GARCIA ZARATE TRIAL

Matt and I have an ongoing conversation, mostly by text, on sundry topics. I was both concerned and happy for him that he and Jeff Adachi were assigned, or chose, this very difficult case. I remember being pleased that Zoe Lofgren spoke indirectly on this topic on CSPAN and to Congress: she supports Gun Control more than the Immigration Wall. Matt and Jeff helped Garcia Zarate avoid the most serious and undue punishment yet he is being tried again at the Federal level; seems like political football to me. And not that I am unsympathetic to the family and friends of the woman who was killed, Kate Steinle.
It says here that Tony Serra is now representing Garcia Zarate. Tony Serra is also the brother of Richard Serra (this is an arts blog)

fmsbw's avatarArt & Politics: The Matt Gonzalez Reader

first published in Medium, July 2, 2108

1_YA2b8vpH-rQD1-vBRm4f9gPhotograph of Jose Ines Garcia Zarate on San Francisco’s Pier 14 taken by Jay Martin on May 23, 2015.

Jose Ines Garcia Zarate Did Not Receive a Fair Trial: 10 Examples

By Matt Gonzalez

“When the court changes it’s ruling on a whim, it disrupts the trial that the parties can expect to have. Last minute changes in rulings without any substantive reason only serves to undermine the confidence attorneys have in the judge’s role in the proceedings.” — Defense counsel Matt Gonzalez via email to Judge Samuel Feng, October 27, 2017.

Introduction

When Jose Ines Garcia Zarate was acquitted by a California jury of murder charges brought against him for the death of Kate Steinle, less attention was paid to Garcia Zarate’s conviction on the lesser charge of gun possession. But Garcia Zarate was innocent of that charge as well. It may seem like a small…

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Fantasy football

dartmouthfootball38.pngMy fantasy football team this year was renamed The Duffy Daughertys after the former Michigan State coach, although I pronounced it with the word “dog” and abbreviated for clarity to The DuffyDogs. The real Duffy won two national championships in the middle 1960s and featured the famous player Bubba Smith, maybe the original “Bubba”.

Before that my team was As The Backs Go Tearing By which references an old Dartmouth football cheer or song. It was written by their coach, circa 1910. Who has a songwriter- coach these days?

Before that my team was Beneath the Underdog, referencing Charles Mingus, and his self-titled pseudo-autobiography and memoir.

Before that it was The Chip Hoopers in honor of the sport of basketball, the sport of tennis, a former music industry legend who doubled as a nature photographer, and a former Gunn and pro tennis star (whose nephews played Stanford football –two of them did).

In high school I was the Blue Oyster Colts, after a rock band.

I am doing laundry and trying to learn about rights of the accused. And momentary possession.

Isn’t everything a momentary possession?

Isn’t everything memoir?

dartmouthfootball30s

Isn’t every moment teachable?

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Go, Sandy! Go, Sandy! (Maureen Dowd on the AOC)

This makes me want to send her money 371b74fc-cc24-4014-9960-8695b95f7bc9more to come +TK

3E8C3CFF-3674-4A7B-A226-4D500FC571F9.jpeg77F77A92-F2D5-4070-85B1-B412FFF5130B.jpegEdit to add: but can she do the hora?

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Happy new year or ‘Oy vey’ yo musician and activist Si Kahn

dc740a07-12a2-435e-8f0d-de0d6c87bdd1I had repressed the memory but suddenly recall his wonderful workshop how old a Dartmouth spring of my junior year

964666EC-EA6C-4B5C-82C9-D9D383DD4D1C.jpegTwo thousand seventeen  lifetime achievement award from the folk alliance   .

Maybe EarthWise productions can bring him out here.

i May be confusing Si Kahn with Saul Alinsky.

he was not too longly up in North Bay for a show about Sarah o gun gunning

edit to add: this just in: there is a Si Kahn play opening this month in Cornelius, North Carolina, “Mother Jones in Heaven“:

mojo poster

I can’t picture making it out to Carolina for this show –although I did take the train from Palo Alto to Raleigh to see Mary Michele Little’s fashion show, but I was so much younger then, I’m older than that now. I did also once see and photograph Mother Jones’ tombstone memorial at the Union Memorial Cemetery in Mount Olive, Illinois – -right on the Route 66 — it’s about 250 miles from Chicago, and equidistant from St. Louis or Springfield.

