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Posts tagged as “student life”

(Archive November 2016) Living Out a Dream

Local Man tours with Pop Artist

By Tyler Morgan | Observer Contributor

Traveling across the United States on tour with a popular musician is something not many people can say they have done. The rock star lifestyle is not fit for many, especially with what goes on from day to day while traveling from state to state.

Imagine not being able to take a shower for over a month while being stuck on a luxury tour bus traveling around the U.S having the time of one’s life? For Travis Collier, 21 a graduate of North Middlesex High School in Townsend, the time spent touring was well spent. read more

(Archive November 2016) Pics…Or It Didn’t Happen!

By Courtney Wentz | Assistant Editor

Everywhere you turn, someone has their phone out to snap a photo of where they are, what they’re doing, or who they’re with.

When you go to a show, whether it’s a concert, play, musical, comedy show, most of the audience has their phone out to record or take a picture of the performance, instead of living in the moment and enjoying the show. You aren’t enjoying the show if you’re on your phone the entire time trying to get that non-blurry photo.

Even when people go on a trip or vacation, you feel like you’re there because your friend is posting every second on social media. Your phone is not your brain. Yes, the photo is going to be a great reminder, but how well are you going to remember that moment? How you were feeling? How environment felt around you?

Last September, the BBC wrote an article where they talked to Linda Henkel, a psychology professor at Fairfield University in Connecticut. She said, “What I think is going on is that we treat the camera as a sort of external memory device. We have this expectation that the camera is going to remember things for us, so we stop processing that object and we don’t engage in the types of things that would help us remember it.”

A photo may say a thousand words, but it’s not going to tell you how you were feeling in that exact moment and you’re not going to remember it because you were too busy thinking about how this would make a great profile picture or Instagram post.

When you go to a concert, the crowd is lit up by cellphone screens, not fans being there with the band. When you go to a play or a musical, people are trying to seek taking a video instead of being in the world the actors on stage are creating.

People should be more focused on enjoying the experience and living in the moment, instead of worrying whether or not your hair looks good for the photo op.

One of my cousins is always posting photos of everything he’s doing on Facebook. It’s great to see recent photos of him because he lives far away, but I can’t help to feel that he should just write a post about the things he’s doing and the things his students make. I would rather know what he’s thinking and feeling.

Last month, YouTuber and author John Green said in his Drowzees and Masterpieces: Thoughts from London video, “At times it feels like documenting a meaningful experience is more important than having the experience.”

The next time you go to a concert, museum, play, musical, comedy show, or leave the middle of nowhere Massachusetts, put the camera down. Tell people a story about your experience with words, instead of a photo because you’re clogging up Facebook with all your selfies.

(Archive November 2016) Battlefield 1 Game Review

By Nicholas Velillari | Observer Contributor

Battlefield 1

Battlefield 1 is the new first person shooter released by EA and Dice and is the sequel/prequel to Battlefield 4. With most shooters sticking with a futuristic/modern setting, BF1 is going back in time, focusing on World War 1.

The draw to Battlefield games is their multiplayer and in BF1 the multiplayer is the best it’s been since Battlefield 3. At launch, there are six modes to play: Conquest, Rush, Team Deathmatch, Domination, and two new modes called War Pigeons and Operations. read more

(Archive November 2016) The Older One Gets

By Rachel Vargeletis | Observer Contributor

Eyes tend to glisten with a certain, familiar
Shine of regret the older one gets.
Wrinkles tend to cast a deeper, darker shadow
Upon their chagrinned pretense
The older one gets.

“Sorry”s feel empty and
“I love you”s only feel like a way of apologizing.
The sun hurts more than is ever brightens your day,
And suddenly,
You find your feet sore from
The routine
Instead of bouncing in eager leaps across each room,
Craving sand under their seasoned edges
And wet dirt between their wriggling toes,
The older one gets. read more

(Archive November 2016) Non-Traditional Students Club Launching Unique Outreach

By Stevie LaBelle | Editor-in-Chief

The Adult College Experience Club is looking to reach out to Mount Wachusett Community College’s non-traditional student population.  While this club started out as a program within the college, it has expanded into a means for seasoned non-traditional students to mentor incoming non-traditional students.

