Sunday, August 30, 2009

Backpacking with Jack, Jay, Gramma Jackie, Jim and Bob






Here are some photos from this year's backpack trip:

http://web.me.com/jimsmart1/Site/JMT_Backpack_09.html

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Sunday, June 07, 2009

spring 09






click here to see some random recent photos:
http://web.me.com/jimsmart1/Site/water_pics_spring.html

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Kid videos

Punahou Carnival 2009:


Eleanor Rigby guitar recital:


may day 2009:


sierra's first swim meet May 2009:


sierra piano recital:

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Monday, March 02, 2009

Bald is Beautiful



HIGHLIGHTS FROM JACK'S FINAL SWIM MEET OF THE SEASON:

SYRACUSE, NY (February 27-28, 2009) – In the second day of competition at the Upper New York State Collegiate Swimming Association (UNYSCSA) Championships, the Vassar College men’s swim-dive continued to rewrite Vassar’s record books, breaking two more school records to bring the total to five new records set in two days.

The Brewers again had a strong session in the morning preliminary trials, setting two new school records, and going on to improve those times in the evening finals. After finishing in what was then a record time of 1:38.74 in the morning, the 200 Yard Medley Relay team of junior Jeremy Shiman (Brookline, MA/Brookline), seniors Tom Liu (Staten Island, NY/Curtis) and John Alaimo (Blauvelt, NY/Tappan Zee), and freshman Jack Smart (Honolulu, HI/Punahou School) improved their time to 1:38.42 with a ninth place finish in the evening session. The time bested the previous time of 1:40.53, set in 2008 by Shiman, Liu, Alaimo, and junior Lars LaPann-Johannessen (Landisville, PA/Hempfield).

Vassar swam well in the 400 Yard IM, led by Alaimo’s eighth place finish in 4:17.42, with Smart placing tenth in 4:19.40, dropping his time from the morning session by an impressive four seconds.
“Considering all the elements it takes to go into a relay race, those records are hard to take down. "We haven’t had the combination of men to do that for awhile, so it’s great to break those old records,” said head coach Lisl Prater-Lee, noting that the 400 Yard Medley Relay team took down a 2003 record, while the 200 Yard Freestyle Relay team broke a 13-year old record, set in 1996. “Breaking these records speaks well for where we are now. It took awhile for us to be able to get close to some of these records, and now we’ve smashed them.”

In the 200 Yard Breaststroke, freshman Jack Smart (Honolulu, HI/Punahou School) finished 20th in 2:15.90 with teammate Liu in 23rd (2:19.56).

“We feel like we’ve accomplished a lot,” said Prater-Lee. “We stood up against some very fast competition and we were competitive in that pool. More than that, it brought us together, and we’re leaving with an even stronger sense of team than we had before.”

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Jack's swim meet

Hi folks,

Yesterday I had the pleasure of watching Jack swim fast at the Vassar College Sprint Invitational. He won several events and improved to his fastest times ever in most of them. It was really fun cheering with the other Vassar parents. Here is a video of his close win in the 100 IM:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7dpz3vHR9I

Click here to read all about it in the Vassar newspaper:

http://athletics.vassar.edu/swimming/m-index.php

basking in the glow,

Jim

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Jack's swim news



POUGHKEEPSIE, NY (January 27, 2009) – In a dual meet that could not get much closer, the Montclair State University men’s swim-dive team squeaked past Vassar College, 122-118, on Tuesday evening at Kresge Pool.

In the tight meet, the Brewers started off with a victory in the 400 Yard Medley Relay. The ‘A’ team of junior Jeremy Shiman (Brookline, MA/Brookline), senior Tom Liu (Staten Island, NY/Curtis), senior John Alaimo (Blauvelt, NY/Tappan Zee), and freshman Jack Smart (Honolulu, HI/Punahou School) finished in 3:54.54 to soundly defeat the Red Hawk ‘A’ team that finished in 4:02.83.

The Brewers went 1-2 in the 200 Yard IM, as Alaimo won in 2:04.48, followed by Smart (2:07.89). Vassar also got a big 1-2-3 finish in the 200 Yard Backstroke, led by Liu in first (2:17.74), followed by Smart (2:22.51), and Shiman (2:22.65). Alaimo notched a win in the 200 Yard Butterfly, finishing in 2:05.43 and freshman Dustin Molina (Toms River, NJ/Ranney School) won the 50 Yard Freestyle with a time of 23.49.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Sierra on the local news - Obama Inauguration

In The News

www.starbulletin.com > Special Projects > 09 > Inauguration '09 >
Punahou School cheers new president

By Alexandre Da Silva

POSTED: 08:34 a.m. HST, Jan 20, 2009
Victoria Eliazar watched her school’s most famous alumnus take on the toughest assignment of his life this morning.

