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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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Comic Con Coverage!

May 21, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Sean Morris

Staff Writer

 

About two weeks ago I had the pleasure of attending the annual Philadelphia Wizard World “Comic Con” convention. Filled with interesting panels and discussions, including with Doctor Who’s David Tennant, Gotham’s Ben Mckenzie, Marvel’s Hayley Atwell,  various comic specialists discussing the Jokers character for the past 75 years, a team discussing the pros and cons of the various star wars movies and what to anticipate for the new movies and much more. Along with a slew of merchandise and artist’s work to choose from, and it also had interactive experiences like a Jurassic Park Oculus rift, tattooing booth, hobbit ear applications and more! Below I attached photos of the various costumes and cool things found, including the winners of the costume contest and my own costume as NBC’s Doctor Hannibal Lecter. Hope you all enjoy and strongly encourage coming out next year!

 

 

 

IMG_7691_2 IMG_7715_2  IMG_7799_2 IMG_7796 IMG_7975IMG_7716 IMG_7718 IMG_7750 IMG_7751_2 IMG_7752_2 IMG_7755 IMG_7757 IMG_7767 IMG_7765 IMG_7782 IMG_7803 IMG_7818_2 IMG_7855_2 IMG_7860_2 IMG_7869 IMG_7871_2 IMG_7873_2 IMG_7874 IMG_7876 IMG_7879 IMG_7881 IMG_7889_2 IMG_7906 IMG_7914 IMG_7834 IMG_7831_2 IMG_7806IMG_7809_2IMG_7812IMG_7820_2  11234974_875662579173539_5347576421812710965_n 11168000_875663772506753_1759708384375260378_n 11206032_875662769173520_374450398810648449_n 11165278_875664982506632_4014515105711962167_n 11255834_875665745839889_8458144033479049274_n11008472_875661342506996_5793532400273994697_n 11203183_875661312506999_9190657101309022345_n 10985911_875661262507004_3659319815065591069_n 11062929_875661255840338_3099721376921002593_n 11168561_875661259173671_7511775120437236864_n 11203722_875661305840333_5978925135311926930_n 11159505_875661309173666_6248373741435076433_n

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Photos, Uncategorized

How Concussions and Injuries Have Transformed Football

May 18, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

big-football-hit-130223

Benjamin Simon

Staff Writer

On March 16, 2015, the San Francisco 49ers’ promising linebacker, Chris Borland, called it a career. He was twenty-four years old.  Despite the fame and million dollar contracts of professional football, he decided it was time to hang up his jersey. Millions of people would die to be in Borland’s position, but he did not care.

Borland was worried about his brain.

When Borland was born, football players didn’t worry about their bodies. They just accepted that when they were done with the game that they would walk with a limp or feel pain in their knees. Wasn’t it worth it for the chance to play?  But these days players and parents are reassessing the risks of the game.

“I think the game itself, if you’re talking about organized football, has gotten safer. The game hasn’t changed, it’s the perception of the game that has changed,” says thirty-two year old History Teacher Jason Todd, an avid fan of the game.

“As a football fan, growing up, the idea of knocking a player out of the game was the goal of the game… When you saw a big hit, everybody got excited.”

“I don’t think too many people knew about concussions in the nineties. I remember when I was a kid, and in my early adulthood, ESPN would highlight big hits, like the Jacked Up segments, that you almost never see happen anymore,” recalled English Teacher Matthew Kay, who also coached football for few years at West Chester University.

“I remember everything that was being broadcasts was about big hits. I remember in video games, it was about big hits and you could replay them. And now, you see next to none of that.”

An awareness that big hits caused and that repeated concussions were detrimental to the brain came to light when former All-Pro Steelers offensive lineman, Mike Webster, died at age 50 in 2002. At the time, he had been broke and homeless, out of touch with his former teammates and friends. The first reports said he died of a heart attack.

Dr. Bennet Omalu is a forensic pathologist in Pittsburgh.  As part of his job, he regularly conducts autopsies. One morning, Omalu found Webster laying on his table in the hospital. Dr. Omalu wasn’t a football fan and he didn’t know anything about Webster and his Super Bowl rings.  But he had a job do.  He must figure out why the Steelers legend had passed away. Dr. Omalu had no clue that his findings would change football.

