And now, the end is near... - Sherburne
Transcription
And now, the end is near... - Sherburne
The Sherburne-Earlville High School Student Publication May/June 2004 Sherburne - Earlville And now, the end is near... Views FromJessica The Halls Mulligan, with help from Dani Maynard As a senior, what do you plan to do after high school? M.McDowell/Discourse So, this is the end. Well, not the end, but an end. In two years as editor, I have suffered through many things- paper cuts, writer's block, bouts of carpel tunnel and temporary blindness due to prolonged computer monitor exposure (you can be expecting to hear from my lawyer)- and seen many things no one should have to endure- run-on comma splices, semi-colon abuse, and grievous punctuation omission/overuse- but I have endured. Although I still can't talk about it in detail, one day I shall write my memoirs, make an obscene amount of money, and replace Kelly Rippa on Regis Philbin's talk show (Yes, the man will still be alive and kicking. Short people always live longer.) But seriously, it's been a pretty amazing experience. I've learned quite a few things along the way, which, out of the pure generosity of my heart as well as the artificial feeling of superiority granted by imparting advice to the masses, I shall pass along. 1. Never, ever, under any circumstances expect a straight answer out of Russell Howard. Learn to enjoy dry and biting wit. 2. There are several issues that one should never discuss at the dinner table: politics, religion, the school parking lot, and Spirit Week. 3. Some adults judge teenagers as apathetic about issues of modern society. They are wrong. 4. Deadlines are made to be extended. 5. Commas, apostrophes, and semi-colons will never be in style. 6. Extra-credit is the best motivation there is. 7. No matter how carefully you proofread, you will inevitably miss something. 8. Attachments on emails received though POPMail = bad. Possibly the thing that I am most proud of is the list of names on the bulletin board outside of the library. It's long, and there are a lot of little foil stars up there (cough-Russell-cough). The fact that so many of us are willing to write in our free time, not for a class nor under duress from one of various English teachers, is awesome. However, what is also noteworthy is how many people actually read the newspaper. I mean, The New York Times can throw as many statistics as they want at me about how many copies it sells every day, but how many people actually read it and how many people buy it because it makes them feel enlightened and look intellectual? Thank you to Mrs. Carvell for all of your time, guidance, trust, and help; to Mr. Schnabl for upholding the sanctity of freedom of the press; to Computer Services and BOCES for help with all of the technical aspects; to anyone who has even looked at a copy of Discourse; and, finally, to all of the contributors. Putting your names and intellectual property in print takes hutzpah, and you've all done a great job. Look for me on daytime TV. Kayleigh Scalzo, editor "I am going to Delhi for two years to study architecture, then going to either Boston or South Carolina to finish up and get my master's." Jessica Mulligan "I might go to the bathroom." Josh Bagnall "Attend Alfred University and declare a major later." Bryan McCracken "I plan to study Biology and Theater at the university of Rochester." Anna Fagan "I am going to Binghamton University to major in Computer Science." Jay Collins "I am going to New Paltz to become an elementary teacher. I also plan on playing on their basketball team. " Courtney Brown "Get rich by being Nikki's manager ." Jason Jacobsen "Go to college." Josh Stewart "Have a fun summer and work hard." Dan Farrow "I am going to Hartwick to major in law or history and play football." Joe Davies "I am going to Moo'ville for web design." Kadie Farrow "Get a life and have fun." Shawn Wheeler "I m going to adopt a young orphan of Guatemalan descent." Dave Shurock cont. pg 18 May/June 2004 Wonʼt You Be My Neighbor? google.com One of Americaʼs childhood heroes died recently, leaving a long story and many unhappy children. People will always remember Mr. Rogers as the quiet, gentle man with the little neighborhood and the long-sleeved sweaters. What people donʼt know is the true service he did for his country. Mr. Rogers was a Vietnam veteran with over twenty-five confirmed kills in combat. He was a master in both handto-hand combat and the use of small arms. He had the expert ability to kill or disarm an opponent in an instant. And, do you know the sweaters he always wore? As a Navy SEAL, Mr. Rogers had many tattoos covering the entire length of both arms that he wished to hide from his young friends. Wow, what a change! From expert Navy SEAL to calm Mr. Rogers. No one would ever have thought, except for Lee Marvin and Captain Kangaroo (Bob Keishan), who earned Navy Crosses together on Iwo Jima. Occurrences like this make one wonder- what other famous people, whose names we Sarah Weinell The Cell Phone:The Next Generation Alright, we all know that the cell phone has become the next great invention in the lives of many Americans. To imagine life without cell phones is like imagining a life without TV. But why is this so? People in previous generations survived just fine without them. And, if they are so helpful, then in several years when cell phones replace home phones altogether (as is predicted), will this mean a change in service as well, or will we still be going around asking the person on the other end, “Can you hear me now? Can you hear me now? How about now?” Or, will we actually be able to have a decent conversation with them? Yes, cell phones are great, but what good do they do us if all we use them for it to test the other personʼs hearing ability? I hope some changes are made in the cell phone industry in the near future, because turning on your phone to use it only to find a message reading “No Service” is quite annoying. I have a friend who refuses to buy a cell phone because it would be out of character for him to own one. Now do you really think cell phones are that uncool? Some people are still living in the past where life was simple and technology was too high tech. Iʼm curious to see how far this cell phone era takes us. And, in twenty years when we see the first cell phone in our childrenʼs history book, we will see how crazy it all was. It will just be another part of everyday life (so we think). Chrissy Natoli The Importance of Education Page 2 As defined in 2000 by members of the United Nations, the Dakar Agreement holds that every human has the right to an education. Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the U.N., set a goal for 2015 that will be marked by measurable steps toward education for all. An integral goal of the United Nations and its body, UNESCO, (United Nations Educational Social and Cultural Organization) is to allow the people of the world to live with peace and equality. Today we are still struggling to become a peaceful world. Should we not be a world at peace? Should we promote the killing of innocent lives because of ignorance and misunderstanding? Is education, which allows people to understand the world and provide for themselves, not a fundamental impetus for peace? Education allows humans to understand the diversity of the world and the multifarious cultural, spiritual and regional values that are present in the world. Continued education allows humans to recognize these differences and not move to war, but sit down as brothers and sisters of the earth and come to peaceful, respectful agreements. Education can provide humans with life long skills so that they may provide for themselves and their families instead of depending on the government. “Give a man a fish and feed him for one day; teach a man to fish and feed him for a life time.” Continued education gives people the tools to help their fellow citizens to be self-supportive, starting a self-sufficient community that does not need to fear war. One of every two children in Africa does not receive an education. The children of America are promised this primary right. In Africa, disease runs rampant, killing millions. People are starving and many are at war. Is not education an obvious reason for the drastic differences between our country and the countries in Africa? Education is the answer to the problems of the world. Education allows children to be inspired by tales of far off places, giving them aspirations. Continued education allows them to reach these goals and give the gift of education to their children in turn. Educating a child is like the devotion of a gardener to a plant. Water, sun, and constant attention cause the plant, and child, to slowly spread its roots and mind gaining a firm hold into the earth. There is not a better moment than now to take action. Become familiar with the goals of the United Nations. Spread the word on education so that our world may flourish. Allow yourself to be the match that ignites the gasoline and takes the issue to fire. altavista.com Discourse Sasha Hoff Discourse May/June 2004 Making S-E Safe Fire Lanes on the S-E Campus: The S-E District is marking off fire lanes in front of a number of school entrances. Please be advised that no one should be parking in these areas. Parking in these areas could result in vehicles being ticketed and/or towed. Page 3 Truly Wicked S-E is Smoke-Free: The entire S-E campus is smoke-free. This includes school buildings and grounds, including athletic events and any other event officially sanctioned by the school, such as community events (New York Pro-Kids Act of 1994). There are civil penalties and fines associated with non-compliance of this law. http://www.startinglinerock.com/index2.html One new and upcoming band is the very talented The Starting Line. This new band is right out of Pennsylvania and consists of four guys: Mike, Ken, Matt, and Tom. Their first CD, Say It Like You Mean It, has done very well, selling 200,000 copies in the first year of its release. Matt descoved Ken, the vocalist and bass player, through his AOL profile. They are just a group of guys who like to have fun. "Ken lied about his age when he first started hanging out with us," Matt reveals with a laugh. "He said, 'I'm like 15,' and we thought, 'That's cool. He'll be driving soon.' But we didn't catch on to the 'like' part; he was actually 14." In the year 2000 they were signed by a small record label, and it was the beginning of a major breakthrough. At this point, Ken was still in high school. His parents were very supportive and told him how important it was for him to finish school. Matt, on the other hand, was working his was through college. They did shows with Sum 41, Taking Back Sunday, and Good Charlotte and a jaunt through Europe, as well as headlining on the Warped Tour. They were not far from the top in such a short time. They are a group of guys who dream big. It will not be long before you begin to see these guys on shirts and caps, if you know what I mean.To learn more, check out their website: http://www.startinglinerock.com/index2.html. Chrissy Natoli google.com The Starting Line A trip to New York City is never complete without viewing a Broadway show, and the show that has everyone talking