the voice issue six

11
issue six // october

Upload: the-voice-avondale

Post on 30-Jan-2016

227 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Celebrating the courage of women globally.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Voice Issue Six

issue six // october

Page 2: The Voice Issue Six

// iss

ue s

ix

2 Editorial

October is also Do It In A Dress month. It’s courageous for a man to wear a dress for a month, and not care what anyone thinks. That’s exactly what this campaign is all about—it aims to raise awareness (and money) for girls in developing countries who don’t have an education.

What we take for granted here—the absolute right to education—is something others in the world are literally dying to have. Imagine if, like Malala, your life was actually under threat for standing up for equal rights.

This month, remember those who are courageous—whether it’s fighting health issues or battling for justice—and do your bit where you can. It might be a donation, a conversation, or a prayer. A little can do a lot.

Comments? [email protected]

“It’s hard to kill. Maybe that’s why his hand was shaking.”

It’s a year since Pakistani schoolgirl and education activist Malala Yousafzai

was shot in the head by the Taliban for advocating for the education of girls in Pakistan. She had the courage to stand up for her rights, to the very point of death. Miraculously, she survived the assassination attempt, and today continues her inspirational campaign for women’s rights.

This issue of The Voice is dedicated to courageous women—not just women like Malala in far-flung Pakistan, but women here in Australia too.

October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. Some of you have been affected, or know someone who’s been affected, by breast cancer, whether it’s a mum, an aunty or a grandma. Maybe they beat it, maybe they didn’t. But you know the fight they went through, and the courage they showed.

Editor Josh Dye

Designer Danelle Morton

Advertising Luke Ferry

Chelsea Mitchell, Claudia Hous-toun, Josh Dye, Laura Mitchell, Lara Campbell, Mitchell Strahan

Writers

The views and opinions expressed in The Voice are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of Avondale College of Higher Education.

Special Thanks to Colin Chuang

CourageJosh Dye

Advertising: [email protected]: [email protected]

Contents 3

Contents

Competition“Twitter Fiction”

page four

Like The Voice - Avondale on

Feature“Winners are Grinners”

Feature “Don’t Rush The Rush”

Feature “A Royal Priesthood”

Vox Pop

Photo Album

page five

page six

page seven

page eight

page ten

page thirteenFeature “A Broken Record”

Feature “Busy”

page fifteen

Culture Corner

While You Were Sleeping...

page seventeen

page eighteen

Page 3: The Voice Issue Six

// iss

ue s

ix

I’d fix the roads around Cooranbong and my hometown Murwillumbah so that I could actually drive on them. Seeing as the local council can’t do it, and being Prime Minister and all, I’d sort that out quick smart.–Brent Whittaker

Tony Abbott, it’s about time you stopped rich and powerful people controlling every inch of our Australian lives. It’s about time cost of living was reduced. It’s about time petrol prices went down, and it’s about time the carbon tax was done away with.–Jemimah Scale

I’m too focused hating on Obama to think about the Australian government.–Cory Chalker

First, I’d get some speech training and a haircut. Then I would leave the smaller matters of running the country up to my hopefully competent ministers and concentrate on building a strong future for Australia in the global economy that doesn’t revolve around mining and fossil fuels. – Gavin Bowyer

Vox Pop

“If you were Tony Abbott, what’s the first change you’d make?”

I would allow New Zealanders to be entitled to Centrelink. Doesn’t the word ‘ANZAC’ mean we’re supposed to have one another’s backs?–Brooke Davidson

First policy change: That all politicians should wear Speedos.–Kaden Pepper

I would create a law that would force food and clothing manufacturer establishments to give their remaining leftover food and clothing to those in need of it.–Jordan Pearce

I’d get rid of the Labor party, period. And then I’d quit and make dad prime minister.–Lucy Johnsen

Seeking asylum is a human right. Pirates are a military threat; people smugglers are a military threat; people seeking asylum are not a threat and require humanitarian aid. Australia shall respect the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and those that seek protection and a better life.–Matt Schimpf

Vox Pop4

Winners are GrinnersJosh Dye

Avondale has capped a historic year in university sport with the men’s touch

football team claiming gold in division two at Australian University Games. The Eagles went unbeaten throughout the tournament, defeating several larger universities along the way, including QUT, UWS and Melbourne Uni.

The grand final, against local rivals Newcastle Uni, was a tight match with Avondale prevailing 7-5. The speed and fitness of the Eagles continually forced Newcastle onto the back foot, with the even spread of performers a highlight.

An individual highlight was the performance of Damee Kea, a first year PE teacher, who was picked in the team of the tournament.

The outcome was a remarkable effort, ensuring Avondale qualified for division

one next year, where it will face traditional powerhouses Monash, UTS and UNSW.

