Picture - The Atherton Aerial
Transcription
Picture - The Atherton Aerial
THIS ISSUE’S FEATURES AERIAL Atherton High School NEWSPAPER Features - Pg 2-5 Former Aerial Writer Publishes... Interview with J.C. Hutchins Volume 85 Making the Invisible, Visible issue 2 23 Years of Suffering is 23 Too Long Nov 18, 2009 Editorials - Pg 7-13 Reviews - Pg 14-15 School News - Pg 16 2 PAGE 4 PAGE Sports - Pg 17-19 THE AERIAL PLEDGE The Aerial is a student publication catering to the interests and concerns of the student body. The Aerial pledges itself to relay important and interesting information to the community, administration, and students of Atherton High School. The Aerial Strongly supports the first amendment and opposes censorship. The newspaper staff determines the content held within the publication. When questions concerning word choice, legal problems, or ethics arise, the editorial board and adviser will discuss and resolve them. The editor-in-chief will have the final say. SUBMIT LETTER TO THE EDITOR A Deeper Look Inside: The Mayoral ElectionOf 2010 Please submit to either Carlee Harrod or Madison Carter, editor-in-chief, via e-mail. Please include your name and contact information. All letters must be signed in order to be published (digital signatures are acceptable). The Aerial reserves the right to edit for grammatical errors, length, and good taste. In no way will viewpoints be altered. Letters may attack The Aerial’s policy, but not any person or persons on the staff. The editor-in-chief reserves the right to reject any letter. Article Written By Lizz Walters A fter 2010, one of the eight new people currently running for the city’s top office will hold the title of Mayor of Louisville. Mayor Jerry Abramson will be stepping away from his current title, and running for Lt.. Governor on a ticket with current Governor Steve Beshear. Although the voting is not until next year, the eight candidates have already started the process of campaigning. The eight candidates are diverse in both personalities and experience. The candidates include attorneys, businessmen, and even a college professor. In the race are four Democrats - Tyler Allen, Greg Fischer, Jim King, and David Tandy - three Republicans - Hal Heiner, Chris Thieneman, and Jim Ellis, and Nimbus Couzin as the sole Independent that has announced intentions to run. Although of different political persuasions, one thing they all have in common is that they are competing in what’s sure to be a tough race. On September 16, 2009, Tyler Allen -(D) officially announced that he was running for mayor. Mr... Allen is a local businessman who graduated from Atherton High School, where he served as a student body president. Mr.. Allen eventually went on to earn a degree from Northwestern University, graduating with Honors. Allen began to make a local political name for himself in 2005 when he started to speak with community leaders about his vision for an alternative to the Ohio River Bridges Project when he co-founded the 8664 project. He has served on many boards of nonprofit organizations, including The Healing Place, the American Red Cross Louisville Area Chapter (where he was a chairman from 2005-2007), the University of Louisville Board of Overseers, and the Mayor’s Public Art Committee ( where he was a chairman from 2004-2008). He has reached out to the community through the internet, with his website tyler4mayor.com and his Facebook group “Tyler Allen for Mayor of Louisville”. Nimbus Couzin, the only independent candidate in the mayoral race, is a PhD holder and professor of physics at the University of Louisville. Couzin is also the owner of Ray’s Monkey House at 1578 Bardstown Rd.. He has experience in business, and can relate to the people of the city. His teaching experience contributes to his leadership and public speaking skills. Local businessman Greg Fischer -(D) graduated from Trinity High School and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. Mr... Fisher gained political experience while running for Senate in 2008, placing second in the race of seven candidates. Fund raising is one of Mr.. Fischer’s expertise. As Chairperson on the board for the Louisville Science Center, Mr.. Fischer raised $20 million for the museum’s refurbishment. Currently, Mr.. Fischer serves as Chairper- son and founder of Louisville-based Iceberg Ventures, a private equity investment firm, and he serves on the boards of many non-profit organizations such as the Waterfront Development Center, Jewish Hospital Board of Trustees, and the University Board of Overseers. Hal Heiner -(R) currently serves the city as a Metro Council Member (elected in 2002). Like Mr.. Allen, Mr.. Heiner is also an Atherton High School alum. Mr.. Heiner is currently a real estate agent who serves on the Christian Academy of Louisville Board of Directors. Jim King -(D) is a Certified Public Accountant and Metro Council Member (District 10). He was elected in 2004 and was the sixth president of the Metro Council. He is currently the Chairperson of the council’s budget committee, Vice Chair of Government Accountability and Oversight Committee. Mr.. King also serves as President and CEO of his accounting firm, King and Company, and as President and CEO of Nelson County Bank. He is currently on the Board for the Kentucky Derby Festival, the Louisville Orchestra, and the Kentucky Bankers Association, where he was previously a Chairperson. David Tandy -(D) is also a Metro Council Member (District 4), and he works as an attorney. This year, he was unanimously elected president of Metro Council. He owns a statewide law firm. He is the executive board member of the NAACP Executive Committee and state Kentucky Youth Association, and the treasurer for the Kentucky Democratic Party. With this many candidates, all with good qualifications, there’s no way of knowing who will be the city favorite, or if any of them will be the favorite. But one thing that’s certain, this election is sure to be a tough one. PAGE The Driving Force Behind Unity FEATURES Inside the Cult of Weaponry .2 Article Written By Ben Smith October 9th, a very large gathO nering of people, ideas, and weap- ons took place at Knob Creek, near Louisville, Kentucky. It just so happens to be the largest machine gun shoot and demonstration in the US. I couldn’t help but be interested, and decided to take a little trip down there for the annual show. I was amazed at what I saw, miles of parked cars and trucks, all leading to a little dirt path into the abandoned test ground, which makes a perfect place for a gun shoot. For the reasonable price of $10 ($15 if you were going to film), seniors, children, and basically anyone could attend and have full access to the goodies that were to behold. From the first time I saw the path in, people were already advertising their products. Old army jeeps and equipment were littered about, army boots being one of the more popular items since the path into the show, and the show itself was covered in thick mud. One of the other recommended commodities at the show were ear plugs, from flimsy foam ones to noise-cancelling expensive ones, because this show got loud. Besides the many little souvenirs they had for sale though, the real beef was the guns. From Ak-47’s to MG-42’s, they had just about every gun for sale or for “ use at the show. I personally fired off a 1921 Tommy gun for only $60, that being one of the less expensive ones. Gun prices actually went up to $150, and if you wanted a package, of say three guns of a theme, it could cost you up to $200. I could say that firing a full magazine off a Tommy gun for only $60 was very worthwhile. What was not worthwhile, and very expected from a show like this though, were the lines. Dozens of people in line just to READ the rules before you got in another line filled with dozens of people to buy the tickets. Even though you could seamlessly travel through the show, there always seemed to be people walking right next to you or standing near you, because if someone didn’t find what they wanted or needed at a certain stall, there were always hundreds more to look at. What I found in the stalls went from very interesting to very questionable in terms of material they sold. For example, one clothing stall sold not only authentic WWI helmets and British outfits, but it also sold Nazi police helmets with swastikas on them alongside German propaganda pamphlets for sale. Oddly enough, the German materials seemed to be selling better than any other clothing item for sale. Actually, some of the stalls sold out of their German outfits. It is very odd to me that these were selling well, since the majority of the people at the show weren’t collectors, and were either going with their families or going to apparently just enjoy the guns. Of course, there was a whole underlying reactionary agenda going on, and there still is outside of the show. The fact is, guns and ammo are selling better then they have in the last 8 years or so, and there obviously is a fear hanging about of the government tampering with our right to bear arms. The people at the show weren’t afraid to share that, wearing Tshirts with the lettering “the last man on earth will carry an AK-47”, and a sign reading “URGENT! Calling all patriots, Barack Obama is SHREDDING our CONSTITUTION” from “riseupforAmerica.com”. One could avoid the more extreme political aspects of the show, including the blatantly racist and aggressive statements on shirts and random items, but the majority of the show besides the distractions of the What I found in the stalls went from very interesting to very questionable in terms of material they sold EDITORS Atherton High School Jasmine Ayres NEWSPAPER Kelsey Hale Jordan Hoehler Advisor: Matthew Rhinehart Contact: (502)485-8202 or matthew.rhinehart@jefferson.kyschools.us Editor-in-Chiefs: Carlee Harrod & Madison Carter Contact: carlee.harrod@gmail.com carter.madison@gmail.com Design Editor: James Ellis Contact: j_s_ellis@hotmail.com Ats Page: Hannah Reeves Contact: hannahmreeves@gmail.com Diamond Ruffin STAFF , Adelle Brodbeck, Thomas Dugan, Alek Flener-Satre, Erin Gibbons, “ Room 100 Romeo and Juliet Cast Members Juliet- Kia Stone Romeo- Chris Heil Tybalt- Drew Survance & David Williams Lady Capulet- Ashley McFadden Samantha Goodwin, Levi Groenwold, Nurse- Sarah Potter , Beatrice Harris, James Haynes, Zach- Lady Montague- Erinn Williams ary Jamison, Aaron Palmer, Hannah Prince of Verona- Antwan Dennis Reeves, Amber Settles, Margaret Friar Lawrence- Jarrid Campeau Shelton, Benjamin Smith, Elizabeth Walters, David Williams Mercutio- Adam Creech http://i2.crtcdn.net/images/epg/issue/KnobCreekShootout/1_400x300.jpg guns was such. The guns at the show acted as a calling and a waypoint for the many people that attended, and brought together a large politically active group, as well as some that aren’t usually as interested. Gun shows like this, and even political gatherings aren’t bad per se, but when there are “how to train a militia” books, and “Hitler gave great speeches too” mouse pads, it goes a little beyond the call of duty. Ideals and opinions are fine to express, but shouldn’t be sold or pushed on people that attend a show that accepts anyone, whether they agree or not. The Room 100 Players Stage Excellent Rendetion of Romeo and Juliet Article Written By Amber Settles and David Williams Room 100 Players are excited. Waving around their foam swords and T hereciting their lines from one of Shakespeare’s well known plays: Romeo and Juliet. For many of them this is the first time they’ve had the opportunity to perform on stage, expressing themselves in front of their peers. What makes this different from every other production of Romeo and Juliet? The students in Room 100 have disabilities. Every student on the stage belongs to a more specialized classroom to guide them towards success. Although Atherton has two of these classrooms, only a handful of students experience the treasures inside of those doors. Being a peer tutor is much more than helping a student with a math problem. To be a peer tutor, you have to understand the person and the struggles they face. You have to be creative and willing to communicate in ways you never thought possible. “It’s amazing that you go in there thinking that you’re helping someone that’s different from you and then realizing that the kid you help knows you better than anyone else.” says an Atherton peer tutor. This year, the Room 100 peer tutors took on a new role, a stagehand. Guiding students along the waves of Shakespeare’s language and giving them encouragement. Ms. Oberhausen admits that the area of struggle with this production was the stage directions, but the students were so excited to perform that it wasn’t much of a problem.” What appeared to be a small production with hand-colored flyers placed around the school, grew to be a crowd of high school students, sitting in folding chairs in the small auditorium, waiting to see good theatre. “As with any production, putting yourself out there is the hardest part, but it’s worth it in the end.” says an eager audience member. “The best part of the whole play was understanding Romeo and Juliet for the first time.” Atherton Alum and Former Aerial Writer Publishes a Novel Article Written By Madison Carter J.C. Hutchins, a former R ecently Atherton student and Aerial writ- er, published a novel titled 7th Son: Descent. Mr. Hutchins wrote for The Aerial his final two years of high school. “I did some cartooning for the paper and I fell in love with Journalism,” comments Mr.. Hutchins. Studying in Print Journalism, Mr.. Hutchins had dreams of becoming a writer for a newspaper. Shortly after college he got a job at The Palm Beach Post where he wrote features for a few years, this is where the novel really took off. “While I was there I got this crazy idea for a novel about human cloning. I decided to switch careers and be a marketing writer.” The Aerial: This book originally started as audio books, why did you make them pod casts and did you have any idea how big this was going to turn out at the time? Mr.. Hutchins: “I started writing it, and half way through I really realized that this was some good stuff. I started writing the book in 2002 and finished it in 2004. In the world of literature, however, you can’t just give your books to publishers, you need to find an agent. It’s just like a sports agent, just far less interesting. I was rejected universally. No one wanted to touch this book. But in 2005, pod-casting was really starting to take off and I saw some unpublished authors recording their books and releasing them online as free audio books. I saw the possibility of sharing this book online as a pod cast. If I can’t sell it, I might as well share it. It started to gain popularity and had around 40,000 listeners. To this day, the book still receives over 100,000 downloads. Through the success of the pod casts in 2007, I got an agent, and then a publisher approached me to write a horror novel based on what they’ve seen and heard about me. I told them I would if they would publish my novel 7th Son: Descent and here we are.” PAGE FEATURES Green in Louisville The Aerial: How was the pod-casting experience? Mr.. Hutchins: “It totally sucks. Its hard, hard work. I am a terrible reader. I would keep messing up and have to rerecord every line and edit out all of the flubs. For a 45 minute episode, it takes about four to six hours. But what is really neat about this, as the popularity of pod casting was increasing, I was making friends with all of these other pod casters. Eventually we started to promote other people’s work. No money being exchanged, just word of mouth. Also I would get celebrities to come and read some of the pod casts. I had cast members from Battlestar Galactica and a show called Fire Fly. This also created a lot of enthusiasm for the pod cast.” The Aerial: Rumor has it that this book is going to be made into a movie. Is this true? Mr.. Hutchins: “Late last year, my literary agent connected me with a film agent and the entire 7th Son trilogy has been optioned to Warner Bros. These are the same guys that produced the Lord of The Rings Trilogy, and iRobot, so these guys know what they’re doing.” The Aerial: What advice can you give to any aspiring authors at Atherton? Mr.. Hutchins: “There are some predictable answers, like to read a lot. But reading a lot helps you with vocabulary and helps you see what works and what Cafe Mimosa Author, and Atherton Alum, J.C. Hutchins doesn’t. The second predictable answer is to write, to just do it. The more you write the better you become at your craft. One of the things that I am grateful for during my Atherton Experience was journalism. It allowed me to get a regular writing schedule. In college and my professional career the continuous writing helped me write the novel the 7th Son. The most important thing I recommend to people is to write without fear. It’s the writing