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Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Journalism Culinary Class with Colton, Jin, and Shawnta'

Journalism Culinary Class
By Colton Sierra '14

Red Cloud focuses on the education, but where does learning how to cook come in? All of my years at Red Cloud, and I have never seen a “home-ec” or a “culinary” class.

Sure it can be taught at home, but sometimes that is not enough. My colleagues and I decided to shed light on the world of cooking, and all of the wonders that follow.

Below are the links to a three part how-to video that my news team and I put together to try and spark the idea of having some sort of class aimed toward the culinary arts.







Friday, March 21, 2014

Viki Eagle’s Advice to Conquer Red Cloud High School

Viki. Photo courtesy of Viki Eagle. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Viki Eagle’s Advice to Conquer Red Cloud High School
By Jin Yup Jung '14

You must be a spy from Pine Ridge High School if you haven’t heard of Viki Eagle…

I bet you have seen a woman who always holds her own camera to take pictures of the Pine Ridge Reservation and students at Red Cloud.

Viki Eagle was on staff at Red Cloud in 2012-2013, and she taught Computer classes and worked on the yearbook with students. She recently visited Red Cloud few days ago for spring break. This was her third time to visit Red Cloud this year.

The reason she keeps visiting Red Cloud is that she earned so many great memories through the past year while working here. She loves this place, the students, and staff at Red Cloud.

Here are eight great tips from Viki, and it’s also called “Zombie Land Rules!” 

Viki wrote this because she wanted to give some advice for students at Red Cloud since she has always hoped that students from Red Cloud do well in high school, in college, and throughout their lives.

1. Cardio. 

Start strong, finish Strong. To all the incoming and current Freshmen and Sophomores: Don’t be like the Broncos' Peyton Manning in the Super Bowl. After that first safety in the first minute, he wasn’t able to bring his team back to catch up and now holds the record for the third worst Super Bowl blowout in the history of NFL.

In that way, don’t mess up your chances of succeeding your first year and having to catch up till senior year. Keep that GPA up, do all your readings, homework, and learn to study. And if you have a chance to join a program, internship, travel, Upward Bound- take it!

2. Enjoy the little things.  

Enjoy being a student and having great teachers that care. Give them a high five in the morning!

3. The Double Tap

Let your Negative Nancy and Debby Downer friend go. No one needs either of them in your life and they are not going to help you succeed.
           
4. Get a Kick A** Partner.  

When you get rid of Negative Nancy and Debby Downer, get a close friend to rely on. Tackle the zombies together as in tackle the academics and homework together.
            
 5. Shoot First 

 Advocate for yourself. No one makes it through high school by themselves. Everyone gets help. There are always teachers, faculty, etc, there to listen to you. Advocate for yourself and tell your teachers and counselors what you are struggling with or need help with. Asking for help is not a sign of weakness. Speak out for yourself. You have a voice so please use it.
          
 6. When in doubt, know your way out. 

If you find yourself in a bad situation where your friends are not listening, walk away from the situation. If they are your real friends, they will understand.
           
 7. Don’t Swing Low. 

 Don’t make your goals low- make them high. You are capable of so much more. It requires work but you can do it.
            
8. Be a Hero. 

Prove to everyone they were wrong. Or as my great friend Amanda say “Make your Haters be your Motivators." For all those people who don’t believe in you or think you cannot accomplish a task, prove them wrong instead of getting down and surrendering. Don’t get lazy…..please! 

                                                           

SDSU Scientists Get a Reaction From Students

Science in action. Photos by Colton Sierra '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
SDSU Scientists Get a Reaction From Students
By Colton Sierra '14

Pop! Fizz! Boom! These are the sounds of science. This past Monday professors Dr. Larry Browning and Dr. Matt Miller from SDSU came to Red Cloud for the second consecutive year to show off their chemistry and physics skills for all to see.   

