16
June 2010 June 2010 Cover Story: Stevens Point teen makes Cover Story: Stevens Point teen makes national canoe, kayak team national canoe, kayak team A product of the Stevens Point Journal A product of the Stevens Point Journal and Boys & Girls Club and Boys & Girls Club

Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Has articles from different schools in the Stevens Point area.

Citation preview

Page 1: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

June 2010June 2010

Cover Story: Stevens Point teen makes Cover Story: Stevens Point teen makes national canoe, kayak teamnational canoe, kayak team

A product of the Stevens Point Journal A product of the Stevens Point Journal and Boys & Girls Cluband Boys & Girls Club

Page 2: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

2June 2010June 2010

STEVENS POINT TEEN MAKES NATIONAL STEVENS POINT TEEN MAKES NATIONAL CANOE, KAYAK TEAMCANOE, KAYAK TEAM

By Nicole StrittmaterJournal staff

For the third straight year, Stevens Point athlete Hailey Thompson has made the USA Canoe and Kayak National Slalom Team.

Thompson, 16, fought against the best whitewater paddlers in the country to keep her spot on the team during the USA Canoe & Kayak Team Trials, which took place early May in Wausau.

She made the senior national team for women’s whitewater canoeing. She placed first, making her the top ranked paddler in the U.S. She also made the junior national team for canoeing and kayaking. View gallery

In 2008 and 2009, she was on both the junior and senior teams for canoeing. This is the first year she made the junior national team for kayaking, said Ashley Knutson, operations manager for the Wausau Kayak and Canoe Corporation.

This summer, Thompson will compete in the Senior World Cup Series, which involves three different races in Europe. She’ll compete in a variety of races to determine her International Canoe Federation ranking.

She also will compete in the Junior World Championships in France in July.

If this were an Olympic year, these races would help determine who goes to the next games, Knutson said.

Thompson has her eye on the Olympics, but women’s canoeing isn’t an Olympic event. She and her parents, Jean Buckley and Michael Thompson, have more than 1,200 signatures on a petition they will send to the International Canoe Federation and the International Olympic Committee.

Thompson has been maneuvering through a whitewater river in kayaks and canoes since she was 12. Whitewater kayaking involves sitting down in the kayak with a double-bladed paddle. In a canoe, she is kneeling with a single-bladed paddle.

In addition to making the national teams, she has been the Junior

Olympics Overall Champion three times. She won the Junior Olympics freestyle, extreme slalom and boater cross events and has been the Junior Midwest Freestyle Champion. She won the U.S. Open, a slalom race, in 2009 and 2010, after she took third place in 2008.

She placed second at the Olympic trials in 2008 and fourth at pre-Worlds in Tacen, Slovenia in 2009.

TOM LOUCKS/STEVENS POINT JOURNAL. Hailey Thompson and her mom Jean

Continued on Page 4

Page 3: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001106554

“A” is forAffordable.

*Savings based on national (except FL, CA, NJ) customer-reported data for new autoand home policies in 2008. Actual savings will vary. Property insurance is subject toavailability. Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company, Northbrook, IL. © 2009Allstate Insurance Company.

Eric Nier(715) 341-38382740 Stanley St., Suite DStevens [email protected]

"A" is also for Allstate Agent.

When you’re looking to save on insurance, I’m the firstperson to call. In fact, people who switched their homeand car insurance to Allstate saved an average of $503a year. Call me today to see how much you can save.

Where Service Continues After The Sale!

Hours: Mon.-Wed. 8-5 Thurs. 8-7, Fri. 8-6

Sat. 8:30-Noon

1300 OKRAY AVE, PLOVER

345-0006

Servicing the Stevens Point/

Plover Area for 30 Years

Authorized

SALES/SERVICE5001106618

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N

CAU

TIO

N CAU

TION

CAUTIO

N CAU

TION

CAUTIO

N CAU

TION

CAUTIO

N CAU

TION

CAUTIO

N

TION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUT

TION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION CAUT

2451 Plover Road 343-7980

DO NOTtry this at home!Leave it to the professionals at...

