jacket buzz (09/07/12)

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J Buzz B The Jacket Starkville High School 603 Yellow Jacket Dr. Starkville, MS, 39759 shsjacketbuzz.com Volume XX, No. 1 09-07-12 20 y ears 1992 - 2012 of The Jacket Buzz. Director James Stidham retires, story on page 3. Leaving Millsaps Ames sees Boys Nation Senior Rex Ames went to Washington, D.C. to participate in the prestigious Boys Na- tion program. Page 3 Japanese heritage a part of Little Senior Akane Little reflects on how her cul- tural roots affect her. Page 5 Holloway likes tech Supt. Lewis Holloway shares his opinions on technology in schools and encourages its continued use at SHS. Page 2 SHS student count grows by 204 SHS got hit with 204 out of the district’s 255 new students this year. Page 6.

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The Jacket Buzz is the student newspaper of Starkville High School.

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Page 1: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

JBuzz

BThe

JacketStarkville High School • 603 Yellow Jacket Dr.

Starkville, MS, 39759 • shsjacketbuzz.comVolume XX, No. 1 • 09-07-12

20years1992 - 2012

of The Jacket Buzz.

Director James Stidham retires,story on page 3.

Leaving Millsaps

Ames sees Boys NationSenior Rex Ames went to Washington, D.C. to participate in the prestigious Boys Na-tion program. Page 3

Japanese heritage a part of LittleSenior Akane Little reflects on how her cul-tural roots affect her. Page 5

Holloway likes techSupt. Lewis Holloway shares his opinions on technology in schools and encourages its continued use at SHS. Page 2

SHS student count grows by 204SHS got hit with 204 out of the district’s 255 new students this year. Page 6.

Page 2: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

By Kelley MazzolaNews Editor

“Well, as I was the one who unlocked YouTube, I would approve of its use in the class-room.”

The words that some Starkville High School stu-dents have been dying to hear have finally been said by none other than the new superinten-dent, Lewis Holloway. Hollo-way finds technology, such as YouTube, to be a valuable asset in the classroom.

“In my previous school dis-trict, teachers would film classes,” Holloway said. “Then, they would post it on YouTube, so that if a child missed class for whatever reason, they could just find that channel and watch class. One teacher had 6,000 hits.”

In Tupelo High School, each student has access to an iPad throughout school. Holloway feels that there is a place for iPads, but educators should look even deeper into the question.

“We know that kids have internet in the pockets,” Hol-loway said. “It’s just a matter of bringing your own device at time.”

As to the concerns about YouTube, Holloway does see some misuse in the future.

“With cell phone usage and YouTube as well, there shouldn’t be a strict no toler-ance rule,” Holloway said. “On the flip side, how are you sup-

posed to judge what is a prop-er use of a device and what is not?”

Meanwhile, Holloway men-tioned a program at a specially called school board meeting on August 23 that would al-low teachers to order laptops to be used in the classroom, then taken home and used to continue working on school related things, such as enter-ing grades.

“It wouldn’t be for the teach-er’s personal usage,” Holloway said. “It’s meant to make the teacher’s job easier.”

As to other policies that con-cern him, the dress code does not seem to leaving under Holloway.

“I don’t see it repealed,” Hol-loway said. “To continue the argument [against the policy] distracts from the educational opportunities.

“It’s a no-win situation, and it causes controversy. ”

However, there is some openings with lenience in

some of the standards.“We’re willing to consider

blue jean Fridays across the board,” Holloway said.

In 2014, school districts na-tionwide will be enforcing a new set of standards, known as Common Core, something that Holloway agrees with. However, he also feels it a little much on school districts.

“We needed a common core,” Holloway said. “But we don’t need to reinvent the wheel with it, and that’s what it’s essentially doing. Here at Starkville High, we are look-ing into reducing the number of credits required to gradu-ate, but nothing is set yet.”

Holloway finds that Starkville School District is similar to his old school district, and hopes to make an impact on it. He enjoys being a Yellow Jacket.

“There are great opportu-nities here [in the Starkville School District],” Holloway said. “We’re just trying to im-prove the school district every single day.”

Holloway plans to continue encouraging educational tech-nology in the Starkville School District beyond just this year.

Page 2 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com News

Holloway takes on technology““It’s (technol-

ogy is) meant to make the teacher’s job easier. -Lewis Holloway

!

!

THANK YOU TEACHERS!

Our teachers have enthusiastically responded to Superintendent Holloway’s invitation to support the Starkville Foundation for Public Education with a $10 per month donation

through salary deduction.

Let’s match their spirit in supporting SFPE and the Starkville School District!

Donate online at www.starkvillefoundation.org or by mail:

Starkville Foundation for Public Education P.O. Box 2307

Starkville, MS 39760

Contact us: [email protected] !

THANK YOU TEACHERS!Our teachers have enthusiastically responded to Super-intendent Holloway’s invitation to support the Starkville

Foundation for Public Education with a $10 per month do-nation through salary deduction.

Let’s match their spirit in supporting SFPE and the Starkville School District!

Donate online at www.starkvillefoundation.org or by mail:

Starkville Foundation for Public EducationP.O. Box 2307

Starkville, MS 39760

Contact us: [email protected]

These are the percentages passing the four state tests across Starkville High School. Compared to 2011 scores, there was a general decrease in the four subjects.

“With the four-by-four, we anticipated a decline, but we hoped to maintain the successful QDI (qual-ity distribution Index) that we had in previous years,” principal Keith Fennell said. “We knew that in the transition of one schedule to the other that it would take a little bit of experience to maintain that success.”

The school’s actual test results have not yet been released to the public by the Mississippi Depart-ment of Education (MDE) but each individual student’s results have not been embargoed. So

far, the school has met the QDI standards for all subjects except for Reading/Language Arts. 81.3% of students taking math, 90.3 percent of students taking U.S. History, 73.2 percent of students taking Biology I, and 72 percent of students taking English II state tests at Starkville High School passed. But the students who did do well on state tests were once given incentives, thought up by Fennell, but these incentives seemed to have disappeared.

“The four-by-four brings about two test admin-istrations each year, one in December and one in May, and the results coming from the Department of Education are delayed,” Fennell said. “It makes it difficult to accurately, in a timely manner, review the data and get the incentives out.”

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Page 3: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

@shsjacketbuzz Page 3 • 09-07-12News

Ames attends Boys NationBy Kelley MazzolaNews Editor

Over the summer, most teenagers would be lying on the couch or be between va-cations.

However, senior Rex Ames channeled his energy into an-other direction. This summer, Ames attended the program Boy’s State in Jackson and Boys Nation in Washington, D.C.

For Ames, this was a dream come true. Boys State is a state-wide program sponsored by the American Legion, which is a veteran’s group promoting civil service and patriotism to all ages.

Boys State brings high school male delegates from across the state to Jackson, where they participate and witness the in-ner workings of the state gov-ernment.

“You run around and do er-rands and odd jobs for peo-ple,” Ames said. “All you ask is, ‘what do you need me to do,’ and they tell you to do it. It’s like being an intern.”

These delegates meet regu-larly to share their experienc-es among the politicians in the Mississippi Capitol building, as well as act as a legislature to pass “bills” according to the standards of the Mississippi Legislature.

Later in the term, these del-egates elect two of their own

to be governor and lieutenant governor of Boys State.

