Rooney Come Back!

Wayne Rooney has a tendency to get upset sometimes. For those who don’t know, Rooney is an English footballer who plays for Manchester United. He is known for his knack of scoring goals and his fiery attitude.

Wayne Rooney

But at this moment in time, he is scaring me. Rooney has played for the greatest team in the world, Manchester United, for a number of years now. He has been loved by the fans and by his teammates. But it seems as though he has decided that his home is no longer the place for him due to a recent row with his manager, Sir Alex Ferguson.

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Guy Fawkes Night

Yes, it’s to early to be talking about the English celebration of Guy Fawkes Night, but surprisingly the celebrations have already begun.

Remember, remember the fifth of November, gunpowder, treason and plot”

The event is held primarily to celebrate the failure of the gunpowder plot.  The gunpowder plot took place in 17th century London. It consisted of a group of catholic conspirators planning to combust the House of Parliament, bringing down the English government and killing King James I.

The aim of the conspirators was not just to ruin the government but also to restore the country to Catholicism. Unluckily for them they were caught in the act and executed. The leader was said to be Guy Fawkes hence Guy Fawkes Night.

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The Mole People

Whenever I get on the subway in New York, I immediately and nervously position myself in front of a window with a hope of observing Mole People.

These people are quite different from other homeless ones: they live in abandoned subway stations under major cities. Surprisingly, this population includes a mixture of lawyers, doctors, and other people of highly respected professions.

But just why would such affluent people join this society? This question lingered in my head for years. My current best answer relates to the madness of the big cities.

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Mutants

The other day I was having a conversation with a friend or two while walking down the big hill to sports and it was pointed out how odd I am. As a ginger, I have blue eyes, and apparently that makes me rare.

As a child I’d always look as my parents as the people that created me, thus only having their traits. My dad had strawberry blonde hair and my mom had very dark, vibrant red hair, but I have an orangish tint in between. My mom had green eyes and my dad had grey eyes, but I have blue eyes. My my dad was 6’ft and my mom was 5’10, but I am 5’6. It never occured to me how odd my combination of traits were.

That makes me prefectly average when it comes to most everything but very strange when it comes to my eyes, hair, and skin. Here’s a statstic for it. 78.3% of red heads have green eyes. Hurray for be a mutant!

A.P.E.S. Goes Ape

Last week the AP Environmental Science class took a 5 hour journey across to the Owens Valley. The trip was specifically meant to teach us about water and its own journey from the Owens Valley River into L.A.’s water system. We saw the river, we saw Mono Lake, we saw the aquaducts, but one thing that caught my eye out of all the things we learned was the relocation camp known to us as Manzanar.

In the early 40’s America was faced with yet another war which led to a nationwide paranoia. So, as a result we decided to avoid “danger” and contain all Japanese people – citizens and non-citizens of the U.S. – in one area (in several different states). It was a relocation camp. President Franklin D. Roosevelt argued that this “cleansing” was justified because the government  would go about establishing the evacuation using “the American way”. We all know that that was just a euphemism for “we won’t kill them”….(unless of course they don’t follow our rules). Three cheers for the American way!

In the end, a trip that started out as an informative, water discovery, week-long, field trip turned into a heart breaking, mind changing, discovery of ourselves and our history.  Thank you Mr. Wickenhaeuser and thank you Ms. Davis for that amazing – and amusing – camping trip.

A tourist in my own country.

Today I have decided to become a tourist.

After the realization that I do not know my home country as well as I should, I have decided to get to know it better.  Becoming a tourist in my own country.

No this does not mean I am going to invest in a fanny back and Polaroid camera. It just means I am going to do those things that I have previously taken for granted, exploring the attractions that Britain takes pride in.

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Faith

A new study suggests that Atheists, or somebody who does not believe in the existence of God, know much more about religion than people who are religious. The study says that this happens because atheists usually like to know more about religion, and why they do not believe.

But the greater reason is because once somebody starts to believe in religion, then they stop questioning their faith. This is a very dangerous concept because one cannot blindly follow a religion that they know nothing about.