Our May Color Saleis on NOW!*

*Some exclusions apply. See store for details.5001106652

3June 2010June 2010

TOM LOUCKS/STEVENS POINT JOURNAL. Hailey Thompson, 16, of Stevens Point

XAI KHA/WAUSAU DAILY HERALD. Hailey Thompson, 16, of Stevens Point

Page 4: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

135 North Division Street, Stevens Point5001105952

5001106022 For more information call:

341-4490 or 341-2000

Maps/schedules are available at the University Center, Trigs, Copps South, Shopko, on any city bus, and at stevenspoint.com

Passes can be purchased at Trigs, Copps South, and Shopko

Special Needs Transportation Available for Disabled Persons

BE GREENBE GREENsavesave greengreenand and

Freedom passes are now available for your student! Purchase a $20.00 Freedom pass and your student rides all summer long on city bus!! Freedom and independence for your student – less stress and cost for parents-

Visit friends – go to the public pool – library- appointments- jobs

Attention Parents

4June 2010June 2010

TEEN PADDLER HAILEY THOMPSON IN ‘STATE OF TEEN PADDLER HAILEY THOMPSON IN ‘STATE OF ELATION’ AFTER QUALIFYING FOR NATIONAL TEAMELATION’ AFTER QUALIFYING FOR NATIONAL TEAMBy Nicole StrittmaterJournal staff

Stevens Point teen Hailey Thompson is no stranger to the USA Canoe and Kayak National Slalom Team.

She’s been on it not once, not twice, but three times. And she’s only 16.

During the USA Canoe & Kayak Team Trials in early May in Wausau, she made the senior national team for women’s whitewater canoeing. She placed first, meaning she is the top-ranked paddler in the U.S. She also made the junior national team for canoeing and kayaking. View gallery

But in recalling the weekend trials, the first thing she mentioned wasn’t about how excited she was.

“I was really impressed with the performances of my competitors,” she said.

And that’s what made her mother, Jean Buckley, most proud.

Buckley recalled a 14-year-old girl who had never raced at the trials before. The girl was nervous and very emotional as she tried to paddle through the elaborate course.

“I saw my daughter being really supportive of her,” Buckley said with a voice scratchy after cheering for all the athletes. “I think she showed herself to be a bit of a leader for some of the younger kids who had never paddled at Wausau.”

One of Thompson’s good friends missed making the team by seconds, and Buckley said she saw her daughter consoling him.

“That’s the kind of stuff that I think is probably the most important -- encouraging others and supporting others,” she said. “It’s great if you make the team yourself, but it’s also great to be a friend to someone who’s ...

had a bad trial.”But Thompson is elated that she made the

team for a third time.“I try to come into competitions with a really

open mind and no cemented expectations of how I’m going to do,” she said. “It was really thrilling to be able to see how I matched up against them.”

She said the moment when she found out she made the national team was “a state of elation you can’t really comprehend.”

In the past, she said she’s had trouble preparing mentally for competitions, but she was comfortable in Wausau.

“I was so close to home and I had trained there often,” Thompson said.

The day after she finishes school at Stevens Point Area Senior High, she will f ly to Europe for the Senior World Cup Series, which is three races in the Czech Republic, Spain and Germany. She’ll also compete in the Junior World Championships in France in July.

She said she’s received a lot of support at school and from her family.

“It means the world to me,” she said, “and I really hope that I can bring back a cool story after this summer.”

Page 5: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

2800 Hoover Road, Stevens Pointwww.herrschners.com

Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Sunday 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

• Quilt shop now open with fun and funky fabrics.

• Easy to make patterns for apparel, home décor, and art pieces.

• Ongoing knit and crochet classes.• Scrapbooking Section.

Fun and friendly staff to help you with all of your questions

from the beginner to the advanced.

Make your space your own!

Retail Store

Largest selection of yarn in the

area.

Jewelry Section

5001106671

Page 6: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

6June 2010June 2010

By Nicole StrittmaterJournal staff

P.J. Jacobs Junior High School Principal Dan Dobratz is shy and reserved. He doesn’t toot his own horn, and he always wants attention on students and staff members.

But during, appropriately enough, National Teacher Appreciation Week, he couldn’t remain in the background.

