December 2015 Issue

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Evaluating college activism

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Gabe Malek discusses the long-term effects of shortsighted protests

No one puts field hockey in a corner

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Back-to-back corner shots with no time left clinch SPC Championship

What’s Inside News Features Sports Centerspread

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Culture Opinions Odds & Ends......... Photostory

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ST. JOHN’S SCHOOL STUDENT NEWSPAPER | SJSREVIEW.COM | 2401 CLAREMONT LANE · HOUSTON, TX 77019 | VOLUME 67 · ISSUE 3 · DECEMBER 9, 2015

THREE CHEERS

field hockey, cross country win spc

n June 13, 2015, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed into effect a law that has triggered a wave of protests, resignations and nationwide controversy. The issue? Next year, students will be allowed to carry guns into their college classrooms. For 20 years, Texans who were licensed to carry a concealed firearm were allowed to walk around college campuses with their weapon. This new Campus Carry law, SB 11, allows students to carry guns inside buildings as well. SB 11 is scheduled to go into effect on August 1, 2016, the 50-year anniversary of the 1966 shooting spree at the University of Texas, which killed 14 and wounded 32 others. Lawmakers cited public safety concerns in passing SB 11, arguing that arming students may prevent mass shootings like the recent ones at Umpqua Community College in Oregon and Texas Southern University. “I am proud to expand liberty in the Lone Star State,” Abbott told the press. “By signing these bills into law, Texans can be assured that their Second Amendment rights will be stronger and more secure than ever before.” Texas A&M freshman Will Pfieffer (‘15) supports the law and sees it as a deterrent to shooters. “Law-abiding citizens carrying guns will prevent

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n most sports, when there’s no time left on the clock, the game is over and hope is lost. For the Maverick field hockey team, the best moments of the SPC tournament hadn’t even happened yet. According to the rules of field hockey, even if there is no time left on the clock, a corner play may be completed, allowing the offense one last chance to score. In both the semi-final and the final, junior Kate Copeland scored off a corner with 0:00 on the clock. “It was our typical corner,” captain Cameron Weiner said. The ball was inbounded to captain Jennifer Trieschman, who passed to captain Lindsey McKone, who passed it to Copeland. “Kate, like a star, tipped it in,” Weiner said. The road to SPC was a winding one for this year’s seniors, most of whom had never won an SPC championship. “We straight-up said that we wanted to win this year,” senior Lizzy Ellison said. Many players noted that the team had been hesitant in the past to set an SPC Championship as their overall goal.

unlawful citizens from shooting large quantities of people,” Pfieffer said. “Unstable killers generally have been able to massacre a large amount of people without resistance because police are too far away to respond quickly enough. This bill will allow active shooters to be stopped before damage, if any, is done.” The law was approved 98-47 by the Texas Legislature after being approved in both the House and the Senate. Not all students see the law as contributing to public safety. “I think it’ll make things more tense, as you have to start being conscious of whether or not someone’s carrying a gun and how inclined they might be to use it,” A&M sophomore Carlo De Guzman (‘14) said. “I don’t think the solution to on-campus shootings is more guns.” UT sophomore Charlotte Amandes (‘13) argues that the law will be abused by college students. “College students are sleep-deprived, overly caffeinated, and anxiety prone — I don’t think many students are qualified to wield a gun,” Amandes said. While private universities like Rice can opt out, public universities including Texas A&M and UT will be required to allow concealed weapons. Continued on Page 3

article by Irene Vazquez photo by Philip Kensinger “I think we’ve been afraid to set [winning SPC] as our goal, maybe because we’ve been afraid of failure,” Weiner said. According to Weiner, this year the team set out to become friends and be a good team but do that through winning SPC. Prior to the South Zone Champoionship, team went 17-0, beating crosstown rival Kinkaid in non-counter play. “The first few games we played weren’t against great teams, so it was hard not to feel a little arrogant going into SPC,” junior Emily Pedrick said. Fortunes changed at South Zone on Oct. 21, a game at Kinkaid in the midst of Homecoming week. When the clock ran out, the game was tied, 1-1. The game went into overtime. “We went into strokes, and their whole football team had lined up to watch them play,” Pedrick said. “It was so high intensity.” The Mavericks lost 4-2 in strokes. “I cried,” Pedrick said. “It was a little disappointing because, honestly, we were expecting to win. Most players agreed that, after the initial disappointment passed, the game triggered a positive mental shift.

“To the degree that a loss is a good thing, [the game] helped re-focus attention on the need to prepare and work hard going into SPC,” head coach Craig Chambers said. “It helped hone the idea that despite our strengths, that SPC would be difficult as always and that we would have to earn each victory with good mental and physical preparation.” On Nov. 6, the team entered the SPC tournament at St. Stephen’s School in Austin. The Mavericks faced Hockaday in its first game. “Last year, Hockaday knocked us out of the tournament,” Ellison said. “We were out to get them.” The Mavericks won the game 3-1, with goals by McKone, sophomore Isabel Windham and Kate Copeland, converting off assists by Trieschman, Weiner and McKone. “We took it one game at a time,” Weiner said. “Last year we really got ahead of ourselves, thinking about the last game during the second game of the tournament.” The squad faced Casady School from Oklahoma City in the semifinals later that day.

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