[Vision2020] For spring break, there's nothing, and then there's Mao Tosi's world

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Fri Mar 23 12:38:46 PDT 2007


>From today's (March 23, 2007) Anchorage Daily News at:

http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/anchorage/beth_bragg/story/

Remember the 1996-2000 Vandals' All-American 6'8", 280-pound defensive end
Mao Tosi?  I am sure that former WSU QB Steve Birnbaum does.  After
graduation he went on to play professional football for a few years with the
Arizona Cardinals.

Where is he now, you ask?  Well . . .

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For spring break, there's nothing, and then there's Mao Tosi's world

BETH BRAGG
COMMENT

(Published: March 23, 2007) 
Spring break, and it's chaos at the Spenard Rec Center. Controlled chaos.

The gymnasium is filled with kids that society calls "at risk," but the only
thing at risk here is that gym time will end before the kids are ready to go
home.

Six basketball hoops hang from the ceiling, and four-on-four games are being
played at three of them. Clusters of kids shoot baskets and collect rebounds
at the others. Dozens more sit on small sets of bleachers, watching the
action or waiting their turn. Astonishingly, only one person is wearing
earbuds, and no one is talking on a cell phone.

In the middle of it all sits Mao Tosi, the giant-sized man responsible for
all this activity. He's the West High security guard who responded to the
city's spike in youth violence last fall by starting after-school clubs at
West and East high schools. 

Tosi is cutting up four bags of oranges with a paring knife, and the kids
are eating them as fast as he can slice them.

"We're trying to keep them all occupied," Tosi says as he jokingly
admonishes a teenage boy trying to sneak up from behind and snatch a whole
orange. "Keep 'em playing. Keep 'em busy."

Tosi, 30, didn't learn until late last week that he could use the Spenard
Rec Center and the Cellular One Sports Center for this week's three-day
camp. There was little time to spread the word. But spread it did.

"The gym doesn't open till 9," Tosi said, "and at 8:30 there were 20 kids
sitting outside waiting. Some of them didn't even have coats."

Ola Vaivai, a 17-year-old from West High, was among those who showed up. His
spring break alternative?

"Nothing," he said. "I got parents that's working, and some of us don't have
cars, don't have transportation. Mao got us our ride.

"Everybody here's for the same reason. He got everybody interested because
it's free. Some of us can't afford five dollars, or even one dollar. It's a
good thing."

It is a good thing. 

And it's getting even better. People in town -- important people, people who
can make things happen -- have seen Tosi at work, and they're ready to help
him help kids.

Tosi will soon leave his job as a security guard for a job running youth
programs for Communities in Schools of Alaska. The position will let him
work full-time with kids in the city's middle and high schools.

Tom Morgan, state director of CIS-Alaska, made the change possible by
raising money from a variety of sources impressed with Tosi's work. The
state's Department of Juvenile Justice says it will help. CIRI and Taco Bell
each donated $10,000, and the city added a one-time contribution of $60,000,
half from the police, half from the mayor's office.

"You pay it one way or another," city manager Denis LeBlanc said. "If we can
keep the kids out of trouble, then the police aren't making police calls.
We're convinced this will pay dividends to the city."

The show of support for Tosi's work is one of the best, most tangible
results of the city's increased focus on youth and gang violence since a
number of shootings and killings in the last year. 

Tosi, a former NFL player who graduated from East High, isn't taking guns or
drugs away from kids. But he's diverting kids from those kinds of things by
giving them somewhere to go and something to do. 

It might seem like bribery when he tells kids that if they participate in a
poetry workshop, they can win digital cameras or T-shirts. But Tosi knows
such offerings are a valuable currency. They buy him a kid's time and
attention.

The scene this week at the Spenard Rec Center was amazing. Kids of all
sizes, ages and colors shot baskets, ate snacks, showed off their beat
boxing skills and even tried a little poetry. There wasn't a hint of
friction, a hint of bullying, a hint of trouble.

"Look at the different race groups and ages,'' said 16-year-old Nicole
Suapaia of East High as she watched a group of older boys play an intense
yet friendly game of basketball. "This is good."

It is good.

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Seeya round town, Moscow.

Came a tribe from the north brave and bold . . .

"Here We Have Idaho"
http://www.tomandrodna.com/HWHI.mp3

"I-D-A-H-O Idaho Idaho Go Go Go"
http://www.tomandrodna.com/Vandals.mp3







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