At the end of the term, the high schoolers gather as a group once again to vote which two of their own will be elected to serve as “senators” to the Boys Nation group, which includes delegates from states such as Alaska and Mon-tana.

“It’s been my dream to go to Washington D.C., so this was an opportunity I couldn’t let fly by,” Ames said. “I strongly urged the other delegates at Boy’s State to let me go and represent Mississippi. It was my goal from the beginning of the program.”

Ames, through persever-ance since the sixth grade, got his wish and was voted as one of the two Mississippi senators to Boys Nation.

While there, the program took him across Washington D.C. to visit monuments and museums, and, of course, the

Capitol building.“My favorite thing at Boys

Nation was when we met the President,” Ames said. “He shook each of our hands and then had to leave, but it was still very nice. My other fa-vorite thing was watching the Senate and the House in ses-sion.

“Just watching from the gal-lery was fantastic.”

As a self-described political person, Ames found the expe-rience extremely rewarding both as a high school student and a citizen of the United States.

“I would recommend Boys State and Boys Nation to ju-niors,” Ames said. “It taught me a lot about our state gov-ernment, since I met the At-torney General as well as Greg Harper. We [delegates] grew very close, since we sat down and ate meals together and talked about things. I made a lot of friends.”

Senior Rex Ames greets with Mississippi govenor Phil Bryant during Boys’ Nation. Photo contributed by Rex Ames.

By Kelley MazzolaNews Editor

As of last Friday, after 25 years as a director of Mill-saps Career and Technical Center, James Stidham has retired to the simple life on his horse farm here in Oktib-beha County.

“I’ve gotten old,” Stidham said. “I know I signed a con-tract with the school district last year to stay for this year, but I just felt like it was my time.”

Before becoming an near-permanent presence at Mill-saps, he started as a teacher at Webster County, then rose to be a director at the career and technological center there and remained in that post for five years. After that, he became the principal for three years before arriv-ing at Millsaps.

One of the programs that he started in Millsaps is Ca-reer Technical Exploration, a program that allows students to rotate through the courses offered at Millsaps, such as Building Trades and Horti-culture. However, in previ-ous years the students par-ticipated in four courses that they may have requested or (as a new feature in the sec-ond semester of last year) six courses. This year, the fresh-men class will rotate through all 10 of the courses, with nine days with each teacher.

CTE came about when Stidham presented the idea to the education department of Mississippi, in order to in-troduce CTE statewide. The state department first imple-mented CTE in Millsaps, granting money to fund this expedition. However, with the recession hitting its hard-est in 2008 and 2009, the funding was soon cut out of the education budget, mak-ing CTE a unique feature to Millsaps.

However, at the beginning of this year, there was talk of CTE being cut as a required class to graduate, since it

is required not by the state, but by the Starkville School District. Stidham still holds faith in the program.

“I’m very passionate about CTE,” Stidham said. “For some kids, it’s the only op-portunity for them to see other options for their edu-cation. Some of them won’t want to go to college, and these classes would give them a trade and a job to look for-ward to after high school. CTE helps them make an informed decision about life after high school.”

Despite having programs such as CTE dear to his heart, Stidham’s favorite thing about Millsaps is the faculty and staff that he worked with.

“The faculty and staff are outstanding,” Stidham said. “We’re called the Millsaps family, and there’s a reason for that. When one of us is happy, all of us are happy. If one of us is hurting, we’re all sad to see that.”

The faculty will miss him just as Stidham will miss them, even though it’s still said that the Millsaps faculty

end-of-the-year barbecue will still be on at Stidham’s farm.

“It was hard and tough,” Rusty Coats, the Horticul-ture teacher at Millsaps, said. “It was a surprise, and we’re going to miss him. He’s done a lot help with funding for equipment and such.”

Patty Newsom feels simi-larly about Stidham.

“He will be missed sorely,” Newsom told the Starkville Daily News. “We were one of the first three Teacher Acad-emy programs to open in Mississippi, and he supplied me with all the technology I needed to teach with, like SMART Boards and com-puters, so that I could teach my students how to become teachers.

“On his behalf, we will al-ways do what’s right and best for the students because that was his motto. He (will leave) big boots to fill.”

Stidham plans to spend his retirment with his sev-en grandchildren, showing horses with them and helping them grow.

“I’ve been showing horses for 40 years,” Stidham said. “I show and judge Western competitions. It’s hard to do both at the same horse show, but I’ve done it before.”

One thing he is excited about is the tractor that is waiting to be used for a long time after his retirement.

“My wife bought me a new tractor,” Stidham said. “I’ve never had a new tractor be-fore, so that’s going to be new.”

Stidham retires““It’s a great loss for the students of Millsaps, and the students of the school dis-trict.-Ray New

Rex Ames posing with MS rep. Greg Harper. Photo contributed by Rex Ames.

COME SEE US!

Page 4: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

Page 4 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com News

By Jareth MurrellNews Writer

Sherre Ferguson’s Acceler-ated English III classes have worked from the beginning of the school year as per the les-son plan.

The only thing they lacked, however, was their teacher.

“I had surgery, and as a re-sult, there were complications from the surgery,” said Fergu-son.

The complications have made Ferguson unfit for the stresses of teaching.

In her absence, the Starkville High School administration and faculty have provided for her class.

Retired teacher Dianne

Freeze worked as a substitute in her class to keep the stu-dents up-to-date with class lessons and procedures to fa-cilitate a smooth return for Ferguson.

The rest of the faculty and administration has also worked to aid Ferguson in her recovery.

“A lot of my colleagues (past and present) as well as my prin-cipal have been very nice to me during the recovery process,” Ferguson said. “Whether it was through prayer, thoughts, food, phone calls, etc., many of my colleagues were very pleasant in assisting me during the process. I want to thank those who did those things.”

Ferguson’s recovery has been going well so far though not as quickly as originally thought.

However, she came back to teaching on Sept. 4, and is lov-ing every minute of it.

Meanwhile, this series of events that have unfolded have caused Ferguson to see a more

spiritual side of life. Being a devout Christian, she extends her thanks to God and prayer.

“I must begin by giving God all the praise for the blessings he has bestowed upon me in the past, now in the present, and also for the future,” said Ferguson.

Ferguson feels that she also learned the valuable lesson about faith through this or-deal.

“This process has and con-

tinues to teach me that prayer changes situations and that my faith has become even stronger as a result. What I would say to anyone who goes through any type of health problem is that: While the doctor may take the fee, God does the healing.”

Ferguson back at SHS““The doctor may take the fee, God does the healing.-Sherre Ferguson

Millsaps’ New Teachers Speak Up

Ferguson teaches back at SHS. Photo by Alisha Carter.

““I’ve been really impressed with students here. I try to implant a little of the real world so it’s not just a teaching scenario.Charles Wright in mid lecture.

Photo by Alisha Carter.

John Dillan talking to his students. Photo by Alisha Carter.

Allen Calhoun explains automo-tive mechanics to his students. Photo by Alisha Carter.

““As a new teacher I am really enjoying it, this facility is better than any-thing we had even at EMCC.

““I came to Starkville for an opportunity as an automotive instructor. I really like Mill-saps.

nTeacher finds strength in herself and deals with illness.