I cannot locate the digital correspondence of that photo of Mother Jones’ resting place — perhaps a portal to Mother Jones in heaven, but I did find this photo from thereabouts – of a blue sky over the midwestern plane near Atlanta, Illinois (sic):

screen shot 2019-01-06 at 9.59.06 am

I also have some silos. pictures of other moter vehichles, the Atlanta library, a main street, et cetera.

 

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Shedroff Farms Revisited

FFC24957-4EC3-4803-A188-DDDE8CB27871.jpeg

First off, I want to note here that I just learned, researching this post, that Joshua Redman has lost his mother, as of November, 2016. I saw him play in June at Stanford, about a month before I lost my own mom, Barbara Weiss. His mother was Renee Shedroff, of Berkeley, a librarian and dancer, and the sister of Alan Shedroff, a friend of my parents, also now deceased. Alan’s sons are Daniel and Nathan Shedroff, former neighbors, shulmates in San Jose and Los Altos Hills, and classmates of mine in Palo Alto, ages 10 thru 18. I recall seeing Daniel, his mom and his son, at a reunion in 2007 and Nathan recently at our 35th/36th. We are all 53/54/55 now.

I’m the only person who calls jazz sax wizard Josh Redman Joshua Shedroff. I’ve never met the man and seen him play maybe 3 to 5 times. The first time, I’m certain, was at Knitting Factory New York, probably with John Medeski, which I found thrilling. Josh was known as Shedroff I think thru his days at Harvard — you used to be able to find on the internet a story about him under that name from the Crimson. He famously turned down Yale Law to play music fulltime, after winning the Monk competition.

I bought a ticket online this morning — maybe the very last ticket in the house — to see Josh Redman lead a band that is a tribute to Wayne Shorter, the culmination of three days of such. (It was supposed to be a residency for Shorter but at 80, that proved to be a tenuous booking — we also saw him on tv recently being feted at the Kennedy Center; filmed in October of last year).

So even though I respect Redman — I used to have a book of 1,001 sax players, and a wee bit of tea on them — I managed a man who won 2nd place in the Monk two cycles later — what sold me on the show is the sidemen.

This started out — in my head — as an Impulse to post some esoteric impressions of the band Sunday (which I will be sussing out after a weekend of four or so NFL playoff games on the tube).

But it also digressed into a photo essay not at all about jazz — in the way that Plastic Alto is hardly strictly about Ornette. I was looking for the photos of Josh from June and clicked on ten or more other images from that period. I found a picture of my mom making eye contact with me. A short, short video –a vine — about a month before she passed and about seven years after her dementia and Alzheimers presented. I may be the last time I felt she looked me in the eye with recognition.

And this is an odd place to say this but: thank you Beth Custer, the reeds player, for taking the train from SF to Palo Alto — I almost said taking A train — on my mom’s 85 birthday to play for her then again two months before she passed, only to be told my mom’s caregivers that the music would disturb her nap.

Heck, I’ll do the photo stream first then circle back to bits about the band I’m obviously obviating towards or forwards (coined term: rhymes with “chords”).

In reverse chron order:

  1. Josh Redman, sax; and Aaron Goldberg, piano, June, 2018 at Stanford’s Bing.
  2. Josh Redman band at Bing — by the way, he has a separate project called James Farm whose name is the source of this headline (“Shedroff Farms Revisited”). He also Still Dreaming with Ron Miles, Scott Colley & Brian Blade.
  3. Hadar Shemtov and Mark Weiss at Bing concert — or I like to call this “Jews With Halos” ie we are backlit.
  4. BHW
  5. This is my dog, Duffy and a human posed with Duffy just for size comparisons. (It’s actually a close friend but he is camera and publicity shy — both of the previous photos might be subject to editing –if you see them now you may not see them later). That’s the nature of this medium, init?
  6. There’s no photo of this — and if there was it would not be chronological the way the others are — but thank you musician and music agent Eli Windau of Cincinnatti and New York area for teaching me the word “autocowrecked”. I can probably post a screen capture of the exchange just for yucks.
  7. Guillermo Gomez Abascal, of Mexico City and Oaxaca Oaxaca, a dear friend and a dean at Iberra-America University, reacting to Mexico’s early round prowess in the 2018 World Cup, which I watched diligently, and partook in some festives as well. That’s a selfie he took in his apartment and digged me (coined term combining “digital” and “dig” as in “appreciate”, as an active verb — don’t worry, editorial help is coming!)
  8. 16289a60-4f39-4dc0-8a95-9ecf00df7be1Four Mexican men forming a human pyramid, on my tv, as my right foot and part of my knee or calf look on. (I can research and add the name of the goal scorer: 25th minute Mexico v. Korea).
  9. 50590a02-57c2-4a54-a009-e3e1f0afd011

