Inside - The Lowell
Transcription
Inside - The Lowell
■ Students strut their stuff in a highly competitive costume contest on the catwalk for the annual Halloween Rally. Page 10 ������ What’s Inside News Pages 1-9 ■ School installs computer updates and improves Internet ■ International visitors galore Sports Pages 11-14 ■ Varsity soccer looks hopefully to next year for successful season ■ JV football overcomes disappointing season through team bonding Columns Pages 15-17 ■ Reporter finds self in Asian egg dish ■ Senior faces decision between watching Sex and the City and living it. Opinion Pages 18-19 ■ China shows incompetence in prioritizing profits in space over health and equity ■ Students express themselves through blogging, sharing tips and personal experiences along the way. By Dylan McHugh A Today I What’s in a blog? Page 20 Barrelin’ down ... Student under suspension for threatening peers ����������� In the news N JUST ONE extravagant and scrumptious day, you can get a taste of China, Italy, Taiwan, Vietnam, Mexico, Greece and so much more. Story of a cultured daredevil jetsetter? More like a Lowell student at Co-Curricular Day! Starting Mod 8, you can go into the courtyard and get a glimpse of every corner of the world in less than eighty seconds. Clubs and student boards will be fundraising and selling all kinds of food, from crepes to egg rolls to tapioca to In-N-Out burgers. Support your class and clubs by expanding your waistline! Save the half-baked cookies, chicken burgers, bagels and celery salads for another day, and get your money and hungry stomachs to the courtyard! Backpage In Photos LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL, CARDINAL EDITION, VOL. 210 NO. 3, NOVEMBER 14, 2008, www.thelowell.org ������ ��� And the prize goes to ... ELENA CHIN Seniors James Tse and Andre Lorico compete in a fast-paced wheelbarrow race between the grades during the annual Spirit Rally on Nov. 7 as spectators look on. STUDENT is awaiting a district expulsion hearing for producing threats against 14 other students on a social networking Web site. According to anonymous sources, the Lowell student was suspended for creating a list of 14 people that the student “hate(s) and would willingly contribute funds toward their assassinations,” [sic]. Initially, on the student’s profile on the social networking Web site Facebook (www.facebook. com), the student offered to send the list to any Facebook friends who asked for it, the sources said. The student published a Facebook note stating, “I even have a physical list of the people I hate and I will make it public if enough people ask me to,” according to the sources. Dean Ray Cordoba was alerted to the list on Oct. 27. Families of the anonymous sources were notified of the student’s suspension and an expulsion hearing that is required to be held before Nov. 28. According to Section 48900(a)(1) of the California Education Code, a student may be suspended or expelled from school if “the principal… of the school in which the student is enrolled determines that the student has caused, attempted to cause, or threatened to cause physical injury to another person.” As of Nov. 10, at least four students have filed restraining orders against the student, according to anonymous sources. Principal Andy Ishibashi said that he was following district procedure in refraining from answering questions about the case and the student’s punishment, but confirmed that the student See SUSPENSION on Page 5 Halloween rally act stirs up controversy By Lydia O’Connor A GROUP of students is awaiting disciplinary action after their costumes and performance during the Halloween rally offended and upset some students and faculty members. Ten senior boys dressed up as characters from the music video for the song “Gay Bar” by the Electric Six in costumes composed of shorts, tank tops, and top hats with beards in imitation of Abraham Lincoln, whom the actors in the music video based their costumes off of. During their entry in the costume contest portion of the rally, one student announced to the crowd that they were the “the gay barmen.” The song there, I would have stopped it in a played, and they began lifting bar- minute,” Ishibashi said. He recogbells, doing pushups and dancing in nized that the other administrators what some interand faculty mempreted as sexually bers present dursuggestive moves. If I were out ing the rally were According to doing their best there, I would to keep track of principal Andy ything but Ishibashi, who have stopped it ever was at a meeting that they were all in a minute.” during the rally, very busy. several students Lowell Student ANDY ISHIBASHI, Association diand teachers apprincipal rector and social proached him after the perforstudies teacher mance and complained of what Steve Schmidt said many could have they considered to be homophobic stopped the performance but accostumes and actions. “If I were out knowledged his responsibility in the Admin probes student behavior at after-party “ I situation as LSA director. “In terms of whose responsibility it was to stop the performance, many could have intervened: SBC, the administration, other teachers, other students, the dean,” Schmidt said. “However, ultimately I will take responsibility for not having stopped it when I could have.” Schmidt added that he did not give permission to the boys to perform to the song. “I had no idea that they were going to ‘hijack’ the rally with their dance performance,” Schmidt said. Assistant principal Holly Giles said she was present at the rally See RALLY on Page 5 Man vs. society By Shelly Tong A FTER A PARENT’S complaints about a senior dance after-party involving underage drinking, the administration has begun to investigate whether the school’s image was being tarnished. According to principal Andy Ishibashi, the administration was notified by a parent who had seen pictures on students’ Facebook (www.facebook.com) pages of students drinking alcoholic beverages at an after-party that took place on Oct. 25 after the Senior Boat dance, Havana Nights. According to a student who attended the party, pictures of the party held at a student’s private residence were taken and put up on Facebook. The parent notified the administration of the pictures out of concern over the students’ actions and over the possibility of tarnishing the school’s reputation. Dean Ray Cordoba was given the responsibility of investigating the matter. Ishibashi received the pictures from the parent that notified him of the issue and See BOAT on Page 5 ELENA CHIN Reverend Parris (senior Dylan McHugh), on right, stares accusingly at Giles Corey (sophomore Dillon Dong) and John Proctor (senior Karel Ebergen) during a rehearsal of The Crucible, running in the Carol Channing Auditorium from Nov. 13-16. 2 NEWS November 14, 2008 NEWSBRIEFS School parking spaces shared The school has allowed staff at a neighboring elementary, school which is undergoing renovations, to use its parking spaces. Twenty parking spaces in the student parking lot have been occupied by the Lakeshore Elementary staff since Nov. 1 while their site undergoes renovations to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. “We don’t really fill up the parking lot, so we gave them the extra spaces,” Assistant principal and head of Buildings and Grounds Michael Yi said. This arrangement will last until Dec. 19 “because we want to see how much it’ll affect us,” Yi said. “If there is a negative impact, we will have to talk it over with the Lakeshore staff.” The Lakeshore administration first consulted the school about their lack of parking spaces at the beginning of the school year. Yi, along with other administration members, the Union Building Committee and the administrative council, decided to help out. “The student side of the parking lot is usually pretty empty, so it probably won’t be too big of a deal if we share with the Lakeshore staff,” senior Mona Man said. — Lily Mak Teacher takes extended leave A substitute teacher replaced a teacher on a leave of absence since the beginning of the semester. Math teacher Anthony Costa broke his ankle on Aug. 21, according to math department head Tom Chambers. “I haven’t seen him since,” he said. Math teacher Nadine Arzumanova has taken over all of Costa’s classes save his Mods 19-20 Algebra 1 class. Chambers moved the students to math teacher Francisco Rosales’ Mods 19-20 10-student class. According to the principal’s secretary Maryline Hee, Costa “is absent due to a medical document that allows him not to return to work until Nov. 18,” Hee said. Some students are upset at having a substitute for an extended period of time. “I haven’t learned anything,” sophomore geometry student Charley August said. Other students appreciate the break from intense work.“It’s not stressful at all having a substitute,” sophomore geometry student Gabe Quintana explained. “I do a lot better when I’m not under stress.” Principal Andy Ishibashi appreciated Arzumanova for subbing for Costa’s leave. “There’s nothing we can do about Costa’s absence,” Ishibashi said. — Sean Lee PE dept hires new teachers The physical education department hired three new teachers to offset the loss of several PE teachers who have retired or gone on sabbatical. After PE teacher John Donohue decided to go on sabbatical and former PE teacher and gymnastics coach Jerilyn Jank retiring. The department hired Brian Okita, Katy Mason, and Christine Hosoda, three new additions to the department. A previous teacher at Mission High School, Mason says she is astounded at the difference between Mission’s and Lowell’s PE programs. According to Mason, she and another teacher taught a class consisting of 80 P.E. students. “It was a totally different world,” Mason said. “These kids don’t realize how good they have it.” Christine Hosoda, another addition to the department, and a former teacher at Wallenburg High School, says she is excited about the challenges Lowell has to offer. “Lowell has more facilities and equipment, plus a bigger department with more colleagues to collaborate with,” she said. The final teacher to be added to the PE department, Brian Okita, previously taught at Jefferson Elementary School in Redwood City, and has enjoyed the impressive jump from elementary school to high school. “Lowell students are more disciplined and enthusiastic,” he said. I’m glad to see that they are excited to try different sports and learn new skills,” he said. — Caitlin McKewan F O R T H E C O M P L E T E V E R S I O N S OF STORIES, PLEASE VISIT The Lowell on the Web www.thelowell.org Lowell High School Cafeteria serves healthy bites By Lily Wong T HE CAFETERIA and beanery now offer new nutritious lunches in an effort to provide students with healthier and heartier meals. Introduced in late October, the new menu items include larger portions of whole-wheat pasta and brown rice, according to school nurse MaryAnn Rainey. A typical lunch now includes one of the main items, a side of salad, fresh fruit, a slice of bread or a corn muffin and a half-pint carton of milk. Student Nutrition Services director Ed Wilkins approved the decision to improve the meals after the United States Department of Agriculture held a forum directing Congress to provide more funding for SFUSD cafeteria food. However, according to the district’s Student Nutrition and Physical Activity Committee chair and founder Dana Woldow, the reauthorization process will not be until 2009. According to the USDA Web site, the process will enable Congress to analyze the federal nutrition assistance programs — school lunches — more closely. The larger lunches come with a price increase: A school lunch currently costs $3, up from last year’s cost of $2. According to Woldow, the cost of school lunches would have increased either way. She hoped more students would purchase school lunches to balance out BEN UDELSON Sophomores Mo Tsui, Chioke Bautista, Gabriel Bonilla, Lydia Lui and Justin Chung enjoy the cafeteria’s new food. the cost of food. “These improvements have definitely driven up the cost of providing school meals, but it is hoped that more students will eat the better food, and that this increased participation will bring in enough extra revenue to cover the additional cost,” she stated in an email. “Although these changes cost the district more for food, there would have been cost increases anyway.” According to Student Nutrition Committee member sophomore Anastasia Salazar, the committee plans to inform students about the new food by listing nutritional facts. The group will also hold a health fair to compare food purchased on- and off-campus. Rainey approved of the healthier options. “The portions are definitely bigger and more filling,” she said. However, some saw little difference. “It looks healthy but still tastes bad,” sophomore Liang Wu said. Senior Alice Tan, who has been eating school lunch since elementary school, was one of the few who noticed the change. “The portion size is bigger than before but I would only buy a school lunch if I had no other food and was really hungry,” she said. School switches to safe district server By Angel Au-Yeung Additionally, the log-in FTER THE security domain has changed from breach in the school’s “Lowell” to the district confile server last month, trolled “SF” system. Although the SF domain the district has begun implementing a controlled domain is new to Lowell, the system is used in other f o r L ow e l l SFUSD schools and a ne w log-in sysIt’s a little such as Thurgood Marshall tem for all daunting, Hi g h S cho ol students. Students seeing that ai nngdt onWaHis ghhreceived registry notices warning.” School for several years, and starting Oct. 20 containKeil Chase, the recent hacking their new, senior in prompted the district to inteunchangeable account names and grate Lowell’s computers into passwords. Instead of having their domain. Technology system adone school-wide username, students must log in to their ministrator Alex Hsieh was own account to access any relieved about the change. “I’ve been asking the district school computer. Students’ usernames con- whether we should join the sist of the first two letters of SF domain every summer for their first name with their several years now,” he said. full last name and passwords “The hack-in didn’t so much are random seven-digit num- cause but press the district to bers. The slips have an extra include our computers.” Now that the school is warning to the students to “keep the passwords safe included in the district’s dobecause you will not be able main, Lowell students can also access their accounts on to change it.” A “ I computers in other district schools. Regardless of where they sign on, users are greeted before log-in with a disclaimer warning them of “no explicit or implicit expectation of privacy” — anything in the account can be “intercepted, monitored, recorded, copied, deleted, audited, inspected and disclosed to authorizedlaw enforcement personnel.” Some students feel scared after seeing the warning for the first time. “It’s a little daunting, seeing that warning,” senior Keil Chase said. “It makes me not want to use the school computers, even if it’s just for homework.” Others complained that the passwords are too random to remember easily and that it takes too long to log-in to their account. “The passwords are impossible to remember, and it takes an average of two to three minutes just for our account to load,” junior Timothy Crowley said. Although the passwords are hard to remember, officially they have been alerted to fewer problems than ex- pected. “I thought a lot more students were going to forget their passwords, but Lowell students are responsible and they kept the notices they got (in reg),” librarian Linda Guitron said. “If they do forget, which hasn’t happened a lot, we have a master list of all the students’ passwords.” When users enter their information, their information is sent to the district’s computers at 601 McAllister Street to confirm or deny the log-in, causing the lag users have been experiencing, according to Hsieh. “We’re working on a local server domain controller, so the users’ credentials don’t have to be sent all the way downtown,” Hsieh said. This is just one of the changes being made to the school computers as the school transitions to the district system, and Hsieh anticipates many more changes in the months ahead. “We still have a lot of work to do, but the system will improve throughout this year,” he said. Parent heads Beautification Day By Caitlin McKewan T HE Parent Teacher Student Association’s change in leadership has left some student leaders concerned about the success of tomorrow’s Beautification Day. Parent Marny Leslie, who was elected the PTSA second vice president, has taken the reigns in this year’s Beautification Day, a coordinated effort by parents and students to clean up and decorate portions of the school. Leslie defeated senior Tiffany Nguyen, who is also the Student Body Council club coordinator, in last May’s PTSA elections. According to PTSA first vice president senior Scott Lee, Beautification Day may be affected now that Nguyen is not involved. ond vice president Mona Marachli with “Club participation may decrease Beautification Day for the previous three now because of the semesters. lack of Tiffany’s adWhen Marachli ran vantageous position for PTSA treasurer, Tiffany is the Nguyen decided to of club coordinator,” he said, explaining that Holy Grail of run for the position of she encouraged club second vice president, volunteer co- whose main job is to involvement in the project. “Tiffany is the coordinate Beautificaordinating. Holy Grail of volunteer tion Day. coordinating.” “I met with prinSCOTT LEE, Leslie said that the cipal Ishibashi dursenior and PTSA officer ing all my free mods,” change in leadership will not have any effect Nguyen said. “Since I on Beautification Day. “We have some had the most experience, I believe that I fabulous volunteers,” she said. “It’s going was the most qualified candidate for the really well.” position of second vice president.” See PTSA on Page 9 Nguyen had aided the former sec- T “ The Lowell CAMPUS November 14, 2008 3 Super group breaks through school’s dancefloor By Nancy Xie an all-new, awesome performance,” SuperITH THEIR SUPERMAN-like, friends member, senior Chris Wai said. A semester later, the Superfriends expandblack and white logo, this group declares themselves to be “a band, ed, adding 16 students to include a new group of dancers and even a a crime fighting unit and band with two basses, two an ice-cream compaelectric guitars, drums, a ny.” What in the world You have to go banjo, a saxophone and is this all about? And who makes up this tough through at least a two violins. They also boast a Facebook “Susquad? An all new Supertrial that involves perfriends” group with man-CSI-ice-cream organization? Not exactly. It’s doing something over 160 members. “The Supercouncil votes on just the Sudangerous.” each new member of the perfriends. dance crew and band,” T he Su CARLOS RAMIREZ, said Ramirez, the Harbinperfriends Superfriends member and senior ger of Boom. “You have earned their to go through at least a reputation as the student break-dancing crew trial that involves doing something dangeron campus after performing “The ous,” he said. The Superfriends are searching for talented Variety Hour” in last year’s talent show in February, which featured a musicians, dancers or anyone with a serious group of animal-masked dancers accompanied interest. “If you’re amazing, it helps,” said by a band