“Life” has a Different Meaning for Juveniles tried as Adults

By Bryan Hess and Sarah Schaeffer –

“There is no time to blame only time to grow and learn from what you done wrong.”

These are the words of 32-year-old Anthony Rashan Lewis.  Fifteen years ago, at the age of 17, he was convicted of murder in the second degree after a robbery in Lancaster, Pa. ended in the death of the convenience store clerk.  Lewis didn’t plan the shooting, obtain the weapon or pull the trigger.  Nevertheless, Lewis will be in prison for the rest of his life, just like 472 other juveniles in Pennsylvania – the most of any state in the United States, say criminal experts.  It’s also more than in any country anywhere in the entire world.

Charging juveniles as adults and putting many of them away in state prisons for the rest of their lives is not without controversy even within Pennsylvania which leads the universe with this dubious distinction.  Should these youths, some as young as 11, be given a second chance or will they forever be a threat to society?

Should society attempt a risky rehabilitation or lock them up and throw away the key?

For this report, Penn Points contacted and maintained written correspondence with several juveniles who were charged as adults for their crimes and who are serving a life sentence in adult correctional facilities in Pennsylvania.  Excerpts from that correspondence appear in this story exactly as the inmates wrote.  No changes were made to correct grammar or punctuation.  The decision was made to let the young men tell their stories in their own voice.

Penn Points maintained correspondence with inmates serving life sentences in Pennsylvania who were charged as juveniles. The photo in this picture is Anthony R. Lewis. Photo by Sarah Schaeffer

“I dropped out of school 3 days into my Senior Year of High School. So with so much free time we just kept on finding ways to get money like burglaries and armed robberies and car thefts. These things eventually led up to what I’m really incarcerated for, a double homicide. So all of these things that I thought was fun and exciting, really wasn’t,” wrote 27-year-old Michael Bourgeois, another juvenile “lifer.”

“As an adult we know how to make the right decisions as a juvenile we struggle about what is the right decision to make, especially when it comes from peer pressure and drugs,” wrote Lewis, now 32 years old, from Rockview Correctional Institution, located in the mountains of Centre County, Pa.

Lewis certainly didn’t make the right decision t he night he agreed with a group of boys he had been hanging out with that a robbery would be a good way to get the money to score some marijuana.

Because one convenience store did not appear to have security cameras, it became the target.  The clerk, 38-year-old Michael Heath, was shot in the neck by one of the boys and bled to death while on the phone with police dispatchers.  He left behind a wife and son.

After Lewis’ trial and his second-degree murder conviction, some jurors said they were surprised that the youths could be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.  The judge had not informed them of the mandatory sentence connected to the conviction of youths charged as adults for second-degree murder in Pennsylvania.

Even so, jurors cited the premeditation of the act, the fact the boys had gone home to get hooded sweatshirts to wear and gloves, made them clear accomplices whether they were in the store during the murder or lookouts outside. They were unmoved during the trial when defense attorneys brought up the defendants low IQs.

“I was high that day and night but I just met most of my co-defendant’s who I was arrested with that next day,” recalled Lewis, “On the night of may 23, 1996, I was out with some friends and one them came up with a plan to rob someone or a place, like a store, well two of them made the plan inside one of my co-defendant house and came out and told all of us about the plan. I was to high to walk away from them so I stayed there, clueless, and didn’t care. Well that night it was getting chilly so I went home to get a sweatshirt, but the only one I had was the one that my friend give me to hold so I put it on and before I left my house I ask my Aunt for some money and took my medication, I was on.and left back to my co-defendant house. Well later that night we was driven to a street behind a store and that when thing’s took the wrong turn, and it’s funny because I was told be them to check out the store, and report back to them as I did, and I was told to be a look out, outside the store. And than I heard a gun shot inside the store, my co-defendant had shot the guy who was working inside the store. Everyone started to run, I was stuck for a few minutes and ran with them out of fear,” wrote Lewis.

It was just this type of juvenile crime that the Pennsylvania Legislature and other legislatures across t he country were trying to address when they passed Pa. Act 33 in 1995.

Rockview State Correctional Institution near State College, Pa. Photo courtesy of BOC

Crime, including juvenile crime, had spiked nationwide in the late 1980s and early 1990s.  By 1993, the annual FBI reports showed the murder arrest for every 100,000 juveniles in the country was 14.4 percent, an all-time high.  By comparison, that rate was halved by 2004 and has continued to decline to its lowest point in 2008.

But the increase in juvenile crime in the 1990s prompted legislators to amend the Juvenile Crime Code in Pennsylvania to exclude automatically from the juvenile system any youths who fit the following criteria at the time of the crime:

-The youth was 15 years or older at the time of the alleged crime.
-The youth was charged with rape; involuntary deviate sexual intercourse; aggravated assault; robbery; robbery of a motor vehicle; aggravated indecent assault; kidnapping; voluntary manslaughter; or an attempt, conspiracy, or solicitation to commit murder or any of the crimes listed.
-The youth used a deadly weapon during commission of the crime.

When these factors are present, district attorneys around the state have no choice but to follow the law and charge the juvenile offenders as adults.

But there are many other cases, where gray areas make the decision more complicated.

There are more juveniles in jail for life in Pennsylvania than anywhere else in the world.