JROTC plans moment of silence

By Kelley MazzolaNews Editor

Across the school, the clam-or of classes will quiet to a moment of silence as an offi-cer of the Junior Reserve Of-ficer Training Corp will come over the intercom, asking for a moment of silence on Sept. 11.

This moment of silence is to remember 9/11, in which ter-rorists flew planes into the two World Trade Centers in New York, and yet another plane into the Pentegon in Washing-ton D.C. This moment of si-lence is to also remember the heroic passengers of Flight 93, who forced the hijackers of

their flight to crash in a field in Pennsylvannia.

However, to assistant prin-cipal Sean McDonnall, it’s a little more than just that.

“It helps put it [9/11] into perspective,” McDonnall said. “We lost a lot of American lives that day, so I think a mo-ment of silence is good to just remember them, and let them know that we’ll never forget.”

To Stacie Young, a cadet in JROTC, it’s a way to express her patriotism.

“JROTC teaches you the importance of being a citizen, so it teaches you to take pride of being an American,” Young said. “You take that and you think about it, this was an at-tack on our country. As a whole, you feel, like, sad that it happened, but you just learn from that situation that, ‘hey, I want to protect my country, I

wanna do something to help.’”Last year, it was the tenth

anniversary of 9/11, and, with that in mind, JROTC had a video played over the Chan-nel One televisions across the school, as well as announce-ments at the times of the ter-rorist attacks. However, since this is only the eleventh anni-versary, the leaders of JROTC deemed a moment of silence appropriate.

“It’s just a moment of si-lence,” Lt. Colonel Charlese Webb said. “It’s just a moment to remember that day.”

However, Young believes that there should be more to this anniversary of the trag-edy.

“We’ve done color guard at so many different ceremo-nies that they have,” Young said. “But just a moment of silence? There could be a lot more done.”

However appropriate it would be to some, McDon-nall believes that a moment of silence is going to become a tradition, instead of a large ceremony.

“I don’t know where you would draw the line,” Mc-Donnall said. “If we start dig-ging back far enough I’m sure there’s tragedies have hap-pened throughout our history that deserve that. I think a moment of silence is appropri-ate, and I don’t have a problem with it.”

nMoment planned as 9/11 memorium p9/11

Tusday, Starkville High School

Moment of Silence

Page 5: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

@shsjacketbuzz Page 5 • 09-07-12News

By Jareth MurrellNews Writer

For the past couple of years, Brenda Jackson has been teaching chemistry as one of her three classes during the day. However, there seems to be a change in schedule.

“Assigning classes would be just a qualification thing,” assistant principal Sean Mc-Donnall said.

“It was mostly because of the conflict of who was need-ed to teach what in the most needed subjects,” Jackson said. “It was a certification conflict; the only way you can teach a physical science is to

have a 182 or a 189. I’m cer-tified to teach in all areas.”

As to who is teaching what, that shift operates similarly to a supply and demand for-mula.

With the new growth of the school and greater number of students taking one sci-ence class over another and so teachers had to be moved around to deal with this.

This isn’t always limited to the science department, though this year changes in the science department are more noticeable than in oth-ers.

However, end result is that Jackson now teaches Phys-

ics, Physical Science, and Ad-vanced Placement Biology, leaving Chemistry with some of the other science faculty.

“This year there are three new people in the depart-ment. Any time you have that number of new hires, the department is going through a transition phase,” Jackson said.

Though this uncertainty could possibly negatively af-fect some faculty, Jackson embraces the changes.

“I don’t know from year to year what I’m going to teach anyway,” Jackson said. “I could teach anything really, I love it all.”

By Cullom McCormickEditor-in-Chief

Half-Japanese senior Akane Little’s parents met in a strange way.

“My dad was an exchange English professor at my mom’s university in Japan,” Little said. “She didn’t actually take his class, but one of the teach-ers threw a Christmas party. My mom remembers thinking my dad was weird because he ate dried fish headfirst, and on the way home, he insisted on holding her hands to keep them warm. I’m just sur-prised she ever talked to him again.”

The details of the meeting – the American man holding a Japanese woman’s hands, the awkward American way of eating, the curiosity resulting from the social missteps – re-flect what Little feels about her mixed cultural identity. The differences and opposing messages she received from American culture and Japa-nese culture used to make her overly conflicted.

“Japanese people aren’t as out there as Americans are,” Little said. “They care more about their own space, they

like being in a group, they like to dress and talk like each other. All that stems from the island being small and not wanting to be unlike each other for fear of getting os-tracized.

“America is much more in-dividual-conscious. Our eco-nomic system is even set up around it: the more successful you are as an individual, the more successful you are in society.”

Watching Japanese televi-sion and spending summers in Japan used to have her

switching gears and mixing her mannerisms together, she says, and she sees this as the reason she felt so weird when she was young.

Now, she just appreciates both halves of her heritage for what they are and just tries to act like herself.

“I feel bad for the multicul-tural kids who are never ex-posed to the non-American side of their culture,” Little said. “My mom exposed me to Japanese things, and I’m really grateful . . . But I don’t like something just because

it’s Japanese. I like what I like and I don’t like what I don’t like.”

And as proud as she is of her background, Little does admit that it has isolated her at times. Her most vivid memory of outright preju-dice, though, was in elemen-tary school.

“Teachers would get to the part in history when we talk-ed about Pearl Harbor,” Little said. “Everyone stared at me. I started crying.”

She points to the sixth grade as the year she started feel-ing alone for being different, when she “kept wishing that there was someone else who spoke Japanese and knew the culture.”

In a self-contradicting at-tempt to both blend in and show her individuality, Little started making “self-degrad-ing, racist jokes” when she got to middle school. Now, though, she’s grown out of those jokes.

“Now, I find that humor to be cheap, stupid and really not funny,” Little said. “Like when an Asian person does something, you comment on it, and they just say ‘It’s be-cause I’m Asian.’ I wish they

would just let go of that and be themselves. And I don’t feel bad for them, I just get annoyed with them. I wish I could just pull them aside and explain to them why they should stop doing it. But it’s not my place.”

Little’s social life has changed to show such an at-titude. For instance, whereas she used to hold out for “a half-Japanese guy who had curly hair and rode bikes ev-erywhere,” now she has no problem dating whoever she gets to know and like best, regardless of skin color or culture.

Little says she hasn’t even noticed anyone stereotyping and dismissing her achieve-ments as being solely because of her ethnicity (as people sometimes do with Asian teenagers), which she believes is because she doesn’t harp on it to fit in anymore.

“It hasn’t been bothering me because I haven’t been hearing it,” Little said. “How much you identify your cul-tural identity with yourself is how much people are going to identify you as that culture. With the state of mind that I have now, I’d be incredibly annoyed if people said some-thing like that to me or made assumptions that I did certain things because I’m Asian. No, it’s because I’m me and I want to do it. It’s because that’s what makes me tick, not be-cause I’m Japanese.”

Still, though, Little says she sees other Asian teenagers doing this, kids who she still wishes she could pull aside and shake.

But it’s still not her place. And despite her annoyance, it all boils down to her wanting others to just be themselves so they could be as happy as she is.

Jackson drops chemistry, takes up physcial science

Little’s cultural identity split

Little working her way through calculus classwork. Photo by Alisha Carter.

Jackson manages her Physics I classroom as they go through a lesson in the morning. Photo by Alisha Carter.