playing the alternative band Arctic senior Eric Rodriguez, Lead Rhythm Guitar Monkeys’ “Fluorescent Adolescent” and Sugar Number 4. The new members include students from other high schools in the city — seniors Hill Gang’s “Apache.” The group began with the “original six” Jonathan Chimento from Abraham Lincoln members — seniors Davin Chan, Carlos High School and Francis Rivera from ThurRamirez, Eric Rodriguez, Michael Banta, good Marshall Academic High School. Even though the members are scattered Brandon Iljas and Kevin Ouyang. “It began with senior Sean Nederlof dropping out from around the city, the Superfriends still mana break-dancing performance, thus causing the age to practice as a group. Every one to two original six to get together and come up with weeks, the group rehearses at least once at “ Y arts W a local Baptist church with their musicians. “Breakers’ Club” at Lowell,where about 15 “The Superfriends now plan to recruit a small friends of the Superfriends get together and orchestra,” Rodriguez said. break-dance in school hallways after school. The Superfriends draw inspiration from “But they’re not an official part of the group,” “anything awesome,” Ramirez said. “Rock ‘n Ramirez said. The “official” part of the Superroll, hip pop, funk — just about anything.” friends, on the other hand, performed in the They also aim to maintain a connection Winterfaire and Talent Show last year and look with nature through their art. “Mother Earth forward to doing so again. plays a big role in what we do,” Rodriguez said. They have other important things on their “Nature is a force that ties everything together agenda, which include supporting human and break-dancing is a very natural type of rights causes, making films and selling icedancing because it’s improvisational.” cream. The Superfriends contend that “art is Just as nature is unpredictable, so are Super- a unique theme that runs through everything friends’ performances. we do,” Supercouncil vice Their efforts to emphapresident senior Andrew size the natural quality of Chang said. I think it’s cute break-dancing highlight Aside from their club, that they are all the importance of sponthe group enjoys support taneity and immediacy friends of the Supersuch good friends from in all their performances. friends. “I’m a fan of the “We don’t want to overSuperfriends,” senior Midoing something perfect things because it chelle Chung said. “Now they all enjoy.” takes the soul away from they are branching off as a the performance,” said fashion statement as well, Chan, who plays the bass, MICHELLE CHUNG, with their cool sweatshirts. guitar and drums in the senior I think it’s cute that they Superfriends’ band. “And are all such good friends we don’t record — when you record something, doing something they all enjoy.” it’s going to be that way forever, but we don’t And how do the Superfriends identify want (our performances) to be the same way themselves? “We’re the most awesome breakforever.” ing crew/Rock-and-Roll band/stand-up comIn addition to their dancing crew and band, edy troop/civil-rights activists!” Rodriguez some members have started an impromptu said. “ I Science class observes environmental life up close By Maggie Huang student to find his or her own tree or bush and observe its environment, noting the types of birds, insects, temperatures and clouds. Students record their observations and may use universal indicators, liquids used to determine the acidity of the plant’s soil. After the semester-long series of observations, students write a formal lab report modeled on professional scientific papers. Senior AP Environmental Science student Crystel Hadley said that she has improved her attention to detail through completing the journals. “You learn to really observe what animals come around and how they interact with each other,” she explained, noting the biodiversity surrounding her subject, a stunted redwood planted by the gym. “One time, I saw two moths mating.” Hadley was also interested to see how the redwoods’ visitors changed with the weather. “When it’s sunny, there are different bugs,” she said. “When it rains, there are termites and ants.” A large variety of creatures also surrounds junior AP Environmental nometric function to calculate the Science student Denisha Govin’s sub- tree’s height. “The first time students ject, a pine tree in front of the math draw a tree, it looks like a cartoon,” Melvin said. wing. “One day, I While amasaw seven crows teur sketches near my tree, and on another, The first time may be amusing, I saw a red-tail the power of obstudents draw servation reveals hawk sitting on al my tree,” Govin a tree, it looks environment problems that are said, adding that monarch butlike a cartoon.” no laughing matter. Through obterflies also frequent the area. KATHY MELVIN, servation, Govin Observations science teacher discovered that some pine trees may not slip by around school, unrecorded, however. Students must sketch the including her subject, are infected organisms to scale after identifying with red fungus. them and measuring the heights Melvin also emphasized that of trees. Although Melvin taught observation leads to discovery. “The students the technique for scaling, Monterey pines are dying because measuring the height of a tree draws they are sick,” she said. “They are sick upon their knowledge of geometry. because they are not native to the Students practice measuring the climate, and the climate is changing, angle between the tree and the This (discovery) is based on the fact ground by approximating their dis- that people watched the trees and tance from the tree and using trigo- made connections.” “ T Students also learned how human carelessness may also exacerbate environmental damage. “Teens don’t actually take time and look at nature around us,” Govin said. She explained that she last seriously cared for the environment in eighth grade by cleaning up trails at California’s Tennessee Valley Watershed. “We have an impact on the environment,” she said, rationalizing that people contribute to the air pollution that affects trees which, in turn, affect animals. “The lab lets us step back from the stress (of school) and pay attention to the surroundings.” Melvin understood the importance of observation. “It’s good to see what’s happening in the world,” she said. “You never know what you will see when you get out there.” curriculum L ADEN WITH ZIPLOC bags of universal indicators, Sharpie markers and rubber bands, stacked high with field guides on insects, beetles and wildflowers and covered with various scientific lab tools, the table in Room 239 seems ready for a decade-long safari adventure. But in fact, these are the tools for Kathy Melvin’s Advanced Placement Environmental Science classes’ trips around the Lowell campus for their environmental journals. Through visiting the same plant at least 10 times during the fall semester and recording their observations, AP Environmental Science students learn to understand changes in the world outside of the classroom. “In some classes, students learn the chapter, do the test and forget about the chapter,” Melvin said. “But in environmental science, you have to make connections.” The journal project, which Melvin began in 2000, requires each Teaching century-old tradition to curious gamers CR EE DO N tience at the table. “You are supposed to play fast and not think too much,” Tsui explained. Although the game has an intense and back-breaking pace, inexperienced players should not be afraid to join the club. “It’s fast thinking, but if you’re a beginner I won’t rush you,” Tsui said. So if you too are interested in learning how to throw around some intense “Gong”s and “Sick wu”s properly, join Mahjong Club. They meet every Wednesday after school from 3:30 to 5:30 in Rm. 114. A Mahjong is traditionally a gambling game; however, the club does not practice gambling and eliminated betting with chips. But gambling or not, players always rely on their wits to win, trying not to rely too much on luck. “If you win off luck, senior citizens who play the game with you at home would kill you because you won without strategizing,” Cheng said. “But we can teach you to be as good as your parents.” Several members said they learned from and played with their parents or grandparents before joining the club. “My grandparents played so fast,” club member freshman Anthony Chang said. “My grandparents and I used to have so much fun playing together.” Other members don’t have the opportunity to play at home, so they come to the club to play the game. “I learned to play Mahjong from relatives in China, but now I can only play here,” club member junior Waito Tsui said. According to Tsui, because he is one of the more skilled players, members often complain of his impa- EL clubs what tiles the other person plays to adjust their hand and to increase their odds of winning,” club vice president sophomore Eric Wong said. These strategies are extremely important because only one of the four players wins the game. Veteran members of the club help new members feel more at home and comfortable playing the game. “We start teaching members Chinese numbers if they are not Chinese, or we start a teaching game by the new player hovering over another player’s shoulder to learn,” club president senior Brandon Cheng said. Although the game’s concept may be confusing at first, players easily learn the basics of the game. “I like the fast pace, even though it’s confusing,” Moore said. “I can’t read the characters but I just learned the numbers. I use more of my brains (in mahjong), unlike in other mindless, boring games.” AH G ONG! PONG! SHANG! Sick wu! Do these words mean anything to you? To Mahjong Club members, they mean quite a lot. They are the calls required to win the strategic game that was started approximately 128 years ago in China. Mahjong is a strategic game which requires players to think on their feet. “It challenges your mind,” sophomore Hilary Louie said. “You learn while you look at people play.” Mahjong is similar to poker, only using tiles instead of cards. Each player gathers a total of 14 tiles, grouping similar tiles into either a triplet, pong, or a straight, shang, and finally a set of “eyes” or two tiles of the same face to win the game. “Mahjong is a mixture of mostly luck and probability, so skilled players keep track of M IC By Lily Mak The Lowell NEWS November 14, 2008 Student awaits Unflattering photos online may consequences affect student body’s image for actions From SUSPENSION on Page 1 is not allowed to be on campus at this time. “I notified the staff (of the incident) verbally,” Ishibashi said. “The teachers are bound (by district policy) from talking about it.” Ishibashi also added that all of the students involved were discreetly notified of the current situation. However, a general statement to the student body in its entirety has not been issued as of yet. Ishibashi said that he was concerned about the case. “I think students know that I care about them,” he said. “We’re doing everything we can to stay safe.” Speaking as a staff member, English department head Svein Arber said he did not feel unsafe around the school. “The administration is doing what needs to be done,” he said. Science teacher and United Educators of San Francisco building co-representative Kathy Melvin said she was unsure whether the union had a position as of yet on how the incident would be handled, but was certain of the union’s concern. “The Union is concerned about the safety of the staff and the students,” Melvin said. In the meanwhile, the administration is waiting for action from the district. “Everything is in the district’s hands now,” Ishibashi said. “We did our job here.” From BOAT on Page 1 According to Cordoba, the school may not have the authority to discipline passed them on to the dean. He then called some students who students for behavior at an event that is attended the party, including some mem- neither sponsored by the school nor takes bers of Lowell Student Association and place on-campus. “It is general knowledge that the Student Body Council, into his office for school only has requestioning. sponsibility for stuA student leader, dents during school, who was spoken to by at dances and for the dean and requested I also feel that to remain anonymous, clubs and sports,” believed the administhey were prying Cordoba said. “We are limited to only tration’s investigation into my personal watching them durof the dance’s aftering school activities, party was an invasion business and and beyond that, it’s of privacy. “I understand what undermining my the parents’ responthe administrators are sibility to raise their personal decision- kids to have specific saying and that what happened is reflecting values.” making.” poorly on the school,” LSA director the student source Steve Schmidt exANONYMOUS, pressed a concursaid. “I also feel that student ring opinion in an they were prying into my personal business e-mail. and undermining my personal decision“Though it is unfortunate that pictures making.” posted on Facebook may have tarnished However, Ishibashi disagreed. “I don’t the reputations of some of the officers in consider this an invasion of privacy the Lowell Student Association, it is inapbecause the pictures weren’t looked up,” propriate for the school to punish any of Ishibashi said. “They were given to the them,” he stated in the e-mail. “Any punschool.” ishments regarding a party held after the “ I 5 Senior Boat Dance should come from the parents of said students and, if underage drinking occurred, possibly from the San Francisco Police Department.” The SBC president of the ’07-’08 school year, Class of ‘08 Carter Chung, said there was no mention of personal conduct within the binding agreement that prospective members of student government were required to sign while running. Chung added that he thought there were higher expectations for people currently sitting on the student government boards. Cordoba said that student leaders are intended to be role models that students look up to within the school community. He added that he felt that some people tend to experience a loss of their common sense while in the party atmosphere, due to increased peer pressure. The parents of the student who hosted the dance after-party are not going to seek any disciplinary action or legal action against any of the students who attended the party, according to the anonymous student. “They don’t care,” the student said. “Those kids are not theirs, so they just want to punish me.” Seniors face repercussions for performance at rally Spellicy also said he felt the situation was From RALLY on Page 1 mocking the homophobes who believed Abe Spellicy acknowledged SBC’s apology but but was not at the performance. “I did see the Lincoln was gay.” mishandled by SBC, which planned and led the said he felt it was lacked important aspects. “I boys with the barbell,” she said. “They menThat interpretation was expressed in a rally. “I felt that as the performance got more recognize that SBC sent out an apology, but I tioned they were going to do posing with it. music review on Pop Matters (www.popmat- and more out of hand it was the responsibility don’t think the apology educates,” Spellicy said. To hear that it happened differently was a bit ters.com) by Stephen Haag, who agreed that of SBC to stop the performance,” he said. He suggested such education would involve shocking.” the Electric Six’s music is SBC president senior Celi Tamayo-Lee said students and faculty going through sensitivAs soon as the rally supposed to be nonsensi- that SBC was put in a difficult situation. “It’s ity training. ended, Ishibashi called Spellicy has planned conferences with the cal and not homopho- hard when you’re trying to provide entertainWhat kind of the participants into his bic. “‘Gay Bar’ (is) … too ment, and it appears that everyone is enjoying boys’ parents. “We will discuss their behavior message does office. “I talked to them funny, too harmless (read: it,” she said. “It’s also just hard to control these and why I was upset about it,” Spellicy said. about what I and others dumb) and too catchy to things in the moment when they’re happen- “And we will decide whether or not (the parthat send to felt about their perforbe considered racist or ing so fast. At the time, we didn’t realize how ticipating students) will remain in my class.” mance,” Ishibashi said. homophobic,” Haag said. offensive it was.” Spellicy acknowledged he does not have the students who “I told them that they “But these guys will take On Nov. 5, SBC issued an apology letter, authority to remove them on his own. are questioning your attention any way penned by Schmidt and SBC Community … reflect their school, Ishibashi discussed the students’ behavior they can get it.” and problems arise when Liaison senior Roy with the staff and the coming out?” people are offended.” In an interview with Lee, to be read in regPTSA. At a staff meetSocial studies teacher Alexander Laurence on istries. “(The letter) ing, a handout outlinIt’s also just hard to JAMES SPELLICY, his blog (www. portable- was just to clear up James Spellicy said he was ing Board Policies 3810 social studies teacher infinite.blogspot.com), the that we know we ofdeeply offended by the control these things on sexual harassment band described the song fended people because performance. “I was of5162 on anti-slur poliin the moment when cies was given to the fended by what I thought to be simulating gay “Gay Bar” as “a song of nonsense.” we knew people would Gadye further explained that the rally per- have liked us to stop sex and one individual simulating ejaculation,” Spellicy said he they’re happening so staff. he said. “My bottom line is that simulation of formance was done in jest. “To put it simply, we it,” Tamayo-Lee said. trusts Ishibashi to keep sex, gay or straight, has no place in a school wanted to make fun of ourselves,” he said. Schmidt added, “It his promise that some fast.” performance.” Schmidt said he saw the performance as stated that SBC was action will be taken. Schmidt said he didn’t see the act as sexual. more accepting than homophobic. “As a gay sorry for not stopping According to seCELI TAMAYO-LEE, nior performer Shant “From my vantage point on stage, I could not man, I was not offended by the ‘Gay Bar’ the ‘Gay Bar’ perforsenior and SBC president Siyahian, the boys are see everything that transpired,” Schmidt said, performance,” he said. “I believe it to be an mance sooner. It also “But from what I understand, the accusations expression of how comfortable the boys were stated that I should have been more proactive voluntarily writing their own letters, but some that are being made regarding sex acts being with homosexuality in general.” in stopping the performance and escorting the remained unsure whether they have been mimicked onstage are unfounded.” However, Spellicy was hesitant to accept boys off of the stage once I realized the nature treated fairly. “We are absolutely being singled Spellicy also expressed concern that the Schmidt’s explanation. “I reject the idea that of their performance.” out,” Gadye said. “There were many more performance created a homophobic envi- has been suggested that the students are just Schmidt also issued additional apologies. “I highly ‘offensive’ costumes: The playboy bunny, ronment that might be hostile to students comfortable with their sexuality and were just publicly apologized for not being more proac- the terrorists, or even the kids who dressed up questioning their own