equivalent to dance like no one is watching. You need to hush the inner critic and that inner voice, you just don’t listen to it.” In closing Mr.. Hutchins had this to say: “Much like everyone who is in high school, they think it is a lousy time. I thought mine was a lousy time, too. When I look back twenty years in the past I see that their were some very key positive experiences at Atherton. These decisions that I made at Atherton really helped me become the person I am. It propelled my life in the right directions.” The Green Building in Louisville, KY, in the East Market District Article Written By Beatrice Harris issues Louvillians face with the ever-declining economy O neis thatof thetheybiggest cannot afford expensive energy bills. But luckily, many of loca- tions around Louisville are working on being almost completely green. There are plenty of places around town that claim to be eco-friendly, with every service from bagels to wind energy and everything in between. The legitimacy of these services is questionable, but at least they are putting forth the effort. There is a building downtown simply known as “The Green Building”, a 110 year old dry goods store that was remodeled in 2007 by its owners, Mr... and Mrs. Gill and Augusta Holland. They decided that they were going to be the first commercial building in the city of Louisville to have a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) platinum certification. Not many people have heard of the Green Convene, which is a shame because it is an underground number one source for learning about sustainable living in Louisville. Green Convene was started in February 2009 by a group of people looking for ways to live green. They organize themselves into focus groups of different issues such as the transportation group, farming and agriculture group, etc. The question they focus on the most is how do they take action in the community? Green Convene takes issues in their different departments and looks for ways to activate them in our community. The group is entirely volunteer based. apologetically. Despite the setbacks, Mr.. Le has a positive outlook on his business returning. He sums everything up in to one word, “adventure.” Back and Better Than Ever Article Written By Adelle Brodbeck the atrocious ice storm of S ince January, 2009, Highlanders have been frantically searching for a restaurant to take the place of our beloved Cafe Mimosa. But now, the search is unnecessary. After a long wait, filled with frozen pizzas and microwave dinners, Highlanders will no longer have to suffer. Cafe Mimosa has returned! Cafe Mimosa is now located in the old Jarfi's Bistro building, across from Ear X-tacy. The old building had lim- .3 ited parking and limited seating space; including the fact that it wasn't in the best condition. The new Cafe Mimosa is much larger and is in a much more suitable area. It has parking all around the building, a party room, a full sushi bar, plus a regular bar. They are even trying to add a patio with a koi pond in the back. Because everything is entirely new, the restaurant decided to have a “soft opening” without advertising to the public for a couple weeks before hosting the official grand opening. The only indication that Cafe Mimosa was ever returning was a scrap piece of paper discretely taped on the inside of the Jarfi’s window stating, “Coming Soon.” The workers had a chance to sort out all the kinks of reopening before the grand opening, but as owner Phat Le said, “Everything that could go wrong, keeps going wrong.” He mentioned that they did not have a dishwasher the day before the grand opening, and it would cost $1,800 just for the shipping cost overnight. “We had our guys washing dishes by hand,” Mr. Le chuckled This adventure has turned into a positive development for the business. Mr.. Le says, “the fire was bad. It happened, unfortunately, but overall it turned out fantastic.” Now, there is more space for the new admirers, and the loyal customers who have returned to the restaurant. “Change is good,” Mr.. Le exclaimed. It was always a dream of his to expand the business. Now his wish has come true. Making the Invisible Visible 23 Years of Suffrage is 23 Too Long Article Written By Kelsey Hale The GoU has made efforts in ending this war; the issue stands that their efforts can only be minimal due to resources, and the strength of the LRA. In 1996 the GoU formed the Internally Displaced Persons (IDP), an organization and camp, to support the process of protecting the Acholi people. The Ugandan government forced thousands out of their homes as a form of protection from the LRA. Over the past 10 plus years the populations in the IDP has reached 1.8 million the past 2 years, roughly ALICE LAKWENA STARTED THE HOLY SPIRIT MOVEMENT ALICE WAS EXILED FROM UGANDA, AND JOSEPH KONY TRANSFORMED HER MOVEMENT INTO THE LORD’S RESISTANCE ARMY (LRA) INVISIBLE CHILDREN: ROUGH CUT WAS FILMED 50% of the displaced Ugandans have returned to their homes. This still leaves a rough estimate of 1,000,000 in these camps, living without basic necessities. Disease, poverty, and starvation will be the death of these civilians compared to outside the camps walls. If a camp isn’t the death of an Acholi person, the LRA will be. There have been attempts to end this war, with coaxing from the international community; the GoU has tried to make peace in their country. Many negotiations between the LRA and the government have taken place and have been spent searching for a solution and a permanent fix. The most recent discussion was held in Juba, Sudan, in July 2006 and resulted in a Cessation of Hostilities Agreement signaling an end of the violence in Uganda) being signed a month after. The peace talks lasted until March 2008, these conferences allowed for Uganda to have the longest period of peace in this 23 year war. The conclusion of the peace conferences was the Final Peace Agreement (FPA), with signatures from Joseph Kony, who actually agreed to sign, and President Museveni. The agreement to sign by Joseph Kony was a reason for celebration in northern Uganda, thinking the end of this war was a pen a paper away. Although this relief was setting in, it almost seemed too good to be true. A man that is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes might not come out of the bush, signing the FPA would be surrender and Kony would be prosecuted for war crimes. The FPA was ready to be signed in April 2008, but the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement has run out of time, due to Joseph Kony failing to sign the Final Peace Agreement a fourth time. “Bear in mind that this is a man wanted by the International Criminal Court, they brand him criminal and the appearance of a collapse in these negotiations is going to send a signal which is that this man is clearly not serious about peace.” -Yvonne Ndege, Live Al Jazeera Broadcast. Since the collapse of the peace conferences, the LRA has been active in Ugan- NORTHERN UGANGDA CRISIS RESPONSE ACT WAS MADE; THIS WAS THE FIRST PIECE OF LEGISLATION ACKNOWLEDGING THE DISASTER IN UGANDA THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT ISSUED A WARRANT FOR JOSEPH KONY’S ARREST PEACE CONFERENCES BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF UGANDA (GOU) AND LRA BEGIN 2000’s JULY 2006 UNITED STATES PATRIOT ACT, THIS DEEMED THE LRA AS A TERRORIST ORGANIZATION 1900’s 1987 1986 18 00 ’s GREAT BRITAIN COLONIZED UGANDA This sparks the question, why isn’t anyone stopping this… why can’t we just do away with Joseph Kony? It’s one man against the Government of Uganda (GoU); it is one man against humanity. So why is it so hard to stop one man? 2003 1890 2001 The Lord’s Resistance Army’s roots Referring to himself as a ‘spokesman’ for God, he destroyed everything in his path. Massacring villages, and abducting children to serve in his army, he leaves lives terrorized. In the LRA, 90% of Kony’s army is made of soldiers who were abducted as children. These children become monsters, and start the cycle once more, of pillaging and destroying villages, and abducting their brothers and sisters. Kony is keeping these kids hostage,.These children live in fear, and to stay alive they must obey. JUNE 2006 What started as subtle revolting and resentment towards an unjust government would transpire into Africa’s longest running war. Though it would be nearly 90 years before an organization was formed to attempt defeating the government, the animosity built and it is still thriving today. Now, a rebel army is to blame for massacres, rape, and abducting children. The northern part of Uganda is war zone, and this war presently has 2 million civilians caught in the middle of a roughly 120 year-old injustice, and an army who will not give up the fight. reach back to 1980 when Alice Lakwena first formed what was then the Holy Spirit Movement. Lakwena’s belief was that she was ordered by the Holy Spirit to defeat the Ugandan government and fight a political injustice against the Acholi people (people of Uganda). The resentment Lakwena and her followers had towards the government was their fuel to ignite the Holy Spirit Movement. A movement meant to be weapon and violence free, was intended to overthrow the government. Though there wasn’t violence, Alice was forced to leave Uganda due to her attempts in overthrowing the government. At this pivotal moment, 1987, Joseph Kony took control and transformed the movement into an army by transforming the Holy Spirit Movement into the Lord’s Resistance Army. This wouldn’t be the only transformation he would be blamed for. 2005 890- Great Britain colonized Uganda. Dividing the new state into two regions, making the southern half of Uganda a home for intellects and the north caged the laborers and soldiers. At the time, Britain could not have known the repercussions of the chosen demographics. Northern Uganda could not handle the political injustice, so they began rebelling and the fighting for what they deserved. The consequences of this action are still raging to this very day. 2004 1 CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES WAS SIGNED BY THE GOU .5 PAGE FEATURES This doesn’t need to be a one person, school, country, or state effort. Our whole nation should stand behind this and push for the legislation, so the children of Uganda, Africa can be a priority. Everyone in our country needs to be a part of something bigger than themselves, and here is our chance. You can choose your stance! Go to InvisibleChildren.com, purchase merchandise that helps Laren, Bobby, and Jason create more ways to help these children in Uganda. Some of what you purchase actually goes to the people of Uganda, 200 0’s CANADA JOINED THE PEACE CONFERENCES AS AN OBSERVER PEACE CONFERENCES BETWEEN GOU AND LRA ARE FINISHED KONY FAILED TO SIGN FINAL PEACE AGREEMENT who manufactured the bracelets or bags. Purchase an Invisible Children T-shirt and make it a conversation starter, you can help spread the word on your own. Everyone knows last year required books are collecting dust, get rid of them! Start a book drive at your school! Donate all the books you can, so when schools are built for the children when they return home. These no longer invisible children can have a safe place learn, that are full of resources that you donated. Get everyone involved around you! Start a ‘Change for Change’ jar, and donate your coins, and maybe throw in a dollar or two time and again. When you feel you have satisfying amount, send the money to Invisible Children. Pennies add up, so many pennies get thrown away everyday, because society feels there is no use for them, well put them to use! Sign up for the Tri fund raiser, and donate a couple dollars a month. Sign the ‘Citizen’s Arrest Warrant/ We Want Obama to…’ card, and be a part of committing the United States to ending this war. Obama said, “It’s time for a change”, let’s see him change something. Here is your chance, are you going to take it? THE LRA RETALIATED AGAINST THE COLLABORATION ATTACKING THE PEOPLE OF D.R. CONGO. IN THIS ATTACK THE LRA MURDERED OVER 600 PEOPLE, AND ABDUCTED OVER 160 CHILDREN. LRA BECAME ACTIVE IN THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO AND WESTERN EQUATORIAL IN SOUTH SUDAN, THIS PROVOKED A COLLABORATION EFFORT BY THE GOU, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC CONGO, SOUTH SUDAN, AND CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, WHO COMBINED THEIR ARMIES AND ATTACK THE LRA THE RESCUE, WAS RELEASED FOR PUBLIC VIEW APRIL 2009 70 MILLION EUROS FOR AID IN UGANDA WAS DONATED BY THE UNITED KINGDOM What the LRA will do next is ambiguous and their horrid crimes are engraved in the minds and hearts of thousands, Invisible Children keeps searching for ways to save Joseph Kony’s child soldiers. This organization has given the ideology of peace a fighting chance in this ravenous war. Laren, Bobby, and Jason have designed fund raisers for the educational and economic support in developing programs for the rescued child soldiers and other displaced children in northern Uganda, but you can help too. DECEMBER 2008 Though these boys were on a vacation, all three felt the need to do something FEBRUARY 2008 2007 2007 US STATE DEPARTMENT, TIM SHORTELY, TO SENIOR ADVISOR FOR CONFLICT RESOLUTION WITH HIS FOCUS ON NORTHERN UGANDA “Invisible because, No records are kept of their numbers or age. Invisible because, Their own armies deny they exist. Invisible because, They simply vanish.” -The Rescue Night commuting in Uganda used to be children leaving their homes and searching for urban areas or centers of larger IDP camps, fleeing in fear they would be attacked or abducted by the LRA, once more or for the first time. Though night commuting has ended in northern Uganda, the violence from the LRA has not. It has actually gotten worse. In the most recent documentary from Invisible Children, The Rescue, the boys went back to document the progression in Uganda, to document history, Joseph Kony was meant to sign the Final Peace Agreement. The film updates the world on the current situation at hand, how can we end this war? With Jason Russell’s narration, the feelings of Joseph Kony failing to sign the FPA are made known, “He defeated us all…” Jason says as everyone left the bush realizing Kony might not ever hand over his army and surrender to the ICC. Realizing the children of northern Uganda needed their help; Jason, Bobby, and Laren took this to the United States and have been pushing for legislation committing the U.S. to ending this war in Africa. SEPTEMBER 2008 Invisible Children is a non-profit organization started by Laren Poole, Jason Russell, and Bobby Bailey who took a But why are these children invisible? about this awful situation in Uganda. Though they were just three boys, visiting a violent filled area, they took their first stand and pushed for public awareness. In 2003, the Invisible Children released a film, Invisible Children: Rough Cut, documenting what they found when they first ventured into Africa. Since the release of that film, night commuting has ended for the children in northern Uganda. APRIL 2008 “It’s not just an Acholi problem, it’s a humanity problem,” said Luis Moreno Ocampo, the lead prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. If it’s a humanity problem, why isn’t all of humanity giving their hands to help? Maybe because most of the human race doesn’t have a clue of the magnitude of this war, there is a chance they do not even know these children exist, which makes them invisible to the world. Norbert Mao said, “How come that all these deaths don’t even take one minute of CNN’s time, and BBC’s time? And yet if there is one Briton who is killed in an incident it is of great concern to the global media”. Unless you’re an avid National Public Radio listener or you keep up with the New York Times you wouldn’t have a clue about what this long running war entails or the terror it’s creating in people’s lives. Major news stations aren’t spreading the word, so 3 boys from California, United States took it into their own hands. vacation to explore Africa. They weren’t expecting to find what they just happened to stumble upon, but instead of stepping back they took a stand. Telling each other, “but we’re so young”, they dove head first into finding a way to leave their imprint in Africa, to have the world know, that out of all the people that are trying to survive in this war, the child soldiers are the most invisible children. The realization for them set in, kids, younger than themselves were killing and destroying a nation, so stepping back and letting someone else pick up the slack wasn’t an option, kids needed to be a reason in ending this war. The relationships Laren, Bobby, and Jason made were beyond belief, they built bonds with previous soldiers who had escaped, soldiers who were still fighting, and mothers who had lost their babies. The urge to bring these lost children home could