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The Rivers Edge - October 2008 - The Rivers School

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Th e Ri v e r s Ed g e<br />

Volume XXXVI, Number 2<br />

I<br />

N<br />

S<br />

I<br />

D<br />

E<br />

News..........................2<br />

Opinions/Editorial.....4<br />

Features.....................6<br />

Arts............................8<br />

Sports.......................10<br />

News<br />

Students participate in<br />

summer science intership.<br />

Page 3<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong>, Weston, Massachusetts <strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Jake Solomon completes over 1,000 hours of service<br />

b y Ma d d y Le v i t t ‘09<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

As we all know, Community<br />

Service is a graduation requirement<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong>. All of us, no matter<br />

what is in our hearts, make<br />

sure to perform the thirty hours<br />

of service at our own personal<br />

peril. But what stands out is when<br />

someone engages in a community<br />

service activity that far exceeds<br />

the thirty-hour requirement, and<br />

does so for reasons other than<br />

removing a potential obstacle to<br />

graduation. Sometimes a student<br />

develops a passion for his or her<br />

community service because he<br />

or she is motivated by the desire<br />

to make a difference and give<br />

back to the community. Obviously,<br />

such an attitude is what is<br />

truly important about community<br />

service, and the development of<br />

such a mindset is most likely<br />

why the requirement was set in<br />

the first place. Community service<br />

reflects the “Humanity” side<br />

of <strong>Rivers</strong>’ “Excellence with Humanity”<br />

motto. What good is it to<br />

have skills and knowledge if you<br />

More colleges lean towards<br />

SAT optional<br />

b y Wi l l Sa h a k i a n ’09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

One day, one chance. This<br />

is how many students feel when<br />

they sit down to take the SAT.<br />

This test is a student’s chance to<br />

help prove to a college or university<br />

that he or she is the right<br />

match for the school.<br />

This perception, however, is<br />

starting to change. At some colleges<br />

and universities, students<br />

are no longer required to submit<br />

poor scores that may not reflect<br />

their potential as a student.<br />

In the past few years, more<br />

colleges in the United States have<br />

become SAT optional, which<br />

could throw a twist into the college<br />

process. <strong>The</strong>re are no new<br />

credentials, but the existing ones<br />

are indeed going to carry more<br />

weight.<br />

Since 1984, the year the first<br />

school dropped the SAT, there<br />

have been 730 colleges that have<br />

now gone SAT optional. This<br />

choice takes some pressure off<br />

poor test taking applicants, and<br />

Jake Solomon ‘09 hard at work as the lightening director of TCAN<br />

community theater.<br />

allows them to just submit the<br />

scores they feel best represent<br />

their abilities.<br />

Colleges such as Middlebury,<br />

Bates, and Bowdoin have led the<br />

way with this decision, and now<br />

larger universities such as Wake<br />

Forest have changed their opinions<br />

on this matter, all going SAT<br />

optional.<br />

Ken Himmelmam, the dean of<br />

Bennington College in Vermont,<br />

told USA Today, “Whether they<br />

get 1300 or 1250 doesn’t really<br />

tell you anything about them as a<br />

person or a student,”<br />

At Wake Forest, the interview<br />

has become critical to the decision<br />

making process. Prior to the<br />

university becoming SAT optional,<br />

Wake interviewed between 10<br />

and 20 percent of the prospective<br />

students. Martha Allman, Director<br />

of Admissions at Wake, said<br />

that the school is now trying to get<br />

close to interviewing, “as close to<br />

100 percent as possible.”<br />

Bates College in Lewiston<br />

Maine has seen numerous changes<br />

in its applicants since they<br />

made submitting the SAT option-<br />

Continued on page 2<br />

do not apply them with compassion<br />

and a sense of duty<br />

In this regard, many of you<br />

may have seen senior, Jake Solomon,<br />

roaming the halls of <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

He is known for his long hair and<br />

his quiet manner. Well, it turns<br />

out that this unassuming guy has<br />

accomplished an incredible feat,<br />

having completed over one thousand<br />

hours of community service<br />

during his <strong>Rivers</strong> career. Clearly<br />

Thirty-two students in the class of<br />

‘12 have a sibling at <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

b y Ja n e y Ad e s’12<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

Whenever students walk<br />

down the hallways of the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>, they are likely to see a familiar<br />

face. For some, this face is<br />

one that they have seen day in and<br />

day out all their lives.<br />

Kaleigh and McKenzie Hunt<br />

have never before been in school<br />

together, but this year is different.<br />

Not only do they pass by each<br />

other in the hallways exchanging<br />

“Hello’s,” but every afternoon,<br />

from 3:45 to 5:45, they play side<br />

by side on the soccer field.<br />

“Kenzie and I have never<br />

played on the same soccer team<br />

together. It’s not only the occasional<br />

‘hi’ in the hallway, but<br />

rather constant shifting, communication<br />

and working together to<br />

beat an opponent,” said Kaleigh,<br />

senior co-captain of the girl’s varsity<br />

soccer team.<br />

Like the Hunts, any other <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

students attend school with<br />

their siblings. This year, 125 out<br />

of 433 <strong>Rivers</strong> students in grades<br />

six through twelve have a sibling<br />

on the <strong>Rivers</strong> campus, according<br />

to the <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> <strong>2008</strong>-2009<br />

directory. This does not include<br />

students who have a sibling that<br />

graduated from <strong>Rivers</strong> over the<br />

past several years. In 2003-2004<br />

Features<br />

Conservatory improvements<br />

bolster<br />

music community.<br />

Page 7<br />

something has driven him other<br />

than the thirty-hour requiremen<br />

Jake’s one thousand hours<br />

were all served at <strong>The</strong> Center for<br />

Arts in Natick (TCAN). TCAN is<br />

a performing arts center that hosts<br />

concerts every Friday and Saturday<br />

night, and where other drama<br />

performances, literary events, and<br />

art exhibitions are held for people<br />

of all ages. Classes in music, theatre,<br />

dance, and visual arts, including<br />

acting and improvisation<br />

workshops, dance and creative<br />

movement classes are also offered<br />

regularly for students of all ages.<br />

Nationally known performers<br />

such as George Winston, Livingston<br />

Taylor, and Jimmy Webb have<br />

appeared at the center. But TCAN<br />

is also committed to promoting<br />

the careers of lesser known,<br />

emerging artists and performers.<br />

there were 47 families with siblings<br />

ar <strong>Rivers</strong>, and in 2005-2006,<br />

there were a total of 54 different<br />

families who had more than<br />

one child currently attending the<br />

score. Each year, the number of<br />

siblings that go to <strong>Rivers</strong> has visibly<br />

increased. Today, there are<br />

61 families with multiple children<br />

who attend <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Most student believe that,<br />

overall, it is beneficial to be in<br />

school with their brother or sister<br />

because there is always someone<br />

to count on.<br />

“We have been able to build<br />

Arts<br />

Mathers-Suter holds art<br />

show at the Kingston<br />

Gallery.<br />

Page 8<br />

Its community theatre has put on<br />

top productions such as To Kill a<br />

Mockingbird, Forever Plaid, and<br />

Miracle on 34th Street.<br />

Since TCAN is officially a<br />

“community theater,” it consists<br />

of a very small number of paid<br />

employees (about four), so it<br />

must rely largely on volunteers in<br />

order to keep the shows running.<br />

Jake has been the in-house lighting<br />

director there for four years<br />

now. He became involved at the<br />

end of his eighth-grade year,<br />

when he took an interest in and<br />

selected the theater job as an end<br />

of the year project. “I’ve gone almost<br />

every Friday and Saturday<br />

night during the school year since<br />

then,” says Jake. This translates<br />

into him typically spending about<br />

five hours each day he is there<br />

Continued on page 2<br />

Senior Janey Ades ‘09 with siblings Andy ‘12 and Lindsey ‘14<br />

up a relationship. We are able to<br />

trust each other more,” said senior<br />

Becca Duffy, referring to her<br />

relationship with her brother Will,<br />

a freshman at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

In order to develop a strong<br />

sibling relationship, more quality<br />

time together is necessary. According<br />

to a study at Penn State<br />

University published in 1996,<br />

children spend 33% of their free<br />

time with their siblings. For sisters<br />

Kaleigh and McKenzie Hunt,<br />

this includes playing together on<br />

the soccer field. Other siblings<br />

rock out to music in the car on<br />

Continued on page 3<br />

Sports<br />

Effects of sports specialization<br />

hurts <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

football.<br />

Page 11


Page 2<br />

News Briefs<br />

--Taken from <strong>Rivers</strong>’ Website<br />

Investment Analyst Speaks About <strong>The</strong><br />

Economics Of Alternative Energy<br />

Michael Schlenker’s Alternative Energy Sources class<br />

was treated to an illuminating talk by investment analyst<br />

Zack Lesko about the economics of clean-tech companies<br />

and the financial viability of alternative energy technologies,<br />

such as solar power, wind power, and biofuel.<br />

As part of the Capital Markets team at America’s<br />

Growth Capital, Lesko focuses on the clean tech/alternative<br />

energy, health care, and life sciences sectors. He<br />

delivered the first of what Schlenker hopes will be many<br />

classroom talks and presentations by professionals in the<br />

fields of sustainability and green energy.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Alternative Energy Sources course is a first-trimester<br />

elective intended to have students examine the current<br />

energy situation as well as possible alternatives. “My<br />

goal,” Schlenker said, “is to provide an introduction to the<br />

topic and create motivation in students for further study.”<br />

Middle <strong>School</strong> Students Share <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

with Grandparents<br />

Monday, <strong>October</strong> 20 marked <strong>Rivers</strong>’ annual Grandparents’<br />

Day at the Middle <strong>School</strong>, in which students<br />

were able to bring their grandparents to campus to attend<br />

classes and get a better sense of their educational experiences<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

Susan McGee, Head of the Middle <strong>School</strong>, said that the<br />

event is a tradition at <strong>Rivers</strong> that lets grandparents step<br />

into their grandchildren’s shoes for a day. “It’s a unique<br />

opportunity to meet teachers and learn more about kids’<br />

experiences,” McGee said. “So that now, when grandparents<br />

ask their grandchildren, ‘how’s school’ … there’s a<br />

familiarity.”<br />

In Bookstores Today—Juggling Twins by<br />

Meghan Regan-Loomis<br />

This past month, Juggling Twins: <strong>The</strong> Best Tips, Tricks,<br />

and Strategies from Pregnancy to the Toddler Years, by<br />

Meghan Regan-Loomis hit bookstores. Regan-Loomis,<br />

the Chair of the English Department at <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>, is a mother of three children.<br />

<strong>The</strong> intent of her book is to help parents and soon-to-be<br />

parents of twins prepare for and manage the first year of<br />

having twins, as those months can be most overwhelming,<br />

exhausting, and frustrating. Regan-Loomis takes her<br />

experiences with caring for her own twins, along with the<br />

invaluable information gained by networking with other<br />

twin moms and the overall inspiration she receives daily<br />

from her students, and brings them together in a guide<br />

that offers specific advice to help parents create the time<br />

and calm to enjoy the blissful elements of having twins.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Continued from page 1<br />

as he takes responsibility for the<br />

show’s lighting. This is obviously<br />

a huge chunk of time in the life<br />

of a busy high school student who<br />

needs to balance the demands of<br />

schoolwork, sports, and other extra<br />

curricular activities.<br />

So why, you may ask, has Jake<br />

continuously given up nearly<br />

ten hours of his weekend for his<br />

Optional SATs prompt debate<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

al. Statistics show that there was<br />

an increase in minority applicants<br />

and only a .05 difference in grade<br />

point average between those that<br />

submit SAT scores and those that<br />

do not.<br />

“Bates is one of my first choices,”<br />

said Bo Cramer, a <strong>Rivers</strong> senior.<br />

“If I had to submit my SAT<br />

scores, I don’t know if I would<br />

get in. <strong>The</strong>y simply do not reflect<br />

my GPA like I would want them<br />

to.”<br />

Franklin and Marshall is another<br />

top ranked liberal arts college<br />

that has gone SAT optional.<br />

This change helped certain students,<br />

who may have thought that<br />

they would have been hurt by<br />

their SAT scores.<br />

“We focus more on the student’s<br />

transcript whether a student<br />

submits his score or not,” said an<br />

assistant dean of admissions.<br />

“I chose not to submit my<br />

scores because my transcript and<br />

extra curricular activities put me<br />

in a better light,” said Trevor<br />

Donnelly a freshman at Franklin<br />

and Marshall. Donnelly was a<br />

two sport varsity athlete and in<br />

the honors society at St. Marks<br />

in Southborough, Massachusetts.<br />

He was also a soccer and golf recruit<br />

for the college.<br />

Stonehill is also a college that<br />

decided to go SAT optional.<br />

“I submitted my SAT scores,<br />

to show that I was a good test taker<br />

and to support my grade point<br />

average,” said Jill Federshneider,<br />

a senior at Stonehill College and<br />

previously of Newton South High<br />

<strong>School</strong>. At Newton South, Federshneider<br />

was an all league swimmer,<br />

and stood out in the classroom<br />

as well.<br />

<strong>The</strong> head of admissions at<br />

Stonehill expressed an interest in<br />

digging deep into the transcript<br />

and the recommendations to figure<br />

out what a student is like and<br />

and people are looking to cut<br />

costs. Anyone who loves the arts<br />

knows that they should not be<br />

considered expendable luxuries.<br />

It is also important to develop an<br />

appreciation of the arts in young<br />

people, and TCAN allows them<br />

both the actual training as well as<br />

the inspiration. Jake acknowledges<br />

that alongside his commitment<br />

to the cause that TCAN serves, he<br />

himself derives personal benefit.<br />

He raves about his positive experiences<br />

there, and says, “I keep<br />

doing it because it’s definitely<br />

something I have an interest in<br />

as far as a possible career choice.<br />

It’s somewhere where I know I<br />

can show up every weekend and<br />

it’s guaranteed that I’ll be able to<br />

work a show.” Obviously, alongside<br />

its more giving component,<br />

community service can provide<br />

life experience that may help to<br />

shape one’s own future paths.<br />

We know that Jake is but one<br />

example of a <strong>Rivers</strong> student whose<br />

foray into community service,<br />

even if it began as an obligation,<br />

has blossomed into something<br />

much more meaningful and has<br />

become an ongoing part of his or<br />

her life. Some of us would have<br />

gotten involved anyway; others<br />

if he or she is qualified.<br />

Andrew Navoni, a senior at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>, is thinking of applying to<br />

Merrimack College and knows he<br />

is applying to Curry College this<br />

fall. Both of these schools are<br />

SAT optional. Navoni finished<br />

his junior year at <strong>Rivers</strong> strong<br />

academically and is continuing to<br />

meet with success during his senior<br />

year. He is also looking to<br />

possibly play lacrosse at Curry.<br />

“A portion of the pressure is<br />

lifted, knowing that everything<br />

does not rely on this one test,”<br />

said Navoni. “I have worked hard<br />

to improve my grades and boost<br />

my GPA for the college process,<br />

and I am glad to know some colleges<br />

feel as if these along with<br />

other things can be judged without<br />

the SAT.”<br />

“He is a good friend and teammate,”<br />

an anonymous teammate<br />

said, “Nav is one of those people<br />

you can look to as example on the<br />

field, and takes advice as well on<br />

the field as he gives it.”<br />

<strong>The</strong>se characteristics are some<br />

of the added qualities that can<br />

jump out at an interviewer during<br />

an interview, that may have more<br />

of an impact when not submitting<br />

SAT scores.<br />

A huge part of the SAT process<br />

is the test preparation before<br />

a student actually take the test.<br />

This preparation is key to getting<br />

a good score on the test. <strong>The</strong><br />

tutors teach the knowledge one<br />

needs to get through the test, as<br />

well as the necessary test takingstrategies.<br />

Such lessons can cost<br />

up to $200 for a two-hour group<br />

lesson, and up to $200 for a one<br />

and a half hour personal lesson.<br />

“Money plays a huge part<br />

in one’s success on the SAT; it<br />

seems like it plays a big part of<br />

everything nowadays,” said Domenic<br />

Delfavero, a <strong>Rivers</strong> senior.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fact of the matter is that<br />

<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Solomon gives back at local theatre<br />

“I’ve gone almost every<br />

Friday and Saturday night<br />

during the school year since<br />

eighth grade.”<br />

entire high school career to take<br />

on this volunteer job As Jake<br />

describes his work at the Center,<br />

it is clear that his commitment<br />

is driven by his passion for and<br />

interest in what he is doing. As<br />

a critical member of the TCAN<br />

staff, Jake is part of a group that<br />

allows people access to the arts in<br />

a convenient, affordable manner.<br />

Such centers become especially<br />

important in times such as these<br />

when the economy is in trouble<br />

of us needed the requirement, but<br />

most of us have discovered new<br />

passions along the way. For those<br />

of you who have already completed<br />

or are continuing to provide<br />

community service, Jake’s<br />

story suggests that we could all<br />

benefit from knowing more about<br />

“I keep doing it because it’s<br />

something I have an interest<br />

in as far as a possible career<br />

choice. It’s somewhere where<br />

I know I can show up every<br />

weekend, and it’s guaranteed<br />

that I’ll be able to work a<br />

show.”<br />

what one another is doing. For<br />

those of you who have yet to fulfill<br />

your requirement, Jake’s story<br />

emphasizes that if you take the<br />

time to find a community service<br />

activity that is meaningful to you,<br />

it may become gratifying in many<br />

ways.<br />

many families cannot afford to<br />

send their kids to test prep. This<br />

can play a part in the difference in<br />

scores that people get. By making<br />

the SAT optional to submit,<br />

a student can feel confident that<br />

if he does not submit his test, he<br />

still has an equal chance of being<br />

accepted and will be judged on<br />

other credentials.<br />

Chyten is a leading test prep<br />

company in Massachusetts, with<br />

“<strong>The</strong> SAT is an accurate<br />

way of testing a student’s<br />

knowledge of vocabulary, math<br />

and reading skills.”<br />

-Chyten tutor<br />

three locations in the state. <strong>The</strong><br />

company also has tutors that<br />

work with kids on college essays,<br />

which is the other key component<br />

of the application.<br />

<strong>The</strong> same tutor went on to say,<br />

“Although the test is a good measure<br />

of academics, it does not test<br />

four major, if not more important,<br />

characteristics character, people<br />

skills, effort and determination.”<br />

He finished his statement by<br />

saying, “ No matter how qualified<br />

the student is, or how good<br />

the student’s school was, without<br />

some form of these four characteristics,<br />

one will almost never<br />

fully live up to their potential.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> topic of the SAT option is<br />

still being debated at many colleges<br />

and universities in the US,<br />

and it is safe to say that more in<br />

the future will indeed go SAT optional.<br />

<strong>The</strong> only way to find out is<br />

to review the listings in the summer<br />

and fall of 2009.


