S t u de n t P r i n t s Sylvania Northview High School
The
April 2, 2007
Issue #7
NEWS Pages 1,2 & 3
EDITORIALS Pages 4, 5 & 6
voting online, wave of the future page 2
Volume 81
FEATURES SPORTS Pages 7, 8 & 9 Pages 10, 11 &12 Sweet times at Turnabout page 9
holidays - just getting out of hand! page 4
Spring sports get underway pages 10-12
Fall play Robotics goes into overdrive takes full show to states Wil l C ousino
Sta ff Wri te r
Jackie Zureich C o-E di tor-In- Chie f On the weekend of March 30 through April 1, Northview’s fall play, The Diviners, took their show to Northmont High School near Dayton for the 2007 Ohio EdTA State Thespian Conference. The Diviners show was the fourth time a NV Theatre has performed at the State conference under the direction of Mr. Don Wachowiak. Previous shows include The Crucible (2000), Rumors (2001), and Moon Over Buffalo (2005), according to a NV Theatre press release. When a play or musical is invited to the state conference it is very different from when athletes, sport teams, or speech and debate go to states. Instead of going to compete against other shows for the best overall show, the honor is the invitation. The director must request for a show to be screened by judges from the conference in order to even be invited. A show can then receive a 60-minute, a 45-minute or a full-length invitation, according to the Ohio Educational Theater Association. Receiving a full-length invitation is like winning first place because the judges feel that the show was good enough to be performed all the way through in front of thespians from all over the state, according to Mr. Wachowiak. The Diviners cast and crew were invited to perform their show full-length and they rehearsed every week since February 8 for the Conference, according to Mr. Wachowiak. Each show invited then performed over the course of three days. Parents and students are not allowed to simply travel to the conference to cheer on the shows, unlike athletic state competitions. They must be registered in order to attend, according to the Ohio Educational Theater Association. Over 1500 theatre students, teachers and chaperones attend the conference every year. The Diviners was on stage along with 11 other shows that were invited to perform full-length. Six 60minute performances, and twenty 45-minute performances also performed, according to the Ohio Educational Association. “Having the opportunity to perform for such a large group of theatre students and teachers is a fantastic experience for our students,” said Mr. Wachowiak. The conference didn’t only consist of performances either. There were also several workshops that cast, crew, and chaperones could attend, including performance workshops, directing workshops, and technical workshops. There was also a dance that participants could attend Saturday night, according to Mr. Wachowiak. “Going to States was one of the best experiences. It was great to interact with other theatre students from around the state and watch the best shows perform,” said junior Lauren Owens, who plays Jenny Mae Laymen in The Diviners. “It’s as if all my greatest aspirations, dreams and desires have manifested into one thing and one thing only- State thespian Conference,” said senior Isaac Cohen explaining his excitement for the Conference. The Diviners cast and crew performed an encore performance on March 28 for students and community members who missed it the first time around.
