Globe clayton high school
EDUCATION::
a global disparity
Across the globe, schools attempt to educate students in an increasingly dipolar world.
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1 Mark Twain Circle
Volume 80, Issue 5
Print newspapers face budget cuts due to economic troubles Laura Bleeke Reporter
Economic problems have forced some publications (above) to reconsider consider budget cuts as prices for paper, ink and subscriptions have increased.
Ever since the invention of the printing press in 1439, newspapers have been a common way to spread news. But as we enter the 21st century and technology becomes one of the main focuses in life, the newspaper has started to fall out of style. Instead of newspaper boys and 10 cent papers, we have iPhones, YouTube, radios and television. Just as phones replaced personal visits, and e-mails replaced snail mail, online newspapers have started to replace the old fashioned printed papers. New technology isn’t the only thing that may be the cause of this change. Economic problems have been forcing printers and publications to reevaluate if they will be able to continue daily papers. But General Manager of the Washington Missourian, Bill Miller Jr., believes the more serious conflict is the 24 hour media, and not the economic changes. “Everybody’s hurting a little bit, but if you have a product that no one else is covering, I think those papers are okay,” Miller said. “And providing analysis and giving consumers what they want, something that they can’t get somewhere else.” Dick Weiss agrees that the real problem is new technology. Weiss, who recently retired from the St. Louis Post Dispatch after being a reporter and editor, is president and founder of WeissWrite LLC, a business that offers writing, editing and coaching services to students, journalists, business people and anyone with a story to tell. “Your imagination is something you will have forever,” Weiss said. “In your imagination there are eternal things, like wine, and there are ephemeral things, like sangria. Stories are eternal, but ink on paper is only ephemeral.” It appears that in smaller communities the papers are not badly affected by the new advances in technology because there is no major media interference. Miller has noticed this in his own city, Washington, Mo. “I think the future looks better for [community newspapers] than a lot of the large urban daily papers,” Miller said. Miller also believes that papers published two or three times a week will survive much better than daily newspapers. This is because there is already available media to provide the information daily. “The concept of, ‘We’re going to get all the information during the day, we’re going to put it out during a window between 10 p.m. and midnight, and we’re going to print it and it’ll be on everyone’s doorstep, and it’s going to be fresh and ready to go,’ that model is probably at risk, because you can get it faster from so many other sources,” Miller said. Even after all of the media, there still seems to be economic troubles papers are starting to face. Prices for paper, ink and subscriptions have been increasing, and the sale revenues are dropping. “Overall newspaper revenue is down about six percent, advertising revenue is down about 4.7 percent,” Miller said. Larger cities are facing even tougher difficulties. According to a recent outlook on traditional media from www. researchrecap.com, “Fitch believes more newspapers and newspaper groups will default, be shut down and be liquidated in 2009 and several cities could go without a daily print newspaper by 2010.” Fitch Ratings is an international credit-rating agency. This statement leads some to believe that soon, many printed newspapers will be discontinued, as least as daily papers. It also brings up the question of whether newspapers will only be available online in the near future. This includes the much acclaimed Chicago Tribune. The newspaper is heavily in debt and is close to going bankrupt. It has been trying to sell the Chicago Cubs, Wrigley Field and a share in the regional sports cable networks. In mid-November, the Tribune Company lost $121 million because newspaper advertising revenue fell. More recently, their economic troubles have come up again. According to
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December 16, 2008
Clayton, MO 63105
Izzy Fratt
New building developments in Clayton including Centene Plaza (above), are under review and awaiting funds. However, in light of the recent economic troubles, some companies may have trouble raising enough funds to further their building plans.