This club is for measure of helping to ease the anxiety of these students while entering into the college experience.  Co-Advisors to the club are Melissa Sargent and Sarah Dorsey.  While they hope that students will find the club fun and engaging, their overall goal is to be available to help.

They hope to be able to host workshops relevant to this population of students.  These workshops would be offered at no cost to the students.  Some topics that may be covered include: how to balance life and school, juggling methods for study when you have children, resume writing, etc.  Additional topics would be decided by the members of club as to represent what is they feel is necessary to their experience and challenges undertaking college.

Since a great deal of non-traditional students have an inflexible and sometimes challenging schedule, the ACE Club has additional options to the standard club meetings.  “Life happens,” explains Melissa Sargent, which they began looking into these alternate meeting options.  The Club is going to launch a virtual meeting tool to its members.

“This variation in club meetings will allow students from not only the Gardner campus to participate, but the Leominster, Devens, and Web students as well,” Melissa Sargent explained.  Not only will the meetings allow for students who have a web camera and microphone to actively participate, the meetings will be recorded so that students who could not watch at the scheduled time, can view at their own availability.  The club will encourage its members to participate in the discussion via Facebook as well.

With “National Non-traditional Students Week” coming up, November 7th – 11th, the ACE Club is recruiting new members as they currently do not have their Officer positions filled.  There first meeting will be held in the North Café at the Gardner campus on November 17th at 5pm.  This meeting will be launching the new technology for a virtual meeting.  Sargent encourages students who are available to come to campus for the meeting to do so, as it will not be solely a virtual experience.

(Archive November 2016) Preview: 2016 Boston Celtics

By Nicholas Cherico | Observer Contributor

In the 2015-16 season, the Boston Celtics finished 48-34, their best record since the 2011-12 season. After a first round exit in the playoffs for the second straight season, the Celtics went into the offseason looking for more pieces to build off their success from last year.

After failing to sign top free agent Kevin Durant, the Celtics made arguably their biggest free agent signing in team history. They signed All-Star power forward/center Al Horford to a max deal through the 2020 season. Next to Durant, Horford was the best free agent available. He provides the Celtics with a deadly mid range shot. He also is going to create a lot of scoring opportunities for the guys around him with his versatility. The Celtics have lacked a skillset like this from the big man position in quite some time.

The C’s also drafted rookie small forward Jaylen Brown from Cal 3rd overall. Brown adds another athletic defensive presence off the bench for Boston, which they did not have a lot of last season. If he can become a more reliable offensive player, he could see his minutes increase as the season goes on.

The Celtics will most likely roll out with a starting lineup of Isaiah Thomas, Avery Bradley, Jae Crowder, Al Horford, and Amir Johnson. This lineup could vary based on who the Celtics are facing or injuries.

The biggest role player for the Celtics is going to be Marcus Smart. Head coach Brad Stevens said Smart would play the role of the team’s “6th starter”. While coming off the bench, Smart is going to receive starter minutes. Smart has already proved that he is a great defensive player, but if he can improve his jump shot and become more of a scoring threat he is going to be a really good weapon coming off of the bench.

The Celtics have been able to do over the past couple years what a lot of teams have been trying to do forever: successfully rebuild. After the trade of Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett, the Celtics have wasted no time putting their names back in the playoff conversation. They have improved each season since they began rebuilding. Is this going to be the season they finally turn the corner? Even though they have been in the playoffs the last two years, Boston hasn’t really showed any signs of making any significant strides in their playoff performance. They have only won 2 of their last 10 postseason games. The team Boston has now will be able to rack up more wins than last season, but still needs one bigger piece to put them over the top and make them a legitimate contender in the East.

My Prediction

Record: 56-26 (8 more wins than 2015-16)

Playoffs: Eastern Conference Semifinals

The acquisition of Al Horford alone will be enough to get the Celtics out of the first round, and maybe even to the Eastern Conference Finals. However, if the Celtics are to face a team like Cleveland, Toronto, or Indiana in the second round they could have a very hard time with them. All of these teams are experienced in the playoffs and have a lot of weapons that the Celtics might not be able to handle.

(Archive October 2016) REVIEW: W. Kamau Bell’s “Semi-Prominent Negro”

By Jason D. Greenough | Web/Social Media Editor

kamau-cover

A lot of us are infuriated with the current state of politics in our country.

