Standard Issue 5 2011-2012

Page 1

Culture

FEATURES Jobs: Students embracing the entrepreneurial spirit discuss their lives in the real world. Pages 14-15

Yayoi Kusuma: A creative interpretation of the artist’s work in students’ daily lives. Page 19

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THE STANDARD

The American School in London | 1 Waverley Place | London NW8 0NP UK

March 2012 | Volume XXXVII, Issue V

Admin abolishes third free period Thomas risinger

assistant news editor From the start of the next academic year, seniors will no longer be able to take three free periods. This year’s juniors will need to find an elective class instead. “The reason for raising the senior minimum [of classes] is to reflect what the vast majority of seniors already do,” Assistant Principal Annie Leonard said. “There are only a handful of seniors who, this year and last year, actually took three free periods.” Leonard explained that seniors can still request a third free period if necessary. Such requests will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. This change has caused some confusion as to the necessity of a sixth credit. “If you have all of your credits filled, then I don’t see why it is necessary to not allow a student to take a third free period,” Charlotte Cowles (’13) said. Removing a third free period was discussed with students who have taken three free periods in the past. “There was not very much discussion with students regarding this decision, since about only 10 percent of students take a third free period. We did, however, discuss the idea with students who had taken three free periods,” Leonard said. There are other changes to the graduation requirements for next year. These changes include a second semester of Physical Education for freshmen at some point in their High School careers. This can be substituted with either the Sports Leadership or Personal Fitness classes. In another change, Digital Photography and Digital Music Creation will be counted as both an art and technology credit. “This will not affect many students because they fulfill their art requirements through the performing arts,” Leonard said.

“You want to think of these things like different kinds of cancers... Removing a fully metastasized cancer is very hard because every organ is exposed.”

K

areem Asfari’s (’13) then 23-year-old brother Hani spent a month in Syria in March 2011, before President Bashar al-Assad’s crackdown on the civil uprising and martial law was imposed. There, he witnessed an unforgettable scene of oppression. Running errands in a general store, he caught sight of a man offering bribes of $10 to join the rebels. When an unsuspecting passerby consented and brought his brothers back to negotiate, the briber went to fetch not money, but rather state secret police forces who subsequently abducted them.

“It’s akin to Stalinist Russia,” Kareem said. While civil unrest mounts across Syria and Assad intensifies his “iron first” response, several High School students with close personal and political ties to the country have decided to shed light on the crisis ravaging their families’ native land. Though their experiences are numerous and varied, they have all rallied behind a common cause: that Bashar al-Assad’s time is up, and that the layers of corruption and oppression that have plagued the Middle Eastern nation must go down with him.

SYRIA continued on pages 12-13 (Please recycle after reading)


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