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The following article was taken from: href="http://www.thesharksfoundation.com/news/news.asp?story_id=29&apid=71388292322">http://www.thes
harksfoundation.com/news/news.asp?story_id=29&apid=71388292322

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From the Sharks to the Sea
May 29, 2008

For the community in Santa
Cruz, California there is no line in the sand between sea life and life.  In a community that eats,
sleeps, and breathes sea air it is only appropriate to have a resource center dedicated to teaching
others about the deep, blue sea. 

On May 27, 2008 the Sharks Foundation presented a
check in the amount of $15,000 to O'Neill Sea Odyssey (OSO), a local non-profit orgniazation that
focuses on providing marine science curriculum for low-income youth around the Bay Area.  style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Arial; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman';
mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA;">The Sharks
Foundation grant will be used for the sole benefit of classes visiting from
Santa Clara
County
and will help off-set the costs of chartering
boats, as well as supplies associated with the program.  On the scene were, appropriately,
S.J. Sharkie and several Foundation board members. 

"Oceanic conservation is vital to our
community, and especially a team named for one of the most well-known creatures of the sea," said
Sharks Foundation Manager Laura Johnston.  "We are thrilled
to assist OSOs efforts to promote conservation to youth in Santa
Clara
County
."


OSO was
founded in 1996 by wetsuit innovator and surfer Jack O'Neill. A living classroom was created on
board a 65-foot catamaran sailing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary where 4th - 6th grade
students from schools throughout Central California receive hands-on lessons about the marine
habitat and the importance of the relationship between the living sea and the environment. The
program is conducted on board the catamaran with follow-up lessons at the shore-side Education
Center at the Santa Cruz Harbor. It is free of charge, but students earn their way into the program
by designing and performing a project to benefit their community.

Board members had the
opportunity to tour the boat as well as the Education
Center
and were very impressed by the depth of
instruction provided by OSO's dedicated staff. 

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"This program doesn't just teach children
about the ocean, but gets them to really think about how their actions at home, miles and miles
away, has the power to hurt or improve the ocean.  For
some, you can tell its something they never thought about before," said Jim Sparaco, Foundation
board member.

Most of OSO's work involves a one-day field trip supplemented by curriculum
for participating classes to use before and after the field trip. In addition, the Adam Webster
Memorial Fund provides the program for cognitively and physically challenged individuals. 
The program's curriculum is designed to support the educational goals of the schools that
participate and each of the subjects taught align with both California state and federal education
standards. The three subjects taught are marine science, marine and watershed ecology, and
navigation/mathematics.

"Our organization has seen a trend in its low-income student
participants that when they enter the program they have a lower-level understanding of their
physical environment than that of their peers," said Dan Haifley, Executive Director for O'Neill Sea
Odyssey.  "We find that at the end of our program students have caught up in their environmental
education and are poised with excitement to further their understanding of the sea.  Being the only
absolutely free program of its kind for low-income families, this program will be able to continue
its vision of free education through the direct donation of this $15,000 grant from the Sharks
Foundation."

OSO has served 50,000 students since its inception. In 2005 the program
received the prestigious California Governors Award in Economic and Environmental Leadership and
Senator Barbara Boxer's Conservation Champion Award.

For more information on O'Neill Sea
Odyssey, to volunteer or make a donation, please visit href="http://www.oneillseaodyssey.org/">http://www.oneillseaodyssey.org/ or call Dan Haifley at
(831) 465-9390.


Posted:2008-06-02 13:46:51 Updated:08-Dec-01 07:12

Sharks Stay Alive

The San Jose
Sharks
are headed back to the Shark Tank instead of the golf course.

The Sharks
avoided what would have been their first series sweep in 13 years by rallying for a 2-1 victory over
Dallas on Wednesday night in Game 4 of their Western Conference semifinal series. The fifth game is
Friday night at San Jose — where the Stars won the first two games of the series before taking
Game 3 at home on Tuesday.

"We had nothing to lose," San Jose coach Ron Wilson said. "So we
went out there and had fun. We'll embrace the challenge to make history in coming back from a 3-0
deficit.

“We've been sitting back too much and not playing Sharks hockey. There were a few
blips, but that was a pretty solid effort. It was an impressive effort. Our special teams were
impressive, obviously — we scored a power-play goal and got another shorthanded."

But going
back to San Jose may not be a good thing for the Sharks. Dallas is 8-0-1 in its last nine visits to
the Shark Tank, and the visiting team has won 14 of the last 18 meetings between the Pacific
Division rivals.

“We’re looking to do what we know we can do,” said Dallas goaltender href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8460612"> style="color: #103293;">Marty Turco, who made 22 saves. “We’ll give everything we
have to win Game 5.”

San Jose lost the first three games after scoring the first goal. This
time, the Sharks allowed the first goal, then came back to win.

href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8466139"> style="color: #103293;">Patrick Marleau tied the game with his second shorthanded goal in
two nights midway through the second period, and href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8470599"> style="color: #103293;">Milan Michalek put San Jose ahead to stay early in the third with
a power-play goal — only the second of the series for the Sharks.

href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8460705"> style="color: #103293;">Evgeni Nabokov wasn’t severely tested after that — Dallas had
just five shots in the third period and 18 for the game. His best stop came with just under a minute
left when he stopped href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8467943"> style="color: #103293;">Niklas Hagman’s stuff try with his right pad.

“They did
a good job getting their sticks in there to create turnovers,” Stars captain href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8466160"> style="color: #103293;">Brenden Morrow said. “We didn’t quite get the bounces we did
previously.”

The Stars also paid the price for a lack of discipline. They gave San Jose six
power plays — five on stick fouls — while getting only three. Michalek’s goal came on the
Sharks’ fifth advantage.

To read the rest of this article, please visit href="http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=362176">http://www.nhl.com/nh
l/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=362176


Posted:2008-05-02 19:23:43 Updated:08-Dec-01 07:12

Sharks sign new forward
The follow article was found here:
href="http://sharks.nhl.com/team/app?articleid=358413&page=NewsPage&service=page">http://sharks.nhl.
com/team/app?articleid=358413&page=NewsPage&service=page
class="headline">Sharks Sign Forward Matt Jones
San Jose
Sharks Staff
Mar 28, 2008, 2:30 PM EDT
class="bodyText">San Jose, Calif. – San Jose Sharks Executive Vice President and General
Manager Doug Wilson announced today that the club has signed forward Matt Jones. Per club policy,
terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“We are excited to add Matt to our
organization,” said Wilson. “Head Coach Mark Dennehy and his staff have done a great job with
the Merrimack program and Matt’s progress as a hockey player is a testament to that.”
/>Jones, 22, recently completed his sophomore season at Merrimack College (Hockey East). Named to
the Hockey East all-conference team as an honorable mention, Jones was first on Merrimack in goals
(15) and shots (124), and was second in points (15-7=22 points) in 34 games. He also tied for 22nd
in scoring among all Hockey East players in Conference games with 19 points (13 goals, nine assists)
in 27 games.

The six-foot-four, 205-pound native of Kentwood, Michigan, also played for
the Sioux City Musketeers in the 2005-06 season.

Posted:2008-03-28 13:40:42 Updated:08-Dec-01 07:12