Any youths who have been charged as an adult but who want to be “decertified” and tried as juveniles must have their attorney request a decertification hearing to return the case to juvenile court.

During those hearings, many different aspects of the juvenile are examined.  The first one, and the one that is normally the deciding factor, said many experts, is if the juvenile will be able to respond to treatment that is offered in the juvenile system.

Treatment is not as common once the juvenile enters the adult system.  Prior criminal history, age of the juvenile, how much injury was caused and the reaction of the juvenile to the crime they committed are other factors that play into the decision of whether or not a juvenile will be tried as an adult.  However, if charged with any degree of murder in Pennsylvania or the other violent crimes that the amended statute names, the case is automatically sent to adult court.

The argument continues within the state whether or not juveniles are capable of making decisions that can and will affect them for the remainder of their life?  And if so, is sentencing a juvenile to life without parole a fair punishment?

Pennsylvania has by far the lion’s share of the 2,500-some juveniles with life sentences in the United States, called by some “the other death sentence” because they will die in prison.  Although far larger in population, California has about 250 inmates who were juveniles when they were given their life sentences. Texas has only four juveniles serving life sentences.

The concept of sentencing juveniles to life is not universally accepted.  Thirteen states prohibit the practice entirely of mandatory life sentences for juveniles.  The rest of the world agrees.

When the United Nations drafted a resolution banning the practice of sentencing youths to life in prison in December of 1990, only two countries in the world refused to sign it – the United States and Somalia.  However records show there may be as few as 12 juveniles in jail without parole possibilities in the rest of the world, not counting the U.S.

Although the practice does ensure that the particular youth will not be able to get out and recommit a crime, there seems to be no correlation between the life sentence and crime prevention.  States that do not have the practice of sentencing juveniles to life often have lower juvenile crime rates, even violent juvenile crime rates, than states who do.

Some experts believe there is a definite physical and emotional difference between juveniles and adults.

According to Jerome Gottlieb, a forensic psychiatrist for over 30 years, the brain is not fully developed until sometime in the 20s.  The last part of the brain to develop, Gottlieb said, is the part that regulates behavior to conform to social norms.  As a result, teens don’t consider risks and they are more impulsive.

Many experts in juvenile crime point to the impulsiveness of the perpetrator who, in 59 percent of the cases, is committing his or her first crime when they are sentenced to life.

“They are not aware of the long-term consequences,” said Gottlieb who has testified at hundreds of hearings to determine whether youths should be treated in the juvenile system.

It is clear that Lewis now believes this, too.

“When I was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole, I still didn’t understand the meaning,” said Lewis.

“When we are charged with a crime as a juvenile we are looked at as super-predator, so that when the court’s had started getting tough on crime because of the violation from young juvenile’s. We should be able to have a second chance to have the opportunity to be release from prison to live a normal life. See we change to be more positive and more understand of our action’s and feel bad of what had happen, not all of us but the most of us do regret the thing’s we did when we was younger,” wrote Lewis.

Lewis, who also committed other crimes previous to the convenience store robbery, expressed remorse for his deeds in the correspondence and the desire to undo the death of the store clerk.

“If I was given the opportunity to go back and change anything what would it be? That day the crime that was planned, I would wished I have never met my Co-defendant’s.  I would have tooken the bullet for the victim so, that he would die or lost his life for nothing,” wrote Lewis.  “And when there is peer pressure the juvenile has no control over what is going to happen and that is because you don’t want to let your friend’s don’t or think your weak.”

But Lancaster County District Attorney, Craig Stedman, feels very differently.  He was the assistant district attorney in both Lewis’ and Bourgeois’ cases.  He sees the victim’s and the victim’s family’s side of each violent crime.

The state prison near Wilkes-Barre where Michael Bourgeois is held. Photo courtesy of Pa. DOC

“Most people know that if you take a gun and shoot someone in the back of the head, it’s wrong,” said Stedman.

He pointed out that the victim is still dead, the family is still suffering, whether he was killed by a juvenile or an adult.  Stedman recalled incidents when victim’s family members collapsed in his arms with grief.

Bourgeois was tried as an adult after he and an accomplice, Landon May, murdered Bourgeois’s adoptive mom and her husband.  Bourgeois is now spending the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole.  Incidentally, May and his father, Freeman May, are both on “death row” awaiting execution for completely different murders (the only father/son combination in Pennsylvania).

Although Bourgeois carefully sidesteps discussion of the actual crime and whether or not he is regretful at this point, Stedman clearly remembers the Bourgeois case.

“I can’t describe how horrible this crime was,” said Stedman, although he goes on to do an explicit job of it.

Lancaster County District Attorney, Craig Stedman. Photo courtesy of co.lancaster.pa.us

“Michael Bourgeois and his friends were living in a house with a woman, who they had a sexual relationship with, a woman in her 30s.  They shot a Mennonite guy in the back of the head when he was riding to work, for fun, they were ramping up their crimes, they were having a great time,” he recalled.

May was the only one charged with shooting the man as he rode to work, but Bourgeois and others were charged with the burglaries.

“They tortured the Smiths to get their pin numbers for their bank account, they thought about it in advance, they talked around the kitchen table, had a summit meeting about it,” said Stedman recalling the much publicized murder of Lancaster County elementary principal, Lucy Smith, and her husband, Terry Smith.

