Number 8
Transcription
Number 8
T H E L A S T PA G E T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 1 2 RIP LIMEWIRE P. 3 What’s WRONG with THESE picture? TH E BO DY FARM P. 2 THE TRUE STORY OF MR. BROWN P.10 S P O O K TA C U L A R COFFEE HOUSE P. 5 THERE IS A NEW CLAIR IN TOWN. HE HAS NICER SANDALS AND A SWEETER GOATEE … SAME SLACKSLACK-JAW LOOK! THS’ Student Newspaper Volume 4, Issue 8 EYES OF FORMER STUDENTS WHO FAILED needSCH4U … Do you really to advertise? T h u r s da y , N o v e m b e r 4 , 2 0 1 0 HALLOWEEN HORROR HITS THS P.4 Celebrity looklook-a-like Jake Andrew & The Hulk Who’s your twin in Hollywood? Connor Ordish & Frodo thespotlight asked two individuals to pick a celebrity they thought they looked like … and this is what they said….. You decide! A THS Tradition Since 2007 LORENZEN’S LAB T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 2 They teach you that in University? Gross! A scientific examination of the facility known as “The Body Farm” By Mr. Lorenzen A few minutes from downtown Knoxville, Tennessee, behind the University of Tennessee Medical Centre, is one of the most gruesome research facilities in the world. Officially known as the University of Tennessee Anthropological Research Facility, it is colloquially known as “the Body Farm”, and it is where forensic scientists have gleaned much of what we know about the science of decomposing corpses. The Body Farm was founded in 1971 by Dr. William M. Bass, the head of UT’s Anthropology Department. Bass was the official forensic anthropologist (a scientist who studies bodies from crime scenes) for the State of Tennessee, and was frequently asked to help solve crimes involving decomposed human remains. At the time he found that there was very little reliable scientific data on the subject of human decomposition, so he established the Body Farm to fill the void. UT’s Body Farm is a 2.5 acre plot of forested land surrounded by a secure barbedwire fence. Up to 40 human bodies at a time are placed at the farm under various conditions and left to decompose naturally. Bodies are usually covered with wire cages to prevent animals like coyotes from disturbing the remains. Scientists at the facility take careful observations during the process and keep detailed notes on the condition of the body, the rate of decomposition and other Maggots can consume up to 70 percent of a body in under 7 days. Brooklyn Free Store By Meghan Beatty A community is coming together in an empty lot on Walworth St. in Brooklyn, NY. The Brooklyn Free Store was r e ce n t l y o p e n e d f o r “business”, and a better business model is hard to come by. Items of all sorts, from history notes to clothing to blenders, are stacked up like store aisles under a giant blue tarp structure. The items can be secondhand, salvaged, or created independently. It also hosts artistic performances, workshops, and educational discussions. There's only one catch to all of this; it's all things like insect activity. All of this information is used to provide forensic scientists with clues that enable them to identify the time of death. Information gathered from the Body Farm has helped us to understand what happens when a corpse decomposes, and allows investigators to pinpoint time of death. When the heart stops beating, the body’s cells and tissues stop receiving oxygen from the blood. Brain cells die first within 3 to 7 minutes while bone and skin cells can survive for several days. Blood begins to drain from the blood vessels and pool in the lowest portions of the body, creating a dark colour (or lividity) on the bottom side and a pale colour on the top. Stiffening of the muscles, or rigor mortis, sets in about three hours free. Not exactly another Salvation Army copycat. Cleaning up and restocking are completely up to the “participants” (as they are called by the store's creator), making it the ultimate DIY experience. The BK Free Store is even on Facebook and Twitter. Some have called it a poverty solution, some have called it the “anti-Wal-Mart,” most participants just call it fun. after death. The body begins to cool, and within 24 hours has lost all internal heat. After 72 hours, muscle cells begin to decompose and rigor mortis subsides. Bacteria in the body are now free to feed on the nutrients in the dead cells. Enzymes in the internal organs cause them to liquefy. The decomposing tissue emits a green substance and gives of foulsmelling gases. The smell attracts insects like flies which lay their eggs on the decomposing flesh. Fly eggs hatch in about 24 hours and maggots emerge which begin to feed on the tissue. Maggots bury their heads in the rotting flesh, but since they eat at one end and breathe through the other, they can feed and breathe at the same time. Maggots can