Getting Lost
The road not taken at the end of summer. On a rural road in northeastern Connecticut the corn is high and the fences rails are old. More photos on page 6. Linda Lemmon photo.
Vitale is
new AD at
Marianapolis
THOMPSON — Marianapolis Preparatory School appointed Andrew Vitale as the school’s next athletic director.
Vitale, a native of Putnam, is ttgoing into his 13th year coaching and teaching at Marianapolis. He has been a mathematics teacher throughout his tenure, as well as having experience coaching basketball, soccer, girls’ tennis, JV softball, boys’ lacrosse, and baseball throughout the years. Last year he served as the assistant athletic director. Vitale has been the head coach of the boys’ varsity basketball team since 2010 and maintains a 119-105 record. The team was the Class B Finalist in 2016-17 and the Class B Semi-Finalist in 2017-18. Over the course of his time as head coach, Vitale has been named NEPSAC Coach of the Year in 2013 and 2018.
“Andrew brings a positive energy and extensive experience as a coach and Assistant Athletic Director to the role,” said Assistant Head of School David DiCicco. “A longtime member of the Marianapolis community, he will support the continued growth of our extracurricular program for all of our students.”
Vitale attended Putnam High School where he played basketball for four years and was a 1,000 point scorer. Vitale’s father, Dave, was a coach at Putnam High and served as the head coach of the boys’ varsity basketball team for Marianapolis for six years when the school entered into NEPSAC. Vitale was the assistant coach for his father for five of those years before taking over as head coach. In the summer, Vitale coaches basketball camps run by The Hoop Group.
Vitale has a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Eastern Connecticut State University, and a master’s degree in athletic administration and coaching from Concordia University of Irvine.
Vitale said that he is looking forward to being a part of the athletic program on a daily basis and to continue to watch it grow.
“Going back to grad school made me realize that someday I wanted to be an athletic director, and now it’s happening. I’m very excited to focus on athletics and make sure the student experience is the best that it can be,” he said. “Being a teacher at Marianapolis for over a decade has allowed me to create meaningful connections with students and alumni. I want to bring these connections to the Athletic Department to strengthen the program for students at all skill levels.”
Vitale is married to his wife Monica whom he met at Marianapolis, and together they have two daughters.
..
Because I had to….
…NUT GRAF.
A nut graf is a term used in journalism. It is a paragraph, often in a feature story, that explains the value of the story and is a contraction of the expression nutshell paragraph. The term nut graf (or nutgraph) has evolved to also include a sort of add-on to a writer’s by-line. In other words, a little snip-it that succinctly adds value to the writer’s name.
Of course it’s true that we all want to feel like whatever we write or, more importantly, say, has value and importance to whomever is listening and so we spend a great deal of effort in our story telling interjecting phrases like “You know what I mean?” or “Can you believe what happened next?” and then adding qualifiers to illicit a facial reaction like “amazingly” or “very unexpectedly” or “disappointingly”. Eventually, amidst all of the verbiage of telling a story, we realize, lest our audience express boredom, that we need to get down to the heart of the matter and nut graf it… “…And so my day was bad because I got sideswiped on my way to get the lunch order!”
But what if we had to nut graf ourselves? Upon presenting this column, as a writer, I had to do just that. And so, I had to ask myself what, in one catchy little sentence or phrase, explains the value of me? How do I effectively nut graf myself so that you, as a reader, want to read my column? It is a given that I need to produce interesting and relatable columns, but I also need to capture the essence of WHY I am able to produce interesting and relatable columns… in one little catchy sentence!
Immediately, I began the task by listing my personal attributes and qualities, but I soon discovered that rather than yielding a nut graf, I seemed to be creating an on-line dating profile; “…likes long barefoot walks on the beach but only if the beach isn’t filled with rocks and sharp shells…”. I discarded my “profile” and focused on the components of the task at hand: What makes me Me and what makes Me, as a writer, valuable?
And then it came to me--- the single most defining part of me has always been my hair. The very first hairs on my head were curly and by the time I was 5, my head was the exact replica of Shirley Temple! I am not sure how or why I have naturally thick and very curly hair, but I do, and it has been THE DEFINING character trait (in a physical sense) I possess. My high school yearbook is filled with anecdotes from friends, acquaintances and, even the lunch lady, about my curls and the single most frequently asked question I have answered in my lifetime is “Is it natural?”
I then needed to just come up with what makes me, as a writer, valuable. No easy task. I soon realized that I had actually been through a ‘thing or two’ over the course of my years, learning that, no matter what, you cannot control everything. You can attempt to control some of the more mundane things like what time of day you will arise and what your children will eat for dinner, but you cannot --- no matter how hard you try --- control everything. That’s a lesson I happened to learn when I was young and impressionable in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, and wanting to look like all of the other kids in my class photo, with Cher straight or Farrah feathered hair! And thus—
Kathy Naumann, possessor of NATURALLY curly hair and the understanding that you can’t control everything!
Refreshing
It's another heat wave this week but the earlier, the rains provided a refreshing break. More photos on page 6. Linda Lemmon photo.