On Tuesday, you wouldn’t have mistaken him for shy. He couldn’t say enough about his great students, and he was constantly smiling. He still was on cloud nine because the Wisconsin Association of School Councils named him Wisconsin middle school/junior high Principal of the Year over the weekend.

The reason he was so excited wasn’t because he won, though; it was because his student council surprised him with the award.

The student council submitted the nomination without telling him. They worked with his family to compile information, filled out applications, wrote letters of recommendation and championed his work to the WASC governing board.

“What made it special is no one told me. I was clearly kept out of the process. It was a total surprise,” Dobratz said. “What made it so exciting is they wanted me to have the award. That’s the coolest part. I got recognized by the students.”

WASC promotes student leadership and responsibilities in schools. It’s a statewide organization of public, private and parochial middle, junior and senior high school student government groups, and governed by 12 students and 12 council advisers from six regions in the state. Stevens Point is in Region 2.

Dobratz, who taught in other districts before becoming an administrator, came to P.J. Jacobs in 1992. This is his fourth year as principal, and he previously served as assistant principal.

“He’s been a phenomenal principal when it comes to supporting student leadership. There is not a complaint,” said Alicia Skarsten, student council co-adviser.

Dobratz didn’t even find out about the award until the about 40 students in the student council invited him to their meeting. They wanted to be the first to tell him.

“His face lit up. He was so happy,” said Ashley Stewart, a student council member and also student president of WASC Region 2. “After kind of a rough school year we’ve been having, we decided Mr. Dobratz really deserved it.”

Stewart was referring to the budget cuts the school is going through, and she said she and the students can tell that Dobratz is dealing with tough

decisions.“I thought it was so nice that we could do something nice for him,” Stewart

said. “He’s been a really great principal.”Stewart said Dobratz is very personable and down to earth with the

students.“I was in the school play this year. He always calls me by my character’s

name -- Madame Mysteria,” Stewart said.She lit up when she remembered the time Dobratz called her Madame

Mysteria over the loudspeaker.“He’s really nice to the students. It’s going to be hard to leave next year,”

she said. “I’m really happy that he was voted. He seemed really proud of it.”P.J. Jacobs isn’t the only school recognizing an educator. Throughout this

week, kids are writing letters of appreciation for former teachers and thank-you notes to the faculty and staff members at their schools. The McKinley Center and Plover-Whiting Elementary School PTOs also organized lunches for staff members.

HUMBLE P.J. JACOBS PRINCIPAL GETS CHANCE TO SHINE:HUMBLE P.J. JACOBS PRINCIPAL GETS CHANCE TO SHINE: P.J. JACOBS EDUCATOR GIVEN PRINCIPAL OF THE YEAR HONORP.J. JACOBS EDUCATOR GIVEN PRINCIPAL OF THE YEAR HONOR

DOUG WOJCIK/STEVENS POINT JOURNAL. Dan Dobratz, principal of P.J. Jacobs Junior High School with students

Page 7: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001100914

7June 2010June 2010

SEVENTH SEVENTH GRADER GRADER

IMAGINESIMAGINES

DOUG WOJCIK/STEVENS POINT JOURNAL. Kaylyn Kluck, a 7th grader at St. Peter Middle School

By Nicole StrittmaterJournal staff

As technology constantly changes, it’s hard to imagine what the world will look like 15 years from now.

But St. Peter Middle School student Kaylyn Kluck can think of every detail.

This seventh grader imagines there will be Blangos, personal servants that fit in the palm of your hand. There will be screens on the backs of eyelids, mini satellites installed on brains to access the iNet, and eyepods, music players built into eyes.

She imagines a world where all her school books are loaded into storage bases installed in her brain. To create an essay for school she will use the screens on her eyelids and speak the words. Instead of email there will be telepathic MindMail, and texting is a thing of the past.

Kluck, 13, loves writing science fiction. Her talent for telling descriptive, compelling stories paid off, because she is one of 25 runners up for a Scholastic Book Club’s national writing contest, “The Techno Future is Mine!” She beat out more than 1,000 applicants in grades seven through 12 from all over the country, and she is the only writer from Wisconsin selected. Each runner up won a laptop computer. The grand prize was a $10,000 savings bond.

