Issue 6, the Black & Gold, Volume 93

Page 1

the

Graphic: S. Hardin

Photo: S. Hardin

For a photo story on local art competitions, a look inside art teacher Amy Harper’s artistic process and the latest Loop look to page 5

&

March 25, 2014

Arts & Entertainment Volume 93

Black Gold

Issue 6 Magazine

2013 MIPA Spartan Award Winner

Traverse City Central High School 1150 Milliken Drive, Traverse City, Michigan 49686

Inside the bathroom lockdowns

Photo: A. Olson

Turn to page 7 for breath-taking landscapes, page 8 for student portraits and page 9 for a compliation of Central’s various vehicles

NMC art explorations

1.

Increased vandalism and mess-making leaves unruly students to blame and only custodians to clean up

Hunter Kelly Staff Reporter

A

s he’s in the cafeteria picking up from the monstrosity of a mess that was once lunch, Head Custodian Scott Markle is summoned via walkie-talkie to clean up yet another disaster in yet another bathroom. “We have to go in and disinfect the bathroom,” Markle said. “Sometimes we are just too busy at that time of day, so we have to lock the bathrooms up and keep them locked until we can get to cleaning the mess.” Bathroom lockdowns send students on a school-wide scavenger hunt to find one open somewhere. This year, there has been an increasing string of bathroom vandalism incidents, mainly graffiti, and primarily in the boys restrooms, which has resulted in numerous lockdowns for repairs and safety concerns. “We lock the bathrooms so we not only send a message to students that this behavior is unacceptable,” Assistant Principal and Interim Athletic Director Jay Larner said, “but we also have to make sure there are no health hazards our students might encounter.” Head Principal Rick Vandermolen feels lockdowns inconvenience the majority of students who use the bathrooms as intended. “Vandalism had gotten better, but I think we’ve gone through a spot this year where it’s gotten really intense,” Vandermolen said. “This isn’t the worst it has ever been, though. When I was an assistant principal, the bathrooms were almost always locked to be cleaned.” Markle said that on a previous run of bathroom vandalism, the plumbing needed to be replaced due to boys intentionally plugging toilets. “Our plumber had to take the plumbing apart,” Markle said. “We had to order new pipes to and from that particular one because it was being kicked, it had been plunged so

continued, page 11

Our custodial staff reveals three buildings’ excessive vandalism problems C-Building: Writing on walls Lori Jacobson, 10 years “I spend my nights trying to make our school clean and safe for students, but I feel really disrespected spending my time on bathroom vandalism. I could be a lot more productive. Bathroom vandalism is also disrespectful to other students. Sometimes the public uses these bathrooms and we want our school nice for everyone.”

Photo: M. Hoagg

2.

F-Building: Waste smearings

3.

Sue Smith, 6 years “First trimester—and I don’t know who it was—but someone all trimester long, except three days, smeared excrement all over the toilet, the floor and the wall. It made me want to quit my job. I don’t see this in the girls’ bathroom. There must be something wrong with groups of boys whose idea of fun is to defecate in a semi-public place. How mad would you have to be at the world to do something like that? My dog doesn’t even do that.”

Gym Area: Excessive messiness Greg McDonald, 9 months “We [custodians] bust our butts here to make Central pleasant for students and staff. We work all night long and it’s like that never happened. The next night, it’s a mess again. You name it, fruit smashed in drains, deodorant smeared on mirrors, dirt-riddled cleats clapped together in the showers, mud everywhere. The worst was the upstairs bathroom by cardio. You could tell it was intentional. There was toilet paper all over, and some group of kids clogged the toilet and then had continued to use it. That’s just really discouraging to have your hard work trashed.”

Photo: S. Hardin

Photo: S. Hardin

1.) Central art students took part in a series of workshops held at NMC. Isabel Schuler ‘16 indulges her artistic inclination during the water-color painting seminar. “My mom’s an artist, so I think I was really influenced by her,” Schuler said. 2.) Under the guidance of Glenn Wolff, Mitchell Wynkoop ‘14 experiments with different water colors. “We did this cool thing where we put salt on the picture to give it a different look,” Wynkoop said. “I think I’ll get into watercoloring.” 3.) Alyk Fuller ‘14 participates in the ceramics workshop. Fuller meticulously etched lines in the clay in order to create a flower pattern. “I was giving it a flowery feel because I was making it for my mom and sister,” Fuller said.