never have been stronger. MARCH 2008 da as well as Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, and southern Sudan. This spread of activism by the LRA has gained disapproval from the international community causing them to pressure the solution to find the end of this long war, because it has become a regional complex. PAGE 91.9 WFPK FEATURES Public Radio at its Finest Aerial Newspaper: Did you create both Live Lunch and Waterfront Wednesday? If so where did you come up with the idea? Stacy O: The idea for these series came from former Program Director Dan Reed. I was his Assistant program director at the time and we put the ideas into motion. Live Lunch was inspired by the fact that we wanted to use our beautiful performance space consistently and bring the public into the building which was newly renovated at the time. Waterfront shows grew out of a brainstorming meeting with the Waterfront Development Corporation. AN: Are you satisfied with both of these programs? Article Written By Adelle Brodbeck WFPK is one of three Lou9 1.9 isville public radio stations. It is a non profit, commercial free, listener supported radio station. Surprisingly enough, most large cities do not have more than one public radio station, whereas Louisville has WFPK, WFPL and WUOL. We Louisvillians should consider ourselves quite lucky. Not only does WFPK offer terrific music, they also provide chances to see amazing bands perform live. No, it is not like when you have to call in and try to win tickets that you're probably not going to get anyway. Waterfront Wednesday (W.W.) is a free concert that is open to the public, no waiting in lines and stressing over getting your hands on a ticket. It is situated, obviously, on the Waterfront in downtown Louisville. The set up is ideal for a concert. Lawn chairs are propped up everywhere, blankets are strewn across the lawn, and food stands are set up along the side. The sights, the sounds, and the smells are all truly authentic to Louisville. Overall Waterfront Wednesday is a perfect experience. It is not just a benefit to us, the citizens; it is a benefit to the bands. A lot of these bands are local, or not wildly popular, so this show is an opportunity for them to introduce themselves to new listeners. Because Waterfront Wednesday features three bands, performing back to back, there is always a chance to find a new favorite artist. The only negative is that it is not always a family friendly concert. The bands that are playing have complete freedom of speech so profanity can be fairly frequent. Also alcohol is offered at most of the stands. Although the drunks are usually harmless, it isn't a proper environment for young children. In addition to Waterfront Wednesday, WFPK also offers Live Lunch. Live Lunch takes place in the Louisville Public Media (LPM) space at 19 S. Fourth Street in downtown Louisville, every Friday at noon. The bands that perform are almost always, at that time, touring. So if you can't make it to their late night performance at Headliners or maybe The Palace, then you could try to catch their free show at Live Lunch. The doors open at 11:30, but to get a seat you should arrive early because space is limited. Since the performance room is relatively small, the fire code regulations only allow seventy lucky audience members to enter. The live part of Live Lunch is self explanatory, but what about the Lunch part? When I first went, I was excited because I thought they were going to make me food. To my dismay, if you want lunch and you're not a member of LPM, then you have to bring your own. The members receive boxed lunches, provided by City Cafe (next to Baxter Theater). The process of becoming a member is fairly easy, not to mention it is also a good cause. WFPK is a listener supported station, sustained by donations from members. To reward these “loyal listeners”, LPM offers special promotions only available to the members, heads up to future concerts in their area, and “bi-monthly e-newsletters — informative updates regarding current station and community happenings” (louisvillepublicmedia.org). To find more information about the WFPK concert series, I conducted an interview via e-mail with the station's program director, Stacy Owen: SO: I'm more than satisfied. Live Lunch has become our flagship program. We have about 10,000 people tuning in throughout the course of the hour each Friday. Waterfront Wednesday just keeps growing. I've been able to attract some stellar bands to each series as both have developed a strong national reputation. I don't have to do as much chasing as I used to. Many of the bands come to me requesting a spot on the WW bill or a Live Lunch. AN: What, if anything, are you trying to improve in these programs? SO: Well, I'm always striving to find the best new local and national talent as well as catch WFPK favorites as they pass through town. Both of them work pretty well in their current formats, but we've done a bit of tweaking over the years. AN: Where do you find the bands that perform? SO: For the Waterfront shows I usually seek out artists that have a new album to promote. The labels look at this as a radio promotion. I consider what's doing well on our roster of artists we're playing and make a wish list then start putting out feelers to see who'll say yes! AN: Usually, how big are the crowds? How diverse are they? Are these performances family friendly? SO: We've been averaging around 5 thousand for Waterfront Wednesday but have had as many as 8 thousand depending on the bands. There's not a lot of ethnic diversity, but certainly diversity in age. We have attendees from babies to grandparents and, yes, it's a family friendly event. AN: I know that Waterfront Wednesday is free, so do the bands that perform get paid? Does all the money from the food stands go to those companies or does WFPK get some of the money? SO: The bands are not paid a performance fee. We put them up and feed them and they keep all of their merchandise sales. WFPK is considered a taste maker in our format and we work hard to support the bands that play the event and make sure they have a wonderful experience so they'll spread the word that it's a great thing to do! Again, the labels look at it as a promotional opportunity. I believe our partner, the Waterfront Development Corporation, uses vendor fees to cover production costs. We have to pay for staging and sound, security, stage hands, etc. The sponsorship money WFPK brings in helps cover these costs as well. .6 AN: Specifically what do you do with the donation money from members? SO: Membership money supports the purchase of national programming, pays for the cost of locally produced programs, upkeep of current equipment and purchase of new equipment... any daily expense that keeps the station running. AN: Why aren't pets allowed at Waterfront Wednesday? Have there been any issues with that? SO: Yes. We received reports of dog bites, dog fights, dogs sneaking food, etc. Not to mention staff observation of not-so-wise owners who would sit with their pet and its sensitive ears right in front of the speakers or owners who didn’t think to give their dog water. The event has just gotten too big to have animals on the Harbor Lawn. AN: Do you feel that the people who come to these concerts enjoy themselves? Is that always the case? SO: Definitely! I've never had a complaint about the quality of the music. I think a number music lovers come even if they aren't familiar with the artists, trusting they'll be introduced to a great new band. It's also a wonderful place to meet with friends and socialize in a casual and safe atmosphere. WFPK is a great contributor to the overall Louisville culture and has created a splendid concert series. Whether it’s listening to the radio station, donating money, or checking out Live Lunch and Waterfront Wednesday, WFPK deserves our appreciation. PAGE Swine Flu EDITORIAL Where are the Vaccines? .7 Article Written By Samantha Goodwin A s the number of Kentucky deaths has risen, many people wonder when the vaccines will arrive. Supplies of the H1N1 vaccine remain in short supply in Kentucky, but they are increasing, officials said. As of October 27, the state had been allocated 225,000 doses, and 175,000 had been shipped by the federal government. We have heard many times who should be among the first to get the swine flu vaccination: children age 6 months to 19 years old, pregnant women, people 50 years old or older, people of any age with chronic health problems, people who live in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, health care workers; caregivers of or people who live with a person at high risk for complications from the flu, and out-of-home caregivers of or people who live with children less than 6 months old. However, no one seems to know when the vaccine will be made available to these high-risk cases. As of October 15, Kentucky had received 73 thousand doses of the H1N1, or swine flu, vaccine. Sixty percent is in nasal form. The remaining 40-percent is injectable. But State Epidemiologist Dr. Kraig Humbaugh says, that’s only about enough to vaccinate one to two percent of the state’s population. Kentucky ranks 42nd in the country in the per capita number of doses shipped, meaning state and local health officials have not been exhausting the state’s allocation of vaccine as quickly as other states. Why haven’t public health officials been more devoted to getting vaccines for Kentucky? It seems like a lack of effort on their part is resulting in public chaos in Kentucky and angry citizens wait in lines. All that is seen by public eyes are promises of shipments, promises of vaccines, but no follow through. Across the country, countless people are having a hard time tracking down the seasonal flu vaccine. In some places, people line up by the hundreds, hoping to get vaccinated — and, after waiting in line for hours, many of them leave frustrated, angry, and still not vaccinated. Few healthcare workers have even had the opportunity to obtain the vaccination. What’s even more unnerving is that while Article Written By Samantha Goodwin “ been dating for about a is because “it’s easier to avoid the emoY ou’ve month, and you notice that things tional intimacy,” required in relation- The vaccine allocation is based on the population of the county. The higher the population, the more vaccinations are allocated to that county. This makes it harder for those who live in smaller counties to receive vaccination. Metro Health says they have gotten 11,000 doses of the vaccine so far. They’ve given it to health care workers and providers, but no public or school clinics will be scheduled until mid or late November. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said she couldn’t predict just how widespread the virus will be. Roughly a thousand people have died from it so far in the United States. But she also said officials do not believe there is yet any cause to close down schools and cease other daily activities. However, district officials say since cases are no longer routinely tested it isn’t clear how widespread the swine flu is among students. While everyone notices the delays in getting shipments to cities, no one understands what causes these delays. And with the seasonal flu shot program coming to an end, who’s to say this situation will improve any time soon? Walgreens has already announced it has given its last seasonal flu vaccines for this year. CVS reports that many of its stores nationwide are still offering the vaccine, but only in certain areas. Health officials acknowledge that by the time the swine flu vaccine becomes widely available, large numbers of people will already have been struck by the illness. There is a good possibility that it will be too little, too late. President Barack Obama declared a health emergency over the weekend to give hos- Serial Dating have been going downhill for a couple ships. He does, however, agree that it is of weeks now. He’s calling you less and less, he’s not holding your hand anymore, and he’s not walking you to your classes. You don’t know what happened to change the relationship, but something must have, because it’s completely different than it was before. Then one night after not talking to him for a few days, he calls you. He says he’s sorry, but things aren’t working out. They aren’t the same, but he still wants to be friends. You agree, The most common reason why peoand you both move on. Until two weeks later ple jump from relationship to relawhen you find out he’s tionship is because of a fear of comasked someone else mitment… out, and they are apparently doing well. most common in teenagers and young According to Gerald Huff, a psychology adults. “They don’t have the experience graduate with a PhD from the Univer- in relationships, and they aren’t as willsity of Louisville, “The most common ing to work at it.” reason why people jump from relationship to relationship is because of a fear While Mr.. Huff believes this tendency of commitment…It’s quite common… is most common in men, Dr. Watson beabout 50% of the dating population has a lieves it’s probably about equal for both tendency to fall into these patterns. [Peo- sexes. “But I’m probably biased,” says ple] under the age of twenty-five more or Dr. Watson. “It’s possible that males do less are into dating just to date.” that as much or more than females.” Dr. Watson, a psychologist specializing in marital and sexual therapy and relationships, disagrees with this. He believes the most common reason people jump from relationship to relationship parents are still watching and waiting and wondering what’s taking so long for the swine flu vaccine, nearby counties have already opened up clinics to the public. Metro Health plans to hold its first swine flu clinic a month from now, and people are getting impatient. Why wait that long when you could easily go to one of the nearby counties to get vaccinated? This seems to be the mindset of many Kentuckians who feel that waiting just isn’t a risk worth taking. Many different reasons can be at the crux of the problem. For some, the act of pursuing a person of the opposite sex can be a game. They set their sights on somebody, and see it as a challenge to get them. They flirt, testing to see how receptive the individual is. If they get the right signals, then the relationship will begin; however, it will not flourish, because they are no longer entertained once the conquest is complete. Once they have wooed one person, they start scouting for the next. They forever seek the thrill of the hunt, so to speak. A person forever pursuing a relationship may be lacking attention, rather than seeking a challenge. If other relationships are inadequate, one may seek attention elsewhere. For example, “If the home life is lacking, and a person is being neglected, they may take on a new hobby that’s popular with their friends,” says Mr.. Huff. This way, a person still receives attention from those they consider important in their life. “ Another theory is that this is an instinct of self-preservation. The individual has been hurt in the past, and are constantly pursuing the opposite sex to prove to their self that it was no fault of theirs that drove the other person away. “They may think, ‘I don’t want to be quite that vulnerable,' and shy away," says Mr.. Watson. They don’t allow themselves to get attached to the next person in line. If they feel themselves becoming too avaricious, or if the relationship becomes too serious, they choke and move along for fear of being hurt again. They aren’t “putting themselves out there”, or taking the risk needed to have a successful relationship. Another common reason for this is low self-perception and self esteem. “[They may] seek constant reassurance from multiple people” if they don’t have a very good self-image, or see themselves as not as worthy," says Dr. Watson. “Self perception also influences the choices we make,” he says. “[For example], how we respond to breakups.” If our self perception is poor, we take responsibility of the breakup on ourselves and see the fault as our own, rather than accepting it and simply moving on. pitals and health professionals more leeway from federal regulations to respond to the illness. And on Sunday, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Congress would be happy to provide additional support and money on a bipartisan basis, if the need arises. Also, the question of whether or not healthcare units are “playing favorites” arises. When the presidential daughters, 11-year-old Malia and 8-year-old Sasha got their shots, controversy arose. While some believed that it was unfair for the President Barack Obama’s daughters to recieve vaccinations before everyone else, others argued this point. They said that this is not the case, and even so, it makes sense. If the daughters of the president were sick, it was sure to be distracting, and Mr.. Obama himself could then