sexuality. “You have imitating the video,” he said. “I’ve seen the tive in terms of stopping the performance to like nerds. Last year, (an) openly anti-Semitic members of the soccer and football teams up (‘Gay Bar’) video, and at the entire Lowell faculty student at Lowell dressed up as Hitler and no there, who are considered the ‘senior boys,’ no time in the video did and staff at last Wednes- teacher … spoke up.” frolicking on the catwalk,” Spellicy said. “What the actors take actions day’s faculty meeting on However, Ishibashi made it clear that he Spellicy has the kind of message does that send to students who even somewhat close Nov. 5,” Schmidt said. knows these students are good people but that are questioning coming out? In my 15 years at (to what the students right to be offended, “Furthermore, I have they did something in bad taste. Lowell, I have never seen a performance that performed).” Gadye, however, did not see the perforread and gave my apbut we feel like he is proval to a letter written mance as serious. “There is a certain point was so, so upsetting to me.” Spellicy also rejectIshibashi confirmed that a few students ed the idea that stuby the performers ad- when you have to take things with a grain of overreacting.” came to him and said they felt very offended dents were making fun dressed to Mr. Spellicy, salt and just laugh, especially when you know by what the performance suggested. of themselves. “They NARIN LEININGER, which apologizes for that the message is meant to only make fun of However, performance participant senior were making fun of gay senior performer their actions and tries ourselves, not a specific group of people.” Nathan Gadye said the costumes and per- people, whether that is to explain their point Spellicy said still he felt the performance formance were meant to be humorous. He the purpose of the video or not. It suggests of view.” Schmidt also attended a Gay-Straight was inappropriate. “I’m disappointed that explained that the Electric Six’s music video intolerance or ignorance on their part.” Alliance club meeting to apologize and discuss Lowell has done such a weak job in helping does not make fun of gay people, but makes Gadye said he understood Spellicy’s anger. how the members felt about it. students understand when it is appropriate to fun of people who consider Abraham Lincoln “Spellicy’s reaction is understandable for GSA member senior Ariana Hirsh said select certain groups when they are the brunt to be gay. “In my eyes, the video makes fun of someone who doesn’t want to understand the that while she was not offended by the per- of their humor,” he said. “It shouldn’t be swept people who are homophobic, like the ones that whole picture of what our costumes were,” he formance, she was thankful for the apologies. under the table.” thought Lincoln was homosexual,” Gadye said. said. Senior performer Narin Leininger agreed, “Yes, their performance was wrong, but they Hirsh agreed. “It doesn’t matter what the “We were not dressing up like gay people. We adding “Spellicy has the right to be offended, apologized, and it’s fine,” she said. “Overall, I performance meant,” she said. “If people were were dressing up like the music video which is but we feel like he is overreacting.” think the whole thing was overblown.” offended, then there’s a problem.” “ W “ “ S I 6 NEWS Lowell High School November 14, 2008 City approves JROTC; board approves alternative By Lily Wong and Sol Granados T HE SAN FRANCISCO Unified School District’s Board of Education approved of an emergency preparedness program for students as an alternative to the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps program, which is currently in jeopardy of termination. A proposal for the Student Emergency Response Volunteers program was passed by the school board 5 -1 on Oct. 28. SERV, first introduced by school board commissioner Jane Kim, is designed to provide leadership training without military implications by teaching students about first aid training, CPR and disaster planning. It will be offered as an elective and billed as a leadership course. According to an October article in The San Francisco Chronicle, Kim and board member Norman Yee authored the resolution. gram was followed by the passing of School board president Mark San- city ballot measure, Proposition V, in chez supported SERV but believed support of JROTC on Nov. 4. The measure was approved by that it is meant to be an alterna54.5% of voters. tive for students, It h a s n ow not to replace the been two years program. It’s a good since the Board “It’s not meant f Education to replace JROTC, achievement to ovoted to phase but meant to be another option get that passed, out JROTC, but now the board for students to considering is actually trycho os e f rom,“ ing to put their he explained. “I San Francisco words to action. think it’s important for students is a liberal city.” The program is to learn about s che du le d for emergenc y retermination in JARRETT HORNBOSTEL, sponse. It would seven months. senior be good to have it Prop. V was in most, if not all put on the ballot of our schools for students to be pre- to sway the school board to keep pared in case there’s an emergency JROTC in district high schools. on any major level.” Many JROTC students were happy The approval of the SERV pro- that it passed, but know that the fight “ I is not over. “It is a good achievement to get that passed, considering San Francisco is a liberal city,” senior Jarrett Hornbostel said. JROTC students are aiming to overturn the previous decision to replace JROTC at an upcoming school board meeting that will take place in January. Some JROTC students, however, believed it unnecessary to replace the program with another one that involves similar, if not less, curriculum. “I don’t understand why we need an alternative JROTC proposal when it’s practically teaching the same thing,” sophomore Hesper Wong said. “The new proposal doesn’t have the special units or teams that practice for competitions, and it’s just wasting money on a program we already have.” Senior Stephanie Zhu seconded Wong, agreeing that JROTC offers more. “Personally, I think SERV is a good program for learning more about disaster planning, but it’s only five percent of what JROTC teaches,” Zhu said. According to Hornbostel, JROTC teaches first aid and disaster preparedness in the first six-week grading period. “The new program itself lacks the other five or six week quarters,” he said. “It provides little leadership opportunities, college and career planning or life skills.” JROTC instructor colonel Douglas Bullard that SERV is a great idea, but believed that it is already incorporated in JROTC. “If they gave SERV to us, we would make it happen,” he said. “That way, more students would be exposed to it.” Bullard also wanted the board to respect the voice of voters. “Prop V. passed, so they need to honor voters’ opinions,” he said. Homecoming festivities rescheduled, rally moved By Lily Mak homecoming dance could not be Friday,” said SBC Events Coordinator Eryn Kimura. “Also, dances on Saturdays get a fewer amount of people and do not work out too well.” The Lowell Student Association and SBC voted to postpone the rally to the first week of November following the Lowell vs. Mission game. The delay of the rally also helped with the planning process of the rally. “Mr. Schmidt wanted to switch up Lowell’s u s u a l s c h e du l e from the beginning (of October) to later (in November) when most football games are,” Kimura said. Class of ’10 Vice President junior Tristan Leder had a similar opinion. “Normally the rally is tied with the football games, but the football games are usually pre-seaELENA CHIN son and not the Above: Song girls show off their moves during the homecoming rally regular AAA sealast Friday. Right: Grannies of the ‘09 senior class hobbled their way son,” he said. from Bingo Night to the football field and got their groove on, stripping He b e l i e v e d down to their bloomers to show their senior citizen class spirit. T HE SCHOOL celebrated spirit week from Nov. 3-7, one month later than the traditional date of the rally in late September. Initially, the change was made to accommodate the October standardized testing. “Spirit week was scheduled from Sept. 29 through Oct. 3, but with SATs the following day, the pushing back the rally would have other benefits as well. “With the rally further away, spirit committee would have more time to get their act together,” he explained. However, Kimura foresaw several problems arising due to the change of date. “There won’t be a late night for spirit committee and having the Halloween rally right before the homecoming rally is very stressful,” Kimura said. “It also usually rains in November. We were so lucky it was sunny.” However, this did not prevent problems with the class skits, which were considered for disqualification. “I thought there were high expectations and I don’t think the classes met any of the expectations,” senior James Won said. Most students had similar opinions of the outcome of the skits, especially after the sophomore skit was interrupted and later dis- qualified due to their use of a teacher’s name. “I couldn’t hear or understand the skits,” junior Kyra Bannister said. Besides the issues concerning the skits, many enjoyed the rest of the rally. “The rally went so smoothly and well; tech was perfect and electricity worked out great,” Kimura said. The last homecoming rally left a bittersweet memory for many of the students in the senior class. “I really liked that the seniors showed their spirit and went all out as a class this year; we came together unlike in past years,” senior Dasha Zakharova said. School integrates wireless Internet into campus By Traci Liang and encryption code, both posted in TUDENTS AND FACULTY the library and main office. “I bring are now taking advantage of my laptop to school sometimes and school-wide wireless Internet, check my email,” senior Matthew installed in September in response to Kitagawa said. The district was hesitant to allow the district’s new Wi-fi guidelines. The system, which encompasses the installation of school-wide Withe whole school, fills the need for fi for security reasons. “The district greater Interd i d n’t w a nt net access on people to look at i n ap p r o campus. Now students priate things “People can bring in their online,” Lowhave been asking for Wi-fi webmaslaptops and access ell for a long time ter and math and someWi-fi anywhere in teacher Kevin times we don’t Sullivan said. the school.” “They have a have enough filter and it gets computers for ALEX HSIEH, updated, but everyone,” nettech system administrator there are inapwork adminpropriate Web istrator Alex Hsieh said. “Now students can bring sites that get created all the time. in their laptops and access Wi-fi I guess they realized that teachanywhere in the school.” ers were getting their own routers Students who wish to access anyway, so they might as well allow the school’s wireless network must people to get Wi-fi and set guidelines enter a Service Set Identifier code to monitor usage.” S “ N The district sent a letter last January to all schools listing usage guidelines and calling for schools to notify the district of the locations of their routers, a hidden SSID, a unique administration password and an encryption code. “If you just turn on your laptop you won’t see the connection,” Sullivan said. “You have to join the network and enter in the SSID and encryption code.” These guidelines were put in place in order to ensure Internet safety, according to Hsieh. “We meet all the guidelines but we haven’t installed Wi-fi until now because of funding issues,” Hsieh said. Teachers are using the new Wifi, anchored by eight on-campus routers, to enhance their lessons and teaching. “I use Wi-fi to stream images that I need for class, to access my online gradebook in class or to gather information or do other prep work,” social studies teacher Cambria Gersten-Bower said. “I use it all the time, every day.” However, students and faculty who use in-school Wi-fi will still be accessing the district’s network, so all the district’s content filters will apply. “The filter blocks youtube, but I find that Web site to have some very good example material sometimes,” Gersten-Bower said. School-wide Wi-fi has also made working in department offices easier for teachers. “Some desks are arranged in the middle of the room, so there’s nothing you can plug into to get Internet,” Hsieh said. “But with Wi-fi, every teacher can bring in their laptop and use the Internet.” Previously, teachers desiring Internet access had to tape wires to the floor. “The wires were a real safety hazard, but now it’s a lot easier,” Gersten-Bower said. The implementation of wire-free Internet has also improved convenience. “I don’t have to have a bunch of wires and keep plugging and unplugging to switch computers,” Sullivan explained. But some teachers are stuck without the new wireless Internet benefits. “It doesn’t work in my class,” social studies teacher Nader Jazayeri said. “I have to download video clips onto my laptop and then show them to my students in class. But I think there should be Internet in classrooms.” The school’s limited budget is the main source of the occasional inconveniences in the system. “There is a big difference between a fifty-dollar router and a two hundred-dollar router,” Hsieh said. “Right now we just have to work with what we have, but hopefully the district will step in and get us something better.” Even though the network can be improved, students can still take advantage of the expanded Wi-fi system by entering in an encryption and SSID found posted in the library and main office. “It’s great that students can use the Internet anywhere on campus,” library assistant, senior Amy Lei said. “Sometimes there just isn’t enough room in the library.” The Lowell November 14, 2008 ARTS Teacher travels abroad to show thread sculpture By Camille Smyth A CERAMICS TEACHER flew to Japan to showcase her artwork at an art exhibit last month. Kirsten Janssen was one of 80 artists selected to be a part of The Missing Peace: The Dalai Lama Portrait exhibit, which traveled to Tokyo on Oct. 11. The exhibit began on Oct. 16 and ended on Nov. 9. “The woman who chose me is Randy Rosenberg, who used to be a private curator for the World Bank,” Janssen said. “Since I’m an established artist in San Francisco, she knew about my work and liked its spiritual sense.” According to Janssen, this is the first time the mainly American art exhibit went international, featuring the work of artists from around the world. It was Janssen’s first time exhibiting her work overseas. “Back in 2001, I had created a gun made out of chewed chewing gum for an art exhibit in London,” Janssen said. “The piece never made it because it was held at customs.” Luckily, Janssen’s piece made it abroad this time. After traveling to Tokyo, the exhibit also stopped in Madrid and Barcelona on Nov. 9. However, Janssen could only go to Tokyo because she had to take care of her daughter, and the trips were not completely free. “I left on the 11th and came back on the 20th, so it was a long time for me to not be with my sevenyear-old daughter,” she explained. This was not Janssen’s first time in Japan. “I’m actually of Japanese heritage, so I had visited some family ten years ago,” she said. However, this time she was accompanied by her sister. Together they visited temples and museums. “We love the food over there, and we got to go to a fish market,” she said. “It was great to go to the motherland together.” They also attended receptions and dinners surrounding the show, which were funded by Japanese corporations. For the show itself, Janssen created an interactive sculpture which she named “Measuring around the Earth with a Golden Thread.” The piece is constructed with wood, cones of golden thread and paint rollers with one cone of thread that weaves through the other 13. When one of the threads is touched the rest of the spools move. “Each visitor is asked to pull the strand from the right side of the artwork and measure one arm span,” Janssen said. “As they pull the thread the fourteen spools rotate similar to a prayer wheel, releasing pleasant thoughts into the universe.” Viewers of the piece also had the chance to read a poem called “Milestones,” which Janssen wrote herself, displayed next to the piece. 7 Although she c ame up w it h the idea for her piece in half an hour, creating it took around eight months. “It constantly had issues,” Janssen said. “It’s a sensitive piece.” The fact that the piece was being showcased in Tokyo did not help much either. “Pe ople were smoking in the gallery, and it was extremely humid,” Janssen said. “I COURTESY OF KIRSTEN BAHRS JANSSEN had to make some last-minute adap- Ceramics teacher Kirsten Bahrs Janssen brought her piece, “Measuring around the Earth with a Golden Thread,” to Tokyo, Japan, as tations.” part of a travelling exhibit honoring the Dalai Lama. The Missing Peace was not restricted to sculptures as several artists’ projects Foundation as well as inspired artists such as included photography, painting and video. The Janssen. Prior to traveling to Japan, the exhibit show was a collaboration among the Com- had been featured at San Francisco’s Yerba mittee of 100 for Tibet and the Dalai Lama Buena Center from Dec. 1 to March 16. Bay area jazz master returns for sparkling show By Glennis Markison “Y EAH! KEEP EM’ comin’!” Dave Brubeck yells encouragingly to latecomers entering after his first tune at the Davies Symphony Hall on Oct. 22. The crowd laughs, already enraptured with the 87-year-old legend. Brubeck, whose frailness required him to hold onto a bandmate as he took to the stage, spoke to the crowd with the same vigor and enthusiasm he played with. At what may have been his last Davies Symphony Hall performance, the Bay Area native with fellow white-haired bandmates — alto sax and flute player Bobby Militello, bassist Michael Moore and drummer Randy Jones — played a variety of tunes, told stories and provided just the performance fans craved. In an almost two-hour set for the San Francisco Jazz Festival, Brubeck and his band mates played ballads, stage, Brubeck’s poignant intro to up-tempo pieces, odd-metered “Stormy Weather” created a dreamy tunes and Southern-style hoedown mood. Controlling his dynamic numbers. He and his fellow players range with incredible precision, had a spot-on sense of their pieces, Brubeck provoked one fan to stand up and clap before often speeding up the alto sax even or slowing down Brubeck’s launched into the depending on their poignant intro to melody. moods. E a c h p l a y e r “Stormy Weather” As Militello sweetly entered played intense sowith the melody, he los — the drum- created a dreamy held notes for what mer aggressively seemed as long as striking his drums, mood. thirty seconds, his t h e s a x p l ay e r use of vibrato alcharging through melodic lines at incredible speeds, lowing notes to resonate even to the the bassist plucking powerful eighth highest, farthest seats. Militello’s solo-style changed to note phrases and Brubeck easily switching styles — that the concert a spicy, soul flavor and the group hall roared with applause after each easily adapts to the shift. The drumtunes. Of particular note were the mer immediately provided strong group’s versions of “Stormy Weather” accents as Brubeck and the bassist and “Crescent City Stomp.” offered more aggressive rhythmic As deep blue lighting covered