Dr. Omalu concluded that Webster died due to Chronic Traumatic Encepathology (CTE), an idea that Omalu discovered as a result of his work with the 6’1 center. CTE happens when the brain has suffered from a significant loss of tissue along with the alarming accumulation of a protein called tau. Tau tangles the protein transportation system in the brain, causing loss of nutrients in those cells. And when the cells can’t get nutrients they die. That’s what killed Webster, Dr. Omalu found, not a heart attack.

“Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) is a progressive, degenerative disease of the brain in people who have have repetitive head injuries over time,” explains Dr. Mark Zonfrillo, an injury epidemiologist, among other jobs at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He often works with concussions. “The brain degeneration can lead to many types of symptoms with memory and behavior. While CTE is a serious sequelae of repetitive brain injury, it is still relatively rare.”

One place it can happen, says Dr. Zonfrillo, is in sports, as a result of repeated concussions.

“The far more common problems with concussions and other mild traumatic brain injuries in children and youth result from short term disability (from weeks to months) in patients who have undiagnosed or inadequately treated concussions. This should be the focus of our public health, research, and advocacy efforts for concussion in children and youth.”

But before Omalu’s autopsy report on Webster, the public didn’t know very much about the link between football and long-term damage to the brain. They knew football was dangerous. They just had to turn on the television to see huge athletes ramming heads into each other.  Many who might have wondered if this was ba1335992213_juniorseaud, did not know for sure.

Public awareness rose again with the death of Junior Seau. GQ magazine once described Seau as “the Derek Jeter of San Diego.” He was a wildly popular figure, both locally and nationally, who never stopped fighting and more importantly, never stopped hitting. He was the definition of a grid-iron warrior. During the AFC championship game, he even played with a painful pinched nerve.

After Seau’s pro career ended, his life went downhill. He began to drink in excess and suffered from insomnia. On May 2, 2012, he decided he couldn’t take it anymore and ended of his own life. Seau was just 43 years old, and two years out of the NFL. Most people had no idea that Seau was in this kind of pain or why.

“Seau, unfortunately, was probably six or seven guys that I knew, once I read the story,” says fifty-year old Joseph Lorenc, a former nose tackle at Penn.

And this brings us back to today. Where is the football today? How have parents reacted to the new information and the stories of the painful lives of Webster and Seau, among others?

“Certainly, the NFL and other organizations have recently realized that both the incidence of and sequelae from concussions had occurred with more frequency than previously thought,” says Dr. Zonfrillo, “There have been a growing number of collaborative efforts, fundraising, research, and advocacy that have focused on prevention of and improved management for concussion.”

“My parents wouldn’t allow me [to play football], they thought I would get injured and they thought it wasn’t safe,” explained SLA Sophomore Aaron Watson-Sharer, a 16 year old sophomore at Science Leadership Academy and avid football fan, “[But] I honestly believe if people take the right safety precautions, they can be safe when they play football. Like making sure your mouth guard is on…knowing how to hit somebody without knocking them off with a concussion”

“As a [basketball] coach now, I have to pass a concussion awareness test every season. Every coach in the Philadelphia public league has to do a concussion awareness test whether or not their sport is a contact sport. Everyone has to do it…And I’m pretty sure that is only three years old,” said Kay, who now coaches basketball in the city.

In a 2013 poll conducted by HBO’s Real Sports, eighty-six percent of people said that they had heard of a connection between football and concussions. Even President Obama joined the conversation. In an interview with the New Yorker, he said that he would not let his sons, if he had sons, play football.  Football fans were outraged, sure that the President’s remarks with add more people to the “anti-football” community.

Now, when young kids want to play football, they will, more times than before, be told they cannot play.  All the parents have to do is type, “Football injuries,” into a search engine and they find thousands of articles detailing the risk of playing this game.

So the question arises, where will football be in 20 years?  How can it survive if no one will let their kids play?

“There will likely be delays in tackle football (possibly not allowed until high school), and there may be other rules that change in the collegiate and professional level,” believes Dr. Zonfrillo, “Most importantly, we will have better techniques for sideline diagnosis of concussion, and may even be able to identify the risk of or exposure to injury with engineering solutions such as helmet sensors.”