catch swine flu from his daughters. If anything, this should set a good example for what all Americans should be doing—getting themselves vaccinated. Besides that, washing your hands regularly is an important way to keep from receiving or spreading H1N1, or any other virus, for that matter. Dr. Watson believes that people generally don’t realize what they are doing so much as they realize they are unhappy. Essentially, one cannot find the satisfaction they seek in a relationship so short. So, while they may not realize their patterns in such affairs, they usually will know of their displeasure, and that something is missing. This is the first step to overcoming these impulses. Once one is aware of the problem, and aware of the fact that they are the ones causing this problem, they set their minds to changing it. They set their minds to being more open. Determination can go a long way in matters such as these, and it is very possible for one to overcome this on their own. Gambling on the Fences PAGE EDITORIALS slot machines would increase their net growth to a considerably higher amount. However this profit would only go to support the horse industry and would be of no benefit areas that are in much more dire need of funds. If the proposal for slot machines was not as black and white and was changed to include one casino in Kentucky the results would be much more positive. Article Written By Paige Harrison through Versailles KenD riving tucky is like going back in time. One beautiful Farm after another, with black and white fences, enormous barns and stables, and gorgeous homes. These are the famed horse farms that Kentucky prides itself on, the farms that would benefit from gambling in Churchill Downs. Do these multi-million dollar, picturesque farms need anymore benefits? Gambling in Kentucky has been a con- troversial issue since it was legalized in Indiana. The newest push has been to legalize slot machines the race track. The money made by these slot machines would go to Churchill Downs and to support the horse industry in Kentucky. The horse farms in places such as Versailles are a rarity in today’s society and deserve to be preserved because of the historical and cultural impacts they have had, but they are not in desperate need of more money. These farms, depending on their proximity to Keen- Graduation Standards Article Written By Carlee Harrod “A nd that’s why, at the start of my Administration, I set a goal for America: By 2020, this nation will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world,” said President Obama in his speech announcing the “American Graduation Initiative” on July 14, 2009. “But today I’m announcing the most significant down payment yet on reaching the goal of having the highest college graduation rate of any nation in the world. We’re going to achieve this in the next 10 years. And it’s called the American Graduation Initiative. It will reform and strengthen community colleges like this one from coast to coast so they get the resources that students and schools need -- and the results workers and businesses demand. Through this plan, we seek to help an additional 5 million Americans earn degrees and certificates in the next decade -- 5 million.” Despite President Obama’s best efforts to shine this statistic, the reality is five million degrees will be simply handed, not earned, but handed to the same children that were not left behind. A few billion dollars “promised” to education, and no apparent initiative to catch up the children that exPresident George Bush “promised” not to leave behind, leaves us with, according to my calculations, twelve years of children that were promised not to be left behind and degrees that are undermined by their own standards. In the Jefferson County Public School district, thousands of students embark on a twelve-year journey through education, but just how far down the road do we go? High school graduation requirements fall lower and lower in a desperate attempt to put a gleam on those all important statistics. And it raises interesting questions: land and famous horse farms, can sell for between ten-thousand and twentyfive-thousand dollars an acre. Higher quality farms in Monroe County Kentucky, an area not as suitable for raising horses, sell for around three-thousand dollars an acre. The land in Monroe County is not worth as much because it is not connected with the horse industry. Churchill Downs made $430.6 million dollars during it’s last session in 2008, which was a large increase from their profits made in 2007. The addition of Since 1983, more than ten-million American students have reached their senior year without basic reading skills. Outsourcing of jobs has lead to the demand of specialization and higher education; meaning even vocational jobs require higher education. Lowering standards for a more competitive job market completely contradicts the intention of a degree Advancement in technology should require more rigorous curriculums, but this 21st century dynamite has ultimately lowered It is reported that 91.3% of seniors graduated throughout the country in the class of 2009, but how many of those graduates truly deserved a diploma? Where does the 91.3% even come from, and how was it figured? But most importantly, what will be the cost of the further cheapening a high school diploma in the future? Whatever the answers may be, nothing about lowering standards to raise statistics is justifiable. The lessening of graduation standards would only further handicap America’s newest up-and-coming generation as it is already hobbled by future prospects within the social and economic order of things. In the end, this current generation of high-schoolers and college newbies will be left with a minimal education to deal with the most complex problems society has ever faced, such as global warming and the continuing energy crisis. It seems as if our generation is ill-fated by its own ignorance. 4806 Brownsboro Center Phone 502-893-5118 By building one casino in Kentucky and having slot machines in the race track more people would benefit. The profits from the casino would go to the state for improvements in the Commonwealth, such as education and state maintenance, and the profits made in the race track would stay and support the horse industry as before. Horse racing itself is a form of gambling that Kentucky has accepted for decades, but many Kentuckians are not welcoming of the idea of slot machines and other forms of gambling. If not approached in the correct way, gambling can destroy towns and the lives of the people in them, but it also can be great graduation standards. It is both unfair and immoral to allow such a curve in the education of society. The most brilliant, and the most illiterate have been forced within the same borders, under the same blanketed assumptions.. The federal government has shown both action, and inaction that has left American education in shambles. I’m sure there is a grammatical error in this piece, my point exactly. Broken promises and unmanage- .8 economic stimulus if it is controlled in the correct way. Only having one casino built in Kentucky would ensure that the state, and the city it is built in, does not become dependant completely on its income for funds for the state. This extra income for the state could greatly improve Kentucky. As in the previous bill the slot machines would also be placed in Churchill Downs. The profits from these machines would support the horse industry so that Kentucky can preserve its history and culture. No one wants to see the rolling bluegrass horse farms disappear, and by creating an increased profit for the industry we can ensure its existence. The issue at hand now is not whether or not Kentucky should allow slot machines, but should Kentucky’s horse industry be the only party that benefits from gambling if it were to exist. Putting slot machines at the race track and in one casino will help preserve the beautiful horse farms and the help the people of Kentucky. ably low requirements have left an entire generation without the necessary skills for life. Lowering high school graduation standards is both short-sighted and damaging to student success. Allowing students to “take the easy way out” is irresponsible as professionals accountable for the preparing students to become responsible citizens. A generation of failure should be reflected poorly on the government, educators and students, not the standards. PAGE Evolution Within Our Walls The River City Players Article Written By Jasmine Ayers A therton’s drama program is one of the many things that has set us apart from the rest of the JCPS high schools. We strive for diversity, cutting edge arts, and enlightenment; and we have achieved all of those. The River City Players is a highly contributing factor to reach these ambitious goals. Mr. Tony Prince ran the River City Players (RCP) program for nine years, before Mr. Perry. Mr.. Prince was the inventor of the “One Acts,” he wanted to “represent the students as artists,”. “The One Acts” is a performance held every year, and consists of short one act plays written and performed by the RCP members. While RCP was under his direction, the group became very close, and was sometimes described as cult-like. Often, the members would extend their school day after the final bell rang, and keep rehearsing. Mr.. Perry worked at Noe Middle School teaching drama for seven years; in that time, he was well known as being the go-to-guy to further your drama career. He applied for a job at YPAS a few years prior to coming to Atherton, but when called about an interview, he turned them down. He didn’t want to go into someone else’s program. However, many of Noe’s main administrators were planning on leaving, which, along with word that this position was open after word of the departure of then current River City Player Director Dan Rechtenwald - who served as director one year between the Prince and Perry regimes - pushed Mr. Perry to apply to Atherton. He was more than qualified for the job, and Mr.. Prince recommended him to Mr.. Hudson. Since arriving at Atherton, Mr.. Perry has changed the program to fit to his styles. “Everyone leaves their own stamp on it,” Mr.. Prince replied when asked how he feels about Mr.. Perry’s directing of the program. As much as Mr.. Prince’s stamp was “One Acts,” Mr.. Perry’s stamp has been transforming River City Players into a competitive drama club. Mr.. Perry did this for three reasons: to get Atherton’s name out there, so RCP can see other high schools throughout Kentucky, and simply because he “wants a trophy!” When Mr.. Prince ran the program, there wasn’t much outside participation with RCP, which helped to formulate this tightly knit group. Mr.. Perry said that he’s realized and even discussed the change in dynamics of the group with Mr.. Prince. RCP is not as tightly held together as it once was. Mr.. Perry mentioned that he would like it to be, but has had trouble building that. Alternatively, Mr.. Prince mentions that a major change within RCP lies with the members, not the director: “I feel like there’s not as much devotion on the part of the students, not as individuals, but as a collaborative unit.” Next year, Mr.. Perry plans on opening up a play or musical to the whole school, allowing others to participate in the drama magnet. He thinks this will be a great opportunity for all the other talented students at Atherton to shine, because not everyone is capable of taking a theatre class. As much as Atherton’s program has shifted since Mr.. Perry’s arrival, his own evolution is also evident. There are many perks to being a high school drama teacher, as apposed to a middle I f you are an Atherton student, as you most likely are, and you are interested in joining a club here at school, this is the article for you. There are many clubs - a few that are officially school sponsored, and many more that are unofficial - springing up inside the Rebel House that you may not have This is a Test is this year’s RCP competitive play. All the members will go to the competitions, and within 45 minutes, they will set up, perform, and clear the stage. If the competitors fail to do all this in the allotted time, individual performances can still win awards; otherwise, the top scored school can move on to state. The River City Players will compete with the Kentucky Theatre Association on November 14, at Morehead State University. They will also be performing at school on November 12. The understudies will perform at 3:00, and the leads will perform at 6:30. Not every school is equipped with such a capable drama director, or the kind of opportunities that are made within the program. So embrace it! We can’t all be good actors, but we can all appreciate their abilities and support our school’s unique programs; without student body support, traditions like RCP would never come to be. School Clubs: What’s Going On in the Rebel’s House? heard about yet. But one thing is certain, Atherton offers extra-curricular activities other schools don’t necessarily have. Article Written By Diamond Ruffin school one, although he did not leave Noe because he didn’t like middle school. The options are much broader in high school level drama. The level of literature, the difficulty of the plays, the general ability, and lack of censorship needed greatly changes. Despite all of those positive aspects, Mr.. Perry makes it clear that it is not that he likes one more than the other, just that teaching among older students is a different experience all together. He also repeatedly states that Mr.. Hudson has been very supportive of him through and through, and that they usually find a way to see eye to eye. Atherton was the first high school in Kentucky to perform The Larime Project that he so boldly directed his first year on the job. If the uniqueness factor of some of these clubs is not what interest you, there are other reasons why you should check out at least one or two of them. Popping your head into a club here and there just to check it out puts you out into the open socially, allowing you to mix and mingle with Atherton’s large groups of different personalities. And a more obvious reason to check out a club is this: you may just discover that you like whatever that club or activity fo- cuses on. Some of the more interesting clubs on the Atherton 2009-2010 club roster includes Atherton’s Video Game Club, sponsored by Mr.. Ron Grant in room 205, Monday afternoons. That’s right, a club for video games. Just when you thought playing video games at home was fun, well now you have another thing coming. The Video Game Club is not passive, like say locking yourself in a room and staring at a rapidly flashing screen for hours on end. Instead, the club is socially interactive and, chances are, you will meet many SCHOOL NEWS .9 Everything BETA Club “Let us Lead by Serving Others” Article Written By Maggie Shelton B eing inducted into Atherton High School’s Beta Club is a prestigious honor. This year’s Beta Club is being sponsored by Ms. Julie Wooden, and she along with the rest of the Beta Club are ready to welcome this years inductees. Beta Club is one of the largest independent, non- profit, educational, youth organizations in the world. It was founded in 1934 by Dr. John W. Harris. Beta Club is a merit association that promotes high academic achievement and focus on the development of character and leadership skills. This club is for sophomores, juniors, and seniors in high school. Last year was the first year for Beta Club at Atherton. As result of the club being new to the school, last year a wide variety of students were inducted. This year’s number of inductees is smaller, and most inductees this year are sophomores. Despite this, the club is still expected to have ten to twenty new members. Although the number is small, each member can make a difference in the lives of people today. Beta club is instructive in the value of good character and well developed social skills. There is a difference in middle school and high school when it comes to Beta Club, though. Middle school Beta Club is just to get you ready for what lies ahead, “to get your feet wet.” High school is a different story. There is much more work to be done, and more people to help. Ms. Wooden was actively involved with Beta Club throughout her high school career, and now she is this year’s new sponsor at Atherton. This club means a lot to her. She believes that Beta Club is for students who have a high academic achievement and the willingness and desire to give back to the community. They have to want to help and be role models. Beta Club is great if you are really serious about it. It can lead to scholarship offers, and it shows well on a transcript for college applications. One piece of advice is not to join Beta Club just to join it; join it because you want to make a difference in people’s lives and the community. To be able to qualify to be in this prestigious club you must have a grade point average of 3.0 and be able to volunteer fifteen hours of your time every year to help others. These are called (community) service hours. Membership is not a right, it is a privilege, you must also have worthy moral and ethical personality. As stated in its charter, Beta Club has strict rules to abide by. One serious violation of ethics or conduct and your membership can be terminated, which is permanent without possibility for reinstatement. This year’s Beta Club will be a hit, the Introduction Ceremony will be on November 11, 2009 at 6:30 in the Small Auditorium at Atherton. Come out and support your fellow students as they are honored with the opportunity of a lifetime. like-minded people. What's the worst that could happen? You lose Mario Kart? Alternatively - if you are not into the toocool-for-school clubs like Video Game Club - Mr.. Will Tucker has recently begun facilitating a new creative writing workshop called *the footnote. I'm not sure about you, but the title of the club gives away at least some hint that this workshop is for those into serious writing. Mr.. Tucker's mission statement for this club: "Express yourself. It's what you do". Some benefits of meeting with the *the footnote after school on Wednesdays in room 108 - besides being able to share knowledge with Mr.. Tucker, the coolest teacher ever - is you will always have the opportunity to show off your writing skills, and you are encouraged to always be your own creative self. How much fun could that be? Don't answer that question just yet. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the more extra-curricular activities you participate in, the better your college application resume will become. So, become active, get out and get to know interesting people, and do what you do best. Be creative! What's the worst to happen? ISAP is Nothing Compared to What These Kids Have Been Through Article Submitted By Scott Wade and his E.S.L .Classes INTRO Picking up by the Ears and Pulling Temple Hairs Narayan Adhikari is Nepalese who was forced to live in a refugee camp in Nepal because he was born in Bhutan, described another tactic. “They pick you up off the floor by your ears,’’ he said, as he grabbed both ears. Sometimes students ask Ahmed Mohamud, a Somali freshman at Atherton, why the fingernail of his finger looks smashed. “Teachers did it,’’ he says, matter-of-factly. “In Somalia and Kenya, they beat you all the time.” Ahmed is part of a wave of refugees now common at Atherton, beginning last school year. Most are Somalis who lived in refugee camps in Kenya, and Burmese who lived in refugee camps in Thailand. A few are from Cuba. Most are now in their second year in the United States. Atherton students who spent their childhood in refugee camps don’t show bitterness to their treatment, but even laugh as they show each other what teachers did to them. In my English as a Second Language class on a recent day, a student’s explanation of what Americans would consider unthinkable ignited a conversation of story sharing, as students from different countries stood up and re-enacted punishments. They even laughed because stories from around the world were so familiar. Ahmed demonstrated how teachers virtually mutilated his finger, weaving a pencil through his fingers, and putting his hand on the desk. “Then they smash your fingers together with the pencil in between,’’ he said. The One Kya Wah said teachers grab hold of the hairs in front of the air and temple area and pull up to inflict pain as punishment. Below, Kya Wah and Po Si Sit demonstrate. Legged Balancing Act Holding Books on Your Arms Melba Seijas, from Cuba, described how her cousin had to hold her arms out straight in front of her supporting the weight of heavy text books. Kim Courtney, an Atherton ESL teacher, said students have told her of having to kneel on corn kernels or even Coke bottle lids. My wife, born in Taiwan, said her mother told her that children had to kneel, putting their knees on an abacus. Wah Wah, a Karen minority from Burma, described it: The teacher would put books on your head and make you stand on one leg for 10 minutes. Students must have a ruler in their mouth, extend both arms horizontal to the floor and, in the meantime, balance chalkboard erasers on their wrists. If the books or erasers fall, or the raised foot touches the floor, the student has to start over. “We just stood there and cried,’’ said Paw Sie, with a doll-like smile. “It’s true.” PAGE SCHOOL NEWS Slapping with Rattan Sticks or Rulers .11 Abshiro Noor, also from Somalia, told a story every student in the class was familiar with. Students are forced press the tips of their fingers together and are whacked on the fingertips for missing grammar or math questions. Ear Pulling Than Da Khing, a Karen from Burma, demonstrated how students had to cross both arms in front of their body, grab their own opposing ears and do deep knee bends, also known as squats. “Ten times for one mistake,’’ said classmate Kya Wah, who goes by Gracy. “Twenty times for two mistakes.” Beatings Dished out for Playing on Weekends Mohammed Ali – that’s his real name – said when teachers in Somalia saw kids player soccer on a Sunday, instead of studying, it was bad news for the student. “They would beat you on Monday. The teacher will beat you everywhere,’’ he said. Mohammed shows a scar on his forearm. He said, “Teachers made us go to the forest to bring back sticks to beat us with.” Whacked Knuckles and Skull Wah Wah saw teachers pulling on teachers ears and teachers making students pull on their own. Ahmed Mohamud and Omar Ali demonstrated the tactic used in Thailand. Fellow Karen national Yeh Bay drew an illustration of several students in squatting positions holding each other’s ears. Next to the image, he wrote: “We cry.” Like getting smacked with a ruler or rattan which on the palms, calves, all common experiences among Atherton’s newcomers, Abdullahi Abdi wrote: “In Africa, the teacher they hit you in the hand knuckles.” He also described getting wrapped in the head by knuckles. Kya Wah described how the girls would have to hitch up their skirts to be whipped across the back of the legs and calves. Finger and Ear Twisting Fatuma Hassan, a Somali, demonstrated a variety of techniques her teachers in Somalia and Kenya had of using pencils to twist the ears. She said when her brother “didn’t want to be a Muslim,’’ teachers made him strip to his underwear, tied his hands over his head to a bar and beat his body with sticks.” Carrying Classmates on Their Back Saw Kler, a Karen from Burma, said boys who broke the rules had to carry a girl all the way around the school on their backs. Maybe it’s not surprising that Atherton’s new comers love their teachers. We don’t hit them. Mr. Wade knocked out by Muhammed Ali International Opportunities .12 PAGE SCHOOL NEWS A Look at Several Programs with which to Study Abroad understanding of the inner workings of other cultures. limited group of languages in France, Spain, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Germany, Italy, or China, for anywhere between 2-52 weeks. Education First A second, Education First exclusive program is their EF Multi Language Year program. In this, students will gain the opportunity to experience 3 of the world’s largest cities through 9 months of rigorous course study of 2-3 languages of their choice. The locations of study however, are the same for both programs. With claims to be “the world’s largest private education organization,” Education First (EF) has been offering high school and college students the opportunity to study the language of their choice in a culturally rich environment for over 40 years. A multinational staff of more than 3,000 full time, and 23,000 part-time teachers and volunteers working in hundreds of offices and schools in more than 50 countries around the world, show that E.F.F. is more than well equipped to succeed in their mission to, “Make it possible for people around the world to communicate with one another across borders, breaking down barriers of language, culture and geography.” Article Written By Zach Jamison High School is one of the A therton few IB magnet schools through- out the state of Kentucky which hosts several foreign exchange students each year from every corner of the globe. The main purpose of these student exchanges is to foster a community of international scholars, and so far, they have been working quite well. Students with the intent and desire to study abroad have a wide variety of programs and options available to select from, as well as an extremely diverse cluster of countries waiting to accept them. Information on these programs is not very difficult to obtain. It is made easily accessible through the use of several websites. American Field Service The American Field Service (AFS) is the first of many exchange programs readily available for students from several countries. It is a volunteer based organization whose yearly basis of participation includes roughly 13,000 adults and students worldwide. With networks on popular websites such as Myspace.com, and Facebook. com, the AFS is easily able to distribute information about its wide selection of opportunities to study abroad in over 50 countries. Enrollment is as simple as the scroll of a computer screen and the click of a mouse, and, with an easily navigable website you’ll have no trouble locating the requirements to travel abroad. With over 90 years of history and a core system based on dignity, respect for differences, harmony, sensitivity and tolerance, The American Field Service offers two quality programs through which to study abroad. The first of which offered is titled, “The School Program”. Through this program, students gain the opportunity to stay for the duration of one academic year, semester or trimester, based on the country they are attending. The students live with a host family and attend a local secondary school as full time students. These exchanges are offered in more than 50 countries across the globe, and according to the AFS website, “Enable(s) people to act as responsible global citizens working for peace and understanding in a diverse world”. The second program The American Field service provides to aspiring ambassadors is that of a “Summer or Intensive” program, in which students have the choice to spend one to three months in a foreign country. These programs tend to have a more direct focus on home stays, language skills, community service, and cultural activities. Although there are two different programs open to students through AFS, participants of both gain a much deeper The programs offered through Education First are as diverse as the countries they send their participants to, but each follow one of their standard promises, affordability. In these hard economic times we need to work together as a global community to reestablish a working economy, and EF recognizes this. “We want everyone to be able to afford our programs, and that means we have to keep the costs down.” – www. ef.com Education First’s main focus is language for the purpose of multinational career opportunities, and this is achieved through offering programs to students of all ages, the earliest of which being middle to high school students between the ages of 13 – 16. Students that fall into this age group are offered the opportunity to study abroad in the months of June, July, August, January, and February. During this time, they will be exposed to the specific disciplines of the language of their choice. It is a carefully structured course of 20 weekly lessons held in mornings and afternoons, and specifically designed to help students progress quickly. The next age group is that of 16+, including mainly high school students, and is presented with a multitude of options to hone their proficiency in the language of their choice. The first and probably most common, is the standard study abroad. Students have the choice to select between Spanish, French, German, Italian, and Chinese as languages, and will have the chance to study this The last age group serviced by Education First is that of the 25+ age group. This age group is offered the same programs as the two prior, but in addition 25+ year old students are given the chance to study through what is known as the EF Executive Courses Abroad program. Adults wishing to further their linguistic ability and form a career are presented with small group and oneon-one intensive immersion courses abroad designed specifically for executives. They are able to choose from UK, USA, France, Spain, Italy, and Germany, as possible study locations. All in all, Education First provides an extensive selection of possible programs through which to hone, or even perfect your understanding of a language or culture. With so many countries available as study locations, and so many career opportunities offered, it’s easy to see why it would be a great choice for any aspiring linguist. The Laurasian Institution The third and final major educational site for language proficiency is that of the Laurasian Institution. This program is crafted specifically for fostering a better understanding of Asian cultures, particularly those of China, and its neighbor, Japan. In existence since 1990, this program has helped connect countries of the world with the unique cultures of two of the largest Asian superpowers, and viceversa. While the Laurasian has its roots dipped deep into several programs, its two largest are that of the Chinese (CCorps) and Japanese (J-Corps). The C-Corps has its bases set in Seattle and China, and its students are primarily second year Chinese students who study abroad in American public and private schools with high educational standards. The same goes for the J-Corps program. What makes these programs unique though, and what offsets them from other modern day exchange programs, is that the students, with their knowledge of their own culture, are required to contribute to their peers’ cultural understanding. The result is an enriching experience for both the American students and foreign students as they collaborate to learn about each other’s world. With so many programs available to today’s students in which they can examine and gain a better understanding of various cultures, we can begin to see the formation of a vast international group of scholars whose primary goal is to establish efficient communication between each nation of the world. In doing this, the cultural leaders of tomorrow have an incredible opportunity with the technology made available to them today. We can shatter language barriers and work our way towards becoming a more unified global community. Bel Canto Desserts - Dec. 4&5 7:30 PM $10 Madrigal Dinner Thursday amd Friday December 10 - 11 Soup, Salad, and Desert for $10 atherton-choir.tk Saturday December 12 Dinner for $15 PAGE Disney ENTERTAINMENT / REVIEWS The Next Comic Superpower? Article Written By Aaron Palmer A few years from now, you decide to take your family to Disney World. Your daughter is pining for the new Jonas Brothers ride which features an exclusive soundtrack in which the audience’s own screams are incorporated into it and a CD of the soundtrack can be purchased from the gift store for $25. Your son, however, is excited about the new rollercoaster, Marvel: Be A Superhero, which features superheroes from the comic company such as Spider-Man, Hulk, Iron-Man, Captain America, and a few others. Is this the future of Marvel comics? But first, let’s look at the history behind the company. Marvel started off in 1939 under the name Timely Comics, founded by Martin Goodman. At this time, comics were still relatively new and extremely popu- lar in pop culture, and during this time, Goodman hired a teenage relative, who in 1941 would rise and take over as an editor. This man, Stanley Lieber, is known by his pseudonym, Stan Lee. In the post-World War II era, the comic business of superheroes was becoming unpopular, so Timely Comics, now newly renamed Atlas Comics, began to broaden its selection. Some of their genres expanded to include romance, westerns, drama, bible-stories, and a wide variety of different works. For the children’s market, they published a few ghost stories and high school drama stories. They even attempted to try to get superheroes back on the popularity wagon unsuccessfully. It wasn’t until DC comics began to rake in the money through superhero comics when Marvel started suit. Text to Media Lost in Translation? Article Written By Adelle Brodbeck and more books are being M ore made into movies. One would think that transferring beloved stories onto the big screen is a great idea. But at what point does this transaction go too far? Are our treasured tales being ripped to pieces by bad acting and poorly constructed scripts? I feel compelled to start off with one book series turned movie that has