“(Writing) is one of the best ways of self expression,” Kluck said. “You can write something and it will be there on paper forever.”

Kluck’s piece is a short story about a girl who wants her own Blango, and throughout the story she tries to convince her mother to buy her one.

Kluck has been writing short stories since third grade. This school year, she joined the student newspaper Our Voice, a product of the Stevens Point Journal and the Boys & Girls Club of Portage County. She’s written creative pieces, news stories and opinion pieces, something that her teacher, Michelle Nerren, said gave her confidence.

“It gave her the encouragement she needs to continue writing,” Nerren said.

Nerren praised Kluck’s use of description.“She thought of crazy new technological things and she though about

every detail about them that would make them work,” she said. “Kaylyn is an excellent and creative writer. She blows me away.”

Kluck’s piece is printed on Pages 8 and 9 of this edition of Our Voice.

Page 8: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

8June 2010June 2010

By Kaylyn Kluck, Our Voice StaffS. Peter Middle School Seventh Grader

Today Zee Eden rode the city monorail home from school. All around her the neon lights of the city fl ashed and fl ickered, making the city seem to come alive. Zee had always thought the city she lived in was like a bright, glowing rainbow. While riding the monorail home, Zee zinged her friend Ali. Ali was telling Zee about how her parents planned to get her a Blango of her very own. Zee was immediately jealous. Blangos were the hottest, newest technology from Japan. It was your own personal servant. It did everything from making you snacks to picking up items you dropped. It did whatever it was told and it followed you everywhere, just hovering in the air right next to your shoulder. Plus it fi t in the palm of your hand. Zee would ask her mom for one once she got home. Deep down inside, Zee knew that her mother would probably say no. Sure, her mom had let her get those screens pasted on the back of her eyelids, and sure she had let Zee get a mini satellite installed on the side of her brain so Zee could access the iNet, send zings, and be able to do about ten zillion other things. And yes, her mom let her get an eyepod, the music player built into her eyes so she could listen to her music anywhere, but that was only because everybody had that stuff. Plus it had all been invented two years ago, so eyelid screens, brain satellites, and eyepods were old news. Zee peered out the window of the monorail. Though it was going at high speed, Zee could still see a moving billboard sporting a fl ashy ad for Blangos. “It’s like it knows I’m watching.” Zee said quietly to herself.

Zee got off the monorail and arrived at her metallic silver sphere-shaped home. The automatic doors slid to the side so Zee could stand in the front entrance. “I’m home!” Zee yelled. Zee remembered when about four years ago, she had always carried her heavy backpack home. Now she didn’t need one because all of her school books were loaded into the storage base installed in her brain. To create an essay for school, Zee used the screens plastered to the backs of her eyelids and spoke aloud the words she wanted for her essay. “I’m in the offi ce.” Zee’s mother called back. Zee ran into the offi ce. Zee’s mom, Izzy, was working away on her tiny laptop. Izzy Eden was one of the thousands of people who sat at home all day trying to make sure that the iNet stayed up and running, and was constantly getting more technologically advanced every day. Once she was done with that, Ms. Eden pressed the tiny button on the laptop’s side. Instantly the computer folded into a tiny 1 inch by 1 inch cube, which she put in her pocket. Izzy was dressed in a light blue sweat suit and was

jogging in place on the exercise mat, a white plastic square on the fl oor. The wall screens projected that Zee’s mother was jogging through a tropical rainforest, even though rainforests didn’t exist anymore. While jogging, Izzy was preparing a MindMail to send to her boss. “And yes Mr. Counger, I did prepare the new format for home page, I don’t know how you couldn’t have got it.” Zee’s mom said out loud. Zee knew that everything Izzy was saying was appearing on her eyelid screens. Once Izzy was done speaking the MindMail, she could send it to her boss using the satellite installed in her head. Izzy fi nally noticed her daughter standing in the doorway. “One minute.” She mouthed to Zee. Then Izzy selected the “private” option on her screen, so Zee couldn’t hear what her mother was saying. After 23 long seconds, Zee fi nally saw her mom mouth the word “send.”