the support. The tune eventually ended softly, the alto’s sweeping cadenzas filling the hall. The group displayed their versatility yet again in “Crescent City Stomp,” a hoedown tune that prompted audience members to clap to the beat. With the drummer providing an energetic funk feel, Brubeck played the melody, infusing it with the energy of a young kid at a Southern fair. Militello soon soloed, his sax screaming long notes across the funky beats. The tune really heated up as he quoted the melody; meanwhile, the bassist got so into the groove that he practically danced with his bass. The lengthy drum solo set the tune on fire, with Jones moving his sticks so quickly and powerfully that Brubeck stood up and stared as the audience remained mesmerized. Needless to say, “Crescent” inspired the biggest applause of the night. Not only did listeners appreciate the variety of tunes the group played, they were very impressed with Brubeck’s charisma. Brubeck talked about the first time the group played “Crescent City Stomp,” joked about how friend Paul Desmond always seemed to find parking spots in the nick of time before gigs and explained his role in creating “cool jazz.” Audience members felt that not only was Brubeck an incredible musician but also a very friendly person. He even complimented the audience, noting that “you’re the most musical audience I’ve ever worked with.” Brubeck and his trio ended the night with the same youthful energy they started it with. The group thanked the crowd for coming out instead of staying home to watch first night of the World Series, and ended with none other than “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.” Canadian charms French students through art By Camille Smyth “Y French Consulate Jean-Francois Questin, this is the ninth year the consulate has arranged the presentation for high school French classes. “We got in touch with Madame Fortier through an old colleague who works for a French publishing company that specializes in children literature,” Questin said. Aside from learning about the artwork, the AP French students were able to work on their speaking skills by asking her questions and attempting to understand her rapid speech. “I knew most of the vocabulary she used,” freshman AP French student Noah Stier said. Puretz believes that the students understood the presentation and that it was a success. “It was such a great activity and a great way for the students to play with their imagination,” she said. RTIER LI FO NATA A clay character sculpted from Fortier’s 2006 picture book Mathurin models different poses. Y OF acters hair by using two colored chalks and drawing random spirals on their heads. The students barely had time to copy what was on the board as Fortier quickly erased her sketch and moved onto something else. “I love drawing so much that I need to start another one,” she said. Just as Fortier can’t stay on one drawing for long, she also finds it difficult to stick to one form of art. Her skills are not only restricted to paint and pastels. After showing some of her handmade sculptures, she encouraged the class members to create their own characters out of clay. “Use all the instruments around you,” she said, pointing to a fork and a popsicle stick. “But always think of the character you are creating.” Fortier believed it was important that her sculptures have personality, since they are the only comfort she has in her workshop. “They surround me in my workshop and they are always speaking to me,” she said. Fortier even has baskets filled with heads made out of clay. “It’s a bit scary,” she confessed. What scares Fortier even more is how popular her books have become. “I’m always surprised that people understand me,” she said. “It’s extremely satisfying because I never thought that I would be able to write.” According to the Cultural Attaché of the RTES After studying art, Fortier began writing and illustrating childrens’ books. She has illustrated more than 20 books, including the award-winning books Lili Plume, Mathurin and Graines de petits monstres monstres. According to Fortier, there is no reason why she writes for children instead of adults. “Painting for me is like a game,” she said. “The writing part requires more concentration, but I’m not thinking about the children when I write.” Fortier encouraged the stressed-out Lowell students to unwind and release their inner child by passing around paper and crayons to copy Fortier’s chalkboard drawing of a character from Mathurin, a children’s story about a boy who is abandoned by his parents and attempts to make a costume out of bird feathers only to be kidnapped by a wicked Queen. While watching Fortier’s demonstration and working on her own masterpiece, junior AP French student Jessica Noss noted the illustrator’s quirky drawing style. “Her style is interesting because she’s ambidextrous when she draws,” Noss said, as Fortier gave the char- COU OU CAN even kiss them if you want,” Canadian illustrator Natali Fortier said, pointing to her colorful paintings during a presentation on Nov. 3. Colored mostly with pastels and occasionally carved into with a knife, Fortier’s paintings and techniques are anything but ordinary. “I use people for inspiration and I always feel like I’m swallowing them,” she explained. Sponsored by the French Consulate, Fortier shared her art through an interactive presentation with the Mods 11-12 Advanced Placement French class in Room 76. “Every year we welcome an illustrator and writer of children’s literature,” AP French teacher Annie Puretz said. “However, this is the first year the French class has done it in conjunction with the art department, and in the art room with art teachers.” While speaking rapidly in French, Fortier explained that she developed her techniques through attending multiple art schools, including San Francisco’s Academy of Art University and the Paris’ École Nationale Supérieure des Arts. “My professors taught me a lot, so I believe it’s important to study at art schools,” she said. 8 NEWS November 14, 2008 Lowell High School Prom no longer in civic monumental splendor By Lily Mak S ENIOR PROM will be held at a new venue this year and ticket prices will have a slight increase over past years, according to Senior Prom Committee president Lily Ling. The formal dance event, which has taken place at City Hall downtown for the past four years, has been relocated to a new location — to be announced in April — due to scheduling unavailability. Ling explained that although the Senior Prom Planning Committee contacted the monumental landmark and official governmental building City Hall one year and two months in advance, anticipating to schedule the expressed disappointment at seeing the dance early, Washington High School had supposed end to their beloved four-year already booked the venue and all other tradition of holding the dance at City possible dates for the dance were already Hall. booked by wed“I am mad bedings. cause City Hall is Ling added Lowell’s tradition,” that the comThere is no point in senior Niki Irgensmittee began its Moller said. “I have complaining (about been excited since search immedifreshman year to ately after finding the change in venthat the venue go to prom at City was booked and Hall and all my ue): we can start a unavailable. friends have told new tradition.” The commitme that City Hall tee will announce was really fun.” FIONA TSANG, this year’s senior Other students senior were more optiprom location in mistic about the April, a month before the dance is scheduled to take change of senior prom’s location. place. “There is no point in complaining However, Ling hinted at the surprise (about the change in venue); we can start the senior students could look forward a new tradition,” senior Fiona Tsang said. to on the often memorable senior prom “I don’t care where the venue is as long as (senior prom) is memorable.” dance night. “It is a beautiful venue,” Ling explained. In order to keep the promise the Senior “It is a very classy place. It is not outside Prom Planning Committee made to the and not on separate floors, and you can senior class at the end of last year, that they look fancy even if you’re would ensure a special prom, the comgetting there by public mittee members went to great lengths to transportation.” choose a new venue for the dance, searchA plethora ing far and wide before making their final of senior decision. s t u According to Ling, the senior prom d e n t s committee members looked at as many as 20 other places in their venue hunt before deciding on the final “ T location. Ling emphasized that the price of senior prom tickets, which will go on-sale in April 2009, will increase from last year’s price of $50 on account of the new venue, but added that the increase would not be dramatic. “Tickets will be around $60 to $70,” Ling said.“We negotiated a lot with the price, and brought it way down.” The committee as a whole also hoped to further lower ticket prices through participating in fundraising projects and other school-sponsored events throughout the year. “We are selling tapioca and In-and-Out Burgers on Co-Curricular day and holding Eggettes nights throughout the year,” Ling said. She added that the senior class could always stand to raise more money as a whole. “Our goal is to fundraise $10,000, but we are prepared to fundraise even more,” she said. Senior prom is scheduled for May 24, 2009 from 8 p.m. to midnight. “It is going to be the best prom ever. Better than City Hall,” Ling said. She emphasized the benefits of relocating senior prom to the new venue. “It is bigger and better than the junior prom venue, and we are going to do it bigger and better than Washington High School,” Ling said. Look forward to the announcement of prom’s location this April. The Lowell November 14, 2008 NEWS 9 Trader Joe’s mall opening offers new lunch spot By Daniel Kim A N ALTERNATIVE GROCERY store will soon open at a mall near campus. The city’s fourth Trader Joe’s will open in the former location of Copeland’s Sporting Goods between McDonald’s and Borders on the southern end of Stonestown Galleria. The mainly health-food centered market will be Stonestown’s first supermarket since the locally owned Petrini’s grocery store, which closed down 10 years ago. Faculty and students alike look forward to the addition. “I would definitely appreciate Trader Joe’s in the Stonestown area,” counselor May Choi said. “It will certainly fill that void Petrini’s created after it closed down.” The new store will face competition from fast-food chains and other grocery stores such as the Lucky in Lakeshore Plaza. However, many said they would choose the healthier organic Trader Joe’s over the neighboring McDonald’s. “I would rather spend more money on better-quality food and support a store that sells locally grown food than a store that transports processed food from outside this region,” freshman Nadia Diamond said. However, due to the lack of security, the Lowell administration will keep Stonestown off-limits to students despite the opening of Trader Joe’s. “We don’t have enough people to watch over the entire city,” principal Andy Ishibashi said. Nevertheless, many students are excited at the prospect. “A Trader Joe’s in Stonestown can make students’ diets healthier because they offer more organic choices than Lucky,” sophomore Ryan Lui said. “I would choose Trader Joe’s over Lucky because they offer better tasting food.” Sophomore Adar Schneider agreed with Lui, especially when it came to the quality of food at Trader Joe’s. “They have a wide variety of premade food that would be good for lunches and snacks,” Schneider said. “Whatever I get there is most likely going to be healthier than what I would get from Lucky. I try to be as health-conscious as I can be.” Others such as junior Matthew Huang prefer products from Lucky. “The quality of food at Trader Joe’s is overrated and it’s too expensive for me,” he said. School nurse Maryann Rainey, however, didn’t object to either grocery store. “They are both fine,” she said. “I do try to buy fresh food that’s grown locally because it supports local farmers and costs less oil to transport it.” Science teacher Kathy Melvin, on the other hand, had mixed feelings about Trader Joe’s. “I want to give Trader Joe’s credit because they offer a diversity of organic choices, but its products are packaged,” Melvin said. “It’s definitely better for you and better for the environment, but it’s the plastic packaging that they’ll have to look into.” BEN UDELSON Traders Joe’s at Stonestown Galleria opening this fall offers job opportunities as well as convenient dining locations. PTSA preps cleaning day From PTSA on Page 2 PTSA president Debbie Gee Wong, who was elected at the same May election, nominated Leslie as a candidate for the position of second vice president, running against Nguyen, who had already been nominated. Wong supported Leslie because the PTSA bylaws state that the first and second vice presidents are also authorized signers of checks, she said. The PTSA first vice president, Lee, a minor, had already been elected by the time the position of second vice president came up to the vote. “Had I supported a second minor for the second vice president position, the check-signing duties would have fallen on only two individuals — the treasurer and the president,” Wong explained. According to Wong, minors on the PTSA are prohibited from signing checks, and she explained that many members of the PTSA have work schedules that make it difficult to secure signatures and process checks in a timely manner. According to Nguyen, after Leslie was elected to the position of second vice president in May, Nguyen and Wong spoke on the phone and decided that Nguyen would be appointed “volunteer coordinator” of the upcoming Beautification Day school cleanup event. However, Nguyen later decided not to participate in Beautification Day. “When I talked to Ms. Gee Wong, it sounded like they didn’t need me,” Nguyen said. Gee Wong explained that Nguyen’s resignation was “most unfortunate and unnecessary, because we had agreed to Tiffany’s request (of participating in Beautification Day), but she decided otherwise.” Members of Lowell’s Student Body Council have already felt the effects of the new leadership for Beautification Day. “The adult members of the PTSA have not treated us with respect,” SBC President Celi Tamayo-Lee said. “At this level and in these kinds of situations, parents and students should be mature and cooperative, or nothing will be accomplished. The PTSA’s attitude towards SBC and their approach to the event have been very condescending. They have asked Tiffany (Nguyen) and myself for help with and information about the process, and have not shown respect for the help Tiffany has offered in the past.” Tamayo-Lee stated that SBC plans to help out with Beautification Day, but did not participate in the planning process. Nguyen said that Beautification Day will still achieve its ultimate goal of improving the school, but she believes it won’t be at its best in terms of student involvement. “I want Beautification Day to continue,” Nguyen said. “The only thing I’m worried about is that the current leadership won’t be able to coordinate and involve students as much as I had.” New district initiative gets schools “greener” By Matthew Estipona OWELL IS BECOMING “greener” under a new district-wide initiative to make San Francisco Unified School District schools more eco-friendly. The Environmental Service Learning Initiative, headed by mayor Gavin Newsom and Superintendent Carlos Garcia, was instated on Sept. 30. Since then, it has encouraged environmental justice, “meaningful” community service and civic responsibility in SFUSD students throughout the city, according to a Sept. 30 press release on the initiative. Among other things, parents have helped plant flowers near the main entrance, compost bins are now available in most restrooms and the Book-to-Book store is now selling eco-friendly bags. The initiative has garnered popular support among faculty L and students alike. “I think it’s about time,” Advanced Placement Environmental Science teacher Kathy Melvin said. “The fact that we are beginning is great because of all the benefits our school and community will reap in the future.” Besides school community involvement, both organizations Community Educational Services and Global Exchange support the initiative, allocating $860,000 in total and planning to introduce environmental ethics-based lessons plans for teachers as well as group discussion workshops in several high schools city-wide. Student organizations are equally supportive of the district’s new measure. “I know that the work we are doing benefits not only our school but our community as a whole,” Recycling club member sophomore Simon Wong said. - - HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN Spotlight November 14 HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN 2008 HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HALLOWEEN HARRY HALLOWEEN! Clockwise from above: Social studies teachers Monty Worth (above, left) and Cambria Bower-Gersten (above, right) storm the stage as Sirius Black and Hermione Granger with the rest of Hogwarts; senior and SBC Events Coordinator Eryn Kimura (below left) announces the Wizard of Oz themed group contestees seniors Bryan Wong, Cathrine Fong, junior Thomas Chu, seniors Cassey Miguel, Christal Tossany, Samantha Tak, and sophomore Julianna Sindell; junior Robert Byrd is elected winner of the singles contest as Barack Obama; (from right to left), senior Ana Billingsley, sophomore Zach Ruylemeyer, and seniors Michelle Agbayani and Camille Smyth win best group-costume as Hot Dog and his Condiments; (below) seniors Lilianna Pedroni and Eitan Neumark win the pair category as Sarah Palin and John McCain. ALL PHOTOS BY ELENA CHIN By Cherry Manoonsilpa W HAT’S THE USE of wearing crazy costumes if you’ve got no place to flaunt them? On Oct. 31, the Student Body Council held their annual Halloween rally on the catwalk, complete with snappy costumes and sugary treats. The crowd went wild when Barack Obama took center stage in the singles costume contest. But his GOP opponents senator John McCain and Alaskan governor Sarah Palin retaliated soon enough, capturing the crowd’s votes with a joint speech during the pairs contest portion. A contest highlight was the Social Studies Department showing in Hogwarts garb, ranging from Albus Dumbledore to Harry Potter himself. The groups contest also included Tutti Melon fro-yo costumes, 26 alphabet letters, China and USA’s ping-pong teams and the winners, a human-sized hot dog and his condiments. As the contests ended, audience members were drizzled on by light rain and handfuls of candy. ■ Football hopes to recapture city championship Lowell High School November 14, 2008 Page 11 ■ Tennis continues tradition of dominating all-city Volleyball “killing” its way to the championship By Traci Liang mance left the Washington crowd speechless. RACTICE REALLY DOES make perfect, “We had very good blocking,” senior outside and the girls’ varsity volleyball know hitter Kerry Ho said. “Wash had a very strong this lesson better than anyone else. hitter but senior middle blocker Laura NapoAnd more practice time in the gym is exactly liello and junior opposition Nicole Lee were what the team needs to improve their game able to block her throughout the game.” The and extend their twelve-year AAA champion team stepped it up during the third set when Lee smashed the ball two feet away from the