“He (Bourgeois) and Landon May (his accomplice) not only killed Lucy Smith, but May sexually assaulted her,” said Stedman.  They hog-tied them with duct tape, hit them with hammers, poked them with barbecue forks for fun, cut them with knives, and shot him (Terry Smith) in the head six times.  He didn’t die at first.  The bullet rolled around in his skull and this went on for an extended period of time.”

According to the autopsy,  among many injuries, Lucy Smith was cut 51 times, shot in the head, beat on the left side of the head with a claw hammer and was sexually assaulted by Landon May.

One of the pair even dropped a television set on Lucy Smith’s head, finally killing her by smothering her.

Steph Herr, a Penn Manor graduate is now a freshman at a local technical college.  She was in third grade at Elizabeth Martin Elementary when her principal, Smith, was murdered. She remembers Smith as a positive figure.

“It was a really big shock. I went out and did Book-It [with Smith], I went to Pizza Hut with her and kind of became friends with her in school and then she got murdered,” said Herr. “I was sad, she didn’t deserve to go and she was one of the nicest ladies I ever knew.”

As for Bourgeois’ sentence, Herr finds it just.

“That’s what [Bourgeois] gets because you must be out of your mind to ever kill someone, she didn’t deserve to die. Coming from her son, she didn’t expect that. You would think he would love and respect her. He definitely shouldn’t be walking,” said Herr.

Lucy Smith was the principal at Elizabeth Martin Elementary School in Lancaster County. Photo courtesy of Lancaster Online

From his prison cell in Hunlock Creek, Pa., a rural area with an estimated population of about 5,585, Bourgeois is eager to talk about everything but details of the crime.

“The Assistant District Attorney (ADA) [Stedman] put the Death Penalty on my plate and I had no idea what to think about it because I was so scared at the time. Just to think about my Life and how all these things led me up to this point. Can you imagine all the thoughts going through my head at this time?…Fortunately the ADA put a Plea Agreement on the table which allowed me to avoid the Death Penalty, but this only meant I was pleading out to 2 Life Sentences,” wrote Bourgeois.

Julia Hall acknowledges there are violent juvenile offenders in Pennsylvania who are violent threats to society and must be kept locked up.  But not the vast majority of them, she contends.

Hall has her PhD and is a professor at Drexel University near Philadelphia and is also the Chairman of the Pennsylvania Coalition for the Fair Sentencing of  Youth.  This coalition is trying to persuade legislators to amend the laws on how juveniles are sentenced, but it’s not as easy as Hall would like.

“Legislators are not very courageous people,” said Hall.

She said legislators are trying to get re-elected, and voting to let a juvenile out early on parole may not be popular with the voting population.

Hall feels that most juveniles who commit crimes would better benefit from some sort of treatment rather then be sent to prison and not ever see the light of day.

David Romano, a local juvenile public defender, is surrounded by youth under the age of 18 everyday who have committed crimes. He agrees with Gottlieb that juveniles are not able to make the decisions and realize the consequences like adults are able.

“There is definitely a difference between a teenage brain and an adult brain,” said Gottlieb, who believes drugs are a big issue and contributing factor to many instances of juvenile crime.

“To suggest that a child as young as 10 can make adult decisions and potentially face adult penalties makes little sense to me,” agreed Romano.

Romano also explained the difference that does exist between sentencing adults and youths.

“The goal of the adult court system is to punish defendants, while the goal of the juvenile court system is to rehabilitate,” said Romano. “I think that the juvenile court system is where these children belong until it’s been proven that they have exhausted all possible resources first.”

Julia Hall with retired Philadelphia Police Chief Jack Maxwell. Photo credit to The Triangle.

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in May of 2009 seemed to take the same viewpoint as Romano.  The court ruled that a sentence of life in prison is “cruel and unusual punishment for juvenile offenders.”  The court did make an exception when the crime is murder.

“The pre-frontal cortex of the brain is not fully developed until  the mid 20s, (that is the) area that is responsible for decision making, impulse control, delayed gratification…all those things keeping a juvenile from crime. [It’s like] punishing a child because his brain is not developed,” said Hall.

“You’re certainly not the same person at 18 you were at 12, not the same person at 25 or 30. Human beings mature and change. When you put a juvenile in prison for the rest of their life and say they are never going to change, that’s not true,” Hall also said.

According to the Pa. Dept of Corrections, 374 are sentenced as adults and are under 18.  The number is lower than the one provided by Hall.

Susan Bensinger, deputy press secretary for the state DOC said it is difficult to get the info on how many prisoners who are serving life terms were charged as juveniles.  She said the data base in the department does not allow for easy cross checking.

Hall, on the other hand, claims she is far more careful, and accurate, with the numbers because she contacts every single juvenile who is charged and sentenced as an adult.

Some inmates who were juveniles sentenced to life are now appealing their sentences based on a two-year old U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Roper v. Simmons.

Just like the case of Jordan Brown, who was 11 years old when he allegedly took a hunting rifle and shot his soon-to-be step-mother, who was pregnant at the time, then proceeded to board the school bus.  Brown, a resident of Pennsylvania, is charged as an adult and is scheduled to be tried this year.

Hall questions whether a kid Brown’s age has a clear idea of what he is doing during a shooting.

“I show pictures of (Brown) to my class (at Drexel),” said Hall, “They say ‘that’s a little kid.'”