lately is Wicked. A star-studded cast, breathtaking scenery, fantastic costumes, and touching songs leave every audience member satisfied in this new tale of the life of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West. Casting the passionate and powerful Elphaba, played by Idina Menzel, in a more sympathetic light, this retelling of Gregory Maguire's masterful novel takes the audience on a journey throughout the life of one of literature's most well-known villainesses. Kristin Chenoweth plays the flighty, perfect Galinda, who later changes her name to Glinda, adding emotional depth to the Good Witch. The Wizard, played by Joel Gray, and Fieyro, played Norbert Leo Butz, are spectacularly portrayed with emotion and vigor. Carole Shelley rounds out this all-star cast with her fantastic performance as the scheming and manipulative Madame Morrible. The show is currently up for ten Tony Awards, including a double nomination for Best Actress and Best Musical. Wicked is truly an amazing experience for all who see it! Christina Pfohl Year In Review Now that the school year is nearing its end, take a look back at it. Was it as good as you could have made it? Yes, you! Although we all wish it were the case, our teachers are not paid to entertain us. They are here to open the depths of their knowledge to us. It is up to you to decide what to do. You can sit back and get by with as little work as possible or you can explore those depths. So, you're looking back and you remember that math assignment that you whined about or that book that you didn't want to read in English. Was it really worth all of your fussing? Or, would you have prefered not to do the assignments and miss all that they had to offer? As you take that into consideration, remember school is only as fun as you make it. Next year, take on your assignments with a positive outlook. Give learning a chance; it just might get you somewhere someday. Kaitlyn Pudney Discourse Cynic’s Corner: Excuse me?! May/June 2004 Oh, congratulations. One of you people finally made me mad. Ok, not really, but I was trying to make a dramatic touch. Normally I would just laugh off an “issue” such as gay marriage, but recently I came across an article with so much bull manure that I was inclined to put the periodical in the spreader. Now, I can’t care less whether they get the “right” to marriage or not. After all, they have already spat or urinated on every other sacred institution of this country; what’s another one? However... I do have a few bones to pick with these people. (If I get any comments about the preceding sentence, there will be suffering.) Let’s get one thing straight (no pun intended) before we move on. I think a few definitions are in order. Toleration: (v) to allow the existence or occurrence of without intervention, to endure. Acceptance: (n) willingness to approve, favorable consent, submit to, receive as suitable. In other words, in this case, to accept means, “I’ll embrace your orientation, and maybe go on a date with you.” To tolerate means, “I won’t beat the snot out of you for looking at me in a funny way.” I (along with most of society) tolerate homosexuals, but there is no force on this green earth that will make me accept them or their “alternative” lifestyle. So, go ahead; get married, but don’t think for one minute that I, or anyone else, will think any higher of you or accept you. Plus, if you really believe everyone will love you if you get married, then you are far too immature to get married! Didn’t the homosexual movements of the ’60s and ’70s rebel against marriage? Is that why a very large portion of the gay and lesbian community does not want to get the right to marriage? Is that why a lesbian judge tried to stop gay marriage? Is that so? Oh, and this is not the Netherlands. We do not commit bestiality, incest, nor polygamy in this country and boast of its lawfulness nor morality! You keep throwing “Homosexual couples are people, too!” around like it means something. So what?! People treat people like dirt in this day and age! Guess what? Hitler, Stalin, Bush, Reagan, Roosevelt, and Crusty the Clown are people, too! So are rapists and unabombers. And, if you (are stupid enough to) listen to the extreme animals rights activists, animals are people, too! Babies are people, too, yet you abortionist kill them without flinching an eyelid! But, I could deal with all that by just laughing it off. But nooooo. You had to get stupid. First, I treat everyone the same. (Basically, I can’t care less about you and if you leave me be, we’ll coexist on this planet with no problems.) But when people start calling themselves “minorities” and start thinking they deserve special rights and go crying to left-wing bleeding heart whinos about their problems and then go and make laws telling me how I should treat them, then, friends, we have a problem. Yes, Martin Luther King made incredible and necessary strides for his people. So did Gandhi, whom I highly revere for his peaceful rebellion. But you know what? They didn’t label their followers minorities and go crying to lawyers or politicians. Instead, they proved through huge trials that they, as human beings, deserved the respect and equality they wanted. When someone called them a bad name, they didn’t go crying to someone looking for a lawsuit; they turned their cheek, and they did it every time they needed to. That makes me respect them. That makes society respect them, and the respect endures. Had they propped it up with laws, they would be nowhere. cont. pg. 7 Now, listen. Page 4 Now, listen. Okay, letʼs dive right in here. I am going to address four of the arguments that people use to say that gay marriage shouldnʼt be legalized. There are many “reasons”, and they are all wrong. 1. Itʼs not natural. This is not true, because I saw a report of a test that proved that there are animals that are clearly homosexual. The test was with sheep. Iʼm not sure who conducted the test, but they did prove that point. And, homosexuals have been around forever. This is very true. There is evidence that homosexual love has been common since 2500 BCE, over four thousand years ago. It probably goes back farther than that, but recorded history doesnʼt go back that far. 2. Itʼs immoral. This is totally one-sided and a very bad argument. Not everyone is religious, and even religious people cannot seem to agree. I think that religious arguments should be totally skipped over, because we are supposed to be living in a secular society, but religion is constantly causing problems in our world. One personʼs idea of morally acceptable is very different from someone elseʼs. I disagree with almost all religious doctrines, et cetera. They teach you to be intolerant and unaccepting. If God were real, why would He make something that was “unacceptable”? I believe that everything is within Godʼs “plan”. Homosexuality is not immoral. 3. Marriage is for procreation. If only procreative marriages were allowed, then how would two old heterosexuals get married? Non-procreative marriages happen every day. This is also a very weak argument. 4. Itʼs a bad environment for children. Well, 28% of gay couples are raising children. Probably many more than that, but this is just a statistic. And, I have read that almost 20% of most general populations (like the population of the U.S.A., the world, or our school) is gay. That is a lot of kids being raised by homosexuals. This is just a stupid argument. Children raised by gays are more tolerant of all ways of life and understand that people who oppose others are just dumb shallows. By the way, on Monday, May 17, 2004, Massachusetts became the first state to equalize marriage for everyone. This list is a list of many famous people who have been or are gay. Sappho (600 BCE) Greek poetess Socrates (470-399 BCE) Greek teacher and philosopher Plato (427-347 BCE) Greek teacher and philosopher Wu (140-87 BCE) Chinese emperor Hadrian (76-138 CE) Roman emperor Alexander the Great (323-356) Macedonian king and crusader Richard the Lion Hearted (1157-1199) English king and crusader Jaques de Molay (1243-1314) Grand master of the Knights Templars Donatello (1386-1466) Italian artist Pope Julius II (1443-1513) Sandro Boticelli (1455-1510) Italian painter Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519) Italian Renaissance artist, teacher, scientist, and inventor Michelangelo (1475-1564) Italian Renaissance artist and sculptor Montezuma II (1480-1520) Aztec emperor Julius III (1417-1555) Catholic pope Sigismondo Malatesta (1417-1468) Lord of Rimini Marc Antoine Muret (1526-1586) French writer Nicholas Udall (1505-1556) English playwright cont. pg. 7 Discourse May/June 2004 Japanese Anime: Creative or Repetitive? google.com Not too long ago, a friend of mine and I were talking about Japanese anime. I was explaining story lines and characters when he rather abruptly exclaimed, “I don’t like Japanese anime. It’s all the same.” Now, me being the Japanese anime geek that I am, I took offense to that. I rather unsuccessfully tried to explain to him exactly how different each series and character is. So as a result, I have compiled some thoughts to encourage other fans and inspire all those who see all Japanese anime as being the same. (I have separated each series for those of you who don’t want to read it all. Also, this is GOOD anime, not Pokemon!) Let’s start with Gundam Wing. This is about five teenage boys with incredible abilities. They have superhuman reflexes and the ability to block out all human attachment to fight for a cause. They fight using enormous robot-like machines, though manned by humans (obviously), called gundams. They are able to achieve any goal because they are willing to give their lives for a cause and hold nothing back. Their names are Heero, Duo, Troa, Quatre, and Wu Fei. Each has his own personality and special weapon. Heero has the ability to stay completely focused and will not accept defeat. The others follow his lead, but he would be just as comfortable working alone. He specializes in long-range weapons, though he also has a laser-bladed sword (yes, like a light saber). His gundam also flies. Duo has a laser-bladed scythe as his weapon of choice, though he also has guns. Duo is the most outgoing of all the gundam pilots and just likes to have fun. Troa’s gundam is equipped with many miniguns and generally lays down cover fire. He is very emotionally and mentally strong. He can deal with any situation, except when he gets amnesia. Quatre is the unifier. He plans everything and keeps the pilots going as a group. He fights close or far range with two mini-scythes. Wu Fei has a double-bladed bow staff. He is driven by honor, which causes him to be unreliable at times. At one point, he refuses to fight with the other gundam pilots because he feels that he has lost the right to use his gundam. (He is also my least favorite of the characters.) And, of course, there is one more character to discuss: the girl who falls in love with one of the pilots, Relena Peacecraft. She is very outgoing and persistent. She is very persuasive and an eloquent speaker, being very successfully politically involved. (She is also very honest!) Now, the story line. Earth and all its space colonies have been taken over by a group of people (that