After finishing fourth at Eastern University Games in July, the team worked hard to improve, and Eagles captain Mark Tipple was proud of the effort. “We’ve been building toward something like this for at least three years, so it was good to see the hard work come to fruition,” he said.

The men’s Twenty20 cricket team also performed well, finishing fourth overall. Despite having a small squad, the team played some great cricket, and were unlucky to lose their bronze medal playoff.

Feature 5

Page 4: The Voice Issue Six

// iss

ue s

ix

Feature 7

good at working within the structures of any given culture.

Imagine what might happen, though, if we stopped leaving full-time ministry to our pastors. Ministry wasn’t meant to be something that an officially sanctioned few do to everyone else, nor was church meant to be an hour-long performance to five hundred passive spectators.

We speak of ‘the priesthood of all believers.’ We need to stop using the Bible to argue about something that is, ultimately, a human institution and instead focus on becoming that priesthood.

The real reason this current debate is exciting isn’t because of its promise to reform some deeply held prejudices in our church, but because of its potential to revolutionise the way we think and go about being a church.

A Royal PriesthoodClaudia Houstoun

Women’s ordination. Undoubtedly the most divisive topic in

mainstream Adventism, it has the power to shake people across the ideological spectrum, strike our philosophy to the core, distill our concerns about the church and make a lot of us rather angry.

But it’s been incredibly frustrating to listen to the discussions of the past few years because they’ve all missed the central issue. Everyone’s been asking, is it Biblical to ordain women? No one’s been asking, is it Biblical to ordain?

That was until Dr Bertil Wiklander, president of the Trans-European Division of the SDA church, presented his findings from a two-year study on ordination. In searching for the Biblical roots of the modern pastor, he’s concluded that our concept of ordination originates in the structures of Roman religion and politics.

The New Testament church was a home-based community of shared blessing amongst equals, while the Romanised church took on the pagan structure of a mostly ignorant congregation administered by a privileged hierarchy. To which do modern churches bear most resemblance?

This isn’t to belittle the God-given calling of the many fantastic Theology students here. We need people who know what they’re theologically on about, and God is

Claudia has never seen Titanic, and her most embarrassing memory involves K-Pop, jet lag and a plane full of Koreans.

Twitter Fiction Competition“Write a story in 140 characters or less”

Winner - $150She is 22, overweight, with droopy ears and wrinkled skin. Undesirable to say the least. But she’s the apple of this elephant’s eye.—Joel FerryJudges’ comments: This one stands out because it could be metaphor or actually giving an elephant a voice. Either way, it’s light and human and lovely.

Runner-up - $80My king was dead moments after his wife. I sigh at the heap of my army, horses and castle ruins. I hate chess anyway; Pop never lets me win.—Emily-Paige ThomasJudges’ comments: This manages to tell a complete story while also being clever and funny with a twist in the tail.

Highly commendedThe agent thought hiding in a coffin was a clever idea. It felt cosy, warm and clean. He drifted into slumber. Bang. Bang. He gasped awake.—Lara Campbell

I claim to love, I claim care, but of the truth, sinners beware. With open doors I bring you in, then shun you, judge you and condemn. —Trent Sperring

FinalistsWith trembling hands, she covers her once smooth skin. She sighs and makes her way on stage. The crowd cheers. Will they ever know?—Cassie Rogers

‘Why?’ The loopy black scrawl cuts through the purity of the whiteboard. Beneath it, printed neatly in small red letters: ‘Why not?’—Viema Murray

Rain falls, mist descends. Slumber evades you. A voice from the past: green, rolling hills, murky lakes, calling you home. Will you answer?—Jesse Herford

I recall that first dinner; anxious glances, nerves, the ache of my last hour with you. But I’d yearn ten years for your company once more.—Mitchell Strahan

I see a girl in the caf. I teach high, She’s primary. She’s vego, so am I. We wed and live in the valley. Our kids grow up and do the same.—Lawson Hull

Competition6

Page 5: The Voice Issue Six

// iss

ue s

ix

Don’t Rush The RushChelsea Mitchell

want to introduce as many people as possible to the outdoors, because it’s through stuff like this where you really get to know people,” he says.

And it’s that passion for people that convinced him to become a teacher. Now in his second year of maths and science teaching, Mitch recently took the opportunity to visit Nepal on a MOTO trip. He appreciates the challenges it brought, and he learnt a valuable lesson.

“We need to slow down our lives a little bit. It’s not about anything specific that you’re doing, it’s about the people around you,” he says.

“I just stopped and chatted to people, got late back to worship, and almost missed dinner a couple of times. But I was just rice planting and lost track of time, just talking to people and going to their houses,” he says.

Mitch’s experiences in Nepal might have planted the seed for something he sees himself doing in future, although he doesn’t like to plan too far ahead: “There’s something exciting about not knowing where you’re going.”

