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

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lpahomov

Hallway Fashion- Haji Koita

January 9, 2014 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

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Exactly what are you wearing today, and do you know where each item is from?

I am a pullover sweater with levis jeans and black timberland 6’ boots. I brought the clothes from Urban Outfitters and my boots are from Kicks USA.

 

What are some of your favorite places to shop, or what are your favorite brands? Why?

H&M, Urban Outfitters, The thrift store, pacsun, KARMALOOP.

 

What does fashion mean to you?

Fashion means to express yourself through your attire and how you can stand out           from others.

 

Do you consider yourself fashionable?

I think I know what’s in style and how to be creative with my clothes.

How long does it usually take for you to pick out the outfit that you’re going to wear for the day and what’s your thought process as you pick out these clothes?

I throw on clothes so probably 10 min.

 

Who/What do you get your fashion inspiration from?

I get it from GQ magazine and looking in stores to see whats new and then i brand off of that. Also Kanye West he is my bro for life.

If you had to wear one outfit for the rest of your life what would it be?

I would wear sweat pants and hoodie with ugg slippers

 

What’s your 1 dream outfit?

My dream outfit is this,

kanye_west_300x400

 

Interview By: Kenyatta Bundy Jr. 

Filed Under: Features, Uncategorized

A Year in Review- Sports Talk with the Straight Shuter

January 9, 2014 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

A Year in Review- Sports Talk with the Straight Shuter

by Jesse Shuter

Staff Writer

 

usa-american-football-crime

Courtesy of http://www.nydailynews.com /sports/football/hernandez- custory-home-handcuffs -article-1.1382767

 

2013 was a great year everywhere, even in the world of sports. There are so many eventful things that have happened that it would be impossible to name them all. For this article we are going to look at my top ten events from 2013 and then the top ten things to look for in 2014.

 

 

10. The Blackout in the 2013 Super Bowl astounds the teams, and completely changes the direction of the game. Some say that it helped the Baltimore Raven in their comeback and victory over the San Francisco 49ers.

9. The Red Sox win the World Series and prove that Boston is still strong after the bombing at the Boston Marathon.

8. Eagles comeback from a large deficit against the Detroit Lions. The crazy part is that it was in a blizzard. It is now known as the Snow Bowl.

7. Clayton Kershaw wins the Cy Young award for the second time, and Miguel Cabrera wins AL MVP for the second straight time.

6. Giant PED scandal where a biogenesis clinic admits to giving PEDs to certain baseball players. The most notable players caught are: Ryan Braun; Nelson Cruz; Everth Cabrera; Johnny Peralta; Antonio Bastardo; and Alex Rodriguez (A-Rod). A-Rod is currently trying to appeal to the courts so he is not suspended, and his career is not ended.

5. Auburn stuns undefeated Alabama in the Iron Bowl. They won on a returned kick with zero seconds left. Here’s the catch, the kick was not a usual kickoff, Alabama was kicking a field goal so that they could win the game, but it was short. The awaiting player from Auburn caught it short of the field goal post and ran it back to win the game.

4. A bomb goes off at the Boston Marathon stunning all of America. The initial reaction was terrorist attack, but it turned out to be local americans.

3. Peyton Manning breaks the record for most passing yards and touchdowns in one season. It is known as possibly the best season by a quarterback in history.

2. Aaron Hernandez is arrested for murder of his friend, shocking people everywhere. None were more surprised then his teammates and coaches over on the New England Patriots.

1. Lance Armstrong admits to using performance enhancing drugs in his races. Armstrong was a hero to many after doing the impossible and overcoming his cancer and then becoming possibly the biker ever.

 

Lets take a look at the tops ten things to look for in 2014.

  1. The World Cup
  2. The Winter Olympics
  3. The Super Bowl Champion
  4. How is the Alex Rodriguez case decided
  5. How is the Aaron Hernandez case decided
  6. NFL Coach of the year, Guru Bill Belichick or Rookie Coach Chip Kelly
  7. The Super Bowl in the Snow, how does the cold weather Super Bowl work out?
  8. How does the new playoff setup in College Football work out?
  9. How does the new replay system for umpires in baseball work out?
  10. Who is hired to replace all the fired coaches in the NFL?

 

It’s been a great year, and let’s all look forward to another great year in the world of sports.

Filed Under: Sports, Uncategorized

Web Tracings

January 6, 2014 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Screen Shot 2014-01-06 at 12.35.37 PMYou sit down at a job interview and everything is going well. You are able to get your sentences out eloquently, and the person interviewing you seems to fancy you. This is, until the interviewer asks you to hand over your Facebook password as part of a company policy. This is an entirely legal thing that the company is asking you to do–the amendment that would make this practice illegal in the Cyber Intelligence and Sharing Act was struck down in April. What is your next move?

 

Many students on our editorial board report that they diligently self-police to avoid anything that they wouldn’t want their grandmothers to see ending up on the internet. Some claim that they don’t want to miss out on future college and career opportunities for having a shoddy internet profile. Our editorial board agrees that it is to our disadvantage that we are growing up and making mistakes while at all times it is possible for all of those things to be documented and shared on the internet–following us into adulthood even. But it happens whether we like it or not–how can students do a better job of monitoring what they put online?