net legacy. Lack of gym time has been holding the girls on an overpass, just short of the Washington back. Varsity volleyball starts practice at 3:30 Eagles’ reach. The girls kicked it up another and has to share the gym with JV volleyball or notch at the end of the match. “Junior middle boys’ basketball. At 5:30, they have to leave the Allison Wasserman put it away amazingly,” Ho said. Varsity volleyball gym and hand it over to the brought home another girls’ basketball team. “We win, beating Washington only get two hours after 25-15, 25-14, and 25-23. school to set up nets, do The girls know that warm ups, and train ofbeating some of the toughfense and defense,” senior est competitors means defense specialist Elaine nothing without a chamNgo said. “We need at least pionship win. They are three hours but now we just hoping to make it to the don’t have enough time to AAA championship game go through everything.” today at Kezar. A win in this According to senior center game would mean another Katrina Lau, the girls can- Katrina Lau, year added on to the girls’ not get through all their varsity volleyball MVP varsity volleyball’s AAA rotations during practice championship streak, which has been going and have to warm up outside occasionally. The crunch for gym time also adds pressure strong for the last twelve years. “It’s my senior on the girls during practice. “We’re forced to be year so it’d be awesome to bring home another super focused but we’re used to being relaxed victory,” Ngo said. The playoff game on Nov. 12 was too late at practice,” Lau said. The lack of practice time is keeping the for press, but if the Cardinals make it to chamteam from improving and developing new pionships, then come out to cheer them on at techniques, which could hurt the team later on 7 today at Kezar. when they face strong opponents. “We should be running more plays but we don’t have time Most Valuable Player The varsity volleyball team has truly taken to try out new stuff so we have to stick with what we’ve been doing,” Lau said. Sometimes the game to a new level. Each and every team member has stepped up and given her all, but coach cannot explain things to us.” Even though the girls still need more Katrina Lau, this year’s co-captain and center, practice, they are dominate on the court. They has truly inspired the team, and is The Lowell’s defeated Washington during the Battle of the pick as MVP. Lau’s leadership is truly felt throughout the Birds on Oct. 21. Many Washington supporters showed up at Lowell to cheer on their team and team. “Without her, we wouldn’t be the same,” distract the Cardinals, but the team’s perfor- junior libero Jessica Peng said. P CAROL MAMON Senior Laura Napoliello gets a kill on the feeble Mustang defense. Cardinals can’t break playoff curse By Julia Kotzian “O FFENSE SELLS TICKETS, defense wins championships,” according to junior forward Safa Mannah. An improved defense has brought the boys to third place in the semi-championships, despite a tough defeat at the hands of Galileo on Nov. 4. “This defeat makes us a ‘choker’ team,” said junior right midfielder Jono Loeser, noting that last year the boys also ended their season BEN UDELSON Senior Hugo Moreno prepares to launch a long ball down field. at the top of their division, but lost their first Penn Scoble as sweeper and stopper, in place game in the playoffs. of junior sweeper Zack Deutch-Gross,” he Before their defeat, the said. Deutch-Gross, who boys were on a roll. In the is a strong defender on game against Washington the team, injured his left on Oct. 30, the boys killed knee. “The replacements the Eagles 9-1, with senior have done a good job in Joey DiMatteo scoring four Zack’s absence, but they of the team’s nine goals. are not nearly as effective Another victory was as Zack,” Pollack said. tallied on Oct. 23 when Deutch-Gross also batthe boys conquered Waltled a cramp during the lenberg 8-0. During the Galileo game but was able game, every player got a to overcome the cramp chance to participate on and play. Contreras was Anthony Clay, the field, bringing the team also injured and played varsity soccer MVP together as a whole. the first fifteen minutes On Oct. 16, the Cardiagainst the Lions. nals handed O’Connell a crushing 4-1 loss, Most Valuable Player with goals from senior forward Jose Contreras and junior captain Anthony Clay. Later, two Anthony Clay, who is on The Lowell, “really goals came from Mannah in the last 10 min- brings us together as a team with his leaderutes. That victory followed a 2-3 loss to the ship and is extremely skillful,” according to Mission Bears on Oct. 14. Pollack. Significantly, Clay was named captain Even though the boys have had a successful as a junior, a first in Lowell soccer history. season, they still have a list of goals. “We want One of his most vital moments was when to build off of this year and become more skill- he confidently stepped up and made the only ful and stronger for next year,” junior forward penalty kick out of the four taken against Sam Pollack said. Galileo in the playoffs. Clay hopes to lead the Back in the beginning of the season, the team next year to the finals. boys had problems with their defense, mainly Clay is a player with a future. “His general due to injuries, Pollack explained. “We had to presence and presence in the midfield can’t go put sophomore “Bagels” (Julian Innis) and unnoticed,” Contreras added. Sophomore dominates the green By Julia Kotzian A FTER A NEAR-STELLAR SEASON, the girls’ golf team obtained 2nd place in the AAA Individual Tournament Finals. Their opponent on Nov. 3, the Lincoln Mustangs, trumped the girls with a score of 500 on 18 holes, while the Cardinals hit 585. The Cardinals started their winning streak on Oct. 20 when they crushed the same Eagles with a score of 225 to 266. The girls triumphed with an easy win on Oct. 14 over Galileo. This was an important win for the girls, considering the Lions’ crushing victory over the Cardinals last year. The Cardinals were more than ready this year, destroying the Lions by a score of 226 to 281. Most Valuable Player Sophomore Shae Kim has led Cardinals to the AAA/CIF SF Section Girls’ Golf Individual Tournament Finals. Combined with good technique and practicing nonstop, Kim is a unique player. Her love for golf has made her an important player on the team. 12 SPORTS Lowell High School November 14, 2008 Cardinals confident to clinch coveted spot By Cherry Manoonsilpa T BEN UDELSON Junior wingback Ronald Ng tackles a Mission offender to prevent a touchdown. HE CARDINALS are entering the playoffs with high hopes, either on their way to the city championship, or just a game away from a repeat of last year’s defeat. Refusing to miss the championships, the Cardinals have mustered a guaranteed spot in the playoffs with a 3-2 record. The team has not won the city championships since 2005, while the Lincoln Mustangs and their star runningback David Henderson have dominated the division for the past two years. On Nov. 6, the Cardinals faced off against the Mission Bears in one of their last games before the playoffs. The Bears have always put up a worthy fight on the field and, sadly for the Cardinals, this year Mission’s efforts finally prevailed. The Cardinals took the lead at the beginning of the first quarter but when the Cardinal’s defense began to falter, the Bears took their cue and scored two touchdowns. The Cardinals failed to get past the Bear’s defense and lost 20-16. That loss followed a victory on Oct. 24 over the weak Galileo Lions. The Lions were no match for Lowell in the first quarter, making way for three Cardinal touchdowns. However, the Cardinals were shut out during the second quarter, and failed to double their halftime score of 21, which was the team’s goal in the second half. “We should have beat Galileo by much more,” senior wingback Wang Han said. “Our defense wasn’t supposed to allow them their one touchdown. We can’t play at our opponent’s low level.” The Cardinals still embarrassed the Lions 37-8. On Oct. 18, the Balboa Buccaneers put up a gallant effort, though the Cardinals dominated the game with a score 38-28. “The score is deceiving,” senior linebacker and captain Shant Siyahian said. “Our defense let up a little, which allowed them to score some touchdowns, but there was no way we were going to allow them to win.” With the season coming to an end, many players are playing in their last season as Cardinals, including all four captains, offensive lineman Ian Maguire, wingback Kevin Li, wingback David Kwong, and Siyahian, and senior wingbacks Nathaniel Banks and Wang Han — who contributed the highest amount of touchdowns to the scoreboard this season. “I am going to miss being a Cardinal football player,” Siyahian said. “But I have high hopes on how the season ends.” Although they lost some games this year, the Cardinals still harbor some of their best players and possible keys to next year’s domination of the AAA league. Still to remain a Cardinal for another year is junior quarterback Ryan Louie, who has stepped into a strong leadership role this season. Also predicted to rise in next year’s season is sophomore linebacker Ernest Marshall, who is one of the youngest players on the team, but has greatly developed throughout the season, according to Han. The Cardinals next game will be the semifinals, TBA. Cross country aims for perfect season end at All-City By Rosa Shields cause there’s not very much competition for us this time.” OWELL CROSS-COUNTRY runners Olson’s prediction proved true as the Cardiare stretching out their sore muscles and tightening their battered shoelaces nals swept both the Oct. 24 and 30 meets. The as they confidently prepare for the All-City Cardinals exhibited impressive decreases in Championships. time and postings of personal records in both On Nov. 12, the Cardinals meets. Cross-country raced the Galileo Lions in coach Michael Prutz Golden Gate Park, though believed his team posted this occurred after press faster times overall as time. On Nov. 6, Lowell took a result of challenging on Mission as well as their itself. toughest rival, Lincoln. They “We focused on an triumphed over June Jordan, outside goal of going Balboa and Thurgood Marout stronger and I think shal on Oct. 30. people really surprised themselves with how On Oct. 24, they emerged well they did,” Prutz victorious in their first AAA Sarah Gulli, said. meet against Washington, cross country co-MVP A prime example of ISA and Burton. Prior to the this was Olson, who immeets, senior captain Mark Olson felt optimistic. “There’s a good chance proved his time by almost a whole minute, we’ll win based on what I’ve seen in previous from 19 minutes and 51 seconds to 18 minutes AAA races,” he said. “I’m predicting Lowell and 56 seconds. will sweep the top four places in varsity beOne factor in the team’s triumph is the L motivational activities Prutz tion to the cross-country has implemented, such as team. Although Olson was honoring a Runner of the somewhat abruptly named Week. According to Prutz, captain after several veteran the criteria for a Runner of runners did not return to the Week is to do something the team, he has fulfilled extraordinary, such as posthis responsibilities beautiing a personal record time or fully. “Mark’s been a great improving consistently. role model because of his For the week of Nov. 3, intense drive and dedicajunior Reilly Clewes and tion,” Prutz said. sophomore Corey WorthingSophomore Karen Chin ton were both named “Run- Mark Olson, agreed with this sentiment. “Mark’s our one and only ner of the Week” for both cross country co-MVP senior, so him continuing to their postings of personal records and speedy times overall. Sophomore run shows that he really wants to be here,” Chin runner Alison Leung believed the team’s suc- said. Gulli has also demonstrated unwavering cess also stemmed from their unique bonding perseverance throughout the season. “She’s here all the time, she’s interested in activites. improving and she’s passionate about running,” Prutz said. Most Valuable Players Junior Amber Murakami-Fester admired Two runners in particular are pushing themselves to their true potential. The Lowell’s Gulli for her drive. “She’s an inspiring prodpicks for Most Valuable Player are Olson and uct of hard work,” Murakami-Fester said. As junior Sarah Gulli for their passionate dedica- All-City Championships near, the Cardinals Cardinals tennis continues to dominate competition By Cherry Manoonsilpa When finals were held on Nov. ITH THE NorCal Tennis 7, Etin advanced to the final match Championships quickly to play Wallenburg’s talented Jenapproaching, the tennis nifer Salomon. Etin lost her first team looks to gain more experi- set 6-1, but when the girls tied 5-5 on the next set, ence by playthe court lights ing matches went out and against each two were other durAll City makes the forced to delay ing All-City games. From you appreciate the their game further until Nov. Oct. 27 team.” 10. through Oct. Back in the 31, sophoJIMMY ROSENHEIM, All-City games, mores Nina coach t he doubles’ Liu and Karen rounds began Etin, junior Brandee Ma, senior Yana Nebuchina with a total of 32 doubles teams, and freshman Kiyomi Kuroda com- many of the Cardinal players facing peted in the annual All-City singles’ off against their own teammates, including juniors Amanda Lum and matches held in Golden Gate Park. After playing two games each, Liu Sally Ness against juniors Gabriella and Etin further advanced to semifi- Rustia and Deanna Chang, and senals, which were delayed until Nov. nior Kira Ostapenko and sophomore Chloe Roddy against juniors Maria 6 due to inclement weather. W “ A Klionsky and Amy Yee. Seniors Mona Man and Tiffany Leung were set to play finals against fellow teammates senior Lum and Ness, who were declared the AllCity champions in the doubles’ matches due to an unfortunate forfeit by both Man and Leung. Playing their teammates, however, proved to be very valuable. “All-City Sally Ness, is a really good girls tennis MVP experience,” Klionsky said. “A lot of the other teams in the league aren’t that competitive, so playing our own teammates is good competition.” Though the NorCal tournaments have been thought of as more important than All-City, head coach Jimmy Rosenheim hoped to take away more from the All-City games than just a title. “All-City makes you appreciate the team,” Rosenheim said. “When you have them backing you up and supporting you, especially in such an individual player’s sport, you realize how important they are.” On Oct. 24, the tennis team arrived at Golden Gate Park to defend their title in the city championship, which they had rightfully held onto for the past nine years. To little surprise, the girls snagged an 6-1 victory over Wallenburg for their tenth year in a row as city champions. During the AAA semifinals against Lincoln on Oct. 22, the Cardinals shut out the Mustangs 7-0. The Mustangs had barely managed to secure a spot in playoffs, but it was all in vain when the Cardinals quickly beat them and destroyed their chances at championships. Most Valuable Player Though the victories have truly been a team effort, leading the team in their victories has been junior Sally Ness, who has shown exceptional talent since her freshman year. She has also captured the captain positions as a junior. “She has done an excellent job on and off the courts on organizing the team, decision making and fundraising,” Rosenheim said. Ness ended the regular season with just one loss, and also has been the only girl in the league to utilize the net, according to Rosenheim. The Lowell November 14, 2008 JV Football bonds despite several losses this season By Shelly Tong T HIS SEASON, the JV football team has learned that a team’s worth has little to do with the number of its victories. Though they only won two out of six games this season, the Cardinals still soar. The Cardinals lost to the Mission Bears 12-26 on Nov. 7. They were leading by a touchdown until the second half, when the Bears stepped it up and showed how much they wanted the win. The Cardinals were not discouraged, however. “Since the season’s almost over, the whole team is just looking towards to the Lincoln game,” sophomore fullback and linebacker CeeJay Silvestre said. Although the team lost their previous game 26-46 they cannot be considered losers by any means. After the first half of the game, Marshall was leading 20-0. At halftime, the team’s morale was down and coach Ken Jew gave the team the option of letting the second stringers play or trying their hardest with the starters, because Marshall had upperclassmen on their JV BEN UDELSON Two Cardinals players scramble to recover a fumble. 13 SPORTS team. yards and sophomore Silvestre following through with a 5The Cardinals went back to the game with new inspiration, yard touchdown, the team was exhausted and defeated after and they caught up, scoring 20 points in a straight shot by get- halftime and lost. ting three on-side kicks in a row. Though the final score came This crushing loss was hard to bear after the team’s recent out to be 26-46, none of the players were too disappointed 26-8 victory against Burton on Oct. 2, only seven days before because they found their own victory within defeat. This Battle of the Birds. The sweetness of that victory was even game was pivotal in bringing the team closer greater, as the preseason games before the together and helping them understand that victory were also devastating losses — 0-60 anything can happen in football and that the against Liberty on Sept. 20 and 8-54 against game isn’t just about winning. Menlo on Sept. 26. The Cardinals also won 20-14 against GaliThe team has come a long way since their leo High School on Oct. 23. In the first half of first few games. They have learned many lesthe game, Silvestre and sophomore wingback sons and built a real team from the ground up. They began the season as a disconnected group Yuriy Torchiyan both scored touchdowns. The score held at 12-6 with the team in the lead of boys with only a love for football, but they until the fourth quarter, when Galileo ran in are ending it as a family. “We’ve improved a lot a two-point conversion and scored a touchsince the first game,” Silvestre said. “We trust down with a minute and 30 seconds left on Yuriy Torchiyan, each other more and our team bond is stronger the clock before the game ended, making the JV football MVP because we’ve spent more time together.” score 12-14. Everyone thought the game was The greatest lesson they have learned as a over, but with 40 seconds left on the clock, sophomore quar- team this season is resilience. “The game’s not about who’s losing terback Jordan Lee threw the ball to freshman tight end Daniel or who’s better,” Ma said. “It’s about playing your hardest until Maionchi who scored a touchdown. After that, Torchiyan ran time runs out. It’s about playing in the moment.” They are looking forward to playing their last game together in a two-point conversion, bringing the score to 16-14. Sophomore running back Calvin Ma described the game as a team. “Since it’s going to be the last game of the season, as a huge turning point for the team. After the win, the team we’re all willing to put our lives on the line for this win,” Silvestre was ecstatic. “I felt almost heavenly,” Maionchi said. “Before said. “It’s the biggest game of the season and the whole team this game, we weren’t really a team and we were unsure about really wants (to win) this.” Come support the team at 2 p.m today at Lowell against whether we’d all do our jobs, but now we’re working together Lincoln. and we can really call ourselves a team.” Torchiyan said that he was proud of the defensive line for Most Valuable Player holding the entire game. He felt that a lot of players improved. “This game changed the way we practice and play,” he said. “I’m The Lowell’s choice for MVP this season is sophomore runproud we won our first home game.” ning-back Yuriy Torchiyan. Ma described him as the guy with Silvestre also said the game was good for the team’s confi- the “biggest heart and greatest attitude as well as great leaderdence and it also meant a lot to the sophomores. “Gal is the ship skills.” Torchiyan hates to lose just as much as the rest of only team we lost to last year, so winning against them was his teammates, but instead of staying upset about it, he gets over really important to us personally,” he said. it quickly and learns from his mistakes. He is extremely hard The win followed a 6-33 loss to Washington in the Battle working because he practiced hard over the summer, and has of the Birds on Oct. 9. Though they kept up with the Eagles improved a great deal as a player. during the first half of the game, with Torchiyan running 80 Torchiyan’s stellar play makes him The Lowell’s MVP. 14 SPORTS November 14, 2008 Lowell High School Girls stick together, conquer competition By Ashley Wu During the set, Menikheim did a noteworthy tricky tip instead HE JV GIRLS HAVE COME TOGETHER and swept of a spike, surprising the opponent and winning the tenth point up outstanding wins throughout their undefeated of the first set. The set ended with an incredible ace served by Lei. The Cardinals started their second set with five consecuseason. One of these amazing wins includes the match against tive aces. Tsang shone by doubling the score 20-10 by serving Balboa High School on Nov. 4. Early on in the season, Coach three slamming aces. On Oct. 17 the team faced off against the Galileo lions at Wesley and returning sophomores felt that their biggest competitor would be Balboa. The match started out in Balboa’s home. In the second set, the girls kept up their strong 4-0 start, favor as the powerful Bucs won the first set. However, in the destroying the Lions with a score of 25-27. Only once in the first set did the Lions manage to gain a one second set, the tide turned at the last point lead over the Cardinals, but sophomore minute due to the girls’ wonderful opposite hitter Chanel Piper quickly brought teamwork. “After the first set, coach the game back to a 12-12 tie. reminded us that we wanted to keep Nearing the end of their season, the Carour record clean,” sophomore libero dinal girls have learned to communicate and and defensive specialist Tiffany Chan play even better together. “We bonded and said. “We talked it up and our energy became an even greater team,” Menikheim picked up in the second set.” said. The bonding that Coach Wesley encourThe score was close at 21-22, when aged throughout the season really paid off for both sophomore outside hitter Winthe girls. “We learned to trust one another on nie Tsang and libero and defensive and off the court, allowing us to play better specialist Jocelyn Kuswanto dived for together,” freshman libero and defensive spethe ball and saved it, leading to a tie at cialist Jasmine De Castro said. 22-22 and allowing the girls to steal Winning all of their games throughout Jocelyn Kuswanto, the win 25-22. the whole season and destroying their biggest The Bucs started off the third set JV volleyball MVP competition, the girls are looking forward. “I with two points, but an ace by freshman setter Vivian Lei started the Cardinals’ points going. With am excited for next year,” Wong said. “We will be playing with five consecutive points on hits made by Tsang, sophomore Cap- the people we played with in 2007.” On top of reuniting as a team with the players they played tain Ruby Wong, and freshman outside hitter Chelan McGinty, with in their freshman year, sophomore opposite hitter and the Cardinals won the match, 15-7. Shortly after their win against Balboa, the Cardinals played setter Sheryl Quock knows that varsity will be a lot tougher. their final match before championships against Lincoln on Nov. “The attitudes on varsity are different from JV,” Quock said. 6. The bleachers were packed with fellow Lowell supporters “You have to prepare mentally, and work constantly. Varsity is shouting encouragements to the team. The start of the match a whole different level of play.” While most of the sophomores will return as varsity players against the Mustangs was similar to the Cardinals’ match against the Bucs as the Cardinals lost the first set. But the team their junior year, the freshmen will return as sophomores playpowered up, winning the second set 25-16 after a tug-of-war. ing with the new freshmen. “I am definitely looking forward The girls hustled for their final set in the match. After three to another undefeated season,” McGinty said. aces made by freshman middle blocker Danielle Menikheim, Most Valuable Player freshman opposite hitter and setter Isabela Haeger ended the This year’s pick for MVP is sophomore libero and defenmatch with a score of 15-9. sive specialist Jocelyn Kuswanto. Kusawanto is known for her On Oct. 30 the girls beat O’Connell after letting them score five early points, but then coasted their way up to a 25-7 win. hustle and heart. Not only did she play multiple positions on T CAROL MAMON Freshman middle blocker Chelan McGinty jumps up to smash down a spike onto a Lincoln defender on Nov. 6. the team, she was a very reliable teammate. “Jocelyn held the whole team up,” freshman Reilly Fitzpatrick said.“She pushes herself hard and doesn’t realize what a good player she really is.” Wong agrees with Fitzpatrick, commenting that, “Jocelyn is a persistent player. She is the main contributor, and when the balls come over the net, she’s the one to set it up for the team to play.” November 14, 2008 The Lowell Foreign exchange students visit campus Japanese teenagers share life with language class by Soraya Okuda “H AJ I M E M ASH I T E,” the American students say, bowing as they introduce themselves to the students from Japan. This was the welcome given to a group of Japanese exchange students from Shizuoka, Japan on Oct. 16, when they attended COURTESY OF ERINA ALEJO class with their host students in order to learn about American schools and culture. Principal Ishida Kuniaki and the teachers of Shimizuhigashi High School arrived at the school with 37 students, and toured the Bay Area for a total of four days through the Japanese Cultural Community Center of Northern California. To organize the trip, JCCCNC notified both principal Andy Ishibashi and the world language department head Dorothy Ong. Senior Pamela Chew, president of the school’s National Japanes e Honors Society, helped prepare for the students’ arrival. “Takemotosensei asked us to recruit people to sign up,” Chew said. “Since there were only around 20 people in the society, we (NJHS members) decided to have around two Japanese people per Honors Society member.” Ishibashi and Japanese teacher Kiyoko Takemoto arranged an 8 a.m. welcome ceremony for the visitors, during which students catered to the guests in Room 218. Ishibashi began by welcoming the group, presenting gifts and briefly recounting Lowell’s history. “I hope you enjoy your stay here,” he said. “This is one of the best schools in the United States. We rank in the top three nationally for the number of Advanced Placement exams given.” After a tour around school, the visitors followed their assigned JNHS members to their classes. “The classes were amazingly interesting, but economics was kind of boring,” Reko Watanabe said. According to Japanese junior Yusuke Kazama, students in Japan must begin their ideal profession early. “In our school, you choose whether you want to take economics and government or science and German rowers tour, dance, shop and row with American friends By Camille Smyth A SAN FRANCISCO rowing club welcomed flocks of tanned, blond teenagers from Germany to San Francisco last month for a week of rowing and sightseeing. Twenty-two rowers from Ratsgymnasium Osnabruck, a college preparatory high school in Osnabruck, Germany, took part in an exchange with the Pacific Rowing Club, a crew team located at Lake Merced which boasts around 20 members from Lowell. The semi-annual Pacific Rowing Club-Osnabruck Ratsgymnasium Exchange began in spring 1986 — each fall, German rowers visit the city and PRC members travel to Germany during summer vacation. This year, Ratsgymnasium students took advantage of the chance to travel to the United States. Prior to landing in San Francisco, the German rowers started their month-long tour of the country in the Southwest, visiting beauties such as the Grand Canyon, Zion and Bryce National Parks. “It was beautiful, but it was hard to walk down and up the Grand Canyon,” 16- year-old German rower Jana Homann said. The group also visited the San Diego Rowing Club and ZLAC Rowing Club in San Diego. After sun-tanning in Southern California, the Germans headed to the City by the Bay for some not-so-sunny weather. While staying in San Francisco, the exchange rowers used PRC’s equipment to row on Lake Merced every morning. They then toured the city, visiting landmarks such as Twin Peaks and Golden Gate Bridge, returning to the boathouse in the late evening to meet up with their host families. While exploring the San Francisco, German rower Charlotte Dukat had some pleasant and some not-so-pleasant experiences. “We saw a group of nudist runners,” she said. “That was not something I wanted to see.” And thanks to the strong Euro and the weak US dollar, the Germans were able to indulge in some shopping at their favorite stores — Abercrombie & Fitch and Hollister. Besides stocking up on ripped jeans and tight-fitting t-shirts, the German rowers also did what they do best — row. On Oct. 25, PRC and the Ratsgymnasium rowing team headed up to Sacramento’s Lake Natoma to compete at the Head of the American race, an annual competition that includes teams from all over the West Coast. The women’s boat placed 4th out of seven boats while the men’s boat placed 22nd out of 25 boats, but according to Homann “the race was one of the things I enjoyed the most while staying in California.” Fourteen year-old German rower Laura Bermel noted that German equipment differs from those that PRC uses. “Our boats are much lighter than Pacific’s,” she said. “I feel like our boats go faster.” After a tiring day of racing, the American students bonded with their exchange students for the remainder of the trip, taking them to football games or introducing them to their friends. Others, such as Homann and Bermel, attended this year’s Senior Boat dance on Oct. 25, catching an up-close view of San Franciso’s Alcatraz and the Bay Bridge. Homann compared the dance to the ones in her homeland. “German kids dance just like American kids,” Homann said, adding that she recognized the majority of the music that was played. However, “The dance floor was too small,” she said. Unfortunately, as all visits must come to an end, the Germans had to return home on Oct. 30 after a series of tearful goodbyes. “My favorite thing I did with my Germans was visiting Coit Tower with them,” said senior Lily Kurkjian, who hosted Homann and Bermel. “We also ate chicken wings at Hooters, which was fun.” Besides tacky restaurants and their American rowing friends, what will the Germans miss most? “I liked the hamburgers,” 17-year-old German rower Max Hunsche said. 15 INTERNATIONAL math, depending on what subject and career path you like,” he said. In addition to subjects structured around career paths, the Japanese school system differs in classroom structure. “The difference between Japanese and American schools is that our teachers go back and forth so that we don’t leave,” Kazama explained, reflecting on his shadowing experience. “When you have a question, you’re supposed to raise your hand in Japanese school, but American students seem to be a little more outspoken. AP Japanese student and JNHS member senior Cynthia Tan realized the true difference between Japanese and American education when she brought her two Japanese shadows to David Hunt’s Precalculus class. “We were working on tangents, and one of the exchange students solved a difficult homework problem that no one in the class was able to figure out,” Tan said. “He did it without flipping through the textbook, and without a calculator or paper,” she said. To create an authentic atmosphere, students were treated to food from the Beanery. “The lunch didn’t taste very good,but the overall school experience was nice,” Watanabe said. After the typical school lunch, the exchange students became the hosts, sharing Japanese activities with students in the Mods 11-12 Japanese classes. The activities included folding origami, calligraphy and tea ceremonies. The exchange students ended their Lowell experience with a closing ceremony, saying goodbyes and exchanging e-mail addresses with their new friends. The trip to San Francisco left a mark on some of the students. “I definitely want to come back to San Francisco,” Megumi Nagayama said. “I really like it here and it is very pretty.” Others hoped to return to America to further their educations. “I want to go to an American college, studying science, and environmental science,” Mochizuki said. Korean students experience a day in the life of Lowell By Sean Lee other,” Park said. “I would love to come back. IGH SCHOOL students from South The weather in San Francisco is really cool, Korea stopped at the campus during the people here are lovely and most of all, the their tour of United States schools landscape was really great.” Although the Korean students were generlast month, shadowing students from Korean ally impressed with the freedom students enclasses. Seventy high-ranked students from Seoul joy in the American school system, sophomore Global High School, a highly-regarded state- Ji-Yoon Heo felt that the students should be run co-educational boarding school located more limited in their freedom. “I like the education system at Lowell,” Heo in Seoul, the capital of South Korea, spent the day shadowing host students to their classes said. “However, I felt that it was too free. I think that controlling students is sometimes and spending time on the campus. According to Korean teacher Ah-Mi Cho, needed.” Principal Andy Ishibashi wholeheartedly the visitors specifically requested to visit the school after hearing from a U.S. representative approved the idea of hosting the Korean stuin Korea about its high academic standards. dents for a day. “I feel proud that schools from other na“They heard about our school and its excellent programs,” Cho said. “So they specifically tions want to come visit Lowell,” Ishibashi said. “I think we can learn from each other.” contacted me.” Cho was pleased that so many students Although Cho was responsible for organizing were able to visit this year. “Two years ago the Korean students’ visit, she still needed we had twenty students visit the school,” Cho approval from Ishibashi, who had no qualms said. “This year, we had seventy students and about having them visit. “There was no five teachers.” According to Cho, this made it hesitation,” Ishibashi said. “The only thing is possible for each student in her Korean classes that it had to be on a day when there was no to host a shadow, an experience many found testing.” The students arrived in San Francisco on memorable. Junior and Korean student Eileen Kyaung Oct. 21 and spent four days in the city before expressed her excitement at hosting the stu- leaving to visit the East Coast. dents. “Not only were the Korean shadows fluent in English, but they were also fluent in Japanese, Mandarin and Spanish,” she said “I was impressed. It was fun to hear from my shadow what a teenage high school student’s life is like in Korea.” Walking around the campus in her easily recognizable brown-and-white school uniform, Seoul Global sophomore Hyeon-Jin Jang noted the differences between the two teenage lifestyles. “It’s very different,” Jang said. “We are not allowed to date or hold hands with boys in school. We do not dress like you guys either.” Sophomore Subin Lim was impressed with the diverse ethnic groups she observed at Lowell. “I liked the various kinds of people,” Lim said. “In one class there were at least three kinds of ethnicities. In Korea, I only see Koreans, which is quite boring, I think.” Sophomore Ha-Neul Park felt comfortable with the school atmosphere and students and expressed an interest in returning to the school. “I liked it very much—how the students made their own time schedule, how BEN UDELSON the teachers taught in their own unique way and also how the students got along with each Korean student strolls with senior Mona Man. H L The Lowell November 14, 2008 COLUMNS 17 Teen tastes cultural potluck Sex & the City lures girl from A college apps By Nancy Xie BASKET OF Indian Naan flatbread with a steaming bowl of potato curry. A dish of stirfried shrimps in soy-sauce. A chocolate-covered tiramisu cake. These were just some of the many dishes at one of my family’s dinner parties, reflecting the heterogeneity of guests: Jeremy was avidly chatting in a thick British accent with my Indian friend Mathew; meanwhile, Hubert, a native of Poland, was trying out chopsticks with the help of Deondra, an African-American woman from Illinois. My gaze fell on my favorite dish, a platter of Mama’s “lu-shui” eggs — browned, hard-boiled eggs brewed in Chinese spices — and I mused over their resemblance to my own experiences. “How would your German parents like our lu-shui eggs?” my mom teased, as I helped her shell hard-boiled eggs that afternoon. I laughed. Well, I thought, they certainly wouldn’t mistake them for Osterei (Easter) eggs. With the warm eggs in my palm, my thoughts drifted to the summer I spent in Germany as an exchange student last June. It seemed like only yesterday that I had never dreamed I could leave my home’s comfort zone and venture to a foreign place alone; yet as soon as I stepped on the plane to Berlin, I knew that I would never regret taking this trip. The Hildebrandts, my host family, not only opened their home to embrace me, but also immersed me into their culture and country. Being perhaps the only Asian on the tiny island of Sylt dur- ing our vacation, I attracted wondering glances from our German neighbors; however, they welcomed me with such heart-felt frankness that I immediately felt at home with them. “This is Nancy, our American-Chinese gast-kind (hostchild) from San Francisco,” my host-dad would introduce me. “Look what you’re doing!” my mom yelled from across the kitchen, jerking my mind back into focus. I discovered that I had dropped all the eggshells into brew pot. Painstakingly I picked out all the shells, and then carefully dropped the eggs into the spices brew, still reflecting on my trip abroad. After their initial boiling, the shelled eggs reveal spotless, smooth surfaces — like my unexposed mind that had been contained in its own shell. The eggs are then immersed in a brew of spices for two days, until they fully capture the flavor and turn deliciously brown, just as my home s t ay e x perience cultivated a new outlook in me. Once too shy to speak in class, I conversed at ease with strangers in Germany. I did not shyly feel the need to “fit-in”; rather, I simply enjoyed myself. As I waved good-bye to my host-family from