Although it is clear that Michael Bourgeois murdered someone, it is not as clear in Lewis’s case.

Bourgeois, now 27, lives in a 15′ by 8’ cell with another inmate.  To pass the time, he watches TV, reads, writes and draws.

“Just the little things in life I miss, like using the bathroom in privacy, eating whenever I feel like it, hanging out with friends, going to different states and see thing sights and just living life freely,” said Bourgeois.

But Bourgeois insists he has changed for the better.

“I flushed my childish ways down the toilet and have grown to be mature and walk proud about who I am,” wrote Bourgeois.

And it isn’t just the juveniles who think they can grow up, mature and become better people

“What do we gain from this?” Hall asked of sentencing juveniles as adults.

A western Pennsylvania boy, Jordan Brown, 11, may become the youngest person sentenced to life in prison without parole. Photo courtesy of allvoices.com

Stedman feels that regardless of age, the criminal must pay the consequences for their actions.

“It doesn’t matter to the victim’s family whether they were 17 or 27,” said Stedman.

The price is also a cause for concern.  It costs about $1 million to keep a juvenile in prison their entire life.  Also, Pennsylvania’s current deficit is $4 billion, $1.8 billion of which goes to the Bureau of Corrections. Pennsylvania’s new governor Tom Corbett has proposed cutting the state’s education budget by $1.2 billion and hiking the allocation to the prison system by 11 percent, which would help fund the construction of new prisons.

When juveniles are sentenced as adults, they are often sent to adult prisons, according to Hall.  This is a cause for concern, she said, because it can put the juveniles in danger.

“They are more likely to be raped, assaulted in some way and have very high suicide rates,” said Hall.

According to a 2000 study of juvenile offenders sentenced to life, placement with adult offenders also puts the transferred youth at risk in terms of physical well being. Compared to youth held in juvenile detention centers, youth held in adult jails are more likely to be harmed, including sexual assault, beaten by staff and attacked with a weapon. Suicide rates are also higher among juveniles. These issues surrounding housing adolescents in the same locations as chronic adult offenders have been suggested as possible explanations for recidivism among transferred youth.

There is currently only one juvenile prison in the state, Pine Grove, but most juvenile offenders who are charged as adults end up in adult prisons anyway, according to Hall.

“Someone can rape you or kill you in here and these people don’t care about your life if you live or die,” said Lewis.

Lewis and Bourgeois both say they have devoted themselves to changing their lives around, but not all prisoners share the same motivation as these two.

“I see all these people coming in and out of jail and think that its funny because they are back, so they greet each other with open arms.  It doesn’t make me mad, it makes me sad because they have been given a second, third, fourth and even fifth time to be free and they haven’t seen anything wrong with it,” said Bourgeois.

But many, including Stedman and the judges who sentenced them, say that society must be protected from these violent youths.

“The younger people are getting worse than when I started 20 years ago,” said Stedman.  “The 17-year-old drug dealer is way worse than the 17-year-old drug dealer from 20 years ago, they are way more frightening.  I don’t want to lock people up but people have a right to live crime-free without worrying about someone selling drugs to their children, raping someone, breaking into their homes.  Sometimes that means incarceration in state prison.  There’s a big difference between someone who raped a 5-year-old kid and someone who stole a piece of paper from CVS.”

At this point the legal system in Pennsylvania agrees with Stedman although Hall said other states are starting to look at juveniles differently these days.  But in this state, hundreds of young men probably will never see the light of day.

Click this link to see the number of juvenile offenders with life sentences in each state.

Although they have programs and studies on the inside, the young men who will spend the rest of their lives behind bars still miss things from life on the outside.

“We grow up in here and mature as man, we don’t think the same, we think about the future and family. I lost my family and that is the hardest thing for anyone who grows up in this place, no children, I never been in any real relationship, I don’t know what love is,” Lewis said.

Lewis and Bourgeois feel that they are living proof that people who commit crimes can change and if given a second chance, could walk out of prison a completely changed human being and never again travel down the path of crime.

“I am a strong positive person, and a role model for other young men in here,” said Lewis.

“We can be productive citizens in our communities and loving family members,” said Bourgeois.

Even if Lewis and Bourgeois are correct, they and others will most likely never find out.

 

A Permanent Remembrance Bears Painful Burden

By Jordann Stekervetz (video credit Blake Wales) –

The pain of losing someone is deafening.

A best friend killed in a car accident, the mother of a teenager dead before she sees her grandchildren, a child watching their parent die in a hospital bed, all situations that can shatter the lives of a teenager. In recent years, teens are increasingly finding ways to cope with this shock and pain through permanent means- a tattoo.

The population of US citizens who have a tattoo has grown dramatically from 6 percent in 1936, to 36 percent  just a couple years ago. Researchers from Texas Tech found that 18 percent of teenagers in America are now tattooed, which is double the amount statistics found in the 1990s. Also, in 1997, the tattooing business was said to be the sixth fastest growing retail business in the United States.

 

All music used in the video is original and composed by Penn Manor students.

 

For many years, a tattoo was a sign of rebellion for teens. Nowadays, a tatted teen is considered the norm. A new trending design, a tattoo in memory of a loved one who has passed, is finding its place in American culture.

Students from Penn Manor have adopted this wildly popular trend to remember family and friends who have died or with whom they had a personal connection.