Izzy shut off the exercise mat. “Hi sweetie, how was school?” she asked her only daughter. “Good, but guess what, Ali is getting a Blango!” Zee told her mom. “And I really want one too.” “Hmm that’s nice.” Ms. Eden said while taking a sip of mineral water. “Mom did you hear me? I said I really want a Blango of my very own.” Zee informed her mother. She could tell that Izzy wasn’t really listening though. Instead Izzy walked up to the wall, which now had turned from exotic rainforest to the usual navy paint, thanks to the wall screens “decorate” option. “Mirror.” Zee’s mom told it, and instantly the four walls in the offi ce turned to shiny mirrors. “Man I’m sweaty.” Izzy said. “Clean me.” And suddenly the sweat on Izzy’s body began to slowly vanish. Her hair grew to its usual glossy brown state, thanks to her MyControl self-cleaning option. In one minute, Zee’s mom was sweat-free and smelling like a fi eld of fl owers. Everyone depended on MyControls these days to shower them, dye their hair, remove wrinkles and excess body fat, and put them to sleep at night. It was a system installed throughout your entire body that was extremely complex. It was rare that anyone didn’t have one.

“So anyway, I want a Blango more than anything in the world.” Zee said again. “Blangos cost money.” Izzy said while she and Zee walked into the kitchen. “Yeah but it’s the latest thing, lots of kids at school have them.” Izzy rolled her eyes. “Zee, you don’t need a tiny robot following you everywhere you go. Besides, we have Martha.” Zee rolled her eyes. Martha was in the kitchen washing dishes. She was the Eden’s house-bot. With her mechanical arms she robotically scrubbed a plate. Zee groaned as she plopped down on a bar stool. “Yeah but I can’t take Martha to school. She’s as big as me! Blangos are the size of a credit card!” “Whatever Zee, you don’t need a personal robot at school.” Izzy replied roughly. “But Mom, I heard that in a few years schools won’t even exist anymore! Ali says

A DAY IN ZEE’S WORLDA DAY IN ZEE’S WORLD

Continued on Page 9

Page 9: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

9June 2010June 2010

Mad Mats® outdoor carpets are made for serious outdoor use. Constructed of recycled plastic, they do not rot, and carry a one year color warranty. Dirt and debris can be rinsed off with a garden hose or mopped with mild detergent. Mad Mats® are manufactured under fair trade standards.

5001

106

Located between Associated Bank and the Plover Post Offi ce

2611 Post Road, Plover, WI 54467715-498-7225

Your Local Source for Eco-Friendly Products

Put the Casual back into Casual Living...

(715)345-0471(715)345-04711009 First Street, Stevens Point

www.emyjs.com • visit us on Facebook 5001105320

now has a new menu,a new vibe, and extended hours

at

that they’re making little microchips that they are gonna surgically install in our brains. The chips will contain everything we will ever need to know. Isn’t that cool? Everybody in the whole world will be a genius!” Izzy was getting really annoyed with her daughters constant asking for the newest devices. It seemed like Zee asked weekly if she could have the latest this or the latest that. She ignored her daughter’s plea and focused on what they would have for dinner.

“I think we’ll have spaghetti tonight.” Izzy said, walking over to the giant Gourmet-Maker. While Zee adored eyepods and zinging her friends, this was Izzy’s favorite device. The Gourmet-Maker could make thousands of recipes in an extremely short amount of time, as long as you had all the ingredients the machine needed to make it. It took up a lot of the kitchen, but at least it had replaced the stove and cabinets that had held all the food before. She used the touch screen on the machine to select the “meals” tab. She scrolled down to the “spaghetti dinner” option and tapped it. “Do you want garlic bread with it dear?” She called to Zee, who was fuming. “Mom! You aren’t even listening to me! Why am I always the last one to get new devices at school? How come Ali’s parents get her anything she wants and you don’t?” “Maybe it’s because you always want something, and when I fi nally get you it, you want something else a few days later!” Zee’s mom yelled back. Just then Martha set Zee’s plate of spaghetti in front of her. Zee was so angry she didn’t even thank the robot. “I’m not hungry.” Zee told her mom. And with that, Zee turned and marched out of the kitchen, accidently dumping her plate of spaghetti and bread that the Gourmet-Maker had cooked automatically in less than two minutes on the fl oor. Martha scrambled to clean it up.

