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The Repeater is the student-produced literary and arts magazine of Cardinal Gibbons High School. Published annually.
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Cardinal Gibbons High School is a college preparatory school of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Raleigh. We embrace the mission of Jesus Christ
to form men and women of faith, service, and leadership in church and community.
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The Repeater
-2012-
Volume 15
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Vincent Perino
MANAGING EDITORSEmmary Williams and Ellyson Williams
ASSOCIATE EDITORRachel Mintel
STAFFDani Chiavegatto, Hunter Davis, William Fenton, Elisabeth McFarland, Abby
Neal, Daniel Reiland, Annetta San Diego, Karthik Sundaram
COVER DESIGNDavid Torres
ADVISERRachelle D. Garbarine
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We, the staff members of The Repeater, are delighted to bring you this magazine, the work it contains, and the creativity it represents. We would like to thank all who submitted this year and encourage all students not only to read but to reflect upon the work included in this year’s edition.
It is our mission to reproduce the words, thoughts, visions, and dreams of the students, here, at Cardinal Gibbons. We are honored to publish a magazine that acts as a medium for the creativity of students to be shared with a larger community. The works within this magazine remind us of the art already present in our lives and the art that has yet to be created.
The idea of The Repeater originated while art instructor Rebecca Dason was at a school dance. She was sitting next to a student who expressed his desire to have a student-led literary and arts magazine. His opinion was that students had no way of expressing themselves in the classroom, as many assignments did not require much creativity. The original intent was to give students “an opportunity to express themselves through a student publication,” said Dason. The original moderator of The Repeater was Assistant Principal of Student Activities Michael Rogosich. There have been two since: English instructor Toni Sutphin and Rachelle D. Garbarine.
The Repeater
5 Garden Joy Blair Torres 7 Ash Ellie Czejkowski Coil Pot with Lid Tim Rozansky9 Rachel Chloe Mintel Crumple, Crush, Fold Cat Hollister10 Pajaro de Fuego Lauren Long Afternoon Utopia David Torres13 The Things They Carried Christina Mancini Crumpled, Crushed, Twisted William Fenton14 License Plate Hunter Reeves16 Hands Rachel Mintel Person-Plane Rachel Mintel19 Costumes Cat Hollister Sky Ground Water Hunter Davis23 D.C. Chloe Mintel Glenwood Avenue David Torres24 Bugling Impression Blair Torres Iguana Sammy Bratzke27 Nature’s Crown Emmary Williams
Contents
6 Drop of Rain Nathan Godwin8 Nature Interrupts Samuel Raines11 Forever Erin Watson12 Babcia Brenna Buckley17 A Candle Catherine Amos18 A Woman Named Narcissa Natalie Freeman20 Rose’s Heat Stephanie Whitecross22 Flamingo Jack Holgado 25 A Gift and a Curse Catherine Wagner26 Empty Paper Daniel Miles Resilient Sea Turtles Samuel Raines28 A Poem for a Girl Jess Schmitz
Literature Visual Art
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Vol 15| 2012
Garden JoyBlair Torres
This piece has a base of acrylic paints, overlaid with colored pencil and magazine clippings. It received a regional Gold Key from the Scholastic Art Awards.
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Drop of RainNathan Godwin
The Repeater
I
am
Falling
Through this dark
Abyss that does not end.
The wind, try as it may to move me,
Will not distract me from my impending doom.
Nothing can stop my uniformed descent to the earth below.
I am not distinguishable; I am not a unique snowflake; I am one of many.
Our only destiny is to impale the earth with such a miniscule force,
Not even a small mark will remain after we wash away.
Drip drop, pitter patter.
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Ellie Czejkowski
This piece was nationally recognized with a Gold Key from the Scholastic Art Awards. It is made from clay, which was sawdust-fired to give the work its varied earth tones.
This coil pot also was nationally recognized with a Gold Key from the Scholastic Art Awards.