erupted with mass popularity. Although some people may disagree on the quality of the books, there is no denying the massive fan base of Twilight. I myself am very fond of the book series, but not a great admirer of the movie. Even though the movie was poorly made, badly edited, full of mediocre CGI and not the best acting, I still own it and watch it constantly because I am a fan. I love the books and will pretend to love the movies for fear of loosing all respect for the book series. But what about all the reluctant boyfriends, family members and friends being forced to watch the movies without reading the books? They will all agree that it was an awful movie. Being a fan of the books may shroud true opinions, but people being newly introduced will have no problem critiquing. Then why does this happen? Why are well written, fun and entertaining books being turned into terrible movies? When a book is translated to the screen ,“ In the 60s, Lee, working with Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, created a wide range of new comic book superheroes that we all know and love today such as SpiderMan, The Fantastic Four, the X-Men, Iron Man, The Hulk, Thor, Daredevil, Doctor Strange, and a wide variety of other fantastical characters. Lee’s characters were often well thought out and developed with a wide range of complex emotions, unlike what most superhero comics were or had been. In the case of Spider-Man, here you had a teenager Peter Parker, struggling with school, family, girl problems, and all the other usual teenage woes, but he has a secret identity in which he protected New York city citizens from various thugs to equally complex and human villains. Nowadays, however, with the boon from comic book superheroes owning the box . office, Marvel and similar comics have to have be doing quite well, right? Seemingly, yes. But how can it explain Disney’s buyout of Marvel two months ago? One of the main reasons is probably to expand on the tween-age boy market, much like Disney has been doing with the opposite gender with its shows such as Hannah Montana, movies and rock/pop acts such as the Jonas Brothers and High School Musical. Previously, the Pirates of the Caribbean series held that throne for young boys. So, Disney might be trying to focus on putting out new marvel related products and shows and perhaps even rides and video games. For example, Disney partnered with Squaresoft (now Square Enix) to create the popular video game series Kingdom Hearts, which is a mash up of the Disney universe featuring Final Fantasy characters. And surprisingly, it made for some great video gaming. Also, for this decade, Disney is buying up a lot of different companies such as Saban entertainment (owns Power Rangers franchise, and was a branch of marvel and featured some marvel superhero based shows) and they famously purchased 3-D animation powerhouse Pixar Animation Studios back in 2006. So, what exactly is Disney planning to do with Marvel? That’s the thing, nobody really knows. However, comic enthusiasts think that there is a low probability that Disney will interfere with the comic industry, other than maybe making new rides/mash-ups/films and other projects involving Marvel’s 8,500+ characters Pessimistic people, like myself, think that books shouldn’t even be made into movies because it will never end nicely (the only exceptions being Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings) there is always speculation. The optimistic people have faith that the directors and actors will portray the movie exactly the way they want. Pessimistic people, like myself, think that books shouldn’t even be made into movies because it will never end nicely (the only exceptions being Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings). Although there are many pessimists, the build up for book based movies can still be overwhelming. All the advertising campaigns, internet buzz and gossip at school is too much. Honestly, is all the promotion necessary when it is virtually impossible to cram an entire book word for word into a respectable movie length. Without all the hype and expectations I think that some of these movies could actually be recognized for just plain, quality movies. Maybe it is just the pessimist in me but, I think that books shouldn’t be made into movies. Not only does it create conflict and disappointment, it destroys imagination. Kids are reading less and less because there’s no reason to. Why would you want to sit and read a book when you can just see the movie? Movies can’t compete with book. When you are reading a book there is so much more left to your imagination. You can dress these characters however you want, picture the scenes however you want, it’s all up to you. But, with mov- .13 “ ies, everything’s already done for you; zero imagination needed. When you’re young, imagination is especially important, and these movies are tearing that away. There are different sides to every story. Some people expect too much from book based movies and are left irritated and unhappy. Some people don’t expect anything from these movies and could quite possibly be surprised. It all depends on where you’re coming from. Even if you know the movie’s going to be a train wreck, but you don’t want to be the only one who hasn’t seen the new rendition of Where the Wild Things Are, for Pete’s sake at least read the book. PAGE Paranormal Activity REVIEWS Real or Fake? J Para n ivity orm al Ac t First, the acting of Katie Featherson and Micha Sloat is convincingly chilling. Micha and Katie are an engaged couple that have been living together for three years when Micha thought he heard creaking pipes, but it was so much more. Throughout this movie you witness what was once am intriguing and loving couple transform to a very stressed, upset, couple. Post er Something that I myself enjoyed during Paranormal Activity was the sense of strange humor in the beginning when everything’s just fun and games. In addition to the rare sense of humor found in this horror film, the story line was very different from the ordinary shock flick. Unlike The Others, Paranormal Activity kicks off your Halloween socks and keeps you sinking in your movie seat, with more of a realistic feel for the home in San Diego and the activity going on in the home of Katie and Micha's lovely house. Amo n Ama r Twili ght o f th’s A lbum Whatever it may be that you appreciate about this movie, expect to be thrilled no matter what. And don’t buy popcorn - in the first ten to twenty minutes, it will be on the floor. Go see this movie with a group of people; you won't want to leave each other’s side. I'd grab a mid-night snack before you keep yourself locked in your room. Come prepared and be ready for anything. r Go the T hund e Another thing that is an eye catcher and keeps you in your seat is the movie camera itself. It feels as if its a home video left behind which in a horrific way gives you that extra chill in your spine. d Then there are the subtle bumps in the night has the viewer's adrenaline rushing. Not only do the main characters develop nicely, but Oren Piel's terrifying directing skills rubs off on the crowd, making Paranormal Activity seem incredibly realistic. In this day of age, movie watchers are looking for something to really crawl down their spine and make them feel as if someone or something is breathing on their necks. Amo n Ama r th Ba nd P hoto And back to the original question first raised in this review: is it really Paranormal Activity? See it for yourself and come up with your own opinions. If you dare. Scre ensh If you thought The Blair Witch Project was terrifying, you have another thing coming. Paranormal Activity is as scary as it gets. I'm not going to answer the question that I myself am still asking: is it really paranormal activity? That is a question for you to ponder. ots f rom Pa rano rmal ust when you thought that Transformers II was the movie of the year, Oren Piel had audiences crouched down in their movie seats. Movie ticket after movie ticket were bought due to the excitement of the movie trailers/previews. Paranormal Activity has a different view. The movie is filmed with a home camera. With two characters and their beautiful home in San Diego what could go wrong? Activ ity Article Written By Diamond Ruffin .14 Amon Amarth Twilight of the Thunder God Article Written By Levi Groenewold Amarth. It’s loud. It’s Heavy Metal. It’s centered on Viking lore and mythology. It is inA mon spired by European folk music from the ancient times. It’s Viking Folk Metal, and no, it is not a band that is going to carry the same legendary impact as The Beatles, or even Metallica for that matter. That most certainly does not mean it is bad music. Your reviewer endeavors to convey to you the very experience of every aspect of this album, as your reviewer strives to do with all the music he listens to, but your reviewer also feels that Amon Amarth’s electric and power driven music merits an entire reality check on the music of the emerging generation and the culture it creates. Amon Amarth’s album, Twilight of the Thunder God, contains everything that a Metalhead would want in music. Amon Amarth manages to stand out as a Heavy Metal band without challenging the very legitimacy of the style itself. Like most Heavy Metal bands today, Amon Amarth, and the album itself, are not one hundred percent pure in their subgenre. Most Folk Metal bands incorporate Melodic Metal or Melodic Death Metal. Twilight of the Thunder God has no shortage of the Death Growls that we all love, and better yet, some of the best instrumentals in Heavy Metal today back the extreme growling with an epic aura. For subgenre-freaks, the album could be said to be Epic-Viking-Folk-Melodic-Death-Metal. That is a mouthful, so why don’t we just call it for what it’s worth: exceptional. Opening with the song whose title is the album’s namesake, elation fills the heart. For the first time, one mat feel tears of impression swell up even in the most macho of music fans because of this heroic sounding anthem. The songs Free Will Sacrifice, Where is Your God is arguably less melodic and have more in common with the likes of Pantera than Agalloch, and focuses on the more extreme aspect of death metal, which can admittedly be a little boring since we have heard Cannibal Corpse more than too many times. But Twilight of the Thunder God more than redeems itself with epic ballads such as Guardians of Asgaard, an extreme vocal style Doom Metal song about the legendary spiritual warrior guarding the sacred city of all Viking Gods. Maybe the Leif Ericsons of metal music have a special throne reserved with them behind those glorious, Nordic walls. Every song on this album has its own place in Asgaard I believe, but taking a more mortal look at things, many would say that this very album is a sign that music is condemned to the lofty gates of some Viking heaven to die. Listening to Amon Amarth and feeling reborn, your reviewer is perplexed as to why so many others are trying to say that music is dead. This is not to say, though, that Amon Amarth is for the masses, or that it ever will be. First, the Swedish Metal band remains mostly in its home continent of Europe, where a vanguard of modern metal is being developed right underneath American listener’s noses (or better yet, ears). And of course, your reviewer understand that he is not the embodiment of the youth of the world and is more than comfortable, in fact feels at home, in the world of extreme metal. And yes, Twilight of the Thunder God will never be as palatable as Avenged Sevenfold or Black Label Society, but it will more than satisfy those who are curious. And that’s just what drives our generation today: curiosity. No, you won’t hear bands as varied as John Legend with Amon Amarth on the same radio wave. In fact, you’d be hard pressed to find any station nowadays that play music popular amongst people like you or your reviewer at all. Most of them have gone to classic rock (don’t get me wrong, I love the classics as well) or nineties pop or to ranting right wing radio fascists (did I say that out loud?). This phenomenon of music "retreating" to the underground has caused every music snob to raise the alarm of music’s death. "Music is dead and we have killed it!" scream the Nietzsche complex of reviewers and musicians alike. Its all underground, there is no commonality in music, there are no legendary labels like Mercury records staying afloat. In a time when there seem to be no music reviewers representing you, the masses, your reviewer is going to take on this issue once, and only once for it is music that I am passionate about, not snobbery. I will speak for the music listening music. Music is far from dead. Music is not a corporate record label, it is an art form. Music is not a multi-million dollar firework spewing glam concert; it is the way how sound adds vibrancy to our culture. I say to the condemners of music that they are the true enemies of music, not the raging undergrounds. Some of us like punk, some metal, some bubble gum pop, some all and none of the above. What we all have in common is that we give music its immortal breath every single day, and cursed be those who will oppose us. This is what Amon Amarth’s Twilight of the Thunder God will do for a listener like your reviewer. So what if it is obscure European metal. It breathes life, and that makes all the difference. PAGE Fight Final Fantasy REVIEWS Gunblade vs. Bustersword .15 Article Written By Thomas Dugan I f you are like me and you enjoy Final Fantasy games, then you would have probably heard two fans arguing about who would beat who in a fight with Cloud vs. Squall [Leon]. Well fans, it is time to find out who will win, the game Dissidia: Final Fantasy. The story of Dissidia is about two gods that fell into an dispute and now are in a full- out war. The two gods that are the reason for this war are Cosmos, the Goddess of Harmony and Chaos, the God of Discord. Thousands of years later, the war is being won by Chaos. As a last attempt, Cosmos summons ten of her strongest warriors. People familiar with Final Fantasy will recognize them as the main characters of Final Fantasy 1-10. Chaos does the same thing, except calls on the ten main villains from Final Fantasy 1-10. Later, Cosmos explains that there is a way to defeat Chaos, and it is for each warrior to gather a crystal of their own by defeating their enemy’s while fulfilling their reason to fight. Now the plot is one of the few problems with this game. The main objective of the game is to find the crystals and to save the world. I mean, to find crystals was already used in some of the past Final Fantasy games and those were mediocre at best, so why would recycling one of the more lackluster aspects of the game work now if it did not do well in the previous games? Article Written By Thomas Dugan I magine waking up on a train in the middle of the mountains and realizing you were shot. Not exactly the perfect start to a day. Once you process that information, you are now responsible for carefully getting out of the train without falling to the bottom of the mountain and trying not to die after being betrayed by your “comrades.” This is not the worst 24 hours of your life, this is just the first five minutes of Uncharted 2: Among Thieves. Uncharted 2: Among Thieves, the follow up to Naughty Dog’s prequel game Uncharted: Drakes Fortune was probably the most eagerly anticipated game for any PlaySation 3 owner. The story follows Nathan Drake on a brand new journey that will take him on a trip around the world to find out the truth behind the lost fleet of Marco Polo, to find Shambhala, also known as Shangri-La, and to find the Cintamani Stone. One of the things that Uncharted fans will be happy about is that Victor Sullivan and Elena Fisher will be in this game to con- PLATFORM(S) AVAILABLE ON: One thing that many people are disappointed about is the fact it that it is not on a PS3 or XBOX360. This might give the game a broader appeal because more people own a PS3 or XBOX360 than a PSP. If they had made this game for the PS3 or the XBOX360, you would be able to see a lot more in game graphics than what you see in the PSP. There are positives to making a game that is portable, but it seems like it could have been released for more than one system. want to mute the entire game, but the majority of the characters voices are good. A lot of anime fans will be happy because some of the voice actors are from popular anime shows such as Naruto, Bleach, and Dragon Ball Z. Now the last issue I have with the game is that just a few of the voice actors have an annoying voice that makes you Now that we are done talking about the negative aspects of this game, it’s time to move on to the good things. First off, each character has their own unique personality that makes you connect with that character. Adding on to that, each character has his or