    take a memo

  10. a90bead1-8272-48b7-a251-ee3d778e9426my wife and mother in law
  11. my wife TMW Terry Acebo Davis and dog — I like that she is reading arts section of New York Times. I like the weird refractions. She looks like Doc Oc — who is a villain in a movie about comics I saw just yesterday.
  12. My dog Duffy (not necessarily named for the legendary and champion coach of Michigan State Spartans football, circa 1966) testing tensile strength of his leash or checking me for ALS, or we are at tug-of-war. Bubba Smith was unbeatable at this. Or so I hear.
  13. Three corporate hench men from the worlds one or two software social media companies, explaining their greed, to a local crowd at Cafe Zoe in Menlo Park. I heckled them, calling them out on their disingenuity. One of them, I spoke to later, and liked, despite his role in destroying everything we have built (potentially; yes, I’m a jeremiad). The other guy, the main speaker guy, was a former Clinton or Obama low level administrator. I.e. neo-liberal. He literally said “pity us or sympathize, because Silicon Valley is losing its lustre and I yelled out that that sounds funny coming from a guy repping a company with $400 B valuation, but I then looked it up and was only half right: the current valuation of his company is more like (TK). I have a 30 second clip I can transcribe and publish above.
  14. 4c1f5248-8744-4311-adcc-fe5bfc87222fThis is me posing as a second baseman, on Upper Market street, before a Giants game this summer, photo by NP.  I am unsure the distinction between memoir and solispsism, but, again, help is on the way!
  15. This is its own thing but: upside down dog by Scholder, at a gallery in Santa Fe.
  16. my dog sleeping on his back — Terry thought the dog in the monotype looked dead;
  17. This is a screen capture of an email from a while ago but I thought to include it because the list of musical personnel resembles the list at bottom of this post, of the jazz people I will see Sunday, lwatcdr. I’ll have to — on my own time — find this email by searching ‘”Uptown” and “Christine” in my yahoo file. To respond.
  18. another all type thingy: I like that thing about boots on the neck, and getting them off us.
  19. My hand and a sticker from Italy and Walgreens with Belgian football star Romelu Lukaku.
  20. street scene, street fair, University Avenue Palo Alto, Father’s Day, 2018 that is June 17 or so, a group of high schoolers performing under the name Garage Mahal, which is also the name of a jazz group, some of whose members likely play or have played with members of Josh Redman fellowship. (I’ve published below similar shots or crops emphasizing the vocalist. Actually it just occurs to me, seven months later that the singer and the bassist are both of Indian descent, which makes their name more fitting.
  21. f42fed02-4329-406d-930f-3c9e0f7e266dSinger-songwriter Gaby Castro who I’ve met three times now including a benefit at a wine bar for Palo Alto’s Project Safety Net;
  22. ef4d484f-7bbe-4d53-b1b2-6bc4fd16a04eOk, I love this pic — again, at the street music event we sometimes, 10 years running, call Fete De La Music, Make Music Palo Alto or Palo Alto World Music Day: Palo Alto Jazz Quintet featuring David Brigham, trumpet; Dan Adams, drums; David Deneau, sax; Terrigal Burn, piano –cropped; and the bassist. I am meaning to say Dan Adams is one of my alltime favorite musicians — going back about 40 years — and in my IMHO could sit in with Joshua Redman or maybe already has.
  23. 889ad45a-ed4e-486d-8a58-9ca03b61c157

    Essence and Bernie: quite a story

    This just in: literally, from hours ago and not last June: my friend and near-client Essence Goldman pka Essence sent along an image culled from the SF Chron from their “YEAR IN PICTURES” that shows a firefighter in front of a giant wall of flame, and then she giving a hug to her friend, bandmate and client Bernie Dalton. God speed to Essence and Bernie.

