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Small-Circle Jujitsu Official Site Wah-leong "Wally" Jay (June 15, 1917 – May 29, 2011), was an American martial artist who primarily studied and taught jujutsu and judo . He was the founder of the Gendai Budo martial art Small Circle Jujitsu .
Alameda High School alumni (11 P) Albany High School (California) alumni (1 P) Amador Valley High School alumni (16 P) American High School (California) alumni (7 P) B.
Pages in category "Alameda High School alumni" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Andy Carey;
The site is still occupied by this school today. The class of 1878, totalling nine students, was the first to graduate from Alameda High School. It was not long before the number of students enrolled in the high school outgrew the space available at Haight. Temporary quarters were located at the Porter school, located on Alameda Avenue, by 1900.
In August 2002, Wally Jay held a ceremony officially handing the title of grandmaster over to his son Leon Jay in their hometown of Alameda, California. Family, friends, several martial arts masters and the media witnessed the occasion. Leon Jay still practices and teaches Small Circle Jujitsu from his base in Surrey, UK and across the world.
St. Joseph Notre Dame High School (SJND) has approximately 470 students enrolled in grades 9 through 12. SJND students come from over 27 public, independent, and Catholic schools. Approximately 50 percent of the students live in Alameda, 25 percent live in Oakland, and 25 percent live in neighboring East Bay communities.
A new study found that Americans 40 and older could live over five years longer if they exercised as much as the top 25% of the population. Here's what to know.
Encinal is the only high school in the city of Alameda to have open-enrollment AP classes. Encinal High School shared its campus with the Alameda Community Learning Center but since the 2013–2014 school year it has shared the space with the Junior Jets (a 6–8 middle school)