Kobe Bryant Fined 100K For Using Homophobic Slur

By Alec Sullivan, Senior Staff Writer


In Tuesday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs, star Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant was fined $100,000 for using a homophobic slur towards the referee, Bennie Adams. This wild episode began when Bryant received a technical foul and while making his way to the bench, he violently slammed his chair and threw down his towel yelling “Bennie, “ the name of the official and then saying the slur under his breath.

During a recent radio interview with Bryant, he explained that the slur was no way intended to harm or hurt anybody and that it was just in the heat of the moment. Later on the talk show, he explained that he would be appealing this fine, and that it is simply “protocol” to do so.

Commissioner of the NBA, David Stern, has recently been praised by many Gay and Lesbian organizations for his actions of acting swiftly and not letting these comments go without punishment. Recently, Stern has released a statement saying, “While I’m fully aware that basketball is an emotional game, such a distasteful term should never be tolerated. Accordingly, I have fined Kobe $100,000. Kobe and everyone associated with the NBA know that insensitive or derogatory comments are not acceptable and have no place in our game or society.”

Being an athlete myself, I can definitely understand the frustration of Kobe and the anger behind receiving a bad call in a big game, but as David Stern said, a comment such as this PARTICULAR one that is highly offensive towards many people is absolutely unacceptable and shouldn’t be tolerated not only in the NBA, but also in our society.

March Madness at Menlo

By Rory Plewman, Staff Writer

March Madness. What a wonderful time of the year. Money changes hands quicker than you can say Kansas State. Brackets are filled out and fretful students glance over them hoping to succeed in all of their picks. It was these fretful Menlo students that crashed the Moodle server on Monday March 21, 2011. This happened because Menlo students, feverish to stream live videos of March Madness games, clogged up the system with to much data being routed to one server. The week of videos and constant checking of brackets was a “New data bandwidth high for us” said Eric DeStefano in an informatory email to the whole school. He promises that this will not happen again, so March Madness fans, you will still be able to watch videos of your favorite teams in peace.

Book Review (I am number 4)

By Rory Plewman, Staff Writer

I am number 4 was an exciting and thrilling tale of a teenage Martian who's planet has been destroyed by the ruthless Mogadorians. This was a story of unbreakable bonds of love between two different species of people, an alien and a human. There is something different about this story though; it is not a soppy love story. This story is a game of cat and mouse, the cat being the Mogadorians, infinitely stronger and well equipped with deadly weapons. The mouse being the #4 and his guide Henri. The mouse being weak but very agile, the mouse can do nothing but run. This was true until #4's legacies developed. Legacies are the super powers these Aliens develop when they mature. These Legacies are beginning to develop in #4; just in time without these he and most probably the earth would have been killed. In short this book was thrilling, punchy and different perspective about a very controversial subject, aliens.