Upcoming play: ‘And Then There Were None’

By: Persephone Pond

Highland Park Theater Arts presents ‘And Then There Were None’ by Agatha Christie. Here’s a quick, spoiler-free review of the plot of this show, and all the information you’ll need to know.

‘And Then There Were None’ was originally written by Agatha Christie and was first published in 1939. Over the years, there have been many spin offs of movies, shows, and play adaptations. There are many adaptations of this novel, including different endings, some happy, some sad. Fun fact: the student cast of this show got to choose which ending they wanted to put on.

The plot of this famous murder mystery revolves around 10 strangers who each individually receive mysterious invitations to a solitary mansion on an island off the coast of Devon, Britain. As each individual guest is accused of a grizzly crime, and people begin to mysteriously die one by one, the remaining members of the group must discover who among them on this island is the killer and how to stop them.

Highland Park’s production stars a talented cast of students cast by theater director Nancy Micheal. The show is completely student run apart from directing, with students manning the lights, sound, set, props, ect.

Opening night is Thursday, November 14th at 7pm in the Highland Park Auditorium. Additional performances are Friday, November 15th at 7pm, and Saturday, November 16th at 2pm and 7pm. Tickets are sold at the door, cash or card, and are $10 for adults and $5 for students. Concessions and merchandise are available for purchase and all proceeds go to funding future productions.

To learn more about future shows, you can follow @hptheatrearts on Instagram.

What is the E/A-18G Growler?

By: Yohan Lee

Photo by Jack Sequeira. Used with permission.

What is the E/A-18G Growler? The E/A-18G Growler is an Electronic Attack which means it can disrupt enemies radars and communications. The E/A-18G Growler was an F/A-18F Super Hornet that was built by Boeing for the U.S. Navy. The E/A-18G Growler is fitted with electronic warfare avionics. The avionics are the ALQ-218, CCS Antennas, Long Baseline Interferometer Antennas, Datalink and the AESA radar. The AESA radar replaces the gatling gun so the weight load can be less.

Its history. Development began in 2003 and the first prototype to ever be flown was in 2006. Each flight they worked to improve the avionics and reduce its air to air armament to accomplish its suppression of Enemy Air Defense or SEAD. Once the E/A-18G Growler was ready, it replaced the E/A-6B Prowler which was the Electronic Attack of the A-6B Intruder.

The first deployable squadron was the VAQ-132 “Scorpions”. There are about 9 deployable squadrons and one non-deployable squadron that holds the E/A-18G Grower. The E/A-18G Growler has its own Naval Air Station based at NAS Whidbey Island which is home of the Electronic Attack. The U.S. Navy gave 12 Growlers to the Royal Australian Air Force which is operated in No. 6 squadron at RAAF Base Amberley. But the U.S. Navy will not give any more Growlers out since it’s the U.S.’s Secret weapon.

Its Payload. The E/A-18G Growler can hold the AGM-88 HARM which means Air to Ground Missile 88 High-speed anti Radiation Missile which fires at a ground target. It also carries the ALQ-218 which receives radar warning. ALQ-99 which jams enemy radio and an AIM-120 which is an air to air missile.

The E/A-18G Growler has 2 crews. One is a pilot who flies the aircraft and one is the Electronic Warfare Officer or EWO. The EWO is responsible for some of the E/A-18G Growler’s most important duties. The EWO jams enemy radar and chaffs flares which is a bright and hot material that tricks the missile into thinking it’s the aircraft.

What makes it important to the U.S? The E/A-18G Growler is one of the best Electronic Attack aircraft. For one, it really doesn’t need to be stealth. The only stealth it has is jamming the enemy radio and radar and a special coating that makes enemy radar bounce off making it difficult to track the Growler. The Growler is also a 4.5 generation aircraft so it’s very modern. And if other branches or squadrons need help trying to be more stealthy they can get the E/A-18G Growler for support. The Growler is always first in the battle field so it can quickly jam before the enemy can see any other non jamming planes. Many other countries tried to replicate the Growler but can’t because the Grower is far more advanced than what they have. So, this is why the E/A-18G Growler is important to the U.S. Navy.

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Why it is important to play at least one sport

By: Isabel Strack

Image created with StarryAI

Here are some reasons why you should play at least one sport.

If you want to play sports but don’t like contact sports there are still many other non-contact sports you could play. These sports include: volleyball, golf, tennis, swimming, gymnastics, and more.

Playing a sport can help you stay in shape. Going to your sports practices everyday and doing exercises can help you feel more energized and feel more healthy.

It can help develop more social skills. You can also create new friendships that you most likely wouldn’t have made otherwise. Sports can bring people together from different schools.

Another reason is that it can help your mental health benefits. By being around other encouraging people that enjoy what you enjoy it can help with your mental well-being. Being in a sport is a fairly social activity and can provide psychological benefits. Getting out of your house at least a couple times a week and exercising and seeing other people can help raise your mental health.

Research has shown that if you play a sport you perform better in a classroom. If you play a school sport it can motivate you to get better grades so that you can stay in your sport. It can help overall with a higher IQ. High school students who play a sport are less likely to drop out of school. By participating in a sport there are results in a higher GPA. It also helps with problem solving skills

By playing a sport it can help you become more responsible. By showing up to practice it can help you with time management. It can help you balance your academic responsibilities with your athletic commitments. It teaches you discipline and how to balance your time.

It can help build your confidence. By having a wide range of skills it can help your self-esteem. By being involved in a sport you’re in a safe structured environment that could help you gain confidence.

There are many more reasons why you should join a sport, these are just a couple of reasons.

TOP 8 CAKE FLAVORS

By: Grace Lopez

1. VANILLA
This cake flavor has to be one of the most popular flavors in the whole world. This cake is a simple normal vanilla cake. It would go really well with any type of party or event and it’s probably number one to get.

https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/vanilla-cake/

2. CHOCOLATE
This cake flavor is a really chocolate creamy cake. It’s a really good flavor to choose for any type of cake. I really enjoy this cake. And this one would also be a favorite to get.

https://addapinch.com/the-best-chocolate-cake-recipe-ever/

Photo by Geovane Souza on Pexels.com

3. STRAWBERRY
This cake is one of my favorite types of cake to choose from just because it’s so fresh and it tastes really good and it’s better when it’s made with real strawberries. I would also recommend this flavor.

https://sugargeekshow.com/recipe/strawberry-cake-recipe/

4. CONFETTI
This cake is my favorite cake of all time. I love how it’s just a normal vanilla cake with some colorful sprinkles inside and for me it’s just a good taste, and if someone would ask me what would be my favorite I would choose confetti.

https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/funfetti-layer-cake/

5. RED VELVET
This cake is really good, I love how it’s so fresh when it’s just made and I love how they are better made into cake pops then actual cake, so I would recommend it to people that love cake pops.

https://preppykitchen.com/best-red-velvet-cake/

6. LEMON
For me I don’t really like this type of cake but a lot of people really love this type of cake. It has a nice lemonly sour and sweet flavor. And for people that love sour and sweet I would recommend this flavor.

https://cakebycourtney.com/the-best-lemon-cake-recipe/

7. CARROT
This type of cake flavor is also one of my favorite types of cake especially with buttercream frosting. The frosting gives it such a good flavor to the cake and by itself. This is also in my top 3.

https://sugarspunrun.com/best-carrot-cake-recipe/

8. PISTACHIO

This cake flavor is personally not one of my favorites but like I said a lot of people really like this flavor. It’s such a fresh and pistachio type of flavor so if you really like pistachios I would recommend this flavor for you.

https://cakesbymk.com/recipe/moist-pistachio-cake-recipe/

Slit-mouth woman (Kuchisake-onna)

By: Seng Yang

Growing up in a small town in Japan, I always found comfort in the familiar routine of my life. My name is Emi, and I’ve lived in this quiet village for as long as I can remember. My parents owned a quaint little bookstore, and I spent most of my childhood lost in the pages of countless novels. The stories I read were my escape, my way of exploring the world beyond our serene surroundings.

