Tri-Color Times 2013-12

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Granger high school

Tri-Color Times

An open forum for student opinion and expression

TRICOLORTIMES.COM

December 2013 LVI-4

Winter has arrived and with it comes Christmas By Melany Rivera WINTER break is the main thing Granger students are thinking about right now, that and being around family on Christmas day. Christmas is one of the most favored holidays of the whole year. There are many ways Granger students like to celebrate this special day like having a huge party or going on a vacation to a warmer climate, and some just like staying home and spending time with family. “My family gets together on the twenty-fourth of December. We wait until the clock strikes midnight, and than we start celebrating Christmas,” Jenny Vega (10) said. Not everyone has Christmas as one of their favorite holidays; some simply just don’t enjoy it. Some prefer to watch a movie or

have a simple dinner with their family and then enjoy some alone time. “I usually like being alone, but I will go and eat whatever my family makes for us,” Brenda Valenzuela (9) said. Besides just celebrating Christmas, some students actually have some Christmas traditions in their families that they eagerly wait for every year. “Every Christmas Eve, my dad takes me and my sisters out to watch a movie or just out anywhere,” Marina Ricks (9) said. Other students like to stay true to the more common Christmas traditions like staying up late with their younger siblings to wait for Santa Claus or waking up early on Christmas day and opening presents or sharing a kiss under the mistletoe with that special

Marina Ricks hopes to go to Florida this holiday break.

person or maybe just sitting by the fireplace while eating cookies and drinking milk. “I love putting the Christmas tree up with my family; it’s my favorite part of Christmas, because I get to spend time with them,” Alejandra Vazque (9) said. Many students have a favorite part about Christmas. There are a lot of things to love about Christmas time like when everyone hands each other presents and when the family gets together and others are extremely happy for when it’s time to dig into all the food. “My favorite thing about Christmas would have to be the food because it’s so good. My favorite food is the enchiladas my family makes,” Jennifer Sepulveda (9) said. Utah has a very cold climate

during winter and some students hate the cold and decide they’d rather have some time in the sun than be covered up in five layers of clothing. They pack up and take a family trip to a warmer place to enjoy a Christmas that includes sunscreen and bathing suits. “I usually stay here, but when my family wants to get away from the cold, we take a trip to California once in a while,” Lizeth Ramirez (9) said. From staying here and enjoying the cold weather to going on a sunny trip, from staying true to Christmas traditions or creating new ones, Granger students are counting down the days to Christmas break. They’re ready to spend time with their families and eat all that amazing Christmas food.

Christmas images by Rebecca Bramall

Lizeth Ramirez will be laughing all the way to the beach this break.

Good books don’t always make good movies By Gage Winters HOLLYWOOD has been basing a good amount of recent movies upon books that were, until recently, just books. The books that have been made into movies range widely from genre to author, from perspective to length, but they all share the fact that the movie industry has made an effort to adapt what is on the printed page to what is on the silver screen. Movies and books are obviously different mediums of entertainment, but people still believe that if a book is made into a movie that it should hold true to the original. Although they don’t always get it right, many people agree that the second film in the Hunger Games series, Catching Fire, is

worth watching even if it’s a favorite. “I think they did a great job with the movie of the Hunger Games,” library secretary Ms. Judy said. “They got a lot of the main points in the book, but Katniss’s interactions with Gale and Peeta seem like they mean more and feel more emotional in the book,” Ms. Judy said. Catching Fire had a $300 Million dollar opening weekend. The third book, Mockingjay, will be split into a two-part conclusion. “Mockingjay doesn’t really need to be broken into two parts, it is about the same size as the rest of the series, but they could be trying to elaborate on the ending,” Ms. Judy said. Many Lancers conclude that

when the author is involved in the making of the motion picture depicting the book, the movie is represented and nurtured better than without that advice. “I think that when authors are involved in the movie, it makes a world of difference. Suzanne Collins was a producer for the Hunger Games, and I think it made it more accurate,” Ms. Judy said. One of the positives of movies is that they give easy exposure to some literary works that otherwise would seem too intimidating, because they require such an investment of time. “I saw the Lord of the Rings movies first, then I finally read the books, because I figured that they were worth reading and giving a shot,” Preston Neilson (9)

said. The books can mean more to people, because books have more time to introduce characters, and utilize readers’ imagination, which creates an intimate connection with the book and story. “I got more out of the book than the movies, because the books had more time to build characters, although the movies did give them more of a humanity and personality than the book did,” Neilson said. Whether it’s reading and analyzing the pages of a book, or watching the depictions on screen, there’s a lot to take from books, and there’s ideas that can’t fit into movies. And with books, the amount of effort put in makes the book more rewarding.

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