By Leslie Modica, Tuesday, November 10, 2009
It was Friday evening. School was
out but the football game hadn't yet started. The time was ripe for
restless high school students to find trouble.
And that's exactly what members of Students Taking Action in Rochester
(STAR) were trying to avoid. So they set up a Battle of the Bands —
complete with free pizza and french fries — and invited Spaulding High
School students to support their peers and hang out after school.
"We feel like you need things to do outside of school," said Hannah
Leonard, a senior at Spaulding who helped found STAR.
The new organization, which was started last spring, is modeled after
Dover's Youth to Youth program, antismoking and drinking youth advocacy
group.
Leonard and Bonny Sigurdsson, another founder,
said the tenants of STAR are similar to Youth to Youth, but they added
that STAR wants to have a greater focus on the positive things teens can
do instead of drinking and smoking, rather than simply fighting the
negatives.
"We want to focus more on the good ways to have fun, rather than what
not to do," Sigurdsson said.
And that's where providing activities like a Battle of the Bands can
come in handy, they said.
Spaulding High School students
Miranda Avery and Breanna Keenan said they typically would have spent
their Friday night in other Seacoast towns, but they stuck around to
support some friends who were playing and check out the local music
scene.
"It's something to do," Keenan said. "Rochester doesn't usually have
anything to do."
Students were streaming in and out of the Rochester Community Center
throughout the event, and organizers estimated that about 100 people had
come through the doors for STAR's first major event, which featured six
bands made up of current of former Spaulding students: Now or Never,
Sexorcist, The Shiznit, Life Cycles, Enough Said and Hung Out to Dry.