Table of Contents


E.S.P.-ski for My Babushka, by Liz Zipse (12th grade): There are powers that anyone would like to have, or would they? . . .

Europa, by Bryce Byers (12th grade): In the defense of Earth, no plan is too desperate, no sacrifice too great . . .

Rift, by Stefan Hatfield (10th grade): The only way to get most people to go on a suicide mission is to force them, unless they're crazy already . . .

<DIVISION BY ZERO>, by Ryan Miller (11th grade): Not all our blessings come without a curse, and what you don't know, just might kill you . . .

Higher Learning, by Hannah Maier (10th grade): If the purpose of learning is to make you think, then maybe there could be too much of a good thing . . .

Death Penalties in the United States, by Chris Feltus (12th grade): When computers become the most important industry there is, can computer crime and punishment be far behind? . . .

Corporate Ladder, by Jenni Carpenter (12th grade): What's good for business may be good for the country, but what if the business isn't all that good? . . .

Violins, by Pat Keck (11th grade): The espionage racket is a tough one in any era, and it will be in the future, but ethical choices won't get any easier . . .

3050 Drifter, by Ray MacDonald (12th grade): Human needs are simple, good food, good water and a roof over our head . . .

World War III, by Nathan Howard (12th grade) and David Busch (11th grade): War in the future may look quite a bit different, but the same, hard lessons remain . . .

Home Again, by Chris Bertram (10th grade): They say you can never go home again, but "they" never went so far . . .

Good Intentions, by Spencer Parrish (12th grade): Change the technology, and you change the economy. Change the economy and you might just lose your job. What are you going to do about it? . . .


You are at Fruita Monument High School's Teenfinity project, an in-class science fiction magazine produced for educational purposes. Copyright © 2000