The Lion's Tale - Volume 49, Issue 4

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April Sullivan performs in Footloose as a triple threat. She dances, acts, and sings. Find out more.

First chalkboards, then white boards and now InterWrite. With the progressing technology teachers must learn new techniques.

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LION’S TALE J a n u a r y 16 , 2 0 0 9

Volume 49

Extracurricular clubs step in to ease financial pain Jordan Hugh Sam

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opinion editor

ith the financial market plummeting, students unable to find jobs, and parents losing jobs, it comes at no surprise that students face troubles making ends meet. Even at school, participating in extracurricular programs proves to be a financial burden for many families. Sophomore Amy Welch’s father lost his job in June. “We had no money to do anything at all. We weren’t able to go anywhere. We just had to stay home because we couldn’t afford the gas because it was so high. We couldn’t go out at all. We are in a lot of debt but it’s getting better now that my dad has a new job but we are still in debt,” said Welch. Amy Welch and her twin sister Anna Welch both are members of the school band. “We were getting by on my dad had unemployment and my moms disability and that was barely enough to make ends meet,” said Welch. To help pay for her and her sister’s band fees they worked in the concession stand. Welch said, “We worked in the concession stand a lot and my mom is second chair for the concession stand. Dennis Line You have to sign up and you have to work. You can either be cashier or you can run around getting drinks or food ready. Depending on the event it is like three or four hours.” The money was then added to their student accounts to help cover their fees. “We have more students with financial difficulties than normal this year. One on one we will call the family and discuss with them and pretty much they tell us their situation. Many have lost jobs, many have come from a split family, and many are single mom or single dad households. We will explain our scholarship program and if it gets to the point where the family can’t help and there’s no way they can pay it, we go to administration and figure out what we can do to help them out. The goal is for every child to have an opportunity to participate in band,” said band director Dennis Line. Still the costs to be in programs often prove to be too see ECONOMY, page 2

Issue 4

601 K ing Street

To write

Oviedo, Florida

The vision is that we can reduce the suicide rate in America and around the world. The vision is that we would learn what it means to love our friends, and that we would love ourselves enough to get the help we need. The vision Beyond treatment, we believe that community is essential, that people need other people, that we were never meant to do life alone. The vision is that community and hope and help would replace secrets and silence. The vision POR istoSHUotPpeople putting down guns and blades g TI includin the M Topic on NG TH le artists Almost ip lt u M EC hurs /The SIC. the m ovement Tbottles. A deroath . 11can and The vision is t the BY MU ) from Unwe Ethat ovem neck day Jan. USE. R U an a J C e v n o l o G b aces 1 S ent. a ld N 5 e I e d h n e P t r w L r ior A ,b ith f HE (pictu conce rms. yx R Gillespie vy and Light, a e Love on her A ts, sh riends to lsuicide Aaronin it reduceracelethe rate America and a r e W H chec eimer go irts a t of To ed a e nd ja k out perform lues in support Love s ckets fB is to su House o ppor around the world. The vision is that we t would Tiffany Ray learn what it means to love our features editor age,” said sophomore Janise Seijos. friends, and that we would love ourselves unior Juliana Matthews* traces the zigzagged scars The mission statement, given on www.twloha.com, across her wrists in between classes. Her best friend, states that the movement exists to encourage, inform, enough to get the help we need. The saddened by Matthews’ depression, pulls out a and inspire. red marker and writes “LOVE” on Matthews’s wrist, “I have friends who deal with depression and cutting. vision better endings. vision reminding her of is a movement devoted to rehabilitation For those people, it’s a The symbol of hope. It hits really and hope. close to home, and I can relate to it. I think everybody is Tothe restoration broken Write Love On Her Arms (TWLOHA) began as a of goes through hard times and almostfamilies everyone has spots small group of friends selling t-shirts in Central Florida of being so down that they might think of suicide or and to pay forbroken their friend’s treatment.relationships. According to www. cutting,” said senior AlyxThe Reimer. “But,vision everyone can twloha.com, the organization’s website, the efforts of the see [from TWLOHA] that people have stuck through it isgrouppeople life, finding have grown into a nonfinding profit organization dedicated and things have gotten better.” freedom, to helping and giving hope to those who deal with TWLOHA has helped sophomore Lauren Joseph cope depression, self-injury, suicide, and addiction. through rough finding love. The vision istimes.graduation, a “TWLOHA gives people a lot of hope to get them *name withheld through tough Bowl, times and depression. helps a lot with our Super a Itwedding, a child, a sunrise. see LOVE, page 14 The vision is people becoming incredible

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Dip users stain campus sidewalks, break rules Kevin Baird

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staff reporter

igns of dip use are subtle. But students who recognize the telltale splats admit it is used on campus. “They stick it on the walls when they’re done with it. It’s disgusting. I almost pushed [freshman] Miranda [Betterley] into it once,” freshman Amanda Ferguson said. Even though school rules prohibit dip along with cigarettes, some students chose to ignor the rules. “It’s gross, disgusting. Some guys have Skool rings imprinted on their jeans pocket and they’re just in high school,” sophomore Lindsay Knox said. “They have coke bottles that they spit it into.

I’ve seen people spit it around the schoolon sidewalks, into the grass.” Other students question why anyone would chew tobacco at all. Sophomore Zack D’Esposito said, “Franky, it doesn’t seem very appealing to me. With all the processing [dip] goes through, it doesn’t come across as being any healthier than the typical cigarette. Either one will kill you. What differs is how they’ll do it.” Placed between the cheek and the gums, dip requires its users to chew packets of tobacco for hours and rewards them with a continuous high. This act often causes the individual to produce excess saliva, which is typically spat onto the ground or into some other container because swallowing can lead

to irritation of the esophagus, nausea, and vomiting. In 1986 the U.S. Surgeon General declared that use of the product, as with all forms of smokeless tobacco, was “not a safe substitute for smoking cigarettes.” In addition, it was found to “cause cancer and a number of noncancerous conditions and lead to nicotine addiction and dependance.” Although abuse of the substance has been linked to an increased risk of developing cheek and gum cancer, The Ontario Tobacco Research Unit has also discerned that the stimulating effects of nicotine in dip can also lead to cardiovascular disease. see DIP, page 3

photo/STACEY STERLING

DIPPIN’ TO CANCER. Dip is highly addictive and

contains large amounts of nicotine, even more than cigarettes. Dip is responsible for cancers in the mouth, lips, tongue, throat, nose, and larynx.


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