The Sylvania Cat Attack Robotics team is seeking an addition to their collection of laurels this season as they charge into competition behind their automated steed, πR8. An aggressive and successful financial campaign drew in the funds that fuel the appetite of the sophisticated cyborg’s budget. The annual winterization of lawn mowers drew in record numbers of customers and funds, according to team member junior Kacey Kinsel. Meetings have been held at the DANA building since late fall and currently the team consists of 25 students and approximately 20 advisors, including parents and DANA employees. The squad was faced with a daunting challenge for tournament competition this season. The season’s game dictates the design of a mobile robot that can collect inflatable pool rings with a hydraulic arm and a pneumatic claw, according to coach Mr. Andy Roth. Once the ring is retrieved it must be placed on pegs jutting out from a tall, jungle-gym styled cage in the center of the arena. Teams operate under an intense two and a half minute time constraint each round. Adding to the difficulty of the task is the fact that opponent robots may block or intercept a robot in its effort to score. Cat Attack’s strategy and subsequent robot design has been offensive,
Photo courtsey of Mr. Roth PERFORMING ROUTINE MAINTENANCE ON THE GRIPPER is DANA advisor Tom O’Neil and senior officer Jared Allen. The gripper picks up pool inter tubes during the games. according to Mr. Roth. “The last two or three weeks before President’s Day weekend we met nearly every night as the February 20 deadline to ship our completed robot approached,” said Kinsel. Continuing the Cat Attack tradition of success is a direct result of the innumerable hours poured into the metal and wires of yet another robot. The final long weekend before shipping πR8 after President’s Day was spent adding the final man-hours to the robot. The team usually cuts it close when it comes to meeting the deadline and this year several members stayed at the DANA Corporation labs
past midnight on February 19 to ensure the robot’s fine-tuned readiness, according to Kinsel. The interim between shipping πR8 and the first tournament was used for contingency preparation by the team. As the majority of teams do, Cat Attack constructs spare parts for their machine in the event of a break down or collision at the match. To hone and sharpen the ‘bot’s drivers into well-trained fanatics, a practice robot is used. This robot is not shipped, but remains instead with the team for preparation, according to Kinsel. The team’s first tournament was March 7-8 in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Last year Cat Attack
finished second, narrowly losing the final round. Due to mechanical difficulties with the shifting mechanism and a faulty arm, the team made a disappointing finish in Ypsilanti. “The mishaps we met at Ypsilanti have been repaired, so hopefully we won’t have trouble with the arm coming loose or the robot making circles in Cleveland,” said Mr. Roth. Next on the team’s schedule is a competition in Cleveland on March 22-24. “We’re anxious to take our game to the east side of the state,” said Kinsel, “It will be an interesting challenge—no northwest Ohio team has ever taken first place in Cleveland.”
Orchestra superior in all respects Ta r a Pate l Sta ff Wri te r Northview Orchestras took their musical talents to the Ohio Music Education Association (OMEA) State Orchestra Contest March 2 and 3 in Sandusky and received the highest rating. OMEA State Orchestra Contest is an annual event designed to critique and comment on the playing skills of school orchestras. Groups compete in one of three classes; A, B or C, A being the highest level of difficulty. Three official OMEA adjudicators judge the floor performances and reward the orchestra with a rating ranging from Superior (I) to Very Poor (V). The group then heads to a separate room for sight-reading. Eight minutes are given to the players to look at the assigned piece and scrutinize it for key changes, dynamic contrasts, accidentals, and difficult rhythms. After the few minutes of intense concentration, the orchestra plays the piece as well as they can and the judge proceeds to give them one of the five ratings. “This sight reading was the hardest we’ve ever had, but Mrs. Thiel prepared us really well and we stayed together,” said junior violinist Michael Deng. Chamber Orchestra competed in Class A, while Concert Orchestra performed in Class C. Both received a superior rating.
Members were happy their hard work and dedication paid off despite the six snow days. “With all the missing school I thought we were in a lot of trouble. I’m glad we pulled it off,” said junior violinist Michelle Reardon. Each group brought three pieces to the contest to be judged. Chamber Orchestra left early from school to perform March 2. They started off with a fast paced Bach composition entitled Sinfonia in D Major. The moving and dynamic oriented Ase’s Death from the Peer Gynt Suite followed and the performance ended with the complex and fast Suite for Strings by John Rutter. “The John Rutter piece was really challenging, but we ended up pulling it off really well,” said Deng. Concert Orchestra departed NV at 6 am the following morning for an early performance. Saison de Cordes by Francis Frese was first on the list, followed by All the Pretty Little Horses featuring freshman violin soloists Haley Armstrong and Alex Gibson. Concert Orchestra finished the concert with the rhythmic Cakewalk from Serenade for String Orchestra by Norman Leyden. After the weeks of intense practice, the Orchestra relaxed for a while before starting to prepare for the May POPs Concert.
Angela Strock PlAYING THE BASS FOR CONCERT ORCHESTRA is junior Nicole Drotar.