FEATURES Polynesian dancer brings the aloha spirit to campus
Transcription
FEATURES Polynesian dancer brings the aloha spirit to campus
4 Features May 22, 2014 Polynesian dancer brings the aloha spirit to campus Take a look at Bon San Diego’s unique, cultural hobby by Christian Blandin I A&E Editor f a person were to say the word “dance,” the majority of people would likely think of ballet, ballroom and breakdancing or if you are lucky one might find themselves in the midst of a flash mob. For junior Bon San Diego, if someone were to say the word “dance” he would think of grass skirts, shouting chants and spinning fire. Not your typical Irvine-esque word association, huh? Well, that is because San Diego is a rare breed of dancer in this neck of the woods - a Polynesian dancer. “‘Poly dancing is a way to express your background and show what you are interested in,” San Diego stated. “I wanted to try something new and I wanted to learn more about my islander background.” The Filipino, Guamanian and Japanese ethnically-mixed student started practicing this form of dance at around age 15. He was drawn into Polynesian dancing when his younger sister began attending Le Polynesia Cultural Performing Arts Center in Lake Forest. He watched as his sister practiced at the studio and soon decided that he too wanted to partake in the experience. “At first I thought it was weird because I thought they were going to make us dance together as brother and sister, but they didn’t, and I was relieved because that would have been embarrassing,” sister Keola San Diego said. “But in the end it’s actually pretty cool to be dancing with [him].” Arguably the most entertaining style of Polynesian dancing is fire knife dancing. This kind of dance is a Samoan ceremonial dance; it is originally composed of a machete wrapped in enflamed cloth and is typically seen in movies set in Hawaii. “I like the adrenaline and the fact that I am able to manipulate fire,” San Diego said. “It’s something different since not very many people do it.” Of course, anything involving fire opens the door for accidents that would get any mother worried. “I get excited because it’s fun to watch and see what (he is) going to do with the fire and being able to see (his) joy while (he) is doing it,” mother Marchelle San Diego said. “I’m also nervous because I don’t want (him) to drop it and burn (himself).” Ultimately, the entire family enjoys his involvement with dancing as he gets to stay active, and they all learn about their culture in a friendly environment. How to lose the freshman 15 The notorious freshman 15 is an issue many current high school seniors will face when they go off to college, but it can easily be avoided with a few simple rules by Simi Kakwani T Staff Writer he idea of college can be quite exciting as it is the first time many students are able to live on their own and be completely independent. However, many do not realize how healthy eating and an active lifestyle can suffer due to other priorities like studying or even laundry. This is where the freshman 15 come in. Student’s neglect to maintain their eating habits and overeating, eating the wrong foods and not exercising can cause them to gain about 15 pounds. Most colleges offer different types of dining plans that allow students to simply swipe into the dining halls and have access to a buffet of food. Getting access to an unlimited supply of food, as exciting as it is, can cause students to overeat, ultimately causing them to gain the “freshman 15.” Another cause of the freshman 15 is the late night snacks that many college students depend on to get them through nights of cramming for exams or writing last minute papers. By following some simple rules, the freshman 15 can easily be avoided. Here are some tips from eatright. org for all of the seniors going off to college next year: 1. Do not skip breakfast. Breakfast is one of the most important meals and it is essentially what kick starts your metabolism for the rest of the day and is the biggest source of energy. 2. Do not snack on junk food. At 2 a.m., when there is still a whole pile of work to do, a bag of potato chips or some Oreos may be extremely tempting. Avoiding temptations like these and substituting unhealthy snacks with some fruit or vegetables can play a huge role in reducing weight gain. 3. Do not treat the dining hall like a buffet. While it is true that you get access to unlimited food every time you swipe, the biggest mistake freshmen make is treating the cafeteria like a buffet. Only eat as much as you need to be full, and do not overeat just because you can. 4. Exercise - join a sport, go for a walk or make use of the recreation center. One of the perks of living on campus is that you have complete access to the recreation center and you also have a number of sports teams all around you. Not only are these great ways to meet new people, but you also get to avoid the dreaded freshman 15! Photo courtesy of Bon San Diego JUNIOR BON SAN DIEGO poses with sister Keola San Diego in their traditional Polynesian dance costumes. “Dancing with Le Poly has influenced me to try new things,” San Diego said. “I plan on continuing to stick with