Wednesday, June 07, 2006

- Short Story by Ishan Chatterjee, Grade 6

I'm Tom Bernstein. I'm twelve years old and live in Goresville. I have one sister. Her name is Mary. She's seventeen, and really crazy. My dad is a retired inventor and has constructed the first time machine in his company, Timeworks.

My mom died in a car accident when I was seven. She used to be an actress. She always went berserk when dad said his time traveler would be done in a year, and asked her if she would go on it with him. But it turned out I went with him instead.

I was eight, and playing in the park with my sister. I checked my silver pocket watch. (At the time it was my most prized possession. It used to belong to my great-great-grandfather, and was handed down the generations. To stop me from losing it, my dad told me that the person who didn't take responsibility for it would be cursed for the rest of his life. Thus I carried it wherever I went.)

"It's 2:13," I told my sister, "Dad's coming in seventeen minutes."

"I wish he'd come sooner," she responded drearily. Some time later dad pulled up, honking the horn.

"You look happy," droned my sister, gloomily observing the frown on his face.

"Be quiet, and help Tom pick up the balls you were playing with."

"What's the problem?" I asked as the car door clicked shut.

"Bad day at work. We were almost done, before someone realized that an internal wire was not hooked up properly. None of us have fingers that are small and nimble enough to connect the wire to the splitter. So we'll have to dissect the machine, and put it together again," Dad explained.

"I'll try to connect the wire and the splitter," I suggested, flexing my fingers.

"You will?"

"Sure." His face brightened, as we swerved in a sharp U-turn to go to Timeworks Headquarters.

CLICK THE WORMHOLE TO GO TO TIMEWORKS HEADQUARTERS!!!


# (5)#
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 6/7/2006
1:32 PM
 Tuesday, June 06, 2006


Being a Rock Star is grueling.

Case in point: I recently interviewed an up-and-coming punk/pop band called the Plain White T's. Their touring schedule is intense. The group will play 200 shows before summer's over.

That means that every other day these guys are in a different town. The day in between each town is spent in a van (that frequently breaks down). AND every night before they get in the van, they scream their heads off on stage until midnight. And they do this ten months out of the year.


                     The Plain White T's on stage

It's the kind of lifestyle that should burn them out, but they just keep on going ...


# #
Jeffrey    Posted by
Jeffrey
on 6/6/2006
12:01 PM
 Friday, June 02, 2006

Last night I watched the National Spelling Bee championship on television. It was soooo cool! Those kids are amazing. I tried spelling along with them on many words and I don't know if I got two of them right. Probably not... but maybe.

13 year old Kerry Close came away with the 1st place trophy by spelling the word "Ursprache".  URSPRACHE?!? Come on! What the heck is that? If you look up the definition at dictionary.com, it just says "see  protolanguage". OK, so then you see protolanguage and here's what you get "A language that is the recorded or hypothetical ancestor of another language or group of languages." In other words, English is the protolanguage (or ursprache) of the language spoken at national spelling bees. Ha!

At any rate, I hope you got to catch some of the show. It was very entertaining. And if you're like me (a big word nerd), you were sitting at home, cheering and applauding with every letter. Especially when 14 year old Saryn Hooks was let back into the compitition after being dismissed for supposedly spelling a word wrong. As it turned out, the judges had the wrong spelling and Saryn was correct! Talk about high drama! Yowsa! In the end though, Saryn placed third behind second place finisher Finola Hackett, 14, of Alberta, Canada. And of course, the champ, Kerry Close.

Congrats to all who participated! Can't wait for next year!

Now it's your turn! There is one word in this blog entry that is misspelled. Can you find it? Look closely. When you see it, shout out "I'm awesome!" and then leave us a comment saying which word it is and how awesome you are.


# (2)#
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 6/2/2006
4:23 PM
 Wednesday, May 31, 2006

I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.

So begins Song of Myself, arguably Walt Whitman's most famous poem. Whitman was an American poet who believed in nature, body, soul, and the entire universe contained within every single thing, within a blade of grass.

I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.

Song of Myself, although quite a long poem in and of itself (what you see here in green is only the first section of the 52 part poem), is just one poem in Whitman's exceptional collection Leaves of Grass. In his lifetime, Whitman wrote nine different editions of Leaves of Grass. He was constantly working on it, improving it, becoming a part of it. In the preface of his very first edition, Whitman wrote, "Here are the roughs and beards and space and ruggedness and nonchalance that the soul loves." Even on his first effort, he knew that his poetry was to be a continuous work of art. He also knew the truth behind the beautiful words he had written, and how the reader's soul would soar.

My tongue, every atom of my blood, form'd from this soil, this air,
Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their parents the same,
I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin,
Hoping to cease not till death.

Whitman's style had little to do with rhyming or form. He was a free flowing poet to the core. One who wrote with reckless abandon while at the same time a perfectionist, poring over his lines with such intricate detail, to find the perfect center. The spaces between his words are as charged as the words themselves.

Creeds and schools in abeyance,
Retiring back a while sufficed at what they are, but never forgotten,
I harbor for good or bad, I permit to speak at every hazard,
Nature without check with original energy.

I admit it. I'm not a poetry guy. I appreciate good poetry when I read it. I strive to feel poetry when I hear it. But in the end, I usually opt to read a novel. Not with Uncle Walt though. You don't read Whitman's work. You become a part of it. He reminds you about everything that exists and has existed and he brings the universe to its knees before you. Check him out. Dig in. Breathe along.

He's my boy.

Walt Whitman was born on May 31, 1819. He lived a long and full life until March 26, 1892.

His words live on forever.


# (1)#
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 5/31/2006
9:17 AM


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