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Beverley Knowles

During the past week, many OVS students received a friend request from Beverley Knowels on Facebook. Some of the students added her as a friend, but some of them have questioned who she is, and they rejected her request.

Beverley Knowels stated that she is an alumni of OVS. However, some students have realized that there is no such a person in OVS history. In the boys dorm, we even had a dorm meeting about this issue. The faculty and student leaders  told students not to add her as a friend.

Some people think that the definition of “friends”  has changed a little bit since Facebook has become popular. People accept people they don’t really know. They accept their friend requests just because they both have mutual friends or they just want to have more friends on Facebook.

It is very dangerous to add someone who we don’t know on Facebook, because other people will know all our information. This is now a very serious problem for everyone who uses Facebook.

Volleyball hosts “Dig for the Cure”

In honor of National Breast Cancer Awareness Week, On October 16th, the Umass Volleyball team will be hosting an event entitled “Dig for the Cure.”

During its game against Southern Connecticut State, players will be selling T-shirts, and pledges, and admission tickets. Each pledge per “dig” during the game, along with all of the proceeds from the sales of their merchandise will be going directly and entirely put toward the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

I believe that this cause is very important and influential, and we should all reach out in this effort. It would be cool if our OVS athletic teams could try to participate in our own spin off of this idea, in correspondence to whatever project we decide to donate to at the time.

Sibling Rivalries?

Many siblings will say that they absolute despise each other. They will fight and physically harm one another, screaming at the top of their lungs: “I WISH I WAS AN ONLY CHILD!”

When I was younger, I “hated” my big brother, Ben, because I thought that was how siblings were supposed to act. I would bite him until he bled, and then burst into tears when my father scolded me for it. I was six at the time. Ben was nine.

We would fight each other, yelling and scratching, but neither of us actually knew why.

When I reached the age of eight, I realized that I didn’t actually hate my brother. In fact, I loved him.

We reached an understanding that we were capable of being friends, but Ben, being the “cool” older brother, would not even say hi to me when we were at school together. I would yell his name and wave my arms frantically when I saw him walking with some of his friends, trying to get his attention, but he would just look straight forward and ignore me.

Once, when I was twelve and he was fifteen, my mom, Ben, and I were standing outside a sushi bar, waiting for our turn to be seated. I was skipping and twirling when suddenly I fell down, scraping my knee and bringing tears to my eyes. I seemed fine at first until I suddenly burst out sobbing (I was always an overdramatic child). My brother, without hesitation, pulled me into his arms and hugged me until I stopped crying.

It was the first time he had hugged in public.

Now, I am proud to say that my brother is not only one of my closest friends, but he is also my hero. I don’t know what I would do without him, and a year ago, I almost found out.

My brother used to race. Not on foot, but in cars. Specifically, he raced a 1996 Mazda MX-5 Miata M Edition in Buttonwillow, CA. He did not race other people, but he raced a clock. Various other people would race against the clock, too, and the person with the fastest time would win.

It was his warm up lap of the third racing event that year when it happened. He was trying to go as fast as possible, to push his limits even while the clock wasn’t running.

It had just rained.

Going around a sharp turn, the car started skidding off the track. His car rolled over not once, not twice, but three times. When his car finally stopped rolling, it was stuck in a ditch that was filled with water. If the car had not landed on its four wheels, and instead landed on the roof of the car, my brother would have drowned.

Ben escaped the nearly-fatal accident with only minor back problems, but needless to say, my mother doesn’t let him race anymore.

I am so thankful that his car landed upright, if it hadn’t, I would have lost the most important person in my life. If that car had landed upside down, I would no longer have my best friend, my hero, my brother.

I remember when I first saw him after the crash. I gave him the biggest hug I had ever given him and gently warned him: “Ben, I love you, but never scare me like that again.”

Rolling:

Lifted off the ground, upside down:

The Aftermath:


A few months later,
still breathing,

and five minutes after graduating from Santa Monica High School: