“Go Local!”

“Go Local!” is GWN's motto, starting from May 27, 2008, a motto started by GWN Founder Diane Zhou's dad. “So many big chain companies, like McDonald's, own newspapers that turned from local to national or worldwide. That loses the meaning of 'local news', so I support GWN,” Diane's dad told GWN. GWN is being motivated by this motto. Without it, GWN would have disappeared long ago in November, 2007!

Volume II No. 5

Kung Fu Panda
GWN Founder Diane Zhou sent her review about the new movie “Kung Fu Panda”! Read about the funny things on pages 6 – 7. GWN also interviewed Diane and some other people!

Say “Happy Belated Birthday” to Alex Zhou and Chloris Li! It was their birthdays on June 4th. Alex's birthday story is on pages 10 – 11. GWN News Update Corner is on page 2. There is more about the Word Contest on pages 2 – 3. Jokes are on page 3 and 11. Please check out the website for an International Day story from the Tri-City Voice (found and given to GWN by Nicholas Lien), videos of Diane and Chloris's performances, a Kung Fu Panda movie review from the Tri-City Voice, and more! Turtie is back with another Turtie's Kitchen Announcement!

Table of Contents
Cover Story
New News
Debate Time
Mail Pail
Tri-City

Debate Time

Favorite Place
Where is your favorite place to go to?

School is finally over! (Please send fun end-of-the-year stories to GWN!!!) Summer vacation is here, so where will you go (Also send vacation stories!)? Speaking of where you will go, where is your favorite place, or where do you think is your favorite place? Please send answers to: GingerbreadWklyNews@gmail.com

GWN News: Update Corner!
Dear GWN Readers,
There are a couple updates in GWN!
1) You can answer to the debate on the website now! Please do not answer on the website if you have email. Freewebs only allows 25 submissions a month.
2) Summer is here so GWN cannot see everyone in person! Paper tickets cannot be given out, but GWN will continue to calculate your tickets. You will receive all tickets when school starts in September!
Have a great summer (and be sure to send your interesting and fun vacation stories!)!
Sincerely,
Gingerbread Weekly News

More About the Word Contest
Remember about the word contest where you can try to make the most words out of the word GINGERBREAD? GWN forgot to mention many things.
First of all, the deadline for this contest is June 22nd. You can always send in early and update your list. The judges will be Diane Zhou and Chloris Li. Chloris will be participating in the contest, but we promise she doesn't see other people's words before she is done submitting all her words.
Amanda Chang and Katherine Xiao wanted to submit an entry together. If two people would like to submit an entry together, GWN may divide the number of words by 2 or 1.5 since it would be unfair to have 2 people's words together....or would it be fair? That gets to another debate:

Divide Score?
Should GWN divide two-people entries? If yes, by how much?

GWN will allow Amanda and Katherine to submit an entry together. But GWN wants to divide their score by 2, 1.5, or 1.25 to be fair, while Amanda thinks GWN shouldn't. What do you GWN readers think?
For now, GWN will divide their score by 1.5, and they will get a bonus of dividing by 1.25 if they get 100 words. Do you think this is fair?
Send all your answers to GWN please!!!

Cover Story

Kung Fu Panda
Written and Typed by GWN Founder Diane Zhou
My family and GWN Reader Emily Wang's family went to Century Theaters in Union City to watch Kung Fu Panda on Saturday, June 14. People at my school, Ardenwood Elementary, said it was very funny, for young and old. A yard duty parent asked me what the “secret ingredient” was. I told her the next day, but I won't tell you what it is, watch the movie for yourself!
Kung Fu Panda is basically about an enemy, Tai Lang, who got out of prison and wanted a scroll so he could be the Dragon Warrior. He used to be a good Master's son, but when he mastered Kung Fu and was ready to be the Dragon Warrior, Master Turtle, the great Kung Fu master, sensed darkness inside Tai Lang. Tai Lang got angry and crazy so Master Turtle had to trap him. Now, since Tai Lang was free and Master Turtle was becoming weak, he needed to find the chosen one. It happened to be a big fat panda named Po. See the movie to know how things went...
Turtie was very happy that he, the turtle, was a master! There was tons of laughing during the movie. I really enjoyed the movie too!