However, Dr. Bryant Simon, a 53 year old professor of History at Temple University, who grew up playing pee-wee and midget league football had a different perspective. “I don’t think it will be extinct, but I suspect one of two things is going to happen. Either the equipment will change dramatically- big puffy helmets. Or it will move in the direction some think that the NFL is already moving toward, flag football. Contact is essentially outlawed. Or maybe the game will be played on a wider field with much more passing and less hitting.”

“There was a fellow Steve Tasker who played when I was young…He had concussions and he ended up wearing an oversized helmet,” recall Lorenc, “There has to be something the NFL can do with helmets. Maybe it would be less violent and would hurt their business, but it would help the players safety.”

First photo courtesy of www.appleinsider.com

Second photo courtesy of www.examiner.com

 

Filed Under: Sports, Uncategorized

60s TV Today: Mad Men

May 13, 2015 by lpahomov 1 Comment

Ella Donesky
Staff Writer

If you have a TV, you may have heard of the AMC television show Mad Men. If you have Netflix, while scrolling for TV shows you may have seen the iconic image of a silhouetted man, seated, set against a colorful 60s-esque backdrop (designed by Milton Glaser, something of an icon himself). Or maybe you just know it as the old-timey show your parents watch.

Most of the SLA students I interviewed had heard of the show, although that doesn’t mean they were all fans. Sophomore Mark Gucciardi-Kreigh said “All I know about it is that a lot of people smoke cigarettes, all the time, everywhere, and then people sell things, like ads, right? And then they wear fancy suits.”

Sophomore Harrison Freed said “I’ve heard that it catalogues the misogynistic workplace dealings of the early 60s.”

Throughout the past seven seasons, Mad Men has attracted a little over 2 million viewers, as well as positive attention from many critics who write for newspapers and magazines such as the New York Times, Vanity Fair, Vogue, Vox and Entertainment Weekly.

Until 8th grade, I wasn’t one of the 2 million viewers. My parents, who are not big TV watchers, learned of the show through friends who were hooked. So before streaming became available on Netflix, they borrowed seasons 1 through 3 on DVD from the local library and binge-watched the show.

Sophomores Zoe Andersson and Kai Burton, who both watch Mad Men, along with their parents, agree that the Mad Men is pretty engaging. I asked them why they watched the show,

“Don Draper.” Immediately said Andersson.

“The drama.” Offered Burton.

When I started the show, most of my friends were watching shows like “The Office” and “Parks and Recreation,” TV shows that were also set in offices. This confused me. I wondered, what was it about TV shows set in offices that were so attractive to teenagers, but furthermore, why was this show I had been watching not popular among my demographic? Why did I like the show?

Mad Men isn’t what you might call a ‘feel-good’ show. Yes, there are moments of victory for characters, but the show is accurate to the time, so often you’re watching sexist men objectifying women, and white office employees making bigoted comments towards African American secretaries. Regardless, it’s important for my generation, especially, to understand the challenges of the 60s, without romanticizing the fashion and music, and to accurately shape their opinion of the era.

With that said, the fashion on the show is one of the primary reasons I watch Mad Men. The show’s seven seasons cover take the viewer from the early ‘60s to ‘70s providing a window on the dramatically changing fashions during these years. With each passing season women’s skirts get shorter, men’s sideburns get longer, and everyone’s boots taller.

I asked Freed what appealed the most to him about Mad Men, “The whole concept sounds appealing, a period piece that lasts during a changing time in the American workplace, it’s appealing in itself.”

Burton, who started the series this past Saturday, said “The time period made me the most interested, the fact that it took place in the 60s, it’s different. And definitely the issues, especially misogyny.”

Andersson said, “The director is really accurate to the time period. He includes a lot of political and social issues that were going on in that era, too.”

Within the first 10 minutes of the first episode, women are clearly the subject of many sexist comments made. Here are a few examples (by both men and women):

“Let her know what kind of man you are, so she can know what kind of woman to be.” And by Joan, who stated without irony, “[The typewriter is] simple enough for a woman to use.”

