Okay, once again Judy and Skip are having their Banked Track Workshop. The date is Sunday May 16,  2010 time will be 12-4PM

This is opened to all skaters, any league, any organization. The cost of the workshop is $30  for OSDA members, $40. for non-member skaters.

Please use the following link to sign-up:

www.hooligansrollerderby.com/pjrd-banked-track-workshop-sign-up

Hope to see you there.

Winning 85 to 19 in a very hard fought game with some amazing jamming.

Penn Jersey’s 2nd home game of the 2010 season was held on April 17th in Mt. Laurel and featured an intraleague game, aptly named Spring Fever.

The Sadistic Sweethearts, co-captained by Lucky Luciano and Mischievous faced Dishonor Roll, co-captained by Classy Chassis and Deuces Wild.

Both teams either had skaters out due to injuries or skaters just coming off illnesses. Dishonor Roll, however, was hardest hit with the absences of their top scorer – Hellanor Rollsevelt, who is out with an injury and hard hitter, Hard Licker, who is pregnant and expecting her first child.

The Sadistic Sweethearts really took it to Dishonor Roll, winning the game by a final score of45-32 after 1 hour of skating. High scorer for the winners was Sloppy
Jo with 18 points, and 14 points for Dishonor Roll’s rookie Bexi Wrexi. Sloppy Jo is always one of the highest scorers, so that comes as no surprise. She is an All-Star. Bexi’s performance proves that this rookie rightfully earned her spot on the roster. I applaud her tenacity!

This game had some additional highlights. Rookie Angry Topaz scored her first points ever, finishing the game with 5 points on two scoring jams.   Her performance in the game steadily improved once she relaxed and found her zone. Vanessa – aka Cra$h Money, who skated as a rookie last year, was placed on the Sweethearts for the 2010 season.
Kudos to all the rookies!

A fight happened in the last period between Classy Chassis and Sloppy Jo. Sloppy, who took an illegal block, shoved Classy as she headed to the penalty box. Maybe tempers started to flair because Dishonor Roll was losing throughout the entire game? Whatever the reason, a near bench clearing happened. It felt like a Flyers’ game and the Broad Street Bullies were back! Both combatants were ejected from the game with only a couple minutes remaining on the clock.

During half-time, the Hooligans played some dodgeball with audience members throwing the balls at them. Kudos to all the guys and a special node to Bill Stickley who avoided 3 or 4 balls in a skate across the track, ducking and weaving the entire time. The audience was really into it and cheered them when it was over.

The next home game is a co-ed game on May 22nd in Mt. Laurel.

Jersey Joe

Final Score Gang Green 88 Black Plague 118

Welcome New OSDA League, Antihero Derby Alliance, a co-ed league from Chantilly, Virginia!

ADA FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – April 19, 2010

The Old School Derby Association is proud to announce the addition of our newest league, the Anti-Hero Derby Alliance. This makes the second league hailing from Virginia to join the OSDA Having watched a few of their skaters in action, the OSDA looks for great things from this skilled group. And to help them build on those skills, the ADA have acquired a new coach, Tom Coelho. A former pro with the Pioneers, Tom has agreed to pass on his knowledge to this eager group of students. Tom raises OSDA’s number of former pro coaches to three. Along with Penn Jersey Roller Derby’s coaches Judy Sowinski and Arnold “Skip” Schoen, the addition of Tom continues OSDA’s connection to Roller Derby’s roots. The OSDA is proud to offer its skaters the opportunity to learn from these talented individuals as they build toward their own banked track careers.

Final score was RDD 117 to ADA 71.

THE DAY THE SKATING ALMOST STOPPED

By:  John Seylaz with special thanks to Mark Olsen, Georgia Bogash and Billy Bogash

It was approximately 11:00 in St. Louis on that March 24, 1937 morning.  A group of people that skated for the infant of sports, Roller Derby, climbed into the bus that was to take the group to Cincinnati for a two-week stop.  The sport had been invented only a year and a half earlier by Leo Seltzer in Chicago.  Its popularity had grown to make it a traveling show.  On this morning, the fourteen skaters and nine other Derby personnel piled into the two year old Greyhound bus.