“What do you want to see?” exclaimed Dr. Browning as he welcomed the next group of science students into the room off the Commons. He helped Dr. Miller set up a station that the students could use to make homemade pop rocks.

They both showed us different chemical and physical demonstrations that had their crowd in awe. The demonstrations ranged from watching a chemical change colors multiple times in a reaction to shooting ping pong balls at a deadly force. There was a point during the presentation that everyone was eating frozen Cheetos Puffs.

This is the second year that these two professors journeyed to Red Cloud. Brother B. (Brother Mike Baranek) tells me, “Wendell and I saw them at their summer program,” and hence led them to come to Red Cloud to show us a piece of the world of science.

“It was good to have real professors,” said Wendell Gehman. “They help give credibility to what we do.” Being with these professors and seeing them in their habitat mirrored what the students might encounter in a college-level science class.

It was all good and fun, but it needed something to put the official stamp of acceptance on it. Dr. Browning grabbed a white bucket and put some water inside of it. He then showed us what he called “liquid air.” It actually was a bottle full of nitrogen. He closed it tightly, and dropped it in the water and scurried from the bucket. His quick little hustle from the bucket indicated visuals of something that all high school science students would want to see; we were about to see an explosion. 

 SCIENCE. Filmed by Colton Sierra '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Horse Clan vs Makipazo: Unfinished Business

The brackets. Photos by Colton Sierra '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Horse Clan vs Makipazo: Unfinished Business
By Colton Sierra ‘14

Red Cloud’s eldest handgame team fell to Red Cloud’s youngest handgame team in a delayed championship game in the Cuny Commons this past Tuesday.

A few days ago on Friday the 14th, all of the Red Cloud handgame players and pow-wow dancers jumped on Joe Fleischman’s school bus and made their way to Porcupine, SD for another pow-wow.

Usually the games get started right away because they can go on for a very long time. However, the space was limited and the amount of teams that were there was almost overwhelming. Therefore, the middle school games finally finished after four hours, and the high school handgames would finally make their start.

Makipazo and Horse Clan made it through the bracket with little to no problem and met up in a game that led to the championship. Makipazo made Horse Clan look like the rookies with a quick sweep of sticks, and left Horse Clan shocked.

The players of Horse Clan were in for a long wait until they would play again. Two Little Wound teams (Taopi Cik’ala and Hashtag Mustangs) battled for who would move on to the next game and avoid losing out of the tournament. This game lasted for about two hours. Taopi Cik’ala moved on to face an all-girls St. Francis team, and again, this game went on for two hours.

Horse Clan was ready for another game, and it was about to finally happen. The people were exhausted and the singing voices were tired. Soon as the game started, freshman Almadon Swalley said he knew that “we were going to win.” No one is saying that this young man can tell the future, but Horse Clan bounced back into championship with a win over Taopi Cik’ala after about only ten minutes of play.

It was about 10:30 at night, and it was a long six or seven hours of handgames. Everyone was tired, so the handgames director Marlon Kelly asked if the two Red Cloud teams wanted to play the championship game at our school. The two captains, Colton Sierra ‘14 and Wakinyan Forney ‘17, consulted on the matter, and decided to have the game played in the Commons for everyone to see.

“I was nervous,” said junior Mikala Marrufo about the game in the Commons, “We had a small amount of time to work with.” Even though Horse Clan attempted to rock the boat, Makipazo had the heart to stay afloat. Congratulations to the freshmen champs: Wakinyan Forney, Stevie Cross Dog, Wayslynn Ghost Bear, Chanda Lays Bad, and Steven Wilson.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Boys Basketball Season Comes to an End

Photo by Shawnta' Jones. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Boys Basketball Season Comes to an End
By Shawnta’ Jones '14

The Red Cloud boys fought hard but didn’t come out with the win against the rival Pine Ridge in a thrilling game in Rapid City at the Civic Center last Tuesday. 