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> community enhanced by sibling students<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

Page 3<br />

the way to school, help each other<br />

with homework, give one another<br />

advice and so much more. Being<br />

in school together adds to this; it<br />

gives them the opportunity to be<br />

a larger part of each other’s lives<br />

and not only see each other in the<br />

home environment.<br />

In this year’s freshmen class<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong>, there are 32 students<br />

with siblings at <strong>Rivers</strong>. Out of<br />

these students, 19 of them have<br />

a brother or sister who is also in<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> Upper <strong>School</strong>. Knowing<br />

someone in the Upper <strong>School</strong>,<br />

especially a sibling, helps make<br />

incoming freshmen more comfortable<br />

in their new environment.<br />

Teachers know your name,<br />

older siblings’ friends know who<br />

you are and can help you, and you<br />

know the dynamics of the school.<br />

“Having a brother or sister on<br />

campus can be beneficial for the<br />

younger sibling, especially during<br />

freshman year,” said Dana Ryan,<br />

a student at Lehigh University and<br />

writer for the student publication,<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Brown and White’.<br />

Going to the same private<br />

school with one of your siblings<br />

is different than it would be to<br />

attend the same public school together.<br />

<strong>The</strong> freshmen classes at<br />

many public schools are the size<br />

of <strong>Rivers</strong> as a whole. Siblings<br />

Maddy Levitt ‘09 and Jonathan ‘12 are one of the many senior-freshman<br />

sibling pairs. Photo by <strong>The</strong> Levitt Family.<br />

might never even see each other attend the same school as their<br />

during the day at a public school, sibling. Being together in school<br />

but this is not the case at <strong>Rivers</strong>. with an older sibling can force<br />

Each student at <strong>Rivers</strong> sees his or some younger students to live in<br />

her brother or sister at least once their siblings’ shadows. <strong>The</strong>re is<br />

during the academic day. constant pressure to get the same<br />

Some people believe that it grades and be involved in the<br />

is not always a smart choice to same activities as your brother or<br />

sister. This can be true especially<br />

at a small school like <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

Math teacher Dan McCartney<br />

believes that although there are<br />

advantages to being in school<br />

with a brother or sister, there are<br />

disadvantages as well. “In public<br />

school you are expected to go to<br />

that school, but in private school<br />

you have a choice. Younger siblings<br />

feel like they don’t have a<br />

choice as much; they want to be<br />

like their older sibling. Younger<br />

kids get referred to as ‘someone’s<br />

little brother,’ but they want their<br />

own identity.”<br />

Catie Walsh, a senior at <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

is one out of ten children in her<br />

family. For the past four years she<br />

has had the opportunity to form<br />

her own identity here on the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

campus. Walsh says not being<br />

in school with any of her siblings<br />

has given her a chance to be an<br />

individual.<br />

Although some students are<br />

able to build up their own identities<br />

without the influence of<br />

their siblings at school, the lives<br />

of parents are made easier when<br />

their kids are in school together.<br />

“Keeping siblings at the same<br />

school focuses parent energies on<br />

one school, one set of practices,<br />

one PTA, one school culture,”<br />

said Daunna Minnich, who wrote<br />

an article in the ACIE Newsletter<br />

in Palo Alto, CA about sibling<br />

preference. “Parents with children<br />

in separate schools sometimes<br />

must choose which event to<br />

attend or which school to contribute<br />

in various ways.”<br />

Nina Delfavero, mother of<br />

senior Domenic and sophomore<br />

Marissa, thinks it is nice having<br />

her children in school together and<br />

that it has helped to make them<br />

closer. An added benefit of this is<br />

the fact that parents do not have<br />

to spend their afternoons driving<br />

from one school to another picking<br />

up their children, because everyone<br />

is moving roughly on the<br />

same schedule.<br />

“Siblings at <strong>Rivers</strong> are a true<br />

testament to the trust between<br />

home and school--families believe<br />

in the essential partnership<br />

and, as a result, seem to have all<br />

of their children enjoy the invaluable<br />

benefits that <strong>Rivers</strong> offers,”<br />

said Assistant Head of <strong>School</strong> and<br />

Dean of Students, Jim Long.<br />

For the Hunt sisters, they are<br />

the first ones each other sees in<br />

the morning and the last one they<br />

each see at night. It makes their<br />

bond between them grow and<br />

their four year age gap fade away,<br />

thanks to their time together at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

Students explore interests at summer science internships<br />

pitching the product to potential<br />

customers. Creedon also worked<br />

with the marketing and research<br />

and development departments,<br />

which gave her a wide view of<br />

the business aspects of scientific<br />

corporations. Although Creedon’s<br />

application note would have been<br />

an extremely impressive culmination<br />

to her internship, she took her<br />

research a step further. Creedon<br />

submitted a poster that detailed<br />

her research to the Federation of<br />

Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopic<br />

Societies (FACSS).<br />

Much to her surprise, not only<br />

was her poster accepted into the<br />

conference but Creedon was also<br />

asked to speak at the FACSS’s<br />

conference in Reno, Nevada.<br />

To understand the significance<br />

of this accomplishment, one must<br />

conjure up a mental picture of the<br />

FACSS. <strong>The</strong> conference was a<br />

gathering of experts in the field of<br />

mass spectrometry: middle aged<br />

scientist types, who have vocabularies<br />

that exceed the comprehension<br />

of normal IQ’s, and a seventeen<br />

year old high school senior,<br />

who not only spoke at the conb<br />

y Je n n Po l l a n ‘09<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

While many of her classmates<br />

were lounging on lawn chairs<br />

and perfecting their tans, Senior<br />

Emily Creedon was examining<br />

the insides of mice. Creedon and<br />

several other <strong>Rivers</strong> students<br />

spent the summer immersed in<br />

scientific research through the<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> Scrience Department’s Internship<br />

Program. While Creedon<br />

worked in a research laboratory<br />

alongside fellow senior Stefen<br />

Laukien for Bruker Daltonics,<br />

her classmate Kate Burns worked<br />

in the simulation lab and Cardiac<br />

and Medicial/Surgical Intensive<br />

Care Units at Children’s Hospital.<br />

In addition, seniors Matt<br />

Robinson and Matt Segal and junior<br />

Alex Post threw themselves<br />

into their own science internships.<br />

Think that sounds like a<br />

pretty dull summer Think again.<br />

While some may scoff at the idea<br />

of “wasting” summer days toiling<br />

around in laboratories, all<br />

of these students participated in<br />

cutting edge research alongside<br />

the top scientists in their chosen<br />

field. When asked to sum up her<br />

experience, Creedon gushes, “It<br />

was incredible.”<br />

Creedon became well acquainted<br />

with the field of mass<br />

spectrometry during her summer<br />

stint. She worked for Bruker<br />

Daltonics a company that manufactures<br />

mass spectrometers,<br />

devices that measure the mass<br />

of substances. Creedon and her<br />

colleagues learned about the<br />

machines through experimentation<br />

in order to aid the company<br />

in marketing and selling their<br />

product. <strong>The</strong> specific experiment<br />

Creedon conducted dealt with the<br />

effects of anti-brain tumor drugs<br />

Emily Creedon ‘09 hard at work at her summer internship with a company that manufactures mass spectrometers.<br />

Photo by Emily Creedon.<br />

in mouse tissue. When asked<br />

about what it was like to work<br />

with these tiny creatures, Creedon<br />

responded with a smile, “<strong>The</strong>y<br />

were so cute. I even have pictures<br />

of all of them.” Although to some<br />

the practice of examining internal<br />

organs may seem repulsive,<br />

Creedon remarks that the situation<br />

was, “more cool than gross”<br />

and shakes her head when asked<br />

whether she named the mice. “If<br />

by naming them you mean E30<br />

and M19,” she responds with a<br />

smile. So maybe Creedon won’t<br />

be adopting any of these mice as<br />

pets, but she certainly got to know<br />

their insides pretty intimately.<br />

Using the mass spectrometer,<br />

Creedon examined tiny slices of<br />

mouse tissue that were about ten<br />

cells thick. Based on her observations,<br />

Creedon could discern not<br />

only information about the antitumor<br />

drugs in question but also<br />

the capabilities in marketing.<br />

<strong>The</strong> goal of Creedon’s research<br />

was ultimately to help Bruker<br />

Daltonics educate its customers<br />

about the different applications of<br />

the product. To that end, Creedon<br />

wrote an application note, which<br />

is an internal publication that is<br />

intended to help the company<br />

facilitate this education. Picture<br />

a user’s manual, throw in some<br />

complicated scientific jargon, and<br />

you have crafted a pretty good<br />

picture of an application note.<br />

Crafting the application note was<br />

particularly enjoyable for Creedon<br />

because of her interest in the business<br />

aspect of science. “Although<br />

I loved working in the lab, there<br />

is no way I would want to it for<br />

a living. What really interests me<br />

is the business aspect of scientific<br />

corporations. For someone who is<br />

interested in science, who doesn’t<br />

want to spend life enclosed in a<br />

lab, working in a scientific corporation<br />

is a really interesting way<br />

to combine business and science<br />

into a comprehensive profession,”<br />

says Creedon.<br />

Drawing on her interest in<br />

business, Creedon threw herself<br />

not only into research but also<br />

into the sales of the product.<br />

She accompanied one of her colleagues<br />

on a sales visit to UMass<br />

Amherst and assisted him in<br />

ference, but also expertly fielded<br />

questions about Bruker-Daltonic’s<br />

products and her research.<br />

As the only high school student<br />

at the conference, Creedon held<br />

her own among the experts and<br />

gave an excellent twenty minute<br />

presentation.<br />

In preparation for her scientific<br />

debut, Creedon went to a presentation<br />

boot camp of sorts. “I spent<br />

six hours at Bruker-Daltonics going<br />

over the product in extreme<br />

depth so that I could answer any<br />

question no matter how complex<br />

it was. We also went over a variety<br />

of presentation skills and<br />

went over my presentation again<br />

and again until I was sure I was<br />

ready to face the conference.”<br />

After her boot camp experience,<br />

Creedon set out on her adventure.<br />

“I flew out to Nevada by myself<br />

and spent the night there. I was<br />

really calm and then the minute<br />

before my presentation, I got this<br />

rush of nerves” Creedon says<br />

with a smile. Always the modest<br />

achiever, Creedon blushes when<br />

praised for her numerous accomplishments<br />

and conveys how<br />

grateful she was for such an opportunity.<br />

Although Creedon might not<br />

spend too much more time hanging<br />

out with rats in a lab, through<br />

her internship she developed a<br />

passion for science that she will<br />

carry with her to whatever career<br />

she ultimately chooses. Maybe<br />

one day Creedon will be the highpowered<br />

CEO of a scientific corporation,<br />

or perhaps a researcher<br />

who finds the cure for cancer.<br />

Wherever she lands in twenty<br />

years, one thing is for sure, her<br />

work with her good friends E30<br />

and M19 will never be far from<br />

her heart.


Page 4 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> <strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Editorial<br />

All school assembies, good<br />

for just a laugh<br />

Not the goldfish! Tell me he’s not going to eat the goldfish!<br />

Cowering in my seat, I tried to hide from what I knew was the<br />

inevitable. I had seen the Regurgitator swallow everything that<br />

sat on the table next to the fish tank for the past half hour now,<br />

ingested Butane, sugar, cigarette smoke, a billiard ball, and Rubix<br />

cube, all the while prodding the poor fish. But as I watched little<br />

Moby Dick swim back and forth I could not smother the sense of<br />

impending doom that seemed to loom over the poor fellow.<br />

While I had learned all about the anatomy of the digestive<br />

system in ninth grade biology class and considered myself to be<br />

a science nerd, I’m pretty sure that the Regurgitator was far from<br />

educational. However, with a few exceptions of hesitant, somewhat<br />

queasy students such as myself, the student body seemed to<br />

love every minute of the assembly. <strong>The</strong> crowd would boisterously<br />

applaud with each successful regurgitation, laughing as he teased<br />

two underclassmen girls, crying out for more challenging feats.<br />

Now, flash forward exactly one week to another, very different,<br />

assembly. This week, the school had invited an internationally<br />

renowned inspirational speaker to discuss our all-school summer<br />

reading, A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier. Clearly<br />

this was meant to be an educational assembly. However, I could<br />

not help but notice the stark contrast between reactions to the two<br />

assemblies. After reading the powerful book this summer, I was<br />

intrigued to hear about the conflict from the perspective of Sarian<br />

Bouma, born and raised in Sierra Leone. However, after the meeting,<br />

I felt unsatisfied, a reaction echoed by the rest of the student<br />

body. Nothing against the speaker, but she did not seem to be<br />

able to command the attention of the audience quite as well as the<br />

Regurgitater had.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se two assemblies are only two examples of the sporadic<br />

special all-school meetings granted to the student body a few times<br />

a year. Clearly, they are quite different. But, during a time when<br />

students are panicking over interim grades and seniors are scrambling<br />

to finish their college applications, sometimes all that is<br />

needed is some light-hearted humor from a man who swallows live<br />

goldfish for a living. Truly entertaining assemblies do not always<br />

need to be educational. <strong>The</strong> most powerful are those that students<br />

reminisce about for days following, and those that bring a smile to<br />

their faces. As inspirational as Sarian Bouma truly was, in thirty<br />

years students will most likely still recall the Regurgitator’s coarse<br />

humor and his strange talent, signs of an assembly that has made a<br />

far stronger impact.<br />

Th e Ri v e r s Ed g e<br />

OPINIONS<br />

AN OPEN FORUM FOR THE RIVERS COMMUNITY<br />

Breakfast: the meal of champions<br />

b y Al e x Dr e w’10<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

Breakfast, it’s the meal of<br />

champions, national merit scholars,<br />

Michael Phelps, and that lady<br />

who gives people bowls of Honey<br />

Bunches of Oats during the cereal<br />

commercial. It truly is the most<br />

important meal of the day, and the<br />

most delicious. I have yet to meet<br />

a breakfast entrée I do not like.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are eggs, sausage, bacon,<br />

pancakes, waffles, cereal, granola,<br />

oatmeal, breakfast sandwiches,<br />

yogurt, smoothies, etc. It is all<br />

so good that sometimes one even<br />

has breakfast for dinner or lunch.<br />

Breakfast is also the best because<br />

of its staple drink, coffee.<br />

Sadly, most of us have little<br />

time for this delectable meal. We<br />

choose ten minutes of sleep over<br />

breakfast. However, that is truly<br />

unnecessary. Breakfast will give<br />

you more energy and make you<br />

feel better rested than ten minutes<br />

of sleep ever will. And in that 10<br />

minutes, you can make and enjoy<br />

more than just a bowl of cereal.<br />

How about an omelet or maple<br />

oatmeal Maybe even a smoothie.<br />

My ideal breakfast choice is<br />

eggs. <strong>The</strong>y fill me up until lunch<br />

and are healthy and easy to make.<br />

For the world’s easiest omelet,<br />

crack two eggs in a bowl and<br />

whisk with a fork. If you want<br />

to add pesto or sundried tomatoes<br />

to your eggs, whisk them in<br />

now. I recommend this because<br />

it’s delicious, and the good fats in<br />

the pesto will fill you up. A good<br />

rule of thumb, if you would put it<br />

on pasta, it’s good in an omelet.<br />

Spray some nonstick spray onto a<br />

small skillet and preheat the skillet<br />

for a second on medium low<br />

heat. Pour the eggs in the skillet<br />

and fold the omelet over when<br />

the eggs are cooked through. You<br />

know they’re done if, when you<br />

tilt the skillet, no uncooked egg<br />

moves around. Do not stand there<br />

watching them cook; that eats up<br />

valuable time. I usually use the<br />

cooking time to go find socks for<br />

my gym bag, to brew coffee or to<br />

find a jacket. Once you have mastered<br />

this (it should only take one<br />

try to master, maybe two if you’re<br />

having a bad day), start getting<br />

creative. Add fresh basil, chopped<br />

peppers, or cheese before folding<br />

it over and try whisking in different<br />

pestos and spices. If you’re in<br />

a rush, you can throw the omelet<br />

into a tortilla or between a bagel<br />

and wrap it in tinfoil. <strong>The</strong> perfect<br />

meal for attempting to drive and<br />

study at the same time. If the<br />

omelet is a little too ambitious,<br />

try oatmeal. For quick cook oats,<br />

it’s one cup water for every ½<br />

cup oats. Use that ratio, and microwave<br />

for two minutes. To the<br />

cooked oats, I usually like to stir<br />

in a tablespoon or so of maple<br />

syrup. Or sometimes a few drops<br />

of vanilla extract with a dash of<br />

cinnamon. I even have stirred in<br />

some peanut butter, grapenuts,<br />

and gobs of brown sugar. Oatmeal<br />

is extremely healthy and will keep<br />

you full until second lunch.<br />

If you’re in too much of a rush<br />

to eat breakfast, make a smoothie.<br />

For the most part, you can get really<br />

creative with what you dump<br />

in the blender. I usually do a few<br />

scoops of yogurt as a base and add<br />

some frozen fruit. Any mixture of<br />

strawberries, whole bananas, berries,<br />

mangos or peaches is guaranteed<br />

to turn out good. Sometimes<br />

I even add a splash of juice,<br />

spoonful of peanut butter, or a few<br />

drops of vanilla extract, depending<br />

on what is in the fridge. And I<br />

always toss in a handful of grapenuts<br />

or granola before hitting the<br />

blend button. Pour this in a plastic<br />

cup and you are ready for school.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most glorious part about<br />

breakfast is the large amounts of<br />

caffeine you may down. I enjoy a<br />

cup of coffee with breakfast and<br />

then tea during the drive. I prefer<br />

the French press method for<br />

making coffee. It requires a few<br />

more steps than the machine, but<br />

it produces a better result. I usually<br />

brew loose leaf tea, because<br />

it’s the finest quality, and use a<br />

strainer to make it.<br />

So if you’re already getting up<br />

ten minutes earlier, and somehow<br />

can’t manage to find the time<br />

to make any of these delicious<br />

breakfast items, you’re left with<br />

just enough time to make a pit<br />

stop along the way. My personal<br />

favorites are Lincoln Street Coffee<br />

and Peet’s Coffee and Tea,<br />

both located in Newton. <strong>The</strong>ir<br />

pastries are the best and the coffee<br />

is the highest quality. But very<br />

few people are fortunate enough<br />

to drive past those wonderful<br />

establishments on their way to<br />

school. <strong>The</strong> best breakfast sandwich<br />

in the area is hands down at<br />

Finagle a Bagel. I love the winner<br />

breakfast: panini and a sausage,<br />

egg & cheese on a whole wheat<br />

everything bagel. <strong>The</strong>ir coffee is<br />

good too. Dunkin Donuts makes<br />

a solid breakfast sandwich too,<br />

but it does not stack up compared<br />

to Finagle. Dunkin’s makes the<br />

best iced coffee and hot chocolate<br />

by far. <strong>The</strong>ir hot coffee is not<br />

the best, and I find some of their<br />

blended drinks strange, but I am<br />

still there a few times a week for<br />

my medium iced coffee with skim<br />

milk. Yum. Starbucks is the king<br />

of all possible morning stops.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are the fastest, their coffee<br />

is great, and they make a mean<br />

latte. <strong>The</strong> food is not always the<br />

best, but a pumpkin spice latte<br />

is better than most foods I have<br />

tried. All in all, if you are going<br />

to stop for food in the morning,<br />

it had better be good. Remember,<br />

breakfast is the meal of champions,<br />

and don’t you want to be<br />

a champion Find more great<br />

breakfast ideas at www.imfreakinhungry.blogspot.com.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Co-Editors-in-Chief............................ ........Cara Bigony ’09<br />