  24. Joey Chang, pka Cello Joe at same event, June, 2018, and a fan demoing the bike-powered electricity generator created and managed by Paul Freedman, son of physics heavy-weight (!) Dan Freedman of MIT and SLAC — who coinkydinky I watched some of the World Cup with — he was a neighbor of my parents, in their building). Also, there is a cameo in bottom right by Karla Kane, the musician, mom and writer. (I also have photos of her young daughter, banging a tip jar bucket to the beat).
  25. bfbe4c60-c080-4238-a8b4-2ae2f9f7553fThis is a band I saw and liked, several times, around town. I am forgetting their name. John Brown’s Body? Maggie’s Farm? Parchman Part-timers? Henry and the Traumanauts? Roger and the Ramen Nagis? Waylon and the Way-Outs? Waylon and the Weightless? (There’s a photo of sequence or burst I love and have not fully posted, full-mast, of me dropping a bag of books while standing in front of a Magritte painting very similar to an image that the physicist Dan Freedman used on the cover of his book about super-gravity. Get it? I was demonstrating gravity in Muybridge/Iphone as an inside joke to my friend the genius gravity guy).
  26. 57d8df18-2dd3-4b78-8af2-b75be61d612fThis is not like most of these a group of fellow humans, or musical, but it is a cool image created by Greg Willensky a friend who works at Adobe and has a PhD, one day while he and I and another guy were walking to Fort Mason from the Marina.
  27. Mary Halvorsen in a tri-led group at SF Jazz; Thomas and Michael?
  28. 007c931f-e8cf-49ef-aaf8-2a69696cb6d1a nice couple I met at a Peruvian bar on Market — not far from SF Jazz — who were describing their musical project to me, but I lost their number. Holler! (I’m always trolling or trawling in six spider-verses for the next big thing. The other day in the time it took my rideshare driver to go from De Young to USF we traded numbers and he later sent me not music files but sexy photos. I wrote back: “more MP3s, less pecs.” (I’ll spare you, dear reader, that one, although it is relatively impressive; he also had nice hair).
  29. As David Shields says, when I write about David Shields I write about myself. I am posting this one –taken by the musicians from 27 — to show my FCB jacket when it was less faded and me speaking of pecs or lack thereof in terms of definition or too much in terms of flab I am at my marriage weight of 180 or so and not normal now of 205. I guess it was fun adding back the extra 25 pounds. Half of that was Ramen Nagi, I’m certain. (Of Ramon and the Noodlers fame).
  30. This is a german visual artits or germanvisualartist at Joey Piziales Romer Young Gallery on 22nd near the train. Yesterday I was photographing the mural tryptich in Palo Alto featuring Joey and David Huffman and Chris Johanson.
  31. Maybe that goes here too: I meant to addend this to the previous post but here is a nice guy who is FSO and formerly US Army, in Sinai (although he said first “Egypt”) from Sacramento: thank you for your service — I was shooting the mural then asked his permission to be in the shot; we actually re-shot it. But I did not say I would describe him.
  32. This is Joey’s gallery. Joey the artist not Joey the musician. It would be cool if Cello Joe played at Romer Young.
  33. Similarly, this is Alice Li I think at Garden Fresh. I saw her yesterday at their Mountain View spot. And just for yucks I am going to microwave my leftover mock beef and real brocolli and brown rice and then eat same, then pick this up around 10:30. I have five more photos then the five musicians whose names are Joshua Redman, tenor saxophone (cousin of my classmates Nathan and Daniel Shedroff); Ambrose Akinmusire, trumpet (from Berkeley and Oakland; Peter Apfelbaum said one of two best along with Dayna Stephens young musicians he knew, when they were all at Stanford Jazz camp; and won the Monk; on Blue Note; Igbo, pretty sure and not Yorba; had his cell for a whiles; since 2008 I think, et cetera): Danilo Perez, piano (played on the Wayne Shorter tribute at Kennedy Center; is a cultural ambassador of his country to ours; owns a nightclub at the Ace Hotel in Panama City; gave the best clinic I have ever seen, at a Redwood City Charter Middle School, for Music For Minors, in 2000); John Patitucci, bass (don’t know, but I think I knew his former or current manager, Robin Tomchin, who also manages or managed Danilo — who called her “Mami” — and also works with Palo Altan whose parents were neighbors to Duffy’s former Mommy, Jana Herzen of Motema Records — which is the worlds record weirdest John Patitucci intro); Brian Blade, drums (whose fellowship played SFJazz big room — this one — Minor? — Miner? — simultaneouslike to my watching and LOVING Jeff Parker New Breed, Parker who has an avail I think in January — too soon — with Scott Amendola, wbose wife and kids, like Josh Redman and me, are Jewish — and that is a worse intro for Blades than I just did for JP: hey, Jazz Gods and other readers of Plastic Alto: what about a Brian Blades Jeff Parker Duo BBJP? I’m jest saying.
  34. Good luck to the Eagles against the Bears, for the hospital guy who worked Terry’s shift yesterday so she’d do his Sunday. (Reminds me of the time I bought a Zuni fetish for Dr. John at Yoshis). Edit to add: I’m looking for a word that maybe starts with”o” and means salivate or anticipate then will redact and obviate my soot  above.
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Spider-Man Miles Morales by Stan Lee and Sara Pichelli w Green guitar mouth playing traumanaut (2006) by David Huffman