The Crusaders fell 69-60. At the end of the first half, Red Cloud led the Thorpes, 33-22. The Crusaders were on a roll in that first half. 

Overall, Kobey O’Rourke led the Crusaders with 17 points and 15 rebounds, Marty Richards had 14 points, and Bailey Pourier followed with 12 points.

Jesse Brown for the Thorpes had a series of three pointers to bring the Thorpes back into the game in the 3rd quarter. From that point on, the Thorpes came on top and held the lead.

“Pine Ridge is a good team with a team full of seniors,” said sophomore Kobey O’Rourke. “We went out to play and compete. We had nothing to lose because the pressure was on them. I think we played great. We left it all on the court but we came up short.”

After only playing the Thorpes once during regular season with the score of 67-46, the Crusaders played an entirely different game at the packed Civic Center. Shocking many of the fans, the game became a nailbiter.

“The season was very good. It was really fun to play for Christian,” said senior Marco Starr. “The game on Tuesday was intense the entire time and it was fun to cheer on my teammates, although I wish it was a different outcome.”

Red Cloud had three seniors who had a great run: Marco Starr, Caine Ghost Bear, and Bailey Pourier.

O’Rourke added, “I loved this season and I felt like we came together as a brotherhood. We will continue to grow and get ready for next season. Mostly, I am thankful for Christian for all that he does for us. There’s no other coach that I would want to play for but him.”

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Friday Pi Day

Pies on Pi Day. Photos by Jin Yup Jung '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Friday Pi Day
                                       By Jin Yup Jung ‘14

Everyone loves Fridays, right?  Wait, did you notice that last Friday’s date looked similar to the number you always encounter in math class? Yeah, Friday was Pi Day.

As some of you have already knew about Pi Day, the Greek letter “π” is a mathematical constant, the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter, approximately equal to 3.1415.

Millions of people have celebrated Pi Day. The reason people celebrate Pi Day is that it’s an official holiday enacted by Congress on March 9, 2009 in an effort to show support for the National Science Foundation and give teachers an excuse to encourage students in the study of mathematics. Also, March 14 is Albert Einstein’s (a genius theoretical physicist) birthday. The amazing coincidence let many people celebrate Pi Day for more than just one reason.

I just want to let you know how to celebrate Pi Day (four days late) by doing some below fun stuff!

Step 1. Eat Pie

Step 2. Play Pi games (such as a Pi reciting contest) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaNN2AEJyvg#t=208

Step 3. Watch Pi movies

Step 4. Say Pi as much as possible

Step 5. Get physical with Pi by running 3.14 miles

Friday, March 14, 2014

Rancher’s Life: Nick Cummings

Photo courtesy of Nick Cummings. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
 
Rancher’s Life: Nick Cummings
                                                   By Jin Yup Jung ‘14

It could be seen weird that students would rather work as ranchers than be college students these days. While college students enjoy their college life, there is a young man who was determined to be a rancher right after he graduated from high school.

Nick Cummings is an alumni from Red Cloud High School and he graduated in 2012. I had an early interview with Nick Cummings a few days ago and heard so many interesting things about his daily job. “My daily life is- I wake up every morning, feed cows, and right now we’re in the middle of calving so you have to check cows everyday and make sure they aren’t having problems having their calf,” Cummings said. “Depending on the weather and age of the cow sometimes, you have to check through the night.”  

During his senior year in Red Cloud, some students told him that he would regret his choice to be a rancher because it doesn’t make sense giving up college life to be a rancher. However, Cummings has enjoyed doing his job and there is specific purpose for him to be a rancher. “I love what I do, not because it’s about the money. It’s about the sense of pride that ranching brings,” Cummings said. “There are not a lot of things in life that can make you feel the way ranching does. All in one day you can go through a roller coaster of emotion, like you can save a calf's life and a few minutes later you can watch one take its last breath. It’s things like that that teach a person to be humble and how to accept problems in life.”

