All posts by jlang@nafcs.k12.in.us

New school-wide recycling program preserves budget, environment

By Eli Bolus

Senior Claire Gapsis throws away all food and Styrofoam before recycling the rest of her meal during lunch.

Anyone who has been in the FC cafeteria lately can tell you there have been some major changes.  The usual line of orderly trash cans has been rearranged, as they now sit in several new places with new directional signs.  The labels on these signs say things like “plastic” and “food.” As you may have guessed this is the newest plan for the corporation wide recycling policy.

Principal Louie Jensen said this policy was implemented by New Albany Floyd County director of facilities Bill Wiseheart, and has been in the works for about two years.

NAFCS maintenance supervisor Steve Green said schools in the corporation are being added one at a time. He that the main reason they were able to implement this is because of a third party they hired.  QRS Recycling is a nation-wide corporation that uses a new technique of recycling called “stream-line” to manage the green disposal means of schools and business.  He said, “The reason we haven’t done this earlier is because people aren’t going to recycle if they have to sort dozens of things out.”

The beauty of QRS, he added, is that they will take 70 percent of the left over materials the school uses and sort and recycle them for them.  This means as long as students sort the food away from everything else there is no other added work for cafeteria workers.

Jensen said the main reason the corporation is recycling should be to save the planet, but there are some other benefits as well.  [Recycling] will save 10 percent of last year’s waste disposal cost after QRS’s fee said Jensen.

Jensen and Green both said they’re excited about the new policy but they expect some resistance from older students.  Green said that younger kids in the elementary schools are more likely to embrace recycling than their older peers. “We hope that they will grow up with recycling and it will become more natural to them,” he said.

QRS will sort and recycling everything from cardboard to pencils for the corporation and save thousands of dollars.

Cartoonist aspires to pursue hobby as career

By Claire DeFrancisci

One of sophomore Emma Howie's finished cartoons. Photo by Claire DeFrancisci.
The sounds of a pencil working feverishly against paper fill your ears. Looking up, sophomore Emma Howie can be seen looking intently at her small sketchbook.Howie is a talented cartoonist who hopes to one day be a professional. Reading how-to books and practice has helped her become the artist that she is today.“Most of it comes from things I see in real life, like where shadows fall in different light. When I was little I used to draw my hand over and over again just to see how it looked every time I moved it,” said Howie.

To keep her skills fresh, Howie also takes Drawing I-II classes. She will continue to take drawing and painting classes throughout high school to keep improving.

“I like to draw cartoon people, but I’m going to take a paint class so I can get better at painting as well,” said Howie.

Not only does Howie draw her cartoons for pleasure, but she also makes a profit. She draws things for specific people like cartoon versions of themselves, pets, or even fan art from T.V. shows.

“People ask me to draw colored cartoons for them, but the pens that I use are so expensive that I charge them $5 depending on the size and difficulty of the drawing,” said Howie.

Howie said drawing is not just a phase, but it is something she would like to for the rest of her life.

“I really would like to be a cartoonist for Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network, or Disney. Especially Disney, but that would be a hard job to get. I also would like to draw comics for Marvel or DC because those artists inspire me.”

FC is full of unique talents like Howie’s cartooning. Her talents show that anyone can pursue their dreams with a little practice.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkQIsr2L-jA]

New trends grow popular as the year progresses

By Claire DeFrancisci and Blake Dykes

Walking down the hallway, students often see styles such as feather hair extensions, gauging their ears and earrings for males. These trends have greatly expanded over the past few months.Feather hair extensions are put in by combining a strand of hair and a feather, then attaching them together with a bead. This summer the feathers became a usual sight to see on girls of all ages. The feathers come in colors from a subtle natural color, to bright neon stripes these feathers are now a popular hair accessory.

There are many different opinions about theses trends.

“I got them because I thought that they were cute,” said sophomore Mallory Grantz. Grantz purchased her extensions at Hair Concepts, a hair salon in Greenville, for 10 to 15 dollars per feather.

On the othere hand  sophmore Garret Glass has a different perspective.

“No one is unique ; they just get them because everyone else does,” said Glass.

Freshman Asa Dempster says that  she wouldn’t get feathers. She doesn’t follow trends, she  starts her on style.

“It’s like why everybody wears Ugg boots, it’s just the thing to do,” said sophomore Sydney Baumann.

Another style that has been spreading through out guys of all grades our pieced ears. This  trend, males having pierced ears is not as new as the feather hair extensions, but they are still popular.

Junior Zach Nichols has his ears pierced and his parents are okay with the piercing.

“They didn’t like them at first, but now they’re used to them,” said Nichols.

Some parents would not be as thrilled with the piercing as Nichols’.

“My dad said he’d never do anything for me if I got my ears pierced,” said freshman Ben Banet.

In Banet’s opinion, earrings are meant for girls.

“If you look at Claire’s they are directly meant for girls, earrings should be kept to the female gender,” said Banet.

However, freshman Jamie Hensley got his ears pierced at Claire’s for $35. He got the piercing because his friends told him he should.

Another form of piercing that has gotten popular recently are gauged ears.

Gauging  ears is a  dramatic twist on ear piercings that has become more popular in teenagers in the past couple of years.

Gauges are a special ear piercing used to gradually stretch ears until a desired stretch or hole in the ear is created.

“I saw them on people a long time ago and I thought that it was interesting because it’s so different. It’s just another way to express yourself,” said sophomore Leah Holsclaw.

Gauges are an eye-catching trend that can be a controversial topic for parents. This is because if a person has stretched their ears to a certain size, the hole in the ear will not close naturally.

“The first time I asked my mom for permission she didn’t let me, but I did it any way. After I had them for a while I told them and they wanted me to take them out, but now they’re okay with it. They’d still prefer I don’t have them, though. They think that they’re ugly, especially my mom,” said Holsclaw.