother-daughter duo together coach a crew of dragon boat paddlers. Matthew, the mother, is an art professor at Union College. Judge, her daughter, is a certified personal trainer who led her mother into the sport. “A dragon boat is a 40-foot long, very narrow racing boat,” explains Matthew in this week’s Enterprise podcast. “That became standardized in the 20th Century but it’s based on a thousands-year-old Chinese tradition of racing the big rivers in China.” A dragon boat has 20 paddlers, two to a seat, with a person in the stern who steers and a person in the bow signaling directions, traditionally by drumming. “It’s the national sport of China,” said Judge “so it’s quite big in Asia and has subsequently spread to Australia, New Zealand, and Europe.” It came to the United States through Canada, she said, citing the work of a doctor in British Columbia who changed prevailing medical opinion on exercise for breast-cancer survivors.Angelica Sofia Parker and Elca Hubbard prepare for a pageant while supporting each other
27:03https://altamontenterprise.com/07242023/angelica-sofia-parker-and-elca-hubbard-prepare-pageant-while-supporting-each-other