Zee hopped on the mini escalator leading to the 2nd fl oor of her round-shaped house. She went to her room and closed the door. Flopping down on her bed, she felt bad about the way she had acted. Izzy had been right; Zee was always bugging her for new things. “Dear Mom,” Zee said, preparing a zing to send to her mother, “I’m sorry about what I just did. You’re right, I constantly want new things because my friends have them and I think they

will make my life easier. Hope you understand how sorry I am.” Zee was just about to say “send” when her mom walked in. “Don’t bother sending it, I was eavesdropping.” Izzy said, plunking herself down next to Zee. “I know that you want to be like your friends and have the newest things. But remember that something newer and even greater will come along.” Zee nodded. Her mother continued, “When I was growing up, I would have given anything to have a cell phone so I could do something called “text” my friends. Now we don’t even use phones, because we can zing each other and hear one another’s voices by opening up the zings. We had to write with our hands too, it was terrible.” Izzy explained. “You are very lucky to be growing up in such a technologically advanced time Zee. And I know how much you want a Blango, so if you help me create a new homepage for the iNet because my boss will fi re me if I don’t by tomorrow, we can go buy you one this weekend. I want you to earn it instead of me just giving it to

you.” Zee raised her eyebrows. “Really? Even after the way I acted?” Her mom nodded. “Yeah, we may even be up all night because it’s a big job to format it, but I need your creative mind to help me. The original one I sent today wasn’t very good. With your help, maybe this one will be.”

Soon Zee and her mom had made a great new homepage. Izzy’s boss would surely love it. Once they had fi nished, it was very late at night, so Zee went back up to her room. Using her MyControl, she said, “Let me go to sleep for nine hours.” The MyControl heard her request and ran the order up the surgically installed wires leading to her brain. Soon Zee was in a deep sleep, dreaming about the Blango she would get in a few days.

Page 10: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001100949

10June 2010June 2010

PUPPY CHOWPUPPY CHOW1 stick of margarine1 (17.9 oz) box of Crispix cereal 1 c. creamy peanut butter2 c. powdered sugar12 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips Melt margarine, peanut butter and chocolate

chips together until smooth. In a large mixing bowl, pour mixture over cereal. Mix well until all cereal is coated. Transfer to a large clean paper bag. Add the powdered sugar and shake well. Cool. Store in a covered container

OREO SHAKESOREO SHAKES 18 oreos1 pint of vanilla ice cream or frozen yogurt1 c. milk Chop 16 cookies, blend ice cream, milk and

chopped cookie at high speed until smooth. Use 4-8 oz glasses and top with the remaining cookies.

HERE ARE A FEW OF DANIELLE PEDERSON’S FAVORITE SUMMER SNACKS.HERE ARE A FEW OF DANIELLE PEDERSON’S FAVORITE SUMMER SNACKS.Compiled By Danielle PedersonOur Voice StaffP.J. Jacobs Junior High School Eighth Grader SWEDISH COCONUTSWEDISH COCONUT

Mix:1 lb. butter2 c. oil4 c. sugar2 tbs. baking soda2 tsp. baking powder2 tsp. vanilla1 tsp. salt Add:2 c. coconut 6 c. f lour Chill. Make into balls. Press and dip in sugar. Bake

at 350 degrees for eight to ten minutes.

Page 11: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

Purchase Books at: Bookfinders, Book Look & Book World.For more information call Cheri at: 715-345-5507.

31st AnnualJune Dairy Day

Saturday, June 19, 20108:00 a.m. to noon

Gene, Caroline & ChristinaPeterson Farm

5677 County Rd AAmherst, Wisconsin

Tom Pease ConcertTuesday, July 13, 20106:30 p.m. Pfiffner Park

(Pfiffner Building in case of bad weather)

11June 2010June 2010

SPASH’SSPASH’S PROM PHOTOSPROM PHOTOS

STEVENS POINT JOURNAL PHOTO. Stevens Point Area Senior High prom court 2010

STEVENS POINT JOURNAL PHOTO. Amber Buckles, a sophomore at Rosholt High School, and Austin Walther

STEVENS POINT JOURNAL PHOTO. Junior Prom Pages Chloee Dernbach, a daughter of Keith and Nicky Dernb Continued on Page 12

Page 12: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001108604

101 Division St. Suite B

Stevens Point, WI 54481

(715) 341-2880

COUPON

$1OFF“Love It” size or larger

Signature Creation.

