PUBLICATIONS
From club to class After 21 editions as a club, the Mini Marque successfully completed its first semester as an actual class. It used to run as an extracurricular with students putting in their own time.
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Because the class is only a semester long, the Mini Marque has now shifted into a club where anyone can join. And although the class is over, it has provided a much-needed foundation for the rest of the magazine. The efficiency of the class led the group to complete 110 pages of design, some 40 pages over the normal number, allowing lots of time to edit and cut unessential pages. âItâs going to help us out in the second half of the magazine because weâre done with most of the
spreads,â Yepuri said. âNow weâre gonna have to go through and edit and hopefully get the magazine by late March or early April.â In years past, applications were necessary to join the club, but because of the hectic year, Clayton decided to get rid of that system. âWhen we are a club, it can be anyone,â Clayton said. âBefore, we had applications, but things are crazy this year.â When the club began, new members were paired with veterans of the semester class in order to learn the basics. Clayton likes this idea of student-run instruction. âIt should be a student-driven magazine,â Clayton said. âThe veterans will train the club members once a week, and now that theyâve already created their own spreads [during the semester course], theyâll help the new members create new ones.â Clayton has not decided on any editors yet, but she may make the decision further down the line. âWeâre all working together to create this, so there are no lead editors at this point,â Clayton said. âI really like the idea of electing those editors based on their service to the magazine at the end of the year and really allowing them to put a stamp on the magazine.â With the club now underway, Clayton wants to focus more on producing rather than assigning management positions. âThat will be up till the end of the year when we come together to find our most creative minds and our hardest workers,â Clayton said. âThey can sit down with the magazine in April and really hone it down to its finest edge.â STORY Eric Yoo, Morgan Chow PHOTOS Morgan Chow
Juniors create their own streetwear clothing company called Strawbuilt by Myles Lowenberg uniors Blake Molthan and Cooper Cole started Strawbuilt, a streetwear clothing company that has released its first piece of clothing, a t-shirt called âPowerlines.â Cole said he and Molthan decided to start Strawbuilt after looking online. âWe were sitting in science lecture hall one day, and we were looking through a Reddit forum on t-shirts and small companies,â Cole said. âWe were like, âWe should start oneâ because heâs good at the whole business side of stuff, and I can do the art stuff.â
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Cole and Molthan found the right design for the shirt after going through plenty of others. âI used my iPad and just kind of drew it up,â Cole said. âI made a bunch of designs, and then we picked one of the ones that we liked best.â They settled on the âPowerlinesâ design, featuring a colorful background that stands out against the silhouette of a powerline and the white of the rest of the t-shirt. âI liked that [design] a lot because the color gradient in the background looked pretty cool,â Molthan said. âWe both agreed it looked nice, and
[Cole] tweaked it a little bit, made some changes with the coloring and shading and added a little bit of text. And we were set from there.â Molthan marketed the product by taking pictures and posting them on Instagram and on Reddit. âOn Instagram, most of the people liking it were just friends or anyone I knew,â Molthan said. âBut on Reddit, it was all strangers, no one that I knew, and it was still getting some attention.â Molthan was surprised by the amount of people across the country viewing his products on Reddit and
buying them. âPeople were giving me advice and updates on [Reddit], and I got a couple of orders from people from like California, Colorado, Idaho,â Molthan said. âEvery now and then I get a new order from out of town, and Iâm just like, âWoah, Iâm actually sending the shirt to someone I donât even know. After this first release Molthan saw the potential that Strawbuilt has for the future. âWe already have the foundation built, the website and the Instagram and the marketing,â Molthan said.
The ReMarker
The Mini Marque completed its first-ever semester as a class Jan. 15. Clayton first conceived the idea because she believed the workload at the end of the year would become much more manageable as a class than as an extracurricular club. âItâs something I pitched last year,â Clayton said. âI thought that I could take on the extra class because, honestly, this is making work light for me. They agreed that it would be a good one-semester course and that it would always be in the fall.â With the introduction of the new class, assignments and organization became easier. Eighth-grader Neil Yepuri enjoyed the more even distribution of seventh and eighth-graders. âI think itâs generally more even between seventh and eighth-graders, so thatâs helped it become more organized,â Yepuri said. âI also think thatâs part of the class thing. I think both of those are much more organized.â Because the Mini-Marque is now an official course, the class has access to new material to learn from, and eighth-grader Joseph Sun believes that he has improved significantly from it. âSince itâs now recognized as an official class, we got to have textbooks,â Sun said. âWe would go to [the textbooks] as a kind of reference, so if we
needed help, we would just go to the page to look at how to do it. Weâve learned a lot from that, and from last year to this year to now, Iâve improved a lot more and I think the seventh graders did too.â Having a class pushes the students to stay focused because it makes the Mini Marque a more officially sponsored project. âIt feels more like an obligation now rather than something you can do if you Danielle want to,â Yepuri said. âBefore, Clayton we basically had to keep track of Humanities Department everyone. Sometimes people would Chair drift off, they would start doing other things. Thatâs why we werenât as productive in the first half of last year because there was no real control over what happened.â Even though the class made things feel more compulsory, Clayton still had to overcome early struggles when trying to teach remotely. âThis was quite a rough start this year even with this group because of all the in-class, out-of-class troubles,â Clayton said. âTrying to teach this kind of stuff when you canât get close together is infinitely harder because you canât just all gather around a computer. Iâm so grateful for the class, however, because Iâm so much less stressed.â
February 5, 2021
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he Mini Marque is the only Middle School publication that boasts 21 editions and many awards, a fact even more pronounced given that it is only a club. However, after Danielle Clayton, the sponsor of the club, concluded that the magazine would be more efficient as a course, the Design and Publication class came to be. The onesemester program would teach seventh and eighthgraders the basics of Adobe Indesign and Illustrator, two applications crucial to the production of the magazine.
Culture
NEW EDITIONS The Mini Marque, the only Middle School publication, releases a new issue every spring. Because of an actual class, students who want to pursue journalism will be more prepared for the Upper Schoolâs intense publications.