Volume 80: Issue 8

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SPOTLIGHT Students work to keep Northview Beautiful

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Student

Prints

United 93 brings controversy is it to soon for a 9/11 movie?

Girls Softball slides into leagues

Bands prepare to battle it out Lizzy Breier Staff Writer

Tonight the annual Battle of the Bands is scheduled to begin at 7pm in the NV gymnasium. Nine bands auditioned this year on April 6 in the cafeteria with Ms. Katie Mattimoe, the advisor of B.O.B. Each band played before a five person-judging panel, consisting of select Challenge Cats members and Ms. Mattimoe. “I am actually very excited about all of the nine bands that were chosen this year to perform,” said junior Chad Weaver. “I’ll be there to see the original music, and to see what NV bands can do for me.” Nine bands auditioned; however, because the possibility of a special guest fell through, all nine bands were given the option of playing. “The purpose of B.O.B. is to provide a musical showcase for Northview bands and to give the rest of the student body something cool to do on a Friday night,” said Ms. Mattimoe. The nine bands chosen to play are Jiff and the Choosy Moms, the Coast is Clear, Finding Emo, Soldiers of Fortune, Saturday Arrived, Under Water Burial, Rocktronica, Transition Elements, and Lies of Our Deception. These bands will have a opportunity to compete for six awards this year. The awards are for best stage presence, best original lyrics/music, most professional, best solo jam session, judges/ challenge cats choice, and best vocals. “We are doing the awards this year to make the event as fair as possible,” said Ms. Mattimoe. “This is also why all bands are participating this year.”

The

Kristin Winters Staff Writer

INSIDE PAGES 1 - 2

Graduation is just around the corner, yet many seniors are in danger of not graduating.

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EDITORIALS

Battle of the Bands starts tonight at 7pm and runs until 11pm. Tickets will be sold at the door for $5 a person. This event

is not just limited to Northview students, and hopes to have a good turn out. “It’s not about who wins or loses; its

The robotics team’s robot, Dark Side, took Third place in National Competition in Atlanta, GA on the weekend of April 27-30. Robotics took second place at the Great Lakes Regional in Ypsilanti, MI on the weekend of March 16-18. Then two weekends after that Robotics took First place in the Western Michigan Regional on the weekend of March 30- April 1 in Grand Rapids, MI. These two high placings lead Robotics straight to nationals. They won their division, which placed them in the Final Four. During the Final Four they lost in the first round, placing them third overall. “Nationals was an experience I will

remember for life,” said junior Jared Allen. In the beginning of the year a certain objective was given to all of the high school robotics teams in the nation. This year the objective was to build a robot that could shoot balls into a goal. Then, with this objective in mind, the robot was created, according to coach Mr. Andy Roth. Dark Side was designed to shoot nerf basketballs into a hole on a wall six feet above the ground. A tournament is a “game” which consists of two teams competing against each other. The two teams are distinguished by wearing different colors and are on opposite sides of the arena. This year the place a team came in was based on how many points they scored in the game. There were center goals and side goals, if

a robot shot a ball into a center goal it was worth three points, a side goal was worth one point. The first phase of a tournament is when two teams compete against each other as a human drives the robot. The second phase is an autonomous game play. Autonomous means that the robot only reacts to sensory inputs and pre-programmed commands. No human interaction is allowed in anyway during this phase, according to Mr. Roth. “This was the smallest and most inexperienced team we’ve ever had yet by far the most successful,” said Mr. Roth. Even though this year’s team consisted of many students who had never touched anything mechanical, they put their devotion into doing their best, according to Mr. Roth.

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Review of the new movie, United 93 portraying the 9/11 disaster plus how has senioritis affected you?

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FEATURES

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Check out photos as they enjoy Dancing in the Moonlight followed up with fun, games, prizes and more at After Prom!

– page 5 ENTERTAINMENT

PAGES 6

Look at the behind the scenes pictures from the musical, The King and I

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SPORTS

about having fun and putting on a good show,” said Ms. Mattimoe.

Robotics in Final Four Drafting

Sylvania Northview High School Volume 80 Issue #8 May 19, 2006

NEWS

PHOTOGRAPHER ROCKING OUT Junior Mark DeWood, sophomore Mike Nelson, and Arden Backus members of the band Underwater Burial practice for battle of the bands. The battle of the bands will begin tonight at 7 in the gym. Tickets will be sold for $5 a person.

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Spring sports start to wind down, but their ability to win doesn’t.

– page 7 CONTACT US

Phone: 419-824-8708 The Student Prints Sylvania Northview High School 5403 Silica Drive Sylvania, OH 43560 www.sylvanianorthview.org

Photo Courtesy of Mr. Roth TUNING UP the robot darkside is DANA advisor Patrick Tillman, junior Cameron Seigl, and freshman Ian Shaw. The robotics team placed third in nationals which were held in Atlanta, Georgia.

students create award winning designs Olivia Reynolds Editorials Editor Knollcrest Community Banquet Hall has little meaning to most Northview students; however, these few words have consumed the student’s lives in Mr. Rick Bohn’s drafting classes since January. Students taking Drafting & Design, Architectural Design, and Advanced Design competed in the American Institute of Architects (AIA) High School Design Competition this year. The awards banquet took place on April 11 downtown at the Owens-Illinois building. Northview did very well in the competition and took home five awards. Winning an award this year were juniors Ryan Connolly (first place landscape) and Peter Keller (junior honorable mention), and seniors Stephen Cooper (senior honorable mention), Viktor Maier (senior honorable mention), and Olivia Reynolds (second place model). “I thought we did well this year. Naturally, I thought we could have been judged better but overall I was very pleased this year,” said Mr. Bohn. The competition this year called for students to design a banquet hall for the Knollcrest community in Point Place. Students had to create seven drawings of their design and mount them on two presentation boards. “Designing a banquet hall this year was much better than last year’s bus station. We were able to put more creative ideas into it,” said senior Steve Scholler. Be sure to check out the winning designs displayed in the front lobby showcase.


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