my family at Le Poly to create more memories with a talented group of people and hone my skills in Polynesian dancing. We all like to hang out; we go on midnight boba runs, watch movies at each other’s houses and, my favorite, and go to the beach to have bonfires.” Dear 16-year-old me: Melissa Dorman Math teacher Melissa Dorman offers advice to her teenage self by Melissa Dorman D Math Teacher and Guest Writer ear Melissa, Right now you’re probably hanging out with Michelle or Andria, maybe driving around in your orange Bug (you still have it by the way!). I’m sure you have a lot going on with school, friends and your family. I’m not going to trivialize your problems and tell you they aren’t a big deal. However, I can confidently say that whatever issues you’re facing now will get better, mostly because you will learn to better deal with problems and drama that come up in life. Make an effort to be friends with more people and invest your time in the ones that challenge you and make you a better person. Try to meet new people and find ones that you have a lot in common with. Spend quality time with them before you all go off to college, move away or get jobs. Also, spend more time working on all those hobbies like music, art and surfing. Challenge yourself more; you could always be doing better! Many people around you are probably telling you that you should be enjoying your time in high school. After all, these are supposed to be in the best years of your life, right? You have fewer responsibilities, more friends and more energy. But in many ways the best years are still coming. Sure, you’ll have more responsibilities in the future (harder classes in college, a job, a family), but as you get older you learn how to better cope with and handle those responsibilities. In fact, college will be better than high school, your twenties will be better than college and so far your thirties are looking great! Don’t always keep looking to the future; enjoy what you have now. You are so often thinking about next week, next month or next year. Embrace the present and what you can do right now to make a difference today. Love, You Photo courtesy of Melissa Dorman MELISSA DORMAN’S teenage-self smiles for the camera. Features May 22, 2014 5 These teacher best friends will make you and your BFF jealous These teachers are friends across classrooms by Clare Aguilar W Managing Editor hat more could you want when your colleague happens to be your best friend? These teachers can bond over the fact that they experience the continuous journey through high school together. Christine Haley and Wendy Kou English teachers Christine Haley and Wendy Kou met during the 2005-2006 school year. Both were new English teachers on campus. “When we started to develop our friendship, I invited Wendy to a Spa Party I hosted as a favor to my aunt,” Haley said. “Embarrassing as I thought the party was, Mrs. Kou was generous and kind and when she continued to hang out with me after that event, I knew we were going to be great friends.” As teachers and moms, Haley and Kou are not able to spend as much time together outside of school as they would like. “In years past, we had girls’ night and even took short trips together but nowadays we have play dates,” Kou said. Kou and Haley are able to create life time memories on and off campus. Their similarities as moms, dog-owners and teachers help them bond over many unique aspects of life. “I think a lot of my favorite memories with Mrs. Kou have been impromptu moments full of laughs like roasting marshmallows in her backyard on a warm summer night,” Haley said. David Baker, Joe Banner, Chris LePage and Jeremy Matamales History teachers Chris LePage and Photo by Clare Aguilar Jeremy Matamales and art teachers DaCHRIS LEPAGE, JEREMY MATAMALES, JOE BANNER AND DAVID BAKER pose with ceramic sculpvid Baker and Joe Banner share a unique tures of themselves. relationship. “LePage and I ended up being raised in “We don’t really hang out after school, also attended his colleague’s wedding. Huntington Beach together, so when I first but we do have a ritual,” Matamales said. “We go on hikes, and do some night started here almost ten years ago, he came “I invite them over for a poker party on a sky stargazing,” Antrim said. “Just this last the year after,” Banner said. weekly basis. And they never show up. It’s spring break, we were both in Arizona and The childhood friends welcomed two kind of ‘our thing.’” were able to watch the lunar eclipse togethother members into their clique. er and hike the Grand Canyon.” “We are lunch time amigos,” Matama- Mike Antrim and Bruno Dworzak Both like the same characteristics about les said. “I met Mr. LePage at a day-long Science teachers Mike Antrim and each other that deepened their relationship. meeting many years ago and started hang- Bruno Dworzak have been great friends “Mr. Antrim is very straightforward, ing out with him and Banner at lunch. Mr. for 12 years, since meeting on campus. very nice, very helpful,” Dworzak said. Baker joined us shortly after.” They take their passion of science to “When you meet him, you know who he Their humorous personalities make experience wonderful things