Thursday, November 29, 2007

Vote for Lumina News’ Person of the Year

The news staff is brainstorming, trying to select Lumina News’ Person of the Year at Wrightsville Beach, and we need your input. So who's your pick?

Skateboarding and fear of the unknown

My Ocean View
By Jennifer Roush

Being a newcomer to this area can be a good thing because, in a way, I bring a new perspective. I have seen some of the same situations arise and how they are responded to a few states away and I can apply it here.
One topic I’ve covered quite a bit for Lumina News is the idea of building a Wrightsville Beach skate park. Skate parks and skateboarding are something I’ve long been familiar with. When I was a child, my friends loved Tony Hawk, Powell Peralta, and there was even a half pipe in my neighborhood. One of my closest friends rode his skateboard often until it was in shreds.
As I grew up, I still loved to watch people skate, even though I could never manage to do it very well myself. So from 6 years old through college, I had many friends who were skateboarders. And one problem remains the same.
The problem being there are always those who want to skate — because it’s fun, challenging, interesting — and there are so few places to do it. There was not a skate park in Morgantown, W.Va., when I was in college nor in the small town I grew up in. In Morgantown, I saw people skate at night in places where they weren’t supposed to because there was nowhere to go. Like in Wrightsville Beach, when youth skate in parking lots and could tear up property.
Is skateboarding a sport for deviants? No. There are those who ruin it for everyone everywhere. Young people with wrong intentions can make a basketball court a bad place to go or a playground. Should we not build basketball courts or playgrounds?
Some ask: Can children get hurt? They can. But I know a young man who had his knee completely taken out playing football. I can’t tell you all the ripped ACLs I’ve seen people endure playing basketball. People get hurt at playgrounds. Let’s just look at the issue that is at the heart of all this. Difference.
When people look or act differently, it can scare people. We need to accept that young people are constantly trying to find themselves and some may find their creativity and energy best expressed through skateboarding. Is it right to discriminate? What if someone told me I couldn’t pick up a pen and write? Good thing I only need a pen and paper. These kids need a skate park.

Friday, November 02, 2007

The Untold Story

My Ocean View
By Jennifer Roush

In this week’s Lumina News editorial, we talked about the freedom of the press. I’d like to spin off that article to discuss why many of us become journalists.
Starting out, I knew I cared about people’s stories. I observed the things around me, and I didn’t want to feel impotent to do anything about them, so I went into journalism. Granted, the news page is not a forum for my thoughts, but it is a place where I can reflect things that are observed and to be the observer for others.
Being a journalist is a title some do not respect. However, it is a role you need the most honorable people to fill.
We are the proponents of truth, the community advocates, and the ones who will put themselves on the line to tell the story that needs to be told. The ones who learn a subject enough to become a mini-expert in order to inform a community.
I can say, personally, I want to be like an unbiased mirror of the things I report. I believe in justice and that means not compromising your integrity, being fair, doing the research and caring enough to tell the truth even when it’s hard – even when you may receive backlash for it. Many of us who are in the profession don’t want to run over people to get a story, we want to find and tell the truth, so it reaches the light of day. We want to tell the untold story.