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From public art mural triptych “untitled” Stanley Bishop corporation 2006

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Action Bat Mitzvah photographer

This gallery contains 9 photos.

      1. Of these nine photos found on the Internet, from the same photographer, purportedly of bat mitzvahs, numbers three and seven seem traditional to me: one is a young woman at the Torah; the other is a … Continue reading

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Female athletes posed, 1948 and 2018

The first image is from an AP Wire Photo of Oakland High School athlete Zoe Ann Olsen, who won the AAU Diving Championships and went on to medal twice for the U.S. in Olympic competition. The photo is from Wikipedia commons:

ZOEANNOLSEN1948APWIREPHOTO

 

The second image is a posed publicity shot from a series commissioned by Stanford athletics by local photographer Jeff Bartee of Saratoga, featuring junior Kyla Bryant of Lake Oconee, Georgia. Bartee’s website has a previous series using the dust special effect. I met Bryant briefly Monday when she dropped by The Old Pro bar trying to place a poster.

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By Jeff Bartee fair use

Olsen incidentally later married Cal football star Jacke Jensen who is one of only two people to play in both the Rose Bowl and World Series, along with Stanford Chuck Essegian; I found my way to Olsen-Jensen today because of an article in the Chron about the 1919 Black Sox scandal; one of the eight banned players was from Oakland High, Chuck Gandil, who some consider the mastermind of the event.

edit to add: speaking of which, I edited out the dust stuff, from Bryant. Or, I can get the whole shot on my MacBook, but it has a cardinal red bar obscuring the balance beam. Not sure why only the smartphone version lets you separate the picture from the border. On Olsen Jensen, the Des Moines newspaper website has another photo plus this long article about her induction into both the state athletic hall of fame and another honor:

Zoe Ann Olsen was born in Council Bluffs in 1931, reared in LaPorte City and learned to swim at age 2 1/2. Why not? her father, Art, managed the municipal pool in Cedar Falls and her mother, Norma, taught swimming.

Mrs. Olsen also taught dancing and the couple was pleased that Zoe Ann became a toe-tapping terror, whose first medal, when not quite 4, came for dancing. Additionally, she was a blonde doll who could pout or cry on command.

“I entered her in a dance contest and she won a trip to Hollywood at 6,” recalls Norma. “The two of us went to California for the summer and she appeared in two plays in the Edda Edson Theater Workshop.”

Several other things happened. Zoe Ann tappy-toed around, including a guest appearance with the Hollywood Starlets, won third place in a junior diving meet and remained unconcerned when some projected her as a “new Shirley Temple.”

“I knew who Shirley Temple was, but never imagined I was going to be another,” Zoe Ann scoffed the other day by telephone from Crystal Bay, Nev., where she is now Mrs. Don Bramham.

Indeed, while the world did not gain a new first mate for the Good Ship Lollipop, it soon was to hail Zoe Ann Olsen as a springboard diver supreme, winner of 14 national titles, plus a silver medal in the 1948 Olympics and a bronze in 1952.

There’s more. The lovely 5-foot 4-inch, 119-pounder, by then a Californian, was three times nominated for the James E. Sullivan award as the nation’s outstanding amateur athlete, woman or man.

Is it any wonder that today she becomes the 86th member of The Des Moines Sunday Register’s Iowa Sports Hall of Fame.

IT’S A FABULOUS tale if you only go back as far as when the “unofficial queen of the 1948 Olympics” came home from London to Oakland to marry Jackie Jensen, the Golden Boy who was an all-american running back for California but opted to play outfield for the New York Yankees.