As I grew older, I took a part-time job at a local convenience store to help with college expenses. The job was mostly uneventful, stocking shelves, ringing up customers, and occasionally dealing with the odd late-night shopper. But it was on one of these late shifts that my life took a turn into the surreal.

It was a chilly autumn evening, and the air had a bite to it that made me pull my jacket tighter around me. The streets were eerily quiet, the only sound being the rustle of leaves in the wind. I had just finished my shift and was walking home, lost in thoughts about an upcoming exam, when I saw her, a woman standing under a flickering streetlight, her face partially obscured by a surgical mask.

“Am I beautiful?” she asked, her voice soft yet chilling.

I hesitated, recalling the stories I’d heard from my grandmother about Kuchisake-onna, the slit-mouthed woman. “Yes,” I replied cautiously.

She removed her mask, revealing a grotesque, gaping wound that stretched from ear to ear. “How about now?”

My heart pounded in my chest. I knew the wrong answer could be deadly. Frozen in place, my grandmother had told me, “If she ever approaches you asking that, describe her appearances as average. It will then confuse her and she’ll leave you alone.”

“You’re average looking,” I managed to say, trying to keep my voice steady.

She stared at me for what felt like an eternity before slowly putting the mask back on. Without another word, she turned and disappeared into the shadows, leaving me standing there, trembling and breathless.

Since that night, I have never walked alone after dark. The legend of Kuchisake-onna is no longer just a story to me, it’s a terrifying reality I will never forget. Now, every time I pass that flickering streetlight, I can’t help but quicken my pace, my mind replaying that chilling encounter. The boundaries between legend and reality have blurred, and I live with the constant reminder that some stories are more than just tales. They are warnings.

Breaking stigmas: Mental health awareness in schools

By: Gabriella Bell

Photo by Mizuno K on Pexels.com

In the past, and across our education systems, resources and strategies surrounding mental health weren’t as recognized. Not only were they uncommon, but there were also several different conflicting stigmas surrounding even the general discussion of mental health. While it’s not as taboo of a topic as previous years, these negative connotations are still prevalent today and can ultimately disregard the importance of the subject. Due to these connotations, many people were, and still are, unable to receive the proper support surrounding their struggle(s) regarding their mental health. This could exist in the form of a diverse range of mood disorders such as Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Seasonal Affective Disorder, as well as anxiety disorders, or eating disorders, along with many other examples of mental illnesses. Not only do hundreds of thousands of people live with these kinds of mental illnesses each day, but it also affects a drastic number of our youth.

The beginning of adolescence can be one of the most conflicting periods across an entire lifespan. There may be internal conflicts experienced within one’s school life, which can often come alongside major relationship dynamic adjustments and bodily changes. These can appear to be recognized as physical, emotional and mental changes. These alterations throughout young adulthood can dramatically impact the emotional and mental health of the youth, which is why it’s so incredibly essential that there is more awareness and resources openly provided and available to all young people in the school systems.

Overall, mental health should also be a more public and honest conversation topic, especially due to the various negative opinions and inaccurate information surrounding the general knowledge of mental health as an entirety. Not only should it be shamelessly discussed, but there should also be more taught regarding mental illnesses, so as to make the subject more of a normalcy in our society rather than a taboo conversational topic. It is also important to note, that people of all ages, racial identities, gender identities and social class can, and are, affected by mental illnesses all across the world, and regardless of who they are should have the ability to receive the necessary support.