Kate Burns ’09<br />

Assistant Editor ........................................Maddy Levitt ‘09<br />

News Editor....................................................Jenn Pollan’09<br />

Features Editor..........................................Katie Voorhes ’09<br />

Opinions Editor..........................................Maddy Levitt ‘09<br />

Arts Editors..............................................Brittany Dixon ‘09<br />

Sports Editor.......................................Adam Lowenstein ’10<br />

Faculty Advisor...............................................Mary Mertsch<br />

Contributing Writers: Hannah Armstrong ‘10, Ethan Bauer ‘11,<br />

Melissa Benjamin ‘11, Laura Blackett ‘09, Ian Brownstein ‘09,<br />

Brittany Dixon ‘09, Ryan Drake ‘10, Alex Drew ‘10, Michele<br />

Edelman ‘10 , Ben Foley ‘09, Jonathan Levitt ‘12, Stephanie Lie<br />

‘11, Andrew Navoni ‘09, Ben Silberstein ‘10, Dave Tackeff, Dan<br />

Singer ‘10, Rebecca Solomons ‘10, Matt Tanner ‘12; Photographers:<br />

Maddy Levitt, <strong>The</strong> Levitt Family, Adam Lowenstein, Tim<br />

Morse.<br />

THE RIVERS EDGE is p u b l i s h e d b y t h e s t u d e n t s o f Th e Ri v e r s<br />

Sc h o o l a n d m ay b e s u b s c r i b e d to f o r t w e n t y d o l l a r s a y e a r. THE<br />

EDGE is a f o r u m f o r t h e i d e a s a n d c o n c e r n s o f t h e s t u d e n t b o d y, a n d<br />

l e t t e r s a n d c o n t r i b u t i o n s f r o m t h e e n t i r e Ri v e r s c o m m u n i t y-s t u d e n t s,<br />

fa c u lt y, staff, pa r e n t s a n d a l u m n i- a r e w e l c o m e d a n d e n c o u r a g e d. Uns<br />

i g n e d l e t t e r s w il l n o t b e p u b l i s h e d, b u t n a m e s w il l b e w i t h h e l d u p o n<br />

r e q u e s t. We r e s e rv e t h e r i g h t to e d i t a l l l e t t e r s b o t h f o r s i z e a n d<br />

c o n t e n t. Pl e a s e s e n d to Th e Ed i t o r, THE RIVERS EDGE, 333 Wi n t e r<br />

St r e e t, We s t o n, MA 02493.


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> Page 5<br />

Letters to the Editors<br />

Do the bus schedules<br />

keep students in mind<br />

Dear <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong>,<br />

I am contacting the school paper in regard to my feelings about<br />

the Boston and Northeastern bus schedules. Bottom line: the school bus<br />

schedule in the afternoon needs to change, specifically on Wednesdays<br />

and Fridays. For those who are not familiar with the schedule, there is<br />

only one Boston and Northeastern bus that departs at six o’clock p.m.<br />

sharp on those particular days. Ironically, these are the days that <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

students get out the earliest. <strong>The</strong> truth is, if there were an earlier bus on<br />

Wednesdays and Fridays for students not doing an activity after school,<br />

bus students would have more time to get home earlier and accomplish<br />

what needs to be done outside of school.<br />

When asked the question, “Why is there only one late bus on early<br />

release days,” a faculty member responded by explaining that the reason<br />

is that, on those game days, students who take the bus should spend<br />

those long four to five hours watching the <strong>Rivers</strong> games taking place<br />

on campus. What confuses me is that if the students who take any of<br />

the two buses have to stay to “watch games,” why are other <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

licensed drivers allowed to leave when they please if they have no priorities<br />

after school on campus Why don’t they have to stay from one<br />

forty p.m. or two thirty p.m. at least until six o’clock Don’t get me<br />

wrong; I believe that showing school spirit and supporting our school’s<br />

teams are important throughout this high school experience. Although,<br />

it isn’t guaranteed that these sports games are always going to be home<br />

on game days. In general, it is quite unfair that students whose only option<br />

is to take the bus don’t get the choice to leave when we please.<br />

<strong>The</strong> school’s decision to have just one late bus for each bus route<br />

on early dismissal days affects students’ schedules outside of <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

limiting their time for activities outside of school. For instance,<br />

a sophomore who takes the Boston bus has traditional dance rehearsals<br />

throughout the week, including Wednesdays. However, not always<br />

guaranteed a ride from the <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> to Back Bay Station by a generous<br />

driver, she would have to attend a later rehearsal that goes from<br />

eight o’clock to ten o’clock. <strong>The</strong>refore, she would risk taking the train<br />

at night and getting home at eleven o’clock. On another note, there is a<br />

junior who has free time after school and would love to get a part-time<br />

job. However, because his only option is to take the bus on Wednesday<br />

and Friday, he cannot get hired due to the fact that he gets home so late.<br />

I personally would enjoy visiting <strong>The</strong> Badger & Rosen Squashbusters<br />

Facility daily because t hat is the place where I am most productive and<br />

can complete my school assignments thoroughly. However, taking the<br />

six o’clock bus would get me to that building around six fifty p.m. It’s<br />

hard enough getting home at seven thirty p.m. on these late days and<br />

getting up at five o’clock in the morning, every morning, and leaving<br />

home at six twenty to take a stuffed MBTA bus and train, rushing to<br />

catch the bus in the morning.<br />

On days when students are dismissed earlier, almost everyone<br />

claims that we who have to wait for the bus should use that time to get<br />

homework done at school. Once that time is taken up, what else is there<br />

to accomplish <strong>The</strong> scenery is beautiful but would you enjoy staring at<br />

a tree for more than two hours I think not.<br />

Another issue is the cost of buses, which is another claimed reason<br />

for one late Boston and Northeastern bus on game days. Honestly, the<br />

school doesn’t need an entire bus for the kids who would like to leave<br />

early. Instead, something as simple as a van would be efficient and<br />

would take the driver less time to get to the destination than it would if<br />

he were driving a large bus.<br />

An earlier ride provided by the school on Wednesdays and Fridays<br />

would make the lives of those who take one of the two buses much<br />

easier and less stressful, and that would make future school years run<br />

much smoother.<br />

- Rochelle Galvao ‘10<br />

Clubs need more time<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> should designate more time to clubs. Sophomore year I<br />

traipsed through the club fair enthused by the prospect of participating<br />

in a great array of activities. Within a week, I realized that it is impossible<br />

to be involved in all the clubs that I’m interested in. In fact, even<br />

with only two clubs I often face conflicting meeting times. Now that<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> has cut club block to a mere once a week, students are forced<br />

to limit their participation in clubs, or run the risk of being overscheduled.<br />

Other high schools allow much more time for club meetings<br />

which strengthens their sense of community.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> loves sports. Most groups of friends originate and revolve<br />

around sports teams. Why Athletic teams bring together students with<br />

a common passion. Clubs could do the same thing. From my experience<br />

with Model UN, clubs can be a great way to meet new people<br />

that have the same interests as you. Often times, these are people in<br />

other grades with whom you may never have had the chance to interact<br />

otherwise. Creating these connections is what builds stronger<br />

communities.<br />

With the addition of more club time, <strong>Rivers</strong> students could pursue<br />

more of their interests. All together, we could construct a stronger<br />

community.<br />

-Leslie Sachs ‘10<br />

Your trash is now my treasure<br />

b y La u r a Bl a c k e t t ‘09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

<strong>The</strong> night before trash day is<br />

my favorite night of the week.<br />

Every Tuesday after I return<br />

from school my mom asks with<br />

wide eyes and a look of childish<br />

excitement if I’m ready for<br />

another “midnight requisition.”<br />

This, I learned at a very young<br />

age, is code for our patrolling<br />

the neighborhood claiming our<br />

neighbors’ wrongfully discarded<br />

“trash.” We love the rusty and<br />

barely functional, the decrepit<br />

wooden furniture, and the outdated<br />

and faded things that most<br />

people overlook.<br />

At ten o’clock (which, for my<br />

mother, might as well be midnight)<br />

I hear a tap on my door.<br />

“Laura,” she whispers, “it’s<br />

22:00, time to roll out.”<br />

“Okay, Mom. I’ll be out in a<br />

sec.”<br />

“Roger that.”<br />

I emerge and see my mother’s<br />

petite frame dressed entirely in<br />

black. She scolds me.<br />

“You know you’re supposed<br />

to call me Jack Bauer!”<br />

I try to explain to her that<br />

Jack Bauer fights terrorists, he<br />

doesn’t root through people’s<br />

garbage looking for home décor,<br />

but she’s already on her way to<br />

the garage.<br />

Our minivan crawls at hearse<br />

speed through our neighborhood<br />

as we examine the piles of garbage<br />

at the end of each driveway.<br />

On most nights we only spot<br />

trash and the occasional moldy<br />

reclining chair, but if we’re<br />

lucky, we find broken wooden<br />

furniture, dusty boxes, and rusty<br />

metal things. We find objects<br />

with potential that most people<br />

overlook – beautiful pieces with<br />

character that are just waiting for<br />

sandpaper and stain.<br />

Once we return home with<br />

the various discards from our<br />

neighbors’ lives we clean them,<br />

repair them, and find them a<br />

place in our own house.<br />

Now, before you conjure a<br />

false image of our home as a<br />

cluttered pit filled with garbage,<br />

let me assure you that everything<br />

that enters our house will have a<br />

purpose. Sneaking around with<br />

my parents after curfew is only<br />

half the fun. <strong>The</strong> other half is the<br />

process of restoring old beauty<br />

and finding an entirely new function<br />

for these neglected items.<br />

<strong>The</strong> planters in our garden are<br />

repurposed pig troughs; we use<br />

a wooden toolbox for kitchen<br />

storage, and an old ammunition<br />

case to hold CDs. <strong>The</strong> bookshelf<br />

in our living room is a recycled<br />

shoe rack from a shoe factory…<br />

from a time when shoes actually<br />

were made in the US.<br />

Enormous effort is invested<br />

in finding and renovating these<br />

items, but then we have to hide<br />

them. We can’t invite our neighbors<br />

into our home for fear that<br />

they will spot our re-upholstered<br />

ottoman. Which used to be their<br />

ottoman. Whenever we have<br />

dinner parties, we must urge<br />

Mrs. Forte away from the back<br />

room where we have hidden her<br />

old wooden desk as if it were our<br />

hostage, and we can no longer<br />

make eye contact with the couple<br />

that lives across the street after<br />

they returned home from a late<br />

night out and caught us maneuvering<br />

their dresser into the trunk<br />

of our van.<br />

A more important result of<br />

our midnight requisitions is my<br />

love of junk – a love that is more<br />

than my inner bargain hunter<br />

trying to save money or my inner<br />

environmentalist trying to reduce<br />

waste. To me there’s something<br />

special about filling my room<br />

with things that have more history<br />

than anything you could find<br />

at Ikea, and I enjoy approaching<br />

what other people consider trash<br />

with creativity and innovation.<br />

I slam on the brakes and<br />

enter a state of giddy excitement<br />

whenever I pass a junk<br />

shop or even see a “free stuff”<br />

sign on the side of the road, and<br />

on Tuesday nights my mother<br />

and I peer out the window with<br />

anticipation, trying to spot<br />

anything worth saving. We patrol<br />

town, collecting the forgotten<br />

fragments of our neighborhood,<br />

and if we’re lucky enough to<br />

find that perfect thing, we take it<br />

home and store it in the garage,<br />

knowing that in a week we might<br />

not be able to have the Fortes<br />

over, but we’ll be surrounded by<br />

the character and beauty that we<br />

restored. <strong>The</strong>n, after sunrise on<br />

Wednesday, the Dumpster divers<br />

in us go home, and we return to<br />

our cover as a well-behaved New<br />

England family.


Page 6<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Features<br />

<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Election <strong>2008</strong>: <strong>The</strong> candidates’ positions on key topics<br />

Barack Obama<br />

b y Be n Si l b e r s t e i n ’10<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