There were plenty of stories on that bus.  We can only imagine what was happening.  Maybe Erma Caldwell, the 34 year-old mother from Chicago was playing a game with her 4 year-old daughter Carol Ann.  Maybe the bus driver, Dick Thomas, only 24, was talking to 19 year-old skater and wife of two weeks, Emily Thomas, who was seated right behind him.  Maybe Frank Vining and John Britton, both 26, were talking about the concession sales they made in St. Louis and were expecting in Cincinnati.   Don Flannery, the 18 year-old skater, may have been discussing he future with his fiancée, skater Ruth Hill.  She was 19.  Joe Kleats, referred to as the “veteran”, only because he was 36 years old, may have been showing the ropes to Johnny “Schoolboy” Creekmore, the youngest skater listed at 17 but probably was more like 15 or 16.  Maybe at 12:49 that morning little Carol Ann spoke with the enthusiasm of a little child pointing out the window at the upcoming bridge.  We will never know exactly what was happening.

We do know that 70 miles East of St. Louis, one and one-quarter miles outside of Salem, Illinois on Highway 50, that bus headed toward Cincinnati suffered a terrible disaster.  Approximately 75 feet before reaching the bridge, the bus, which was only going about 40 miles an hour, endured a front right tire blowout.  As Dick Thomas wrestled with the steering wheel to try and maintain control, the bus flipped onto its side and skidded along the bridge, eventually hitting a concrete abutment and bursting into flames. It was recalled that the gas tanks were severed and gas was flying everywhere. Dick Thomas tried to make his way out through the broken windshield but could not find his way. Eventually, he climbed out of the side window. He then pulled wife Ruth out who had been just behind him. At the hospital he was quoted, “I pulled another girl out, and then the flames hit me and blinded me. My wife helped me walk down the road.  People outside the bus were screaming but it didn’t seem that any of those in the bus were screaming.”

Don Flannery was also a survivor who could speak. “She (Ruth) called me twice. I was feeling around for her. Didn’t see her. Found her and tried to pull her out through the window. She was pinned under baggage and seats.  It was so hot I had to crawl out. I walked up the road.  Help came and took me here. I did everything I could,” he ended with a sob. “I tried to save Ruth.”

Eighteen people died immediately in the crash. Five were brought to hospitals. Later that night, Emily Thomas, the wife of the bus driver passed away of severe burns. It has been quoted as being said that Ted Mullen, the 25 year-old announcer, also severely burned, whispered to doctors, “Do you think I’ll ever be able to skate?” When the doctor assured him he would, he responded, “Funny. I was never able to skate before.” Ted also died that evening. One month later, John “Schoolboy” Creekmore passed. The doctors valiantly tried with transfusions and the like but Creekmore was too badly injured.

Twenty-three people boarded that bus on the fateful morning of March 24, 1937.  Only Don Flannery, who later rejoined the Derby and Dick Thomas, the bus driver, survived. It almost ended the “babe of sport” only a year and a half into its existence, but popularity demanded it continue and the skaters pressed on into what was a nice run.

In memory of the victims, the number “1″ that was worn by Joe Kleats was retired and never worn again in Leo or, later, Jerry Seltzer’s Roller Derby. I wrote that story so that these pioneers of the sport could be remembered and honored.

IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO PERISHED (Name – Position – Age):

Frank Vining – Concessions – 26                         John Britton – Concessions – 26                           Erma Caldwell – Dietitian – 34

Carol Ann Caldwell – Fan – 4                               Joe Kleats – Skater – 36                                        Jack Israel – Skater – 24
Mary “Millie” Cooper – Skater – 19                     Bud Gesser – Skater – 21                                     Louise Brower – Skater – 21

Tony Marzano – Skater – 21                                Ruth Hill – Skater – 19                                         Nick Kelson – Skater – unknown
Libby Hoover – Skater – 19                                  Carolyn Barton – Skater – 31                               Jerry Hickson – Skater – 27

Dr. Henry Salmon – Doctor – 27                           Kay Wilson – Scorekeeper – 25                            William Wilson – Concessions – unknown
Ted Mullen – Announcer – 35                              Emily Thomas – Skater – 19                                John “Schoolboy” Creekmore – 17

THOSE WHO SURVIVED (Name – Position – Age):

Don Flannery – Skater – 18                  Dick Thomas – Bus Driver – 24