her own attack style with the exception of Bartz, who uses his ally’s moves for his power but gives each attack a special twist to tinue helping Drake on his quest. While it is always good to have some familiar faces, the new characters that are introduced in Uncharted 2 really help bring variety to the story. You meet Harry Flynn, a long time friend and treasure hunter of Drake’s. Chloe Frazer, who is Drake’s new love interest and a thief that is good at getting information from enemy territory. Plus Tenzin, a man from a Tibetan village that does not know any word of English but can still communicate in different ways with Drake. Something that you can also do that involves close combat is stealth kill. The player must go up behind an opponent who has no idea that you are there and you attack him and it will be a one hit kill. Another version of stealth kill is when you are hanging on a ledge and there is someone right in front of you, you are able to pull them off that ledge and one hit kill them. The opposite version of that is when you kick them off the ledge; also a one hit kill. it. That being said there are many types of weapons at character’s disposal, such as swords, daggers, magic, lances, axes, and even beach balls. The controls for this game are magnificent, it has so many things for a character to do and you can easily remember which button is which and using combos are a breeze, unlike the controls of the Street Fighter series. The music score for this game is great. It has some of the best music from the previous Final Fantasy games such as One-Winged Angel. Big time fans will be happy to know that every time you win a battle, the victory theme from the Final Fantasy series will play. If you win while you are an evil character, you will get a different victory theme from the hero’s side of the game. It adds a really nice touch. This game is not easy to sum up in a few words. If it were a math problem, you would add the main Final Fantasy Heroes and villains with a Tekken style game, subtract a detailed plot line and multiply the crystals from Crash Bandicoot with a bit more detail. This answer would total Dissidia: Final Fantasy. An Uncharted Adventure The antagonist of the game is named Zoran Lazarević, a Serbian war criminal who is after the power of the Cintamani Stone. He is a dangerous killer who does not let emotions get in the way of business. Let’s start by talking about the controls. First off, if you have played any shooter game for any system then this will be easy to use. You also have the option to do some hand to hand combat, which has been improved on since the first game. When you are in a fight and the opponent is about to attack you, you are now able to dodge it and do a counter attack. A majority of the game’s combat is shooting. The shooting in this game is very precise and very user friendly. It is basically no trouble at all for people that have ever played a shooting game. The gun selection in the game is very good; you have the selection from Dessert-7, M4, and even RPG’s, or rocket-propelled grenades. Now it is time to mention something phenomenal about the game. Hands down best graphics ever. The graphics for this game arethe best that the PlayStation3 has ever have produced. The editing of how the characters look are fantastic, it makes the characters have their own individual feel to them that makes you stunned at how detailed the characters and background setting is. Movie quality graphics help make any gamer feel like they are right in the action. Due to the quality of the game in story mode, it would be easy to dismiss the multiplayer in this game, but the way that the developers created story mode makes it worth talking about. You have the option to go on and fight other players or team up with two of your friends in co-op and go through mini missions. In this mode you have a level up process which you can find extra items for you own needs. It is a nice addition to the game as this will entertain players after they complete the story mode for a very long time. It is an intelligent decision to make sure that a player doesn't stop playing just because they have beaten the game. You also have the option of machinima mode which is a personal movie making mode of this game. You can create as many videos that correspond with what you would like to have seen in the story mode. The other feature is option mode which you can look at the previous cut scenes that you have seen in story mode. You also have the option to see the behind the scenes look of how they made the game. Beware, this game is that it takes awhile to get connected to the internet for the multiplayer, but the wait is well worth it. Graphics, story line, multiplayer battles, weaponry, behind the scenes information. This game has it all. Uncharted 2; Among Thieves manages to take all the great ideas from the original game and expand on them and make them even better. With they way they have outdone themselves, I can only hope to see Uncharted 3 some time in the future... PAGE The Incident REVIEWS Porcupine Tree Article Written By Alek Flener-Satre rock is a term used P rogressive to describe bands such as Pink he was driving one day, and noticed a wreck. “The irony of such a cold expression for such seismic events appealed to me, and I began to pick out other ‘incidents’ reported in the media and news,” said Wilson. “…Each song is written in the first person and tries to humanize the detached media reportage.” Floyd, Yes, and Rush. However, even today, progressive rock is as popular as it ever was, albeit among a small crowd. So, with all of this, how does the album actually sound? It’s actually rather strong, despite its weak first impression, as I found. Among the bands in the genre today stands out Porcupine Tree, a band that began as nothing more than Steven Wilson, a drum machine, and a multi-track recorder. Today, it’s one of the most successful progressive bands around. This past November, they released their newest album, The Incident. The album starts off with Occam’s Razor. It starts out as a set of heavy power chords that eventually come to a more peaceful acoustic guitar. The song then transitions into a soundscape, something I noted, Steven Wilson utilized a lot to bring the album together in some places. I fell in love with Porcupine Tree because of the material’s similarity to Pink Floyd. However, the band’s style was never completely the same. It was constantly changing and taking new forms. Over time this evolved into a heavier, almost metal, sound that was a bit more conventional, as heard with Fear of a Blank Planet from the earlier works such as The Sky Moves Sideways, which was spacey. This soundscape transitions us into the next song, The Blind House. At first it sappears to be a heavy song, but before the first verse, the song mellows out into the more jazz progressive style. The verse is well done in my opinion, but the chorus, which people usually remember, seems incredibly weak. It sounds like modern pop-rock, and rather generic. Another small soundscape and we’re back into the heavy sound. It’s very reminiscent of Opeth’s style. With the new album, Steven Wilson blends the older progressive style and the newer metal sound to create something fresh. However, the theme for the album is a rather strange idea in itself. Steven Wilson’s idea behind the songs was to attach human emotion to the detached news reports. In interviews he has said to have gotten this idea when As The Blind House ends, we’re moved into Great Expectations. This is a more mellow song, reminiscent of their early works. The song has potential, but it’s much too short. As well, the guitar tone after the first verse is quite odd, almost as if it were a mistake. With another perfect transition, we’re into Kneel and Disconnect. It rather compliments Great Expectations, while standing as its own song. It ends in a piano solo that seems to drag on just a bit too long. Next comes one of the weakest points of the album, Drawing the Line. It starts with, and sticks to, their older style for the verses, but the chorus is more in the style of modern pop-rock again. I find it rather obnoxious, but still listenable. The guitar’s tone for the solos after the choruses is rather annoying, too. Next comes the title track, and the track that outlines the event that gave him the concept, “The Incident”. This piece is very reminiscent of Wilson’s works from Unreleased Electronic Music. The sound is dark and eerie, as well as the lyrics. During the bridge you hear the influence of the band Meshuggah. It’s almost a replica of their sound. The song ends with another soundscape. Another flawless transition finds us in Your Unpleasant Family. After the nod to heavy metal, this is another breath of the old. Wilson’s voice is also very beautiful in this piece. The solo is quite amazing as well. The piece then concludes into the transition track The Yellow Windows of the Evening Train. This piece is rather unimportant, and in my eyes, has no real purpose, nor need. It does lead us into the work’s longest piece, Time Flies, a song of reminisce for Wilson. The song is eerily similar to the Pink Floyd song Dogs. In fact, I can hear influence from the Animals album throughout. The transition from the intro to the verses and the breakdown before the solo near the middle take influence from Dogs, while another section in the song sounds like the ending of Sheep. The song ends in silence before Degree Zero of Liberty, marking the first real break. Degree Zero of Liberty is much like a reprise of Occam’s Razor, with a more distraught sound in place of the acoustic guitar at the beginning. This is the beginning of a small medley that leads into Octane Twisted. Octane Twisted sounds like a more mellow version of The Blind House, with a more ‘troubled’ that transitions it into the heavier sound again, which brings us back to the older style again. It leads into The Séance, a short piece of mellow that reprises Octane Twisted before leading into Circle of Manias. This short instrumental track ends the small medley with a burst of energy. Another break leaves us with I Drive the Hearse. It starts with a calm acoustic verse, with a sad tone. It then heads into a more hopeful sounding chorus. We come back to the verse before a break, itself having a saddened sound. The lyrics rather mirror the music in feeling through the song. The final chorus has an even more hopeful sound, before heading to a sad musical ending, and a slow fade, ending The Incident itself. That’s not the end, however. Along with the main song cycle, you get a 22 min EP length disc with four songs stemming from a band writing session. This is a nice addition to the set, rather than something sold separately. Although the material would’ve fit on the first disc, Wilson chose to keep it separate from the rest, stressing that they aren’t related. It opens up with Flicker. This is a mel- .16 low piece that reminds me almost of Stars Die. The piece has some intricate drumming and a wonderful, slow, melodic solo in the middle. In contrast to this, we have the dark piece Bonnie the Cat. It has a rather interesting middle section, which throws the rhythm section into the far background through distortion as the chorus is repeated. This leads into a strange synth solo, which translates the tone, before leading into another Meshuggah influenced riff. We then come to Black Dahlia. This song is familiar to the material on Deadwing. Its light-hearted sound and dark lyrical theme are catchy and beautiful at the same time. It really stands out from the rest of the material in the set. We find ourselves now on the last track, and longest of the disc, Remember Me Lover. This stands out to me as well. It starts mellow, but very sharp in tone, which conveys the message of the lyrics through the music, as well. The breaks after the chorus are heavy riffs. The second break leads us into a quiet solo that crescendos into another heavy section that ends the disc. All in all, I was very impressed by the new work, and I’m saddened by the fact I missed them when they came around. Although it may seem weak at first, this is one of those things that has to grow on you, much like a Rush album. It also gladdens me to see Wilson reaching back to the roots he came from while branching out, something a lot more artists should try, instead of rehashing old ideas for a quick buck. PAGE The Rebels Get a Win SPORTS Too Little Too Late? .17 Article Written By James Haynes & Jordan Hoehler T he Rebels Football team closed out their season with a 1-9 record, and a last game 12-8 victory over Iroquois. Laronta Murray, who has had an explosive season, rushed 25 yards for their last Touchdown of the season, and Coty Wright recovered a fumble and ran it back 11 yards for a touchdown. But was it too little too late for the Rebels? Can their season still be considered a success? Yes it can, this is a team who normally never seems to care by the last game of the season, but not this year. They knew it was their last chance to win and they jumped on it. A 1-9 season with no playoff berth, makes fans turn their attention to basketball quickly. Still, you have to give the Rebels credit for their heart and dedication, for not letting a whole season look like a failure. The fact that the Rebels scored only 40 combined points this season causes opposing teams who see Atherton on their schedule to think that it’s a sure fire win. The Rebels disproved that in their final game. Iroquois was favored to win 14-6 over the Rebels. That did everything but discourage them though. They went out and played “OCHO” + T.O. = EGOS with a fire that had been building all season. Looking at the stats it doesn’t look like it was all that amazing of a performance, considering the Rebels only had 29 total yards of offence and went 0-11 on 3rd down conversions, as well as 0-6 on fourth down conversions. But, and you have to focus more on the stats to see this, the Rebels proved that with this win. Senior Derrick Robinson said it best when asked what he believed was the reason the Rebels won, “We wanted to go out with a bang, and everyone did their jobs.” You have to have heart to win. Desire is the ultimate key to success. How else can you win when you only have 29 yards and never convert a 3rd or 4th down? Despite those horrific offensive numbers, the Rebels still managed to grab 2 interceptions and recover a fumble and return it for a touchdown. It takes more then offense to win a game, and on Friday night, defense proved to be the key to victory. The Rebels closed out their season on a positive note. This may just be the type of energy they will need going into next season. The Rebels will be returning six juniors and a handful of sophomores and freshman. This season has been a rebuilding one for the Rebels as they welcomed a new head coach, and all signs point in the right direction with a final game victory like this. Good job Rebels, and good luck next season. Article Written By James Haynes F rom all my years of watching football, I have never seen more ego at a position than at the wide-receiver spot, which always seems loaded with athletes ready and willing to be the next one in the spot light. You can’t talk about wide outs who think too much of themselves more than Chad Johnson (a.k.a. Ochocinco), or Terrell Owens (a.k.a. T.O.), two of the most dominant - yet selfish - forces of our time. If we are going to start off talking about who has the biggest mouth, heads turn straight to 85, excuse me… Chad Ochocinco. Known for his memorizing celebrations and his wonderful catch phrases, is it such a bad thing that he talks so much? He has the skills and drive to back it up. Ochocinco is what the league needs to stay alive in my eyes. Motivation surrounds this man’s head every season, weeks 1 through 17. If you don’t know Ochocinco, you’ll love to hate him, and you’ll hate to love him, period. His most famous celebration is the “Dear NFL, PLEASE don’t fine me AGAIN!” celebration. This lets people know, “Hey, I’m paid to play this game, don’t restrict me, I’m bringing fans to the stadium, and that’s what the NFL needs me to do.” Another little celebration, which turned out to be a big deal to the league, was the “Hall Of Fame 20??” jacket incident. He was also fined $5K, when he velcroed “Ochocinco” over his name on his jersey, (which was ripped off by Quarterback Carson Palmer during pre game warm ups.) But to sum things up, Ochocinco is one of the most animated characters who has ever run a route in the league, and until retirement, I hopes he keeps it up. Then there is Terrell Owens, who’s career totals include 4 teams, 13 seasons, and all attitude with the ego to back it up. Terrell Owens, who soon generated to the unstoppable alter ego known as T.O. started his career with the San Francisco 49ers, and from there started a rollercoaster that spread through four teams. Yes, he