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Proposition 8 passes in California
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County vote defeats Proposition M
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Boys’ basketball dribbles to victory
New building developments in Clayton bring jobs, tax revenue Noah Eby
Reporter
Several new building developments in Clayton are under review and awaiting funds, but the waning economy is slowing the progress of these projects. Centene Corporation’s Centene Plaza, Orchard Development Group’s Trianon, and RJ York’s Maryland Central Hotel have all been approved by the city and are awaiting funds to begin construction. The proposed plans for Centene Plaza—Centene Corporation’s future world headquarters—include 500,000 square feet of office space, 30,000 square feet of retail space and a parking facility. The project is also expected to bring many new jobs to Clayton. “We are anticipating somewhere between 900 and 1,400 new jobs by the time Centene is completely done,” said Catherine Powers, Director of Planning and Development Services for the City of Clayton. The Trianon will be located at 7454 Forsyth, across the street from the Forsyth MetroLink Station, and will have hundreds of condominiums as well as over 30,000 square feet of office space and over 9,000 square feet of retail space. According to the City of Clayton’s website, Trianon takes advantage of on the project’s location. “The Trianon is designed as a Transit Oriented Development (TOD), which capitalizes on the development’s proxim-
ity to the MetroLink passenger station,” the city’s website said. The planned Maryland Central Hotel includes 225 hotel suites, retail, condominium and meeting space, as well as 4,400 square feet of restaurant space, a foot spa and a gift shop. Powers said that the city is still waiting for the plans to materialize for Brown Shoe’s expansion, the construction of Montgomery Bank, and the Carondelet Village Project. With the current flurry of new construction and development in Clayton, one might wonder why Clayton is so popular among companies looking to build. Powers said Clayton is attractive to businesses for many reasons. “[We are] centrally located, we are willing to work with developers to get the kind of quality projects that we want and they want, and since we already have many of these companies here, more companies want to relocate near Fortune 500 companies, so it becomes a hub of these world headquarters,” Powers said. As for what the city hopes to get out of the new developments, Powers said that there are myriad things the city wants to achieve via these projects. “We want quality jobs… we want people shopping, eating, doing all the things they need to do in Clayton, we want the quality architecture that builds up our downtown area, and of course we want the tax revenue,” Powers said. Powers also said that she thinks the effects of new developments on the
Clayton community at large will be for the better. “I think [the effects] are all going to be very positive,” Powers said. “[The projects] are going to bring to Clayton more density, of course, and they’re also going to bring to Clayton more of the world-class element that makes us known in the area.” Large building projects are notorious for taking a long time to be completed, and Powers said that the timetable for when the Clayton projects will be completed is up in the air. “I wish I knew,” Powers said. “I think Centene will move forward, knock on wood even for that one, but the rest of it is all based on the economy. We certainly hope sooner rather than later.” The economy is expected to play a large role in the commencement, or lack thereof, of projects like Centene Plaza and Trianon. Powers said that this is primarily because of the economy’s effect on fundraising. “The role of the economy is absolutely huge because nobody can get financing right now,” Powers said. “Without their financing they can’t move forward, so that’s what’s holding all of these projects back.” Unfortunately, Powers said there isn’t anything that she or the city can do to help move the projects along. “In terms of affecting the economy, even the president can’t affect the economy,” Powers said. “We just have to wait it out and do the best we can.”
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Seeing double: twins at CHS
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“This Wonderful Life” charming, cheerful
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Rwandan Paul Rusesabagina inspires student
Gov. Blagojevich charged with conspiracy, soliciting bribes Apoorva Sharma
Reporter
Rod Blagojevich, governor of Illinois, was arrested on Dec. 9, for going on, according to U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, a “political corruption spree.” He was later free on $4500 bail. The governor, along with his chief of staff, John Harris, were charged with several accounts of federal corruption, including, according to the Chicago Tribune, “one charge related to the appointment of a senator to replace Barack Obama.” The affidavit released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation supports this claim and states that through wiretapping, an F.B.I agent was able to deduce that Blagojevich was misusing his power to replace the seat left open by presidentelect Obama. “By law, after the President-elect’s resignation of his position as a U.S. Senator, which was effective on Nov. 16, 2008, Rod Blagojevich has sole authority to appoint his replacement for the two years remaining of the President-elect’s Senate term,” the affidavit states. “During the course of this investigation, agents have intercepted a series of communications regarding the efforts of Rod Blagojevich, John Harris, and others to misuse this power to obtain personal gain, including financial gain, for Rod Blagojevich and his family.”
The affidavit then explained how Blagojevich and Harris planned to exploit their power for personal gain. “Rod Blagojevich has also been intercepted conspiring to sell the Senate seat in exchange for his wife’s placement on paid corporate boards or Rod Blagojevich’s placement at a private foundation in a significant position with a substantial salary,” the affidavit said. “Rod Blagojevich has also been intercepted conspiring to sell the Senate seat in exchange for millions of dollars in funding for a non-profit organization that he would start and that would employ him at a substantial salary after he left the governorship.” Essentially, there are multiple accounts where Blagojevich conspired to simply sell the vacant Senate seat to whichever offer presented his family with the most fiscal gain, and if no offers of value were made, then he planned to take the seat himself. The affidavit quoted Blagojevich during a conversation with the Deputy Governor: “If…they’re not going to offer anything of any value, then I might just take [the vacant seat],” claimed Blagojevich. He restated his goal with more detail in another conversation that was wiretapped. “I’m going to keep this Sen-
ate option for me a real possibility, you know, and therefore I can drive a hard
Blagojevich, 5
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Metropolis: a St. Louis photo essay
Inside: 1 News 6 InDepth 9 Sports 13 Lifestyle 20 Forum 23 Interest 24 InFocus MCT Campus