– Uh, scratch that –

All of us are infuriated with the current state of politics in our country.

Many of us choose to express that feeling with anger, others with disenchantment and apathy. Both paths are very understandable. But then there is another path, that many have used over the years, and that the path of humor. George Carlin, Dick Gregory, Bill Hicks, Jon Stewart…So many comedians have made politics and current events the centerpiece of their hook, their message. W. Kamau Bell, the socio-political comic who you may have seen on CNN as the host and creator of United Shades of America, is no different, and brings the heat, once again, with Semi-Prominent Negro, his newest stand-up special. read more

(Archive October 2016) Football is Back, But Pats Fans Await Brady’s Return

By Andrew Hoenig | Observer Contributor

 New England –  It’s that time of year again! Football is back!!

Every September when fans of the game hear those three words, their hearts soar a little higher with a joyful glee.

But this year has a different feel to it in New England. And that may be because of the suspension that has loomed over New England all offseason and that will continue to loom till October.

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady had his suspension decision by Judge Richard Berman from last year overturned by a federal court which stated the primary reason for the 180 degree turn as being “Roger Goodell has the given power to impose the penalty based upon the agreed upon CBA by the NFL and NFLPA”.

Because of this decision and eventually Brady’s sacrifice of giving up the fight that could tarnish his name just based on the ridiculousness of the whole supposed scandal with no supporting evidence, Patriots fans now watch their team go the whole first month(four games) without the man who’s led the team to four Super Bowl titles.

For some fans, it feels like the season hasn’t truly started. A feeling reiterated by a fan by the name of Matt Pilcher, a Peterborough local. “Ya of course we think and know it’s wrong and it feels weird but hopefully Jimmy comes in and does well for now.” “Jimmy” is in reference to Jimmy Garappolo, the Patriots second string quarterback. He gets the starts while Brady takes the suspension.

The whole team has seemingly gathered around Jimmy G singing his praises. Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski said that he has confidence in Jimmy G and that he believes Jimmy can steer the team in the right direction in Brady’s absence. “Guys just have to get behind him”, said Gronkowski.

So will the fans. Some fans seem ready and willing to jump on the Jimmy G train which is all fine and good so long as the media doesn’t overblow his play. Bill Belichick really isn’t one for headlines and won’t much care what we think. The Patriots head coach has already, in a shocking development, TOLD the media of his future plans at quarterback this season; a rare thing indeed.

“Jimmy will be the quarterback the first four weeks and Tom will take over again in week 5 when he comes back,” declared Belichick in one of his news conferences before the start of the season.

This just laid a nail in the coffin of an already resounding echo by Belichick all season that Brady is his quarterback and wouldn’t want anyone else. There’s something to be said about loyalty. It might be why Belichick and Brady have enjoyed so much success over the last previous 16 seasons. Or at least a small part of it.

As fans who know what Brady has done for the team and the situation he has been forcibly put in by the league, mainly commissioner Roger Goodell, loyalty might be the best thing to show during that four game stretch no matter what promise(or not) Jimmy Garappolo shows. One day Tom Brady will retire and there will be another quarterback leading the charge in New England but today is not that day. One thing is for sure… Tom will come back and he will be hungry. He’s still got further to go. #DriveFor5

(Archive October 2016) Lessons I Had to Learn on My Own Because of You

By Rachel Vargeletis | Observer Contributor

Never in my life do I remember my chest physically hurting more than it did the moment I realized I meant nothing. I breathed, I was alive, but I wasn’t living. It, pathetically enough, seemed like my world was over. It felt as if he was ringing my heart dry in his clenched fists, drawing out every last bit of worth and feeling I could try to muster. There was a new crack developing in every one of my bones as each word bounced off his tongue, one by one in a calamitous nose dive.

“I didn’t mean to use you, but I guess I did . . .” Crack.

“I guess I just don’t find you emotionally attractive . . .” Snap.

“You wouldn’t be enough . . .” Total heartbreak.

And from that day on, I swear I was worthless.

It’s like learning how to ride a bike, but on a tightrope. That is how it feels to try and make yourself believe (if you even tried) that you are more- more than this anyway. More than that dumb boy who added to this dumb seemingly perpetual feeling that I will never be enough- or I never even was to begin with.