consume up to 70 percent of a body in under 7 days. After 10 days they begin the transformation to adult flies. All of this evidence is used by forensic investigators to determine how long a corpse has been left at the scene of a crime. Subjects used at the Body Farm come from various sources; some are unclaimed corpses from the Coroner’s office, while many are from people who have voluntarily donated their own bodies to the facility. In fact, the last wish Grover Krantz, a famous anthropologist from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC, was that his body be donated to the UT Body Farm so that he could do something useful after his own death. It beats ending up in an urn on someone’s coffee table, I suppose. A&E T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 1 1 Rocky Horror Picture normal enough, but then Show turns into a crazy whirlwind By Katherine Fell I n the sprit of Hallo ween, everyone has to watch the best Halloween movie out there: the Rocky Horror Picture Show. Made in 1975, this movie never gets old. I wouldn’t suggest watching it with your younger siblings, as there is a lot of sexual subject matter. Filled with lots of singing, dancing, and strange quirky characters, this movie will become a Halloween tradition. The movie starts out full of strange people. Janet and Brad, two main characters, have their c a r break down a n d have to go to a house to use a phone. Go i n g to the house to ask for a phone sets off the entire string of events, where conservative Brad and Janet are exposed to a whole house full of gender bending people. It’s one of Review: The Majesty of Colors By Meghan Beatty T he Majesty of Colors is another poetry-in-motion game by Gregory Weir. You play a Cthuluinspired monster who has just become conscious of the world around it. The monster can interact with humans in a variety of ways, each action leading to one of the five endings. You can become a helpful friend or a horrible foe. The gameplay is simple point-and-click, the monster's tentacle is occasionally wobbly but always true. The 8-bit Pac-man-ish art style is truly and uniquely beautiful. Interacting with the humans and objects in the game is entertaining and has a very replayable quality. Though it would be nice to be able to do something with the beach on the left of the screen, otherwise it's just an overdecorated background distraction. The army boat that attacks you in HYPNOTIST NOV. 23 BUYBUY-IN $2 the most well known movies out there, and every Halloween there are still screenings of the movie where people go dressed as their favorite characters and do the time warp. It’s a movie that everyone can watch and enjoy, so go out and see it! some endings also moves far too slowly considering the game usually only takes ten minutes to play. Although the incredibly smooth animation in the rest of the game more than makes up for it. It's PG13, never graphic, but does get delightfully creepy at some points, very good to play when in a Halloween mood. Overall, the heart of the game is the artistry and the stories. It's fabulous and I would recommend it to everyone, even people who've barely attempted computer solitaire. Available on Newgrounds. NEW RELEASES NOVEMBER 2 NEWS / A&E / OPINON BACKGROUND THIS WEEK: MR. BROWN By Nancy Flieler A ndrew grew up in one of the largest towns in Ontario. . . Bancroft. He is one of the most unpopular male teachers in our school because he came in 20th in cross country at Bay of Quinte. Sources say he has supernatural experiences in his car on a day to day basis to the point where we can’t know the details. Brown found his wife on eBay and relies on her to make his lunch everyday for (Continued from page 6) there has been a bunch of finger pointing and still, nobody is 100% clear who is accountable for telling the police to move in. Police Chief Bill Blair and again the mayor have taken much heat from the people in the city but they shun responsibility for it as well. Q: As a Toronto resident, how did all of this make you feel? A: Angry. What was really accomplished this G20 summit? Our tax money was used against us. Our freedoms and rights were taken from us. We were urged to go not be scared and go outside, arrested, and than told it was our fault for venturing out. Innocent people were arrested, assaulted and abused by authorities for no reason at all (as if there were such work. Andrew has a large shrine of John Deere products and aspires to be like John Travolta. Andrew is constantly told from his neighbors to stop singing thing as a good reason for these actions). Plus, to add insult to injury it feels like nobody will take responsibility nor apologize for what happened – if anything, those responsible just keep trying to make it all look justified. When Canada