GWN interviewed Diane and some other people:
GWN: How did you like Kung Fu Panda? Rate it from A through F.
Diane Zhou: Kung Fu Panda was very interesting. It was fun and I was laughing like every 5 seconds! I would rate it an A- or B+. The movie was pretty original, having Kung Fu and a lot of Chinese in it. I love the part where the turtle is the wise one!
Shudong Zhou: B
Carol Zhang: A (Assume A is the best)
Alex Zhou: A
GWN: Was it really funny? What was the funniest part?
Diane: It was totally funny! I think the funniest part was...well, the whole thing! I really remember the part where the panda stole the cookies and when the he always thought of food. I also remember when he sat right on top of Tai Lang.
Shudong: Panda makes a face because of acupuncture.
Carol: Yes, it is really funny. Funniest part: When Tai Lung saw Po, he said: Hm, a panda, what are you going to do with me? Sit on me?
Alex: It was very funny. The funniest part was when Po made Tia Lunghigh into the air and when he came down and made a hole.
GWN: What was the secret ingredient? What had to be done to be the Dragon Warrior or even the be a great cook? *****
GWN: Which character in the movie would you like to be? Why?
Diane: I might want to be the turtle. He is wise, and I like turtles. I might also want to be Tigress. I would certainly NOT want to be the Panda. I like him in the sense that he is funny, but I don't want to be fat, even if that would make me a hero.
Shudong: Wugui, wise and powerful.
Carol: Po, of course. He is funny, enthusiasm, never give up. Good role model for us.
Alex: Po because he is funny.
GWN: Thanks for taking the interview!
If you would like to take the interview, email to GWN, along with your name, the questions, and your answers. You will receive one ticket for taking the interview!

***** What was the “secret ingredient”? Guess, or if you watched the movie, tell us about the secret ingredient. Email to: GingerbreadWklyNews@gmail.com by June 27th. You will receive one ticket for guessing and one more if your answer is correct.

Turtie's Kitchen Announcement

From the desk of Turtie Turtle
Hi GWN Readers!
I am here again, just like I promised! Still a little busy, so there will be no cooking tips. I decided to take the Kung Fu Panda interview though, so here are my answers! Gingy decided to take it too, so her answers are also here!
Turtie Turtle, Owner of Turtie's Kitchen

Please note that these are all false email addresses.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: “GWN” gwn@gingerbreadwklynews.org
To: “Diane Zhou” diane@email.com , “Amanda Chang” amanda@email.com
Cc: “Turtie Turtle” turtie@turtieskitchen.com , “Gingy” gingy@gingerbreadwklynews.org

Subj: Interview for Kung Fu Panda
----------------------------------------------------------------
Here is an interview for everyone to answer about Kung Fu Panda, the movie that just came out. Reply to this email with the questions filled in:

How did you like Kung Fu Panda? Rate it from A through F:

Was it really funny? What was the funniest part?

What was the secret ingredient? What had to be done to be the Dragon Warrior or even to be a great cook?

Which character in the movie would you like to be? Why?

Thanks for taking the interview!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: “Turtie Turtle” turtie@turtieskitchen.com
To: “GWN” gwn@gingerbreadwklynews.org
Cc:

Subj: Re: Interview for Kung Fu Panda
--------------------------------------------------------------
These are my answers to the interview!

I loved Kung Fu Panda (especially since a turtle is the wise one). I'd rate it A!!!

It was very very funny! I like the part where Po (the panda) stole cookies. At the end when it showed the credits, it showed the monkey looking for the cookies and Po hiding.

*(Will not show the secret until everyone is done guessing!!! See Cover Story.)

I would LOVE to be Master WuGui, the great Kung Fu master that is a turtle!!! I am a turtle too :-)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: “Gingy Gingerbread” gingy@gingerbreadwklynews.org
To: “GWN” gwn@gingerbreadwklynews.org
Cc:

Subj: Re: Interview for Kung Fu Panda
-------------------------------------------------------------
These are my answers to the interview!

Kung Fu Panda was pretty good. I am happy that my pet, Turtie, is a wise Kung Fu master! I rate it B.

It was hilarious! I love the part (no offense to Po) where one animal says, “How can he [Po] learn kung fu if he can't even touch his toes?” and another one says, “Or even see his toes.”

*(Will not show the secret until everyone is done guessing!!! See Cover Story.)

I want to be Tigress because she is a good guy and is good at Kung Fu.

New News

A Field Trip to Don Edward's San Francisco Bay National Wild Life Refuge
Written and Typed by GWN Writer Alex Zhou
On Thursday, May 29, 2008 half of the second graders at Ardenwood School went on a field trip to Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge. The second graders played many fun games and activities. Alex's favorite activity was looking in owl pellets (owl throw up). Too bad Alex didn't have a skull in his owl pellet. He also liked the last activity about wetlands. Everyone had to pretend to be an animal and only can eat the food that the animal eats. In another activity, students had to look for an animal that lives in the mud. They were small but can still be seen. The students got to use microscopes. The park rangers told us to protect wetlands because there are less wetlands and a lot of animals that are endangered live there. One of them are endangered because there are less wetlands and because of predation. This field trip was the best one ever!

