Creative Writing – Fonts
By, Hailey Griffith | Writer September 13, 2016 Snow is simple cursive letters, the elegant colors and pointed cold. Rain is thin Gothic letters, brutally dark and gently somber. Leaves are an elegant stretch […]
By, Hailey Griffith | Writer September 13, 2016 Snow is simple cursive letters, the elegant colors and pointed cold. Rain is thin Gothic letters, brutally dark and gently somber. Leaves are an elegant stretch […]
By, Max Jonnaert | Sports Editor After a big time feature on the 3.8 million follower Instagram account ‘House of Highlights’ and a plethora of other sports related accounts, SCHS’s Loud Crowd has taken the […]
By: Zack Gardner | Videographer September 21, 2106
By Josh Greene | Writer/Photographer September 8, 2016 Last week, students of the AP Environmental Science classes received an unfamiliar brochure to an unfamiliar land: Iceland, the land of fire and ice. Students will have the opportunity […]
By, Chloe Rudnicki | News Editor September 7, 2016 A surge of far-right conservatism has swept the world as war-torn regions, such as the Middle East, plummet into deeper chaos. An unforgiving global socioeconomic […]
By, Camryn Ostrander | Writer & Kenzie McKinnon | Writer September 8, 2016 For anyone, coming into a new and unknown environment can be scary and nerve-racking–especially if it’s high school. For freshmen, coming […]
By, Darren DiMarco |Writer September 8, 2016 A class full of oil, metal, gas, and cars, San Clemente High School’s Auto Academy fires up its engines once again this school year. Excited students ready to have fun, […]
By, Hailey Griffith | Writer September 8, 2016 They say that the lion fell in love with the lamb, but what if it was the lamb who fell in love with the lion first? […]
By, Brooke Herbes | Social Media Director September 7, 2016 Welcome Tritons to the 2016-17 school year! This year a group of previous and current environmental science students joined together in order to start […]
Saffron Sener | Editor in Chief August 15, 2016 Over the past three years, I’ve grown accustomed to greeting my upperclassmen acquaintances, specifically those of the senior persuasion, in the halls, and looked forward […]