Day arrived on the Thursday after the G20 I was upset. I was not only angry, I was embarrassed to be be Canadian for the first time in my life. After living through the events that until now I had only seen on the news I thought to myself - "How arrogant of us! What made us think that we were any better than anyone else? People have done this throughout time despite, nationality, social values, or geography. Why would it be any different in Toronto?" We are totally capable of the same pointless drama and violence as anybody else. T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 1 0 ABBA so loud in the shower. Mr. Brown was given a ballet scholarship to Lakehead University. Mr. Brown dances in grocery stores because he feels safe around produce. Being a distant cousin to Jeff Foxworthy means Mr. Brown has an unlimited supply of lawnmowers. He drives those lawnmowers to school because he can’t afford a vehicle due to spending mass amounts of money on Dance Dance Revolution games. Andrew played on several OHL teams including the Belleville Bulls. Everyone in our school has to talk Mr. Brown into growing his hair back. He’s a tall teacher, with a fierce face and at the end of the day Mrs. Walker loves him more then she should. Q: What's next for the city of Toronto? A: The same as any other 'post-G20' city ... we repair our windows and fight about what happened until the next one happens in some other city in the world and it becomes their debate. Sad. Q: Any final thoughts? A: Keep an open mind but do always question everything you see and read. Remember that every story has at least two sides and that your probably only hearing one side - it's up to you to find out the other side and make your own opinions. Keep an eye on "independent media", things like Youtube, facebook and twitter to get different and real people's perspectives and ask yourself the same questions that you would for a major news source. Q By Michael Amesse uinte Fashion Boy I was walking in the mall this weekend, and I finally decided to check out the UFC inspired clothing store, Chaos. I’ve seen tons of these shirts around school, the mall, downtown, etcetera and to be completely honest, I’m not a huge fan. It just seems really tacky to me to see a group of five people, four of them wearing those bright, shiny, tshirts, glowing like mosquitos flying into an open fire. I must admit that I don’t really follow the whole UFC sport so maybe I’m a bit uneducated on the subject, but what I do know, is that this years major trends are classic, and well kempt. A T-shirt that looks like someone through a bag of glitter all over it, is not “Classic”. A year ago, when the shaggy style was in, it might have been more appropriate, but it doesn’t match up with any current trends. I noticed when I was in there, a few things. One, the lack of real variety. Yes there are many different colors of T-shirts. Yes a few different logos. But what about some other stuff? The main focus was their overly sparkly T-shirts that I have absolutely no interest for. There was no way I was going to buy anything there as it was all way too much money for my wallet so I found a friend with a t-shirt from there. I tried it on. I felt like an idiot. If they come out with anything new, I’ll keep my eyes open, but to be completely honest, my faith is lacking for them. If you really feel the need to show who exactly you cheer for, 24 hours a day, go buy a shirt there. If your like me, and have no need for all that, stay away. N E W S / S P O RT S T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 3 THS Aviva Community Bid for the students and for various community members who use it on a regular basis, Public Schools also hold their ASG track meet on our track. We are currently in the top 20 but need to make the top ten to be eligible for the semi-final round. So tell your friends, tell you family, register all of your email accounts and get those votes flowing. The link is www.avivacommunityfund. org/ideas/acf7639. By Lexi Allison I f you haven’t yet heard about Duncan Armstrong’s dedicated cause to Trenton High School’s community refresh project for a new track, then you must be living under a rock. Nonetheless here’s a refresher on what you need to know. Armstrong has entered THS in the Aviva Community Fund contest which gives groups and organizations the opportunity to win specific amounts of m o n e y ( e i t h e r small, medium or large depending on the project). The THS Track Quest is in the largest 100k - 500k division, and in order to be considered for R.I.P Limewire By Nancy Flieler I t looks like music pirates with have to find another program to download their music from. After ten years, Lime wire has joined the P2P cemetery along with oldschool Napster, Kazaa and many others. A federal judge found LimeWire guilty of assisting users in committing copyright in- Project EDP By Katherine Fell M r Bonisteel’s period one and t wo classes have been doing lots of projects around the school. Mr. Bonisteel teaches a work experience course that gives students a chance to design and build different projects. Their first project was a bar for Mr. Fellows that they fringement on a massive scale. On October 27th Limewire followed their court-ordered injunction and started the process of disabling their file-sharing and m u s i c searching features. The company behind Limewire, LimeCompany will move forward in some way and is most likely to form a music store or a streaming music service. designed themselves. The bar has a log top and fits together seamlessly. The students learned how to do a pocket hole joint to fit the pieces of wood together. Adam McGowan, Shane Dishart and Zack MacDonald really took the lead in this project and put in a lot of time. The students constructed the bar in Mr. Bonisteel’s room, and it the top prize the students and community has to join together, register on the site, and get voting. Getting this money could be huge for THS as our track is an integrated part of Trenton both Students’ Council Corner HFCC STANDINGS After tallying all of this past week’s points the new standings are in: 1 – Noack 2 – Culkin 3 – Apperley 4 – Tripp 5 – Reynolds took the combined efforts of the entire class to carry it down the stairs. Another one of their projects was pouring a sidewalk for Mrs. Ogden. They built the frame, dug out the ground for the frame and poured the concrete themselves. The students put expansion and contraction joints into the concrete to make sure the cement doesn’t crumble with the freezing and thawing of the ground. They textured the concrete using 76 63 59 53 52 a broom for safety. The students used a magnesium float to finish the concrete, just like they would on a real construction site. There was a lot of work involved, so Mr. Bonisteel’s period five came out to help. All the money they made from the job went right back into the students, and they had a pizza party to celebrate all their hard work. The students get to go out into a work placement, a lot like co-op, where they get real on the job experience. NEWS / OPINION T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 4 Festive Friday By Emily Tetzlaff L ast Friday the halls o f T HS were filled with decorated doors, creepy costumes and tons of pumpkins! The entire school was in the spirit participating in all of the Halloween celebrations. Students’ Council hosted a door-decorating contest, a pumpkin carving contest and promoted everyone to dress up in their Halloween costumes. Home forms went all out this year with the door decorating contest and set the standard high for next year. There were fog machines, spooky lighting, motion sensor skeletons and Halloween s o u n d effects. The doors w e r e amazing this year but of course we were forced to choose our favourites. Mr. Noack’s tec class’s dimmed lighting, fog effects and amazing detail earned him 1st place and 5 HFCC points. Ms. Apperley’s dynamic display of a failed math student surrounded by hanging skeletons, Halloween music and a REMUS rants By Nathaniel Remus T he Snuggie? What the heck were they thinking? Who actually needs one of these. The only reason they sell is because they are a novelty. People buy one so they can say I have a blanket with sleeves. The parody on youtube for these things sums it up perfectly. I mean honestly does this even make sense to people with more than half a brain. This was probably conceived in some God forsaken Russian to wn were the Soviets still rule. So probably five minutes from Moscow. In this Russian village a farmer had a blan- boy that jumped out of the display case earned them 1st place as well and 5 HFFC points. Special mention also goes to Ms. Aide’s esthetic lab door which followed theme with a crazy lady hanging out the door with curlers in her hair, Halloween decals on his finger nails and smoke affects surrounding her. Following them came Mrs. Walker, Ms. Reid and Mr. Manlow with excellently decorated doors. Next up ket with two holes in it and the sleeves off a sweater so his wife sewed them together and he sold it to some rich guy for a cow (not that all Russians are that poor or lame) who patented it and sold over here and made a lot of money off it. Why would some one actually need this? Blankets INSIDE THE G20 PROTESTS Part Four: The Conclusion By Meghan Beatty D espite begging and pleas from the inmates basic human rights were outright denied by the prisoners. Medications were denied and the people were cold, tired and hungry. Not even a sip of water was dispensed for a 14 