together like is, there is no this or that. Mr. Antrim is Mr. their clique fun and not a day goes by with- spontaneous vacations, planetarium trips Antrim all the time and that’s how he is in out laughter. and hiking with Dworzak’s sons. Antrim school and out of school. “ Photo courtesy of Bruno Dworzak BRUNO DWORZAK AND MIKE ANTRIM went hiking at the Grand Canyon together. WENDY KOU AND CHRISTY HALEY smile for a photo at a restaurant. Photo courtesy of Christy Haley Griffin Starr: the social media guru Senior Griffin Starr possesses incredible talents in the technological world by Andrew Beall S Staff Writer enior Griffin Starr is something most high school students are not: the CEO of his own private corporation. Starr is a highly- talented computer programmer, and has used his talents to start LTS, or Limited Technology Studios, as a limited liability corporation, which is a flexible form of enterprise that blends elements of partnership and corporate structures. Starr first took the social media world by storm when he created “The Social High.” “During my freshman year I decided to start developing Social High, which was a representation of my programing skills, and a way to build a social network around the basis of Facebook and my space combined,.” Starr said. “It took about five months of completion, and in the first day we had 1,200 people sign up.” Starr discontinued the website a month after its launch so that he could focus on bigger and better things. He is currently developing a new social media site called White Box. “Ethan Lynch and I were sitting in a cupcake shop called SusieCakes, and I don’t remember how it came around, but he said something about having a white box in the middle of a screen just like 4chan, which is an anonymous posting board,” Starr said Starr’s team is composed of brilliant young programmers from all over the country. Starr has also established senior Ethan Lynch as the co-founder of White Box for his role in coming up with the idea and Starr also had senior Austin Murphy design the website’s logo. Starr said he and his team hope that White Box will revolutionize the way social media is run. “It’s like a giant Facebook board, but anyone can post on it without having an account. I thought about the idea for about a month, and I got in touch with my director of programing, and we talked about it for a while. We decided it was a great idea and started programing it in November of 2013.” Starr and his team are excited for the sites launch this week. “It will be the first social network to do live updating,” Starr said. “Facebook does live updating in what’s called a sending order, which means post after post, so it goes by the oldest post. With a couple of core algorithms we perfected a way to have live updating in what’s called bumping ascension, so the content is refreshed as old posts are bumped off.” Essentially, Starr has made White Box more stylish and user-friendly as the page never needs to be refreshed. LTS has big things in store for the public, and Starr has lofty goals for the company. “Besides profit, our long-term goal is to create a better web design; we will be launching up to seven social media websites by the end of 2015, and White Box is the start of it all,” Starr said. “All websites will link together, so just by visiting one site, you can connect to all the other ones.” White Box is something LTS plans to hold on to for quite some time, and Starr said he hopes it will only grow over time. White Box is definitely something worth joining and launched last night. The URL is 255box.com. Starr chose this URL because the total RGB value of the color white, which is the combination of the color codes for all colors of the spectrum, is 255. One thing is for sure, nobody will ever say that Starr does not think outside of the box. 6 Features May 22, 2014 “La La Lie”Jack’s Mannequin M uch to my dismay, KROQ decided to host Weenie Roast 2014 on the same day as prom, which means I’m going to miss out on watching the Bleachers, Fall Out Boy and Fitz and the Tantrums perform among a variety of other bands. For a while, I thought about skipping prom because I wanted to meet the lead singer of the Bleachers, Jack Antonoff. I also thought Weenie Roast would be more fun and considering it was cheaper than prom, it made sense to skip on my last school dance and watch the amazing 14 bands that would be there. The major problem with this plan was that I was letting my inner fan girl take charge and disregarding all the plans I had made with various friends for prom. Being a fan girl can be kind of awful sometimes. It makes you forget what is important because you often let your passion for a band take control over reason. For example, only a fan girl can be sad about getting into her dream school because it means she is going to miss out on a concert (I’m serious. When I committed to NYU, one of the first thoughts that went through my head was, What did I just do? Now, I’m going to miss Panic! at the Disco, Magic Man and Walk the Moon on The Gospel Tour). However, I have no problem with being a fan girl. I have posters of bands up in my room, attend a plethora of concerts, wait by the backdoor