Ash
Coil Pot with LidTim Rozansky
Vol 15| 2012
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The Repeater
Nature InterruptsSamuel Raines
The sun’s first rays hit the freshly raked clayAs man’s shadow darkens the verdant grass,While the blue sky smiles as clouds drift away,Bringing joy to crowds who start to amass.The first pitch is thrown lacking precision.Sensing a fresh danger, the batter prepares.The seams scold the air, striking a collision; As ball meets bone, terrible tension flares.Gloves are thrown off as their clenched fists emerge,As cleats claw flesh, sanguine hues start to stain.Umpires call out as the fight starts to surge;Nature answers back with showers of rain. The players’ spite and malice soon retreat As Nature performs yet another feat.
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Vol 15 | 2012
Crumple, Crush, Fold
RachelChloe Mintel
Cat Hollister
Artist draws self-portrait using ebony pencil.
Drawn entirely in graphite, this piece received a regional Gold Key from the Scholastic Art Awards.
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Pajaro de FuegoLauren Long
Afternoon UtopiaDavid Torres
The Repeater
Shaped from clay, then glazed, this sculpture has a variety of colors.
This acrylic painting was digitally altered to give the sky its texture.
ForeverErin Watson
Vol 15 | 2012
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Forever is never with a single kiss of eternity.It drives sweet opposition to
Those who cannot handle patience.It contains the imagination of those who
Live without limits and always picture future.It thrives in those who are excited to live inCreation and the imaginative persuasion thatConnects reality to the dream world of sleep.
But with the limits of tomorrow and theComplications of our time and age,
Forever is limited within itself.Masking imagination
Behind bars ofInsanity.
ButInsanity
Behind bars of Masked imagination
Limits forever within itselfAnd complicates our time and age.
Limiting tomorrow and causing broken Connection between reality and our dreams.But with imaginative persuasion and creation,
Those who are excited to live their lives thrive.And without limits and always picturing futuresThe imagination of people becomes contained.
And those who cannot handle patienceAre driven to sweet opposition,
The single kiss of eternity, never short of forever.
The Repeater
You always were “tough as nails,” old woman,But you wore that smile a million times.Like a bird, you would hum in the kitchen,And your voice was a blend of songs whose rhymesWould rock me to sleep in your secure arms.You would run around with me, head thrown backIn laughter while I clung to your forearms.But time seized you and began to attack:Your back bent and your feet were not steady.You, a candle whose flame was flickeringCould only sit as if restrained all day,Your eyes like a light bulb slowly dimming. Now you lie with flowers under a tree, But you soar like a bird, your soul now free.
Babcia is Polish for grandmother.
Brenna BuckleyBabcia
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*
*
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The Things They CarriedChristina Mancini
Vol 15 | 2012
This sketch was drawn using pen and ink.
Crumpled, Crushed, TwistedWilliam Fenton
This sketch was done using ebony pencil, creating the contrast of light and dark spaces.
License PlateHunter Reeves
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The Repeater
15
Vol 15 | 2012
This piece was created with a collage of magazine images covered in the white Nevr-Dull.
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The Repeater
HandsRachel Mintel
Person-PlaneRachel Mintel
This piece was drawn with pen and ink.
This image was made using a process called batik. The white portions are completed through a wax dripping process. Once dried, the whole piece is dipped in ink. The wax is removed to reveal the final product. The piece received an honorable mention from the regional Scholastic Art Awards.
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A CandleCatherine Amos
Vol 15 | 2012
A
Candle is not butA long waxen stick,A thick, sturdy base.On top, a small wick.
It can say no kind word,Cannot fix what has failed;
No kiss from a mother,No cure for the ailed.
Yet the flame of a candleCan offer such hope
To the hearts of thousandsWho manage to cope.
To the heart of a motherWho’s lost her young one,
To the soul of a manWhose love is undone.
And when the candle’s burnt through,And they find it at its end,
There’s not loss of that hope,Simply love that ascends.
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The Repeater
A Woman Named Narcissa
The house still cold in the silent morning,Sounds pierce the stillness. The first sunrays sliceThe mirror she gazes into. AdorningHer blank easel, her veiny lids blink twice.She reaches for a brush, the bristles cakedWith concealer. Powder tickles her nose.She dabs rouge on her sharp cheekbones, warmth faked,The pigment dying her skin a deep rose.She coats her spider lashes midnight black,Creating a thick web to trap her prey.She combs corn-silk hair running down her back,Then pats on the sweet scent of a bouquet. But no makeup covers of what she’s made: Just vain ideals not meant to be displayed.
