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I live in Herndon, VA and work in Reston, VA. Reston and Herndon are suburbs of Washington, DC and are in the heart of the High Technology Corridor on the border of Northwestern Fairfax County and Eastern Loudoun county. This Technology Corridor has a large number of technology companies headquarted in the Washington area and is also home to many sizable tech centers of companies headquartered in other cities.
In January 2012 I embarked on a new opportunity at The College Board as a Principal Configuration Management Engineer.
The College Board is best known for the SAT tests used for college admission.
The College Board has college readiness programs such as Advanced Placement (AP®), SpringBoard®, RediStep™, CollegeEd®, CLEP®, PSAT/NMSQT® and EXCELerator™. The College Board has college connection and success programs and resources such as SAT, SAT Subject Tests™ and SAT Readiness Tools, Student Search Service, College Planning, College Search, CSS/Financial Aid PROFILE®, and Scholarship Search.
The College Board is headquarted in New York City and also has an office in Reston, VA. Most of the Business technology professionals at College Board work in Reston, VA. I was born in George Washington Hospital on July 19, 1951 when my family lived in Arlington VA.
At the age of 2 1/2 my family moved into my childhood home in Alexandria VA.
For my freshman year of high school I attended T.C. Williams High School of "Return of the Titans" fame for the first quarter of the year. The day before Thanksgiving of my freshman year, I went into the hospital and was diagnosed with Infectious Hepatitis. I spent 37 days in the hospital and came home in time for New Years Eve.
I spent the rest of my freshman year at home and had three tutors that taught me Earth Science, Geometry, Spanish and English.
Fortunately I was able to go back to school for my sophomore year. We had sold our house and moved to an apartment in Alexandria, VA and I started my sophomore year at Francis C. Hammond High School. I was on the Dean's List every quarter throughout my high school career including the year I was homebound. I was a "geek" in school and was most comfortable in Math or Science class. I took five yars of high school math (starting in eighth grade) and four years of science. The only classes other than Math or Science that I was really "comfortable" in were Humanities (experimental at the time) and journalism. I was a reporter for the The Salvo, Hammond's newpaper and took journalism for two years in high school. I had a number of articles published in the Alexandria Gazette.
As a lark, I took Data Processing in my senior year of high school since my brother was a programmer at Washington Gas at the time. I wanted to "find out what it was all about". I guess I had an apptitude for computers and it was my summer job between high school and college and in the summers between college years. I went to work for a computer manufacturer in 1973 and have been in the computer industry ever since.
I have always lived in Northern Virginia so I am a "Washington native".
I am a big Washington Redskins fan (even when they are not so good) and have season tickets. I also constantly watch the Washington Nationals and am glad we finally have a baseball team back in D.C. I also sort of follow the Washington Wizards and the Washington Mystics. I actually pay more attention to the Washington Capitals than the basketball teams.
But other than football I am a big fan of the Washington Kastles, D.C.'s World Team Tennis franchise. They have completed four seasons in Washington DC and after attending several matches in 2008 I decided to buy season tickets for the Kastles in 2009 and renewed them in 2010, 2011 and have already renewed for 2012.
Going to all of the tennis matches has been a blast and the Kastles did the unexpected in 2009.
The Washington Kastles managed to get into the Eastern Division playoffs by winning the last match of the regular 14 match season defeating the Springfield Lasers who came into that final match with a record of 12 and 1.
The Kastles played against the New York Sporttimes in the Eastern Division Championship match and advanced to the WTT Championship finals on July 26, 2009 against the Springfield Lasers.
It was even better than expected since the WTT Championship Finals were hosted by the Washington Kastles and the match was on our own home court.
The Kastles were leading the match 18 to 16 after the Men's Singles, Men's Doubles, Mixed Doubles and Women's Doubles matches. All that was left was the Women's Singles match.
| Event |
Washington |
Springfield |
Washington Total |
Springfield Total |
| Men's Singles |
5 |
3 |
5 |
3 |
| Mixed Doubles |
5 |
4 |
10 |
7 |
| Men's Doubles |
5 |
4 |
15 |
11 |
| Women's Doubles |
3 |
5 |
18 |
16 |
The Kastles women's single specialist, Olga Puchkova was presented with a daunting task - playing against the World Team Tennis 2009 Female MVP, Vania King who was almost unbeatable all year and expected to dominate Olga.
With the score tied 20-20, Olga was down 4 games to 2 (5 games wins the event). Vania King went up 3-1 in the game and then had three championship points against Olga. Olga managed to fight off those championship points and break Vania's serve to bring the event score to 4-3 and the overall score to 21-20 Kastles. Olga then held serve to tie up the event 4-4 with the Kastles leading 22-20 for the match.
Since the event was tied 4-4, there was a 9 point tiebreak for the 5th game. If Springfield won the tiebreak, the score would have been 22-21 and the match would have gone into overtime.
Olga dug deep and won the 9 point tiebreak giving the 2009 WTT Championship title to the Washington Kastles with a 23 to 20 victory.
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