after concerts in an attempt to meet the band, etc. I even made my parents fly me back from New York just so that I could meet the Drowners. What it comes down to is, you should do whatever makes you happy whether it be going to see Andrew McMahon for the billionth time like me or going to H&M just to see David Beckham’s underwear campaign like a certain friend of mine did. Just don’t let your inner fan girl get out of hand, OK? Sincerely, Audrey Fong Sharon Solel fighting her way to Israel One student chooses to head home and join the Israel Defense Force by Sierra Christopher S Photo Editor enior Sharon Solel has made the decision to go straight into the Israel Defense Force after graduation, moving thousands of miles away to help defend her home country. Solel moved to America at the age of eight and had an easy time adjusting to life here. Although she has grown up as an American girl, she said part of her has always missed her hometown of Tel Aviv, Israel. “Before I made the move it seemed like the most ideal situation,” Solel said, “but once I actually got here it hit me that I didn’t really know anyone, and I was away from my grandparents and cousins, so it was really hard.” As most seniors are deciding which college to go to, Solel decided to explore the route of joining the army in Israel, which is a requirement of people her age who are citizens of Israel. For two years, young Israeli adults spend the beginning of adulthood in the Israeli Defense Force. Sharon was not obligated to join, but made the decision to go against the comfortableness of college and take on the adventure of moving back to Israel en route to the army. “For me, the decision was really hard,” Solel said. “I’m not really sure what I want to do with my life, so I feel that two years SHARON SOLEL proudly shows off her Israel Defense Force t-shirt. doing something productive will help me figure it out.” Solel will not be the only one from America making the move back; she will be joined by students from all over Southern California, with whom she has spent a lot of time. She attends army seminars to meet the group she will be going with. There, they learn a lot of skills including Krav Maga, which is a popular form of self-defense. They also receive information about what they will be doing in Israel. “At the seminars we do a lot of bonding activities with the people in our groups,” Solel said, “because we are going to be spending a lot of time with them when we enlist.” Photo by Sierra Christopher Her family and friends will miss her for she will be miles away, but the decision to defend her country should be commended. In the Israeli Defense Force she will not be in combat, but helping out in other ways. The specific duties she will be doing are not certain yet but could include talking to soldiers’ families and helping them deal with their children being away, or even helping out wounded soldiers. Although the future is not certain, her decision to go to the Israeli Defense Force is a definite decision. “I completely support her decision,” friend and senior Lynsie Rouk said. “I am going to miss her a lot but I’m very proud of the choice she has made.” New restaurant owned by track coach will make you “Flip Out” Track coach Aaron Craver takes us behind the scenes of his new eatery and the inspiration behind it the torch and continue the tradition. “My family has always been in the restaurant industry; it’s like a past time in our family,” Aaron Craver said. The regular season for track is over, but Aaron Craver is still coaching many “It will give some job experience and I will be able to spend more time with my dad,” Maia Craver said. Aaron Craver was in the NFL for nine years and played for the Miami Dolphins, Denver Broncos, San Diego Chargers and by Darius Chriss B Staff Writer eing a track & field coach for one of the best teams in all of Orange County takes a full commitment, but retired NFL player and coach Aaron Craver figured he could add more to his plate when he opened up a restaurant in Garden Grove called Flipped Out. The restaurant mostly serves wacky food that you would never imagine cooking or eating, such as chili cheese pastrami burritos or ice cream burgers. “[Flipped Out] came from a kid making crazy food items,” Aaron Craver said. Craver and his family have been involved in the restaurant business for many years. The Craver family has cook-offs and are always in the kitchen cooking up something. Aaron Craver said his family just knows and loves food in general. He said he believes that now it is his turn to pick up Photos courtesy of Aaron Craver COFFEE AND BURGERS are just a few of the dishes reinvented at coach Aaron Craver’s Flip Out. athletes who made it to CIF. Still, he finds time to operate at Flipped Out. Senior Maia Craver, his daughter, is one of those athletes who is still competing and will compete this Saturday in CIF Finals. She hopes to work at Flipped Out in the summer. New Orleans Saints. He said he understands some people may come in just for his autograph, but he does not mind it at all. “Anything you can do to add publicity to your restaurant is a good thing,” Aaron Craver said with a big smile on his face.