Also, Cummings is proud of himself to be a rancher. “I’m a rancher because that’s who I am. 12 years of education was more than enough for me,” Cummings said. “ I chose ranch rather than go to school because I have a family name to carry on. It’s not that I felt it was my duty to carry that name on but more so that that’s what I’m supposed to do with my life.”


“Ranching ain’t just what I do, it’s who I am,” Cummings said.


 



Thursday, March 13, 2014

Colton’s Top Seven Favorite Albums

Colton the critic. Photo by Shawnta' Jones '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Colton’s Top Seven Favorite Albums
By Colton Sierra ‘14

Beyond all of the rap music filled with clichés, meaningless lyrics, and the abandonment of quality,  you will find my top seven albums (since 2008).

There are plenty of hip-hop albums from the past 20 or more years that have broken ground for the genre itself. I enjoy sounds ranging from KRS-One all the way to Kanye West. However, for this article I wanted to focus on what has been happening with rap music in recent times.

I wrote down as many albums that I have listened to thoroughly since 2008 and organized them by year. From there, I realized that I liked too many albums, and I would be obligated to create a top 50’s list. The idea of creating the longest article that MLT has ever posted gave me great fear, so I constructed and crafted a criteria that each album had to fit for it to be truly a great album.

1.) Since an album is defined as a collection of songs issued as a single item, then each song has to be good. Therefore, each album had to have an “unskippable” characteristic.

2.) I had to have great memories behind each album. Meaning: which album captures a great time in my life?

3.) The album and its lyrics and messages had to have given me a new perspective about life and situations that come with it.

4.) The album had to surprise me. Maybe it was a different new sound, or a sound that the artist had before but more polished. Essentially, something that raised my eyebrows a bit.

5.) The final criteria that the album had to meet was if I would recommend this album to anyone. Music is usually a reflection of a person, and if the album couldn’t do that then it did not meet this criteria.

So without further ado, here is my favorite seven albums!

#7.) Paper Trail - T.I.

T.I., the “King of the South,” shows himself in a different light here with this album. In this album he seems to take a step back and look at his life. With uplifting songs like “Live Your Life ft. Rihanna” and “No Matter What,” T.I. sheds light upon his current dark situation. This albums serves as a “everything’s going to be alright” message rather than “poor, broken down me.” That is how T.I’s Paper Trail made it to the hardest list I have ever made.

#6.) The Blueprint 3 - Jay Z

Young Hov’s (Old Hov?) Blueprint 3 was highly anticipated when word first came out. People waited and waited. When it finally dropped, they found out that this album was star-studded both with familiar faces and newcomers that made this list. The final album of the Blueprint series, Jay Z brings old and new faces of the rap game together to emphasize not only his power in rap, but the community you can create from it. Maybe The Blueprint 3 serves as what Billboard would call “the blueprint for hip-hop music to come.”

#5.) Cole World: The Sideline Story - J. Cole

Finally releasing his long awaited album after recent mixtape successes (The Come Up; The Warm Up; Friday Night Lights) J. Cole gives us a view of the sideline and attempts to prove why he deserves a spot on the “court." He has songs that address music industry struggles and emotional occurrences from his young life (“Sideline Story” and “Breakdown”)  balanced with songs that are ready for the radio (“Can’t Get Enough” and of course “Work Out”). Yet these radio songs still excel with the captivating imagery that J. Cole is capable of. With this well balanced album, it gives all who venture into it a good idea of who Jermaine Cole really is.