Sports schedule for: Nov 11-16

ATHLETIC EVENTS SCHEDULE: NOVEMBER 11 – NOVEMBER 16  
MONDAYNOVEMBER 11 
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
  Girls Basketball Practice Starts 
  Boys Hockey Practice Starts 
  Gymnastics Practice Starts 
TUESDAYNOVEMBER 12
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
  Cheerleading Tryouts Start 
  Alpine Ski Practice Starts 
JV: 5:00pm V: 7:00pm Girls Hockey vs. OsseoDick Vraa Ice Arena
WEDNESDAYNOVEMBER 13
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
  Nordic Ski Practice Starts 
THURSDAYNOVEMBER 14
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
    
FRIDAYNOVEMBER 15
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
JV: 5:00pm V: 7:00pm Girls Hockey vs. Mankato EastAll Seasons Arena
SATURDAYNOVEMBER 16
TIMEBUS TIMESEVENTLOCATION
5:30pm Girls Hockey vs. Rochester LourdesWSP Ice Arena

‘NAUSICAÄ OF THE VALLEY OF THE WIND’: REVIEW

By: Charlotte Bistodeau

‘Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind’ was released in 1984 and was Hayao Miyazaki’s first ever film he did. It’s also the first ever film I watched by Miyazaki followed up by ‘Howl’s Moving Castle’ and the like.

‘Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind’ is a post-apocalyptic fantasy based in a world covered in plants that make up the Toxic Jungle. Nausicaä is a princess who loves her people of the Valley of the Wind and would do anything to protect them. But she also loves the insects of the Toxic Jungle and knows that harming them would only hurt her people.

‘Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind’ has got to be my favorite movie and I must have watched it over twenty times. From the writing to the screenplay, I love it all. The story is about a girl, Nausicaä, who is taken as captive and ends up in the middle of a feud between two other empires, Tolmekia and Pejite. In the end, she ends up getting back to the Valley of the Wind and stopping the Ohmu, an insect from the Toxic Jungle, stampeding across the land destroying everything in their path. I love Nausicaä’s character and what she believes. She is strong and caring and she would do anything to protect her people, even if it meant dying.

I also think that my favorite sound track from any of Miyazaki’s films has to be from this movie. All the songs convey different feelings that you can really feel.

I also have to talk about the voice acting. I have watched it in the original Japanese and the English version and I have to say, surprisingly, the English version is better. Nausicaä’s voice in the Japanese version is extremely small and baby like, which doesn’t suit her at all, while in the English version she sounds like an 18-year-old girl, which she is. The audio quality is also way better and also the subtitles on the Japanese version are really bad. For example, there is little emotion and some of the sentences don’t make any sense whatsoever. It’s one of the only films where I like the English dub better.

Overall, I rate this movie a 10/10 but I might be a little biased. The only real complaint would be that they did skip over some parts in the book, which Miyazaki wrote. But it doesn’t take anything from the movie, probably because Miyazaki was the author of the book and one of the directors of the movie.

You can find the movie on Max, Amazon Prime, Hulu, YouTube TV, and Google Play Movie. You can also purchase the Blu Ray/DVD set for 15 dollars at Target. In any case, I would recommend the movie to anyone, young or old.

GALA (girls alliance association)

By: Kumari Mia Wijetunge

At Highland Park there are many clubs students can join, one for example is GALA (girls alliance association) a club that supports young women, promotes self confidence, and encourages empowerment. GALA provides a safe, positive environment where girls of Highland Park can connect, share experiences, and grow.

What is GALA?

GALA is not just a club but also a community. Made on the belief that young girls deserve to feel confident and valued, GALA was created to give girls room to explore topics of self growth, leadership, and personal development.

GALA meets regularly, every Thursday during advisory and with occasional meetings after school throughout the month. We do all kinds of activities like bake sales, tailgating, collaborations with the school store, and product drives. During our weekly meetings we will have small group discussions where we can talk about anything and grow closer as a community.

Why was GALA created?