Alex's 8th Birthday Party
Written and Typed by Birthday Boy Alex Zhou
On Saturday, June 7, 2008 Alex had his 8th birthday party. His real birthday is June 4. He and his friends mostly played video games. When it was time to eat, most of them didn't. Only he and Austin ate. After that, they started playing video games again. Then they ate ice cream cake and sang happy birthday. They went outside and played with flying disks on the field at Ardenwood School. Afterwards, they went back to Alex's house and started playing video games...again! About an hour later, parents started arriving. My neighbors stayed the longest since they live next door. It was a fun birthday party!

Big Red Ball
Written and Typed by GWN Writer Chloris Li
On Friday, June 13th, 2008, there was a substitute in my classroom at Ardenwood Elementary. We had extra recess. The substitute brought a large red ball outside and the fifth-grade boys started playing basketball with it. Someone shot it inside the hoop and the ball couldn't come back out. The boys used theirs shoes and it did nothing. Later, a boy found a stick and he used it to push it out but it didn't work. The primary kids (first to third graders) were staring at them. Later, GWN Founder Diane Zhou (I think she is the tallest fifth-grade girl in our class.) tried pushing the ball out with the stick and it didn't work. Later, we gave the stick to the substitute [because he was the tallest out of all of us]to push the ball out of the hoop. It still didn't work because I think he doesn't want to work. Finally, the boy who found the stick carried his friend on his shoulders and they got it out! YAY! After all that, all the fifth graders decided to play dodge ball.

Joke Center
Written and Typed by GWN Joke Maker Tiffany Chen
  • There is a word that I know, six letters it contains, subtract one, and twelve remains. What is it?
    dozen
  • What can run but not walk, has a mouth but can't talk, has a head but never thinks, has a bed but never sleeps?
    a river
  • The more of this you take, the more you leave behind.
    footsteps

Mail Pail

Coupon or Dollar?
“I think there should be dollars! Coupons are like dicounts. It doesn't really make sense to me so I think there should be dollars!” Chloris Li, almost 6th grade
“I chose GWN Dollars, because they sound better.” Brigitte Gong, almost 6th grade
“Coupons because then GWN can decorate it however they want and it wouldn't sound like money.” Tiffany Chen, almost 8th grade
“Dollars, it sounds much nicer.” Deanna Wong, almost 6th grade

Boxes or Circles?
“Boxes should be found on the coupons/dollars. GWN Tickets already has circles and to make coupons/dollars to look much different, you should use boxes! Besides, I don't think circles look so good on tickets anyways.” Chloris Li, almost 6th grade
“I like circles better!” Brigitte Gong, almost 6th grade
“Circles, it looks much nicer and a dollar uses circles.” Deanna Wong, almost 6th grade

Employees Only?
“It shouldn't be for employees only. That won't be fair for the readers. Anyways, why waste 5 parts of a paper? Just trade 5 for 1!” Chloris Li, almost 6th grade
“No, I think GWN should give the tickets to everyone. This way, the readers will want to answer debates and send stories.” Brigitte Gong, almost 6th grade
“No, GWN coupons shouldn't for employees only because everyone has a right to deserve them, just like everyone else.” Tiffany Chen, almost 8th grade

“I think there should be dollars with squares on them. If you use dollars and coupons, dollars should be for GWN employees, and coupons should be for GWN readers.”
Susan Pham, almost 6th grade

News from the Tri-City Voice

Our GWN readers and employees are on the Tri-City Voice! These are some stories:

Ardenwood Elementary International Day Celebration
Submitted (to the Tri-City Voice) By Michelle Motoyoshi
Fremont has become a potpourri of cultures and nowhere is this more apparent than at Ardenwood Elementary School's International Day celebration. Each year parents, teachers and students come together to share a slice of their world with one another; the result is a lively show that educates and entertains.
This year's event was no exception. It began with a parade of flags, a tradition started by Principal Paula Rugg and modeled after the march of nations at the Olympics. Students from the primary grades, many dressed in traditional garments, carried paper flags representing their nationalities as they strolled through campus.
Immediately following the parade, fourteen groups from the primary grades (1 - 3) performed traditional songs and dances from around the globe. Thirteen groups from the intermediate grades (4 - 6) performed in a separate show shortly thereafter. The slate of acts included Chinese and Korean martial arts demonstrations, dances from the Philippines, Cameroon, Ireland, Tahiti, and India, and music from Japan and Europe. Two of the acts were multicultural in nature. In "A Folk Medley" a group of students from the primary grades performed songs and dances from Russia and India. Another act, called "Goa Amache," featured music and dance from Goa, a region in India with strong Portuguese influences.
To participate in International Day, the performers had to audition before a panel of three judges. Judges selected actsaccording to several criteria, including whether the performance showcased a unique aspect of the culture it represents and whether the content was appropriate and interesting for the children. This year 35 groups auditioned for a slot in the primary grades show, while 13 auditioned for the intermediate grades.
Students and parents spent weeks preparing for the show, often spending 2-3 hours rehearsing after school. Their hard work was readily apparent in the energetic and engaging performances and in the vibrant costumes, many handmade by parents. The audience of over 200 parents and students clearly appreciated their efforts.
Ardenwood's International Day was established 21 years ago by a committee of parents and teachers. Today the event continues to thrive because of the dedication of parent and teacher volunteers, in particular Shanthi Satish, coordinator of the event. Mrs. Satish has run the event for the past three years. She said that she took on the responsibility because "I felt this event was a very good opportunity for our Ardenwood children to work together as a group, showcase the rich and varied culture of their native country to their fellow schoolmates, and of course, display their individual talents."
Though Mrs. Satish will not coordinate International Day a fourth time (her children will graduate from Ardenwood this year), she would like to see the event expand to include displays of artifacts and clothing from different cultures as well as booths providing information on the countries represented in the show.
If student and parent enthusiasm is any indication, Mrs. Satish's hope for the event will be realized. As Dorothea Randolph, grandmother of two Ardenwood pupils put it, "We need to give the kids more of this so they can be ready for the world."
GWN Founder Diane Zhou played the Chinese Zither and GWN Writer Chloris Li danced at International Day!

Movie Review: Kung Fu Panda
(From the Tri-City Voice Writer) By Mona Shah
The film is set in and around China's Valley of Peace where there are no humans, only talking animals. In the tradition of lovable but challenged cartoon heroes, along comes Po (Jack Black), the well-meaning if awkward Panda bear who happens to be the world's biggest fan of kung fu. It isn't exactly a talent needed for his place of employment, the family noodle shop. Po spends his days dreaming about martial arts while serving noodle soup.
At a nearby temple, Head Monk, Master Oogway (Randall Duk Kim), has had a vision that power-mad Tia Lung (Ian McShane) will escape from prison and ravage the Valley in his quest for dominance. To prevent this, Oogway must find the "Dragon Warrior." There are five obvious candidates - the Furious Five, all apprentices to Master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman) - Monkey (Jackie Chan), Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Viper (Lucy Liu), Crane (David Cross), and Mantis (Seth Rogen). Yet, as the result of a seemingly random series of events, Oogway chooses Po. This comes as a surprise not only to an outraged Shifu but to his pupils as well.
When unexpectedly chosen to fulfill an ancient prophecy, Po's dreams become reality. The very thought of Po confronting Tia Lung is laughable since the fat panda even has trouble making it to the top of the temple's stairs. But Po has hidden talents that Shifu is able to discover and unlock, even as time grows short.
Can Po turn his dreams of becoming a kung fu master into reality? Po puts his heart into the task, and the unlikely hero ultimately finds that his greatest weaknesses turn out to be his greatest strengths.
See Cover Story for GWN Founder Diane Zhou's story! You can take the interview and email it to GWN too!

Fremont Flute Ensemble
to perform classical concert
Submitted (to the Tri-City Voice) By Alicia Unis
For the Summer Concert 2008, the Fremont Flute Ensemble will perform French composer Camille Saint-Saens' famous work, "The Carnival of Animals."
Consisting of fourteen short pieces, each piece embodies a zoological motif, painting a delightful musical portrait of a lion, chickens, turtles, an elephant, kangaroos and the immensely popular swan. Originally written for orchestra and piano, this work has been arranged for flute ensemble with narration.
The program will also include "Concerto in G" for two flutes by D. Cimarosa and the well-known "Canon in D" by Johann Pachebel.
The Fremont Flute Ensemble was established in October 2004 under its music director, Mr. Shao Jiang Huang, the former principal flutist of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra. In comparison with other flute ensembles in the United States, this young ensemble has made its name on the local scene and in the Bay Area within a short period of time.
In Spring 2007, the Fremont Flute Ensemble gave a premier performance of the "Romeo and Juliet Ballet Suite" No. 2 by Sergei Prokofiev. It was the first flute ensemble collaboration with strings, percussion, and narration. The performance was well received and the audience was delighted with the new arrangement of such a famous Shakespearean drama.
Our goal is to introduce famous classical works to the audience, especially to the young children.
This concert will be a nice weekend treat for both parents and children, so come and enjoy this enlightening performance.
GWN Reader Andy Wang was part of this performance.