#4.) Man on the Moon: The End of Day - Kid Cudi

“You’re in my dreams…” states Cudi as the album opens up with an orchestrated beat accompanied by dream-like drums that take you to a different place. The interesting thing from this album is it’s set up like a play (Act I, Act II, Act III, Act IV and Act V) and the play is Cudi’s life. What really makes this album what it is today is the way Kid Cudi is able to portray images that anyone can essentially relate to over instrumentals that seem to take a person to an unfamiliar yet relaxed state. Throughout the five acts, Cudi brings you along his journey filled with darkness as well as having a “Heart of a Lion." By the end of it, you are left with a message that makes you think about your inner battles rather than worrying about the outside world. He ends it with “Up Up & Away," a song telling his audience to have a “whatever” type attitude to whoever attempts to judge them on what they do. Kid Cudi and his album has definitely inspired people to think openly and to take on challenges head first.

#3.) good kid m.A.A.d city - Kendrick Lamar

Kendrick Lamar, otherwise known as one of my favorite artists from the new era of rappers (also one of my favorite rappers from the West Coast), dropped an album that took the world by storm. Lamar and his group Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE) all predicted the future of the group as being extremely successful. Lamar, along with his fellow TDE artists, all came with projects to try and make it apparent. But through Lamar’s effort “good kid m.A.Ad city” he puts an exlamation point on the phrase “TDE!” In his song “*****, Don’t Kill My Vibe” he states, “You ain’t heard the Coast like this in a long time.” And honestly, nobody has heard the West Coast portrayed in this way in a while. This album differs from most of the albums on this list, and it is because the album doesn’t focus on the trials of being famous or the amount of money that he attained in the past year. The album focuses on life in Compton, CA, but more importantly, it goes in-depth about Lamar’s childhood and teen life. It does it so well, especially with his song “Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst," it feels as if you just had watched a short film and that is why it’s topping this list.

#2.) Acid Rap - Chance The Rapper

Whoa. After Lupe & Common (and early Kanye), there was only Chief Keef-like hits coming from Chicago. Stupid rap lyrics and saying “3hunna” a bunch of times was what Chicago looked like for a brief second, all until Chance The Rapper came out his free album Acid Rap that he posted himself on his website. What was truly amazing from this album, promoted only by Chance and his loyal fans, was that it made some noise in a world who didn’t know him. After this album came out, his name was featured in many places.

Chance’s
Acid Rap is a dark journey into Chicago’s violence-riddled streets and is haunted by the memory of his friend who was murdered. It reveals this pain to all listeners, and anyone is welcomed to jump in the car and drive through Chicago with Chance. This album, like J. Cole’s debut, is well-balanced with poetry tracks and tracks that would cause today’s kids to “turn up”(slang for “go wild”).  His weird voice fits perfectly with his chatterbox rhymes that coincide perfectly with his beat selection. They all come together with a new sound and a new name for rap and I am certainly looking for more. People are taking Chance’s music serious, even if he is just “having fun with it.”

#1.) Control System - Ab-Soul

You might say “Who and why Ab-Soul?” and I could recite a line from his first song on the album that says, “said I was the underdog, turns out I’m the secret weapon…” but that wouldn’t even begin to describe the guy. Ab-Soul is the lesser known member from the TDE Black Hippy Group but is arguably the smartest. He is known for his incredible wordplay, witty elongated lines, and his thoughts about the faults of the government. His album Control System undoubtedly delves right into what he’s about. His second track, literally titled “Track Two,” is a rare vicious Ab-Soul that disparages his competition with boasts such as, “...they couldn’t wait for Soul to reappear, Click. Boom. T.N.T. TDE. We in here” and “...imagine if Einstein...sipped juice, broke rules...beat up rookies on pro tools.” This track alone sets the stage for Ab-Soul to continue on for 16 more tracks of  him destroying a lot soulful and/or trippy beats from producers loyal to TDE.

His most outstanding track is hard to determine given the fact that there are a lot of outstanding
tracks on the album. His song “Double Standards” is a very honest song that points out the wrong doings in young relationships today. Another great track on this album “Illuminate” includes a verse from Kendrick Lamar and they both shine on the Skhye Hutch beat without tension. While Kendrick talks about his expectations about being a new big name next to Dr. Dre and Snoop, Ab-Soul is busy battling his way into the rap game and calling out Jay Z while doing it. With his line “I used to wanna rap like Jay Z, now I feel like I could run laps ‘round Jay Z, Nas ain’t seen nothin’ this nasty, Big and Pac got it comin’ when I pass too.” Soulo shows his mic skills and why he deserves to get far more recognition than he’s been getting.

