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SLAMedia is a publication of the news for the Science Leadership Academy community. Writers come from the student body in 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. We work in unison to create a functioning paper with biweekly postings on a variety of events.

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lpahomov

Laptop Life and Times

May 13, 2013 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Jesús Jiménez

Staff Writer

High school is the ultimate obstacle for teenagers. When students enter through these doors, it is expected they will receive their fair share of drama, friendship and an immense amount of work that will haunt them throughout the next four years.

Fun Fact: This picture was taken two years ago.
Fun Fact: This picture was taken two years ago.

The latter applies directly to the community of SLA. Behind the amount of conversations you have over the internet and all the projects that were definitely not completed at the last minute, there is someone, or rather something that you owe it all to: your laptop.

We, teenagers, ages thirteen through eighteen, are as reckless as they come and it is not expected that we will suddenly be responsible, capable adults when an electronic device is trusted to them for the remainder of our time here.

Quite of few things can happen: You might tip a soda bottle in the direction of your keyboard, crack a screen after slamming your top-case a little too hard or even drop it on your very first day. While most of these incidents are preventable, the consequences of mistreated laptop are apparent by senior year.

Our laptops look and feel alienated from the rest of the school. To put this into perspective, recall the Pixar’s WALL-E. If you were to compare the aged trash compactor WALL-E to the much more sleek and fast, then you could get a glimpse of how bad they have it.

Senior Breeanna Noi had a good run with her Macbook. It was two months to prior May that the issues started to arise. She accidently spilled lemonade on her laptop during the busiest season of the quarter. “All the times I was forced to work on benchmarks and projects made me want to stay away from my computer,” said Noi.

Nearing the end of her high school career, she only had one comment to make about her computer. “I hate technology.”

Unlike Noi, Senior Alex Johnson had a different approach on laptops in general. “I don’t like Macs,” he admitted. “They have a very short life span. Plus, they’re outdated and have underpowered hardware, too.”

Johnson doesn’t bother bringing his Macbook to school anymore. He leaves it at home and does all his assignments on his own PC.

Very soon, seniors at Science Leadership Academy won’t have to worry about any heart wrenching trips to the Tech Lab, any benchmarks gone terribly wrong or the infamous spinning beach balls of doom.

The final Laptop Turn-In is right around the corner. Regardless of when students are graduating, we can all reminiscence on the first day we got our laptops, excited that we were to be apart of SLA’s culture and community.

Filed Under: Features, Uncategorized Tagged With: 2013, Class of '13, laptops, seniors

“No Ifs, No Buts, No Education Cuts”

May 10, 2013 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Jacob Lotkowski & Isabela Supovitz-Aznar

Staff Writers

On Thursday May 9th, approximately 120 SLA students left the building to participate in a city wide protest against the proposed district budget cuts.

No more cuts

The idea started with a Facebook event and was  also spread by word of mouth following the student protest that took place the previous Tuesday.

The time leading up to 12:30 was hectic. SLA’s main office was buzzing before the unofficial start of the protest. Students ran in and out of classrooms calling their parents, and trying to get permission to leave and support the walkout.

Several students made signs to bring to the protest.

Starting at 12:30, SLA students who had received permission from their families checked out of the building and began their march down Market Street.

They marched in a pack, signs in the air, chanting “Save our schools!” and “Students united, we’ll never be defeated!”

When they arrived at City Hall, the joined with students from Central, Palumbo, Franklin Learning Center, CAPA,  and many more schools from around Philadelphia.

Many were interviewed by the news, and above city hall two helicopters filmed the event.

At around 1:30 PM , the students began their march down Broad Street, led by police who, along with members of the Philadelphia Student Unions, served as escorts to 440 N. Broad St.

The torrent of marching students took up an entire lane of traffic. The cars in the opposing lane were honking in support. With every honk the students cried out and cheered.

Students continued to protest into the evening hours, waning in numbers as the hours went by.

 

No more cuts

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

Being White in Philly; A Black Girl’s Response

May 10, 2013 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

DSC_1688DeShawn McLeod

Staff Writer

“My younger son goes to Temple, where he’s a sophomore. This year he’s living in an apartment with two friends at 19th and Diamond, just a few blocks from campus. It’s a dangerous neighborhood. Whenever I go see Nick, I get antsy and wonder what I was thinking, allowing him to rent there.”

These are the opening lines to Philadelphia’s Magazine March Issue’s cover story, Being White in Philly, written by Robert Huber.

Cover; Being White in Philly; Philly MagWhen I first read this article, I didn’t know what to feel about Huber’s angle on blacks in Philadelphia. As an African-American young woman living in Philadelphia, I felt that I should have a strong reaction, but I couldn’t form one.

I began to look up different perspectives on the article. I had first listened to NPR’s Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane, and she was interviewing Robert Huber and Tom Mcgrath, the editor of Philadelphia Magazine, Philly Mag.