the train station, I realized that cultural diversity is more than just tolerating people of different backgrounds; it is a recipe for building open-minded connections with others. Before my trip, I had been unwilling to step out of my culture’s comfort zone, but now I always browse through a college’s study abroad programs. And what’s more, I love to learn new food and recipes from different cultures. “How do you make your vegetarian curry?” I’d ask Mathew. But at the same time, the yolk of my inner self remains unchanged as I continue to respect the values of my own culture. I still stick to my family’s traditional teachings of Confucian values. Finally, as the eggs emerge from the spiced b r e w , ready for serving, NG so do I feel UA H A SIC JES refreshed with a sense of being “spiced” with life. “Dinner’s ready!” I called to our guests, bringing out a steaming platter of freshly brewed lu-shui eggs. Fervet olla, vivit amicitia, I thought. The man who gives good dinners has plenty of friends. The art of social skills: mastering just what to say and when to say it By Shelly Tong with as soon as possible. Another huge aid in preventing future awkwardness HAT IS SOMETHING every student wants? Well, besides straight A’s? Teenagers want a lot of is just being honest. Telling it like it is makes for less conthings like the best math teacher, the most stylish fusion the next time clothes and more, but as in all the teenage angst-ridden chick you see a person. For flicks, like Mean Girls, the holy grail of them all is a cure for example, when you’ve met someone before social awkwardness. As a freshman last year, I epitomized awkwardness. I but you have the unwas clumsy, inarticulate, timid and oblivious. I started high fortunate luck of forschool knowing a grand total of six people at school. I was getting their name, never assume that all too aware of my inability to socialize. I remember my first day of high school without incident. your instinctive guess I introduced myself to a few people in my classes who made will automatically be eye contact, smiled or didn’t look particularly severe — the correct. In my experimost likely to converse with me — but on the inside, I was ence, “Hey you!” never terrified they would hate my jokes or scoff at my opinions. I works for very long. Also, instead of saycouldn’t decide which would be worse: having someone not know me and dislike me for no apparent reason or having ing every unfiltered someone learn almost everything about me and still decide thing that comes to my mind, I relax, and I choose what silly thoughts are allowed to come out of my mouth, considerthat they didn’t care for me. The most embarrassing thing that happened on my first ing how what I say will be received. For example, instead of day of school occurred in the morning when I was looking saying “Wow, that’s so ugly, but I like it,” I’ll take the time to for the gym. I recognized a student I knew by face but not think and say, “I like that.” By the second week of school, I took my own advice, and by name with another girl and decided to approach her. “Hi. things started to improve. A formal You’re Kerina right?” When she gave “hello” turned into a casual “what’s me the “do I know you?” look, I told I started introducing myself to her of our distant connection, and she To our mortification up?” my friends’ friends and their friends’ informed me that she was also looking friends. Eventually, I found a group of for the gym. The three of us went up we had stumbled friends that I felt totally at ease with. to the first door we saw in the general into the boy’s locker They were a little quirky, like myself, physical education area and opened it. and they were also intelligent and fun To our mortification we had stumbled room. to talk with. into the boys’ locker room. Luckily, One of girls quickly became my we had the sense to let the door slam best friend. One day, we spent our entire lunch “getting a before they reacted to our intrusion. Today Kerina and Rosa, my accomplices in the locker- soda” and just walking around talking about our love for room incident, are two of my closest friends and we continue John Legend and our obsession with Trader Joe’s Orange our routine of embarrassing things on a daily basis. If I hadn’t Flavored Cranberries. Looking back, if I hadn’t put myself out there despite the taken that initial step forward, without fear of the “do I know you?” look, I probably would not have met either of them awkwardness, I wouldn’t be the person I am today. Though awkwardness is uncomfortable, it is practically and would not have become friends with them. The constant bombardment of social anxiety gave me a a conditional clause to being an adolescent. We even have reason to strategize and develop a method for overcoming a hand sign for it; the “awkward turtle” has integrated itself my gracelessness: simply sprint through it as quickly as pos- into our vocabulary. Social anxiety may be difficult, but realsible. Uncomfortable situations are bound to arise at the most izing that it’s something almost everyone deals with is a step inopportune moments, and you might as well get them over towards overcoming it. W T By Glennis Markison “C AN I AT LEAST EAT the last quarter of my muffin without hearing about my obligations?!” My outburst at breakfast a few Saturdays ago was nothing out of the ordinary. My parents feel the need to bring up college applications as frequently as possible. I usually stop them in their tracks. The college application process frightens me, and baked goods aren’t the only thing distracting me from my future. Sex and the City has sidetracked me for weeks. As I start an episode of Sex and the City on the internet, my ears tuning in to the playful theme song, my eyes carefully searching for which male “guest stars” will grace the episode, I fall into a world in which there are no “Common Apps,” no personal statements and no postmark deadlines. I watch several episodes a week, and as I become more and more engrossed in the fantasy realm of Sex and the City, I avoid the reality of applying to college. I’m sure I would try harder to tear myself away from the show if I weren’t convinced that it actually helps me understand what I want out of the college experience. Rather than stop coldturkey, I choose to benefit from the show’s emphasis on friendship, fellows and the fruits of one’s career. Set in New York City, Sex and the City explores the friendship between four women — Carrie, the spunky columnist; Samantha, the over-sexed public relations gal; Charlotte, the old-fashioned art gallery worker and Miranda, the somewhat judgmental lawyer — and their relationships with men. The women are so comfortable with one another that at mealtimes they almost always share details of their romantic lives. In the Sex and the City movie, the ladies even witness Charlotte’s untimely bowel movement after she drinks tap water in Mexico. Unfortunately, they don’t manage to suppress their giggles before she scurries off to a bathroom. Through marriage, divorce, first dates and break-ups via “post-its,” they help each other in the best of times and the worst. Though I may not have the same relationship dilemmas — or bowel problems — in college, I hope to have equally supportive lady friends. I also wouldn’t mind having plenty of boys to gossip about. Sex and the City has spoiled me by suggesting that just when a single woman’s feeling lonely, out pops a single man to keep her company. The show’s man-filled environment makes the gender balance of most colleges — around 55% girls and 45% guys — appear especially harsh. While Sex and the City enables me to hide from these depressing statistics and simply root for the ladies and their love lives, it has ultimately taught me that quality trumps quantity. The show’s four ladies may have dated guy after guy, but they each end up with the man who matters to them most. In Carrie and Mr. Big’s case, even multiple break-ups and their engagements to others can’t stop them from being together. All in all, Sex and the City has exposed me to men of all types — the good, the bad, and the ugly. I imagine college will be no different, and while I certainly won’t be applying to any all-girls schools, I will just have to accept the gender statistics and try my best to find a man of “Mr. Big’s” caliber. Of course, the dating scene won’t be as important a factor in where I’ll apply as what academic opportunities are available. After all, if I don’t have opportunities in film studies, journalism or jazz, I don’t care if my school is chock-full of John Stamos look-alikes. Sex and the City also spoils me with respect to career opportunities. All four women do what they love while miraculously enjoying a paycheck that grants them access to expensive clothing, shoes and handbags. I watch with awe and envy as Carrie buys Prada pumps on a journalist’s salary. Though I don’t expect to make that kind of cash while pursuing my dream job, it’s inspiring to see that at least these ladies can have their cake and eat it too. Having watched the women of “Sex and the City” go through all of life’s highs and lows, I find the hardest part for me is not so much waiting anxiously for what happens to them next, but rather approaching what I know awaits me when the episode is over. However, having realized how much “Sex and the City” has taught me about what I want, I might as well buck up and apply to schools that will help give it to me. I may not have a weekly column or a “Mr. Big” in college, but that doesn’t mean I can’t look for bargains on attractive shoes. The Lowell November 14, 2008 China must put people before space By Shelly Tong whole, the government’s money should EACHERS AT LOWELL com- be invested in programs like healthcare plain that too much cheating that will increase standards of living occurs at the school. They don’t for all. In no case should the profits of comrealize that this is just small cheating. panies take preLeaders in cedence over the China are milkhealth of consuming the country’s Four infants have ers they are suppolitical paramposed to serve. eters and cheatdied as a result of Instead, while ing big on infant melamine-caused children are dyformula health ing from kidney tests. kidney stones. stones, China According to is investing an Oct. 16 New Over 50,000 are billions of York Times arsick, but no courts dol l ars in ticle, since early advancing April babies in will hear parents’ its space China have been program. dying as a result cases against Sanlu. In order of kidney stones to boost that developed its interfrom ingesting poisonous baby formula produced by national reputation, China has companies like Sanlu Group, one of manned three space missions in the last five years, inChina’s largest milk suppliers. Sanlu added a dangerous and illegal vested millions of dollars chemical called melamine to watered- to develop a space suit, down milk so it would appear to have and walked on the more protein and deceive government moon. China safety tests. At least four infants have should take died as a result of melamine-caused kidney stones. Over 50,000 are sick, but care of its no courts will hear parents’ cases against p e o p l e Sanlu. During the Olympics, as a part of an initial stonewall by the goverment, Chinese politicians covered up news of the kidney stone disaster by asking journalists to keep negative news from being released, according to a Sept. 27 New York Times article. The countr y has shamefully put its public image before the welfare and health of its people. China’s advances are leaving too many of its own people behind. Although its economic progress creates jobs and improves the country’s image as a T F before jetting off to space. If the country continues to squander its wealth on its space program without raising the standard of living for its poorest or protecting its consumers — especially infant ones — China will be neglecting the greater good of its people. And that’s cheating. California should redouble efforts to transition to renewable, green energy A new study that confirms the success of California’s eco-friendly energy approach gives the green light to the green energy movement. new jobs over a three-decade period. This recent evidence of the success of conservation in California is a nail in the coffin for the dysfunctional energy policies of an administration that did not pay enough attention to green energy. Knowing that the state’s energy policies are saving money, the state needs to continue looking for innovative ways to make the state greener. Already, governor Schwarzenegger By Tiffany Leung HE FALSE CLAIMS of the uncertainties of the “theory” has stepped up efforts to “green” the state. The governor has of global warming have tried to lead Californians to appointed a Green Action Team to help implement sustainable believe that green policies will hurt California businesses building practices and energy efficiency efforts statewide. Currently the team has been working on Executive Order and drain money from the state. For a long time, environmentally friendly policies were not S–20-04, also known as the Green Building Initiative, which is aimed towards making government welcomed by some government figures. buildings 20 percent more energy efficient President Bush’s Energy Policy Act of by 2015. In order to meet the 2015 goal, 2005 focused on using greater amounts of California has been practicing sustainable coal provided incentives for oil companies California’s green or “green” building, designing, operating, drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and did not energy plans have maintaining and removing buildings in give support for conservation, according that conserve natural resources and to the president of the National Repubcreated 1.5 million ways reduce their impact on climate change. licans for Environmental Protection AsThe Green Action Team has also been sociation, Martha Marks in an MSNBC new jobs. integrating technologies for renewable article from Aug. 8, 2005. energy in state buildings, such as solar Nevertheless, under the guidance of panels and fuel cells rather than coal fuel governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and state legislators, California has implemented many environmen- for electric energy. In addition to the changes the government tally friendly policies on energy efficiency and conservation, has implemented, the team also encourages individual consersustainability, green building and green purchasing practices. vation and sustainability. California’s continued support of green energy policies has And this all seems to have paid off. According to an Oct. 20 article in the New York Times, shown the nation that such policies do indeed create new jobs California’s green energy plans have led to a $58 million reduc- and reduce the cost of energy for businesses, and serves as a role tion in energy costs as well as creating as many as 1.5 million model for other states seeking to adopt similar policies. T C OPINION 19 Suburban lifestyle ecounfriendly By Karyn Smoot T HE STATE OF CALIFORNIA recently passed Proposition 1A, which proposed to fund a highspeed rail system between San Francisco and Los Angeles, by a margin of 412,497 votes. This high-speed rail system will reduce the need for polluting cars and fuel-burning airplanes. However, according to an Oct. 20 San Francisco Chronicle article, the success of this high-speed rail depends heavily on communities to live in dense concentrations around stations. Though this high-speed rail is supposed to reduce pollution, unless its commuters resist the urge to live in sprawling suburbs, its advantages may be leveraged. California will now need to encourage smart development in the urban areas around stations, such as the Transbay Terminal in San Francisco, in order for the California high-speed rail to be as successful as trains in Japan and Europe. But furthermore, urban sprawl into suburbia hurts the environment through both practice and design. Since the end of World War II, suburbs have indicated a higher standard of living, the pinnacle of the American dream. The higher standard of living offered in suburban living appeals to growing families seeking out safe, spacious communities far from industrial cities. However, Americans need to realize that this aspect of the stereotypical American ideal simply is not sustainable. Families rely heavily on cars for transportation to work, school and shopping, which increases dependency on gasoline, a limited resource as well as a contributor to greenhouse gases when burned. Sprawling suburbs inc re as e d is tances traveled in MONICA ZHANG order for residents to commute to work or to the local mall, further increasing the demand for gasoline. Furthermore, paving over large amounts of land for use by cars also releases large amounts of carbon dioxide, while allowing rainwater to wash street pollutants into sewers. The Sierra Club released reports in 2004 that found that vehicle-related pollution adversely affects human health. Those who oppose urban sprawl for its inefficiency suggest alternatives that make the most of existing developed land and revitalize communities. “Sprawl and urban decay continue because development grows with outdated standards or no standards at all,” stated Urban Advantage, a company that digitally transforms photographs to visualize sustainable urban communities on their Web site. The company’s use of computer imaging helps communities see how “smart growth” can revitalize existing suburbs. Their vision of “urbanism” involves a closer proximity of businesses and homes to promote efficient use of space while encouraging interaction. A popular example of such sustainable development is Portland, Oregon’s urban renewal in their Downtown Waterfront district. The project focuses on commuting by bicycle and public transportation and creating a space suitable for community interaction like open-air markets. Centering similarly attractive and practical communities around public transportation would be a big step forward for California in making the most of the new high-speed rail system. Dynamic communities would not only be more efficient and uphold Prop. 1A’s promise to reduce emissions, but also encourage stronger connections between neighbors. We have heard about how we can be more environmentally friendly by making small lifestyle changes, but what many environmentalists have been afraid to mention are the big lifestyle changes that we need to make in order to preserve the environment. Americans need to realize that suburbs, idyllic as they may be, can be an environmental mess. 18 EDITORIAL November 14, 2008 EDITORIALS City should collect rain A N ANCIENT agriculture technique is now being used in a modern way to improve our environment. On Oct. 9 mayor Gavin Newsom launched an initiative to promote the collection of rainwater for non-potable purposes, such as irrigation for yards and even indoor plumbing. Known as rainwater harvesting, this method is an innovative step towards reducing water waste and conserving natural resources. The initiative features a partnership with Cole Hardware and permission to collect non-potable rainwater in San Franciscan homes. The local hardware store is offering a highly discounted price of $69.99 for a 60gallon rainwater barrel — subsidized by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission — with valid identification of a residence in the city. Rain harvesting is the practice of collecting rain from flat surfaces, such as roofs and gutters, and conserving it in technologically equipped barrels. This ancient practice, which originated in farming communities in Mesopotamia and Egypt as far back as the third millennium BCE, will renew awareness of water consumption and act as an innovative step towards reducing our “water footprint.” This technique is part of the “gray water” movement — conserving bathwater, laundry water, dishwater and now even rainwater. Rainwater harvesting will also reduce flooding in urban areas and minimize sewer discharges. While rainwater harvesting will by no means alleviate the drought of the last two years, or support all of San Francisco’s water needs, it is a creative step in the direction of better water conservation. This innovative system will ultimately help San Franciscans become directly involved with the green movement, and raise water conservation awareness, while providing a simple yet effective contribution towards our climate crises. To get involved in the age-old practice of rainwater harvesting, simply purchase one of the discounted 60-gallon barrels at your local Cole Hardware. While $70 may seem expensive for a bucket, this innovative and well-equipped system will be well worth the investment and result in savings on your water bills. So let’s reach back to our roots, and irrigate. This creative method to conserve water will be well worth it. YouthVote error-ridden W HAT IF ON the November fourth find that Proposition Q will “enable our small ballot, Obama’s name had been businesses to hire more employees, expand misspelled Osama? This is the benefits, and provide additional services to kind of question the authors of the 2008 our communities.” YouthVote should have, at the very least, YouthVote ballot should have asked themselves when writing their informational drafted a fair argument in opposition, because without the second side of the issue, pamphlet and ballot. On this year’s ballot, distributed over a students will not know the high cost of doing period of time before the November 4 elec- business in San Francisco and how the effects tion, Question 7 of the student survey asks, of Proposition Q could drive more businesses “Would yo [sic] enjoy skill or job-training out of the city. classes at school?” Question 17 asks, “Who Many students reacted negatively to who [sic] is responsible if students miss the errors in the ballot and on the student school?” Mistakes like these brought many survey. students to hunt through the survey for “The mistakes showed how unprofesmore typos, rather than to take the survey sional it really was,” junior Emma Shaw said. “If they’re not going to take us seriously, then seriously. Founded in 1993, YouthVote is organized why should we take them seriously?” The results of the survey and the ballot are for the students, by the students, in an effort to engage the school community in the politi- significant because “they are released back to cal world that has saturated our minds and the schools, the media and the campaigns,” our televisions, especially in recent weeks. according to Peter Lauterborn, YouthVote Although we comCoordinator. They are mend YouthVote’s inalso shared with govtentions to involve the ernment bodies like the Proposition Q has School Board. city’s high school community in local politics, Despite these claims, an argument in fa- the only access students the mistakes in this fall’s YouthVote balvor of it listed in the have to these results is lot and student survey through the YouthVote have brought students handbook, but no Web site (http://www.sfto take elections less gov.org/site/youth_comargument against mission_index.asp), a seriously. fact which was not anThere were errors it. nounced to students. that not only brought Junior Shira Kogan confusion to students, believes that Youthbut also hurt candidates. In the voter pamphlet, Kevin Dempsey Vote’s lack of seriousness was reflected even Petersen, a candidate for the Representative more in the fact that they did not announce of District 12 to the U.S. House of Represen- the results to students. “If the results would tatives, spoke of his advocacy for personal have been somehow announced to us via the freedoms and provided good arguments bulletin, I may have looked them up,” she against spending tax dollars on special said, “but they are so unavailable to students. interests. It shows it doesn’t matter, and that it was a However, Petersen was not represented pointless thing to do.” on the ballot itself, so even if students agreed Statistically, U.S. citizens between the ages with his proposals, they could not have sup- of 18 and 30 represent the smallest voting ported him with their vote. demographic, and according to Lauterborn, Only one candidate, Barry Hermanson, one of YouthVote’s goals is “for high school was represented both on the ballot and in graduates to continue to vote because they the pamphlet. Furthermore, School Board are in the habit and are used to considering candidate Kimberly Wicoff, who wanted to and researching issues.” improve schools in the Bayview and VisitaBut students cannot rally behind a propocion Valley neighborhoods, also did not ap- sition if they are only aware of half of the pear on the ballot. argument, or endorse a candidate who is not Not only are various candidates left off on the ballot. the ballot, but one proposition, Q, which Even smaller grammatical errors distract endorses a modification of the payroll tax, students away from the content of a survey has an argument in favor of it listed in the that could shape their educational future. handbook, but no argument against it. And if they do not take it seriously now, By reading the pamphlet, students will when will they? P Lowell High School The College Board’s new test, ReadiStep, gets young’uns fit four years before they take the SAT. JESSICA HUANG LETTERS TO THE EDITOR and a place on the Lowell wall of fame. In fact, we should print a picture in every classrooom of the face of any such heroic As a distinguished Lowell alumnus, I have parent so that students are reminded that to say that I am appalled to hear about the we are always watching. recent events taking place at Lowell High. Students have to know that we will infilNever before have I heard of students par- trate Facebook, Myspace and even Xanga to ticipating in such irresponsible behavior such make sure our school is a safe place. as teenage drinking, especially after a formal I think each parent should do a bi-weekly dance like Senior Boat. Our upstanding search of their child’s room and backpack community has no time to make sure they aren’t for teens to celebrate getting away with anythe end of their high thing. Students have to school years by consumWe have to remember that the students ing alcoholic beverages know that we will of the best high school in time they could be spending on college apinfiltrate Facebook, in the state are unable plications and gathering to make intelligent Myspace and even decisions, so we have Advanced Placement make decisions for study groups. Xanga to make sure to them. Are these students really the leaders of It’s not like when our our school is a safe tomorrow? Much apkids go away to college place. plause should be directthey will resent the overed towards the chamcontrolling parents they pion-of-a-parent who had in high school. It’s allegedly discovered the not like our kids will condemning photographs on that social miss out on a proper education about maknetwork called Facebook. Our community ing smart decisions regarding alcohol and needs more upstanding citizens who are drugs at parties. prepared to make sure the children of our It’s not like we are making the wrong deaward winning high school are safe by any cision in trying to execute complete control means necessary. over our kid’s lives. I would like to be the first to suggest that — Avi Baskin, we nominate the parent for a Purple Heart Class of ’08 Alumnus questions the role of intrusive parents S Want to have your opinions printed in the next issue of The Lowell? You can now submit your letters to the editor by email to [email protected] or deliver them in person outside of S107. Accounting Mona Man Web Editor-in-Chief Jonah Varon Editors-in-Chief Sandra Chen • Amy Seaman Rachel Hwang• Roy Lee News Sandra Chen, Lydia O’Connor, Amy Seaman Sports Cynthia Chau, Anthony Clay, Bonnie Tong Features Rachel Hwang, Soraya Okuda Columns Sandra Chen, Glennis Markison Opinion Roy Lee Reporters Angel Au-Yeung, Cynthia Chau, Matthew Estipona, Sol Granados, Maggie Huang, Daniel Kim, Julia Kotzian, Sean Lee, Tiffany Leung, Traci Liang, Lily Mak, Cherry Manoonsilpa, Glennis Markison, Caitlin McKewan, Dylan McHugh, Lydia O’Connor, Soraya Okuda, Rosa Shields, Karyn Smoot, Camille Smyth, Shelly Tong, Lily Wong, Ashley Wu, Nancy Xie Photo Editor Elena Chin Photographers Michaela Creedon, Carol Mamon, Ben Udelson Illustrators Jessica Huang, Monica Zhang Advertising Joanna Huang, Courtney Lee, Kristina Low Web editors Elena Chin, Scott Davis Advisers Samuel Williams & Sharn Matusek Published every four weeks by the journalism classes of Lowell High School, Room S108, 1101 Eucalyptus Drive, San Francisco, CA 94132 Phone: (415) 759-2730 Internet: [email protected]; http://www.thelowell.org. All contents copyright Lowell High School journalism classes. All rights reserved. The Lowell and The Lowell on the Web strive to inform the public and to use their opinion sections as open forums for debate. All unsigned editorials are the opinions of the staff. The Lowell welcomes comments on school-related issues from students, faculty and community members. Names will be withheld upon request. We reserve the right to edit letters before publication. 2007 NSPA All-American 2007 NSPA Web Pacemaker 2007 CSPA Gold Crown 2006 NSPA Pacemaker 2006 NSPA All-American 2005 CSPA Gold Crown 2004 CSPA Silver Crown 2003 CSPA Gold Crown The Lowell Backpage—November 14, 2008 Blogging offers a new outlet for teen self expression By Karyn Smoot er form of journalism,” said Eming Piansay, blog editor of “living literary journal” Youth Outlook (www.youthoutlook.org). “It’s at the moment, on the fly, whatever’s going on at the time.” Youth Outlook, a San Francisco-based branch of ethnic news organization New America Media (www.newamericamedia. org), ), uses the Internet to help teens express their opinions on hard-hitting issues in their communities through posted works of art and writing. “We pick up on news stories and we give them our own twist,” Piansay said. “The writers’ experiences always come out in the stories they write.” Recently, Youth Outlook extended an open invitation to local teen writers to participate in a weeklong “Blog-a-Thon,” where bloggers post about the week’s topic and provide unique points of view. From Oct. 22 to Oct. 29, Youth Outlook prompted discussion on the election and its overlooked impact on the lives of teens. Posts ranged from a video spoof of the presidential debate to an in-depth discussion of Prop. 4’s Evolution of blogging ramifications for young women. “A lot of people that are talking about For those still unfamiliar with the In- issues affecting youth aren’t youth,” said Maaternet revolution, blogs, formerly known hum Chaundhry, a Youth Outlook contribuas “Web-logs,” are frequently updated pertor and former Lowell sonal websites that began cropping up in the student. “Stories about late-90s. In the early days of the Internet, the youth are more bloggers were mostly Internet-ineffective when dustry workers with the time and written by the the know-how to post about youth themtopics that interested them. selves.” Today, there are more than Yo u t h 112 million blogs out Outlook althere, and though only lows writ11 percent are actually acers like is a tive, roughly 120,000 n Blogging e w Chaundhr y blogs pop up every d a y , to speak freely quicker form of according to global blogabout current ging hub Technorati ( w wjournalism. w. events without It’s at technorati.com). the constraints of the moment, on the Bloggers are also print media conconstantly redefinvention. The site’s fly, whatever’s going ing the term “blog” f re e - t hi n k i ng ap on at the time. by including audio proach allows multiple (podcast) and vidEming Piansay writers to express their eo (“vlog”) posts, Blog editor of Youth Outlook thoughts on the same issues. not to mention Youth Outlook’s blog isn’t the connecting their only online community for socially blogs to various soconscious teens. WireTap Magazine cial networking Web(www.wiretap.com) is a national Web-based (www.wiretap.com sites like Myspace and news and culture publication also by and for Facebook. youth. Young writers suggest article ideas With user-friendly blog generators, blogs to the blog’s editors, then work with staff to are available to everybody, especially com- research and write their own articles. puter-savvy teenagers, and run the gamut of A recent contributor, Balboa High School themes. Many young people use blogs to re- senior Monica Guerra, wrote an article support on their own lives in unnecessarily great porting her belief that 16-year-olds should detail, but any subject is fair game — topics have the right to vote. According to Guerra, from voting rights to fashion, international WireTap allows her to practice her journalpolitics to gaming. istic writing skills while strengthening her own convictions. “I think it’s a way to express Blogging for free speech yourself, not just by ranting, but saying, ‘Here are On the other hand, “alternative” press blogs provide up-to-the-minute reporting and commentary. Somewhere between these two extremes lies the new frontier of youth-generated media. Blogs have changed not only individual expression, but also created a new journalistic forum. “Blogging is a quick- “G uess where I am right now?” blogs junior Tristan Leder. “You guessed it, Starbucks.” One summer afternoon, Leder and his friends took blogging to its limits — a post every hour of an uninterrupted 24-hour stint at a Starbucks. Posts to Leder’s blog, The Weekly Accident (www.weeklyaccident.com), updated his faithful readership on which drink he was having that hour and what he was doing to kill the boredom. “Current beverage: tall doubleshot on ice,” he posted at the start of the experiment. “A decent choice for a starting beverage. With high amounts of caffeine and only 70 calories, I’ll be having plenty of these today.” Posting your hourly occupations is just one way to blog. Students as well as local youth media organizations are catching on to the blogging trend, swapping paper journals for public Web space where they can express their opinions in cyberspace. B “ some facts to support (my views),’” Guerra said. With such inspired young writers, the trend is catching on as a legitimate form of mainstream media. For example, in the recent election, both major candidates took advantage of blogging’s popularity among younger citizens, keeping their sites updated with the latest campaign news. Student blogs But blogging extends far past journalism. For those who find their own hobbies more inspiring than current events and social issues, personal blogs can also be a valuable tool. Popular blogging sites like LiveJournal and Blogger allow users to create their own profiles, posting entries on any topic. Blogger (www.blogger.com), Google’s response to the blogging craze, calls it “pushbutton publishing,” and, like other sites, allows users to customize their blogs for a personal feel. Livejournal ((www.livejournal. www.livejournal. com) currently hosts nearly two-million active accounts, where users can not only post journal entries, but also share music and discuss hot button issues in user-created communities. “My LiveJournal (account) is like a personal diary, but I can share it instantly,” sophomore Dillon Dong said. Many Lowell students are creating their own online personas with blog templates other than Livejournal, such as Leder, who subscribes to web-hosting site GoDaddy. com.. His blog, The Weekly Accident, features weekly podcasts and writings on “this and that from a geek’s perspective.” The “non-diary” blog allows him to editorialize on his latest comic book, video game and movie finds with plenty of music thrown in. Junior Tim Crowley is a fan of Leder’s blog. “He brings up random things that I’ve never heard of,” he said. “It’s a good way to share cool information.” While some bloggers revel in the prospect of a worldwide audience, others hesitate to make their personal thoughts public. LiveJournal addresses these issues with customizable privacy settings, allowing users to choose which friends can access their entries. However, some students don’t consider privacy to be concern. “I have no hesitation to post personal information,” Leder said. “It’s essentially the same as writing something (on paper); it’s just easier to get out there.” While blogging may be as easy as writing on paper, it is legally equivalent to printing words in a formal publication. Legally-minded blogs like Buzz Machine (www.buzzmachine.com) advise their fellow bloggers to check their facts, avoid feuding, obey libel, privacy and copyright laws and follow several other tips. “There are ways to keep (your blog) private, as long as you practice common sense,” said senior Devan Lane, a LiveJournal user. Blogging’s virus-like contagiousness might get some in trouble, but for the most part has only helped The Weekly Accident, attracting over 1,600 visits so far. Nevertheless, Leder stressed that he blogs for his own gratification. “Regardless of feedback, if you’re taking the step to start your own blog, it’s because you want to have that outlet of expressing yourself,” Leder said. Another blogger, junior Wendy Chak, testified to the free-expression blogging allows, but said that readership plays an important role in the blogging experience. “It’s really nice to know you have readers,” she said. “It (doesn’t) feel like you’re just writing it for yourself.” Chak, who writes a fashion blog called www.handmeover.blogspot. Hand It Over (www.handmeover.blogspot. ), began blogging as a personal project, com), but got more serious once she realized she was attracting more and more readers. “They can comment on what you post,” Chak said. “Once in a while you get emails and it feels really awesome.” For both Chak and fellow fashion blogger Richel Kumar, blog popularity has paid off in internships with fashion Web start-up ). Kumar’s Weardrobe (www.weardrobe.com). blog, Ragamala (www.ragamalas.blogspot. com), shares in Chak’s love of fashion, featuring clippings from magazines and pictures of her favorite outfits According to Chak, not all blogs are so successful. “A lot (of fashion blogs) are really bland,” she said. “It just depends on what you write.” But some blogs are quite successful. For budding celebrities, the viral popularity of blogging has provided free publicity and a jumpstart into stardom. Indie rock band Tapes ‘n Tapes gained most of its momentum through various music review blogs. The Internet provides accelerated word-ofmouth popularity for these “blog bands” as well as other pop culture trends. The future of blogging Potential web-stardom or not, Chak and Leder both plan to continue using blogs as to express themselves. While Chak hopes to expand her blog into a well-known fashion resource, Leder plans on blogging as a career path. “I want to be in this community and try to make something out of it,” Leder said. “This is what I want to do for the rest of my life.” HUANG JESSICA BY IMAGES MONIC G AND A ZHAN N O T T U G B N I H H S S I P U L B P U