To clear some things up; yes, as cliché as it sounds- I, a young woman, got my heart broken by a young man that probably wasn’t worth my time in the first place maybe once or twice. Like an abusive relationship, I kept coming back and coming back, trying to make things work – somehow – with a boy I was never actually in a relationship with. I had already told myself I’d find no one better. I was so messed up in the head, I convinced myself I wasn’t settling, per say, I just earnestly believed I deserved nothing better than what I was “dished”. It didn’t feel like he wasn’t worth my time- for the longest time- and as accurately as I can try and appropriately explain that sad situation to be, all that really matters- all that I can actually benefit from now were the lessons I had to learn from that one person. Lessons I believe with every ounce of my (now) well-being, every single man or woman, girl or boy, need to come to know.

Going through a pain like the one I did where my whole world was demolished at the blink of an eye and for years afterwards, is something I would never wish on anyone. And one of the biggest accomplishments in my life, honestly, is overcoming that nothingness that was so deeply imbedded in me.

Life, itself, is falling down, but living is getting back up- and that’s why what I can take from this is far greater than what I went through.

This accomplishment in my life, of getting back up, has really given me the greatest satisfaction. It may seem petty from an outsider, however especially necessary to me in my journey through life. What I have taken from this experience I call: “The Lessons I Had to Learn on my Own Because of You”:

Lesson Number One: I don’t need somebody; I may want somebody- but I am not lacking anything on my own.

Lesson Number Two: My worth is not determined by the arch of my curves, or the flutter of my eyelashes, and even the weight of my step.

Lesson Number Three: If I am not worth someone’s time and effort, they are not worth my affections.

Lesson Number Four: I am altogether lovely, from the girth of my hips, to the snort when I laugh, the width of my feet, and the heart on my sleeve.

Lesson Number Five: Sometimes the end of your world is the beginning of something better.

Lesson Number Six: I am not nothing; I am not even something. I am everything even if you can’t see that.

Without a bottom low, and a (small) desire to keep going, I will have never known how high I can possibly go on my own- by myself- without any boy, because I am worth it, can capable of amazing heights. And I don’t need anyone else to come to that realization. Just as I hope you will too.

(Archive October 2016) Political Opinions From Across The Pond

By Courtney Wentz | Assistant Editor

Everyone knows what the United States thinks of the upcoming election, but other countries have opinions about the election too.

Giada Lancellotti, 21, from Ostigliano, Salerno, Italy, is worried about who the next president will be. She said, “I know that who we elect in Italy does not really affect other countries, but you are going to elect the president of one of the biggest world powers.”

Lancellotti has never been to the United States, but she understands the rights and how important it is to vote. She knows three languages: English, French, German, and some self-taught Spanish. She is starting University in Pescara, Italy to become a translator in London, England to translate books.

Lancellotti doesn’t like either presidential candidate, saying Trump “is a stupid, racist, xenophobic ‘being’ who shouldn’t be able to speak” and Clint to a “freak,” even though she does think Clinton would be the better choice, saying Trump running the United States “sounds like a joke.”

James Corcoran, 26, from Carlow, Ireland, thinks the election is a “highly important matter,” saying he doesn’t find either candidate appealing. He said President Obama may be hard to live up to because of what he’s done for the United States and its allies.

Corcoran travelled to Minneapolis, Minnesota in 2006. While he was there, he went to an American school for a day and from what he saw we actually do have cliques. When he was in school he studied television, film, and journalism.

He does think Clinton is the better candidate, saying, “Hillary has the capacity and potential to run the country the way in which it should be.” Corcoran believes Clinton could provide a stable economy for the United States. Corcoran also said Trump’s public image wasn’t welcoming, compassionate, or empathic enough.

Tasmin Poole, 18, from Caldecott, South Wales, said “If I were an American citizen, I would vote Clinton and pray that she has the ability to listen to the people because I truly believe Trump will not.” She thinks “Clinton is the lesser of two evils,” which seems to be a common thought.

Poole has been to Orlando, New York, and New Jersey in the past ten years. She said while in New York, Trump was starting to get covered by the media. She is also doing a degree in Modern history.

Poole said if Trump won, “America would lose any respect from the Middle East, Mexico, and South America, along with strong, female led countries.”