NOVEMBER 19, 2008 | THE MEREDITH HERALD • Educating Women to Excel \ VOL XXVI • ISSUE 9 CORNHUSKIN’ RESULTS (SEE PAGE 3) INSIDE News . ■ Mmm, Thanksgiving Events ■ Cornhuskin'^2008 Results Science & Technology ■ Gonllapod: Get a Better Self-taken Picture ■ The Bluetooth Craze Arts & Humanities ■ AFaireDay ■ Sports Overview 6 Sports Athle^s ■i-Sponft.OvervieWf^' * V V - Opinion's Campus Life ■ i«-n't Neejled ‘ ■ man David Price Speaks at me ■ fegwy Green Tip for the Week of November 17 Save energy by turning off your computer monitor every night. During the 2008-09 academic year, Meredith College’s cam pus theme is “Sustaining our Environment: Developing our Greenprint.” To help the Meredith community make daily choices that are ben eficial to the environment, Angels for the Environment have compiled a year’s worth of tips for greener living. To view green tips from previous weeks, visit vmw. meredith.edu/campus-theme/ environmental-tips.htm. EXAM STRESSES By Morgan Ericson Staff Writer In October of2003, WRAL reported a surprise suicide in Lenoir County. Seventh-grade student Jonathan Ward became so upset after receiv ing his report card and a request for a parent-teacher conference that he took his brother’s gun and ended his life. His case represents a seri ous increase in youth suicides; from 1980-1977 rates increased 104% for children ages 10-14. Suicide rates for 15-19-year-olds increased at a lower rate of 11%. Stress seems to be eating away children and adults alike, a phenomena wittily captured by the American Academy of Fam ily Physicians (AAFP) with an arti cle entitled, “Teens and stress: Who has time for it?” Meredith students are experienc ing their own battles with stress as Wednesday, Dec. 3, approaches, marking the last day of classes and final exams that run from Fri day, Dec. 5, to Thursday, Dec. 11. Papers, projects, tests, evalua tions. Midnight runs to Cook Out, an endless amount of cheap cof fee, lack of sleep, hair loss, and weight fluctuation. Who knew that all these things—and more—were included in your college enroll ment? The good news is that you are not alone and that helpftil cop ing mechanisms exist for those suffering stress. Many people believe all stress to be negative but a quick Google search indicates otherwise. Consider a mu sician and her stringed instrument; she must produce some type of ten sion on the strings in order to pro duce a note or song. Too much ten sion results in shrill, cacophonous noise that can make your ears bleed, but the right amount produces vari Pholo courtesy Davis SngUsh ance and a beautiful piece. Another myth pertains to the idea that stress is the same for everyone, when in fact all Meredith students respond in a different manner to their cir cumstances; some can handle more tension than others. So how do you cope with Decem ber Madness, especially if you are a freshman and find yourself com pletely overwhelmed? Senior Tori Keels advises students to “stop, take a minute and walk away from [your] work for 30 minutes or less and then come back to it,” stating that she PliolocounesyUYCHUBming Cenim See EXAM, PAGE 2