Memorial tattoos don’t come in one certain shape or size. Birth and death dates, a depiction of something the person enjoyed, the deceased’s zodiac symbol or even a portrait can all be seen covering a portion of teens’ skin.

“My tattoo is of a tiger,” Lisa Mayo, an English teacher here at Penn Manor explained, “it represents passion that should never be caged.”

“When I graduated from high school, I was forbidden to go the college,” explained Mayo, ” I am now everything my father hated [which the tiger symbolizes]; a left wing liberal and college educated women, influencing the youth of America. I hope that he is spinning in his grave.”

A popular TV series, L.A Ink, has shown many of people getting pictures of loved ones and getting objects that represent a hard time in their life tattooed on themselves.

A new and upcoming trend for memorial tattoos is mixing cremated ashes with the tattoo ink. People are starting to get the ashes put into the tattoo to feel some type of closure, by not only having a tattoo in memory of loved one, but having a piece of them in you forever.

*Credit to the young speakers who shared their memorial tattoos with us. Thank you Hayden Gonzalez, Sarah Nagy, Jeff Ford, Genny Leonards, Kendal Phillips, Amanda Ackerman and Shannon McCoy.

This story came to mind not only because of this type of tattooing becoming popular, but because just like the people interviewed, my tattoo is for a loved one who passed away. When I was 9 years old, my dad was put on a list for a liver transplant. From before I was born, my father had a liver disease called Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis, which is the swelling, scarring or destruction of the bile duct. He lived his life how he wanted to, not letting his disease slow him down or ruin his life. PSC is not usually fatal, but in my dad’s case, it was. In late 2001, the disease worsened, leaving my dad very, very sick.. He was in the Lancaster General Hospital while his condition got critical. The doctors then moved him up to Philadelphia, where he waited for a liver transplant. When we visited he seemed to be getting better, up until December 16, 2001, when the disease took over his weakened body. He was very sick, throwing up blood to the point where the doctors had to do a blood transfusion. He died that night. Eight years later i decided to get a tattoo in memory of him. I chose to get “I love you” in his handwriting from a card given to me when I was younger. Now I will always have him with me. Forever&Always -Jordann Stekervetz

 

Update your Playlists for the Summer

By Storm Kelley –

Break in the summer with new music from some of your favorite artists.

The list includes artists ranging from a number of genres. Country music by Eric Church, some post-hardcore by Attack! Attack!, “run the world” with R&B singer Beyonce, Get rowdy with Flogging Molly’s new CD, Speed of Darkness, then rap things up with rapper Lil Wayne, The Carter IV.

Lil Wayne's Carter IV Album Cover. Courtesy of RapUp.com

Country star Eric Church re-enters the scene with his new CD, Chief, being released on July 26. Church released his single, titled “Homeboy” for the album, on February 28. Some tracks on his new album include “Drink in my hand”, “Springsten” and “Over when its over.”  According to Billboard.com, Church’s single is rated number 21 on this weeks most popular country songs chart.

Looking for some beats to drive around with? Lil Wayne releases his new CD in the Carter series, The Carter IV, on June 21. After much anticipation for Wayne’s new album and many delays, Zimbio.com released information about rapper Lil Wayne’s mix-tape leak. Songs that the album are to include are titles, Exclusive, How you doing, and a hidden track, Call of Duty. Wayne calls upon a few other rappers for his new CD, with feats including, popular rappers, Jay-Z, Dre, Swizz Beatz, and Tyga.

With much enthusiasm for Wayne’s new release, Brendan Carroll, a senior at Penn Manor High school calls Wayne, “the black Jesus Christ.”

Beyonce released her single “Run the World (girls)” for her new album 4, on May 19. According to NME.com the first for music news, Beyonce states, her next single “1+1” is her favorite song on the album.  4 comes out on June 28th, and has been confirmed to feature a collaboration with Andre 3000, from the band Outkast. Some titles from the album include; “Love on top,” “I miss you,” and “End of time.”

Flogging Molly's Speed of Darkness ablum cover. Courtesy of LA Times.

Cody Wedge, a senior at Penn Manor High school, describes Beyonce as, “amazing and beautiful.”

The post-hardcore band Attack! Attack! brings it back with their new album titled, The Latest Fashion. On a review given by Alterthepress.com, Sean Reid says, “Although some of the ideas, especially the guitar work, later on sounds recycled, Attack! Attack! have managed to produce a record that is persistent throughout and does not disappoint.”  Titles on the album include “Seen me lately,” “Everybody knows,” and “No excuses.” The Latest Fashion is expected to be released on June 21.

For those of you who are impatient, you may find solace in Flogging Molly’s, Speed of darkness. Speed of darkness is released today. Containing tracks titled, “Revolution,” “So Sail on,” and “Saints and sinners.” This will be the fifth installment to the celebrated celtic punk ensemble. Song writer Dave King quoted, “It wasn’t the album we set out to write. It became the album we had to write.”

A senior at Penn Manor, Taylor Stump, describes the band as a “rowdy bar band.”

Get your Ipod out and update that playlist because summer’s hot days are right around the corner.



Hair Extensions Stolen rather than Cash

By Chelsea Miller and Iris Santana –

Clip it, Glue it, Weave it!

Hair extensions are becoming very popular nowadays. From Sammi from the Jersey Shore to Scene Queens modeling for the internet– they are even getting so popular that people are willing to steal them. Not just to wear them, but to make money off of them.