Orchestra and Band explore and perform in Washington D.C.

The city’s various monuments had a lasting effect on both the performers and performances

John Minster Staff Reporter

Out of hundreds of schools nationwide, Music Celebrations International (MCI) selected Central and just two other schools to perform at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. After serious consideration, MCI invites one school from each state. Orchestra and Band was first recommended by a group from Ann Arbor that also went to D.C. After hearing of Central, MCI sent Orchestra and Band an invitation last March, and they decided to pursue the opportunity. “At that point, they wanted to hear what we sound like,” Orchestra teacher Ellen Boyer said, “so I sent them three concerts from this year to keep things current. They accepted us, and so we started fundraising like crazy.” Students were awed by the honor of performing at the Kennedy Center, so much so that part of their repertoire

was an homage to the fallen president. “One of the pieces we played is a dedication to him,” Dawson Mortensen-Chown ‘15 said. “There’s parts about his assassination and it’s just a really emotional piece, and to understand the emotional side of the piece, seeing his memorial, touring the center and just seeing how sad it really was, helped me connect more to the music and it gave the music more meaning.” Boyer said the essence of our nation’s capital—it’s monuments, traditions, architecture and music enhanced the students’ play. “I think of the Kennedy Center as the second biggest place to perform in the country, right behind the Carnegie,” Boyer said. “It’s a living monument to J.F.K. We played the J.F.K. Suite, we went to all these monuments where they talked about the test and the will of a country, and seeing all that affected our playing in an extremely rewarding way.” All but two students made the trip,

Briefs

even though it cost $1000 per. Most either earned or paid their own way. Orchestra and Band tried to give the students who sold goods credit for their own sales, instead of mass fundraisers where everybody benefited. “We sold stickers, discount cards and Younkers cards and we worked at Younkers,” Boyer said. “We held a silent auction, sold calendars and ran bake sales. We just did a huge array of things to try to raise as much money as we could.” Orchestra and Band left early March 6, and spent the entire day riding a bus straight to D.C., eventually arriving at the Hilton Hotel in Alexandria, Virginia. The students woke early Friday morning to visit monuments such as the Lincoln and Vietnam Memorials. “I first went to D.C. when I was younger,” Emily Long ‘16 said, “but coming back a second time really helped me understand the true meaning of the memorials. It really changes your

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Photo: courtesy of Symphony

Before the performance, the Symphony Orchestra and Band rehearse in the Kennedy Center. Violinist Marissa Boursaw ‘15 enjoyed the grandiose atmosphere. “It was really cool because the audience was a lot bigger,” Boursaw said. “I’ve never performed for that big of an audience. Representing our school and our music in front of all those people was great.”

Central hosts Robotic contest

NMC WorldQuest

Last Friday and Saturday Traverse City Central hosted a district FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) robotics competition. Every year a challenge is released to teams; this year’s objective is to shoot an exercise ball through either a nine-foot-tall or ground-level goal in order to score points. Teams can also pass the balls between members of their alliance in order to score a burst of points. “We feel we can make it to the finals this year,” Jon Shank ‘14 said. “And, if we make it to the finals, we have a good chance of making it to states.” Central’s team, the Raptors, has spent the last two months designing and building a robot. Occasionally staying as late as 1 am after school. “My favorite part of being on the team is knowing that this is really going to benefit my future,” Alex Anderson ‘15 said. “I want to be a mechanical engineer and I know that all this is going to help prepare me.”

NMC’s International Affairs Forum recently held Traverse City’s first Academic WorldQuest competition, which consisted of four-person teams that answered 10 questions about world affairs. Seven schools from the region competed in the event, and the winning team, West’s Wild & Wacky Western Warriors, will be flown to Washington D.C. to compete at a national competition in April. Central’s teams have yet to receive their rankings. “We could have done better,” competitor Nora Johnson ‘17 said. “But we definitely did better than we thought we were going to do.” The 10 topics are agreed upon by World Affairs Councils from across the country, and a study guide is released beforehand. “For two or three months we prepared for the competition,” Dante Vozza ‘17 said. “Each

Photo: S. Hardin

Photo: M. Caldwell

practice was us in Mr. Failor’s room reading over each article and developing questions so we could quiz ourselves on the subjects.” The teams, “Work,” “Ubermen” and “Homosapiens” were the first teams to represent Central in the event. “I will definitely compete in it next year,” Vozza said.


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