The eight-grader joined an overflow crowd of Punahou School students, parents and staff who packed an auditorium to watch Barack Obama, a 1979 graduate, be sworn in as the 44th United States president.

“It’s an interesting inauguration because he is our first African-American president,” said Eliazar, 13. “It is making a difference in my life because he is from Punahou and now I just want to do better in school.”

Shari Smart came with her husband Jim, a humanities teacher, and their 7-year-old daughter, Sierra, to watch Obama’s inaugural address broadcast on a giant screen. The audience, which applauded about a half-a-dozen times as Obama promised to fix the economy and launch a diplomatic administration, gave him a standing ovation.

“We wanted to watch it live,” Shari Smart said after the speech.

Her daughter had an American flag hanging from her neck with the words “The Obamas are awesome” written on it.

“I like him because he went to Punahou,” Sierra Smart said.

The school planned a day filled with festivities and lessons centered around Obama’s inauguration. Sixth graders and faculty were scheduled to hold an assembly at 10:30 a.m. to watch clips from the ceremony in Washington, D.C., while children from kindergarten through fifth grade would join teachers in a parade starting at 1 p.m.

“I’m going to be dressed as the statue of liberty,” said a teary-eyed Lauren Buck Medeiros, the school’s chaplain. “The last three days I’ve gone from laughing to crying to laughing to crying. It’s been such a depth of emotion, not just for our country but just for the exciting possibilities that lie ahead.”

Punahou eight-graders were set to learn about different aspects of the election and the inauguration in social studies, science, math and English classes.

Just last month, Obama visited the campus for a pick-up game of basketball. He attended Punahou from fifth grade until his 1979 graduation, playing eighth-grade football, high school basketball, singing in the choir and writing for the school’s literary journal, Ka Wai Ola.

“It is very inspirational to see a graduate of Punahou become president and lead our nation to a better time,” said Kalen Chong, 14, an eight grader. “I liked how we are going to work together to make our nation a better place. We are going to work together with other nations to be a better world.”

Victoria Eliazar watched her school’s most famous alumnus take on the toughest assignment of his life this morning.

The eight-grader joined an overflow crowd of Punahou School students, parents and staff who packed an auditorium to watch Barack Obama, a 1979 graduate, be sworn in as the 44th United States president.

“It’s an interesting inauguration because he is our first African-American president,” said Eliazar, 13. “It is making a difference in my life because he is from Punahou and now I just want to do better in school.”

Shari Smart came with her husband Jim, a humanities teacher, and their 7-year-old daughter, Sierra, to watch Obama’s inaugural address broadcast on a giant screen. The audience, which applauded about a half-a-dozen times as Obama promised to fix the economy and launch a diplomatic administration, gave him a standing ovation.

“We wanted to watch it live,” Shari Smart said after the speech.

Her daughter had an American flag hanging from her neck with the words “The Obamas are awesome” written on it.

“I like him because he went to Punahou,” Sierra Smart said.

The school planned a day filled with festivities and lessons centered around Obama’s inauguration. Sixth graders and faculty were scheduled to hold an assembly at 10:30 a.m. to watch clips from the ceremony in Washington, D.C., while children from kindergarten through fifth grade would join teachers in a parade starting at 1 p.m.

“I’m going to be dressed as the statue of liberty,” said a teary-eyed Lauren Buck Medeiros, the school’s chaplain. “The last three days I’ve gone from laughing to crying to laughing to crying. It’s been such a depth of emotion, not just for our country but just for the exciting possibilities that lie ahead.”

Punahou eight-graders were set to learn about different aspects of the election and the inauguration in social studies, science, math and English classes.

Just last month, Obama visited the campus for a pick-up game of basketball. He attended Punahou from fifth grade until his 1979 graduation, playing eighth-grade football, high school basketball, singing in the choir and writing for the school’s literary journal, Ka Wai Ola.

“It is very inspirational to see a graduate of Punahou become president and lead our nation to a better time,” said Kalen Chong, 14, an eight grader. “I liked how we are going to work together to make our nation a better place. We are going to work together with other nations to be a better world.”