However, prejudice on Mad Men isn’t limited to gender, but also Jews and homosexuals find themselves the frequent target of oddly casual bigotry. One of the founding partners of Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce–the ad agency at the center of the series–asks the creative director, “Have we hired any Jews?” The response was “No!” delivered with a laugh. One of the show’s main characters, Salvatore Romano, is a closeted homosexual.

The show also has its vices. One of the series’ main characters (and often antagonist), is alcohol. Though more prominent in the first season (every office has a booze cart), drinking and smoking becomes almost invisible throughout the rest of the series due its ubiquity.

My favorite character is the secretary Peggy Olson, who fights her way up to copywriter and, later, to copy chief. Her development is the most fascinating because, unlike many of the men in powerful positions, she is forced to over-prove her worth to be treated equally (that fact that even then she never really develops into one of the series’ richest storylines).

I’m often amazed at the innocence in the show. In the first episode, Peggy visits the doctor to obtain birth control pills. She lays down on the examination table and the doctor enters with a lit cigarette in one hand. First, I admire his progressiveness by providing her with birth control, considering the time. But he then he reminds her to exercise restraint, reminding her “easy women don’t find husbands.”

It’s fascinating to me, with the general knowledge we all currently possess, to be able to witness historical events, such as the murder of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 or the Moon Landing in 1969 and to be able to observe the development of social and political issues that I know about but never experienced (as they were during that time, since many of these issues continue in contemporary contexts), and which could never be explained to me through a textbook as vividly as they play out on screen.

In many ways, Mad Men is still relevant today. It is useful to be reminded how recently social norms took forms so offensive to us today. Sexism and Racism continue to exist, though perhaps less blatantly and a series of basic laws to protect people’s rights have been put in place that did not previously exist, which must be seen as evidence of progress.

“[The show Mad Men] can be relevant to some people. With adults, it’s closer to their time period, even if it wasn’t their time period.” Says Burton.

Part two of the last season premiered last month, though you can catch up on seasons 1-7 on Netflix or Comcast On Demand.

Filed Under: Op/Ed, Uncategorized

Editorial: Through the View of Baltimore, a Lense into Racism Dark Perpetuity with the Boys in Black and Blue

May 11, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

2015-04-28t005951z1lynxmpeb3r00irtroptp4usa-police-baltimore

 

 

Sean Morris
Staff writer

 

With 2,800+ innocent, unarmed people shot and killed by Police officers; most of which are African-American males, it’s impossible not to sympathize with this struggle,Through the lens of a mainstream, white-controlled media, it’s easy to villainize the protesters in Baltimore and other areas about this issue. as they will often label them as “rioters”, “thugs”, and so on. It only takes the the tiniest dosage of thought and research and we can see that this is not simply a “minority problem”. It is a human rights issue.  And It’s impossible to say that the police force in the United States should not change.

In a report from USA Today  last August, around 400 unarmed civilians were killed by the police per year in the past seven years, making the total number already up to 2,800 people-most of which were  African Americans. In November, a mere 3 months after the report,Tamir Rice, a 12 year old, who was shot for having a toy gun outside a Walmart, which is even more infuriating when you consider how many actual white serial killers like James Eagan Homes are able to get away with simply being arrested by the police, yet the Police will shoot defenseless black children. You’ll hear and read about any number of news reports of cops being overly aggressive to what the situation requires. This is even more troubling when you compare it to several other countries,who have reports of much less civilian casualties.

While not all cops are killers, the problem has grown to the point where nothing short of an extensive change in the police force is needed. In our discussion on the topic, we agreed that the depth of the problem also called for some radical, systemic changes in how the police train and work.To this extent here are suggestions from SLA students for what  could be some potential resolutions to this issue:

 