to 16 hours even though there was a skid of water in the middle of the warehouse – the guards helped themselves to that. Finally after 14 to 16 hours everyone got a small Styrofoam was the judging of the pumpkins and although it was a tough call between Mr. Noack’s amazingly carved pumpkin and Mr. Thornton’s cardboard popcorn pumpkin box, the title of best pumpkin went to Noack. Second place went to Mr. Beylerian’s class and their 5 computer themed pumpkins, which were connected with a computer cord. Following Mr. Beylerian was Ms. Jones, Mrs. P e n s o n , a n d Mrs.Launderville. “Judging was definitely tough this year because everything was so well done,” says HFCC officer Sam Boutlier. Participation was amazing so all classes received HFCC points for taking part, way to go Tigers! work just as well .Wait somebody probably saw Brad Pitt with one and they took off just like Crocs. What are they for? Sales must be going down because now they have the dead zebra and leopard styles. What is wrong with the regular blanket. Sure it been around since the cave men doesn’t mean it has to be replaced. In my opinion if it isn’t broken don’t fix it. So stop buying them they are just another thing that will get used for a year then shoved to the back of the killer closet from mars at the end of the hall. cup of water and sandwich consisting of 2 slices of bread and 1 processed cheese slice. The holding area was supposed to be videotaped and the tapes released after the G20 to prove conditions were proper – but I haven't heard of the tapes coming out yet. (Continued on page 6) S P O RT S / N E W S T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 9 ONE MO R E S trikeforce is not very well-known in MMA today, but I thought we would take a look any- ways. Strikeforce is one of the few MMA Companies that have women fighting in it. Up coming on November 19 in the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Mississippi is a women's welterweight bout between Jan Finney and undefeated prospect Liz Carmouche. It will be televised on the main card of Strikeforce Chal- By Megan White O U N D lengers 12. This fight will be Finney’s first fight since she struggled for the women's middleweight title in June at Strikeforce and M-1 Global: Fedor vs. Werdum. In this fight Finney was pitted against Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos and was totally dominated with knees and punches before the ref finally stopped it in the middle of the second round. In fact the ref for that fight was Tigrrls set to make a difference By Kelsey Reid O ver the last few months, there has been a concern for the amount of confidence that the girls who attend Trenton High School behold . With our extremely high teenage pregnancy rate, among other staggering statistics, it was decided that it was at our hands to change this. Tigrrls is a group of senior feminist girls who believe strongly in good judgment among females and empowering young women with their strong inner voice. The senior girls along with the help of Ms. Penson are focusing on holding one special night for grade nine girls along with student mentors and female staff members . The exact date of this event is not yet precisely set, however it will be held some time in late November with some scheduled events being DDR and makeovers to improve self confidence . The group is moving forward along with the help of the Speak Up student grant . The $1000 grant is up for all students who want to improve student success within their schools and want their opinions to be heard. Quinte West Boo Fest By Alisha Struthers E very year Quinte West hosts the boo fest, and every year kids turn out by the hundreds. Tons of kids came down and played some ghost bowling, digging for candy in hay, and other games. Not only do the kids get spoiled with the amount of candy given to them, but the criticized by many MMA fans who said that she let Finney take to much punishment before she stopped it. Finney however defended the ref. Prior to taking the title opportunity, Finney racked up back-to-back wins in a women's 135-pound MMA tournament with the Freestyle Cage Fighting promotion. Carmouche, on the other Two Pink Lines By Amber MacNeil H alloween has just passed, and boy do I have a bone to pick with the parents out there. Honestly, how many of you let your kids have suckers before the age of 5? Probably not too many of you, seeing as they’re super unsafe, and a huge choking hazard. Why the heck do you hand the damn things out? For every minichocolate bar, gummy candy, and bag of chips that my daughter got, she gained like 5 suckers. It’s ridicu- volunteers themselves are spoiled too. Hersey's company alone donated over 120,000 pieces of candy for the boo fest, Domino's donated warm pizza to the volunteers, and other candy companies donated candy as well. Boo-fest is a well supervised and safe environ- hand, has made a quick splash on the women's MMA scene this year with four pro victories. She made her Strikeforce debut at Strikeforce Challengers 10, where she beat Colleen Schneider by unanimous decision. Most recently, she earned a TKO victory over Valentina Shevchenko in a regional competition. I do think that women’s MMA will become more and more popular and personally I like seeing the women fight. I think that maybe seeing women fighting in the same sport as men will inspire more women to fight, and maybe bring more respect to MMA as a sport for all those who still don’t care for it. lous. I have nothing against suckers, I’m just saying that you should have something on the side for the younger c h i l d r e n . All of that aside, Halloween was a blast; there were some super-cute costumes out there. A tip for future parents to be, buy your costumes a size or two larger than they need to be. Halloween is always cold, so most children will end up with their winter gear beneath the costumes to avoid hypothermia. They hate it, but it’s better to be warm, even if it makes you bulky. And pillowcases work just as well as the bags sold at the stores, so don’t waste your money on them. ment for parents to bring there young children down to earn some candy instead of walking the streets. Overall Boo-Fest was a success this year, and will be just as big if not bigger next year. A&E / OPINION T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 8 MyStyle By Alison McWhirter Nancy’s Interesting 10 Facts By Nancy Flieler 1 ) More babies are born in September than in any other month 2) 32% of singles polled think they will meet their future mate online 3) The average speed of a golf ball in flight during the PGA tour is 160 mph. 4) 85% of phone calls are conducted in the English language 5) Chewing gum while peeling onions will keep you from crying. 6) Dalmatians are born without spots. 7) Bats always turn left when exiting a cave. 8) The lion that roars in the MGM logo is named Volney. 9) Google is actually the common name for a number with a million zeros. 10) Women blink nearly twice as much as men. Questions You've Never Asked By Meghan Beatty W Caroline Rolf Donny Bridgen With my style, co-ordination is key. If you don’t match, why bother stepping foot in the public eye? I would describe my style as feminine and eccentric. My daily outfits usually consist of brighter colours with a pretty detail or two. Despite my father owning a diamond mining industry, I’m not big on the bling, and keep the accessories and jewelry minimal. My style icon is Susan Rolf, formerly known as my mother. Although not sensibly fashionable, she has taught me to respect all scenic sweaters and never underestimate the power of spanx. I would describe my style as lumberjack chic. I like to wear things that accent my masculine physique. I usually go with jeans that shows off my fine booty. I used to wear my signature solid colored T-Shirts, but I’ve changed my style this season to patterned tops, stripes and plaid preferably. It’s not the shirts that are important, displaying my bulging biceps is all that matters. I like the colour blue because it really brings out my eyes, which have been said to be like staring into the depths of an ocean on a gorgeous summers day. I wear run-of-the-mill black shows because I run the mill. It takes me hours to get my hair in the perfect bed head shag and I often rock the dirty beard in my spare time. The ladies love it. hy doesn't Tarzan have a beard? Why do Kamikaze pilots wear helmets? Why do we press remote control buttons harder when we know the batteries are dying? Why doesn't glue stick to the bottle? Why do you believe someone who tells you there are four million stars, but have to check when they tell you the paint is wet? Why do we keep going back to the refrigerator, hoping something new will have materialized? Why is it when trying to catch something that's falling off a table, you always manage to knock something else over in the process? How can you tell when you've run out of invisible ink? If a turtle doesn't have a shell, is he homeless or naked? If all the world's a stage, where is the audience sitting? If you try to fail and succeed, what have you done? What happens if you get scared half to death twice? What's the speed of dark? What do you do if you see an endangered animal eating an endangered plant? Why do we put suits in a garment bag and garments in a suitcase? Why do we sing 'Take Me Out to the Ball Game' when we're already there? Why do we wash bath towels? Aren't we clean when we use them? NEWS / OPINION T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 5 Coffee House Craziness By Julianne Marshall C offee house was this past Thurs- day and it was a HUGE success. There was great music and treats! The theme was Hocus Pocus, and there was some COSSA XX-Country By Chandandeep Sidhu T HS cross-country team traveled to Goodrich-Loomis for the 2010 COSSA meet last Wednesday, October 27. COSSA is the qualifying meet for OFSAA, which will be held next weekend at the Boyd Conservation Area in Woodbridge. In the senior boys' race, Andre Merilainen lead the senior boys finishing 18th, Chandandeep Sidhu finished 46th, Logan Laite finished 64th and Jason Miller placed 67th. The really cool costumes, including Mr. Thornton dressed up as Angus Young, and Tyler Dorazio as beer. These two had a guit a r o f f t o s e e who had t h e best costume, Tyler beat Thorn- boys cross-country team had a good race and finished 8th overall as a team. Emily Tetzlaff finished her last race a THS Tiger finishing 28th overall. Rachael Faulds had amazing race finishing 2nd, coming just short of 1st overall, but still qualified for OFSAA. Our only Midget girl Morgan Walker finished 6th overall in her race. COSSA was the end for a lot of our tigers, as Rachael Faulds was the only tiger who has qualified for OFSAA. Overall everyone had strong season and we hope the large turnout will continue next year. Halloween: When Creativity Shines By Julianne Marshall H alloween; a time for witches, goblins and ghouls. A day to dress up as someone or something that is totally different from you. Some say Halloween is about the candy, other say the fear. Some people just say that it is for fun. Well I think that Halloween is a day that everyone can dress up as someone they admire, or as something different and possibly even scary. Halloween is all about being creative in my eyes. A lot of people go to a store, buy a costume and accessories, then they are done with it. I have never bought a costume. My ton with a knee slide and killer solo. The whole night was kicked off by our very own jazz ensemble, and ended with Ms De melo singing an incredible rendition of More Then A Feeling. Everyone who performed did an incredible job! Some of the more memorable performances where the Time Warp which was performed by a group of music and arts students, Highway To Hell by our very own music teacher Mr. Thornton, and Gives you hell by Lindsay Dale and Kate Read. There was tons of tasty treats and the 2 mc’s where great as well! I hope that the next coffee house has an even better turn out! See you there. Movember Hits THS By Brendan McShane T his month, young men, you can help raise awareness and funds for prostate cancer treatment and research simply by giving your razor a break. ‘Movember’, a combination of ‘moustache’ and ‘November’, is a movement started in Australia that ‘changes the face of men’s whole life it has been a tradition to either make a costume or put old clothes and costumes together to make something different. There is also plenty of household items that work for costumes, for example if you plan on being something like a unicorn, you can use an ice cream cone (just the cone) for the horn. Halloween is one day that you have to express yourself and show how creative health’. By beginning the month clean-shaven, but letting your peach fuzz grow for the full 30 days, you are spreading awareness of one of the biggest ailments to men all over the world, prostate cancer. Whether you register officially (you can at ca.movember.com) or simply let yourself get a little shaggy for a while, men around the globe are bringing the fine facial hair back into style for a good cause. you are without being judged or made fun of, and those people who do try to make fun of you they don’t know what they are missing. So next year, whether you are handing out candy, going to a party, or going trick-or-treating yourself, I challenge you to instead of buying a costume and everything for it, use your creativity and be something crazy and cool. NEWS / OPINION T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 6 Tigers Bring Home Bay of Quinte Double Gold By Raven Roe L ast Friday, October 29th, the senior rugby girls faced off against St. Theresa’s in the Bay of Quinte semi-final in Belleville. The game got off to a great start, with a try scored in the first few minutes of the game. Morgan Houde-Pearce scored a try, and then Hannah Wilson scored a penalty try and convert shortly after. In the second half Lindsay Kelly and Houde-Pearce scored for the Tigers making the score 24-0. Unfortunately, from this point on and for the next twenty min- G20 (cont.) (Continued from page 4) I heard lots of stories of how the people wrote messages for the cameras in the cell grates with the cups like "freedom" utes, the Tigers game started going