no one likes) who resemble communists. They try to take control and force people to do as they (the leaders) want. Many people are sick of it. The five gundams are sent to Earth from the colonies to take out the government so that the colonies can rule themselves. Want to know what happens? Ha ha, go watch it yourself! Now let’s talk about Trigun. Also set in the future, this is about Vash the Stampede, a man who is accused of destroying entire cities wherever he goes. However, no one can catch him and claim the reward. He cannot be killed, either. He Page 5 seems to be invincible. Vash is tracked down and followed by two girls trying to stop him, though they end up helping him. Vash is a very interesting character. He is very friendly and outgoing and seems to be a child stuck in an adult’s body. His favorite food is doughnuts. He also refuses to kill. This creates a dilemma due to the fact that he is wanted for murder. He is known for his long, red jacket and his spiked blond hair. His two tag-a-longs are Millie and Meryl. Meryl is very small and petite. She is very focused on her hunt for Vash the Stampede. She carries a pistol and can be very deadly. Millie is a little mentally-blond, and when she first meets Vash, asks for his autograph. She is very fun-loving and open with everyone. She also carries a gun approximately the size of Meryl and can take anyone by surprise with it. Together, the three of them discover that Vash was mind-controlled to destroy certain cities by his brother. This series involves a very interesting and unique plot. The history of the characters and their feelings and conflicts are completely different from any others I have read or heard (and I spend lots of time reading and have encountered all kinds). Now onto my favorite: Inuyasha. Inuyasha is a series about a girl, Kagome, who falls through a well in Japan behind her family’s house and ends up in ancient Japan. She finds out that she is the reincarnated version of a demon hunter from ancient Japan. Through her reincarnation, she has possession of a stone with magical powers. Thousands of Japanese and Chinese demons are after this stone and she must protect it. Through the help of her ancient “sister”, Kagome is able to control a demon (to an extent) named Inuyasha. Inuyasha is a hanyou, or half-demon. He wishes to use the stone to make himself become a full demon. He decides to help Kagome in the hope that he can obtain possession of the stone without her knowledge. Together, they fight many demons, including Inuyasha’s full demon brother, to save the pieces of the stone and, in so doing, the world. The characters in this series are very interesting and unique. Kagome is a very forceful girl who is very focused on school, her chief concern when she has trouble getting back to her own time. She does know how to have fun, though, and makes the most of situations. Inuyasha is very serious and, in being so, is very funny. He is also very confident in his abilities but only after he obtains possession of his father’s sword, which also has incredible abilities. Inuyasha and Kagome have quite a few character clashes, which adds to the humor in the story. This is a fun series with a unique twist and, as I said earlier, my favorite. As you can see, Japanese anime is NOT all the same. Each character and each series is different, with very few similarities. I hope that those of you who previously thought of anime as boring now see the light. I also hope that for those of you who watch anime, I presented some new series for you to watch. Also, there are many more series, and these are not the only good ones. Be adventurous and go find one that you will like. There are many choices, and almost all of them are fun! Sarah Weinell Letter to the Editor My sincere apologies go out to Eric Bergeron for the mistake on his rank; he is a sophomore and not a freshman. I was mistaken to make a judgement on his actions. Sorry, again; sincere apologies, Eric. Jessica Mulligan Discourse May/June 2004 Luigi : My Inspiration Eugene Louis Faccuito (Luigi) is a dance teacher who has greatly influenced my life. He has not only taught me to move my body with wonderful style and grace, but he has taught me how to live my life. Over the past two years, I have been blessed to be able to take jazz dance lessons from Luigi, a man who, at the age of 78, still teaches classes twice daily. Luigi perfected a style of dance that is greatly admired by his students. I, too, was impressed by what he taught me to do with my body. I learned that he had led impromptu jazz dance classes on the MGM musical sets years ago, and often as I danced in his studio, I felt that he had taken me back to those glory days in his life. How fortunate I am to be able to work with such a great master. Luigi has the motto, “Never Stop Moving,” and as I got to know him, I learned the deep meaning behind those words. When Luigi was in his twenties, he was in a car accident that left him paralyzed. Doctors told him that he would never walk again. That was a hard prognosis to accept. Luigi was determined to not only walk again, but to dance again. He would have someone bring him to a studio and lay him on the dance floor. He would will himself to get up so intensely that he would bleed on the floor. He worked diligently at rehabilitating himself and succeeded. He did dance again; if fact, he made a career out of being a talented dancer. More than just Luigi’s dance classes touched my life; it was his strength of character and determination that really made an impression. All I ever wanted to do was dance and perform. When I entered my high school years, I knew that it was time for me to “buckle down”, work hard at developing myself as a performer, and do well academically to open doors for my college education, but life didn’t want to cooperate with me. Throughout my high school years, I was stricken with a series of Page 6 bouts with strep throat left me susceptible to colds and flu-like symptoms in my freshman year. In my sophomore year, a house fire gutted my family’s home and we lost everything. I had mononucleosis during all of my junior year, keeping me out of school for months. In addition, two very close friends died in car accidents, one during the winter and one a week before finals. During these years, it was easy to get discouraged. Last summer, healthy at last, I returned to Luigi’s dance classes. The Luigi moves put me in touch with my body again. I felt myself becoming energized. All of my concerns disappeared. I thought it was just the dancing that did it, but soon I realized that it was the man. I would think about his life and how he never gave up. Surely being paralyzed was worse then being sick and saddened. I felt myself thinking that, “If Luigi could do what he did, surely I, too, can be successful.” I will never give up, and I will “never stop moving!” Valerie Mya Walters Cirque du Soleil On May 14, 2004, the French Club traveled to Randallʼs Island, NYC to enjoy an amazing performance by Cirque du Soleil called Alegria. It was an afternoon to remember. The flamboyant clothing, brilliant music, and glamorous costume attire all contributed to the outstanding show put on by the performers. Each music performance was broken up by the most hilariously funny clowns I have ever seen. One act following the fire twirlers included a clown coming out with a candle pretending to fire twirl. Each eye catching performance was a crowd pleaser. Some of the acts included the trapeeze, contortionist, fire twirlers, trampolines, and singers. Unfortunatly there was no photography allowed. However, it is a memory that many of the students will never forget. Out of all the acts, my favorite would have to be the trapeeze act where six or seven men climbed to the top of the arena and took turns jumping from ropes and swinging on the trapeeze. It was a wonderful event that Iʼm sure all of the students enjoyed. Chrissy Natoli Discourse May/June 2004 Excuse Me!?, cont. from pg. 4 Listen, cont.from pg. 4 Will giving gay and lesbians couples the “right” to “marriage” shut them up? Not if the greedy lawyers and politicians have anything to do with it. You see, you are nothing more than useful idiots, mere pawns in a huge game of chess known as Congress. I guarantee you that within years, someone will find something new to whine about. It may be divorce or making marriage between up to four parties (two males and two females) or God knows whatever perverse thing people can think up. (I want this article published, so I won’t mention them. Plus, I do have some shreds of good taste!) Plus, you people know government is corrupt and will only screw it up! They’ll stick in some stupid rule out of spite. Even though you and your fellow liberals have no regard for it, the Bible and Koran both clearly state that gays are not cool with God. Never mind the fact that our country and nearly every country in “the western world” are based on these works and that they span three whole religions. But that doesn’t matter; I forget- God doesn’t exist. That is, until he fits somewhere in one of your agendas. Here’s a little something you might be able to appreciate. Anyone who has taken World History knows that among the many reasons that the Roman Empire fell was social corruption. Standards dropped, one after another. Now, historically, the U.S., based on that stupid little bunch of scriptures, has been antigay. It was simply viewed as (and still is in most circles) immoral. And, it was not tolerated. Don’t start on me with all your morality garbage; I’m just telling you history. If you don’t like it, go knock a tombstone over. The moral standard was dropped to accommodate toleration. (Not that you would care, but the Bible preaches toleration.) And now you want us to further drop the bar to acceptance? What’s next, active participation? You see, whether you like it or not, you are dropping a moral bar. When morals begin to fall too short, the country loses great strength. Next, people will begin doing all sorts of things but not the things they need to be doing. Eventually, they begin doing nothing. And, so, the country becomes a pushover. Interestingly, the extreme far right (you know, the guys who make me look liberal!) want you to get gay marriage, too. Have neo-Nazis become tolerant? Nope. You see, when you get married, you get registered. When you get registered, anyone can know who you are and where you live, etc. (Now do you see why gun owners don’t like gun registration?) See, I told you it ain’t all it’s cracked up to be! Your School The school systems of the United States are a shame. Letʼs take a look at our own school, shall we? Who are the most important employees in the school? The teachers, naturally. But, then why are they not the highest paid? They are closest to the students and they do the real work, correct? But, the administrators think that they rule everything, and they think that they should make the most money, when they donʼt even teach us. And thatʼs why weʼre here, right? To be taught, right? Right. Of course. I think that everyone should band together and give the teachers the rights they deserve. They work hard to provide us with invaluable knowledge, and we treat them like crap and throw a few dollars at them and expect them to do a good job. I believe that if the teachers were paid reasonably, they would be compelled to do an even better job. I have only ever encountered two bad teachers, people who should never teach, and neither were teachers for very long, and both taught in our school last year, and neither teach any longer. cont. pg. 15 Page 7 Ieyasu Tokugawa (1542-1616) Japanese sho-gun and founder of Edo Shogunate Jerome Duquesnoy the Younger (1602-1654) Flemish sculptor Christina (1626-1689) Swedish queen Philippe, duc dʼOrleans (1640-1701) Louis XIVʼs brother Peter the Great (1672-1725) Czar Samuel Foote (1720-1777) English writer and playwright Frederick the Great (1712-1786) Prussian king and military leader Madame de Stael (1766-1817) French writer/intellectual Lord Byron (1788-1824) British poet Franz Schubert (1797-1828) Austrian composer Hans Chrisitan Anderson (1805-1875) Danish poet and writer Maragaret Fuller (1810-1850) American writer and journalist Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) American philosopher, naturalist, and peace activist Walt Whitman (1819-1892) American poet Herman Melville (1819-1891) American writer Chief Crazy Horse (Tashunca Witco, 1849-1877) Ogala Sioux chief Pater I. Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Russian composer Simeon Solomon (1840-1900) English painter Edward Carpenter (1844-1929) British author and gay rights pioneer Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) Irish writer and dramatist Dame Ethel Smith (1858-1944) British composer, writer, and activist Marcel Proust (1871-1922) French writer Sergei Diaghileff (1872-1929) Russian ballet impresario Willa Cather (1873-1947) American writer and critic Colette (1873-1954) French writer and actress W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965) British writer and dramatist Alice B. Toklas (1877-1967) American writer, Gertrude Steinʼs “domestic partner” E. M. Forster (1879-1970) British writer Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) American writer and art collector Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) British writer and publisher John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) British econimist and Nobel Prize winner Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962) U. S. Delegate to the United Nations and First Lady T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia, 1888-1935) British soldier Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) French writer and filmmaker Ernst Rohm (1887-1933) German Nazi and SS leader Georgia OʼKeefe (1887-1986) American painter Ruth Benedict (1897-1948) Influential American anthropologist Vaslav Nijinsky (1890-1950) Russian ballet dancer Cole Porter (1893-1964) American composer Vita Sackville-West (1892-1962) British writer Bessie Smith (1894-1937) American blues singer and entertainer Bill Tilden (1893-1953) U. S. Tennis champion George Gershwin (1898-1937) Pianist Federico Garcia Lorca (1894-1936) Spanish poet and dramatist Henry Cowell (1897-1965) U. S. Actor Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) Composer William Haines (1900-1973) U. S. Actor Marguerite Yourcenar (1903-1987) Belgian-American writer Sir John Gielgud (1904-2000) British actor Frieda Kahlo (1907-1954) Mexican artist and activist Christopher Isherwood (1904-1986) British author cont. pg. 8 Discourse Listen, cont. from pg. 7 May/June 2004 W. H. Auden (1907-1973) British poet and writer Errol Flynn (1909-1959) U. S. Actor Bayard Rustin (1910-1987) U. S. Civil rights, labor, and peace activist Jean Ganet (1910-1986) French writer Babe Didrikson (1911-1956) U. S. Athlete Emma Goldman (1869-1940) Alan Turing (1912-1954) English inventor of the computer Langston Hughes (1902-1967) American poet Tennessee Williams (1914-1983) American playwright Walter W. Jenkins (1918-1985) Whitehouse aide to president Johnson Liberace (1919-1987) Famed pianist Montgomery Clift (1920-1966) American actor G. Harrold Carswell (1920-1992) American Supreme Court nominee Janis Joplin (1943-1970) Awesome rocker Cary Grant (1904-1986) American actor James Dean (1931-1955) American actor, teen idol John Cage (1912-1992) Composer Michael Foucault (1926-1984) Philosopher Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975) Italian film director James Baldwin (1924-1987) American writer and civil rights activist Sergei Paradzhanov (1924-1990) Russian film director Noel Coward (1899-1973) British playwright George Maharis (1928-) American actor Edward Albee (1928-) American playwright Adrienne Rich (1929-) American poet, feminist theorist, educator Andy Warhol (1930-1987) American artist Audre Lorde (1934-1992) American writer and activist Gerry Studds (1937-) American congressperson Robert Bauman (1937-) Republican American congressperson Tom Waddel (1937-1987) American doctor, athlete, founder of Gay Games Daniel Curzon (1939-) American writer Ian McKellen (1939-) British actor Billie-Jean King (1943-) American tennis champion Martina Navratilova (1956-) Czech-American tennis champion and activist Gore Vidal (1925-) Writer Peter Gomes - Openly gay minister, professor of religion at Harvard University Barney Frank (1940-) Democratic politician, congressperson Jon Hinson (1942-1995) Republican congressperson Rita Mae Brown (1944-) Activist, novelist, poet, screen and teleplay writer Elton John (1947-) Pop star Rudolph Nureyev - Ballet dancer Harvey Milk (1930-1978) San Francisco supervisor and gay activist Pedro Almodovar (1951-) Spanish film maker Randy Shilts (1951-1994) American journalist, author Glen Burke (1952-1995) American athlete Pallone, Dave (1952-) American athlete and umpire Anthony Bacon (1558-1601) Sir Francis Baconʼs brother Greg Louganis (1960-) Olympic gold medallist Melissa Etheridge (1961-) American rock star k. d. Lang (1961-) Canadian pop star Pete Townshend (1945-) Lead singer of The Who RuPaul (1960-) FABULOUS entertainer Sandra Bernhard (1955-) Comedienne and actress David Geffen (1943-) Entertainment mogul Philip Johnson (1906-) Architect Frank Isreal (1945-1996) Architect Bruce Goff (1904-1982) Architect George Michael (1963-) Pop star Page 8 Clive Barker (1952-) Writer Gus Van Sant (1950-) Film maker Jann Wenner (1947-) Publisher, Rolling Stone David Hockney (1937-) Artist Robert Mapplethorpe (1946-1989) American artist Herb Ritts (1952-) Photographer Mark Robbins (1956-) American artist Touko Laaksonen (1920-1991) Robert A. M. Stern (1939-) American architect Keith Haring (1958-1990) American artist Louis Sullivan (1856-1924) American architect Julia Morgan (1872-1957) American architect Paul Rudolph (1918-1997) American architect Charles Moore (1925-1993) American architect Freddie Mercury (1946-1991) Lead singer of Queen Rodolfo Machado (1942-) American architect Jorge Silvetti (1941-) American architect Ani Difranco (1970-) Folk diva David Bowie (1947-) Entertainer Pansy Divison - Kewl Punk Band Billy Strayhorn (1915-1967) Jazz great The Village People - Defining ʼ70s band (YMCA, famous song) Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) American composer and conductor Samuel Barber (1910-1981) American composer Aaron Copland (1900-1990) American composer Ludwig Van Beethoven (17701827) Composer Glenn Gould (19321982) Pianist Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179) Composer George Frederic Handel (1685-1759) Composer Camille Saint-Saens (1835-1921) Composer Claude Vivier (1948-1993) Composer Gianni Versace (1946-1997) Designer Tim Gill (1954-) Started Quark software Malcolm Forbes (1919-1990) Magazine tycoon Sandy Gallin (1940-) Mega talent agent Urvashi Vaid (1958-) Gay rights activist Morris Knight (1919-) Founder of Gay Liberation Front of Los Angeles Patty Sheehan (1956-) Hall of Fame golfer Muffin Spencer-Davis (1953-) Pro golfer David Kopay (1943-) Pro football player Rudy Galindo (1969-) Figure skater Justin Fashanu (1961-1998) British soccer superstar Mike Bailey (1957-) Psychologist studying the biology of sexual orientation Ellen DeGeneres (1958-) Comedienne/actress Dean Hamer (1951-) Leading DNA researcher Monica Majoli (1963-) Artist Madonna (1958-) Superstar! Jonathan Larson (1960-1996) Playwright Susan Sontag (1954-) Culture Critic R. W. Fassbinder (1946-1982) German filmmaker Doroth Allison (1949-) Fiction author David N. Cicilline (1961-) Elected 2002 as mayor of Providence, RI (Source: “Yes mom, theyʼre queer” from XY Magazineʼs Survival Guide 2) Patrick Tretola Discourse May/June 2004 Cynic’s Soapbox: Adieu, Adieu, parting is such a great blessing for me! Before I begin dispensing all of my dollar-a-thought wisdom, let me slam you people one last time. I must say, you people are almost as boring as you are mindless and pathetic! I have written for almost two years, and I haven’t gotten one lousy rebuttal, even from some twit calling me a “meanie”. I’m glad I’m moving on. Hopefully I’ll have more fun in college where people are supposed to have brain stems and my politically incorrect, abrasive nature may get someone into an intellectual debate, something none of you cretins is capable of. Actually, I will miss insulting your intelligence, or lack thereof. I would go on, but I was just struck with the idea that I might jinx myself into failing and staying here for another year of mental gangrene. So I’ll stop. Note: I have often been at odds with your “civilized” society. Just a heads up. The following have come through four years of high school. Actually, the majority, and what I believe to be the crème da la crème, were created during pax ruzz (summer vacation, tenth grade), when my mind was actually stimulated to any measurable degree. We begin in January of my freshman year, the dawn of Ruzsland recorded history, and work our way up to the current time. Here we go. -Never spray Lysol into your mouth as a cure for sore throat. -Never lick the lid of a tuna fish can. -When I grow up, I’m going to be a cynic. I’ll have a steady source of employment. -Being a good fiend is like being a good photographer: you must catch the right moment to cherish forever! -Something I must do when I am older: videotape a tornado, laughing hysterically with each new leveled house or explosion. (How many of you have no problem seeing me do that?) -These days, you’re either a terrorist or a freedom fighter. (Thought up on 9/10/01. Too weird!) -Never assume anything. -Americans assume a lot. -Run for it? That’s not a plan; that’s what you do if my plan fails! -Why do only low-life girls want to go out with me? (To all my hundreds of ex’s: I swear that was repealed before I met you!) (Oh, and I found the answer to that one: I am a low life!) -Never smoke while producing hydrogen via electrolysis. -If deprived of something (or if it’s illegal), make your own. -You know the “no weapons in school” policy? Yeah, well, it doesn’t apply off of school grounds. -(Here’s one custom made for Christina!) The sneakiest thing the Devil ever did was convince the world he doesn’t exist. -The highest level of honor you can get from making up your own swear words is to one day hear them in a movie, even if they do use them wrong. -(This is more of just a “bad” idea that I got one day upon discovering The Bible O’ All.) Post some kids a bunch of letters in a normal envelope with no print! Ha! Kids always get excited when they get