If anything, he plans on getting into base-jumping, and considering he’s already jumped off cliffs by making his own swing in the Blue Mountains, he’s probably got this one covered.

Chelsea is violent when tickled, is an expert at hoarding, and has a one-and-a-half-year-old goldfish named Oomps.

Feature 9

The Blue Mountains is also where Mitch conquered The Three Peaks challenge—a hike of more than 90km, including over 4000m of vertical climbing and descending.

He was aiming to complete it in 48 hours, but his torch died in the first hour (the bulb blew – spare batteries were no help), it rained both nights, and he didn’t have a tent. He still finished in 50 hours.

“I might try and convince someone to come with me next time! Then there’ll be a spare torch,” he says.

But it would be about more than a spare torch. It would be about spending time with people. “That’s what we’re sort of called to do anyway isn’t it?”

‘Be careful’ is something he hears a lot. “People think I’m some reckless loose cannon that just does everything, but it’s always a calculated risk. I only do the things that are worth doing.”

And if you’re wondering why he rides his bike backwards: “If you can do something… why not do it?”

an Outdoor Reccy in his first year because “the rocks are better on this side of the country!”

Learning the ropes over here helped him to realise his passion for people. “I just

Feature8

You may have seen him at the Rez Banquet—not wearing an Elvis wig or

lifting two beautiful girls on his shoulders like The Strongman, but dangling from a tree outside. He was watching over the jumping castle, and then he decided to fall from the tree just to “stir things up a bit.”

Born with adventure in his veins, Mitch was convinced by a friend to come and take on Avondale as his latest escapade. Coming all the way from WA, he became

Brenton StaceyChelsea Mitchell

Page 6: The Voice Issue Six

// iss

ue s

ix

Photo Album

Photo Album10

Jesse Herford

Jesse Herford

Photo Album 11

Jesse Herford

Jesse Herford Colin Chuang

Colin Chuang

Colin Chuang

The 2013 Rez Banquet—1950s carnival theme

Touch football and cricket teams representing Avondale at Australian University Games on the Gold Coast.

Page 7: The Voice Issue Six

Feature 13

A Broken RecordMitchell Strahan

While driving one day, I went to change a CD I’d been listening to

for a while. My ears were assaulted—I didn’t remember that album being so loud! The volume was the same, and the type of music similar, but there was no mistaking the blaring in my ears.

I’d been listening to the first CD for so long that I’d become desensitised to it. It once played loud, vibrant music, but through repetition, the colour of the sound had faded, and I had to set the volume louder and louder to eke out some small pleasure from it.

As Theology students, we often make jokes that rely on taking theological language out of context, like shutting the class door at the time to start and calling it The Close of Probation.

It’s not that we’re being sacrilegious—we still think the message is important—but we’ve heard the words over and over, to the point that they’ve ceased to have any meaning to us.

Do these situations have parallels to our spiritual walk? The sermons and messages, through constant repetition, sound all the more dim, until they’re like a broken record—the remnant church! the remnant church! the remnant church!

Constant exhortation to try, try, try—these messages get tiresome, to the point

where we shut ourselves off to the message. Not because we can’t be bothered, but because we’ve heard it so often that the vibrancy of the message has faded.

I don’t have the answers to make my faith a vibrant and varied experience each day.

But there is one aspect to spirituality that has never become meaningless to me: knowing more of Jesus.

Every morning, my first prayer is that God would make himself unmistakably known in my life; a prayer I know he will answer, because he wants it so much more than I do.

Just like there is always so much more to learn about our friends, how much more there is to discover of an infinite God!

Large variety of non-alcoholic wines, beers, sparkling & still juices and mixers. Specialising in Australian brands, with a large variety of International labels.

Mention this add for a 10% discount.

M 0450954129E [email protected]

Mitchell hates people who drive under the speed limit, can put his legs behind his head, and knows nothing about dating.

Page 8: The Voice Issue Six

BusyLaura Mitchell

I t’s Sabbath and I’m sitting in church again feeling completely convicted and

utterly guilty. I’m here in my fancy dress and high heels and my make-up is done perfectly—but I didn’t even think to bring my Bible. Where is my Bible, exactly?

Oh, that’s right. It’s on the shelf back in my dorm room. Covered in dust. Along with my devotional booklet and ‘2013 Prayer Journal’ that so far consists of only three entries. How did I get to this point?

I tell my small group each week that I’m “just so busy.” But that’s not true. Okay so it is true, but that’s not my problem—I’m selfish. I’ve been pushing God to the side, over and over again, so that now I hardly notice Him in the margins of my life.

In such confident pride I’ve believed that I can run things my own way, even though they never turn out right. I cry to God in desperate moments and ignore Him in my daily routine. Why do I never learn?