Barack Obama—the man, the<br />

legend. Yes, the Democratic contender<br />

for the Presidency of this<br />

fine country, the United States. In<br />

possibly one of the most important<br />

elections of our time, Obama<br />

stands for positive change. And<br />

yes, every other politician in the<br />

history of civilization has said<br />

the same thing, but in this case,<br />

Obama directly opposes our current<br />

Bush Administration. Because<br />

of this, change seems a<br />

likely possibility. Here’s where<br />

Barack Obama stands on the following<br />

issues:<br />

<strong>The</strong> Economy<br />

Maybe you noticed, but the<br />

United States’ economy is in an<br />

unfortunate place. <strong>The</strong> current<br />

Bush Administration took over<br />

the Presidency with nearly a $6<br />

trillion surplus, and has now left<br />

us trillions in debt. <strong>The</strong>re is panic<br />

in the stock market, and there is<br />

talk about another Depression.<br />

Obama proposes that he will<br />

tax oil companies (a “Windfall<br />

Tax”), which will initially put<br />

a $1,000 energy rebate in the<br />

hands of many American families.<br />

<strong>The</strong> goal here is to help families<br />

pay rising bills. Obama’s<br />

second major plan is to stimulate<br />

the economy with a $50 billion<br />

package, half directed towards<br />

job security, the other half directed<br />

towards education and health.<br />

Finally, Obama intends to put a<br />

tax in place that benefits 95% of<br />

American families. Any family<br />

or business with an income of<br />

less than $250,000 will receive<br />

a tax cut. Obama’s intends to revitalize<br />

the economy while emphasizing<br />

the well-being of the<br />

middle class of America.<br />

<strong>The</strong> War in Iraq<br />

Depending on opinion, the<br />

War in Iraq has either been a<br />

catastrophic failure or a success.<br />

Barack Obama agrees with the<br />

first sentiment, that this War has<br />

been a disaster. That we were<br />

“careless getting in.” On a pure<br />

statistical basis, this has been one<br />

of the longest wars in our history:<br />

longer than both World Wars and<br />

the Civil War. 4,000 Americans<br />

have died, and 60,000 have been<br />

wounded. It seems we entered the<br />

“But in this election, and in<br />

these upcoming years, understanding<br />

the world around us<br />

has never been more important.”<br />

grants, making them “wait years<br />

for applications.” Either way,<br />

there is an immigration crisis.<br />

While Obama intends to make<br />

the borders more secure, he still<br />

wishes to keep immigrant families<br />

together. He has put an emphasis<br />

on working on economic development<br />

with Mexico, to get rid of<br />

the incentive to immigrate to the<br />

United States. He also intends to<br />

give current well-standing illegal<br />

immigrants the opportunity to become<br />

citizens. In other words, he<br />

means to cut off immigration at<br />

the source. At the same time, he<br />

intends to help those who have<br />

already immigrated.<br />

Global Warming<br />

To put it bluntly, the other issues<br />

seem to pale in comparison<br />

to this one—because if we destroy<br />

the world, none of these<br />

other issues will matter. Barack<br />

Obama understands this, and he<br />

plans to create millions of new<br />

jobs by investing $150 billion<br />

(over 10 years) to create an oil<br />

independent society. He intends<br />

to put over 1 million plug-in, hybrid<br />

cars on the road by 2015, all<br />

of which would be produced in<br />

America, and all of which would<br />

get 150 miles/gallon. He also intends<br />

to use renewable sources<br />

for electricity: 10% of our electricity,<br />

he says, will come from<br />

renewable sources by 2012, and<br />

25% by 2025.<br />

Healthcare<br />

Healthcare is Barack Obama’s<br />

strongest issue, especially compared<br />

to John McCain’s plan.<br />

Obama promises cuts in health-<br />

war with one idea, and are now<br />

attempting to justify another. Either<br />

way, Barack Obama fully endorses<br />

a withdrawal from Iraq. It<br />

will be very difficult to do so, but<br />

regardless, Obama plans to have<br />

the vast majority of our troops<br />

out of Iraq by 2010. Obama also<br />

intends to pressure the Iraqi government<br />

into taking control of<br />

its country and reaching some<br />

kind of political stability. Barack<br />

Obama has voted against the war<br />

since it was initially proposed,<br />

warning that it would be “an occupation<br />

of undetermined length,<br />

with undetermined costs and undetermined<br />

consequences.”<br />

Illegal Immigration<br />

While it may not be as important<br />

in the current scheme<br />

of things, there is obvious resentment<br />

for illegal immigrants<br />

in this country. 500,000 illegal<br />

immigrants come to the United<br />

States each year, and there has<br />

been a 40% increase in illegal<br />

immigrants since the year 2000.<br />

In addition, the Immigration Bureaucracy<br />

has failed legal immicare<br />

payments for those who<br />

have and are pleased with their<br />

existing plans. In Obama’s plan,<br />

the cost of healthcare could drop<br />

by as much as $2,500 per year.<br />

However, Obama says that if you<br />

do not have healthcare, that it<br />

will be readily available. Obama<br />

plans on covering this healthcare<br />

with the increased taxation on the<br />

5% of this population that makes<br />

$250,000. Like his tax plans,<br />

Obama is putting emphasis on<br />

lessening the load on the middle<br />

class economically.<br />

I know many choose not to involve<br />

themselves in politics. For<br />

some, it is boring. For some, it has<br />

no relevancy. For others, arguing<br />

over politics is a waste of time<br />

and energy. But in this election,<br />

and in these upcoming years, understanding<br />

the world around us<br />

has never been more important.<br />

Whether you support McCain or<br />

Obama, you should know this: it is<br />

imperative to know what’s going<br />

on. Our country, in the past eight<br />

years, has regressed significantly.<br />

This country has fallen into tough<br />

times. Both parties argue change,<br />

but only one of them means it.<br />

Both parties say they will fight<br />

for you and your family, but only<br />

one of them will battle. Both parties<br />

say they will fix this country,<br />

but only one of them will. And<br />

hopefully, if you’re voting, you’ll<br />

make the right decision.<br />

John McCain<br />

b y Dav e Ta c k e f f ’10<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

<strong>The</strong> candidate for the Republican<br />

side is John McCain, a seventy-two<br />

year old senator from<br />

Arizona. McCain was educated<br />

at Annapolis and shortly after, he<br />

enlisted in the Navy as an aircraft<br />

carrier pilot. In 1967, the young<br />

pilot was on a mission in Vietnam<br />

when his plane was shot down<br />

and McCain was taken into custody<br />

at Hanoi. During his tenure<br />

as a POW, McCain was tortured<br />

and interrogated for a total of five<br />

and a half years. His character<br />

showed in captivity when he was<br />

offered freedom and he adamantly<br />

stated that he would not leave unless<br />

his fellow soldiers were liberated<br />

as well. After his release on<br />

March 14, 1973, McCain returned<br />

to America and underwent two<br />

years of physical therapy for his<br />

extensive injuries.<br />

His service to the Navy led to<br />

his entry onto the political scene<br />

in 1977 when he was appointed<br />

the Navy’s representative to the<br />

Senate; he maintained this position<br />

until 1982 when he became<br />

an Arizona congressman. During<br />

the Reagan Administration, his<br />

votes in the House of Representatives<br />

were closely aligned with<br />

the President. McCain strongly<br />

opposed the Soviet Union and<br />

Reagan’s tax breaks and a free<br />

market economy. His policies<br />

were not changed when McCain<br />

was appointed as an Arizona senator<br />

in 1987. McCain’s votes in<br />

the Senate have generally gone<br />

against the grain of both parties,<br />

but he is classified as a Republican.<br />

He has served as a member<br />

of the Armed Services Committee<br />

and several other military panels.<br />

On September 27, 1999, the<br />

Arizona senator announced his<br />

first campaign to become President<br />

of the United States. His<br />

campaign was built on giving<br />

government back to the people<br />

and McCain’s so-called “Straight<br />

Talk”. He won the New Hampshire<br />

primaries, but slander and<br />

attack ads from George Bush’s<br />

campaign derailed his campaign<br />

and McCain lost to Bush; however,<br />

his loss to the current President<br />

did not sour his relationship<br />

with him. In 2004, McCain<br />

showed loyalty to the Republican<br />

President by endorsing him in the<br />

election while also supporting fellow<br />

Vietnam veteran, John Kerry.<br />

McCain supported Bush’s War<br />

on Terrorism and defended Kerry<br />

from Bush’s attack ads questioning<br />

Kerry’s Vietnam Service.<br />

During his latest Senatorial<br />

term, McCain introduced a bill<br />

prohibiting the torture of prisoners<br />

at Guantanamo Bay, which<br />

passed in the senate with a vote<br />

of ninety to nine and vehemently<br />

supported Bush’s troop surge in<br />

Iraq.<br />

On April 25, 2007, McCain<br />

announced his intention to run for<br />

President once again. He fared<br />

poorly in the first primary, losing<br />

to Mike Huckabee, and many<br />

thought that McCain lacked the<br />

funds to continue his campaign,<br />

but he won the next primary in<br />

New Hampshire and had a relatively<br />

smooth rise to the Republican<br />

nomination. After becoming<br />

the Republican candidate,<br />

McCain based his campaign on<br />

principles similar to those of his<br />

2000 campaign. At the head of<br />

his policies, once again, is the<br />

idea of Straight Talk to the American<br />

people. He believes that it<br />

is important for a government to<br />

serve its people and to be truthful<br />

in that respect.<br />

<strong>The</strong> army veteran is largely<br />

viewed as the tougher candidate<br />

in this election due to his support<br />

of military action in the War on<br />

Terror, his service in Vietnam,<br />

and constant support of military<br />

funding. McCain reinforces the<br />

idea that America must meet terrorist<br />

foes on the battlefield and<br />

bring the fight to them if we are<br />

to protect ourselves and deprive<br />

the extremists of the supporters<br />

they desire. <strong>The</strong> Arizona Senator<br />

has stated that Nuclear Proliferation<br />

must be avoided at all<br />

costs. A multitude of people feel<br />

as though McCain is the better<br />

candidate because he is the stronger<br />

candidate with regards to our<br />

defense.<br />

On the reeling economy, Mc-<br />

Cain supports a free market and<br />

will give corporations tax breaks.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se corporate tax breaks<br />

would create jobs because they<br />

would stop large businesses such<br />

as General Motors from closing<br />

due to bankruptcy, thereby saving<br />

thousands of American jobs.<br />

McCain is advocating in the Senate<br />

and on the campaign trail<br />

for the cutting of “Pork-Barrel”<br />

spending in the economy. Mc-<br />

Cain supporters believe that<br />

helping struggling corporations<br />

will create jobs and will save the<br />

economy from a recession<br />

“He respects his opponent<br />

and that Barack Obama is a<br />

family man who is worthy of<br />

leading our great nation.”<br />

McCain plans to cut taxes for<br />

those in scientific research in order<br />

to boost American technology<br />

and insure that we remain competitive<br />

in the world. <strong>The</strong> Republican<br />

nominee also believes that<br />

technological advances in missile<br />

defense and other military aspects<br />

will protect our country even better<br />

than before.<br />

From Captain in the<br />

United States Navy, to Senator,<br />

to Republican Nominee for<br />

President of the United States,<br />

his resume is impressive. His<br />

campaign promises truth from<br />

the government and safety for the<br />

American people. McCain echoes<br />

Integretas et Sedulitas with grace.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Senator has been honest with<br />

the American people and has battled<br />

adversity. McCain’s attacks<br />

against Barack Obama’s character<br />

have slowed because McCain<br />

has realized that he is committing<br />

the crime which George W. Bush<br />

committed against him in 2000.<br />

Recently, a woman at one of his<br />

rallies called the Democratic nominee<br />

an Arab and McCain unwaveringly<br />

replied that he respects his<br />

opponent and that Barack Obama<br />

is a family man who is worthy<br />

of leading our great nation. It is<br />

becoming a fascinating race for<br />

the Presidency, and on November<br />

4th, we will learn whether people<br />

will side with Obama’s train of<br />

change or McCain’s straight talk<br />

safety.


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Page 7<br />

Conservatory revamped: stepping things up an octave<br />

b y Ia n Br o w n s t e i n ’09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

Casey Berman, 17, the lead<br />

saxophone in the <strong>Rivers</strong> Big<br />

Band, Select Combo I, Conservatory<br />

Program, who had<br />

surgery on his leg this summer,<br />

excitedly crutches over to the<br />

new Bradley Hall after a long<br />

academic day to learn about<br />

music composition from a New<br />

England Conservatory (NEC)<br />

professor.<br />

“I love learning and seeing<br />

music in a different way every<br />

time I talk to him [the professor]<br />

because he teaches me new approaches<br />

and angles that I never<br />

would have thought of,” said<br />

Berman. “It has altered the way I<br />

play drastically.”<br />

After a long day of classes,<br />

another 19 <strong>Rivers</strong> students join<br />

Berman spending their time<br />

after school in the classrooms of<br />

Bradley Hall.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Conservatory Program<br />

has increased its student body<br />

from 8 to 20 students in the 6<br />

years since its founding, and the<br />

new Bradley Hall has centralized<br />

this expanding program, according<br />

to students and faculty.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> Conservatory<br />

(the former Music <strong>School</strong> at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>) was founded in 1975 after<br />

<strong>The</strong> New England Conservatory<br />

of Music closed its suburban<br />

branches. <strong>The</strong> school has been<br />

committed to excellence in music<br />

education and performance<br />

since it first became part of the<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong>, according to its<br />

website. <strong>The</strong> school has gained<br />

national fame with its annual<br />

Seminar on Contemporary Music<br />

for the Young and has grown<br />

to accommodate more than 750<br />

students.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Conservatory Program<br />

was founded in 2003 bridging<br />

students between the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> and the <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Conservatory. This program allows<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> students to<br />

pursue interests in music beyond<br />

their band, chorus, or orchestra<br />

sessions during the school day<br />

and is “a bold alternative in<br />

college preparatory studies for<br />

students with a serious interest in<br />

and aptitude for music,” according<br />

to its website. This alternative<br />

has graduated students like<br />

Leo McDonnell, 2006 MVP of<br />

the Massachusetts State IAJE<br />

(International Association for<br />

Jazz Educators) competition and<br />

Features<br />

after a long day of academic<br />

classes.<br />

Last year the program moved<br />

into the new state-of-the-art<br />

Bradley Hall equipped with<br />

practice rooms, kitchen, library,<br />

recording studio, and a recital<br />

hall.<br />

“All of us being in two buildings<br />

[Bradley Hall and next door<br />

Blackwell House] right next to<br />

each other we have a unity of<br />

faculty and students” said David<br />

Tierney, director of the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> Conservatory. “<strong>The</strong> collaboration<br />

is allowing us to grow<br />

even further.”<br />

Faculty and students alike<br />

share the opinion that Bradley<br />

Hall has unified the Conservatory<br />

Program and the <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Conservatory and at the same<br />

time causes growth of the programs<br />

offered by the institution.<br />

“I feel that the Conservatory<br />

Program is taking a step forward<br />

in becoming a serious musical<br />

institution by moving into Bradley<br />

Hall,” said Ross Hoyt, 16,<br />

a 11th grade first year member<br />

of the program and the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Select I Combo who aspires<br />

“to be a professional composer<br />

someday.”<br />

Back when Hoyt, also a third<br />

year member of the <strong>Rivers</strong> Big<br />

Band, was applying to private<br />

schools, <strong>Rivers</strong> stood out for<br />

him, “because I knew that I<br />

would want to take music seriously<br />

and <strong>Rivers</strong> was the only<br />

ISL school with a strong jazz<br />

program.” He is excited that the<br />

new facilities allow him to play<br />

at any time of day in the numerous<br />

practice rooms in Bradley<br />

Hall.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new practice rooms, as<br />

well as the Bradley Hall library<br />

and foyer, have given conservatory<br />

students places to play and<br />

do homework between classes<br />

without having to leave the<br />

building.<br />

Jeremiah Campanelli, 14,<br />

a 9th grade first year member<br />

of the conservatory and Select<br />

Combo I, came to <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

because of the program. He<br />

heard about the program through<br />

the lessons he took at the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> Conservatory and<br />

thinks the new facilities and the<br />

program will help further his<br />

musical education.<br />

Most conservatory students<br />

hear about the program through<br />

similar experiences as Campanelli’s.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Conservatory<br />

Program is advertised mainly<br />

by word of mouth,” said Dan<br />

Shaud, the Conservatory Program<br />

Coordinator and teacher. “[T]here<br />

is a ‘buzz’ about the program<br />

because the students are excited<br />

about what they’re doing and others<br />

want to be a part of it,” Shaud<br />

said. “<strong>The</strong>re is a desire among<br />

many students and parents to find<br />

a school that has the opportunity<br />

for intensive musical training as<br />

well as a great academic program.”<br />

This desire has brought a<br />

150% increase in the student<br />

body of the program, from 8 to<br />

Are high school students too old to trick-or-treat<br />

b y Be n Fo l e y ’09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

As the leaves change to brilliant<br />

tones of yellow and orange<br />

and people begin to bundle up<br />

in numerous layers of protection<br />

from the bitter wind, an indescribable<br />

feeling creeps in and begins<br />

to fill the air. <strong>The</strong> long awaited<br />

Halloween season has arrived!<br />

Pumpkins sit on doorsteps carved<br />

into shapes varying from witches<br />

and monsters to smiley faces and<br />

jack-o-lanterns.<br />

Occasionally one might find<br />

masses of fake cobwebs entangled<br />

in his neighbor’s trees. With<br />

this annual eve of staged terror in<br />

the near future, young children<br />

begin to plan and craft the costumes<br />

that will adorn them come<br />

the 31st. Yet some kids find themselves<br />

in a pickle of sorts as they<br />

steamroll towards adolescence.<br />

Young teens enduring their middle<br />

school years are forced to ask<br />

themselves the age old emotionally<br />

tolling question: “Am I too<br />

old to trick-or-treat”<br />

I would like to consider myself<br />

a pretty typical, All-American<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Conservatory Program<br />

is taking a step forward<br />

in becoming a serious musical<br />

institution.” --Ross Hoyt<br />

current student at the Oberlin<br />

Conservatory in Ohio, and Alex<br />

Barstow, a current student of<br />

the rigorous Tufts-New England<br />

Conservatory joint program.<br />

Before Bradley Hall’s opening<br />

last year, the conservatory<br />

program was spread from 321,<br />

the house adjacent to the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>’s entrance, to the basement<br />

of Berwind in the old Big<br />

Band room. Students would<br />

walk back and forth for classes<br />

like color (ear training), solfege<br />

(singing with syllables), music<br />

theory, and performance classes<br />

teenager who has had a pretty<br />

standard childhood and upbringing.<br />

With this in mind, I feel that<br />

my past endeavors on various<br />

Halloween nights represent the<br />

events experienced by any given<br />

veteran trick-or-treater on the<br />

verge of retirement. Up until middle<br />

school I would look forward to<br />

Halloween all year long, planning<br />

and coordinating my costumes<br />

with friends and even determining<br />

which pillowcase in my house<br />

was the largest, in anticipation of<br />

the copious amount of sweets that<br />

would soon be mine.<br />

However, things changed<br />

when I entered middle school. I<br />

was too cool for school, and thus,<br />

was way too mature and grown<br />

up to go trick-or-treating. Instead,<br />

the three Halloween nights of my<br />

middle school career involved<br />

my friends and I roaming around<br />

the bustling neighborhoods of<br />

Sherborn armed with masks, silly<br />

string, and eggs, taking on all adversarial<br />

elementary school kids<br />

who were stupid enough to leave<br />

their father’s side. <strong>The</strong>se nights<br />

were short lived and filled with<br />

mischief, always ending with the<br />

confiscation of our weapons and a<br />

stern talking to, courtesy of a perturbed<br />

adult.<br />

According to Jennifer B.<br />

Siverts of the University of California’s<br />

Daily Nexus this type<br />

of mischief is not uncommon<br />

amongst teens. On <strong>October</strong> 31st<br />

2002 there was a reported 103<br />

teen arrests and 143 criminal citations<br />

given to teens in the town of<br />

Isla Vista.<br />

“Age is just a number. Maturity<br />

is a mindset. If you can<br />

enjoy yourself trick-or-treating<br />

then there is no reason why you<br />

shouldn’t go.” - Olivia Rochman.<br />

Other cities, such as Milwaukee,<br />

Wisconsin have resorted to<br />

daytime trick-or-treating, with<br />

hopes of deterring the mischief experienced<br />

at night. This approach<br />

undeniably takes away from the<br />

mysterious and daring fun to be<br />

reveled in by those young enough<br />

to be scared and invigorated by<br />

“Bradley Hall has consolidated<br />

the Conservatory<br />

and given the program a focal<br />

point.” - Tom Chalmers<br />

the unknown that may be sitting<br />

on a dark porch as they approach<br />

and beg for their tasty morsels.<br />

Information and statistics such<br />

as these prove that middle school<br />

should be the age limit of trickor-treating.<br />

If so many teens were<br />

not roaming the streets looking<br />

for trouble on Halloween then<br />

the night would be much more<br />

enjoyable for the kids still young<br />

enough to be enthralled by the<br />

sheer joy of having heaps of candy<br />

dumped into their pillowcases.<br />

Also, entire cities could return to<br />

good old fashion nighttime trickor-treating.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> junior Tommy Harrison<br />

