Senior Spotlights

in Senior Spotlights by

Noah Barnes

  1. What colleges are you applying to? Furman, Virginia Tech, Auburn and Wofford.
  2. What were you involved with in high school? JVB XC, Wrestling, Soccer and Mission Trips.
  3. Who was your first Wesleyan crush? Riley Casey in 7th grade.
  4. What is your most embarrassing moment? When Ms. Karen yelled at me in the lunchroom in front of the whole high school for spilling a ton of sweet tea in front of the bagel bar and not cleaning it up junior year. It took a couple months to live that down.
  5. What is one thing you wish you had done in high school? Model Arab League.
  6. What is the theme song to your life? “We Built this City” by Starship.
  7. If you could be any faculty member, who would you be? Why? Mr. Cooper. He’s the man.
  8. If you were stranded on a desert island, what three things would you want to have with you? Garage door opener, deflated balloon, blown out tire from the highway.
  9. What do you hope your life will be like in 10 years? Hopefully living somewhere in the northeast or northwest making millions of dollars.
  10. Assuming you had 24 hours to live, what would you do with your remaining hours? Probably make preparations to have my body launched into the sun when I die, this will be possible on account of the millions of dollars.

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Grinds My Gears

in Features by
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Mitchell Robinson: “What grinds my gears is when people do not comprehend my relationship with William Delk.”
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Alex Bufton: “When Jeff Plunk calls me out in chapel for wearing athleisure [but] I can power clean twice as much as he can.”
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Molly Borucki: “When my dog licks me to wake me up and I have to take him out because he peed on my bed.”

 

 

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Garrett Hangartner: “When people touch my pillow.”
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Mrs. Myrick: “That flipping water bottle thing…”
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Gracie Mitchell (left): “I cant move my fingers…”

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School Security: “Locking Down” the Details

in Features by

Confusion, excitement and fear swept throughout Wesleyan campus during the late morning hours of Aug. 18.

Students and teachers were notified of the second Dollar General thievery, causing the school to go into lockdown mode. Thanks to many years of practice, the process went smoothly with very few errors. Throughout the many hours of anticipation to hear the real account of what happened along Spalding Drive that morning, rumors had developed, each unique to its storyteller.

It is safe to say that the real story is probably still out there jumbled amongst the faulty ones, but the real matter in this situation is the safety precautions that were taken to avoid much larger problems. A big thank you goes out to the campus officers for handling the situation with ease and keeping all on campus safe.

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Singing in the Rain at Music Midtown

in News by

Thousands of fans and music lovers gathered at Piedmont Park to scream at the top of their lungs with their favorite bands and dance in the rain at Music Midtown. With the festival kicking off on Saturday, Sept. 17th, the headliners to see were Twenty-One Pilots, ColleGrove, Beck and G-Easy.

Senior and third time attendant of Music Midtown, Kelsey Strott, expressed that she was most excited to see Twenty-One Pilots on Saturday because she’s “obsessed with them.” Some of Twenty-One Pilots well known songs are “Stressed Out”, “Car Radio”, “Tear In My Heart” and “Ride”. Keep Reading

Working Our Way To College

in Editorial by

College is an expected destination for Wesleyan students. With every new week of school comes new tests, quizzes and papers to write, and everyone works hard to keep their GPAs eligible to get them into their dream college. Between tests and quizzes, students give up their nights and Saturday mornings for ACT and SAT tutoring, and let’s not forget sports and play practices. So how are students expected to have any fun?

The ultimate goal for Wesleyan students is to work hard enough to get into the college of their choice. Although we often believe that high school doesn’t matter because we are learning pointless subjects, it does matter for our futures, with colleges and even life after college. Keep Reading

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