““How much you identify your cultural identity with yourself is how much peo-ple are going to identify you as that culture.-Akane Little

Page 6: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

By Ashley Rude News Writer

Starkville High School start-ed the year off with 204 more students than last year. 1,288 students attend SHS verses the 1,084 students from last year.

Many blame the sudden in-crease on the freshman class which grew by 66 from last year, the most of all the class-es.

Juniors had 47 extra, 39 se-niors, and 27 sophomores.

The sudden population in-crease has left administrators and teachers thinking of solu-tions for crowding.

“I’m trying to make sure

everyone has textbooks and desks in all the classrooms,” assistant principal Avence Pitt-man Jr. said.

Classrooms are overrun with students. Algebra II teacher Xavier Tillman has packed in as many students in her class-room as possible.

“I have someone seated at my podium, someone seated at my desk, I brought extra desks up to the front of my room and I actually brought in a couple of tables for kids to sit at,” Tillman said “So everywhere, every nook, crook and corner I can find.”

The problems caused by overcrowding are overall a

good thing compared to down-sides.

Principal Keith Fennell not only believes the student body has increased due to freshmen, but also because of the oppor-tunities offered by the school.

“We do provide a compre-hensive educational experi-ence and I think people will recognize that in the immedi-ate surroundings and prefer to be part of the Jacket Na-tion because of that,” Fennell said. “So when they have that opportunity to, I think they will pursue that opportunity in efforts to land in the loca-tion where the best education is provided.”

Page 6 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com News

By Jareth MurrellNews Writer

English II teacher Sally War-ren, despite looking young and beautiful, could very well have retired this year.

However, she decided to stay.

“I think you know when it’s time to leave: when you can’t stand to see your students any longer and every obstacle

becomes something that you don’t feel that you can over-come,” Warren said. “I just haven’t reached that point yet.”

Warren said continuing teaching has been a positive as-pect of her life.

She also looks forward to the future rewards of continuing to teach here at SHS.

Specifically, she would like to teach at SHS long enough to see her son attend the school.

Her son being in the eighth grade, it won’t take too long for Warren to have a chance to teach her son or accompany him in his high school years.

As for what Warren would be doing if she had retired, she wouldn’t be ending her career.

Warren would instead be ex-tending her passion for teach-ing and taking advantage of other opportunities.

“I would have to work,” War-

ren said. “Maybe I’d teach at Mississippi State University.”

Warren feels that this would be something she would look into when she does finally re-tire from SHS.

For now though, Warren is content with continuing to have her position as an English Teacher at SHS.

“For some reason, I still like my students, and I love SHS,” Warren said.

Warren considered retirement

SHS grows by 204 students

Starkville High School’s increased population shows best during lunch, when the cafeteria is loaded with the extra students. Photo by Robert Dandass.

““I’m trying to make sure everyone has textbooks and desks in all the classrooms.-Avence Pittman

This year alone, 255 new students have enrolled in the Starkville School District. 204 of those alone enrolled at SHS.

Veteran teacher Sally Warren teaches English II students about poetry. Photo by Robert Dandass.

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Page 7: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

By Ashely Rude News Writer

The Starkville High School BEST robotics team lost three valuable members from last year: CEO Nick Elder, build-er Joey Pritchet and lead pro-grammer Abdalla Sherif.

Pritchet worked tirelessly for the entire group to com-plete the robot’s booth in time.

“Joey was good in the booth construction, but now this year we have the booth, so all we have to do is change it to whatever the theme is,” advi-sor Denise Adair said.

While Pritchet focused his strengths on the building aspect of the competition, Sherif channeled his talents towards programming the robot.

By the time he was done, the robot ran well.

“If it wasn’t for Abdalla, we wouldn’t have the robot in the running condition by the time we did,” marketing director Nick Kolbet said.

Sadly, Sherif’s program-ming was not enough to bring the team to a first place win.

The team only managed to secure the People’s Choice Best Booth and Rookie Team of the Year awards, and the robot’s true capabilities were not demonstrated thoroughly due to a small difficulty in charging the battery.

As CEO, Elder had more responsibilities than any oth-er member. His loss leaves a major vacuum within the team.

“His job was to look over both branches and make sure that everyone was on task,” Kolbet said. “To make sure that we’re getting things ac-complished in a very specific manner of time.”

Elder left Starkville High School and the robotics team behind to attend the Missis-sippi School for Mathematics and Science.

He will be replaced at the beginning of the 42 day pe-riod to build the robot when the team votes on a new CEO.

While the loss of valu-able members is regretful, it provides opportunities for newer robotics club mem-bers to step up and do what they love.

“For 42 days it’s a lot of work, but the kids get so much out of it that it’s worth it,” Adair said.

@shsjacketbuzz Page 7 • 09-07-12News

By Jareth Murrell News Writer

Talisha Cheeks is the new-est addition to Starkville High School’s math dept. faculty. However, Cheeks isn’t entirely unfamiliar with the territory.

“I was here in 2004 to 2007,” Cheeks said. “I taught Algebra I to geometry, transitions, pre-algebra, any math course they had, basically.”

Since being back, Cheeks notes the familiarity she has with the school in its faculty, students and general atmo-sphere.

“The whole climate is pretty much the same,” Cheeks said. “The whole culture is also pretty much the same. There are lots of familiar faces.”

Not everything is the same, though. Even though the stu-dents and staff stay consistent, policies shift from year to year.

To help her adjust to these new changes, the administra-tion has provided her with a

mentor for her to ask questions to when she needs clarifica-tions on new policies and other changes within the school.

Cheeks has noted several sig-nificant changes since she was last here. Some of those in-cluded more involved technol-ogy in the classroom as well as the dress code.

“I love having the SmartBoard and being able to use YouTube,” Cheeks said. “I think that was a step in the right direction, especially in a math classroom. There are so many things that I’m able to show them now and that they’re able to experi-ence it with the technology. [It especially shows] when we’re graphing and when they’re able to see a bigger perspective on things.”

Even with these changes, Cheeks still feels at home here.

“The turnover rate is not as great as in some places, as in you go back the next year and ‘poof’ — all new faces,” said Cheeks. “And that’s great be-

cause it shows stability within the school where people can feel secure and safe, unlike how they are in a new environ-ment.”

Cheeks returns to SHSMillsaps loses three, still set for new year

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pRoboticsTuesday, 3:15 p.m., Denise Adair’s room

meeting

Cheeks uses her old skills to teach a fresh concept to a class of her new high school students. Photo by Robert Dandasss.

Former BEST CEO Nick Elder works on last year’s robot. Photo contributed by Victoria Hearn.

Page 8: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)
Page 9: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)
Page 10: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

The editorial below is a written collaboration among all members of the Jacket Buzz staff. Ideas expressed represent the majority opinion of the students.

Cullom McCormickEditor-in-Chief

Kelley MazzolaNews Editor

Jordan CohenYearbook Editor

Rex AmesMarketing Director

Robert DandassPhotography Editor

Aaron RemotigueSports Editor

R.J. MorganAdviser

Jareth MurrellAshley RudeAngela WhiteAvery CohenColin DammsAlicia CarterShelby Adair

Staff Members

EditorialPage 10 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com Opinion

Starkville High School’s attitude toward technology has im-proved greatly in recent years. Unblocking YouTube on school computers shows this best. However, the school’s outdated poli-cy on cell phones still flies in the face of this recent progress.