“My hair takes long to grow and I wanted to give length to my hair,” said Harlie Madonna, a sophomore at Penn Manor who got extensions to her hair.

Hair extensions can be applied three different ways. You can either clip them in, glue them in or weave them in. Weaving the hair extensions in is a more permanent way of applying them if you want them in for a while (6 months to a year). In order to have the best quality, you must get them tightened every two to three weeks. This is the most expensive but easiest type of way to get extensions done.

Sally Beauty Supply

When getting your extensions glued, you have to use a special kind of glue. There are many different types such as: ones that dry clear, ones that are made for darker hair and ones that are made for lighter hair. Glued extensions last at least two weeks only if you wash it a certain way. Getting your extensions glued in may not be the best way, however, because they can leave you with bald spots if you don’t apply them the right way.

The easiest and fastest way to put your extensions in is by getting clip ins. You can take them out and put them in whenever you please.  You can’t sleep with them in and you can’t shower with them. These extensions last up to four months, only if you take good care of them.

Extensions can range from $10 to about $200. It basically all depends on how much hair you get, the length of the hair, the quality and the kind of hair. Synthetic is fake hair and is cheaper than Remy, real human hair. Remy hair is the more popular type of extension because you can treat it as actual hair, meaning you can cut, dye, straighten or even curl it.

Clip in hair extensions

Ever since extensions have become popular, people are willing to steal for them.

There have been a couple of cases around the country where people have broken into stores to steal hair extensions.

In Pearland, Texas a beauty salon was stuck twice. The robbers only stole the extensions, no money.  The same thing happened in Missouri when a beauty shop was broken into for only hair, not the cash available. The criminals only stole Remy hair, not synthetic.

Police think it may be a part of a large crime ring.

Whoever the criminals are they sure can get rich quick from all that hair.

Wall Mosaic Won’t be Complete

By Lyta Ringo –

In the past years, hundreds of students have worked on it. Put all their time and effort into the mosaic, and in the end, the wall will not be completed by its scheduled time.

Terry Hay, an art teacher at Penn Manor and the head of the Starry Night Mosaic said, “I figure we lost about twenty days of glass application (just this year).”

Whitney Reno, a senior at Penn Manor also noted that a lot of time was lost this school year due to an increase in weather problems.

“There was a week straight of rain and I couldn’t go out and work on the wall,” said Reno, “at that time that was the only step I had to work on.”

The glass will not all be on the wall by the end of this school year, leaving lots of summer work up to Mrs.Hay. The wall has been worked on by many students in the district throughout the year.

“Students that were finished with their class work, worked on finishing the glass pieces,” said Hay, “Every single one of my students this year has done glass work.”

The glass work is considered the easiest part of the process, however, the most time consuming. Hay commented that having every student help was a good thing because the students will be able to look back and know that they were a part of the mosaic.

One student in the school has put a lot on work into the wall. Reno has been helping with the wall since the day the project began. This year she took an independent study, during second block, to focus entirely on the mosaic.

Reno stated that she likes the design aspect of the project. She will be attending college for a degree in design next year.

“Putting the design together, onto the paper model,” said Reno, “I only did it for a short time, but it was my favorite part.”

The time consuming steps to the wall can cause some mixed emotions about the project.

“I enjoyed putting it (the mosaic) on the wall, but it got frustrating,” said Reno.

Even though the wall is not complete, the product so far has those involved very optimistic.

“I’m happy (with how the mosaic is turning out) the only thing is there is a grid line, and you can see the individual sections,” said Reno, “I’d like for them to not be there, but in a way it’s kind of cool because each student will be able to know which part they helped work on.”

The Starry Night Mosaic has been a learning experience for all.

Mrs.Hay said, “The one thing this (mosaic) has taught me is that going slow does have it’s advantages.”

Peter Deluca Asked to Try Out for the Red White and Blue

By Connor Rowe –

Starting as a freshman didn’t settle him.

Peter Deluca, a lacrosse goal keeper and a graduate from Penn Manor High School was walking through a high school gymnasium to collect his diploma one year ago. He knew his future would consist of playing lacrosse at Jacksonville University, but Deluca didn’t know everything.

What Deluca didn’t know is that he would start every game for the Dolphins. He didn’t know he would post 169 saves averaging a .508 save percentage. He didn’t know he would lead the Dolphins to its first ever Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Tournament.

The achievements didn’t end there for the dynamite goalie.

Photo courtesy of www.JUdolphins.com

Deluca took on the long-time powerhouse in lacrosse, the Duke Blue Devils on April 30. He posted 20 saves between the pipes. He held the crew to 10 goals on 46 shots.

With 2,043 in attendance at the game, the skill was seen by many.

However, his play was not just witnessed by the fans. The conference selected him rookie of the week for tying his career-high in saves against the Blue Devils. This deserved notice.

The notice delivered, Deluca was selected to try-out for the US under-19 team.

He is just one of 12 goalies along with 122 players overall to be invited by US Lacrosse according to the JUdolphins.com website.

Deluca had much to say on the reward, “I was super excited, it was a huge honor just to be selected for the tryout. Being 18 years old representing my country would be pretty sweet, it would be nerve-racking but I think that having a year of college under my belt will definitely help a lot.”