agrees: “When kids get too old<br />

for trick-or-treating they usually<br />

just end up walking around finding<br />

trouble to get into. I used to<br />

hate being terrorized by those<br />

older kids when I was just trying<br />

to get as much candy as possible.<br />

I never did anything to them,”<br />

Harrison recalls.<br />

Yet some people such as <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

senior Olivia Rochman insist<br />

that one is never too old to go<br />

trick-or-treating, claiming that<br />

children mature at different rates.<br />

“Age is just a number. Maturity is<br />

20 students, and more than 2/3<br />

of that growth occurred before<br />

Bradley Hall’s construction.<br />

While the program is becoming<br />

popular through its reputation<br />

and its oral advertisement,<br />

Bradley Hall has had an impact<br />

on current students and their<br />

decision to choose <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

“I came to <strong>Rivers</strong> because the<br />

Conservatory and Bradley Hall<br />

made an impact on my decision<br />

to come,” said Campanelli.<br />

“Bradley Hall has consolidated<br />

the Conservatory and given<br />

the program a focal point,” said<br />

Tom Chalmers, 16, a 3rd year<br />

member of the program, Select<br />

Combo I, and the lead Trombone<br />

in the <strong>Rivers</strong> Big Band. <strong>The</strong><br />

facilities have given the space<br />

and equipment necessary to bring<br />

the program into one building,<br />

commented Chalmers. He no<br />

longer has to shuttle to-and-from<br />

the modules, Berwind, 321, and<br />

the Blackwell House, which is<br />

next to Bradley Hall, like he did<br />

last year.<br />

“When I came as a freshman<br />

the conservatory program<br />

seemed a more makeshift<br />

program. <strong>The</strong> new facilities revamped<br />

the program,” said Alex<br />

Adach, 16, first year member of<br />

the Conservatory and 2nd year<br />

member of Select Combo I. This<br />

is a common opinion of students<br />

in the classical and jazz departments<br />

of the program.<br />

While some students decide to<br />

join the program so they “don’t<br />

have to do sports,” as one student<br />

said, the program is growing in<br />

focus and is defining itself as a<br />

third option of <strong>Rivers</strong> students<br />

in their choice of after school<br />

activities. But all students agree,<br />

“Conservatory is for people who<br />

want to take music seriously.”<br />

a mindset. If you can enjoy yourself<br />

trick-or-treating then there is<br />

no reason why you shouldn’t go,”<br />

Rochman preaches.<br />

Although this theory might<br />

hold true for some teens, it is the<br />

trouble seeking kids who make<br />

this age limit justifiable. Even<br />

if a few teenagers genuinely do<br />

want to go trick-or-treating for<br />

the utter thrill of having an old<br />

lady toss Sour Patch Kids into a<br />

weathered burlap sack, the other<br />

young adults roaming the streets<br />

will surely put an end to the good<br />

times.<br />

Many people concur with this<br />

concept. After a poll of 50 <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

students ranging from freshman<br />

to seniors, 39 of them agreed that<br />

7th grade should be the cut off<br />

and a rule of thumb for borderline<br />

trick-or-treating retirees.<br />

With obnoxious older teens<br />

roaming around on Halloween,<br />

the night can be transformed from<br />

a time of joyous children consuming<br />

sugary treats, to a night filled<br />

with mayhem and terrorization.<br />

However, this mischief is easily<br />

avoidable. Please let the younger<br />

trick-or-treaters be this coming<br />

Halloween.


Page 8<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Arts<br />

<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Mathers-Suter returns to <strong>Rivers</strong> with new vision<br />

b y Br i t ta n y Di x o n ‘09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g w r i t e r<br />

<strong>The</strong> artist-run Kingston Gallery<br />

in Boston’s South End hosts<br />

a multitude of artist’s creations,<br />

including the work of <strong>Rivers</strong> art<br />

teacher, Ms. Catelin Mathers-Suter<br />

(<strong>Rivers</strong> ‘97). She is one of 18<br />

female artists who are displaying<br />

their work during different parts<br />

of the year. Currently, the work<br />

of Rose Olsen is up in the gallery.<br />

Ms. Mathers-Suter’s last show<br />

was this past September, and her<br />

next will be in July.<br />

Mathers-Suters’ work displayed<br />

in the September show<br />

explores the relationship between<br />

structures created by humans and<br />

humans themselves. Much of her<br />

work begins with simple photos<br />

of human creation such as airports,<br />

parking lots, highways,<br />

“<strong>The</strong> viewer is going to<br />

have a role in whatever you<br />

create.”<br />

-Mathers-Suter (‘97)<br />

and malls. She then works with<br />

a contemporary medium, Photoshop,<br />

to boost the photos’ contrast.<br />

Next, she bases her drawing<br />

on the skeleton of the photo<br />

to create her piece using repeated<br />

lines from a thin pen. Mathers-<br />

Suter chooses to use non-precious<br />

materials such as pen and ink to<br />

further convey her message of human<br />

impact.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Kingston is one of her<br />

most recent artistic ventures;<br />

however, there have been many<br />

Fashion in Solomons Shoes, the key to every outfit<br />

b y Re b e c c a So l o m o n s‘10<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

An example of the art displayed at the Kingston Gallery entitled<br />

Lotscape Playa.<br />

to come before. “I first became<br />

interestd in art around the age<br />

of three, when someone sat me<br />

down and started me at drawing.”<br />

As she grew up, art was the only<br />

thing in which she was interested.<br />

During her senior year at <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

she attended the art school, La<br />

Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes,<br />

in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.<br />

Mathers-Suther’s preferred<br />

mediums have evolved throughout<br />

the years. From ages 12 to 18,<br />

she studied with Robert Cormier<br />

in Boston, who only allowed her<br />

to work with charcoal (and no<br />

color). And when her guidance<br />

counselor, Mr. Rizoli, suggested<br />

to her that she apply to Skidmore<br />

College, Mathers-Suter had a different<br />

vision of what her future<br />

would hold. She applied to four<br />

art schools, and ended up choosing<br />

Rhode Island <strong>School</strong> of Design<br />

(RISD) where she obtained<br />

her obtain her BFA.<br />

When she got to RISD, she<br />

began painting in oil. After this,<br />

she made a dramatic change and<br />

began working with packing tape.<br />

As I sat down to write my first<br />

ever fashion column, all I could<br />

think about was Lindsay Bloom,<br />

and how I was going to fill those<br />

big shoes. Luckily for me, I have<br />

pretty large feet; size eight and<br />

a half to be exact. This got me<br />

thinking. I guess I could write<br />

my first article on shoes, a very<br />

important accessory. Scratch<br />

that, calling shoes an “accessory”<br />

would be an understatement. To<br />

me, shoes are what make or break<br />

the outfit. You can put together an<br />

unbelievably chic outfit and then<br />

just ruin it with a pair of crocs.<br />

Now I can see why some<br />

people might say they love crocs,<br />

because they are “so comfortable”<br />

or “that little strap on the<br />

back is great for ankle support.”<br />

This might be true, but when<br />

I get ready in the morning and<br />

have the perfect outfit planned<br />

out (a pair of skinny jeans a<br />

slightly looser top to complement<br />

the straight leg look of the<br />

skinny jeans, the perfect sweater<br />

and a fun scarf), I don’t immediately<br />

say to myself, “Man, I<br />

wish I had a great pair of crocs<br />

to put this outfit together.” That’s<br />

just not the way my mind works.<br />

<strong>The</strong> perfect pair of shoes for<br />

that outfit might be a great pair of<br />

tall boots, or a really cute pair of<br />

ballet flats that maybe have a tiny<br />

hint of brown in them to match<br />

your brown top. Just enough to<br />

“Fashion is a way of<br />

expressing yourself. Shoes<br />

are what take you there.”<br />

make the outfit pop! This winter/<br />

fall leather boots are must-haves.<br />

For the spring, a great pair of ballet<br />

flats (maybe a brighter color<br />

if you’re feeling dangerous), and<br />

for the summer, gladiator sandals,<br />

and a great pair of wedges<br />

are the best way to complete your<br />

“When you put packing tape on<br />

transparent surfaces, it looks like<br />

stained glass,” she noted. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

days, she works with oil and pencil,<br />

and her works deal mostly<br />

with the relationship between<br />

man and nature.<br />

After college, she received<br />

two grants, one from RISD and<br />

one from the Ludwig Foundation<br />

of Cuba. <strong>The</strong>se grants permitted<br />

her to live and make art for six<br />

months in Cuba.<br />

In 2007, Mathers-Suter traveled<br />

to London to attend the Slade<br />

<strong>School</strong> of Fine Arts in order to get<br />

her master’s degree. At the Slade<br />

<strong>School</strong>, she was honored with<br />

the Slade Project Award--a cash<br />

award that gave her the financial<br />

support she needed to complete<br />

her art installation in painting and<br />

new media.<br />

Mathers-Suter believes that<br />

art is completely individual, “if<br />

you’re lucky enough to have the<br />

opportunity to create what you<br />

want.” Unfortunately, she pointed<br />

out that many people have to<br />

worry about the commercial side<br />

of it. Even if an artist has the economic<br />

freedom to create whatever<br />

she wants, Mathers-Suther added,<br />

“<strong>The</strong> viewer is going to have a<br />

role in whatever you create.”<br />

She hopes one day to see her<br />

art become more lucrative. She<br />

would love to be in a gallery that<br />

Mathers-Suter in front of her masterpeice entitled Lotscape.<br />

summertime look. <strong>The</strong>y look<br />

great with a dress skirt or shorts.<br />

Besides my nightly ritual of<br />

reading Instyle, Vogue, or Teen<br />

Vogue, I love watching the MTV<br />

series, <strong>The</strong> Hills. Although this is<br />

not the most educational show on<br />

TV, I watch it so I can see what<br />

each character’s new outfit is for<br />

the week. Lauren Conrad is not<br />

only the star of the hit tv series, but<br />

also a prominent icon for fashion<br />

gurus like myself. Lauren sports<br />

a daytime/work outfit, which usually<br />

consists of a fun, but serious,<br />

usually dark colored dress with<br />

the perfect pair of pumps to complete<br />

her look. Having previously<br />

worked at Teen Vogue, and now<br />

working at People’s Revolution,<br />

she has to look the part. She also<br />

shows her nighttime outfit which<br />

is either a brightly colored dress<br />

or a pair of skinny jeans and a silk<br />

and/or perfectly patterned top.<br />

Whether she is running to the gym<br />

in her Nike shocks, or strutting the<br />

streets of LA, Lauren is always<br />

properly dressed for the occasion,<br />

all the way down to her shoes.<br />

For some, shoes are the hardest<br />

part of the outfit, but for me,<br />

I can slide my eight and a halves<br />

into a wide variety of shoes depending<br />

on my mood or the particular<br />

look I am trying to achieve.<br />

“I love watching the MTV<br />

series, <strong>The</strong> Hills.<br />

Lauren<br />

Conrad is not only the star<br />

of the hit tv series, but also<br />

a prominent icon for fashion<br />

gurus like myself.”<br />

Don’t ever feel nervous or insecure<br />

about trying new styles of<br />

shoes. If they catch your attention,<br />

then that usually means that<br />

they will work. Fashion is a way<br />

of expressing yourself. Shoes are<br />

what take you there. You can’t<br />

leave your house to go anywhere<br />

without a pair of shoes. Let your<br />

next pair be interesting and take<br />

you to places you’ve never been<br />

promotes individual artists’ work,<br />

instead of being in a gallery where<br />

artists have to sell themselves.<br />

Still, the community she has<br />

found at the Kingston Gallery has<br />

helped enrich her and improve her<br />

work. She enjoys engaging in dialogue<br />

with other artists, and she is<br />

especially appreciative of the fact<br />

that they are not afraid to critique<br />

her work. One of the reasons, in<br />

fact, that she was delighted to join<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> faculty this fall is that<br />

she feels that high school students<br />

are not afraid to look at art with<br />

a critical eye. She looks forward<br />

to seeing her own art differently<br />

through her students’ eyes while<br />

simultaenously helping her students<br />

to create their own art.<br />

Her accomplishments are<br />

all very impressive. Be sure to<br />

take a peek at the Kingston Gallery,<br />

which is open from 12 to 5<br />

p.m., Tuesday through Saturday-<br />

-especially next July when Ms.<br />

Mathers-Suter’s work will be on<br />

display.<br />

before. Have a new and unforgettable<br />

experience in those<br />

shoes and you’ll always remember<br />

that those were the shoes that<br />

guided you to that special place<br />

and time. Next time you walk<br />

out the door, remember that shoes<br />

not only complete the outfit, but<br />

if chosen with care, they can reflect<br />

the wearer’s personality,<br />

and be the very sole of her style.


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> Page 9<br />

Arts<br />

<strong>The</strong> Express opens eyes to racism in college football<br />

b y Jo n at h a n Le v i t t ‘12<br />

c o n t r i b u t i n g w r i t e r<br />

a n d Ma d d y Le v i t t ‘09<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

Imagine that you have just<br />

been voted most valuable player<br />

of the big game, but you are not<br />

permitted to attend the award ceremony<br />

because the country club<br />

where it is being held does not allow<br />

blacks. Such a set of circumstances<br />

was real life for Ernie<br />

Davis, the first African American<br />

to win the Heisman Trophy, the<br />

most prestigious award for college<br />

football. This scenario is one<br />

of the most powerful moments<br />

in the new film based on Davis’<br />

life, <strong>The</strong> Express. Although I am<br />

typically not a huge fan of sports<br />

movies because they are all so<br />

similar and predictable, when the<br />

opening credits of this film began<br />

to role, I could tell that it was<br />

going to be about much more<br />

than merely sports. I relaxed,<br />

and decided to approach it with<br />

more of an open mind than usual.<br />

As a young child growing up<br />

in the 1950’s, first in Pennsylvania<br />

and then in Elmira, New<br />

York, Ernie Davis suffered racial<br />

taunting, and was further teased<br />

because he had a stutter. Despite<br />

these social and personal challenges,<br />

Davis had what it takes<br />

to succeed on the field and in<br />

life, both in terms of his incredible<br />

gift for running and his supportive<br />

family, headed up by a<br />

loving grandfather. From early<br />

on, Ernie admires Jackie Robinson,<br />

the first black major league<br />

baseball player, and football<br />

idol, Jim Brown (played by Darrin<br />

DeWitt Henson). Both men<br />

have instilled enormous pride<br />

and hope in Ernie, who realizes<br />

that they are great athletes who<br />

have advanced the cause of black<br />

people in America without having<br />

said a word. At one point in the<br />

movie, Ernie Davis tells a reporter,<br />

“When I’m on the field, my<br />

focus is on playing the best I can,<br />

but I never forget that I’m black.”<br />

Ernie is recruited by Syracuse<br />

University where his coach, Ben<br />

Schwartzwalder (played by Dennis<br />

Quaid), advises Ernie to focus<br />

only on the game, not the racism<br />

at the university or at the other<br />

schools they play. In West Virginia,<br />

for example, Ernie is pelted<br />

with bottles from the crowd when<br />

he is about to score a touch down.<br />

Meanwhile, Schwartzwalder<br />

(Quaid) convincingly conveys<br />

his struggle between supporting<br />

Ernie as an individual and focusing<br />

on winning the championship.<br />

Eventually, as the coach teaches<br />

Ernie to be a better football player,<br />

Ernie teaches the coach that you<br />

have to stand up against racism<br />

even when you are doing something<br />

as seemingly carefree as<br />

playing football. Ernie, who had a<br />

very special relationship with his<br />

grandfather, forms a similar bond<br />

with the coach. Schwartzwalder<br />

himself went on to be elected<br />

into the Baseball Hall of Fame.<br />

In many ways the movie powerfully<br />

depicts the realities of racism<br />

and reminds us of how much<br />

worse racism was in our country<br />

not so long ago. However, in some<br />

ways, the film seems to chicken<br />

out. For example, Ernie is obviously<br />

perturbed when the coach<br />

tells him to avoid inter-racial dating,<br />

but he appears to go with the<br />

flow, and just happens to meet<br />

a gorgeous black co-ed visiting<br />

from Cornell. Problem too conveniently<br />

solved. Newcomer actor<br />

Rob Foster plays Ernie Davis to<br />

great effect, but sometimes the Ernie<br />

Davis character almost seems<br />

too good to be true. One wonders<br />

if the book on which the movie is<br />

based (Ernie Davis: <strong>The</strong> Elmira<br />

Express by Robert Gallagher)<br />

presents Davis as more complex a<br />

person than the movie makes him<br />

out to be. I had never heard of Er-<br />

nie Davis before the film, but he is<br />

a great role model for all athletes<br />

because his story reveals that,<br />

even if you are not confronting<br />

racism specifically, sports are not<br />

just about the game. After winning<br />

the Heisman award, Ernie is<br />

recruited by his dream team, the<br />

Dennis Quaid and Rob Foster’s relationship warms hearts.<br />

Cleveland Browns, but just as all<br />

the pieces of his life begin to fall<br />

into place, his story ends sadly.<br />

<strong>The</strong> movie can also be challenged<br />

with regard to how little<br />

racism Ernie and two other black<br />

players seemed to confront within<br />

their own Syracuse team. <strong>The</strong><br />

Express seems to focus more on<br />

the way Ernie was mistreated by<br />

other teams and townspeople,<br />

particularly in the southern environment.<br />

This contrasts with<br />

the movie Remember the Titans,<br />

another movie about football that<br />

incorporates race, but has as its<br />

premise the difficulty that the<br />

black and white players on the<br />

team themselves had getting along<br />

and consolidating themselves into<br />

a team. However, <strong>The</strong> Express<br />

does a solid job demonstrating<br />

that when people are under stress<br />

(for example, about an important<br />

upcoming game), racism can<br />

come out, even among people who<br />

are generally getting along well.<br />

At just over two hours, the<br />

movie is a bit too long for comfort,<br />

and you may sometimes feel<br />

as though you are on an emotional<br />

rollercoaster. However, the fact<br />

that it is a true story makes it feel<br />

legitimate. Probably the worst<br />

thing to be said about <strong>The</strong> Express<br />

is that, as a movie, it never really<br />

rises to new heights. Its inspiring<br />

tone is just what you would<br />

expect; heartwarming messages<br />

such as the gratification of overcoming<br />

obstacles, the importance<br />

of family and sticking up for what<br />

you believe are all typical of<br />

sports movies. Even so, it is hard<br />

to ignore this movie’s lessons.<br />

As with Jackie Robinson, the<br />

movie demonstrates what a huge<br />

impact athletics can have on society,<br />

particularly when it comes<br />

to race. President Kennedy himself<br />

acknowledged what a huge<br />

influence Ernie Davis has had.<br />

Just maybe, in this age of actionpacked,<br />

special effects thrillers<br />

without much of a plot, a sports<br />

movie with something to say is<br />

not such a bad change of pace.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Music Kids” have unique music experience at <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