The punishment for cell phone use is far too severe. Because a student gets caught glancing at his phone, he has to report to In School Suspension (ISS) for an entire day. Theoretically, this would not be a problem, as teachers are meant to send any work from that day to the ISS room. But in practice, this sys-tem is flawed in multitudes of ways. Seldom do teachers actually send work to ISS, justifying their misstep by claiming to be too busy for the inconvenience or saying it was the student’s fault for misbehaving in the first place. A day in ISS also goes on a student’s permanent record, which colleges will see and assume was because of a fitting rules violation. Thus, the student suffers academically as well as behaviorally, compounding this already egregious punishment.

On top of the ill-conceived punishment for cell phone usage, many teachers often don’t even enforce the rule. Many of them discourage but conveniently overlook cell phone usage. From

one block to another, a student can go from a class that allows listening to music on his phone during a test to a class that has the phone confiscated for so much as having a suspicious outline in his jeans. Such uneven enforcement sends mixed messages to students who see the only difference between the rules in those classes as whether they can text above or beneath the desks.

The rules on cell phone usage need either uniform enforce-ment or heavy revision. Almost every student texts, so why not use cell phones educationally? There are websites that allow stu-dents to anonymously text in questions and comments instead of speaking in front of all their peers. This can be a solution to one of teachers’ biggest complaints: that their students won’t ask the questions they need help with because they’re too embarrassed. Teachers could just take students’ cell phones up at the begin-ning of class and keep them for as long as necessary, maybe even until the end of the day. This would stop students from texting during tests, one of teachers’ biggest fears.

However the school decides to handle cell phone usage from now on, the Jacket Buzz staff hopes for the SHS faculty and ad-ministration to take a more levelheaded approach to this issue.

Phone policy needs change

The Jacket Buzz is published three times each semester by the Journalism

Department at Starkville High School. The Jacket Buzz is a student-run

publication committed to providing SHS with objective information.

The Jacket Buzz serves SHS as a forum for student expression. Opinions

expressed are those of students and don’t reflect the views of others in

the Starkville School Distict. Content decisions are made by student edi-

tors, and factual errors will be corrected by a retraction in the next issue.

Letters to the Editor are accepted and published, excluding those that

are deemed libelous or disruptive. Unsigned letters will not be published,

and all are subject to editing. Please email all letters and comments to

[email protected].

Statement of Policy

Chick-fil-A donates to hate groups

If I turn on the news or even pick up a newspa-per, I’m almost guaranteed a story about Chick-fil-A. The same is true for Starkville High School. In almost every class (especially around lunch time), it seems to be a popular conversation topic.

On the news I hear all about the donations that Dan Cathy, the CEO of Chick-fil-A, makes to not only anti-gay organizations, but hate groups as well. In class, though, I hear my peers raving about Chick-fil-A and how they can’t wait to go back.

It worries me that the majority of the students here at SHS have no idea where their money is go-ing when they buy a chicken sandwich at Chick-fil-A. When we put our money in the cashier’s hand at the counter, it is going straight into Cathy’s pocket, and what he does with that money is hor-rifying.

Dan Cathy donates millions of dollars to causes like the Family Research Council, Exodus Interna-tional and the Marriage & Family Council.

The Family Research Council, whose motto is “Advancing faith, family, and freedom,” is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Cen-ter. A hate group is an organized group or move-ment that advocates and practices hatred, hostility or violence towards members of a race, ethnicity, religion, gender, sexual orientation or other desig-nated sector of society.

As well as being advocates against Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual-Transsexual rights, they are also anti-

divorce, anti-stem-cell research and many more things. FRC is defined a hate group, though, be-cause they strongly discourage anti-bullying cam-paigns because they work to prevent LGBT teens from committing suicide.

Now, I realize that not everyone is pro-LGBT, but when suicide is involved, someone’s sexual orientation is irrelevant. The fact that the FRC is against any type of anti-bullying campaign is sick-ening.

Is an organization like that really where we want our money to go?

Just the other day I overheard a fellow student talking about how her youth group had breakfast at Chic-fil-A earlier that morning. When I heard this, I couldn’t help but think about how much money that youth group inadvertently donated to hate groups like the FRC.

So I ask you, SHS: Is that chicken sandwich worth it?

LACHIEM: A DIFFERENT OPINION

AVERY COHEN

“Don’t worry. We’re just making you miss school for that text to your mom. Just step inside for a little while and wait for your teacher to send everything you need...”

Starkville’s own local Chick-fil-A. Courtesy photo.

Page 11: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

The next time someone goes to vote, they may find them-selves denied of the very right to do so. Since 2010, 37 states have passed laws involving voter identification, Mississippi included.

The laws in question require voters to have both photo identification and certain legal documents that would prove their citizenship. The main purpose of these laws is the pre-vention of illegal immigrants influencing the democratic process. Though this idea might sound good on paper, it fails in its implementation.

The fact-checking journalism group News21 recently re-leased a study recording the number of voter fraud cases of the past decade. What they found was that within that length of time only 10 allegations of voter fraud were found. With 16 million registered voters, that would equal to a 0.000000625 percent occurrence a year making voter fraud virtually non-existent. Still, many of those in favor of these laws claim higher percentages, even though they are false. The greater fraud occurs in absentee ballots and voter registration.

Note who this affects. It does not, in actuality, counter ille-gal immigrants from voting. An illegal immigrant trying not to get noticed is not going to pretend to be another person so that they can submit a single vote that many think will not matter in the grand scheme of things.

These laws do harm to legal citizens, however. Those who misplaced their specific legal documents, cannot afford pho-to identification, or simply don’t have specific documents will end up deprived of the right to vote because they can’t afford it or because they don’t have pieces of paper with their names on it embroidered with stamps, fancy lettering and legal terms.

These laws allow those not having the provided materials to pay a fee to receive them. This is a blatant poll tax, some-thing that is outright illegal. The laws don’t actually address the real problems: absentee ballots and corruption within the voter registration system. They instead provide a ruse to look like something is being done and restrict the amount of poor and minority votes, which tend to go against the party that proposed these laws.

These laws don’t help the country or stop fraud, but only help the people who proposed them get a larger percentage in the polls by cutting some of the competition.

There are very few benefits for being a junior in a senior-oriented high school. The junior class is being infringed upon because the senior parking lot is burst-ing at the seam from drivers of all ages parking in it.

As a freshman, I enjoyed the perks of having a sister who was a junior who also had a nice car and a junior decal.

Now, myself a junior, I expected a junior spot, since my twin sister and mother lodged themselves in the front of the line for a parking decal, yet I got a sophomore decal, and a bitter taste in my mouth.

Then, I realized how selfish I was being. So what if I got a sophomore decal? It just means that other people in my grade have to park there, as well as the few sopho-mores who can drive and a longer walk (which is better for me). Why was I so

mortally offended? Then, it hit me: I’ve got the Seniority bug.

I never thought before I would get hit with that infection; as a freshman, I took the “abuse” of being a “Freshie” and, then, as a sophomore, I never thought myself “better” than the freshmen I knew and talked to. In all honesty, I didn’t have privileges that were associated with class standing unless I wanted to go out of my way to tease freshmen.

