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Issue 4: November 28, 2 - Lake Stevens School District #4

Issue 4: November 28, 2 - Lake Stevens School District #4

Issue 4: November 28, 2 - Lake Stevens School District #4

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8opinion<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>28</strong>, 2012 Check out more photos on Facebook at “Lshs Valhalla”<br />

Lunchtime Freedom<br />

An open campus would provide<br />

students with many benefits<br />

“The ability to ensure an open<br />

campus for our school would let students<br />

show their responsibility.”<br />

An open campus at school would be great to<br />

some. Being able to leave school during lunch and<br />

taking the choice to not have to eat school lunches,<br />

or even going home to take a quick power nap,<br />

what’s bad about that<br />

“I think an open campus would be kind of awesome<br />

because we could have lunches better than<br />

the ones served at school,” sophomore Camryn<br />

Dietrich said.<br />

However, as there are many reasons why an<br />

open campus would benefit the students at our<br />

school, there are many reasons why the school<br />

chose to close campus.<br />

“It probably isn’t allowed now because the<br />

school could lose track of the kids, if there is an<br />

emergency at school, teachers wouldn’t know<br />

where people are and wouldn’t know whether or<br />

not they need to search for kids within the buildings<br />

or if they’re safe and just aren’t on campus,”<br />

Dietrich said.<br />

Also, some students don’t always love the<br />

lunches here at school and would prefer to go<br />

home to make their own lunch for themselves.<br />

“I think it would be good because the school<br />

lunches are not very good, and it gives students<br />

more freedom,” junior Alexander Verhoeven said.<br />

In my opinion, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Stevens</strong> High <strong>School</strong><br />

should include an open campus. Open campuses<br />

are a fantastic way to let students know they<br />

aren’t being fully controlled during lunch. It gives<br />

them freedom to do what they please during their<br />

lunch break.<br />

“Don’t fence me in”: no more shortcuts<br />

New barriers bother students and block off easy pathways<br />

Walking from the 400<br />

building to the cafeteria not<br />

all students have noticed<br />

little changes that happened<br />

over summer break.<br />

Certainly a few of the veteran<br />

juniors and seniors have<br />

noticed that the shortcut to<br />

the grass in front of the cafeteria<br />

has been blocked off<br />

by awkward rails.<br />

“When I saw that there<br />

were rails there [by the cafeteria]<br />

it honestly pissed<br />

me off, not just because it<br />

was unexpected, but also<br />

because it feels a little bit<br />

restricting,” said junior Tyler<br />

Baggs.<br />

Likewise, I personally<br />

enjoyed having the quick<br />

get away when things became<br />

really jammed up<br />

between periods. The traffic<br />

in between classes is<br />

still just as bad. Now, students<br />

decide to jump over<br />

the bars, which could end<br />

badly if they ever happen<br />

to misstep. If they wanted<br />

people to get off the grass,<br />

it didn’t work out too well.<br />

“Some rails were left<br />

out of a previous construction<br />

project, so we finished<br />

the job at a nominal cost.<br />

Our Facilities Department<br />

works very closely with the<br />

school to address maintenance<br />

and safety needs...<br />

Students can assist in the<br />

effort as well by notifying<br />

a building administrator<br />

or teacher about repairs<br />

Photo by Chloe Rowland<br />

Over the summer, the maintenance team put metal bars connecting the railings around campus to<br />

stop students from cutting across the grass by the commons.<br />

needed,” said Robb Stanton,<br />

Director of Operations<br />

Services.<br />

The high school seemed<br />

like it treated its students<br />

like adults, but now it<br />

seems like the school officials<br />

want to keep students<br />

controlled like pigs in a<br />

pig pen. The railings may<br />

reduce students from going<br />

directly from the dirty<br />

grass to the cafeteria, but<br />

it doesn’t stop them from<br />

walking all over the lawn or<br />

putting themselves in risky<br />

situations by jumping over<br />

the slippery metal.<br />

This is another pointless<br />

addition to the school,<br />

when there are much more<br />

important things to take<br />

care of, like the broken cement<br />

benches and the beat<br />

up lockers. More could be<br />

done to the school to make<br />

it more appealing to the<br />

eye and give the students a<br />

somewhat more beneficial<br />

environment for learning.<br />

Girls are fed up with domestic stereotypes<br />

Students give their opinion on the saying “Cool story, babe, now go make me a sandwich”<br />

There are always stereotypes about the<br />

roles of men and women, such as women belong<br />

in the kitchen and men belong at work<br />

to support a family. Recently, some students<br />

have been wearing T-shirts that say “Cool<br />

story, babe. Now, go make me a sandwich”.<br />

This t-shirt design comes across more like<br />

a joke than anything else, although the message<br />

it portrays is not exactly right for the<br />

sake of women’s roles.<br />

A lot of people view these shirts as just a<br />

joke not thinking of the deeper message.<br />

“It’s not degrading if she makes a great<br />

sandwich,” senior Brenon Thompson said.<br />

Teenage boys are just acting like teenage<br />

boys. They don’t care or know any better,<br />

and they view those things as jokes more<br />

than as serious disrespect towards women.<br />

Jokes at girls’ expense are funny to boys;<br />

sure, part of it is human nature, but most of<br />

it is just immaturity.<br />

“I think the ‘make me sandwich’ joke is<br />

degrading because many men think making<br />

a sandwich or cooking is all we can do or are<br />

good for,” junior Brittany Willis said.<br />

In this day and age basically nobody is<br />

raised with a stereotypical stay-at-home<br />

Photo by Marissa Fredrickson<br />

Juniors Izel Thomson and Andrew Ralph act out the “Make me a sandwich”<br />

stereotype that annoys most girls.<br />

mom like it was many years ago. Most women<br />

want a career of their own and plan to<br />

build their own life without relying on men<br />

to do it for them. It’s wrong for men to think<br />

otherwise of women, they are good for many<br />

more things than cooking and cleaning.<br />

Women do everything men can do and<br />

sometimes, do it better.<br />

With regard to college graduate rates,<br />

“Women aged 25-34, 42% had earned an<br />

associate or bachelor’s degree, while just<br />

34% of men of that age group had done so,”<br />

according to mainstreet.com.<br />

Women and men are becoming more and<br />

more equal every year, and more women<br />

are getting an education to have a career of<br />

their own.<br />

These shirts shouldn’t be allowed at<br />

school, just like any other inappropriate<br />

shirt. The shirts are degrading to women<br />

in a society that still needs some work on<br />

equal rights, and the message on them is<br />

negative towards women.

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