mail, so just imagine the look of disappointment on their faces! Make sure there is no return address, or, even better, make the return address from the mean old man down the street or from an in-law. -Steal someone’s mailbox and post it back to them. -Get a blank check from some rich sucker all signed out, and give it to a homeless person. (Beat that, liberals!) -Post yourself things you feel would be useful in the future. -Post yourself a timer and see how long it takes you to re- Page 9 ceive it. -Post me something. (Sorry, that’s the last one.) -Go up to a Native American and call them derogatory Asian names. -Insist to a gay or lesbian that Uncle Sam has a present for them called AIDS! -Set aside one day when you watch every mind boggling and disturbing movie imaginable. Enjoy your nightmares! -Figure out lava lamps. Write a song for them. -Some symbolism: I am separated from town and society by the Chenango River. I love the Chenango River. -If people in my school are physically capable of keeping up with me, then they mentally are not, and vice versa. (I have found that that applies to most people, so don’t feel bad!) -Nothing ruins fun like obligation. -You can work harder, or smarter. -Clubs aren’t very fun if you are the only member and have no enemies. -I came; I saw; I left. -The grass looked greener on the other side, but when I got there, it was a drought. -Political Activist: (n) Anyone foolish enough to give a crap about government. -Individual: (n) someone you care about. -Society: (n) someone you don’t care about. -The art of survival is resourcefulness. The science of survival is preparation. -The problem with living for the moment is that you don’t die the next. -To whom it may concern: this does not concern you. -Genius is stifled by incompetent people in groups. -When life gives you lemons, cut them in half and mash them into her eyes. -I could beat you with one brain tied behind my back. -There’s a right way, a left (wrong) way, and my way- all out assault! -You have the right to disagree with me; it is also known as your right to be wrong. -“Social diversity is social perversity.” –Mike Savage -“Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.” –Ben Franklin. -Prohibition is proof that Government doesn’t. –ruzt -School: A community drug-free zone. LOL! -We need the correct view on this matter: mine. -I heard that mankind needs answers, so here I am! -When the competition gets hot, so does my gun barrel. -When I need your opinion, I know I can’t stick my head up any further. -Be politically correct: sell white people into slavery in Africa. -My home security system is a shotgun. -I am full of myself because everyone else is insufficient as fuel. -Some people decide to be great; I never had a choice! -Want to see the pinnacle of American engineering? Give a redneck a lot of money. -Rhetoric: learning to talk like a stoned person without the drugs. -You’ll have to excuse my cynicism; it just ate three bean burritos. -I’m paranoid, but I’m not afraid of you. -I’m not afraid of people with guns. (Mine are bigger.) -So, this is being a senior? Man, I’m going back to ninth grade! -To take the edge off of a revolutionary, give him a girlfriend. -Society has drained me of tears. Now I only have spit. -If you get zits, you are human. If you get a bunch, you are teenager. -In sin’s case, practice does not make perfect. cont. pg. 10 Discourse May/June 2004 Cynicʼs Soapbox, cont. from pg. 9 -Abortionists! How would you like it if a fetus decided it didn’t want a mother and aborted you! -Have you ever had a soda bottle full of caustic, superheated chemicals blow up in your hand? Yeah, it’s not fun. -If you see me running with tears of laughter in my eyes, sit back and watch the fireworks. If there are tears of trepidation, cell phone your loved ones and say goodbye. -Hades hath no wrath... like hungry Ruzslanders have on cupboards and refrigerators. -Friends call me ruzz; enemies call me their downfall. -Sometimes the only difference between an “adult” and a child is how easily they can boss you around. Well, that’s that. If you’re kind of disappointed in me, remember: these are only the ones suitable for your small minds. the almost clear for takeoff ruzt From Klingons to Stargates google.com While some of us have addictions to coffee, chocolate, or crack cocaine, others are addicted to television. Specifically to the sci-fi channel. Even more specifically, those who are addicted to the sci-fi channel are more often than not addicted to Stargate: SG-1. Take, for a moment, a flashback to the 1960s: everyone who has seen a few episodes of the original Star Trek knows that each episode has the same basic plot structure: grave peril, rethinking of perspectives on life and life forms, and, of course, Kirk demonstrating his core nature as a ladies' man. This is not to say, however, that there is no vestige of suspense remaining; the main question is how will the crew (or Kirk) get out of the particular quandary which they happen to be in at any given moment, regardless of whether they are confronting a society obsessed with Romanlike gladiator games or a warp-core failure just as a Klingon bird of prey arrives. Essentially, however, it is the same thing over and over again. The Next Generation tops the original solely because of Q and his appealing character traits; he (a) has a brutal sense of humor, (b) is incredibly obnoxious, and (c) is one of the few things in the universe which can make Captain Picard boil over with irritation. Stargate SG-1 seems to rise above even the epic Star Trek for a few simple reasons. It has much more of a plausible base (well, relatively speaking); at the very least, the combination of ancient cultures/archaeology with astrophysics, extraterrestrials, and an ancient system of gates which allow one to travel to other worlds via wormholes makes for a great sci-fi series. Part of the appeal must be the present-day setting. Star Trek, etc. all take place in the future of humans or in the past or future of alien races, whereas the Stargate Command is a highly guarded secret, a USAF facility un- Page 10 Cheyenne Mountain, and this stargate was unearthed from an archaeological dig in Egypt. It not only provides fuel for budding conspiracy theorists, but it puts a twist on the old perspective. In The X-Files, concealment of extraterrestrials = very, very bad; in Stargate SG-1, concealment of the stargate program = very, very good (except where the opposing organization, the NID, is concerned). Rather than being concerned mainly with Earth's future (creatively speaking), it is concerned with its future AND its past, making it that much more interesting than Star Trek or Star Wars or Battlestar Galactica. That is not to say that Stargate is superior; I do, indeed, appreciate Star Trek and its 3, 500 branches, and I am, in fact, a "trekkie". On a tangent, I suppose that I could call myself a "starggie", too, but that may be a bit over the edge. Albeit, Stargate, and probably most space-based science-fiction series, owes much to Star Trek, as such series would probably have never been produced at the time they were had there been no Star Trek to provide a basic idea; it is an example of evolution in sci-fi series terms. Stargate isn't necessarily a better sci-fi form; it's just more complex and provides a more variegated image of the pseudo-universe. Admittedly, the extent of characterization found in the majority of the Star Wars films is equal to that of Stargate: SG-1, and they definitely have more characterization than the Stargate movie. Additionally, just as Star Trek did, Stargate will most likely develop 3,500 branches (Stargate Atlantis seems to foreshadow this), and in twenty years, an even better show will arrive and Stargate will be seen as only slightly complex and imaginative. Again, the evolution analogy applies; the original Star Trek is monotonous when compared to The Next Generation, Enterprise, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and on goes the list of its 3,500 branches, and those 3,500 branches are now slightly shadowed by Stargate. The fact is, most scifi obsessed can appreciate most solid works of science-fiction, be they in text or on film, with the unique exception of the new Andromeda (convulse, go into apoplectic shock). If you have an enemy, strap them to a chair, hold open their eyelids, and force them to watch an episode of the new Andromeda. If you really want to torture someone, that is the way to do it! In any case, if you ever find yourself compulsively playing solitaire for ten hours straight during the summer, try watching a few episodes of Stargate: SG-1 instead. Auralee Morin, a veritable "starggie" The Music of Bjork Bjork is an amazing artist. She is from Iceland, a country in the north Atlantic Ocean, southeast of Greenland. It is sometimes considered to be part of Scandinavia. Bjorkʼs music is certainly unique, a mix of pop and techno with unique, mysterious lyrics. Her songs reflect many different ideas. In the song “Hunter”, she says, “I thought I could organize freedom, how Scandinavian of me!” I highly recommend her Greatest Hits CD, released under Elektra in 2002. The most interesting tracks are “Human Behaviour”, “Bachelorette”, and “Isobel”. Her songs are sometimes surprising in nature. Bjork is never afraid to take risks with her music. She writes all her own songs. In concert, Bjork enjoys having fireworks exploding around her. It makes her feel powerful. Her CDs include: Debut, Post, Homogenic, Verspertine, Gling-Glo, and Greatest Hits. Gling-Glo is a CD Bjork recorded in 1990 with the trio Gudmundar Ingolfssonar. The entire CD, save its last two tracks, are in Icelandic. The theme is slightly jazz-aired, light and easy to listen to. If everyone listened to Bjork, the world would be a better place. Patrick Tretola Discourse May/June 2004 A View from the Loser Section google.com google.com In case youʼre wondering what the “loser section” is, a friend and I were attending one of the ever-so-fun school dances, and we noticed that we always tended to congregate in one spot of the cafeteria and watch the dance from there. We thusly coined the place “the loser section”, as neither of us is ever going to be on the prom court. The loser section was in existence for about a year until one fateful dance when it turned into the “skanky makeout section”. All we could do was shake our heads at the inappropriate PDA and go find somewhere else to complain about the terrible music and all the fun we werenʼt having. My friend and I go to every single dance. I see phoniness pretty much everywhere I go. Between the butt-kissers and the people who donʼt really want to talk to you but feel like they have to, and I'm sure youʼve met someone like that, it gets a little sickening. Maybe itʼs just me, but sometimes I see these people with their vapid smiles (itʼs not just teenagers either; there are plenty of adults that do this, too) and I just want to smack them upside the head and say, “Stop being so fake! @$^O(&$$%&))!!!!!!!” I'm one of the most nonaggressive people youʼll ever meet in your life. I avoid confrontation, to use a hackneyed platitude, like the plague. Yes, I'm a people pleaser. I admit it. I drop my own opinions in favor of others. I'm fake. I know it. Back