Reporters lurked behind convenient trees and photographers kept the glamour couple visible, flashing such news that her wedding gown and silver medal had been stolen from the car when she drove into New York City to join Jackie.

Fully intending for it to be permanent, Zoe Ann retired from competitive diving about year later and gave birth to the first of their three children, a son named Jan.

Jensen had two years as Yankee property before being traded to the Washington Senators. After nothing more strenuous than occasional exhibitions for several years, Zoe Ann started eyeing the ’52 Games.

“It just started eating on me,” she confesses. “I looked around and nobody was really that good. So we talked it over and I decided to make an effort.”

Would you believe that she made the U.S. team after only two weeks of serious work? Norma went back to baby-sitting, Art came east to do the coaching as he had almost always done, and the bronze medal followed.

IT WAS PREVIOUSLY stated that the story was fabulous from 1948 on. Before that, it was nigh on the unbelievable. It has not been mentioned, for instance, that LaPorte City did not have a pool, let alone a diving board.

“Zoe Ann was a good dancer but really outstanding in acrobatics,” says Norma. “The closest proper diving board was in Waterloo and those were the days of gas rationing. So we got a trampoline for the back yard.”

Little Miss Olsen went out and tossed, twisted and turned under the expert guidance of her father — an 11-letter winner at Northern Iowa and a coach and principal at the local high school.

“I remember. I remember,” says Zoe Ann. “I enjoyed the tramp when it wasn’t cold but I had to be pushed in the winter. It was like bouncing on rubber cement and the wind penetrated my little ol’ snow suit.”

On the rare trips to the YWCA pool in Waterloo, she had to stand in line for turns on the board. Yet, at 11, Zoe Ann won the state indoor and outdoor titles for women.

She claimed her first national title at 12, the 1943 Junior Amateur Athletic Union crown, and the Athens Athletic Club of Oakland invited the yound Iowan phenom to compete under its banner.

“I had thought of moving to California before that,” recalls Art, now retired in Oakland. “I was going into the service so we moved west to give Zoe Ann a chance to develop in good circumstances.”

THE 14 TITLES — one- and three- meter boards, indoors and out — were spread from 1943 through 1949, the last coming a month before her marriage to Jensen.

There was much more than diving and dancing (she also was into ballet) for Olsen. She played the piano, violin, clarinet, sang, was a high school majorette and honor student who also gave autographs.

“I don’t think I thought much about my athletic future. Diving was there. It was what I was doing,” recalls Olsen, who was deprived of one shot at Olympic Gold in ’44 because there were no Games from ’36 until ’48.

Vicki Manoles Draves, the wife of former Iowan Lyle Draves, Zoe Ann’s coach during the two years her father was in the service, won the three-meter title in London. Olsen was second.

“I was the youngest on the team. On the back dive, the girl in front of me hit the board and they stopped competition for 30 minutes,” says Olsen. “I guess it got to me because I hit my heels on the next dive.”

Helsinki in 1952 was weird. In what may be an eternal Olympic record, she took one dive three times. On the first try, judges ruled that “a technical fault in the fulcrum of the springboard” had aborted her effort.

“In my state of nerves, I did not realize there was a rule I had to wait for the whistle. I just went up, did the dive again and it didn’t count because all the judges weren’t watching,” she says with a sigh.

Once more, after the whistle, was good enough to get her into the finals by two-tenths of a point. She was so sure later she hadn’t placed that she was taking a shower when the news of the bronze arrived.

“That was it. I was so tired of the pressures that I came home and turned professional, so I wouldn’t be tempted again,” she says.

JENSEN WENT on to play for the Red Sox and was the American League’s Most Valuable Player in 1958. Zoe Ann liked the life of a baseball wife, particularly in Boston. The marriage broke up in 1963, they were remarried 14 months later, then were divorced again in 1970.

“He was broke. No money for the children, no alimony, so I went to work as a blackjack dealer at Cal-Neva Lodge,” she says. “I really enjoyed it, but I can’t deal now because of my accident.”

Zoe Ann, who has been wed to Bramhan for five years, was taking down snow tires from overhead storage last fall when one tire went on a rampage, cracking her ribs, breaking a cheek bone and damaging nerves in a hand.

“I got my front tooth for Christmas,” quips the lady who is now a three-time grandmother. She still weighs about 110, hasn’t been on a diving board for 13 years but scuba dives and water skis.

