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Oceanside/Island Park Herald 02-02-2023

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Vol. 58 No. 6

FEBRUARY 2 - 8, 2023

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He’s aspiring to perfection Oceanside High School alumnus wins cheer national competition By KARINA KoVAC kkovac@liherald.com

Courtesy Oceanside SAFE Coalition

AlIsoN ERICKsoN, pRojECt coordinator for the Oceanside SAFE Coalition, presents Nick Wollweber with the Outstanding Youth Award for his many contributions to the coalition.

Coalition award winners stress the power of listening By KARINA KoVAC kkovac@liherald.com

Nick Wollweber and Daniel Rinaldi have something in common. They both received an award from the Oceanside SAFE Coalition, a drug use prevention and awareness

organization founded in Oceanside in 2015. More important, both are using the power of human connection and vulnerability to fight stigmas associated with drug use and mental health. Wollweber and Rinaldi were honored at a recent event that looked back on the

many contributions the coalition made last year, including its 10-years-later Hurricane Sandy coastal cleanup and its ever-popular Prevention Night. Wollweber, 18, received t h e O u t s t a n d i n g Yo u t h Award, and Rinaldi, 43, was presented with the Coalition Continued on page 9

Matthew Guglielmo made history when he became the first male cheerleader to compete at Oceanside High School, where in his senior year he served as cheerleading team captain and was named to All County. Now, as a class of 2022 alumnus, he has added to his accolades by becoming a collegiate national champion as a member of the University of Delaware cheerleading team at the Universal C h e e rl e a d e r s A s s o c i a t i o n National Competition. A three-year varsity athlete at Oceanside, Guglielmo, 18, was named to the All-Long Island second cheerleading team and All Division as a junior. He then sent out a highlight reel that led to him to being recruited by the University of Delaware coaches. His journey started, however, with gymnastics in middle school where a cheer coach convinced him to try cheerleading out. “I kind of just fell in love with it and then stuck with it and tried out for high school,” he said. “Finding cheer was kind of the perfect sport for me.” When he heard the news that he was the first-ever male cheer-

leader at Oceanside, he thought it was intriguing — but he said it wasn’t the reason he tried out. “To me, it was just me doing what I wanted to do,” he said, “And I thought it was fun, and I really enjoyed it. But then my freshman year of high school, it kind of, like, clicked a little bit more because I was the first guy on Oceanside cheer, and started to compete on a competition routine. So that’s when it kind of, like, hit me that I’m making history for the district.” If other young men want to try out, Guglielmo said he hopes “they know that they could do that and there’s nothing against it.” During his junior year, Guglielmo started to plan for college and realized two things: He wanted to keep pursuing cheer, and he wanted to major in landscape architecture. The University of Delaware, where he just finished his first semester, has excellent programs for both. While architecture is his main goal, he’d like to cheer on the side in the future and possibly coach. His first semester ended on a high note, with his national competition win, confirming Continued on page 4


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