Ohio
MEN’S SWIM: Bulldogs break six team records, place fourth at Ohio State
Yale Athletics
The men’s swimming and diving team (2–0, 2–0 Ivy) came in fourth at the Ohio State Invitational last weekend, finishing with a grand total of 1292.5 points and breaking six Yale records.
The Ohio State Invitational took place from Nov. 21 through Nov. 23, and the Buckeyes welcomed the Elis and eight other teams to compete: Cincinnati, Indiana, Louisville, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Penn State, Rutgers and the UCLA women’s team.
The Bulldogs can use their successes in Columbus as momentum for the remainder of the season.
“Ohio was a great opportunity to see where we are as individuals, what we need to improve to help the team as much as possible in the second half of the season,” Konstantinos Zachariadis ’27 wrote to the News.
Day One: Thursday, Nov. 21
The highlight of the opening day was Jake Wang ’28, who broke a team record in the 200-yard individual medley with a time of 1:45.34.
Alexander Hazlett ’26 came in 19th, followed by Charlie Egeland ’27 at 1:47.05 and 1:47.69, respectively.
Noah Millard ’26 excelled in the 500-yard freestyle, placing first and clocking in at 4:11.29. Arshak Hambardzumyan ’28 finished 13th in 4:19.77.
The Bulldogs also placed well in the relay race. Wang, Nick Finch ’28, Nareg Minassian ’26 and Deniel Nankov ’27 finished fourth in the 200-yard freestyle relay with a time of 1:17.55. The team of Mak Nurkic Kacapor ’27, Lucius Brown ’26, Alex Deng ’25 and Hazlett came in eighth, clocking in at 1:19.12. In the 400-yard medley relay, the squad of Millard, Egeland, Finch and Nankov finished in 3:07.53, putting them in fifth place.
In the 50-yard freestyle, Finch placed tenth in 19.82, Nenkov came in 15th with a time of 19.68 and Minassian finished 18th in 19.87.
On the diving side, Brady Stanton ’28 led the Bulldogs, placing 15th in the 1-meter board competition with his score of 275.3. Fellow first year Jackson Lipscomb ’28 scored 266.6 points, which put him in 18th place. Nicholas Chau ’26 followed closely, finishing two places behind, with a score of 258.6, and Ray Wipfli ’25 came in 28th with 197 points.
Ending the day with a team total of 377.50 points, the Bulldogs were in fourth, with Penn State, Cincinnati, Northwestern and Notre Dame trailing behind.
Day Two: Friday, Nov. 22
The highlights of the second day of competition included three broken team records. Egeland, Brown, Nankov and Finch broke the record in the men’s 200-yard medley relay with a time of 1:24.98, putting them sixth overall. With a time of 45.50, Finch broke the record in the 100-yard butterfly. In the 200-yard freestyle, Millard’s time of 1:32.42 broke his own record and secured him third.
Considering his own and the team’s record breaking achievements, Millard was proud of the team’s performance in Columbus.
“The OSU meet was a great way for everyone on the team to give themselves a benchmark at the halfway point of the season, seeing the successes from their training thus far. It’s also a great opportunity to be compared against other high quality competitors and then to see how we can fine tune our skills in the next 12 weeks before Ivy Champs,” Millard wrote to the News.
In addition to Millard’s record-breaking finish in the 200-yard freestyle in 1:32.85, Jose Cano ’26 came in 18th in 1:38.38, Nankov in 20th in 1:39.30 and Finn Henry ’26 came in 23rd in the C final. The Bulldogs performed well in the 400-yard individual medley. Jed Jones ’25 came in 16th in 3:50.93, Elliot Lee ’28 in 24th with 3:53.71 and Zachariadis in 30th in 4:02.07.
Other impressive scores came from Egeland’s ninth-place finish in the 100-yard breaststroke in 52.54, Wang in 11th with a score of 52.75 and Deng at his heels in 52.97, followed by Hazlett in 15th in 53.24, Minassian in 18th in 54.02 and Alex Brehm ’25 in 29th with a time of 54.82. In the 100-yard backstroke, first-year Manoli Mountantonakis ’28 came in 25th, touching the wall in 48.17; Kacapor’s time of 48.48 placed him 29th. The team of Millard, Jones, Wang and Egeland finished sixth in the 800-yard freestyle relay in 6:26.71.
The Elis ended a long and successful day of swimming, maintaining their fourth-place spot.
Day Three: Saturday, Nov. 23
The Bulldogs broke two more records on the final day of competition: Egeland in the 200-yard breaststroke with a time of 1:54.82 and Millard in the 1650-yard freestyle in 14:33.47.
Millard’s record-breaking time and a first-place finish in the 1650-yard freestyle was an NCAA “A” cut mark. Hambardzumyan placed seventh in 15:08.36, Cano in 18th in 15:30.26, Zachariadis in 22nd in 15:35.52 and Henry in 24th in 15:48.62.