to the subject though, phoniness really bugs me, along with a lack of creativity among todayʼs youth. My history teacher assigned a project to my class a while ago. He specifically said that it had to be some kind of performance along with three different types of visual aids. There were six groups. Four out of the six made posters and presented them. That involves performance how? I probably should mention that the other project he assigned us, in September, was to make posters. Yeah, repeating the project six months later is really a good idea, guys. I couldnʼt decide if I was sad, horrified, or if I just wanted to laugh. He gives us free reign and we make posters. Thatʼs todayʼs youth for you. Everyone has to be the same. Originality is frowned upon today. If youʼre not wearing some five dollar piece of cloth that you paid a thousand dollars for just because it has the word “Tommy” on it, then youʼre not cool. Why would you want to wear someone elseʼs name on your shirt, especially if said someone else is sixty thousand years old, but yet he still decides whatʼs cool? By the way, I really wish I were a size 5 so that I could fit into the stuff at Hot Topic. Everyone needs a shirt that says, “I understand how you feel. I just donʼt care.” There are some clever people alive today. Along that same token though, there are some people that are one taco short of a combination plate. Take the millions of teen girls that use Seventeen or Elle as their bibles. Evidently, the Ten Com- Page 17 mandments now involve something about, “Thou shalt not wear all black,” and “Jessica Simpson is thy God.” Wake up people! I get discouraged when the emphasis is not placed on being yourself but rather on being somebody else. I donʼt understand the world sometimes. It gives me a headache when I'm trying to figure out why pretending to be something youʼre not is in. Why do we let ourselves drop any sense of self in order to be accepted? If your friends all think that Britney Spears is the best thing since music was created and you think youʼll scream if you have to listen to anything Britney ever again, then try doing something new. Simply say that Britney Spears is dating (insert name of current male celebrity with million dollar body and .2 brain cells here). Youʼll at least get them talking about something, and it should hopefully drown out the noise. Quick! Think of five reasons that you are unique. If you couldnʼt think of anything, congratulations! Youʼre part of the Conformity Trap. Do you think your airheaded friend is the epitome of cool? Sorry, he/she is not. Please, do me a favor, and throw away your YM, put down your Natural Shade foundation, and make friends with yourself again. Try to discover a part of you that says, “Itʼs okay to be myself.” Maybe I shouldnʼt be preaching at you like this. I admit that I read Seventeen occasionally, though Iʼd rather read Spin or Rolling Stone. I like modern rock, and I even have considered buying a Tommy shirt. Then, I woke up and realized that my size 18 body is not going to fit into Tommyʼs size negative infinity clothes. Thatʼs another thing that really bothers me. Why do fashion designers believe that fat people enjoy wearing purple muumuus? The average size of an American woman is now a 14. The fashion designers need to get with the program and make some fat people clothes, too. I'm a proud shopper at Lane Bryant and the plus size department at Fashion Bug. But thatʼs another issue for another day. People need to stop being so fake with each other. I hate it when people skirt around issues. As a society, we need to be more open with each other. If you have a problem with someone, the way to solve it is not by complaining to everyone within a 902.45-mile radius. It can be solved by talking to the person. Please, stop spreading rumors and telling lies. It only reflects on the quality of you as a person. If people would just be themselves, I think that society would improve greatly. Great. Now I'm really piling on the drivel. I'm probably the fakest person youʼll ever meet. I guess Iʼll hop off my soapbox for now. I sincerely believe, though, that the best thing any of us can do is to start embracing uniqueness again. Everyone else does not define you. You define yourself. When all the conformity is gone, then, perhaps, we will be able to rise as a proud culture. Maybe all everyone needs is to be accepted for who they are. Or maybe I'm just living in my utopian daydream. There can be no individual growth if all people are exactly the same. I think Iʼve finally come to realize that. I hope someday that you will, too. Kelly Corey Discourse May/June 2004 To Sleep or Not to Sleep To sleep or not to sleep- that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler to rest the entire day, Or to get up for that heinous thing called school. To go, to learn- and by learning know'Tis a knowledge devoutly to be wished. To go, to learn- to learn perchance to grow. But in that growth there is the responsibility That comes with such knowledge. There's the thought that makes slackers of us all. For who would bear the pages and pages of notes, The piles of homework, the formulas to memorize, The vocabulary to learn, the boring books to read, The history we have to know, and the difficulties One faces to bear it all without complaint When all might be ended with a drop form? Who would homework and reading do, Falling ever into the arms of sleep, But that the dread of parents' wrath, The avoided boundaries from whose trespass No son or daughter returns with a family name, Frightens us all and makes us return to school Than to step on those toes we dare not touch? This fear does make students of us all, And thus the tired face of determination is Wakened with a cup of coffee and forgets the thought, And great worked up courage that takes long to prepare With understanding that there is no hope Loses all motivation- Oh, but listen, Mom and Dad! In your considerations Be my sleepless hours remembered. Sarah Weinell It Can Happen On May, 20, 2004, SADD hosted a model car crash resembling that of a drunk/stoned driver, played by me. It was a very eye-opening experience for many and an experience I will never forget. With the help of Andy Tarbell and the Sherburne Fire Department, the crash was very realistic. Being involved in the car myself (co-president), I could not see the reactions of my classmates, but from what Iʼve heard, we reached many people. The students got to see what really happens at the scene of a crash. We had our make-up done, very realistically I might add, and that added to the reality of it all. I also found it interesting that when I asked over and over, “Where are my friends? Whatʼs going on?”, the only response I got was, “Some of them are being taken to the hospital; just calm down.” No one ever said, “One of them is dead.” “It was very scary,” said Nikki Foster (co-president) after it was over. The students involved were asked to speak with a reporter afterwards. The reactions were fairly mixed, but all of them felt it was a frightening experience. I hope that SADD has done its job in informing the upperclassman about what could happen in the months to come. It really got us thinking that this can happen, and it doesn t matter who you are. So donʼt ruin your lives or your friendsʼ lives, and take away the keys. I hope that I never have to be at the scene of a crash like that, but thatʼs up to you. Chrissy Natoli Page 12 False and Insecure I don’t know why, but everything in the world today seems false and everyone is insecure. I know that I can be insecure, of course, but I don’t know why everyone else is afraid of any nominal spot, stain, or broken fingernail. Maybe we can blame the media. Overly watchful eyes follow every step you take; they scorn you when you wear the wrong thing or if you have any strand on your plastered coiffure out of place. Why should the way we look to others be such a big deal? Fashion has become a great statement of individuality in the past years, but is it really when you buy mass produced clothing that you had no hand in designing? Yeah, some people have the excuse that they couldn’t design a good-looking Popsicle, but it seems that everyone lacks the imagination lately. Entertainment scares me lately, especially how much people are diving right into every lie their favorite star produces. There was this famous guy, Jackson was his name, who was accused of child molesting or something. Now, because he was this great big wig in Hollywood, his trial is all over the television. They even showed his mug shot on TV! I kind of feel bad for the poor guy, having his life ruined on TV! If any other regular Joe had been caught doing the same thing, his trial would have made local news if he were lucky. I don’t know how someone else’s problems have all of a sudden become the bait of everyone else’s fishing for “real” entertainment. There’s even the Court TV Channel, and shows like Judge Judy humiliate and make a movie set out of a stupid courtroom. One of those cases, where this lady wanted money for damages that her neighbor’s dog put on her car, was on there once. Don’t know why I watched it. Why did she have to go on TV? Sympathy? I felt bad for the poor underpaid camera crew that has to sit through the same made up scandals every day. Baseball drives me crazy. The sport itself is great, and I enjoy watching a good game. The players, the owners, and everyone else who has anything to do with professional baseball have had a hand in creating the biggest and most popular form of entertainment in the world. This can carry true for any sport. The Super Bowl, the NCAA of basketball, and the World Series must be the highest grossing “competitions” in the sports world. Companies pay millions to just have a commercial devoted to them played during the breaks. The simple fact that these players are playing for money I cannot grasp. It isn’t really a job and it should be for fun, not to pay for your next big party. Players used to have to work multiple jobs while being a professional athlete. And players are asking for more and more money! I can’t even see why they deserve more when steroids and speed are part of their pre-game diet. It’s like a movie or a TV show now, too. Merchandise from these games sells like crazy and television stations eat airings of games right up. Society has fallen victim to economizing and making money off of things that people wanted kept in their private lives or what makes them afraid. Society lacks art, in music everything is produced by machines and lip synching is anything but uncommon, movies lack interesting plots and real meaning, and the universe full of activity has been put up for profit. A reality show is full of “cat fights”, rumors, and dishonesty. This is all human nature, but if that is what entertains people, then the world is coming to a very sad state. I wish that morals were still true and people could still enjoy the simple things, but it might be too late. Michele Harris Discourse May/June 2004 Page 15 Cynic’s Toolbox: Recommended Classes forging ahead. Recently, I have been developing my skills as a BE (Backyard Engineer) in the direction of metallurgy. Surprisingly, against all odds, I still have most of my facial hair and no third degree