 

 

Tressel Announces Resignation amid Allegations

By Connor Hughes –

  Courtesy of leeloveshottrends.com.
Former Ohio State coach Jim Tressel commanding the sidelines.
The turmoil took its toll on Jim Tressel.

 

Tressel, who led Ohio State to its first national title in 34 years, resigned Monday amid NCAA violations from a tattoo-parlor scandal that had many college football fans wondering about the validity of his program.

Tressel had a record of 106-22 at Ohio State.  He led the Buckeyes to eight Bowl Championship Series games in his 10 years.
But there were problems amidst the glory.

“After meeting with university officials, we agreed that it is in the best interest of Ohio State that I resign as head football coach,” explained Tressel.

Luke Fickell from Ohio State will be the coach for the 2011 season. He already had been selected to be the interim head coach while Tressel served a five-game suspension.

Although most people believed that Tressel would serve his suspension and then continue to coach at Ohio State, the allegations and accusations were too much for the 58-year-old coach.

Tressel’s downfall began when it became apparent he had prior knowledge of players receiving improper benefits from the owner of a local tattoo parlor.  The public and media pressure then began to mount on Ohio State and Tressel.

Tressel and Ohio State were to go before the NCAA’s infractions committee Aug. 12 to answer questions about the player violations and why Tressel did not report them. He denied knowledge of improper benefits to players until confronted by investigators with emails that showed he had known since April 2010.

Ohio State officials began preparing an appeal of the players’ sanctions. It was then that investigators found that Tressel had learned in April 2010 about the players’ involvement with the federally-investigated parlor owner, Edward Rife.

A local attorney and former Ohio State player, Christopher Cicero, sent Tressel emails involving the improper benefits, according to national media accounts.  Tressel and Cicero swapped multiple emails on the subject, said investigators.

Tressel had signed an NCAA compliance form in September 2010 saying he had no knowledge of any violations by athletes.

Also on Monday, The Columbus Dispatch reported that Pryor is the subject of a “significant” inquiry by the NCAA and Ohio State regarding cars and other improper benefits he may have received.

Later Monday, Sports Illustrated reported that at least 28 players, 22 more than the university has acknowledged, were involved in exchanging memorabilia for services as far back as 2002, Tressel’s second season at Ohio State.

www.midwestsportsfans.com
Jim Tressel and Terrelle Pryor celebrating a win.

After the article’s publication, athletic director Smith issued this statement:

“During the course of an investigation, the university and the NCAA work jointly to review any new allegations that come to light, and will continue to do so until the conclusion of the investigation.”

“Coach Jim Tressel has made positive contributions to Ohio State and its student athletes during his tenure,” Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said in a statement. “He has also acknowledged making a serious mistake.”

But at one time his image was that of an honest man who always thought before he acted.  His nickname was “The Senator” for always having his integrity above all else.

“As I think back to what I could have done differently … I’ve learned that I probably needed to go to the top legal counsel person at the university and get some help,” Tressel said in an interview with ESPN.

“I don’t think less of myself at this moment,” he said. “I felt at the time as if I was doing the right thing for the safety of young people.”

Memorial Day Weather is Bright, Sunny and Hot, Hot, Hot

By Hayden Gonzalez and Alex Geli –

The fantastic memorial weekend weather has been a great change from the rainy months that we have been experiencing. Many people have been getting together enjoying the nice weather, having picnics and swimming.

According to to Weather.com, Monday had a high of 91 degrees. But if you were outside yesterday it felt like a melting 97 degrees. Tuesday’s weather is supposed to hit a high of 92 degrees.

Wednesday there is a chance of thunderstorms but may only reach 88 degrees. Thursday’s weather is predicted to be partly cloudy and a high of 88 degrees. Friday is supposed to be partly cloudy as well with a high reaching 78 degrees. Saturday and Sunday are supposed to be a high of 85 degrees but Saturday has a chance of thunderstorms and Sunday is supposed to be sunny and humid.

Some people didn’t participate in any activities because it was so hot.

“That’s the whole reason why I didn’t leave my house, because it was hot,” said senior at Penn Manor High School Emily Hess.

Conestoga Township is one of the local pools open for swimming this summer. Photo courtesy co.lancaster.pa.us

“I stayed home and watched Netflix because it was so hot,” said Troy Diffenderfer a junior at Penn Manor High School.

The hot air has been coming from a warm front from the bottom eastern region of the country and mixing with a cold front coming from the western region of the country.

“It has been so hot the past couple of days I don’t feel like doing anything while the sun is out,” said senior at Penn Manor High School, Noah Kuhn.

Pools just began to open over the weekend. Skyline pool charges $18 per person for non-residents and $13 per person for residents living in Manheim Township. Also, Lancaster County pool has opened up starting at $5 per person per day. A Millersville pool membership is $160 for a single person for a year and $250 for a household for an entire year.

“My memorial day weekend was great except it was scorching outside and I needed to take a dip in the pool,” said senior at Penn Manor High School, Jeff Ford who has a pool in his backyard.

Picnics are also becoming a more common scene around because of the much better the weather is in general.

“We had chicken, rice, burgers, hot dogs, chips, soda and steak. I ate a very healthy meal and right after that I went to sleep” said a freshman at Penn Manor, Antonio Vega.

The Ultimate Gamble Creates our Food Supply

By Evan Shertzer –

Every year they always go all in, they have no other choice.