On his second to last song “The Book of Soul” Ab describes his relationship with deceased girlfriend and TDE singer Alori Joh, and how her death affected his life. He also goes on about how nothing can stop him, and he tells his listeners to not be “dethroned by these systems of control.” He continues “just keep your fingers crossed and get them locks off your soul.” His final song “Black Lip ******* (Remix)” features verses from the other three TDE members (Kendrick Lamar, ScHoolboy Q & Jay Rock) and they all come together to help Ab-Soul travel his way along the road to success. At the end of the album, it seems like Ab-Soul still has more to say, and leaves us all wanting more. I wouldn’t hesitate to teach the younger hip-hop heads about this album, and I hope you, the reader, go check these albums out if you haven’t already, just to see for yourself.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Horse Clan Bounces Back

Handgames champs. Photo by Paulina Fast Wolf. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Horse Clan Bounces Back
By Colton Sierra ‘14
Aaron Thompson, along with the rest of the Horse Clan handgame team, left Rapid City with a heavy weight lifted off their shoulders because they just won the 2nd annual He Sapa Handgame Tournament. The night before, they were stunned by a St. Francis handgame team that beat them out of the tournament (coincidently in St. Francis) shortly after toying with their emotions.
The He Sapa Handgame Tournament is hosted by the Ateyapi program at the Southwest Middle School, and it serves as a traditional and fun activity that the Lakota youth can be a part of. There were a total of 22 teams that were then divided into an elementary division and a high school division. There were 16 elementary teams and only six high school teams. The high school teams were represented by some of the best handgame teams in all areas around South Dakota. Teams came from Crow Creek, Little Wound, Rapid City, Crazy Horse, and of course, a team from Red Cloud.
“My heart was racing during that final game on Friday night,” said junior Mikala Marrufo. Horse Clan neared defeat four times before they finally met their fate and went home empty handed from the pow-wow in St. Francis.
Broken hearted and discouraged, freshman Wakinyan Forney showed up to the tournament thinking, “There’s probably a lot of really skilled teams here.” Little did he know that they would continue to the championship game undefeated. He told me, “I felt like we pulled through as a team, even though we almost lost every game.”
Horse Clan was seen at the tournament Saturday narrowly winning games and breathing sighs of relief as they moved up in the bracket. In the championship game they lost and were forced to play a rubber match against Crazy Horse. During the rubber match, Aaron Thompson and Britni Iron ‘16 rallied Horse Clan back to the lead. To end it all, Colton Sierra ‘14 and Mikala Marrufo ‘15 put the final nail in the coffin and left Southwest Middle School as champions.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Igniting the Ignatian Beard

Photos by Colton Sierra '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.
Igniting the Ignatian Beard
By Shawnta’ Jones ‘14

Last month, Red Cloud High School took part in the Pennies for Patients fundraiser.

Red Cloud students raised more than $300 for this year’s fundraiser. The junior class won a prize for raising more money than any other class. Junior class sponsor and Spiritual Formation teacher Brad Held S.J. promised the class that he would get flames shaved into his beard if they raised the most pennies for the fight against leukemia .

 “I think Brad had a very creative incentive to get the juniors to raise money for the Pennies for Patients,” said Shenique Monique. “He definitely has raised the bar for incentives next year.”

“It was a fun way to motivate my class. It was really cool!” said junior Myranda Pourier. “Brad is awesome.”

On Tuesday March 4th, Brad had flames shaved into his beard by local artist and hairstylist Alvin Mills of Native Stylz. 

Filmed by Colton Sierra '14. Copyright Red Cloud Indian School.