burns, nor have I started any major conflagrations. So, I would say, on a scale of 1 to 10 (1 being safe for all but the most accident prone anarchist, 10 being something like nitroglycerin production, where grown scientists even have to run for cover!) of dangerousness, I would give it a 3. So, while it is safe, as long as you don’t intentionally do something stupid (ruling most of you people out), there is a slight bit of danger. Interestingly, despite all the other years of my “projects”, I have only seemed to attract the attention of the fuzz by doing this; what an irony! I don’t think a meth lab looks anything like a forge! (Problem is that I don’t know what a meth lab looks like.) Be sure to start out small, and remember: the key to a good hot fire is air flow! WEAR SAFETY GLASSES! (It’s not terribly hard to “borrow” some from the school.) This is dedicated to all the whinos who seem to think that all of my articles are too long or use too advanced of terminology or vocabulary. (Even though I find my language inculpable of any such chagrin causing slander!) Such duplicitous, squalid temerity has a malevolent effect on literary engineers and should never be brandished to their faces nor used to barrage their hearts! The Musty Cheese shall have revenge for me! Long live the Musty Cheese! (That one’s for you, Mrs. Mason! The Musty Cheese cult bids you good tidings and good luck on all your endeavors!) the fire and sulfur ruzz Your School, cont. from pg. 7 This is a message to the school rulers, basically, but I am also informing everybody of the maltreatment of our teachers, our thinkers, our brilliant ones. To teach is an incredible gift. To boss and give out small amounts of money (the school administration) requires little talent. Someday, I hope to see a complete reformation of American school systems. Only have employees that are needed. Pay teachers better. Treat students better. They (administration again) treat us students like a burden most of the time, like weʼre getting in the way of their job or something. I think that neither they nor you realize that they are employed for US and us alone. They act like we are just a part of their job description and that we are irrelevant. Keep this figure in mind: I believe that the superintendent salary is somewhere around $175,000 a year, and the superintendent is the farthest from us students, and a teacherʼs salary is in the vicinity of $30,000 a year (not for teachers who have worked as teachers for many years, though.) And, the teachers are the closest to the students. Someday, teachersʼ rights should be the major issue at hand. They are very mistreated. You think school is bad for you; well, itʼs excruciating for them. Patrick Tretola At the end of the school year, many seniors have regrets about classes and clubs or activities that they have not experienced. A few classes we know as seniors that we are grateful for taking are keyboarding, accounting, and business law. Keyboarding has improved our speed and accuracy in typing papers, which results in less time spent on writing essays for school. Accounting has taught us how to balance a check book, have a checking account, and understand the importance of banking. Business law also helps in many different ways and will be very useful in everyday situations after graduation. Business law has taught us everything we need to know about making contracts and agreements. This class has also taught us about the torts and crimes in society, which can be very helpful in protecting ourselves. We urge everyone to take these business classes; not only do you learn a lot, but they are also fun and interesting classes. Becky Lawrence Nicole Lawrence Great Summer Activities for the Spoon-Obsessed 1. Write a 100-page paper with .3 inch margins and size ten font concerning the development from the basic spoon to the various genres, such as soup-spoons, ladles, and the latest development in pop culture: spoons as nose rings. 2. Form a discussion group concerning the disturbing influx of plastic spoons, and conduct a study on this phenomenon, including the psychological reaction to plastic spoons. 3. Form a Spoon Society to commemorate famous spoons, lament the spoons who gave their lives during Houdini's spoon-bending spectacles, educate the public about the great ways in which spoons have contributed to our nation (in fact, many hold seats in Congress), and condemn the sacrilege of spoon-fork hybrids, the most famous of which goes by the name of "spork." 4. Request that S-E provide a class concerning spoon-making for the 2004-2005 school year that will address the key issues as to why we make spoons, how we make spoons, and the social reaction to spoon-making. Suggest that the recent preeminence of spoons as the favored choice of utensil for eating everything from ice cream to pizza be on the syllabus. 5. In addition to the reenactments which will occur within the Spoon Society, compose dramas about the tragedies which spoons have had to face constantly throughout their long, tedious lives. Catchy titles include "Spoons and Suffering" and " The Taming of the Spork". 6. South Africa is infamous for its illegal diamond trade, but what one does not hear about in the headlines is the underplayed illegal spoon trade. In the U.S. last year, more spoons were illegally imported from South Africa and Mexico than all of the illegal drugs combined. Expose this underground spoon-trade in The New York Times. 7. Write a 12-page article for Discourse concerning the appeal of custom spoons, the history of custom spoons, and the art of knitting. Note the various wars that have been fought over custom-spoons. Include custom-spoons in the spoonmaking report mentioned above. 8. Note that this article was, in fact, written by a renegade spoon who suddenly became bent out of shape after the national census revealed an unusual rising trend in the interest in forks. This renegade spoon is in no way associated with the alleged author of this article and should be completely ignored. Auralee Morin Discourse Invincibility May/June 2004 We act so strong and cocky all the time, We tell ourselves that we'll be just fine, The truth to life is that no one's safe, Not in mine, yours, or anyone's case. We bow down to fate everyday we live, We don't realize that we are just kids, We act invincible like we'll live forever, That's what we all hope about each other. Too many people are taken away, That's why we have to live life to the fullest each day, It's true that we don't know what day will be our last, With all of the action, our lives go by so fast. At our age we haven't experienced much at all, 'Cept some parties, some lovers, and a few trips to the mall, These events can take your life but you wouldn't think that, A trip with a lover to the mall the day after a party took Matt! Our independence, freedom, and sense of individuality, Is engrained in our brains as teens, and we can see that took Julie! Now, we try to look forward to a warm summer of fun, And can't wait till we know that school is definitely done, We try to be strong and forget the horrific events, But they are burned into our memories forever and we'll never forget. By now we should know that we are teens with an entire life to live, And our youthful charisma is something we have to give, With our intelligence and ideas, we are the future of this nation, And we try to avoid the hardships we are facing. What we don't realize is that we must cope and be strong, At least that's what I was told by Frog. That kid was so brave and he fought for our country, And he lived the life of a soldier daily. A soldier in life, and a soldier at war, He was a man of strength, courage, and more. He told me to have fun no matter what happened, And I will, knowing he will watch while I have it. Our attitudes prevent us from seeing the truth, About life and the decisions we make, Our futures rest in the hands of me and you, But our time on this earth simply belongs to fate. All these good people are taken away, In the process of being all they can be, With entire lives to live all we can say, Is "I am invincible, that won't happen to me." Brian Russell, 6/1/03 In memory of Jason Brown, Matt Masuhr, Julia Mulligan, and all those loved ones who were tragically taken from us as teenagers or young adults, with an entire life ahead of them. Class of 2004 Page 14 We've gone through so much And are still so close at heart. In the cafeteria at lunch, Somewhere, our friendship had to start! From the very beginning we knew we'd be friends, These bonds formed with one another will surely never end. Graduation is so near and we will depart, We'll hold each other in that special place in our heart. Right next to the spot that we all hold Matt, Matt was our leader, a legend, we all know that! Now is the time we all say goodbye, And many of us will begin to cry, But in the end all will be fine, A class like no other, we're simply one of a kind. Brian Russell "Dedicated to the Class of 2004 and my best friend, Matthew Ryan Masuhr, holding all the memories throughout the years dearly in our hearts. Our time together was limited, but our memories together will last forever!" Spirit night and spirit week champs, along with so many other memories Every special moment lasts forever Nothing compares Inseperable bond One of a kind Real friendships that will last forever Striving for sucess, knowing we can always count on each other Jesi Hicks Thank You This year is the last of four years of high school for the senior class. Many things can change in four years- teachers, friends, classes, buildings, and so much more, even that which we remember learning in elementary school. (Did you know that Pluto is no longer considered a planet?) There is one thing that has not changed- Mr. Leinbach. Mr. Leinbach is our class advisor and has been for four years. His constant help and support have brought us through high school as a class, providing us with memories that will last a lifetime. The countless fundraisers that he has helped us with have given us great potential for having fun through various activities. Mr. Leinbach is retiring this year and will be greatly missed. His dedication to our class will always be remembered. On behalf of the senior class, for the hard work and dedication, I would like to say "Thank you!" Sarah Weinell Discourse May/June 2004 Seniors 2004 Page 11 Discourse May/June 2004 Views from the Hall, cont. from pg. 1 "Become a street pharmacist and play professional baseball and bowling on the side." Brian Russell "Cazenovia College to major in Graphic Design and compete on the IHSA equestrian team." Tina Kowalski "Go to work; live life up." Travis Drexler " I will be going to Morrisville for my core classes, then going to LeMoyne [to become] a physicianʼs assistant." Joanne Swayze "I m going to Cazenovia College and majoring in education." Megan McDowell "I m going to work for a year then possibly go to college." Brian Button "I m going to military training (AIT) and then to college for Diesel Tech." Richard Schreve "This fall I will be attending SUNY Cortland for Criminology and Psychology." Ashley Boise "Iʼm going to Herkimer Community College to major in Physical Therapy Assistance." Matt Barnes "I m going to Delhi." Zach Goodier "I am going to