Natalie Freeman
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CostumesCat Hollister
The artist used bright watercolors to fill in her playful pen and ink characters.
Sky Ground WaterHunter Davis
The photographer captured the tree’s refection in a muddy pool.
Vol 15 | 2012
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The Repeater
Rose’s Heat Stephanie Whitecross
Rose’s eyes snap open, the last essence of the dream fading entirely too fast. She feels the almost tangible, heated gravity seeping away from her…from her wrists…her palms, and as she feels it just about to leave her fingertips, she tries desperately to grasp at the gentle sting that she was completely enveloped in only moments ago. Before she even realizes, she jumps out of bed, something she immediately regrets. She rushes back into the pile of blankets that make up the only heater she has anymore. When Rose’s mother left her and her father, it seemed like she took everything: the money, the happiness, and the heat—Rose’s heat. After all, Rose learned it all from her mother. She was the one who Rose got it from. It’s simple genetics: if one of your parents is a Gift Bearer, then the child will be as well. Rose had all the same powers as her mother, but Rose also had something else—something the other Gift Bearers didn’t quite understand. Yes, she had the standard control over the growth of the nature around her, but the thing the others couldn’t explain was how simple it was to her, and how inclusive. Not only did plants and flowers grow or decay at her command, but trees, too—great, old, grandfather trees—and animals, and soil, and rocks. Everything was at her hands. But in order for any of the Gift Bearers to have power, including Rose, the whole council had to live relatively close to each other, as if to feed on the power of each other. When Rose reached seventeen, when her powers were meant to stop growing and level out, they continued to grow. The council feared she would grow so strong they would have no power at all. In light of this, the council, Rose’s mother included, left the quiet town hoping Rose’s powers would fade away—which, after only a few days, they did. Now, two months after their abandonment, dreams are the only place Rose can go to feel her power, her natural strength, her heat. The artificial heat the blankets provide is nothing compared to the real burn of the sun baking into her pores. The sun was where all the natural energy came from to fuel the power of the Gift Bearers, but the Bearers also attracted the sun, turning even the Olympic Peninsula into a sun-drenched oasis—when the council left, it snowed and snowed for days without end. With each day it snowed, Rose gave up the hope of ever getting her power back. She longed for the steady glow of sunshine on her face. Memories overtaking her, she throws off the blankets and exchanges them for her new-to-her-but-used winter coat that she never had needed until recently. She shoves her sock-covered feet into the first pair of shoes she
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Vol 15 | 2012could find and automatically goes to the ultimate threshold of her sadness: the back door, known for her whole life as the gateway to her haven, the gateway to the golden embrace of the sun. Now, looking out into the gray gloom, Rose tries to imagine feeling her power and bringing up the sun to shine just for her. As many nights before, she raises her hand to the rust-worn latch of the sliding door. She takes a deep breath. “This is the night,” she thinks to herself, craving to hear the sticky crack of the door she knew so well as a child. For the first time in what seems like ages, Rose opens the door. She doesn’t know why tonight, but something about her dream pushes her outside into the almost immediate forest surrounding her house. The deafening silence is almost too much for her when she remembers the bustle of sounds that used to be the soundtrack to her life. Her hands ache to feel the tangible glow that built with every moment she used her power. With each step the ache worsens and the sadness grows, so she stops and looks down at the small rocks next to their mother stone. She raises her hand over the sibling rocks, like she would have in the old days, but something seems to click—maybe the dream that brought her out here was playing tricks on her mind or maybe she was feeling the heat, her heat, originating from her palms and almost hovering on her fingertips. She knows if this is her power coming back, an empty hand waving wouldn’t be enough to roust the embedded power deep inside her. “Move,” she speaks just above a whisper to the lifeless rocks mocking her whispered desperation. “Fine then, I knew you were too scared,” she challenges, and her heart stops when she saw the baby stone hop three inches in the air, flip, and plop right back down. She was so happy she couldn’t remember if she was holding her breath or hyperventilating. She couldn’t let it stop there: “Ha, so you’re just going to let the youngest have all the fun.” Before the words even left her mouth, her hands were set ablaze with the sweet sting of her heat, just as she remembered it. There was no turning back now. She wasn’t going to stop until she was caressing the sunlight. Just as she raised her hands, the small family below her followed. “Very good, I’m impressed,” she awards the solid family, now flying everywhere. The snow around her starts to melt, and Rose’s smile grows. “Alright, it’s now or never,” she says quietly to herself. “Take me higher,” she tells her new friends. One by one the rocks start to form a makeshift throne, with mother stone as the cushion and the siblings flying around her to support the impending flight. Rose feels her feet leave the ground, unable to tell if it’s rocks or the pure, white-hot happiness she feels deep inside. The rocks stop just above the now swaying treetops. She knows what she wants and no longer fears she doesn’t have the power. She lifts her hand to the sky and starts to wipe away the clouds. Once her hand is full, she throws the snow and overcast far down to the forest floor. She beams, for now she is face to face with her power, her sunrise, her heat.