b y Me l i s s a Be n j a m i n ‘11<br />

a n d Et h a n Ba u e r ‘11<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r s<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Music Kids,” as some<br />

like to refer to them as, have<br />

a very different <strong>Rivers</strong> experience<br />

than most of the jocks and<br />

visual-artists have. After school,<br />

three to four times a week, 21<br />

students trudge over to <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Conservatory for extra classes<br />

until 5:00. But there is no need to<br />

feel sorry for them, because these<br />

students are doing this for the joy<br />

of it. In fact, to even be accepted<br />

into the program, each musician<br />

has to pass a difficult audition.<br />

Singers have to prepare at least<br />

three songs or pieces in front of<br />

a panel of judges, and then sight<br />

read a piece given to him at the<br />

audition. Instrumentalists have<br />

to choose two contrasting pieces,<br />

play scales, and sight read for the<br />

judges. As a result, only the most<br />

dedicated and trained musicians<br />

get the pleasure of a 10 class day.<br />

<strong>The</strong> classes in <strong>The</strong> Conservatory<br />

Program are fun and interactive,<br />

yet extremely challenging. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

is a wide range of classes offered,<br />

taking into consideration that every<br />

musician is at a different level<br />

of training when he or she enters<br />

the program. Although all the students<br />

must take Music <strong>The</strong>ory (a<br />

class on how music is composed<br />

and the elements that music is<br />

made up of) while they are in<br />

the program, there is also a wide<br />

variety of classes ranging from<br />

composition classes to Masterclass<br />

workshops with talented instrumentalists<br />

outside of <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

“I really like how<br />

Tierney keeps it seasonal<br />

with his ties, I<br />

never forget the time<br />

of year.”<br />

-Elliot Berman ‘11<br />

For the classical students, there<br />

are half-year classes like Color,<br />

where the students learn to improve<br />

their pitch, and Musicianship,<br />

where the students get involved<br />

with Doctor Goldberg and<br />

his extreme improvisation games.<br />

For jazz instrumentalists, there<br />

are online ear training programs<br />

and Jazz performance classes as<br />

an alternative. Students of all instruments<br />

take classes together,<br />

and as seniors, or younger if the<br />

musician is advanced enough, an<br />

AP <strong>The</strong>ory exam is taken, which<br />

can be used for college so that the<br />

students can further pursue their<br />

musical interests. Interpretive<br />

Analysis is another class that all<br />

classical conservatory students<br />

take. Students play for each other<br />

and the faculty, Mr. Shaud and<br />

Dr. Goldberg, and the students offer<br />

appreciations and critiques to<br />

the performer. This class enables<br />

students to develop their ears<br />

by listening closely to their colleagues’<br />

performances and learning<br />

from the mistakes they make.<br />

<strong>The</strong> classes are not like the<br />

classes in the regular school day.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are small and interactive<br />

with a maximum of five students<br />

per class. <strong>The</strong> inclusive, comfortable<br />

atmosphere makes it easy to<br />

learn and appreciate all sorts of<br />

music. “I really like my theory<br />

class because I get to learn about<br />

different styles [of music] and<br />

also, Mr.Shaud is the best!” says<br />

Anna Teng, an enthusiastic violinist<br />

in the program. <strong>The</strong> highly<br />

influential and dedicated faculty<br />

increases the eager young musicians’<br />

knowledge on music immensely.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y inspire the students<br />

to practice and work hard to get to<br />

a higher level on their instruments.<br />

This is what makes <strong>The</strong> Conservatory<br />

Program a great place to<br />

learn and have a blast. Also, as<br />

Elliot Berman points out, there<br />

are benefits from having such a<br />

fashion savvy head of the conservatory:<br />

“I really like how Tierney<br />

keeps it seasonal with his ties, I<br />

never forget the time of year.”<br />

Throughout the year the conservatory<br />

gives a few concerts<br />

and master classes to the public.<br />

Many of them take place in the<br />

beautiful Rivera Concert Hall in<br />

Bradley Hall. This performance<br />

hall has spectacular acoustics<br />

and an amazing Steinway piano.<br />

However, the first concert takes<br />

place in Wayland at the Church<br />

of the Holy Spirit on Sunday<br />

November 9th and will showcase<br />

both jazz and classical musicians.<br />

<strong>The</strong> works of Schubert,<br />

Beethoven and Kodaly, among<br />

others will be featured. <strong>The</strong> concert<br />

is free and everyone is invited<br />

to attend. <strong>The</strong> Conservatory Program<br />

also reaches out and shares<br />

their music with the community<br />

by giving concerts to nursing<br />

homes and other places. All of<br />

the students treasure sharing their<br />

gifts with the community and<br />

love the opportunity to perform.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Conservatory Program<br />

also has a few public master classes<br />

during the year. Gillian Rogell,<br />

who is on faculty at New England<br />

Conservatory, for viola and<br />

chamber music, will be conducting<br />

the first Conservatory master<br />

class of the year on Wednesday,<br />

<strong>October</strong> 29th. She will listen to<br />

different student ensembles and<br />

critique them, thus providing<br />

students with a different perspective<br />

on their music. <strong>The</strong>se master<br />

classes are not only a great way<br />

to hear extremely talented professions,<br />

but also give an outside<br />

view on the student musicians.<br />

Whether it is learning how<br />

to invert chords or playing solo<br />

repertoire in front of a class, the<br />

action and good times in <strong>The</strong><br />

Conservatory Program never die<br />

down. For many of the students,<br />

the Conservatory is a comfortable<br />

place to hang out, and make<br />

friends. “I really look forward to<br />

conservatory every single day. It<br />

is a place where we can all relax<br />

after a hard day of school and<br />

still learn lots of interesting and<br />

helpful things about music, while<br />

laughing and hanging out with<br />

our friends.” <strong>The</strong> Conservatory<br />

Program invites everyone to come<br />

over and share in the musical fun<br />

and check out one of the concerts<br />

or master classes this year.


Page 10 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> <strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Sports<br />

Football sets goal to end a successful season strong<br />

b y Kat e Vo o r h e s ‘09<br />

Ed g e staff<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> Varsity Football<br />

team entered the <strong>2008</strong> season<br />

with little hope, but with a long<br />

list of goals. Two years ago, their<br />

record was 2-6, and last year an<br />

even 4-4. This year the team’s<br />

main goal is to finish above .500.<br />

Ending the first game of the<br />

season with a 21-14 loss at St.<br />

Mark’s, <strong>Rivers</strong> quickly rebounded<br />

during their next two opponents.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y won 20-7 on the road<br />

at St. Paul’s for their first win of<br />

the season. <strong>The</strong> next weekend,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> crushed Thayer Academy<br />

at home, 31-10. This game was<br />

important for the team because it<br />

was the first time in fifteen years<br />

that <strong>Rivers</strong> has beaten Thayer.<br />

<strong>The</strong> football team’s fourth<br />

game of the season at Homecoming<br />

was against undefeated Lawrence<br />

Academy. <strong>Rivers</strong> definitely<br />

showed red-and-white spirit as<br />

alumni, teachers, and students<br />

gathered to watch the game on<br />

Waterman Field. Although <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

suffered a devastating loss<br />

of 51-3, the team’s attitude remained<br />

optimistic. Senior cocaptain<br />

Steve Manning said their<br />

loss was a learning experience.<br />

“Playing Lawrence,” he said,<br />

“showed us what the best team<br />

in the league was like. Losing<br />

to them made us realize that<br />

we have a lot of work to do, but<br />

I know we can do it. We don’t<br />

want to have another game like<br />

that again.” When asked about<br />

the Homecoming game results,<br />

A.J. Walsh ‘11 and Steve Manning ‘09 in action against Thayer Academy. Photo by T. Morse.<br />

Coach Darren Sullivan said, “We<br />

are looking to redeem ourselves.”<br />

Though they lost the next week<br />

to Groton 14-9, they did redeem<br />

themselves as the game was a major<br />

improvement from the previous<br />

weekend. <strong>The</strong> rest of the season<br />

includes games against many<br />

challenging Independent <strong>School</strong><br />

League opponents, a schedule that<br />

serves as a tough test for <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

Several players have distinguished<br />

themselves throughout<br />

this year’s football season.<br />

Coach Sullivan has specifically<br />

mentioned that junior linebacker<br />

Ben Patrick has performed exceptionally<br />

well, making incredible<br />

defensive plays and preventing<br />

opponents from scoring.<br />

Also worth commending are two<br />

seniors on the offensive side,<br />

Steve Manning and Drew Pappas,<br />

who have executed successful<br />

offensive plays and scored<br />

many of the team’s touchdowns.<br />

Coach Sullivan’s goal is to<br />

have a winning record for the season.<br />

If they are successful, it will<br />

be the first time in thirty years<br />

that the <strong>Rivers</strong> Varsity Football<br />

team had a record with more wins<br />

than losses. It looks like the team<br />

has a shot at accomplishing their<br />

goal. <strong>The</strong> coaching staff, comprised<br />

of Head Coach Darren<br />

Sullivan and assistant coaches<br />

Sem Aykanian, Kerry Murtagh,<br />

Dana Schneider, and Bruce “BT”<br />

Taylor, <strong>Rivers</strong> graduate of 1973,<br />

leads intense daily practices, encouraging<br />

their athletes to work<br />

hard. Coach Sullivan, beginning<br />

his third year as the head coach<br />

“Losing to them made us realize<br />

that we have a lot of work<br />

to do, but I know we can do it.<br />

We don’t want to have another<br />

game like that again.”<br />

--Steve Manning<br />

after ten years as an assistant,<br />

enjoys coaching very much, saying,<br />

“[He] and the other coaches<br />

have fun working with kids.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> coaches and the three senior<br />

captains, Steve Manning,<br />

Lenny Bautista, and Matt Robinson<br />

are looking forward to the<br />

rest of the season and leading the<br />

team to victory. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> Varsity<br />

Football will continue to give supreme<br />

effort and perform well for<br />

the last few games, and hopefully,<br />

accomplish their goal of having<br />

a winning season. Go Redwings!<br />

Strong talent up front, in backfield bolsters Boys’ Soccer<br />

b y Da n Si n g e r ‘10<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

After opening the season at<br />

7 wins-2 losses-1 tie, the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Varsity Boys’ Soccer team is looking<br />

forward to participating in the<br />

New England Class B tournament<br />

and possibly grabbing the top spot<br />

in the Independent <strong>School</strong> League<br />

(ISL) to secure a tournament<br />

home game. To accomplish this,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> will have to go through a<br />

tough Belmont Hill team that sits<br />

precariously atop the ISL standings,<br />

leading by just two points.<br />

With big games against Belmont<br />

Hill and St. George’s in<br />

late <strong>October</strong>, Head Coach Bob<br />

Pipe is optimistic about the<br />

team’s chances but knows the<br />

team will have to play at the<br />

same level it has been playing all<br />

year: “We have to come to play<br />

everyday, if we play <strong>Rivers</strong> soccer,<br />

play our best game, then we<br />

have a great chance of winning.”<br />

Coach Pipe has been very<br />

pleased with how the team has<br />

played so far this year, getting a<br />

big win over ISL rival Nobles.<br />

<strong>The</strong> team has been led throughout<br />

the year by seniors Charlie<br />

Rugg, Cecil Jeffrey, Eric Ander-<br />

Captain Harold Salinas ‘09 dribbles towards the opponents goal.<br />

Photo by T. Morse.<br />

son, and Harold Salinas who have<br />

had “been big for us this year,”<br />

according to Pipe. Coach Pipe’s<br />

praise rings especially true coming<br />

off a convincing win over<br />

a struggling Governor’s Academy<br />

team. Harold Salinas put<br />

in 3 goals and assisted on one of<br />

Charlie Rugg’s two goals. <strong>The</strong><br />

team also received solid contributions<br />

from their seniors during<br />

a 4-0 Homecoming victory over<br />

Lawrence Academy, with Charlie<br />

Rugg scoring two goals and<br />

recording an assist. In addition,<br />

senior Jamie Lapides put in a goal<br />

during the sixtieth minute. Rugg<br />

leads the ISL in scoring with fourteen<br />

goals and five assists for the<br />

season. With a total of 33 points,<br />

Rugg is ahead of the second best<br />

player by an astounding fourteen<br />

points. Eric Anderson has also<br />

turned in a terrific season thus far<br />

with a very solid sixteen points,<br />

and Harold Salinas has ten points.<br />

<strong>The</strong> only stumbling point<br />

for <strong>Rivers</strong> was a 4-1 loss on the<br />

road at St. Paul’s. Coach Pipe<br />

was quick to credit the opposition:<br />

“St. Paul’s played a fantastic<br />

game that day. We had chances<br />

to score but just couldn’t finish.”<br />

On a rainy September afternoon,<br />

St. Paul’s jumped out to a twogoal<br />

lead and was winning 2-1<br />

at the half. <strong>The</strong> lone goal came<br />

from Eric Anderson on an assist<br />

from Charlie Rugg, but it<br />

was not enough as the team suffered<br />

their first and only defeat<br />

of the season. <strong>The</strong> team was<br />

also challenged in a hard fought<br />

game against B.B.&N., which<br />

ended in a tie. Although <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

jumped out to an early lead with<br />

two goals from Rugg, they could<br />

not hold on as B.B.& N. tied the<br />

game in the eightieth minute.<br />

Great play has not come only<br />

from the senior players. Coach<br />

Pipe noted the play of freshman<br />

John Lin on defense, “John<br />

has done a great job adjusting<br />

and learning our system.” Lin’s<br />

work has no doubt contributed to<br />

another solid season for sophomore<br />

goalie Peter Quayle who<br />

has worked three shutouts so<br />

far, most notably against a fifth<br />

place Nobles team. With signifi-<br />

“We have to come<br />

to play everyday, if we<br />

play <strong>Rivers</strong> soccer, play<br />

our best game, then we<br />

have a great chance of<br />

winning.”--Coach Pipe<br />

cant contributions coming from<br />

all players on both sides of the<br />

ball, Coach Pipe has good reason<br />

to believe that the team will do<br />

even better than their semifinals<br />

appearance last season: “We’re<br />

as talented as any team that we<br />

play, and we just have to be consistent.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> team will be tested<br />

as they face their toughest opponents<br />

yet over the final stretch of<br />

the season leading up to the New<br />

England Class B tournament.


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Page 11<br />

Sports<br />

<strong>The</strong> effect of sports specialization hurts athletic teams<br />

b y An d r e w Nav o n i ‘09<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

On Friday nights the Natick<br />

Red and Blue have around 50<br />

athletes on the sidelines of<br />

their football field. When they<br />

look across the field, they often<br />

outnumber their opponents.<br />

On any given Saturday however<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> Red Wings come out<br />

on their home field with 25 athletes<br />

at the most. <strong>The</strong>y often look<br />

across the field at numbers that<br />

are much bigger than their own.<br />

Football is a game of numbers,<br />

and in many schools, it is being<br />

affected by the specialized athletes.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>, a school that was<br />

home to many three-sport athletes<br />

a few years ago, is now becoming<br />

engaged in specialization.<br />

<strong>The</strong> age of specialization<br />

in sports is benefiting many<br />

high school athletes, but at the<br />

same time hurting certain programs<br />

in the school. Athletes<br />

are committing themselves to a<br />

single sport instead of becoming<br />

a well-rounded athlete by<br />

playing multiple sports. It appears<br />

that these days, three sport<br />

athletes are a thing of the past.<br />

Many critics in sports specialization<br />

feel that athletes today are<br />

looking more at where they are going<br />

than where they actually are.<br />

<strong>The</strong> majority of the athletes<br />

trying to play college sports know<br />

that they have to specialize year<br />

round to achieve their goals. Some<br />

of athletes are not getting the exposure<br />

they need at their high<br />

school games. A lot of the college<br />

coaches are unable to scout<br />

players during their seasons because<br />

the coaches have their own<br />

teams playing at that time to worry<br />

about. This makes the summer<br />

tournaments a hot bed for coaches<br />

to recruit high school athletes.<br />

Field Hockey stays strong with a winning record<br />

De b r a Ed e l m a n ‘10<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> Varsity Field<br />

Hockey team has showed a combination<br />

of skill and determination<br />

as they move toward the<br />

completion of their solid <strong>2008</strong><br />

season. <strong>The</strong>y stand at a record<br />

of 8 wins and 5 losses. Impressive<br />

wins thus far include an<br />

opening day 5-0 shutout over the<br />

Newton Country Day <strong>School</strong> followed<br />

by an astounding 8-1 victory<br />

at Southfield only days later.<br />

<strong>The</strong> team has proven to be able<br />

to seamlessly merge the skills of<br />

both their novice and veteran players.<br />

Junior Alexis Antonelli says,<br />

“We have a great combination of<br />

new talent and more experienced<br />

players. Every player has greatly<br />

developed their skills, making<br />

this season one of our best.”<br />

Perhaps the game where the<br />

team displayed the greatest feat of<br />

perseverance was on the road at<br />

“If you’re not playing year<br />

round, you’re getting left behind<br />

and the scholarships will<br />

go else where,” said Darren<br />

Sullivan coach of the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

football and baseball teams.<br />

<strong>The</strong> scholarship money is<br />

the calling card for a lot of athletes<br />

that specialize. With this<br />

year round specialization, some<br />

programs’ numbers are down.<br />

“<strong>Rivers</strong> is too small to specialize<br />

in every sport; you need two sport<br />

athletes,” said Bob Pipe Coach<br />

“I look to recruit two<br />

sport athletes, if they’re<br />

not playing two sports<br />

then they better be doing<br />

something else for the<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> community.”<br />

