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VOL. VIII, NO. 114
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH
MAY 9, 2001


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news:

8-year-old student drops jaws at CSULB

By Irene Howard
Special to the On-line Forty-Niner

Kit Armstrong is making history at Cal State Long Beach.

Armstrong is currently a student at Los Alamitos High School and is taking general physics at CSULB. The 8-year-old said he wanted the challenge of taking a college physics class.

Neal Breslin, a teaching associate, said he was quite surprised when physics and astronomy department chairman Alfred Leung told him that there would be a 8-year-old enrolled in his general physics lab in the Fall 2000 semester, but Breslin found Armstrong to be extremely gifted and enthusiastic.

Armstrong loved doing experiments, Breslin said. Of more than 80 students in his lecture class with Dr. Kuan-Wen Chuang it was evident that Armstrong was the top student.

"I am honored to have the opportunity to teach Kit physics," Chuang said.

Without taking lecture notes, he absorbed all of the instructor's lectures and earned the highest score in the class, Chuang said. He asked profound questions and often called out the correct answers to problems even before the entire problem was given to the class.

In his physics 100B lecture and lab in the Spring 2001 semester, his instructors had the same experience, Chuang said.

"It is really amazing that he has the maturity to understand physics concepts that are puzzling to our undergraduates," Leung said.

In addition to being a gifted science student, Armstrong has studied piano since 1997. On October 7, 2000, the Pacific Symphony Orchestra performed Armstrong's "Symphony No. 1 in F Major," and played the first movement of "Mozart's Concerto in C Minor, K491" with Pro Art Symphony Orchestra in Walnut Creek last March.

Last October, Armstrong also performed "J.S. Bach's Concerto for Piano and Strings in D Minor, BWV 1052" with the Long Beach Bach Festival Orchestra.

Not only has Armstrong's talent won him respect among the music community, but he has also won awards for his ability.

He was awarded first prize in the Music Teachers' Association of California State Piano Concerto competition for his performance of the third movement of "Mozart's Concerto in A Major, K488," last July. He has won first prize in the MTAC State Composers Today competition three times and has performed his own pieces at two state conventions.

Armstrong is also a scholarship student at Chapman University and his chamber works, "Piano Quartet for the Millennium," and "String Quartet in B Flat Major " were premiered there.

While wearing a brightly decorated helmet riding a skateboard, one would never guess he is the same boy wearing a Sunday suit belting out a piano work form one of the great masters of music in the Crystal Cathedral last April.

 

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