Even then, teasing freshmen was point-less. They were going to find out that there isn’t a third floor or a pool in the basement; haranguing them would only alienate them from the upperclassmen. In the long run, it would just continue a vicious circle of freshmen tit for tat, and no one would get anything done. Sopho-more year only gave me a headache and tired sigh, due to the English II state test in December and Advanced Placement European History tests every Friday, as well as writing on the side as a news writer.

To present day, I simply shook my head at my own foolishness- what’s the point in thinking about not having a junior spot? I have a parking decal, I have a car to share with my sister, and I have my In-

termediate. I can drive myself from point A to point B.

As to seniority, I have a right to write the English III research paper, perform Trigonometry, and stress about the news section of The Jacket Buzz. I’ve got enough on my plate, with or without feeling superior for being a junior.

After all these considerations, the grade that has it best (despite being ste-reotyped as the worst) is the freshmen. The freshmen have the easiest classes, as well as the most slack among the teach-ers and students. “They’re freshmen. Let ‘em be.”

Contrary to popular belief, the seniors don’t always have it easy- they’ve got in-cessant questions of “Where are you go-ing to college?” or “What do you want to do after high school?” They’ve got col-lege applications on top of the dreaded English IV research paper, on top of other duties to clubs and organizations. As my prophetic sister said, “You’ve got it easy, little sister. Enjoy it while you can.”

So be happy, my fellow juniors (except the few lucky ones). We’ll be soggy on rainy days, but, hey, we’ve got another year till graduation. We can invest in hair dryers until then.

@shsjacketbuzz Page 10 • 09-07-12Opinion

Voter I.D. ineffective,unconstitutional

Democratization unforceable

Foreign countries will not instantly become Western democracies, and the United States should stop expecting them to do so.

The recent jailing of a Russian punk band is one of the lighter illustrations of this point. The group protested Rus-sian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in an Orthodox church and got a two-year jail sentence. The Western world was shocked and appalled at this (entirely predictable) courtroom affront to freedom of speech, but Russian society itself couldn’t have cared less. In fact, the Levada Independent Research Group conducted a poll that found only six percent of Russians sympa-thized with the incarcerated rockers.

To use a more extreme example, look at U.S. involvement in Afghanistan. The Afghani government is a corrupt, theo-

cratic plutocracy that can’t control its own people or the many terrorist cells within it. The U.S., being God’s Gift to Liberation, is intervening to oust these cells and restructure the government. But it isn’t working and the natives hate the Americans.

That’s not to say, though, that countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Russia will never be truly democratic. It’s that outside powers, like the U.S., cannot force them to be something they’re not. The change must happen from within these countries or not at all. It took Western society over 500 years to develop to its current, com-paratively egalitarian form, and the East is still a couple hundred years behind.

Why are these countries so seemingly backwards? Well, they’re not backwards at all. Russians and Afghanis literally think differently than Americans.

The West has been richer than the East for just under a thousand years now. This means that at various points the West could afford to think about itself and make reforms because it had enough extra food, people and resources to contemplate non-essential things. They could forgo worry-ing about having enough food to survive

the week and instead think about how it’s unfair for a government to have absolute control over people.

The East, however, has had to scrape by just to survive. They largely retained their mindset of a select few being in charge and controlling the rest because they couldn’t afford to take the time off and philoso-phize on injustice – they’d starve if they stopped working. Thus, the East has come from a background of absolutely power-ful rulers who allow little or no individual rights and use religion to oppress their people. Given, some Eastern nations are more advanced than others, but even the more advanced ones are behind the West.

These countries have never been dem-ocratic and have not had the necessary social and philosophical advancement to take that step.

Some of these places even turn to Com-munism, like Vietnam and China. How-ever, many countries are actively work-ing toward “Westernization,” so to speak; Arab Spring being an example of this.

So the U.S. shouldn’t be surprised when a band gets jailed for speaking its mind or when natives don’t want more violent change.

CULLOM’S COLUMN

CULLOM MCCORMICK

A MODEST PROPOSAL

JARETH MURRELL

MAZZOLA MANTRA

KELLEY MAZZOLA

Underclassmen have advantage

Have an opinion of your own? Tweet to @shsjacketbuzz. Have too much to say in just 140 characters? Email it to

[email protected]. Your views could be in the next issue!

Page 12: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

By Aaron RemotigueSports Editor

Athleticism doesn’t come naturally for a lot of people, but volleyball certainly did for sophomore Courtney Wilson.

Wilson has only been on the volleyball team for two years, but it only took her one-year to move up to play on the varsity team.

Wilson has tallied up 39 digs this season alone. Wilson credits her coaches with her progress.

“The people who have helped me most are Coach Lauren Love, the SHS vol-leyball coach, and Jeanne Sumrall, one of the Missis-sippi Juniors Club Volleyball coach,” Wilson said. “They have both taught me so much about the game, technique, and fundamentals. They have also pushed me to do my best at every game and every practice.”

At these practices, Wilson works on her strongest part of her game: Her serve.

“My greatest strength is serving because my serves are consistent,” Wilson said.

Wilson supports the team with her serve, and she has all ready posted 37 aces this season.

Wilson says that her team is “very encouraging” and that she loves playing with

them. However, she believes she

can be doing more to im-prove the chemistry.

“On varsity I feel like I shouldn’t be making simple playing errors like I did on JV because varsity is more competitive,” Wilson said. “I need to work on defense when [the other team is] hitting the ball. I also need to work on hitting the ball harder.”

Defensively, Starkville High School is posting better stats than last year.

In the 2011-2012 season, the Starkville High School Yellow Jackets posted only 29 blocks, but this year the Jackets have already posted 35.

Page 12 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com Sports

Wilson critical for Jackets on defense

Local ref: crowd not factorBy Aaron RemotigueSports Editor

A recent Harvard study has suggested that referees may tend to make calls in favor of a home team if a large crowd is present.

Kevin Randall is the head physical athletic trainer for Mississippi State University, but he also referees for the Mississippi High School Ac-tivities Association. Because he graduated from Starkville High School after playing quarterback in 1995, he can-not be an official for Starkville varsity games.

Randall says that the study doesn’t seem accurate to a high school setting.

“I don’t think as an official a crowd is going to sway you much at a high school game,” Randall said. “Maybe at a col-lege game where the crowds is

much bigger. Most of the time I can’t tell you who the home team or the visiting team is—honest to goodness—once the game gets going.”

Not surprisingly, Randall says that referees hear more of coaches than anything else in the game.

“The biggest thing you run into in high school football is noise on the sidelines with the

coaches hollering and carry-ing on,” Randall says. “It’s been my experience in the seven years I’ve done it that a lot of high school coaches don’t know the difference between high school, college and NFL rules.”

Randall says the coaches may not sway referees, but officials do hear much more of them than the crowds.

pNextCalloway at the SHS

Gym

match vs.

Sophomore Courtney Wilson prepares to serve against the Ridgeland Titans (Right). Yellow Jacket Varsity Starters from top to bottom Khris Carr, Vicky Vo, Michaela Mills, and Jamiyah Covington (Top). Not pic-tured: Stacie Young, Vivian Barksdale, and Hannah Knox. Photos by Alicia Carter.

““My goals are mostly just to be faster than I was last season and to work a lot harder.