Young women in high school often face all kinds of social pressures that can test our confidence and sense of self. Many girls struggle with insecurities about their appearance or social skills. GALA was designed to counter these pressures, helping members see their true selves and understand their worth .

Why should you join the GALA?

Students can join GALA for many reasons – to find support, make friends, gain confidence, or simply to be part of a positive community. Members are motivated by a shared journey of personal growth and helping each other succeed. By creating a safe space, GALA allows our members to come out of their shell and build lasting friendships.

Building the future

GALA’s leaders and members hope to leave a legacy of strength, self love, and support. As GALA grows we hope to inspire and bring the message of confidence building to a broader community within the school and the community.

We’re Alive

By: Daniel Kendle

*Note: The following story is a work of horror. It contains graphic imagery, and depictions of violence including self harm.

Vines coiled. Leaves flitted. The world was at pause, yet the jungle roared in praise at its newest creation: the very thing I watched in horror from across the garden sanctum.

It was tall, with the body shape of an average man, yet constructed from what looked like peat and various flora mashed together in an unholy amalgamation of death, one that looked an astral god in the eyes with malice. It was slightly bent, the bark and mud groaning from their new roles. It was a monster. It was alive.

My clothes, no longer splendid and clean from the garden’s chaotic innards, looked like rags compared to the creature’s rake-like claws. Huge and strong, they were the type of things one would expect out of an extinct animal, something ancient in look and primal in sound. Yet here we were, watching one another from opposite ends of the glass facility. What was once a folk story was real, breathing, eyes twitching. It was silent, but internally I could feel it screaming, hissing in a rage that could only emanate from a beast burdened by the eventual stroll of time.

It took a step forward. Plants rattled and shuffled, the flytraps adorning its left shoulder – or what could be seen as one – contorted ever so slightly. They were the creatures voices, part of a hive mind.

I was in a state of paradoxical stasis. I was afraid, like I imagined anyone would’ve been, yet I was also entranced. Delusioned, yes, but nonetheless intrigued by the immortal shape that skulked towards me. It was halfway across the garden’s square by now, its chrysalis now resembling a broken egg.

It reached me. Spores danced like angels in the aether. We stood, only feet away from each other, trying to make out what the other’s intentions were. Mine were of fearful lust. Their intentions, meanwhile, were something beyond this world’s mortal coil. Something beyond my stupid brain of a mangy ape.

I finally stepped back, then ran.

I didn’t leave my apartment for a couple of weeks. My fridge was full, but my stomach wasn’t. I couldn’t think straight, talk right, move like the hedonistic wretch I used to be a month ago. The monster plagued my mind. It was as if a demon had burrowed into my throat, then my stomach, and then my lungs. I wanted it out.

But even after a few hours, the feeling wasn’t gone, that emotion that called from inside me like a bat rising out of Hell. The fictitious demon continued to coil around me, its snaking body squeezing my neck like a python. I wanted to vomit in retort, but my lame throat forbade it. I curled up on the couch, breathing heavily. I finally tried to sleep.

In my trance of anguish, I found again that sensual desire from my encounter with the creature. I was stunned at this rediscovery, and blushed. For the first time since that fateful night I smiled, bashful. I imagined the creature, now not under the umbrella of fear, but under one of compassion. This umbrella was one of lust, of an attraction towards this false human.

Just before entering my tired paralysis, I toyed with the creature and I like dolls in a house. I could imagine their thick vines and bark claws raking across my face. Embraced in celestial love, I dreamed of us together. I wanted, needed their touch. Why, in that moment I could almost picture the pair of us in their nighttime world again, vines allaying my worries as they ensnared my naked skin…

My world was slowly becoming one of flora and fungi. My cat was slowly morphing into a tiger; a beast that wanted to eat me alive. Its cries rang out through my concrete jungle, thick and drenched with sweat.

My mind was blotted with an incurable smog. The end was before me. Time was no longer on my side.