“I wanted to take a look at how white people relate to black people in the inner city.” Huber said. Regarding Huber’s article, Mayor Michael Nutter responded by ripping this article to shreds stating, “This month Philadelphia Magazine has sunk to a new low even for a publication that has long pretended that its suburban reader were the only citizens engaged and socially active in the Philadelphia area…”

This month Philadelphia Magazine has sunk to a new low… I don’t know about other readers, but that made me sit up in my chair a little bit.

He continued, “Being White in Philly aggregates the disparaging beliefs, the negative stereotypes, the ignorant condemnations typically, and historically ascribed to African-American citizens into one pathetic, uniformed essay quoting Philadelphia residents, many of those whose names either the author or the speakers themselves were too cowardly to provide.”

I was utterly blown away by Mayor Nutter’s willingness to call out Philly Mag. I started to think I was underreacting to this article being an African American female. It was strange because I didn’t feel obligated to feel something. I didn’t think this article applied to me.

I talked to a few others who read the article and I tried to flesh out how I felt about the article. And the same consensus came about every time, “DeShawn, I see you don’t feel anything toward this.”

In the media, this story has had a plethora of negative reactions. When I heard about the article before reading it, I thought it was an article freely talking about racism and making racist comments about black people.

So why didn’t I get so angry about this article?

I don’t feel like my skin color defines who I am.

It doesn’t make me angry when somebody starts to stereotype blacks – because I feel that it doesn’t apply to me. If you’re not anything like what’s portrayed – and I’m not – then why would I let it get to me?

Why let it get to you?

That may be a selfish point of view, but I don’t want to put so much energy into hating Philly.com or Philly Mag because they put the energy into writing it.

Filed Under: Op/Ed, Uncategorized

A Bittersweet Ending: Baseball Season Comes To A Close

May 10, 2013 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Ryan Harris 

Screen Shot 2013-05-10 at 11.24.57 AMStaff Writer

After a streak of getting second place in the playoffs, the SLA Rockets baseball team will not be making the playoffs this year.

The Rockets, a D-division team at the beginning of the season, had one of its most successful seasons with a record of 11-1. Their only loss going to University City High School.

Although the Rockets did not make it to the playoffs, due to budgets cuts and school closings, they will be moved up to C-division next season.

The winners of D-division, University City, is one of the schools slated to close as a result of district budget cuts.

“The only reason we’re going to get to move out, and go C, based on the way the system is structured is because University City will not actually be a school next year,” says Coach Douglas Herman.

Even though his baseball team was pushed up a division, Coach Herman expressed his feelings on how they got to C-division.

“Had University City been in operation next year, we would not make the playoffs and we would still be D because we had one loss. That’s ridiculous.”

Screen Shot 2012-04-13 at 11.37.51 AMCoach Herman also expressed the pride in his team for season.

“The Rockets scored more runs this season than any team in public league baseball,” he stated.

The Rockets won their last game of the season against Sankofa Academy Charter School with a forfeit due to weather complications.

Overall, though they are not going to the playoffs, the Rockets have moved up a division; a bittersweet ending to their season.

Filed Under: Sports, Uncategorized

Lehmann’s Plan: Pro Sports Teams should Support Athletics

May 10, 2013 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Jacob Lotkowski

Staff Writer
Change.org petition
The Philadelphia School District is rolling out 300 million dollars in cuts to schools for the 2013-

2014 school year. These proposed cuts would include a complete elimination of 7.1 million dollar (2011-2012) athletics program for every school in the district.

Principal Chris Lehmann wants to change that.

With his petition on Change.org, Lehmann trying to get the attention of Philadelphia’s highly profitable sports teams, the Phillies, Eagles, Flyers, 76ers and Union to tap into the vast expanses of revenue, about a combined total of 800 million dollars (2012), to fund the district’s sports leagues.

There appears to be no precedent for private sports teams funding public programs in such a large, systemic manner. However, donations coming from players on Philadelphia sports teams are not unheard of.

In June of 2012, The Cole Hamels foundation donated more than $400,000 to three schools for updates of their playgrounds and libraries. The foundation was hoping that these projects would help keep these schools off the chopping block–but in January of this year, they were slated for closure.

Although this donation wasn’t able to save any schools from closing, it is that same type of philanthropic spirit that this petition is trying to get out of our hometown sports teams.

The petition has been picked up by local news NBC 10, The Philly Post, The Notebook and Philadelphia Business Journal. The petition has gotten more than 2,300 supporters total, but public interest peaked last week and signatures have since plateaued.

The School District is currently looking over the proposal and Lehmann is awaiting their response.

Until then, the only thing that can move forward is the number of signatures on the petition and awareness of the looming 2013-2014 budget cuts.

 

Filed Under: Sports, Uncategorized

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