411 Highway 12 EastStarkville, MS 39759

Page 13: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

@shsjacketbuzz Page 13 • 09-07-12Sports

Lechiem|Avery Cohen

We’ve all heard it a mil-lion times: soda is bad for you. But just to reiterate, one can of Coke has 140 calories and 39 grams of sugar. That’s just as many calories, and twice as much sugar as one brownie.Ac-cording to the Children’s Nutrition Research Center at Baylor College of Medi-cine, teenage girls should be eating an average of 2,000 calories per day, and teen boys should eat some-where between 2,200 and 2,400 calories. So that one Coke just took 140 calories away for you to eat that day, and you received little to no nutrition from it.

When you drink that one can of Coke, your body breaks down the sugar and a chemical called Serotonin is then released into your body, causing you to crave more sugar. So that already steep 39 grams of sugar you just drank is now turned into twice that number be-cause of sugar’s addictive quality. Sugar isn’t the only culprit, though.

There are also loads of high fructose corn syrup in that tiny little can, and ignore those commercials, because high fructose corn syrup is just as bad as sugar, if not worse.

Since high fructose corn syrup was introduced in 1967, our annual sugar intake has gone up 25

pounds... per person. So now that we know just

why sodas are so dangerous, you go for another drink. Instead of reaching for a Coke, you grab a nice Lem-on-Lime Gatorade because it’s healthy, right? Take a better look at the label. Yes, its 50 calories look nice and slim next to the Coke’s 140 calories, but its 21 grams of sugar aren’t worth it. It’s just a glorified soda.

The same is true for oth-er “healthy” drinks. Take Vitamin Water and fruit juice. Vitamin Water has 120 calories and 32 grams of sugar, and those couple milligrams of vitamin C don’t make up for it.

Most fruit juices are packed with sugar, most of which are only about 10 percent actual juice. So, you decide to get 100 per-cent juice instead. There’s real juice in there and in-credibly real 35 grams of sugar in there, too.

So what do you drink now? I’ve basically subject-ed you down to water and, God forbid, milk.

Next time, try a Coke Zero or a Diet Coke in-stead of the original. Get a Gatorade G2 Low Calories, which has a third of the sug-ar a regular Gatorade has.

As for fruit juice, drink it in moderation and it won’t be too much of a problem. Just make sure it’s juice, not preservatives.

Drinking low sugar drinks not only make you feel better and give you less of a crash in the short term, but could ultimately help lower and obesity in the long term. So the next time you’re just craving a Coke, think about the con-sequences and the alterna-tives for it.

Don’t drink your dessert

by Avery CohenSports Writer

This season, the Cross Coun-try team has hit the ground running -- literally. It’s barely a month into school, and these runners are fully charged and ready to compete.

“We already started be-cause we started working in the summer,” Coach Caroline Woomer said. “And they’re practicing hard, practicing consistently.”

Senior runner Haley Jenkins concurs, saying she already has a lot of miles under her belt for this 2012 season.

“It started off a lot harder than last season,” Jenkins said. ”I got into it really fast getting my mileage in, and it’s just gotten better from there.”

Even though the runners have been practicing harder this year, they got a late start on the competition. The team decided against going to the annual Choctaw Relay meet this year that traditionally kicks off their competitive season.

“I didn’t want everyone to know how good we look right now,” Woomer said.

The same is not true for the meet this weekend.

“For the MSU Invitational… we want to win it,” Woomer said. “I mean this is like a home meet for us we want our girls to win it and we want our boys to win it.”

Senior runner Damian Grady is going to take that to heart as he strives for first place.

“I’m going to stay motivated and win a state champion-ship,” Grady said. “Training’s going pretty well so far. I’ve done pretty well. I think I’m going to have a good year”

Fellow senior runner, Gari-son Arinder, has a different way of looking at things.

“I’m just trying to improve my time,” Arinder said. “I’m not the best.”

Each runner is not just com-peting for themselves, but for their team as a whole, which makes training that much more important.

“My goals are mostly just to be faster than I was last year and to work a lot harder,” Jen-kins said. “It’s my last year to make a difference on the team and I want to actually use it wisely.”

The competition will be tough for the MSU Invitation-al, not only for the runners to beat their own times, but the other schools as well.

But Woomer is still confi-dent that her runners will end up on top. That being said, there are some previously troublesome teams she plans on keeping her eye on.

“I hate to say it, I really hate to say it,” Woomer said grudg-ingly, a forced smile and a wince crossing her face. “But there’s Pearl and Madison Central.”

Cross country off to racing start

Eighth Grader Kate Mattox and Sophomore Patrick Bell (right) lead their group on their long run at the South Farm. Photo by Robert Dandass.

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5A Miss. XC Rankings

Boys1) Saltillo

2) Starkville

3) Pearl

4) Oxford

5) Picayune

Girls1) Saltillo

2) Pearl

3) Starkville

4) Oxford

5) Longbeach

Page 14: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

Page 14 • 09-07-12 shsjacketbuzz.com Sports

By Angela WhiteSports Writer

In the season-opener against Noxubee County, senior start-ing quarterback Gabe Myles injured his ankle after taking some hard hits from the Nox-ubee County defense.

This injury gave the Yellow Jacket players and coaches a great scare.

Although the injury turned out to be minor, Myles has still been feeling weakness and, therefore, sat out during the games against Madison Central and Tupelo.

During those games, Myles had the opportunity to watch from the sidelines, which is not somewhere he is used to being.

“I wanted to play (last week) because Tupelo is a rivalry and it’s my last year playing but at the same time, I like to

watch the team work,” Myles said. “Caleb did an outstand-ing job and so did the offense, and thanks to the defense for shutting (Tupelo) out.”

Myles will be back for to-night’s game against West Point and this will be his first time to suit up in three weeks.

While the team wants Myles to return, coaches know not to rush the healing process.

“We hope Gabe will be back as quick as possible,” head coach Jamie Mitchell said, “but we have to make sure he is ready.”

After much practice, Myles says he is 100 percen and ready to take on the Green Wave.

“I’m very excited to get back out there because two weeks is a long time to not be playing,” Myles said. “I’m always nervous before a game

so that won’t be anything new. I just know that I have to go out there, play my hardest and have fun.”

According to Myles, the West Point game was a good game to come back on.

“I know the stadium will be packed and it will be loud,” Myles said. “It’s almost like a championship type atmo-sphere so that in itself is a big deal. I’m really excited just to get to play in this game.”

Myles was relieved by back-up quarterback Caleb Wilson will lead the Jackets after completing 66 percent of his passes against Tupelo for 180 yards.

However, with so much change in such little time, the offensive line just got used to the new playing style of Wilson, and they are now ad-justing back to Myles, whom many of them have played with for four to five years.

by Angela WhiteSports Writer

The 2011-2012 football sea-son was pretty solid for the Yel-low Jacket offensive line. The offensive line was consistent and played as one. This year, offen-sive line coach Justin Moss and offensive coordinator Preston Leathers have their hands full after three linemen graduated. And with starter Kirk Kinard injured and out for the season, Moss and Leathers are working from the ground up to build a top-notch offensive line.

“All (of our players) have evi-dent talent, it is just young tal-ent,” Moss said. “We just have to become more consistent.”