Many Elis posted impressive times in the 200-yard backstroke. Mountantonakis finished 14th in 1:44.56, Lee in 17th with a score of 1:45.93, Kacapor in twenty-fourth in 1:47.24, Jones in 26th in 1:48.40 and Lee rounding out the team in 29th in 1:50.97.
In the 100-yard freestyle, Nankov’s time of 43.29 put him in eighth. Finch’s time of 43.33, only 0.04 seconds behind Nankov, helped him claim ninth, followed by Minassian in 15th with his time of 43.50, Brown in 25th in 44.44 and Kacapor in 29th, clocking in at 44.84.
The 200-yard breaststroke put many Elis on the scoreboard. Egeland finished eighth in 1:55.09, Deng in 15th with a time of 1:57.36, Wang in 22nd in 1:57.74 and Brehm in 23rd in 1:59.04. In the 200-yard butterfly, Lee placed 17th in 1:48.40 and Hazlett in 21st in 1:46.66. Millard, Finch, Minassian and Nankov’s time of 2.51.65 in the 400-yard freestyle relay earned them fifth place.
With a final team score of 1292.5, the Bulldogs ended the Invitational in fourth place.
Reflecting on the team’s wins over the three days, Zachariadis was proud of the team’s performance and looks forward to keeping up the momentum throughout the season.
“This team can achieve great things and it is a pleasure to be part of it! There were some great swims and we are all excited for what is next!” Zachariadis wrote to the News.
Millard echoed Zachariadis’ sentiment, expressing that he, too, anticipates the team’s upcoming meets as they continue to build on past successes.
“I’m super motivated after seeing how the team raced,” Millard wrote to the News. “We have a lot of exciting things developing and I can’t wait to see what will happen come our championship meet.”
The Elis will host Southern Connecticut on Wednesday, Dec. 4, and Thursday, Dec. 5, at Payne Whitney Gymnasium’s Kiphuth Exhibition Pool and head to Greensboro, North Carolina, for the U.S. Open from Wednesday, Dec. 4, through Saturday, Dec. 7.
Ohio
Color in the dark: Ohio artists’ ties to Cuba’s American-made blackout
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Ohio artist David Griesmyer said the colorful, resilient Cuba he’s frequented looked different his most recent trip as the island nation continues under a U.S.-induced blackout.
“To see the whole nation just plunge into darkness, it was odd,” Griesmyer said. “But then to see all the grandmas holding up battery powered lights in the dark and seeing children kicking a makeshift ball down the streets through the city, everybody was outside talking … It didn’t stop them. They’re there. There’s a fire inside of that. But it was dark. It was dark.”
The darkness was brought on by an American fuel blockade that has created a nationwide blackout and brought the tourism industry to a screeching halt. President Donald Trump has commented about a possible takeover of Cuba, where residents are living without power, heat or clean water.
The issue is front of mind for 60 Ohio artists, business and government leaders who traveled to the Havana Bienal last year, a prestigious international art festival. Ohio artists with close ties to the Cuban art scene want Ohioans to think about Cuba’s people, not its politics, as the blackout goes on.
“They are so resilient,” Michael Reese, Columbus art consultant, said. “And I just believe tomorrow’s going to be better because if they don’t go down the rabbit hole, they’ll never get out. So they just push on.”
The U.S. has maintained an economic embargo on Cuba since the 1960s, when Cuba became the center of a Cold War confrontation between two superpowers. In 1962, the Soviet Union attempted to deploy nuclear weapons to Cuba, which sits 90 miles away from the southern tip of the U.S. The attempt led to the 16-day Cuban Missile Crisis, considered the closest the Cold War came to using nuclear arms.
Cuba has been under U.S. embargo since, but the situation turned dire in January when the U.S. cut off access to Venezuela, Cuba’s main oil supplier. The U.S. has also blocked fuel and product deliveries from trading partners like Mexico.
In capital city Havana, home to 2 million people, residents are living without ways to keep food cold or operate water treatment plants. Residents can only cook using charcoal grills and have no internet access. Ohio documentarian Tariq Tarey is making a film about the Cuban people and said outside Havana, resources are scarcer.
“It is literally dark ages. Water scarce, internet is gone for weeks on end. Horse and buggy is the only thing that’s moving,” Tarey said. “It is dire. It’s absolutely dire.”
It had already been difficult to get items before the blackout. The coalition who attended the Bienal each brought a second suitcase stuffed with necessities to give away. Tarey recalled visiting a Cuban clinic and noting medical equipment that read “Made in East Germany,” a nation that has not existed for 36 years.
Columbus City Councilmember Lourdes Barrosa de Padilla was among those who traveled to the Bienal last year, accompanied by her mother and daughters. Barrosa de Padilla’s parents fled Fidel Castro’s regime in Cuba, and she showed her daughters the small village her parents grew up in. Now, family tells her conditions are difficult.