A wheat harvest in Kansas. Photo from gainescommunications.com

It’s spring and the weather is finally nice. It’s a big time of the year for farmers, it’s planting time. This is the time of year when every farmer around here is rushing to plant their corn, beans and many other crops. After the large amount of rain and flooding during the previous weeks, the weather was finally nice outside so all the farmers scurried to get their crops growing.

That is their gamble, by placing all their money in and hoping to get out more than they put in.

Farmer’s got an average $3.83 per bushel of corn in 2010 according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. In 2011 though, the cost per acre of planting corn is supposed to go up 13 percent to 14 percent, which means profits go down.

“For rotational corn, which is most of the corn in Indiana, our estimates show variable costs in 2011 up around 13 percent compared with 2010,” Bruce Erickson, Purdue’s director of cropping systems management and a crop guide contributor, said. “Soybean production costs will be up around 6 percent, and for winter wheat we’re estimating that costs will be 13 percent higher. If you grow continuous corn, you can expect to spend about 14 percent more next year.”

Farmer’s are essential to America’s economy and growth. They provide our food, and they supply thousands of workers all around the country with jobs. They were the base for our country for a long time and without them America would not survive.

This price increase per acre will be effecting farmers all across the nation, and even a few Penn Manor students who plant their own crops and vegetables.

Tyler Bauman and Alex Cantey of Penn Manor both plant crops for an SAE project in the FFA and for their profit.

“We have a business for selling crops together such as watermelon, tomatoes, cantalope, beans, strawberries and over 15 other various crops,” Cantey said.

Bauman and Cantey sell their crops at a vegetable stand by Central Manor Mart on Rt. 999. They also sell their vegetables to a Leola auction where they make money. Their business has been going for a year, and has gained them a profit of $15,000 during last year.

“Between sprays, seeds, chemicals and plants, it costs about $5000 for everything during the season,” Bauman said. “We plan to make anywhere from $30,000 to $40,000 this year in profit.”

The duo of farmer’s aren’t going to be feeling the pain of rising prices this year though.

“The prices won’t really effect us because we don’t plant corn or soybeans,” said Cantey.

A Lancaster County Cornfield. Photo from flickr.com

“We do plant sweet corn though,” Cantey said. “With sweet corn we plant the plots one week apart so it all doesn’t come in at one day. This helps with harvesting and also lets us sell sweet corn longer.”

Another student farmer at Penn Manor is graduating senior Kaleb Long, who will be effected with his small business by the rising prices.

“The prices for feed for my animals have increased dramatically,” Long said, “The feed has already gone up $100 a ton, and it will continue to rise.”

“With all the severe weather, corn that should already be a few inches tall hasn’t even been planted yet,” said Long.

Long has a business of breeding swine or pigs. He has had his business for four years, and continues to keep his business on growing. Long has a plan though to keep his business from going under by the prices rising.

“As the prices rise for corn and feed, I will just continue to raise my prices of pigs,” Long said, “I want to keep my business growing.”

These students have been working for the past few years on their projects for the FFA to gain essential skills as farmers as well as a profit in cash. These skills will be helping them with their future goals as farmers. The skills and knowledge the students get from raising animals, planting, growing,  harvesting and selling their own crops will be a great help in their career.

“We plan to make this our future and career,” Cantey said. “We want to buy or lease more land and expand our business so it grows.”

These businessmen are the future for agriculture in our area and the future for our local produce market. Without these students there wouldn’t be any more local crops and roadside stands. Even though the prices for raising produce and crops might be rising, they continue to grow and sell us crops.

These FFA students are the future for Lancaster’s local produce businesses, and they will continue to make Lancaster proud of its home grown products and animals.

McCreery, America’s Newest Idol

By Kayla Pagan –

Wednesday night American Idol fans chose the tenth season winner, Scotty McCreery.

Seventeen-year-old McCreery and runner up, Lauren Alaina who is 16 walked hand-in-hand for the all-country two-hour finale in Los Angeles.

Together they brought the biggest amount of votes in the history of American Idol with a total of 122.4 million viewer votes.

“I was rooting for Scotty McCreery,” said senior Ashley Bowers.  ” I love his voice and I’m glad he won.”

McCreery stuck to his style by putting his own country twist to every week’s challenge.

He had out-shined top singers such as 20-year-old Casey Abrams, a jazz fanatic of Idyllwild, California, 22-year-old rock lover from Santa Cruz, California, James Durbin to Haley Reinhart, a 20-year-old vocalist from Wheeling Illinois.

Unlike Alaina, he was outgoing and connected very well with the audience.  He had an idea why he had been voted American Idol’s tenth season winner.*

American Idol's tenth season winner. Photo courtesy of frogenyozurt.com.

“It’s because I’m one of them.  I was just a kid who was bagging groceries three months ago,” he told Derrik J. Lang, a member of the Associated Press.

Wednesday the two finalist had performed individually with Tim McGraw, a country icon as well as Carrie Underwood, Idol’s fourth season winner.  The two were the youngest pair in the history of Idol.  Alaina had just made the cut for the season auditions last year, auditioning at age 15 which is the minimum age requirement.

“Scotty wasn’t my favorite from the beginning,” said senior Kendal Siegworth.  “But after awhile he started growing on me,  I definitely think he deserved to win.  He is extremely talented.”