ANY

Expires June 30, 2010

Celebrate a successful school year with

Every fi nal core course grade of “A” earns you a

FREE RENTAL in June!

ns yyyooouuuuu aaaaaaearn

LNTAL

316 Division St.Stevens Point

715-343-5461

5001108978

Be Ready For Summer With

$10.00 OFFAny Color Service

715-570-777123 Park Ridge Dr., Stevens Point

Jeannine @

Salon Prestige

5001

1094

83

12June 2010June 2010

STEVENS POINT JOURNAL PHOTOS. Stevens Point Area Senior High PromSPASH’SSPASH’S PROM PHOTOSPROM PHOTOS

Continued on Page 13

Page 13: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

� Full Service Oil Change� Tire Rotation� Visual Brake Inspection

5001105941

Stevens Point3145 Church St.

Stevens Point, WI 54481

341-1576

Stevens Point - Express 3417 A Church St.

Stevens Point, WI 54481

295-0061

Stevens Point - East 5382 East Hwy 10

Stevens Point, WI 54481

341-1600VISIT US ONLINE AT WWW.AUTOSELECTONLINE.COM

ULTIMATETHE

AUTO SERVICE CENTERS

Quality Dependable Auto Repair &

Service Performed By

Qualifi ed Technicians

You Can TRUST!

3 Convenient Locations To Serve You! Locally Owned & Operated

SpecialSpecial

13June 2010June 2010

STEVENS POINT JOURNAL PHOTOS. Stevens Point Area Senior High PromSPASH’SSPASH’S PROM PHOTOSPROM PHOTOS

Page 14: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001092531

Portage County Public LibraryPortage County Public Library

Summer Library Program for grades 6-12

June 14 to

August 6, 2010

14June 2010June 2010

PENNY PELOT a freelance photographer

PACELLI’S PACELLI’S PROM PHOTOSPROM PHOTOS

Continued on Page 15

Page 15: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

5001106580

P R O M 2 0 1 0

www.dreamweaversbridal.com • 715.344.11812824 Post Road - Bus. 51 S. in Whiting • Stevens Point, WI

Store Hours: Mon & Thurs 10-7 • Wed & Fri 10-5 • Sat 9:30-3 • Closed Tues

Dream Weavers Bridal

Become a Facebook Fan...

Post to “Our Fan Page” and

receive $20 Off on your

next Prom or Formal

Occasion dress.

“Where Your Dreams Begin...”

5001106638

Store Hours: MWF 10-5 • Thurs. 10-7 • Sat. 10-3 • Closed Tues.

Congratulations

2010 Graduates

Become a Facebook Fan...

Post to “Our Fan Page”

and receive $20 Off

on your next Formal

Occasion dress.

15June 2010June 2010

Just like all of you, Our Voice will take a summer vacation, and the next issue will be published at the end of September.

Have a fun and safe break, and if you are in junior high or high school in Portage County and are interested in writing for Our Voice this fall, please call adviser and Stevens Point Journal reporter Nicole Strittmater at 345-2249 or email her at [email protected].

We are always looking for people to join.

EDITOR’S NOTEPENNY PELOT a freelance photographer

PACELLI’S PACELLI’S PROM PHOTOSPROM PHOTOS

Page 16: Stevens Point Journal Our Voice

�������

�������� � ��� ��� ������� ����� ���������� ��������������� �

������������������ �������� �������� ����� � ��������� ���

�� !"#$"����"%�� &"#�'"!�& %�"��'(�#%&�)'�*)&)%�"!�

�� � ������+����������� ������� !#$$�,���)&#(� -./01210/21-

PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY & ORTHODONTICS

���� �������� 3

33��"&

4"&

��!)5

5001108354