Hobart and William Smith College. There I am going to major in English while studying pre-law. Then I hope to go to law school." Krysta Augistine "I am going to Mohawk Valley Community College where I will take liberal arts, and then transfer to film school afterwards." Troy Goodier "I m going to SUNY Geneseo as undecided." Laura Murphy "I am going to Ohio Tech. for diesel and automotive." Brandon Schwarting "I am going to Bryant and Stratton for graphic and design, then transferring to either Cornell or Cazenovia." Crystal Kupris "I am taking a year off to work." Shawn Brown "I am going to Cazenovia as a physiology major to make lots of money like Dani so we can live together in a mansion." Melissa Gunther "I am going to Oneonta for early childhood education." Miranda Walls "I am going to get married and make lost of money from stenography." Erica Utter "I am entering the Marines to serve my country." Luke A. Willis "Hanging out with college babes near rivers and ponds at SUNY Cobleskill." Russell Howard "I am going to Herkimer to major in forensics." Nate Gehm "I am going to throw a party and celebrate the 12 years of hell that is over." Chip Wojehowski "I am going to college, hopefully in the United States." Jorge Londono " I am going to Broome Community College to major in taking x-rays." Jason Fairbanks Page 18 "I plan on working at the Big M for many years like Fredman." Jared Lindholm "I am going to enjoy my summer, play piano on the weekends, and try to have fun. I will attend Cedarville University in the fall as a music major." Greg Cooley "Iʼm off to Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island to study Linguistics and someday run a marathon." Kayleigh Scalzo "Iʼm going to Daemen College in Amherst, NY to study Physical Therapy." Tyler Morgan "Iʼm going to St. John Fisher College in Rochester to play soccer and study biology with a minor in criminal investigations." Alyssa Fuller "Iʼm going into the Air Force and taking independent college courses." Casalee Hatton "Iʼm going to Potsdam and am majoring in history [in order] to become a teacher." Courtney Greabell "I am going to Moʼville for 2 years, then Herkimer for 2 to study criminal justice." Ashley Proskine " I am attending Manhattanville College where I will study music education." Kaitlin Carey "I am going to SUNY Oneonta to major in biology with a focus in pre-medicine, then attend a great med. school to make lost of money!” Dani Maynard "Iʼm going to SUNY Alfred to major as a Vet Tech. and eventually vet school at Cornell." Kyle Delee "I plan to go to college." Stephanie Christian "Go to college at Cobleskill." Tony Scott "I plan to attend Cazenovia College and I think Iʼm going to major in elementary education." Stacy Jenne "Morrisville Ext. liberal arts humanities." Melissa Leight "I plan to go to Cazenovia College as a studio art major and eventually move on to art therapy." Laurel Terras "I plan to go into the Air Force." Becky Lawrence "Iʼm attending the University at Albany." Liza Blanchard "Iʼm going to Buffalo State, majoring in elementary education." Jesi Hicks "Iʼm going to Colgate University undecided, and I will be playing field hockey in the fall for them." Natali Plesniarki "I am attending Cortland to possibly major in biology and minor in psychology." Christy Steiner "I am going to Oneonata State to study business, and then I am headed off to law school." Abby Alishauskas "Getting my nail tech license and hopefully opening my own place." Sara Prosser "Going to college for meteorology." Crispen Boyson cont. pg 19 Discourse May/June 2004 Views from the Halls, cont. from pg. 18 "I am going to college." Kyle LaFever "I am going to work for a month then have fun for the rest of the summer before going to Nazareth College." Nichole Foster "I am going to Adirondack Community College to get a degree in forestry." Krystian Lepcio "I am going to Broome Community College for communications and media arts." Amanda Janiki "I am going to Harvard to study liberal arts." Jason Lollman "I am attending Liberty University and majoring in meteorology." Brad Day "I am going [into] active duty in the Air Force." Jake Snyder "I am going to SUNY Morrisville to major in nursing." Nicole Nemeth "Iʼm planning on getting a real job and enjoying the summer, going to college in January." Jessica Parry "Getting a job for a year, then college, a trip to Venice sometime in there, and yeah, thatʼs it." Jason Martin "I plan to attend Buffalo State and major in education." Cassie Lewis "Iʼm going to Cobleskill College and majoring in graphic design with a minor in photography." Justin McDermott "Iʼm going to Daemon College to major in elementary education and have fun." Stacey Kline "My big plans are to attend the University at Buffalo and major in pharmacy and eventually get my Ph.D. Oh! And have a great time doing it!" Stephanie Purdy "I will be attending Johnson and Wales University in RI and majoring in culinary arts." Hodgie "I m going to SUNY Canton and majoring in nursing." Jon Carson "Iʼm moving to West Palm Beach, FL and getting my real estate license and attending school to be a dental hygienist." Nicole Lawrence "I plan to go to Morrisville College to become a registered nurse." Megan Utter "I plan to go to Mount Saint Mary College and then become a physical therapist." Marrissa Silverman "I am taking a year off, then college after that!" Jenna Thayer "I plan to go to Morrisville College to get my certificate in prevet, then transfer to Cornell to get my degree in veterinary [science]." Jennifer Clark "I plan to go to my full-time job and attend college courses at the Norwich-Morrisville Campus." Tabitha Tilbe "I plan to go to college and play football and pursue a profession in athletics or sports management." Richie Zdanowicz Page 19 "I am going to Caz, then transfer[ring] to a bigger and better college and have a great fun life!" Cristina Larson "Iʼm going to the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. Woot.” Christina Pfohl "Iʼm going to SUNY Canton, then transferring to Cornell (to be a vet)." Tatum St. Pierre "I plan on going to North Country Community College. For what? I donʼt know, just to have some fun." Ashley McCracken "Iʼm going to attend Oswego and study zoology, and maybe play some volleyball." Kirsten Parry "Iʼm going to Cazenovia College to major in business and possibly play some good olʻ volleyball." Deanne Strait "I will be attending Binghamton University where I will be studying psychology and law." Kalie Hill "I plan to attend SUNY Potsdam so that I can earn a degree and certification to teach music." Sarah Weinell "I plan to attend [the] Syracuse University School of Architecture." Brandon Cole "I am going to Renesselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and majoring in aerospace engineering." Lauren Turrell "I plan to attend SUNY Cortland and major in elementary education." Erin Taylor "I plan to attend Berkeley in White Plains. I will major in fashion merchandising and business management." Courtney Williams " I am going to the University of Northwestern in Ohio [to] major in high performance technology." Mike Penner "I plan to live with my boyfriend, eventually get married, and start a family." Sarah Green "I plan to attend MVCC to study computer information systems, and eventually get married and start a family." Paisley Crandall "I am attending the University of Vermont to major in criminal justice and journalism, and continue doing construction work." Troy Dibble " McDonaldʼs." Shawn McGrath "I am going to attend Morrisville State College as an equine major." Quinn Fitzpatrick google.com Discourse May/June 2004 Wedding Bells for an S-E Alumna My sister graduated here three years ago. Until recently, I did not realize how many people still knew her here. I decided that maybe those of you who knew her would appreciate some news. On May 15, 2004, Carolyn Maria Weinell was married to Adam Matthew Francis Palm of Cooks Falls, New York. The wedding ceremony was held at St. Malachy's Roman Catholic Church in Sherburne, and the reception was held in the church hall. The ring bearer and flower girl were Michael and Sophia DiMaio, my cousins. The junior brideʼs maids were my sisters, Caitlin and Meaghan Weinell. Another "junior" brideʼs maid was Hannah Weinell, as the usher with whom she was supposed to walk was on active duty in Iraq. The brideʼs maids were Rachel Farrow and Betsy Weinell. I was the maid of honor. The ushers were Daniel Beers and Jonathan Weinell. The best man was Matthew Weinell. The brideʼs maids were dressed in pastels and held matching flowers. The bride's dress was embroidered on top, and the skirt was gauzy and had a train. The ceremony was beautiful, and the rain held off long enough for the bride to enter the church. The couple now lives in Walton. Sarah Weinell Junior Prom Proves a Night to Remember Page 20 Teacher Feature I was born in New York state and went to high school at Cortland Senior High. After high school, I attended SUNY Cortland, where I recieved my master's degree in education. I have taught at Sherburne-Earlville for eighteen years at the high school level. In my spare time I like to read, watch movies, garden, mow lawns, and travel when I am free. In my future, I plan on continuing to teach at SherburneEarlville and enjoy my life. If I won a million dollars, I would buy a prosperous cattle ranch in the West and live there in the "big house", and also take an occasional trip to California to go surfing. Can you guess which high school teacher I am? Submitted by Rebecca Lawrence The teacher featured in the April issue of Discourse was Mrs. Martindale. Discourse secsd.org The Sherburne-Earlville High School Student and Publication winner of two BOCES Media Festival Awards I'm sure that everyone knew that the juniors had their prom at The Palace in Hamilton on May 22, 2004. The Class of 2005 had a lot of fun at the prom. There were many prizes that the juniors could have won. We would like to thank Mr. Sherry, our class advisor, who is the most enthusatic person on a Monday morning, or any morning, and our Prom Committee. The decorations were beatiful, and everyone had a good time. It was a night that we will never forget. We would also like to thank Randy Davis, because we were able to hold the After-Prom Party at The Fox Run Event Center. Another thanks goes to Rachel Pancoe and Emily Rose for being on top of everything and being the best Prom Chairpeople ever. Anyway, everybody on the Prom Committee hopes that everyone had a fantastic time and will never forget the memories that will last a lifetime. Best of luck to all of the juniors! Jenn Emerson Cheers and Jeers Cheers to summer! Jeers to violators of senior privileges. Cheers to no more homework! Jeers to insane gas prices. Cheers to resolving conflicts between grades! Jeers to sunburns. Cheers to yearbooks! Cheers to the last issue of Discourse of the year! Discourse Staff/Contributors Kayleigh Scalzo, editor Krysta Augustine Kelly Corey Jenn Emerson Michele Harris Jessica Hicks Sasha Hoff Russell Howard, cynic-in-residence Nicole Lawrence Rebecca Lawrence Dani Maynard Megan McDowell, graphic editor Auralee Morin Jessica Mulligan Chrissy Natoli Christina Pfohl Kaitlyn Pudney Brian Russell Patrick Tretola Valerie Walters Sarah Weinell