-Bob Pipe<br />

of the <strong>Rivers</strong> boys’ soccer team.<br />

In 2001 Pipe’s varsity soccer<br />

team won the ISL and the class<br />

A title. That same year, the varsity<br />

basketball team was also very<br />

good and got to the semifinals of<br />

the class C playoff. This happened<br />

because there were four players<br />

who played on both of those teams<br />

that were well-rounded athletes.<br />

In the modern era of sports the<br />

two-sport athlete could help benefit<br />

a school more than the single<br />

sport athlete. “I look to recruit<br />

two sport athletes, if they’re not<br />

playing two sports then they better<br />

be doing something else for<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> community,” said Pipe.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are typically 40 spots<br />

T. Morse.<br />

St. Mark’s where the girls found<br />

themselves trailing 2-0 after the<br />

first half. However, after convening<br />

as a team at halftime, <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

was able to level out the playing<br />

field with both Alexis Antonelli<br />

and sophomore Nicole Ferrara<br />

scoring goals. Although they did<br />

ultimately lose to St. Mark’s on<br />

that late September afternoon,<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> Varsity Field Hockey<br />

team showed great determination<br />

in ninth grade open for students<br />

that need to fill the extracurricular<br />

activities such as music,<br />

drama and athletics. <strong>The</strong>re are<br />

only so many spots for recruited<br />

athletes which means the twosport<br />

athletes are twice as good as<br />

the specialized one sport athlete.<br />

An example of one of these<br />

two-sport athletes is Steve Manning<br />

who is a Captain and an<br />

All-ISL in both football and lacrosse.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re is a little pressure,<br />

but I don’t really think<br />

about it,” said Manning, who<br />

is one of the few who plays lacrosse<br />

year round but commits<br />

himself to football in the fall.<br />

With the specialization able<br />

to happen all year round for<br />

some sport, the club teams often<br />

become more important than<br />

the school teams. “<strong>The</strong>re is no<br />

AAU football; it is the only game<br />

you represent your school in.<br />

You have to play at your school,<br />

there’s no alternative” said Sullivan.<br />

This makes football different<br />

than all the others and is the reason<br />

why the numbers are down.<br />

While football is hurting from<br />

the specialization this year, the<br />

soccer, lacrosse and hockey programs<br />

are benefiting from it. “<br />

It’s a double edged sword,” said<br />

senior Mark Cornacchio, who<br />

specializes in lacrosse. “ <strong>The</strong><br />

lacrosse team benefits but the<br />

football team loses numbers.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> football team may<br />

also be hurting for numbers because<br />

football has the highest injury<br />

rate of any sport. <strong>The</strong>re are<br />

at least two to three players that<br />

get banged up in the course of<br />

a week ,and this is not counting<br />

the numerous bumps and bruises<br />

sustained through the week.<br />

“It’s a collision game. It’s<br />

tough and physically demanding,<br />

not everyone is meant to<br />

play it,” said Sullivan, who also<br />

in making a strong comeback.<br />

In addition to Alexis Antonelli<br />

and Nicole Ferrara, skilled contributors<br />

include senior captains<br />

Laura Blackett and Becca Nichols,<br />

as well as senior Jacqueline<br />

Gannon. <strong>The</strong> team happily welcomed<br />

freshman Elizabeth Hitti<br />

to the team this year. She was<br />

recently named to the USA Field<br />

Hockey 2009 Future Elite team, a<br />

highly competitive field hockey<br />

understands why some athletes<br />

don’t risk injury to their number<br />

one sport by playing football.<br />

Out of the 19 players on the<br />

boys’ varsity soccer team, 12<br />

of them play soccer on an outside<br />

team. Of the 11 starters on<br />

the soccer team, 8 specialize in<br />

soccer, and the first four off the<br />

bench also are soccer specialists.<br />

It is clear that on a team<br />

that has the potential to be one<br />

of the best the school ever had,<br />

you need to be a year round soccer<br />

player to see significant time.<br />

<strong>The</strong> age of specialization<br />

in sports is benefiting<br />

many high school athletes,<br />

but at the same time<br />

hurting certain programs<br />

in the school.<br />

Sometimes, however, specialization<br />

can have the opposite effect<br />

for the school. <strong>The</strong> soccer<br />

team was hurt by specialization<br />

when Sheanon Williams, an All<br />

league freshman, went to a residential<br />

soccer school in Florida.<br />

“It didn’t help us, but he had to go<br />

if he wanted to play in the World<br />

Cup. I supported it, I needed to,”<br />

said Pipe. Williams could have<br />

been a multi-sport athlete when<br />

he was recruited to come to <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

but instead decided to specialize<br />

in soccer at the highest<br />

level. Williams is now at UNC<br />

and is starting as a freshman.<br />

This is one case where the<br />

soccer team lost a player due to<br />

specialization, but football has<br />

lost many more. “Instead of kids<br />

quitting they need to get kids<br />

Captain Laura Blackett ‘09 shows her unbeatable defensive skills during <strong>Rivers</strong> Homecoming. Photo by<br />

program that annually only invites<br />

150 players nationwide.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Varsity Field Hockey team’s<br />

tough defensive line comprises of<br />

sophomore Abby Gilmartin, senior<br />

Meggie Woodruff, and sophomore<br />

goalie Carlie Tarbell. “We<br />

improve as a team every year,”<br />

says senior co-captain Laura<br />

Blackett, “and we’re already well<br />

on our way to beating last year’s<br />

record [5 wins-10 losses-1 tie].”<br />

to play,” says Pipe. Many kids<br />

drop out because it is easier to<br />

quit than get athletes to join with<br />

them. It is hard to convince others<br />

to play football when it is<br />

so tough and time consuming.<br />

“Practices are hard. <strong>The</strong>re’s<br />

one game a week, you practice<br />

a lot more than you play,<br />

I know as a player I didn’t<br />

like practice,” said Sullivan.<br />

According to players on<br />

the football team, the practices<br />

are difficult, but when you get<br />

to Saturday, the games outweigh<br />

the week of practice.<br />

What the naked eye doesn’t<br />

see about football is the unity<br />

and team bonding of the sport.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> players on the team<br />

need to sell it to their friends,<br />

the camaraderie of the sport, the<br />

team dinners,” said Sullivan.<br />

According to many players on<br />

the team, they believe that football<br />

teaches them life lessons<br />

that are not incorporated in the<br />

classroom or on any other field.<br />

Out of six kids surveyed on<br />

specialization, all felt that football<br />

was taking a hit due to specialization.<br />

“We need to recruit<br />

more kids with football as their<br />

number one sport,” said Sullivan.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are other schools in the<br />

ISL that are having the same problems<br />

with their football teams. At<br />

St. Mark’s there are around 25<br />

kids playing football. According<br />

to the St Mark’s website, a<br />

student has to play three sports<br />

a year, but there are still ways<br />

to get around playing football.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were sixty cross-country<br />

runners out for the fall. Among<br />

these athletes are the hockey<br />

and basketball specialists mixed<br />

in with the actual long distance<br />

runners. According to Pipe<br />

the specialized athletes have<br />

found a loophole in the system.<br />

<strong>The</strong>ir hardest fought victory<br />

came at home on Davis Field<br />

against Thayer Academy. <strong>The</strong><br />

rival teams found themselves tied<br />

1-1 at the end of the second half,<br />

sending the game into sudden<br />

death overtime. With four minutes<br />

remaining in the extra session,<br />

Nicole Ferrara scored to put<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> over the top. Just days later<br />

at B.B.&N., the team again forced<br />

overtime. However, this result<br />

was not as successful since <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

suffered an unfortunate 5-4 loss in<br />

another highly competitive game.<br />

Despite losing to Lawrence<br />

Academy by one goal and Nobles<br />

by two, the Varsity Field Hockey<br />

proved to rise above their setbacks<br />

by beating Dana Hall 2-0 and<br />

Bancroft 5-1. With competitive<br />

Independent <strong>School</strong> League opponents<br />

at the end of the schedule,<br />

the team looks forward to the challenges<br />

ahead. Co-captain Becca<br />

Nichols notes, “Now is the time<br />

for us to really apply the skills we<br />

have been developing throughout<br />

the season. We have the potential<br />

for a strong season finish.”


Page 12 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> <strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

Sports<br />

Cross Country races to the finish, training for ISLs<br />

b y Ma d d y Le v i t t ‘09<br />

a n d Mat t Ta n n e r ‘12<br />

c o n t r i b u t i n g w r i t e r<br />

Varsity Girls’ Soccer rises to the challenge of Class B<br />

b y Mi c h e l l e Ed e l m a n ‘10<br />

Co n t r i b u t i n g Wr i t e r<br />

Faced with a relatively young<br />

team, Varsity Girls’ Soccer has<br />

had both struggles and victories<br />

throughout the <strong>2008</strong> season with<br />

a record of 6 wins and 3 losses.<br />

Victories against worthy Independent<br />

<strong>School</strong> League (ISL) opponents<br />

include Thayer by a 7-2<br />

score, St. Mark’s 5-0, St. Paul’s<br />

4-0, and B.B.&N. 2-1. Other<br />

non-ISL wins consisted of Dana<br />

Hall at 4-0 and Newton Country<br />

Day <strong>School</strong>. <strong>The</strong> girls also<br />

were able to come away with a<br />

Girls’ Cross Country<br />

Running is not easy, but from<br />

the looks of the Girls’ Varsity<br />

Cross Country team’s season, the<br />

eleven girls come out to practice<br />

each day ready and determined<br />

tackle this feat. Captains Louise<br />

Blake and Jenn Pollan are very<br />

proud of what the team has accomplished<br />

thus far. Jenn comments,<br />

“It is really amazing to see<br />

how hard everyone is working.<br />

Although we have had a lot of<br />

injuries, the team as a whole has<br />

remained strong all throughout.”<br />

Although everyone has made<br />

improvements, the two new<br />

freshmen who have never run<br />

before really stand out. A team<br />

member comments, “they have<br />

both improved immeasurably.”<br />

Average practices really take<br />

a toll on the body, and can range<br />

from relaxing three mile jogs to<br />

more intensive PPMs (pace per<br />

miles). Once a week the girls do<br />

what are called intervals, alternating<br />

sprinting and jogging for<br />

what can add up to eight miles.<br />

But the girls have been working<br />

incredibly hard at each feat to<br />

conquer both team and personal<br />

goals, and this has without a doubt<br />

contributed to their great success.<br />

Something particularly special<br />

about this team is its unity. Since<br />

sickness and injuries emerge often<br />

throughout these fall months,<br />

Jenn Pollan. Photo by T. Morse<br />

the team needs to be supportive<br />

of one another, and needs to be<br />

able to compete in difficult races<br />

no matter what the circumstances<br />

are. Senior Alexa Kopelman reflects,<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re is a huge camaraderie<br />

among the members of our<br />

team. Everyone is so supportive,<br />

and that support is contagious.<br />

We cheer one another on even<br />

when we are just practicing.”<br />

Another team members comments,<br />

“<strong>The</strong> girls’ and boys’<br />

teams spend a lot of time togeth-<br />

victory against Lawrence Academy<br />

at Homecoming with the<br />

help of freshman Nikki Johnson,<br />

who scored two goals in the 6-3<br />

Varsity Girls’ Soccer<br />

has had both struggles<br />

and victories throughout<br />

the <strong>2008</strong> season.<br />

win. Despite losing two of the<br />

their key players, seniors Adrienne<br />

Anderson and Meghan Tedoldi,<br />

to injuries, the team has been<br />

able to overcome this challenge.<br />

er, both at races and team dinners.<br />

It’s a great way to mix boys<br />

and girls in all grades, and it’s<br />

so much fun because everyone<br />

gets along really well.” In addition,<br />

although the team is made<br />

up of people that run at all different<br />

paces, Coach Karash inspires<br />

the team’s unity by insisting that<br />

all members run at a common<br />

pace every so often, something<br />

that the team truly enjoys doing.<br />

At the end of September, the<br />

team’s drive and commitment<br />

was really put to the test in a duel<br />

meet against St. Mark’s. It was<br />

a frigid, rainy Friday afternoon,<br />

and many of the runners were<br />

injured or sick. <strong>The</strong> remaining<br />

members persevered, earning a<br />

solid victory over St. Mark’s, and<br />

taking second, third, and forth<br />

place in the meet. It was a memorable<br />

victory for everyone involved,<br />

having been the first time<br />

they have ever beat St. Marks.<br />

Homecoming was another highlight<br />

of the season, as everyone<br />

came out to support the runners<br />

as they beat Lawrence Academy.<br />

Even though the season is<br />

nearing its close, the girls continue<br />

to work hard at practice in<br />

Head Coach Susanna Donahue<br />

remarked, “<strong>The</strong> players have responded<br />

to injuries with a positive<br />

attitude. At some points in<br />

the game we have five freshmen<br />

on the field.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> team had less success<br />

against challenging teams including<br />

Nobles, losing 3-1, and being<br />

shutout by Governor’s Academy<br />

2-0. However, in the midst of<br />

the tough defeats, seniors Kaleigh<br />

Hunt and Megan Delaney<br />

have stepped up to become great<br />

leaders of the team. Junior Sarah<br />

Sweeney remains the team’s leading<br />

scorer. She has been crucial<br />

in the team’s victories by scoring<br />

preparation for the ISL Championship<br />

on <strong>October</strong> 31st and the<br />

New England Championship on<br />

November 8th, both of which<br />

they are certain will be successful<br />

races that truly reflect their<br />

overall progress this season.<br />

Boys’ Cross Country<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is little doubt in anyone’s<br />

mind that the Boys’ Cross<br />

Country team will walk away<br />

with a season that each member<br />

can be proud of. <strong>The</strong> season commenced<br />

with a successful meet<br />

against Tabor Academy, as <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

placed third out of five schools.<br />

During Homecoming, the boys<br />

Camden Griffith. Photo by T. Morse<br />

raced against Lawrence, St. Sebastian’s,<br />

and Thayer. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

was a great turn out of <strong>Rivers</strong>’<br />

faculty, students, and parents<br />

alike. <strong>The</strong> team as a whole did<br />

Erika Flavin ‘10. Photo by T. Morse<br />

three goals in each of the wins<br />

over St. Paul’s, St. Mark’s, and<br />

Thayer. During the home game<br />

JV Boys’ Soccer triumphs over many ISL teams<br />

very well, with senior captain<br />

David Shapiro placing first for<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>, and second in the entire<br />

race. Overall the team came in<br />

at a close second, beating Lawrence<br />

and tying with Thayer.<br />

It has truly been a season of<br />

comebacks for the boys. Senior<br />

and captain Camden Griffith<br />

suffered an ankle injury early<br />

on in the season, but bounced<br />

right back and placed in the top<br />

five during Homecoming. At<br />

another race, David returned<br />

from injury and still managed<br />

to snag earn place, and on his<br />

return Camden earned seventh.<br />

Camden comments, “<strong>The</strong>re<br />

are a lot of new runners, which<br />

is always fantastic because of<br />

our phenomenal improvement<br />

as a team. We are really looking<br />

forward to New England’s.”<br />

With thirteen total boys, seven of<br />

whom are new freshmen, it is vital<br />

that each member contributes<br />

something to the team, and the<br />

boys have not at all hesitated to<br />

do so. <strong>The</strong> boys are also showing<br />

great spirit as a team with Davidpainting<br />

his face with red wings<br />

for Homecoming, something<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> can never get enough of.<br />

on Davis Field against Thayer,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> had a diversity of players<br />

score their seven goals including<br />

juniors Shannon McSweeney and<br />

Leah Stansky as well as freshmen<br />

Brooke Stoller and Megan Kerbs.<br />

Sophomore Allison Brustowicz<br />

and freshman Taylor Cross have<br />

also had great seasons alternating<br />

at goalie. “<strong>The</strong> team has yet<br />

to find their rhythm,” continues<br />

Coach Donahue, “but I’m optimistic.<br />

We have a lot of young<br />

talent and have worked very<br />

hard.” As the team moves into<br />

the final weeks of the season, the<br />

girls remain optimistic as they encounter<br />

tougher opponents.<br />

2-1. With less than two minutes<br />

remaining, Milton scored their<br />

second goal of the game, which<br />

sealed the tie. <strong>Rivers</strong>’ low spirits<br />

carried from Milton to their next<br />

game against Belmont Hill at<br />

home, which <strong>Rivers</strong> lost 3-0. <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

gave up all three goals in the<br />

first half and was unable to get the<br />

biscuit in the basket all day. On<br />

the positive side, <strong>Rivers</strong> stepped<br />

it up and did not give up a goal in<br />

the second half. Although the JV<br />

Boys’ Soccer team was dissatisfied<br />

with the loss against Belmont<br />

Hill, this was only the second loss<br />

of the season. <strong>The</strong> <strong>2008</strong> edition<br />

of JV Soccer looks encouraging<br />

and the team may finally finish<br />

well above the .500 mark.<br />

<strong>The</strong> three junior co-captains,<br />

midfielder Brandon Meiseles,<br />

midfielder Erik Simon, and goalie<br />

David Stanton, have led the team<br />

both on and off the field. Time<br />

and time again junior forward<br />

Neema Shams has set up freshb<br />

y Ad a m Lo w e n s t e i n ‘10<br />

Ed g e Sta f f<br />

After a few years of hanging<br />

around the land of .500 records,<br />

the JV Boys’ Soccer team has finally<br />

found themselves in a position<br />

to play to their full potential<br />

by beginning the <strong>2008</strong> season<br />

with 6 wins-2 losses-3 ties. First<br />

year Head Coach Francis Karasch<br />

has provided a spark for all<br />

the players. He states, “<strong>The</strong> team<br />

has been very impressive thus<br />

far, but there is still room to improve.”<br />

Coach Karasch’s patient<br />

coaching style gives the entire<br />

team the opportunity to make a<br />

spirited step forward with their<br />

natural soccer skills.<br />

After a bumpy beginning to<br />

the season, JV Boys’ Soccer has<br />

only lost once since. JV Boys<br />

Soccer, by the score of 4-1, won<br />

the first game of the <strong>2008</strong> season<br />

in a rout over a weak Dexter<br />

team on Dexter’s home turf. Although<br />

the boys received a confidence<br />

booster with a victory over<br />

Dexter, their next opponent, St.<br />

Mark’s, turned out to be a very<br />

skilled team. At their home in<br />

Southborough, Massachusetts,<br />

St. Mark’s dominated the game<br />

and shut out <strong>Rivers</strong> 2-0, handing<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> its only loss to date. After<br />

two road games, the JV Boys<br />

Soccer team returned home for<br />

six straight.<br />

In the next game, <strong>Rivers</strong> tied<br />

Roxbury Latin 1-1, but controlled<br />

the play for the majority of it. After<br />

scoring early, <strong>Rivers</strong> went into<br />

halftime with a 1-0 lead and continued<br />

to keep the lead.<br />

Though with only a few minutes<br />

remaining, Roxbury Latin<br />

was able to knock the ball in a goal<br />

and tie the game for good. After<br />

this annoying tie, JV Boys’ Soccer<br />

strung together five wins in a<br />

row, beating Thayer 3-2, squeezing<br />

by Noble & Greenough 1-0<br />

on a last-minute game-winning<br />

goal by junior forward Neema<br />

Shams, beating B.B.&N. 3-2, and<br />

shutting out both Lawrence Academy<br />

and Governor’s Academy<br />

1-0 and 3-0, respectively. After<br />

this five-game winning streak,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> tied both Groton 1-1 and<br />

Milton 2-2. <strong>Rivers</strong> escaped the<br />

game at Groton with a tie. <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

did not have many chances in this<br />

game, but did convert one of the<br />

few shots on goal. Groton controlled<br />

the ball on the <strong>Rivers</strong> half<br />

of the field for the majority of the<br />

game, but the defense was able to<br />

stand firm and only allow the ball<br />

into the goal once. After this encouraging<br />

tie with a very skilled<br />

Groton team, <strong>Rivers</strong> was disappointed<br />

against Milton, a team<br />

they consider quite average. <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

fell into the same problem that<br />

plagued them during the Roxbury<br />

Latin game. After scoring goals<br />

at the beginning of each half,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> gave up leads of 1-0 and<br />

man forwards Jonathan Levitt<br />

and T.J. Moor for scoring opportunities,<br />

and those two freshmen<br />

lead the team in goals. <strong>The</strong><br />

strong defense’s backbones have<br />

been stopper Evan Gallagher and<br />

sweeper Ben DuBois, both of<br />

whom are sophomores. Behind<br />

the defense stands the last stance<br />

in goalie David Stanton. David,<br />

who averages just over one goal<br />

given up per game, has been one<br />

of the team’s largest and most consistent<br />

strengths. With all these<br />

contributing players, JV Boys’<br />

Soccer has performed well.<br />

<strong>The</strong> standards of play and conduct<br />

of the JV Boys’ Soccer team<br />

have severely been enhanced<br />

because of the abundance of talent<br />

and perseverance exhibited.<br />

Coach Karasch notes, “We have<br />

a very challenging schedule coming<br />

down the stretch. If we continue<br />

to outplay the other teams<br />

in heart and hustle, then we will<br />

have a chance in every game.”


<strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong><br />

Page 13<br />

Sports<br />

Fall Sports Updates: JV Girls’ Field Hockey keeps winning<br />

JV Girls’ Soccer<br />

<strong>The</strong> JV Girls’ Soccer team has<br />

gotten off to a positive start. With<br />

a record of 4 wins-2 losses-1 tie,<br />

the team has definitely proved to<br />

be strong once again. <strong>The</strong>y defeated<br />

the Newton Country Day<br />

<strong>School</strong> 3-1, shutout St. Marks<br />

8-0, and won a close 1-0 game<br />

over Thayer. After beginning<br />

the season with three consecutive<br />

wins, they suffered their first<br />

two losses to Noble & Greenough<br />

and Lawrence Academy by the<br />

scores 3-1 and 3-2 respectively.<br />

A recent game against B.B.&N.<br />

also proved to be tough as neither<br />

team managed to get the ball<br />

in the net. After these two losses<br />

and a tie, <strong>Rivers</strong> managed to get<br />

back to their winning ways by<br />

beating Groton 1-0.<br />

Junior forward Zoë Cohen,<br />

the captain of JV Girls’ Soccer<br />

team, and sophomore defenders<br />

Caroline Brustowicz and Ellen<br />

Bailey lead the team. Newcomer<br />

Georgia McIntyre has made an<br />

immediate impact upon the defense.<br />

Freshmen midfielders Emily<br />

Snider and Martha Cosgrove<br />

both have contributed greatly to<br />

the strong start. “<strong>The</strong> girls are<br />

great and we all have a lot of fun<br />

on and off the field,” said captain<br />

Zoë Cohen. This includes freshman<br />

goalie Jenna Jasinski, who<br />

has been virtually unstoppable in<br />

goal thus far.<br />

<strong>The</strong> JV Girls’ Soccer team lost<br />

its first game in three years, and<br />

it occurred on the road at Noble<br />

& Greenough. Head coach Alexander<br />

Caplan was encouraged by<br />

the loss, “It will give the team the<br />

spark to play even better in the<br />

games to come. <strong>The</strong> Nobles team<br />

was a very fast, well-coached<br />

team, and they exposed some of<br />

our weaknesses that we will be<br />

working to improve upon in the<br />

coming weeks.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> game held on Maintenance<br />

Field against Thayer, the highlight<br />

of the young season, ended with<br />

a victory. Sophomore Rachael<br />

Calmas scored three minutes into<br />

the game. <strong>Rivers</strong> was able to hold<br />

Kaleigh Hunt ‘09, Megan Delaney ‘09, McKenzie Hunt ‘12, and Alison Brustowicz work together to save<br />

a tough shot. Photo by T. Morse.<br />

off the Thayer attack for the rest of<br />

the game. Although the JV Girls’<br />

Soccer team was without three<br />

of their top players for the game,<br />

including captain Zoë Cohen, the<br />

entire team stepped up and gave a<br />

tremendous effort to beat a very<br />

talented opponent.<br />

In a recent match at home versus<br />

Governor’s Academy, they<br />

put in a strong effort in route to<br />

yet another victory. Even though<br />

Governor’s kept the ball in <strong>Rivers</strong>’<br />

end for almost the entire<br />

game, Governor’s could not convert;<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> was able to. With less<br />

than two minutes remaining, Caroline<br />

Brustowicz scored the only<br />

goal of the game. Jenna Jasinski<br />

earned the shutout with a terrific<br />

performance. <strong>The</strong> JV Girls’ Soccer<br />

team’s late game heroics led<br />

them to the win.<br />

<strong>The</strong> team has gone into every<br />

game with a positive attitude,<br />

plenty of enthusiasm, and exceptional<br />

dedication. With some<br />

grudge matches still to come, the<br />

team is looking forward to practicing<br />

hard and winning more<br />

games. <strong>The</strong>y are especially focused<br />

on improving the pace of<br />

play as they finish off the season.<br />

-Hannah Armstrong ‘10<br />

JV boys’ soccer huddle at half-time during a pivitol game. Photo by Adam Lowenstein<br />

JV Field Hockey<br />

<strong>The</strong> JV Field Hockey team has<br />

gotten off to a great start with impressive<br />

wins over tough teams,<br />

proving that they have what it<br />

takes to have an extraordinary<br />

season. <strong>The</strong>ir record so far, 6<br />

wins-1 loss-2 ties, shows that<br />

their hard work is paying off. <strong>The</strong><br />

team has had commendable onegoal<br />

victories over teams such<br />

as Governor’s Academy and St.<br />

Mark’s. <strong>The</strong>y have scored a notable<br />

twenty-three goals, versus<br />

only eight goals scored by the opposing<br />

teams, which is the result<br />

of a full team effort.<br />

<strong>The</strong> co-captains include junior<br />

Melanie Wilson and sophomore<br />

Caroline Barns. Though the leading<br />

point scorers include Kelsey<br />

Young with five goals and Janelle<br />

Ferrara with two goals and three<br />

assists, Head Coach Troy Peters<br />

comments, “This season has seen<br />

a team that has won games not<br />

on the backs of superstar players,<br />

but rather a team effort that<br />

has no real weak link, no matter<br />

who is on the field.” <strong>The</strong> team’s<br />

depth of talent is exceptional with<br />

other standouts including sophomores<br />

Margaret Taylor and Si-<br />

mone Aptekman and junior Jess<br />

Franchi. Junior Michelle Edelman<br />

comments, “<strong>The</strong> team works<br />

really well together. It’s very balanced.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> team proved their<br />

strength as a team with a game<br />

against Groton. Head Coach<br />

Troy summarized the game as<br />

“one of the most evenly matched<br />

games I’ve seen in any sport.”<br />

Strong defense and goaltending<br />

helped them preserve the tie. JV<br />

Field Hockey showed their fighting<br />

spirit with a comeback goal<br />

with only five minutes remaining<br />

to reach a final score of 2-2.<br />

Practices are tough with a<br />

lot of conditioning and work on<br />

corners, shooting, and defense.<br />

Though the practices are exhausting,<br />

they are proven to be successful<br />

given the team’s record.<br />

Coach Troy also remarks, “<strong>The</strong><br />

team has stepped up to every<br />

challenge put in front of them,”<br />

proving themselves to be a hard<br />

team to beat this year.<br />

-Ryan Drake ‘10<br />

Thirds Girls’ Soccer<br />

<strong>The</strong> Thirds Girls’ Soccer team<br />

has steadily improved throughout<br />

the season and holds a record<br />

of 2 wins-4 losses-1 tie. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

struggled somewhat in their first<br />

two games, but the team executed<br />

an impressive win in their third<br />

game of the season on the road<br />

at Brooks. This victory was<br />

very sweet because <strong>Rivers</strong> shutout<br />

Brooks 2-0 on Brooks’ home<br />

turf during the school’s Parents’<br />

Weekend. <strong>Rivers</strong> moved the ball<br />

around extremely well, which enabled<br />

freshman midfielder Kristine<br />

Corey and freshman forward<br />

Drew Silverman to score <strong>Rivers</strong>’<br />

two goals. <strong>The</strong> team’s defense,<br />

backed by freshman sweeper<br />

Phoebe Melnick, was solid. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

kept the ball in Brooks’ half of<br />

the field for the majority of the<br />

game.<br />

<strong>The</strong> team had an incredible<br />

win against Lawrence Academy<br />

just two weeks later. During<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>’ Homecoming Weekend,<br />

the Thirds Girls’ Soccer team<br />

went to Lawrence determined to<br />

win. Lawrence scored early in<br />

the game, but this deficit did not<br />

faze them. Throughout the rest of<br />

the game, <strong>Rivers</strong> played hard and<br />

freshman goalie Katie Oppenheim<br />

did not let any more balls past her.<br />

During the last five minutes, they<br />

dug deep and gave it all they had.<br />

Leading scorer Drew Silverman<br />

managed to score two goals to<br />

push <strong>Rivers</strong> to a 2-1 victory. This<br />

win was a very nice way to propel<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> into Homecoming Weekend.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Thirds Girls’ Soccer team<br />

has had their share of losses, but<br />

this has not let that influence their<br />

positive approach to each and<br />

every game. <strong>The</strong>y have learned<br />

from their mistakes and improved<br />

tremendously. At the beginning<br />

of the season, the girls were not<br />

working together as a team to<br />

their best ability, but now they are<br />

communicating on the field and<br />

moving the ball well. <strong>The</strong>y have<br />

also learned how to possess the<br />

ball and work it around. Coach<br />

Matthew Karasch notes, “We’re<br />

having fun while working on our<br />

skills.” <strong>The</strong> girls are having a lot<br />

of fun playing the game with one<br />

another and they will continue to<br />

improve as the season progresses.<br />

-Stephanie Lie ‘11<br />

Thirds Boys’ Soccer<br />

Struggling to gain their first<br />

victory of the season, Thirds<br />

Boys’ Soccer stands at 0 wins-4<br />

losses-1 tie. <strong>The</strong> team’s record is<br />

attributed to the fact that there are<br />

only eleven permanent players on<br />

the team. <strong>The</strong> defense has been a<br />

strong suit for the team. Sophomore<br />

defenders Osa Okoh, Nat<br />

Mullen, and Matt Bigony all have<br />

protected the promised land and<br />

have held many opponents to few<br />

goals. <strong>The</strong> team’s leading goal<br />

scorers include freshman Kevin<br />

Bloom and sophomore Miles<br />

Gardner. <strong>The</strong>se two forwards<br />

have showed aggressive play on<br />

offense, moving the ball very<br />

well while under control.<br />

In early <strong>October</strong>, Thirds’ Boys<br />

Soccer faced a tough Belmont<br />

Hill team. <strong>Rivers</strong> jumped out to a<br />

two-goal lead, but was unable to<br />

keep it. This game showed promise<br />

for the <strong>Rivers</strong>’ Thirds because<br />

they were able to get onto the<br />

board early. Captain Osa Okoh<br />

noted, “We worked together as<br />

a team and had a fun time doing<br />

it.” Osa referred to the teamwork<br />

employed by the Thirds Boys’<br />

Soccer team. <strong>The</strong>y all came together<br />

as a team for the first time<br />

but came up just short.<br />

Head Coach David Burzillo<br />

was encouraged by the team’s effort<br />

because they put up a tough<br />

fight against a tough Belmont Hill<br />

opponent. He noted that Thirds<br />

Boys’ Soccer has a “good group<br />

of people coming back from last<br />

year” and the “new players are<br />

meshing with the old.” Although<br />

Thirds Boys’ Soccer has somewhat<br />

struggled, Coach Burzillo<br />

hopes they can get into the win<br />

column soon: “I hope some of last<br />

year’s wins come to this year.”<br />

-Adam Lowenstein ‘10


Page 14 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>Edge</strong> <strong>October</strong> 31, <strong>2008</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> Quad<br />

Cheers and Jeers<br />

Cheers to the regurgitator! His<br />

tricks were no doubt incredible,<br />

and Emily Burlingham will never<br />

look at her ring the same way.<br />

<strong>The</strong> audience participation was<br />

great. If only<br />

we could have<br />

gotten a few<br />

more teachers on<br />

stage! Although<br />

some of his performances had<br />

the audience cringing, it was a<br />

perfect way to break up a long<br />

day of classes.<br />

Jeers to the days<br />

getting shorter.<br />

Long gone are the<br />

September days<br />

when the sun shines<br />

until seven, and summer doesn’t<br />

seem like too long ago. <strong>The</strong> days<br />

are shortening, and the forbearers<br />

of a dark New England winter<br />

are emerging. Time to grab the<br />

gloves and hats out of the basement,<br />

start remembering what<br />

it’s like to scrape frost off the<br />

windshield, and turn on those<br />

seat warmers!<br />

Jeers to the<br />

the new advisory<br />

schedule. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

student body is<br />

extremely involved<br />

in co-curriculars, but many<br />

students are now having to cut<br />

back on their clubs because of<br />

the meager twenty minutes each<br />

Monday offered for meetings.<br />

Also, ironically, with the addition<br />

of a second advisory block<br />

and many individual meetings,<br />

students seem to spend less time<br />

with their advisors, and more<br />

time hanging out in the quad<br />

wondering if they have advisory.<br />

Cheers to<br />

homecoming!<br />

<strong>The</strong> athletes all<br />

performed at the<br />

top of their game, some of which<br />

can definitely be attributed to<br />

the liveliness of the fans. It was<br />

great to see alumni supporting<br />

our teams, especially those that<br />

graduated just last year. Both<br />

girls and boys soccer attracted a<br />

large crowd, as did the football<br />

game!<br />

Cheers to the fluff in the<br />

cafeteria. Every year the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Co-Presidents make promises<br />

in their campaign speeches,<br />

but they rarely<br />

follow through.<br />

However, James<br />

and Becca are<br />

off to a great<br />

start this year and kept their word<br />

about a key campaign promisethe<br />

fluff. It has become a staple<br />

in the cafeteria. We constantly<br />

see it dipped in hot chocolate,<br />

wedged between peanut butter<br />

and bread, or in the case of some<br />

freshman boys, eaten straight out<br />

of a cup. students votes!<br />

Cheers to the<br />

four day weeks!<br />

<strong>October</strong> is a<br />

beautiful time at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>, seeing<br />

that we have more days off than<br />

any other month. It seems as<br />

though we have every Monday,<br />

or Thursday to rest and if not,<br />

there is a late opening for interim<br />

comments, or an assembly schedule,<br />

shortening classes. Students<br />

appreciate the time to sleep in,<br />

hang out, and for the seniors,<br />

spend some tim eon the college<br />

applications we have grown to<br />

love.<br />

ACROSS<br />

2. <strong>The</strong> word "Halloween" comes from the phrase "all _____ eve."<br />

5. Pumpkins can also be white, blue, or _____.<br />

7. Halloween dates back ___ thousand years.<br />

10. _____ is one of the world's oldest holidays.<br />

11. <strong>Rivers</strong> should have a haunted _______.<br />

14. 36.1 ________ kids trick or treat each year in the U.S.<br />

15. "________ the friendly ghost."<br />

17. ______ or treat!<br />

18. U.S. consumers spend 1.5 _________ dollars on Halloween costumes each year.<br />

19. Halloween is Mr. McCartney's ______ favorite holiday.<br />

20. A ______ costume wears fangs.<br />

DOWN<br />

1. Jack O'lanterns originated in __________.<br />

3. Bobbing for _____ is an ancient Roman tradition, and a fun halloween game!<br />

4. <strong>The</strong> central symbol for Halloween.<br />

6. "_______ Ice," a popular rapper, was born on Halloween.<br />

8. In Austria, people hand out ______ instead of candy on Halloween.<br />

9. Don't let a ______ cat cross your path!<br />

Quote of the Month<br />

“Great minds discuss<br />

ideas; average minds discuss<br />

events; small minds<br />

discuss people.”<br />

- Eleanor Roosevelt

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