She has a room full of trophies (about 150) and mementoes, not the least being proof that she and Norma, a pioneer in synchronized swimming coaching and promotion, are mother-daughter inductees in the Helms Foundation Hall of Fame.

And looking back, what was the best part of it all?

“There are still a lot of people who remember,” she finally said, after a thoughtful pause. “The compliments. The compliments are the nicest part.”

(Note: Mrs. Olsen Jensen, who they describe as a 3-time grandmother, was born the same year as my mother, who died last year, or nearly six months ago. A lot of my recent posts are tributes to my mom or dad; by Maury White for The Register).

Screen Shot 2019-01-02 at 2.23.42 AM

edit to add: oh, dear; it appears that Mrs. Bramham (Olsen Jensen) had deceased in 2017; she was actually born five weeks before my mom, Barbara Jane Hayms; here is the obituary:

Zoe Ann Bramham left us on September 23, 2017 to be with her mother Norma Olsen (Tu-tu) and ALL her cats. She was born in Council Bluff, Iowa on February 11, 1931. She was raised by her parents, Art and Norma Olsen in LaPorte City, Iowa until the age of 12 when they moved to Oakland, California.

She was an accomplished diver on the one and three meter springboard. She won her first national diving championship at the age of 14. She went to the Olympics in London in 1948 where she won a silver medal. She took a break from diving and married Jack Jensen and gave birth to the first of three children, Jan (Lepke) in 1950. She started training for the 1952 Helsinki Olympics a week before the tryouts and made the team, where she won a bronze medal. She retired from diving and second child Jon came along in 1953 and her third, Jay in 1959. They settled in Crystal Bay, Nevada.

She raised her children while supporting her husband Jack who played professional baseball. They eventually divorced in 1970 and she stayed active locally in Crystal Bay, Nevada. She drove the first school bus for the Incline/Crystal Bay area. She gave swim lessons and was the lifeguard for the community pool in Incline. She worked the 1960 Winter Olympics as a gate keeper for the slalom and giant slalom events. Zoe became a local blackjack dealer at the Cal/Neva casino. There is where she would meet her future husband Don Bramham.

Don and Zoe were married in 1973 and stayed in Crystal Bay until 1988, then they moved to Stuart, Florida for Don’s job in government. Zoe being very independent enjoyed this new lifestyle. During this time she was an avid bowler. She became so good she made it to the national finals in St. Louis, Missouri. She would also play card games one day a week with Don’s brother Bill. They lived in Saudi Arabia for several years while Don worked for the government. They spent the next several years traveling often all over the world and on cruises with Zoe’s mother Norma in tow. After settling back in the states she enjoyed her passion, her cats. Always one or two, but never without a furry critter in the house. She could be seen walking the grounds of her house with the cats on a leash or by her side. They were inseparable.

She was loved by all.

She is survived by her husband of 45 years, Don. She was preceded in death by her son Jon and her grandson Jason Knapp. She is also survived by her children Jan Jensen-Lepke and Jay (Barbette) Jensen; her grandchildren Jaena Knapp, Scott Knapp, Zachary Burd, Nicholas (Brittney) Burd, Jacob Burd, Tucker Jensen, Jackie Jensen; her great-grandchildren Tayler, Kiley, Dawn, Jason, Adam, Aydden, Abel, and Graysen; her great-great-granddaughter Laila.

 

She is also survived by Don’s children Becky Gillespie (granddaughter Lauren, great-granddaughter Avery), Lynn Bramham and Mark Bramham. Please send any donations to your local hospice.

So, Mrs. Jensen Olsen Bramham of Oakland High and Iowa lived to meet 19 of her descendents, over four generations, god bless.

The Bramhams in Florida:

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Married 45 years

This is (andand) a weird segue — I guess Jackie Jensen is posed — but here is Norman Rockwell cover art The Rookie which features the baby Mom of Mrs. Olsen Jensen Bramham — that’s him tieing his shoe (in front of Ted Williams, who it is said did not go sit for Rockwell the way that JJ and 2 others did):

Norman_Rockwell_-_The_RookieTucker Jensen, one of Zoe Ann’s grandkids, played baseball for Embry Riddle of Daytona Beach, Florida, a D2 powerhouse.

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Something comparing crawl pace of a leopard tortoise to Dunne or Marvell stopping the sun

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Ready Player Tran

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