Days later, my fingernails were on the bathroom floor. Blood was shed, as were tears. They reminded me of its eyes: apricot, with hints of deep coral pink littered around the edges. The difference was red strewn about my hands – and the wall.

I wanted to scream. This apparition lurking inside me hadn’t left. The thing in the garden was the only thing keeping me sane, though at this point my love for it had blossomed, for lack of a better term. A name had been endowed onto it. I didn’t just crave it anymore; my faith in it had reached its climax. It was now less of a physical want, but instead a psychological fix that festered in me.

A parasite.

I bashed my head against the wall. My cat scratched at the door in a desperate attempt to calm me. It was an intrusion, and in response I continued bashing. Bashing and crashing and bashing until…

Red.
Blood.
Relief.
I was panting, smiling. For a moment, the parasite left me, abandoning my vessel that had become polluted with the deranged clouds of the deceased. Smoke filled my lungs. Acid filled my gullet. My brain was like a hurricane that had subsided, only to return in a new form.

The cat was becoming a distraction.

Desire balled up inside me. That longing for demise, that need for the creature ate me alive like animals to rancid meat. I was that meat. I needed to die by their hand.

My hands were laughing at me, snickering at me, jackals basking in the glow of a kill. My knife joined them. My blood joined them. My cat joined them.

The garden was my fix. My mind couldn’t take it anymore; I needed to return. By crawling across my apartment to the door, grabbing my coat and wrapping it loosely around my ragged body. I stood up, bent at the knees, joints knocked together, and left my home.

The walk was quick, even though it took a half hour. I couldn’t remember much after; my blurred vision made seeing difficult, memory impossible. Humans and humans walked past me, some staring, others more direct in their traveling. I was like a lost ship at sea, until I found my lighthouse.

The park where I’d found the garden was just ahead of me, who was flailing in desperation at the sight. I sprinted – or “hobbled,” to be accurate – towards a thicket near the eastern quadrant of the fields. There it was: a bramble of shrubbery that stretched high above the oak and aspen trees, a cloud of doom. My sanctuary.

I tore through the vegetation. My stumps of hands bled out once again, but at this point my mind was dulled enough to barely notice. My brain, burdened with evolution, was escaping its chains and about to be set free.

Breaking through the final wall of foliage revealed the garden once again. The same chain-link fence, derelict gate…it all came back to me. I ran into the sanctum a moment later.

It was relatively-simple finding my way through the garden again. A left, right, two lefts, then straight. The dead architects had done well in the maze’s design.

Finally I ran into the square. It was night again; the sky’s complexion was almost identical to the fateful night weeks before – just like the monster’s.

It rose. Bark snapped against other bark; vines knotted around other vines. An air of dread was exhaled by its green, meat-hungry servants. The beauty ascended, slathered in a coat of moss and love. I felt weak. The monster was awake.

My hands were fighting at my sides. I couldn’t take it anymore. I rushed towards it, tears streaming down my cheeks, demons roaring in raucous excitement. I leapt towards it, hands outstretched, body wide.

As my life was sucked away, I began to resist. The vines around me began to prick my skin, and the leaves sliced through flesh. I struggled a bit, my mind free. The parasite was gone, only now, I was too. I began to scream; the forest as well. For once, the monster let out a cry of anger, of rage. It shrieked, desperate for me as I was once for it. We struggled for a moment, a cage of bones starting to encircle me. Now that I was with it again, the world had changed. The body of a human gave way to a thinly-veiled structure of mud and dirt. Thinking jaws of flytraps wilted, alongside the rest of its body.

The pair of us were sinking, down, down, into the soil below. I yelled, hoping someone special would hear and be my ally. In the moment, I felt that recollection of consciousness. My vision sharpened, and my trance was broken. I was alive again, the monster dead.

Embraced in eternal love and death, the plants and I sank into the Earth, silent as the forest night.