This inconsistency has been

the root of SHS football troubles since the beginning of their sea-son against Noxubee County.

“Every year it takes some get-ting used to but I love our of-fensive line,” Leathers said. “We have got some good guys that are coming along, and we are already so much better than we were a week and a half ago.”

According to the coaches, these weaknesses will disappear as the young players gain more experience and learn to play as one unit and not as individuals.

“Our first game, we started a sophomore at left and right tackle,” Leathers said. “Youth, obviously, is a big thing but we are getting better and better and better- there is no doubt about it.”

Offensive line causes trouble

Myles set to return tonight

$1 SCOOPS ON TUESDAYS!

Offensive line faces off against Noxubee. Photo by Victoria Hearn.

Quarterback Gabe Myles suffered an ankle injury after scoring Starkville’s first touchdown against Noxubee. Photo by Alicia Carter

Page 15: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

@shsjacketbuzz Page 15 • 09-07-12Sports

Henderson gets coaching from NFL pro kicker

by Colin DammsSports Writer

On Aug. 25, the SHS swim team went to their first meet of the year in Clinton, finish-ing second overall to Madison Central.

It was a valuable experience for the newcomers to be in a competition and learn how swim meets work. Points are earned depending on which place the competing school finishes in for each event. At the end of the meet the points are totaled up, and whoever has the most points wins.

“I think we performed as we were expected,” senior swim-mer David McKell said. “We mostly just need to get back in form. Most of us don’t do any

competitive swimming with other teams after high school season, so a lot of swimmers haven’t competed since last season.”

Senior swimmer Mark Anne Hobart, who had shoulder problems last year, is “feeling a lot better” this season.

“I feel like an actual swim captain this year since I’m contributing so much more,” Hobart said, “and we had a great first performance.”

Although eight seniors are beginning their final year, this was the first meet for several swimmers.

“They’re improving and I expect them to keep improv-ing over the course of the sea-son,” McKell said.

Hobart is also impressed

with the younger swimmers. “They’re putting in lots of

hard work and have potential to become assets to the team this year and in the future”, Hobart said. “We’re all being very supportive of each other

and they’re doing very good.”The Yellow Jackets compet-

ed at the Jackon Yacht Club on Tuesday, and the Jackets are expected to compete in their next competion at Tupelo next week.

by Colin DammsSports Writer

Charlie Henderson, the ju-nior kicker for the Starkville high school Yellow Jackets, attended a camp this past summer to improve his kick-ing.

Retired kickers were counselors who taught drills on how to improve the kids’ abilities and give tips to punt-ers and long snappers.

Last season Henderson gradually became the start-ing field goal kicker while Senior Daniel Fumo did kickoffs.

Henderson’s improving ac-curacy was key to reaching the championship game.

However, there is bound to be more competition this year with four other kickers on the team.

Charlie’s instructor was Ray Guy, a three time Super Bowl winning punter with the Oakland Raiders.

At the start of his career,

guy was a first round draft pick from the University of Southern Mississippi.

“I kicked a lot of balls,” Henderson said, “and we did a lot of drills. I’ve got poten-tial for far ones.”

Ray Guy was the last kick-er/punter to be selected in the first round of the NFL Draft and the only kicker to hit the video screen at the Super Dome in New Or-leans. He was a seven time Pro-Bowler during his career from 1973-1986 with the Oakland Raiders and helped win the Super Bowl in 1977, 1982 and 1984.

“You can tell by his pres-ence he’s a legend,” Hender-son said, “He’s very person-able and patient.”

Henderson is excited about this season, and he is perhaps a kicker for the future as well.

When asked if he wanted to play in college, Hender-son said, “Definitely, if the opportunity arises.”

First meet learning experience for underclassmen swimmers

Junior Charlie Henderson warms up at practice. Photo by Alicia Carter.Senior capt. Mark Anne Hobart opens up her season at the Clinton Invitational. Photo by Avery Cohen.

by Avery CohenSports Writer

The pressure was on Fri-day night as sophomore Caleb Wilson was replacing the regu-lar starting quarterback Gabe

Myles because of an injury.“I was nervous at first, but af-

ter the first play I was alright,” Wilson said. “It was hard fol-lowing a Dandy Dozen like that, but it was a good experi-ence out there.”

Even though Wilson’s first game as starting quarterback ended in an 24-8 loss against Madison Central, Wilson sees the game as learning experi-ence.

“It’s a lot faster than ninth grade ball, and I just got to keep working,” Wilson said. “It was raining pretty hard, but I can’t make any excuses, so I didn’t throw the ball very well.”

The Madison Central game wasn’t just a learning experi-ence for Wilson, the rest of the offense had to adapt to playing with a different quarterback.

“Him and Gabe are very dif-ferent, as far as Gabe’s a runner and Caleb is more of a thrower,” Offensive Coordinator Preston Leathers said. “[The players in the offensive line] have got to work like one. It takes weeks and weeks of just playing to-gether and communication and knowing rules. They’ve got to

learn their rules first and then just play them together. They’ve got to play like a unit instead of just individual positions.”

Wilson not only has to get used to playing with guys older than him, but leading them as well.

“It’s different because I nor-mally lead people my age, but it’s just something you’ve got to learn to do,” Wilson said.

According to Leathers, this transfer is going smoothly.

“Caleb’s a natural leader,” Leathers said. “He’s gotten in there, and you can tell when he’s in the huddle people are listening to him and going through things as business as usual.”

Wilson’s offensive leadership might be hereditary. His father, Chris Wilson, is the defensive coordinator at Mississippi State University and was at his son’s first game last Friday.

“His understanding of the game is awesome,” Leathers said. “Last year was actually his first year to play QB as a ninth grader. He didn’t play quarter-back in seventh or eight grade so it was new for him last year.

He’s come so far. His accuracy passing-wise is very, very good. [His] decision-making is re-ally, really good. All that really lacks is he’s just got to get bet-ter with his feet. Being so tall – and being young and tall – it just takes a lot of young players time to grow into their bodies or what not.”

The team is still trying to improve to have a successful season.

“Every year it takes getting used to,” Leathers said. “But I love our offensive line. We’ve got some good guys up there. We’re already so much better right now than we were [during the Madison Central game] it’s not even funny. I think our first game we started a sophomore at right guard and a sophomore at left guard, so you know [the team has] youth, but obviously but they’re very, very talented. They’re going to get better and better and better, there’s no doubt about it.”

The Jackets might have gotten off to a rocky start, but they are looking onward and upward.

“I plan on trying to win the game this Friday,” Wilson said.

Wilson deals with pressure

Caleb Wilson winds up for a pass at practice. Photo by Alicia Carter.

Page 16: Jacket Buzz (09/07/12)

JBuzz

BThe

Jacket

Starkville renews WP rivalryThis historic rivalry continues tonight.

FEATURE: Page 8-9

Jacket kickerHenderson goes to camp

Charlie Henderson was instructed by Ray Guy, three-time Super Bowl Champion for the Oak-land Raiders. Page 15

Does the crowd affect the refs? Referee Kevin Randall weighs in on a study showing that strong crowds may affect ref-erees. Page 12

Page 16 • 09-07-12

FINE & DANDYQuarterback Gabe Myles returns tonight against the Green Wave. Page 14

SHS volleyball starts upThe 2012 season means moving up for Courtney Wilson. Page 12