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FlamingoJack Holgado
This
gift
from
nature
sheds
light their appetite.
of
individuality which
pleases the sight
One bird
many have heard
achieves utmost splendor
unlike the ostrich, a contender
Peace
Poise
Balanced through noise
Flamingoes have the ability
To Maintain Unwavering Stability
Being different is the price they pay
for you can spot them from a mile away
Flamingoes are unique for they possess that hue
Which sets them apart from animals colored too
Born
pink
many
would
think, but in fact they are white until they satisfy
The Repeater
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Vol 15 | 2012
D.C.Chloe Mintel
Glenwood AvenueDavid Torres
The artist used a drypoint ink process to create this print. The image is carved into plexiglass and covered in ink which is then wiped off. The ink left in the cracks is pressed onto paper to create a print of the image. This piece won a regional Gold Key from the Scholastic Art Awards.
This artist also used a drypoint process to complete this piece. It received a regional silver key from the Scholastic Art Awards.
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The Repeater
Bugling ImpressionBlair Torres
IguanaSammy Bratzke
This piece uses construction paper overlaid on newspaper to contrast the artist’s colored pencil drawing. It received honorable mention in the Congressional Art Competition.
This sketch of a reptile was drawn with pen and ink; the red color was added using colored pencil.
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A Gift and a Curse
Springing, sprightly, salty summer breezesDance carefree down the path and meet a rose,Whose fair beauty every day increasesAs summer nurtures, and it grows and grows.Soon, swirling, circling, spinning, autumn gustsTwirl tunnels down the path in search of charm,But only find a shell, a brown-as-dust,Brittle façade of the fair rose disarmed.Now whistling, roaring, howling, winter galesStorm down the path, craving tragic chaos.Paper petals whisper, blackened stem fails:The withered rose falls, mourning sadness, loss. For everything, no matter how lovely, Must defer to Time, or learn its folly.
Catherine Wagner
Vol 15 | 2012
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The Repeater
Empty PaperDaniel Miles
Blue rows and a red column Stare back at me as my world plays out.A medium from my world to others— An open canvas.
A safe haven for The free expression Of anger, guilt, and rageWritten by shaking hand,Perused by unseeing eye.
Thoughts unexplainedAnd emotions unexploredFind solace in the neatly lined Paper that lies in my notebook.
Resilient Sea Turtles
Torturous tides taxTranquil turtles, turning and Tumbling them through time.
Samuel Raines
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Vol 15 | 2012
Nature’s CrownEmmary Williams
This headpiece is compiled with pieces taken from nature.
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The Repeater
A Poem for a GirlJess Schmitz
Cheekbones they wear like crowns with pride, accessorized with collarbones.She starts to hide in shapeless shirts, her hollow stomach moans.
Weighted eyelids, she longs to eat but, fearing what’s insideThe shiny wrapper, to her the gym seems safer.The blood red blinking numbers rise with every strideOn the treadmill. She imagines the otherNumbers falling as fast as these ones rise.And those three digits keep her moving.
Long forgotten faces noticeHer shrinking, shrinking physique.
She wakes us swathed inPlastic ribbons, observedBy white-coated men,While one bed overA skinny girlAdmires Samantha’sCollarBone.