downhill. St. Theresa’s answered back within minutes with three well earned tries of their own. Luckily, the Tigers managed to pull off the win with a finishing score of 24-17; the closest game the Tigers have played this season. After a game like that the Tigers spirits were brought down until coaches Meindl, Ms. Reid, Bubba, and Razor had some critical, but inspirational words. The girls advanced to the Bay of Quinte finals against the Centennial Chargers, who they’d already played twice in their season with winning re- sults. The finals were played on the new artificial turf field that had been built across from Centennial Secondary School at Mary Ann Sills Park. After a good warm-up and the coaches great pump-up speeches, the girls ran onto the field with their heads held high, disregarding their previous match. A try was scored right off the bat by Wilson, and then by Raven Roe. Soon after there was another try scored by Shannon Lee. In the second half Wilson and Kelly scored tries making the score 31-0. Centennial managed to poke one in, despite and "help us". tattooed with the words "our cage" in solidarity over what happened. Q: Who was giving the orders? A: Many people/groups are responsible from a our mayor at the municipal level, to Stephen Harper at the national level. Overall it's been nothing but astonishingly sad and negative stories about the holding centre. The people that were held there feel traumatized and a lot of them have gotten their wrists where the zip-ties once were the excellent goal line defense by the Tigers in the last moments of the game. The final score was Trenton Tigers 31, Centennial Chargers 5. It made up for the first disappointing match by far, and was a proud moment for the coaches and the fourth and fifth year students. Trenton High’s junior girls rugby team shared in celebration with the seniors for their Bay of Quinte champions title after beating the Quinte Saints 17-12. Make sure to wish both of Trenton High’s rugby teams good luck in the COSSA AA finals at M.A. Sills on Tuesday, November 2nd. Even many of the world leaders are accountable for the 'plague' that they bring with them with this repeatedly violent and money wasting event. As far as the police actions and who was giving orders (Continued on page 10) OPINION T H E S P O T LI G HT P a g e 7 ‘DUSSEN’S DOs & DON’Ts W hen you are a friend of Joshua Vanderdussen there is a good chance that over the period of your friendship, that one of you will have slept over at the other’s house. Now if you end up remaining at his house for the night, well the judgment for that is up to you. Whether you find the idea appealing or not, one can only wonder what on earth it would be like. Dos: Letting your guest feel at home and providing them with enough space. Don’ts: Run around your house naked at night while chasing your only guest. Dos: Providing them a guest room that was organized well in advance. Don’ts: Having your guest sleep in the changing room with four screaming infants. Dos: Telling them where the bathroom is when they ask you in the middle of the night. Don’ts: Locking them in the garage when they are too drowsy of their whereabouts. Dos: Calling your friends parents for them to confirm that they’ve arrived late at night. Don’ts: Calling their parents and saying their son hasn’t arrived and you don’t know where he is. Dos: Talk to your guest and keep them company so there not bored. Don’ts: Have a web cam conversation with each other while you are in the bathroom. Dos: Although having fun is a good idea, consideration for neighbors is also good. Don’ts: Think to get up in the middle of the night and cleverly decide to start mowing your lawn. Dos: Finding a way to entertain yourself when having a guest over. Don’ts: Prank calling your neighbors and having them knock on the door because you forgot to take off your caller id. Dos: Make sure the accommodations are set for everyone before going to bed. Don’ts: Turn the air condition on without asking your friend and having him freeze because of your controlled sweating habits. Dos: Letting everyone fall asleep, even when you cannot fall asleep. Don’ts: Continuously call your friend and run into his room naked when he isn’t responding. Dos: Allow your guests peace and comfort when sleeping and not trying to bother them. Don’ts: Waking up next to your guest in the morning and having them verbally assault you for your choice of sleeping arrangements. Kidz In The Hall What is your favourite part of Halloween? Dressing like a freak! - William Muschett Gr. 12 Scary Movies - Paige Young Lowe Gr. 11 All of it and then some! -Samantha Blodgett Gr. 11 Scaring small children - THS Tiger Decorating - Aisling Palleschi & Samantha Boutillier Gr. 12 & 11 Free Candy - Connor McAdams Gr. 11