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FROM THE PRESIDENT F

I hope you are all doing well. Keep pushing through! We’re nearly at the finish line! Because of your unwavering support, the SRC has hosted numerous successful events, such as Multicultural Night and Winter Formal. We cannot wait to see you at our annual All College this Friday. As summer is around the corner, snow continues to melt and days are getting longer. I wish that your anxiety and stress would also melt away like snow, and you will have smiles on your face as long as there is daylight. Grade 12s, good luck with your IB exams, and we will make it through!

WANT TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE TATLER?

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Use it to stay connected with The Tatler so that you know when submission deadlines are. For the next edition our theme is farewell Disney. We welcome all stories, articles, poems or art.

Rom The Editors

HI EVERYONE!

We have reached the last term of this school year and are planning on publishing one more edition of The Tatler. Thank you all so much for making this edition possible and for all of your incredible submissions. It is great to see all the different submissions, from paintings to poems. I am grateful to be working with all of you! Good luck with the last few weeks of the semester. I am thrilled to see what the end of the year has in store for everyone and for our school newspaper.

PAIGE PATRICK

ARTIST ’ S NOTE

The Luther Tatler is edited by Ini Idowu and co-edited by Paige Patrick with the help of Eva Markatos and Lila Gelowitz.

Everything around us is a chaotic balance, a delicate interplay of opposing forces that create the very complex tapestry of existence we live in. Good and bad, life and death, each one depends on the other, and together they form the fabric of our lives. This artwork is a self-portrait which revolves around the same idea involving two opposing sides working together to create a unified whole. The face represents the beauty and joy in my life, a part of me that smiles, laughs, and loves. The vibrant colours and swirly patterns in the background signify the beauty of mystery, darkness, and the infinite possibilities and opportunities that lie beyond our understanding. It simply serves as a reminder for us to take risks and be willing to step out of our comfort zones. Conversely, the other side involving the skeleton is perhaps the resilience and what makes us truly human, a synthesis of the good and bad.

RISHAM JASSAR

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