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The Spectrum Newspaper February 2023

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SPECTRUM

“Your Voice in Print”

blakespectrum.org

Wednesday | March 1 | 2023

Issue VII

The Blake School

Bearstangs Swim on to State

Tyler Vandersall

Pictured above, Nam Truong ‘23 placed 3rd in the 100 Butterfly with a qualifying time of 52.72 seconds. On Feb. 25, the team raced at Section Finals at Richfield Middle School. The Bearstangs placed 1st with 560 points. The Boys’ Swim and Dive State Meet is Mar. 2-4 at the Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center. The Bearstangs are chasing their seventh consecutive win.

Holocaust Unit Revived, Reimagined What a Waste Middle School Holocaust study curtailed by COVID-19 Zoey Ueland | Co-Editor-in-Chief

focused on World War II and the Holocaust, broadened. Eighth grade Social Studies teacher Raina Green explains, “We decided to move the me-

and includes a visit to the Holocaust Memorial Museum. Cole Eckes ‘26 explains, “When you look at [the Holocaust] on a larger scale like in

A

were some people who weren’t really taking it as seriously or didn’t really care about it as much.” As COVID hit, the D.C. trip was canceled for two years. Zellie Olson ‘25 comments, “Everyone [knows] how meaningful [the Holocaust Museum’s] exhibit[s are]. I just feel like it’s such an emotional experience because it shares so much about firsthand experiences within it. I do feel like we missed out.” “Night” a “memoir by a Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel who not just survived Auschwitz himself and several other camps but has worked all of the rest of his life to resist genocides wherever else they occur in the world,” was removed from the eighth grade curriculum due to COVID, explains Chair of the English Department Rick Cawood. Continued on page 2.

Students, faculty weak links in waste management Faith Zhao | Staff Writer

T

he trash cans in our school are emptied every single day; three

2020 Pew Research study revealed a drastic lack of understanding amidst Millennials and Gen Z regarding the Holocaust. 55% of participants didn’t know that six million Jews were murdered as a result of Hitler’s Final Solution. While Holocaust and Genocide Studies was added as an elective in 2022-2023, the majority of students’ Holocaust education stems from the eighth grade curriculum, which lessened due to COVID. Curricular changes perpetuated a misunderstanding over lack of Holocaust education throughout the school. The eighth grade Memorial Project, formerly

Students from the class of 2026, at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C. in the spring of 2022.

Did you know that there are amazing donuts all around the Twin Cities! This classic American cuisine is loved by many.

Molly Seidel ‘24 has a very close relationship with her grandfather, who also has greatly influenced her life.

Revamping of old and classic items has become very popular because customers often look for familiarity.

Food: Page 5

InDepth: Page 8&9

Perspectives: Page 13

Submitted by: Green

morial out of just World War II as a context and instead make it about any topic within U.S history students felt was worthy of a memorial.” This change was in part due to the advancement of the eighth grade trip to Washington, D.C. which is now mandatory

a school lesson, you’re kind of just seeing it for its impacts, the numbers, the statistics. When you’re going through the museum, it deepened my understanding of what it was actually like.” However, Ivy Besikof ‘23 grew frustrated during her visit to the museum as “there

“If there’s [a] mixture in, let’s say the compostable or the recycling, it will all go up in the landfill trash.” Gronlund notices, “Students, especially at breakfast or lunch time, [don’t] pay attention to which one they put their

“Students, especially at breakfast or lunch time, [don’t] pay attention to which one they put their stuff in.” - Gronlund times a week, the landfill dumpster gets picked up as well as recycling and compost, which are collected twice a week. Ultimately, each load is filled with 12 to 14 more cubic yards of landfill trash, and six to eight cubic yards of recycling and compost, according to Russ Gronlund, Maintenance Lead at Blake for the past 35 years. Gronlund explains,

stuff in.” Years ago, there was a chaperone to watch students dispose of their trash. The trash accumulated then was significantly less than the trash accumulated now. Jake Vraa, Maintenance Assistant, explains how “the trash build up in the school can be inevitable, if students bring a Starbucks cup everyday or don’t like their food, it’s just how it is.” Continued on page 11.


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