Looking around, I see my peers coming across as wonderful Christians. They’re dressed to the nines, sitting faithfully in church and paying attention. They sing along to the songs and comment on the sermon afterwards. Sometimes I wonder if I’m alone in my struggle for spiritual motivation.

Feature 15

People in AA meetings don’t hide their battles, because they attend with the intention to get better, with the help of other people who are sharing the same journey.

So why aren’t we as Christian young people doing the same? When was our burning desire to know Christ replaced with a burning desire to convince each other we’re perfect?

It’s time to take a stand—to share. After all, church isn’t a museum for good people, it’s a hospital for broken people.

If we could only admit that we’re not okay, maybe we could build a stronger community of young men and women seeking God’s heart.

Shop  2,  20  Yambo  Street  Morisset  

  ***Exclusive  College  Student  Deal***  12%  OFF  any  purchase  In-­Store  or  Online!  

Coupon  Code:  ACSTUDENT011013  expires:  15/11/2013  

* Friendly Staff

* Save Time Traveling

* Lots of Deals!

NEW MUSIC SHOP

IN MORISSET!

NOW OPEN  02  4973  3660  

iPlayMusic.com.au  

 

 

   

 

 

 

   

 

 

     

Laura is a champion Boggle player, can do the splits, and if she was in charge of Avondale, she would replace defrosted mixed veggies at the Caf with real veggies.

Page 9: The Voice Issue Six

Culture Corner 17

Culture CornerJosh Dye

This cosy one room apartment is located in a serene, natural environment, with impressive views of the campus. Easterly facing, the morning sun pours in, bathing the room in summery warmth year-round. Located at the far end of the top floor, the resident is required to conquer a strenuous two flights of stairs, but that negates the need for a gym membership. At $300/week (incl meals), it’s not the cheapest option around, but the camaraderie of 120 other mates is something money can’t buy. With the current tenant’s lease expiring soon, men of Watson Hall take note: this prime piece of real estate could be yours in 2014.

Room 233: Watson HallFan boys (and girls) can once again unite in celebration, with Apple’s latest release of outdated technology. This time, there are two versions: last year’s model in colour, or last year’s model with a few small changes. One clear improvement is the battery, which now reportedly lasts longer than five minutes. The Apple buzz of yesteryear seems to have diminished, but you’ll still find legions of loyal supporters queuing up to breathlessly sing the praises of their favourite corporation. The big feature? There isn’t one. (No, fingerprint swipe doesn’t count.) But, they say the next one will be the best yet…

iPhone 5s/c/etc

cnet

Snakes. So many people hate them, which makes owning, feeding and nurturing one a strange phenomenon. However, a number of curious souls at Avondale seem to love them. Although reasonably costly to buy and maintain, they’re fairly low maintenance and provide good company—just don’t let them escape. If nothing else, perhaps owning one of these slithery serpents decreases your chances of graduating single. It could be the x-factor separating you from the rest. What could look cooler during open dorms than casually strolling around with a snake wrapped round your neck?

Reptiles as petsDaily Mail

Josh finds talking to strangers easy, flies the North Korean flag out his window, and faithfully calculates his fuel mileage every single time he fills up with petrol.

Page 10: The Voice Issue Six

While You Were Sleeping... 19

// iss

ue s

ix

Lara has been drooled on by an elephant, her special subject is the Berlin Wall, and she excels at getting lost.

Afghan girls aren’t generally allowed to ride a bike, but they can ride a

skateboard. Skateistan is a non-profit organisation that aims to connect youth

and education through skateboarding. They focus specifically on empowering

girls: 40% of their students are girls—a high percentage in a country where

women’s rights are limited. Visit www.skateistan.org

In a world-first, a Chinese man has grown a nose on his forehead. Following

a car crash, 22-year-old Xiaolian got an infection in his nose that caused the

cartilage to corrode. Taking cartilage from his ribs, the doctors performed

reconstructive surgery, shaped a nose and implanted it under his forehead.

Now that the nose is ripe and ready, doctors are preparing to transplant it to its

proper place: in the middle of his face.

“We have announced an animal-print ban.”A British zoo, Chessington World

of Adventures, has announced a ban on animal print clothing following the

introduction of a new close encounter ride where the animals began acting a

little “overfriendly” toward patrons wearing similar print clothing.

While You Were Sleeping...Lara Campbell

“Update to iOS 7 and become waterproof.”A slew of iPhone owners are not happy after dunking their iPhones in water

to test the new updates. A fake ad created by anonymous publishing site, 4chan.org, has been circulating on social media claiming the latest iPhone iOS

updates include a “smart switch” that automatically comes on in water and prevents any damage. The ad also assured that the warranty covered

this cutting-edge technology.

Page 11: The Voice Issue Six