Post by MHA Admin on Apr 12, 2010 2:30:20 GMT -5
[align=center]M A D I S O N H A L E
Every student at Madison Hale Academy is linked together by one thing and one thing alone: a hatred for each other.
Since the beginning of time rivalries have been an omnipresent part of our society;[/align]
[align=right]Think the Montagues and the Capulets.
Think the sharks and the jets.
Think the greasers and the socs.[/align]
[align=left]Rivalries are every where you look. But none is more inescapable than the rivalry that tears apart Madison Hale.
In beautiful Seattle is Madison Hale Academy, one of the most prestigious boarding schools in the world. At one point in time it was a school set aside just for the highest of the high class, the well to-do jet setters who ruled the world. Everyone who is anyone sends their kids to Madison Hale. It's a given that a student who graduates from Madison Hale will go on to do something amazing; be a doctor or a lawyer or a movie star. To have a diploma from MHA is basically an automatic acceptance into any college you could dream of. And just to say that you attend Madison Hale makes you automatic royalty.
However recently a scholarship act was passed and now the makeup of the school is about 40% students on scholarship from bad neighborhoods and bad breeds. The parents who pay ridiculous amounts to money to have their students go to MHA were outraged to hear this. They did everything they could to change it and some are still fighting for it. But the scholarship kids are here to stay.
The children of the rich and famous don't think the scholarship students would be there and the scholarship students are none too pleased with the way they're treated.[/align]
[align=center] And thus, a rivalry was born.[/align]
[align=center]The feuding has been going for years but lately it's gotten so much worse.
Fights have been breaking out all over the place, several people have been seriously injured, and it's almost become dangerous to be out by yourself.
At MHA the separation of the classes is brought on solely by tradition and unbreakable pride and nothing seems to be able to stop it. There are those trying to bridge the gap, but will a handful of students really be enough? How far will it have to go?
Find out at
Madison Hale[/align]
Every student at Madison Hale Academy is linked together by one thing and one thing alone: a hatred for each other.
Since the beginning of time rivalries have been an omnipresent part of our society;[/align]
[align=right]Think the Montagues and the Capulets.
Think the sharks and the jets.
Think the greasers and the socs.[/align]
[align=left]Rivalries are every where you look. But none is more inescapable than the rivalry that tears apart Madison Hale.
In beautiful Seattle is Madison Hale Academy, one of the most prestigious boarding schools in the world. At one point in time it was a school set aside just for the highest of the high class, the well to-do jet setters who ruled the world. Everyone who is anyone sends their kids to Madison Hale. It's a given that a student who graduates from Madison Hale will go on to do something amazing; be a doctor or a lawyer or a movie star. To have a diploma from MHA is basically an automatic acceptance into any college you could dream of. And just to say that you attend Madison Hale makes you automatic royalty.
However recently a scholarship act was passed and now the makeup of the school is about 40% students on scholarship from bad neighborhoods and bad breeds. The parents who pay ridiculous amounts to money to have their students go to MHA were outraged to hear this. They did everything they could to change it and some are still fighting for it. But the scholarship kids are here to stay.
The children of the rich and famous don't think the scholarship students would be there and the scholarship students are none too pleased with the way they're treated.[/align]
[align=center] And thus, a rivalry was born.[/align]
[align=center]The feuding has been going for years but lately it's gotten so much worse.
Fights have been breaking out all over the place, several people have been seriously injured, and it's almost become dangerous to be out by yourself.
At MHA the separation of the classes is brought on solely by tradition and unbreakable pride and nothing seems to be able to stop it. There are those trying to bridge the gap, but will a handful of students really be enough? How far will it have to go?
Find out at
Madison Hale[/align]