was the guy who quarterbacks wanted to throw to, but they didn’t want him in the locker room. When Owens was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles in 2004, things started to slip up in the locker room with the drama between T.O. and Eagles quarterback Donavon McNabb basically tearing the Eagles apart. But 81 didn’t stop there, being traded for the third time in his career, this time to the Dallas Cowboys. His relationship with his QB, Tony Romo, took a turn for the best as the real Terrell Owens cried about the public abuse Romo was getting from the media. That soon changed when T.O. stopped getting the ball every time he wanted it. Now, as a member the Buffalo Bills, Owens is in his 14th NFL season. Will this team be the one T.O. finally fits in with? Only time will tell. So after looking at both of these great wide receivers, you have to ask yourself, do I really want all the baggage that comes with these two players? The answer is a tough one, but when it comes down to it, do you want to win? BuildersSurplusLouisville.com Kitchen Cabinets Hardwood Title Doors Bath Vanities Laminate Granite Plumbing AND MORE! PAGE Low Key SPORTS Rebel Cheerleaders .18 Article Written By James Haynes fail to look behind all the P eople short skirts and glitter when cheerleaders hit the floor during home games at Atherton High School, but behind all the back handsprings and peppy attitude lies a real athlete. According to Coach Julie Wooden, (Atherton’s Cheerleading Coach) “It’s a lot more than shaking pom-poms.” After being on the Dance Team in both High school and College, last year was a learning experience for Coach Wooden. On top of being a teacher, she then had to grasp the spirit of cheerleading. “Being involved at the games makes me proud.” Coach Wooden says, “We’ve grown as a team, I started coaching after the football season, and had to start picking up on it.” Cheerleading started in the late 1800’s just as fans cheering on their favorite teams. But it soon evolved to what we know as cheerleading today. It wasn’t until 1923 when females were able to cheer. In 1999, ESPN acclaimed that cheerleading was a sport, due to the level of difficulty, athleticism, and competition. Junior Captain Ashley Goodman said, “If people actually saw some of the things we do to condition or practice and the ways we do they would realize that most of the girls on the team are in better shape than other sports teams at Atherton.” To help prove that cheerleading isn’t as easy as it looks. “Conditioning, running, year around practice, and physical strength are mostly overlooked.” Coach Wooden said, “The upperclassmen have really stepped up, and we have a lot of talented freshmen this year, I’m really proud of the team”. With Junior and Freshmen Captains Ashley Goodman and Ally Sulzer, and 75% freshman on the squad, a lot of experience really seeped in. Ashley Goodman started cheering at Indian Trail Elementary School and participated in gymnastics for 5 years. While trying to make a hard decision between gymnastics and cheering, a day in the gym made her decision one sided. “One day at gym practice, they used me to fly, and I realized I loved it again,” she said. “So my mom gave me the choice of cheering or gymnastics, and I choose to cheer again. Cheerleading pretty much is my life, when I’m not doing something cheer related, I’m sleeping or eating,” Ms. Goodman joked. Women And Sports Over the Years Article Written By Maggie Shelton L ook at public and private high schools thirty years ago; there were very little sports teams available for women. Most of what was offered was girl’s softball. That was basically it. Women’s roles in sports were limited to a team manager, or even a water girl, but it was the out of the question to have full teams of women playing with desire and being competitive. Today, almost every public and private high school in the country has teams so women and men can have equality. There are now soccer, basketball, swimming, golf, field hockey, cross country, and track teams available for women participation. It’s not just that there are women’s teams now, but these teams are also very competitive. Girls in today society work hard to get things done and prove themselves. You see, teams working out in the blazing sun, and the freezing winters just to get better, faster, and stronger, whereas thirty years ago the few sports that were offered were played simply for leisure. Competitiveness was not even an issue that was touched on. Atherton’s Athletic Director, Ms. Debbie Beichler had insightful comments on the topic. Ms. Beichler played keeper for her soccer team and also was a member of the softball and tennis teams in high school. Before the 1970’s, she commented there were little to no sports that were offered. Everything started to change in the 1970s when Title IX (nine) was passed by Congress. Title IX is a law that was passed on June 23, 1972. This law required federally funded schools to make sure sport activities and clubs equal. It states, “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance…” In Second year cheerleader, Chelsea Cochran said, “The squad is a lot more organized from last year.” When compared to the other sports, some look at one important statement, is cheerleading a sport. “A lot of people don’t think it’s a sport, but we have to commit just as much as everybody else, condition and all the other stuff like other sports.” says Ms. Cochran. This year, the cheerleading team took on a whole new training technique, “learning from the best,” Power Cheer program, where the team trains with private instructors, to work on their technique, and improve as a team. other words, this law made high school and college sports equal for both men and women. Therefore these programs would get the same amount of equipment, supplies, facilities, uniforms, coaching and medical opportunities as any other male sport in that school. edly the best female soccer player ever to play. Shawn Johnson the seventeen year old Olympian who in 2008 won the Olympic gold medal in the balance beam and the individual all-around silver medalist champion. It is not just female athletes who have succeeded ,there are coaches like Pat Summitt who has been coaching at Tennessee since 1974. She has eight national championships in her pocket and over a thousand wins. She is considered by most to be one of the greatest coaches in the history of basketball. Title Nine has greatly impacted women’s sports ever since it was enacted in 1972. In 2009 there are more opportunities for female players to compete and learn from more experienced coaches. Some coach’s preference is to coach girls. It is unbelievable how much women have accomplished in sports. Some of the top athletes in the world are women, including Serena and Venus Williams the two sisters who torment the competition in the tennis world and have won countless championships. Then there is the famous Mia Hamm who single handedly made women soccer what it is today and is undoubt- This year, the cheerleading team really stepped up to what everybody, especially Coach Wooden expected. They can only get better as the years move on. Change has been huge in women’s sports over the past thirty years; there are more opportunities for women at both the high school and collegiate levels, with the help of Title IX. Today it is common to see that girls don’t just “hang” with the guys, they actually compete. Look back and see how much growth has taken place and it has been for the better. PAGE Rebels Boys Basketball SPORTS A Team in Transition .19 Article Written By Jordan Hoehler in high schools T heacrossatmosphere the country shifts to bas- ketball, a game loved around the world. It’s the same here at Atherton as the Rebels Boy’s Basketball team is getting their season underway. This no doubt will be a tough season for the Rebels considering they lost 4 of their 5 starters from last season. But that doesn’t discourage Coach Thomas Wilson too much. When asked what he was hoping for out of the team this year, he responded, “At least win 10 games. I’m really hoping for a .500 record.” Coach Wilson also said that the main improvement he hoped for from last season was to improve “team play.” A few of the players had comments they wished to voice. Junior shooting guard Ian Kelley said, “I think Coach Wilson mainly wants to see us give as much as we can and improve as the year goes along.” When asked about his expectations for the season Mr.. Kelley said, “For us mainly to improve as the year goes along, we are a little inexperienced since we lost 4 seniors who were very important to the team. I, as a teammate, expect a lot from my teammates and a lot from our one and only senior, Dwayne Gordon, who will be the team leader.” Leadership is a huge part of sports, and it’s necessary for victory. And on a team with only one returning varsity starter, it looks as if that role will be put on the shoulders of Dwayne Gordan (the only senior/returning starter). When asked where the leadership needs to come from this year, both Coach Wilson’s and Mr.. Kelley’s responses were, “Our one and only senior, Dwayne Gordon.” When asked which underclassmen he expected the most out of this year, Coach Wilson responded with this: “I’m going to be depending on my sophomores a lot, mainly on our one returning varsity sophomore, Andy Read. I’m also going to be depending on sophomore Trey Hayes.” There are strengths and weaknesses with every team in every sport. But it’s a strange case with Atherton as they are a young team and feel they have a lot to improve on. When asked about the strengths of the team Coach Wilson said, “Not many. Our one returning starter will be the biggest strength we have this season.” Mr.. Kelley agreed 1553 Bardstown Rd. stating: “Our strength is mainly Dwayne Gordon.” When asked what his expectations were for the season, sophomore Andy Read replied, “My prediction for this year is for it to be sort of a building year for the sophomores and juniors. We had almost our whole varsity team graduate last year and we only have one senior this year.” ketball smarts.” It seems as if the Rebels Boy’s Basketball team has a lot to improve on this season, but they also have shown heart. No one is willing to just give up and expect a terrible season. Senior guard Dwayne Gordon is the only senior and the only returning starter for the Rebels this year and a lot is expected out of him. “We need to improve on playing together and talking out on the court. Communication has always seemed to be a problem with us,” replied Mr.. Read when asked what they need to improve on. When asked if he felt any added pressure because he is the only senior he replied with, “Yeah, Coach Wilson will be relying on me a lot this year. Mainly because I am the only returning starter.” When asked about the team’s weaknesses, Mr.. Read said, “Our main weaknesses are our size and experience which are both going to be a BIG factor in the upcoming season.” “We hope to improve the underclassmen in practice first. But I do think we will have a successful season,” responded Mr.. Gordon after being asked what his expectations are for this season. Finally, Mr.. Read said this when asked how much potential the underclassmen have, “Our underclassmen definitely have the potential, they just need to be willing to put in the hard work to keep improving. They also need to get in some more experience and more bas- What do you think Coach Wilson wants out of you this season? “I think he wants me to teach the underclassmen. To take them under my wing and teach them the game of basketball.” Said Mr.. Gordon. Mr.. Gordon also commented on the strengths and weaknesses of the team “Our only real strength will be our speed. We are a much smaller team, but we are also faster.” Mr.. Gordon said. “Our biggest weakness will be our lack of size. We also have a big lack of depth. We don’t really have a proven bench.” Finally, Mr.. Gordan commented on his hopes for the underclassmen. “I hope they learn how to play the game of basketball. And most importantly have fun playing the game,” said Mr.. Gordon. A lot is expected out of a young team this year at Atherton. But it seems as though they are up for the challenge. Clearly they have the potential to have a great season, and a great future. Adversity is staring them directly in the face, and all signs point that they will come out on top. WRITERS BLOCK Poem Written By Sterling Richmond Art Created By Parker Spurling A stump. A blank. Thoughts scattered to no end. The fuzz in ones mind grows and consumes all. A purpose? A basis? There is none. The pencil drops upon an empty page with a dull thud, reverberating through one’s mind, as they desperately search for the words. For the meaning. You stare at it in silence. The loss of thought is beyond comprehension, the feeble attempts to grasp your thoughts, words fail thee. Your soul is frozen, void of a mission. Unmoving, unknowing. Unexpressable. But only light can create shadows. So the darkness shall fade, the light will enevitably come, and the pencil will touch the paper once more, sliding across it gently, the canvas of your expression. The justification for all that you are. And thy shall tell the story of life. And paint the picture of the future, the truth. The embodiement of all greater thought. The storm after the calm. The calm of writers block. And Her Beloved, Which Was Not Beloved. My door broke. What? I said my door broke. When? Last night while I was reading Beloved. Who broke it? My family. Why does it matter? When my door is shut I feel the tranquility of loneliness, the security of oneself, and when my door is open my heart is spread wide; an open spring from which others may partake and enjoy all that I am. Without the lock there is no regulation, no control over myself or my thoughts. No barrier between the manifested “me” in the comfort of my home-in-a-home, and all that rests outside. Something just stirred within me; my family didn’t break the lock it was His curtains are black as the night sky in which the sun wields no power. You have no dominion there, whether he does or doesn’t receive light or guidance in the dark is for the moon to decide. What if my bulb runs out? I do not know. I have only known you as long as you have been burning. How long have I been burning? 17 years, 10 months, 20 days. How long have you been remembering? The same. Who made me? I do not know, I am merely a box. I am here to serve 2 purposes, to store what I am told to hold, and to survive. Without me would you forget? No, remembering is remembrance is memory. And although I would be in the dark, memories never fade. Sometimes they (How convenient and peculiar to run are moved from box to box, sometimes out of ink at that exact moment) burned, but our ashes transcend time. Now, as I go to lock it it may open, Will I die? when I shut it it may swing wide. The No. Light and memories never die. point remains that the lock is broken and one only needs to bang the door So I trudged onward, destroying literaand all the security I’ve ever had will ture, bludgeoning books, and in angst, desert me, betray me, and swing open remembered. Chills I’ve suffered toon its hinges to reveal all that I am. night will leave a painful residue on my Who are we? neck so cold it will have burned into You and I? my skin. Chills which, icy, will have Yes. trickled down my spine to form a trunk, We are ourselves, we are the light in his and inching out, will have seared into room and the box under his bed. my flesh the scarred and withered reWhy are we important? mains of a tree. A tree whose branches Without me, he wouldn’t remember, house the ropes from which hang every and without you he could not see. memory I have ever sustained. I’ve heard of the sun. ME. My room is ALIVE. My aunt lived and died in this house. Felt the pain of her own slavery which took the form of cancer. It whipped her until she begged for death’s sweet embrace, and I can feel her memory crawling through the walls. I feel sick, as though I don’t want to move. My body screams with the desire to do just that, to call to war the aunt I never knew. Her life was spent raising crosses and mine Was spent burning them. So why, Why? me? Would you force this upon “You seclude me in a room whose color is of my choosing, promise me freedom in my loneliness, and then shatter it by breaking my lock and inviting a ghost?!” And all the while all I hear is silence. Voices screaming through my orange walls to bust them open so that they may escape to an uninviting world, and all I hear is silence. Silence, the whirl of a white fan blade, and the conversation between a box of all my memories and the only light I’ve ever had. A Tributary By Zachary Jamison Art Created By James Ellis “Beauty in art is often nothing but ugliness subdued.” -Jean Rostand Interested in being in the paper?! Email me at HannahMReeves@gmail.com, and give me whatcha got!