“The challenge is that there’s not petroleum, there’s not cash. You cannot run a generator either,” Barrosa de Padilla said, adding a cousin had just three hours of power for a week due to the blockade.
Griesmyer was in Havana in mid-March and said the streets were empty of the thousands of tourists he’d grown used to seeing. While there, he watched the city go dark. He also witnessed an afternoon where Elon Musk used StarLink technology to temporarily give everyone in Cuba free Internet.
“This was history,” Griesmyer said. “And one of the people said to me, ‘Yes, we want electricity, but we want the freedom to be able to communicate and to to talk to people and know what’s going on.’ Because that’s scarier than not having electricity, just to not know.”
Starlink is not officially permitted to be used in Cuba, and Cuban officials allege Musk is breaking U.S. trade restrictions by providing free internet. Cuban officials are also worried about possible aggression from the U.S. as Trump threatens military intervention.
“I do believe I’ll be … having the honor of taking Cuba,” Trump said in mid-March. “Whether I free it, take it – think I could do anything I want with it. You want to know the truth. They’re a very weakened nation right now.”
Barrosa de Padilla said Trump’s threats to take over Cuba are complicated. She said the people of Cuba know their current government isn’t working, but feels American intervention in other countries’ governments is not putting America First.
While visiting Cuba, Barrosa de Padilla’s mother died from a heart attack. Barrosa de Padilla said her mother took her final breath in the homeland she loved, surrounded by the poverty she fled.
“It was a beautiful end to my mother’s story because she died in her hometown with her sister, her last living sibling,” Barrosa de Padilla said. “And the place where she first opened her eyes, she closed.”
Reese and Griesmyer said despite the darkness, lack of resources and uncertainty, the people of Cuba believe things will get better. Griesmyer said neighbors share the food he brings to the island so everyone can eat. He said people are dancing through the darkness.
There is much more to the story of Ohio, art, life and Cuba. See the full story on Sunday Briefing at 10 a.m.
Ohio
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Ohio
Math plan would help a generation of Ohio students | Opinion
Aaron Churchill is the Ohio research director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education policy think tank based in Columbus.
In November, the Ohio Senate unanimously passed math reforms that would help a generation of struggling students. House lawmakers should send that excellent package known as Senate Bill 19 to the governor’s desk post haste.
Math difficulties start early for many Ohio students. Last year, 45,000 third graders, or 36% statewide, fell short of proficiency on the state math exam. These youngsters had difficulty solving basic arithmetic and measurement problems. Without such skills, big trouble lies ahead for them.
Meanwhile, even larger percentages of high schoolers fare poorly in this subject. On last year’s algebra I state exam, 53,000 students – 41% of test takers – did not achieve proficiency, while a staggering 72,000 students (57%) fell short in geometry.
These failure rates are unacceptable. Students should not be left to struggle with the routine math needed to manage their personal finances, bake a cake or do a home repair. Nor should they lack the critical thinking, data interpretation and problem solving skills that are demanded by today’s employers and essential to career success.
Ohio must help more students gain fluency in math. Senate Bill 19 does this in the following ways.
First, it supports students with math deficiencies. The bill would require schools to provide math interventions to students scoring at the lowest achievement level (known as “limited”) on state tests. Importantly, schools must engage a child’s parents to create an individual improvement plan that outlines the interventions and how progress will be monitored.
Second, the bill promotes strong math curricula. The Ohio Department of Education and Workforce would be tasked with reviewing math materials and establishing a high-quality list. With dozens of programs and textbooks on the market – some far better than others – this vetting process would aid school districts in finding the best curriculum for their students.
Third, it asks colleges of education to better prepare elementary teachers. Research from the National Council on Teacher Quality shows that teacher training programs often lack serious math content, especially in the elementary grades, leaving teachers ill-prepared for effective instruction. To help address the problem, the bill mandates that prospective educators pass the math section of the state licensure test to teach the subject, something that is not presently required.
Fourth, it gives high-achieving math students a boost. Traditional course placement practices rely on teacher and parent referrals, which tend to overlook economically disadvantaged students who excel in math. Yet, as a recent Fordham Institute study found, access to advanced coursework is critical to high-achieving, low-income students’ college prospects. Through automatic enrollment provisions, Senate Bill 19 would ensure that all high achievers are placed in challenging math courses, including algebra I in eighth grade.
Some may view Senate Bill 19 as burdensome on schools. But the need for significant improvement in math is urgent and the reforms are commonsense. Students struggling in math ought to get help. Schools should use the best-available textbooks and materials. Teachers should know math before they teach it. Schools must push high achievers to reach their full potential.
Math and reading are the academic pillars that support students’ long-term success as well as the state’s economic growth. Thanks to the leadership of Gov. Mike DeWine, Ohio’s Science of Reading initiative is off to a strong start and promises stronger literacy statewide. It’s now time for policymakers to roll up their sleeves and help students get better at math. Their futures – and the state’s – are at stake.
Aaron Churchill is the Ohio research director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education policy think tank based in Columbus.
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