  • Police should be required to live in the community they are policing.
    • How this would help: Rather than have the police officers as an alien outside force, this gives the people and officers a sense of familiarity to allow for better cooperation and collaboration between the people and the officers,
  • All police officers should wear body cameras that cannot be turned off.
    • How this would help: Holds accountability to possible offending officers and allows for better transparency into situations. Below are some links to how it has already benefitted communities:
      • http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2015/05/nj_police_department_sees_90_decline_in_ia_complai.html
      • http://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/With-body-cameras-rolling-police-use-less-force-6254667.php
      • http://www.delawareonline.com/story/news/local/2015/05/08/expect-delaware-police-wear-body-cameras-soon/27016123/
  • All police departments should have civilian review boards with subpoena power.
    • How this would help: Keeps the close collaboration of officers away from situations where personal feelings could mix with professional.
  • All police should be required to attend regular training sessions to update their skills in handling mentally ill people.
    • How this would help: Keeps potential innocents safe who can’t control all of their actions.
  • End civil forfeiture- which allows the government to take cash, cars, homes and other property of people suspected of being involved in criminal activity.
    • How this would help: Prevents unjust seizing of property when someone can be innocent. To read more about this troubling law, which is alieve and well espcially in Philadelphia go here: http://endforfeiture.com/
  • Data on police misconduct should be public and easily accessible.
    • How this would help: Prevents misformation from getting out.
  • More protection for whistleblower cops. There was a Baltimore police officer who reported a beating to the prosecutor and was shunned by his department for it.
    • How this would help:  Protects cops who are doing what they are meant to; protecting and serving the public.
  • Some form of a racial sensitivity class.
    • How this would help: Attempts to diminish and eventually destroy racial profiling.
    • How this could not help: cops could see it as an unnecessary and time consuming.
  • Perpetuate knowledge-make certain that African Americans (and just youth in general) know their rights and how they can make a difference.
    • How this would help: A better understanding of one’s rights allows for a smoother operation in the event of a police questioning.
  • Impower a sense of self worth and pride within African Americans and for white allies to understand the anger in the situation because it is extremely justified.
    • How this would help: In a white-powered media outlets African Americans crying for their human rights have become “thugs” and “rioters” and it’s important to shift the public misunderstanding to be in the advantage of those it has thus far disadvantaged.


While the situation in Baltimore is not ideal way to resolve, its utterly understandable how it’s come that, and it’s hard to see that without some kind of dramatic reform, the situation will not improve.

Filed Under: Features, Op/Ed, Uncategorized

Locker Talk: “If you could say anything to the creator of the Keystones, what would it be?”

May 11, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Arielle Moore
Guest Writer

Matt (not his picture): “Get rid of it.”
Deja & Crystal: “Do you think that this will determine our destiny?”
Quran: What percentage of freshmen pass?”
Ijustice: “Why did you make them?”
Jessica: “You shouldn’t make the rank on how well they answer the questions.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Features

New Teacher Profile: Alexis Clancy

Braylon Dunlap Staff Writer As many people know, there are a few new additions to SLA’s staff this year with a brand new member being History Teacher Alexis Clancy. If you’re in her advisory or African American history class you may have already met her but there are some other interesting things about Ms. Clancy […]

New Teacher Profile: Mercedes Broughton-Garcia

By Maya Smelser Staff Writer SLA recently welcomed Spanish teacher Mercedes Broughton-Garcia, or Ms. Garcia to her students. After spending 7 years as a science teacher next door at Ben Franklin High School, she is transitioning to life at SLA. Background & Family Life “That’s a loaded question,” Ms. Garcia replied when asked where she […]

Wardrobe of SLA

By Harper Leary Staff Writer Philadelphia is a diverse city, and the student population of Science Leadership Academy reflects that fact— not just with their identities, but also with their fashion choices. If you walk down the hallways of SLA, your head will turn every which way to get a glimpse of all the different […]

How the Pandemic has Changed Live Events

By Maya Smelser & Anouk Ghosh-Poulshock Staff Writers Everyone remembers their first concert. But when the pandemic hit, many tours were canceled or rescheduled. There was a hiatus from live music as people adjusted to their new lives– so many teens missed out on their early concert experiences..  In the past few months, however, concerts […]

How Are SLA Students Are Dealing With Their Last Quarter?

Leticia Desouza Staff Writer After a long yet quick year at SLA, students from different grades have experienced many new things they weren’t able to experience during the 2020-2021 online academic year. After almost 10 months of being back in school, students have encountered difficulties and new experiences that further molded how the rest of […]

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