 

A response to very public social networks that have become the norm, Snapchat has been the answer to a generation’s distaste with the information that they themselves put out in the internet. Snapchat is an image sharing service where you can send pictures person to person, that automatically delete when opened after a preset amount of seconds. This service was created out of necessity to prevent images that people want to share become unwanted permanent online fixtures. As everyone knows–once you put something on the internet it no longer belongs to you, anyone could have it and it could be anywhere on the internet after you put it up.

 

AskFM debuted as an anonymous question and answer service for friends, but the anonymity creates  uncomfortable moments when inappropriate questions are asked. People anonymously and commonly throw insults and remarks about sexual orientation, the site is infamous for this. If people know inherently that this could potentially happen to them, why do they sign up. Is it the responsibility of the user to control what they let themselves become susceptible to? In theory this service has an actual use, but in practice it just seems to lead to bullying and other harassment.

Often we think of personal or private things getting out over social networks, but sometimes email can be the culprit too. Files and text we send in email in it’s own way can be shared. Take this example of a girl at Duke University in 2010. She made a PowerPoint of guys she had slept with and emailed it to three friends.

 

Using Snapchat is one way to avoid permanent documentation of your life online. Here are a few more tips:

– Using efficient self policing and going by the rule of thumb, “Don’t post anything you wouldn’t want your grandmother to see.”

– Lock your accounts if you want to post anything you want

– Edit Facebook app permissions to manage what services can post on your behalf

 

Doing this, we can all keep ourselves safer online and out of Lehmann’s office once and for all.

Filed Under: Op/Ed, Uncategorized

Locker Talk: What is your New Years Resolution?

January 6, 2014 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Staff Writer Isabella Mezzaroba

Freshmen Harry Freed: I'm resolving to eat more Kit Kats. There is no such thing as to many Kit Kats.
Freshmen Harry Freed: “I’m resolving to eat more Kit Kats. There is no such thing as to many Kit Kats.”
Junior Marteena Johnson: "I'm going to stop procrastinating this year and learn to stay on task. I won't get distracted by my computer this year."
Junior Marteena Johnson: “I’m going to stop procrastinating this year and learn to stay on task. I won’t get distracted by my computer this year.”

 

Senior Abou Hinson: "I'll be nicer to more people in 2014"
Senior Abou Hinson: “I’ll be nicer to more people in 2014”

Sophomore Felix D'Hermillon: "I'm going to grow to 5'11 in 2014."Sophomore Felix D’Hermillon: “I’m going to grow to 5’11 in 2014.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Child Labor: A Worldwide Issue

January 4, 2014 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Staff Writer Claudia Bonitatibus

There are many things that we take for granted in America today because we are unaware of the struggles in the past that won us the privileges that we now enjoy. One of these privileges that we take for granted is that working conditions in the United States are much better than those in other parts of the world.

In many parts of the world, particularly in less developed countries where poverty and starvation are constant threats, the presence of children working in grueling and unsafe conditions, often in sweatshops, is a constant danger.  While we rarely consider child labor to be a major problem these days even in other parts of the world, the truth is that America is just one of the more fortunate continents, as child labor is an ever present threat to the wellbeing of many of the world’s children.

Child labor is particularly prevalent in Ethiopia, Pakistan, Burundi, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Sudan, North Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia, and Burma.  All of these places use minors, often as young as four years old, for different types of jobs or manual labor, whether that be for large corporations or for the black-market. Typically these children come from more rural areas and could not afford an education. Many children are put to work mining for riches, such as gold or gems, in extremely dangerous conditions.

Child labor is directly associated with the mining of blood diamonds. This is what puts Democratic Republic of the Congo in the list of countries that are the least sensitive towards child labor.  There are estimated to be about a million workers in all of Africa whose wages do not even approach the minimum wage. They earn in some cases less than one dollar a day. Even though there are minimum wage laws in most of these places, they are hardly ever enforced. 30% of the mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is done by child labor. The Democratic Republic of the Congo holds 64% of the existing Coltan, which is required for electronics. The resources that the Democratic Republic of the Congo possesses have been the cause of many wars.

There are many large corporations, such as Urban Outfitters and Toy’s R Us, who both admitted to using cotton from farms in Uzbekistan that used child labor. In Burkina Faso there were cotton farms that Victoria’s Secret is known to buy from. However, this cotton farm claimed to be fair trade, but as it turns out, that was a false claim. Cotton farms are not the only connection between large companies and underage workers.

In 2001 Nike claimed that they did not own sweatshops, but intensive investigations lead to the discovery that they were using underage workers in Pakistan to produce their soccer balls. Nike produced 80% of soccer balls in the world making this scandal even more severe. They had workers hand stitching them for less than a hundred dollars per month, about three dollars per day. Pakistan previously had a problem with child labor, having more than 3 million minors below age 14. These minors were working long hours in factories to produce expensive Nike soccer balls for much less than minimum wage.

While we would like to believe that the problem of the exploitation of children is no longer a concern, we would be wrong. It is still a very prominent issue in many parts of the world. The most important thing that we can do address this problem is to educate ourselves and those around us to become more aware of the issue. We should monitor the companies we buy from by fully researching their employment practices before we purchase their products. We should be confident that we can be part of the solution and that big problems can be solved with many small actions.

Filed Under: Op/Ed

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Features

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