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SPECTRUM
“Your Voice in Print”
blakespectrum.org
Issue X
Wednesday | May 31 | 2023
The Blake School
Student Body, Class Presidents Share Goals
Cleo Kilpatrick
Sam Hardy ‘24 was elected as the senior class president for the upcoming school year. Hardy says,“I’m excited for the year to come and I’m really excited to work with everyone else in Forum and make things happen. I think the past few years have been very productive on Forum especially, this last year has been productive.” One of his goals is “to shape the year in a way that people will miss Blake, will have a fun time during the year and it will be a memory for them that’s not just their friends but also Blake, the community that we’re in.” Hardy is very excited to help plan events like Defend the Den and the grade retreats to keep everyone connected to the community.
Zellie Olson ‘25 has been voted the junior class president for the third year in a row. She shared several goals for next year. “[I want to] continue with the Defend the Den, that was a huge success this year and I’m glad Breck felt included and very involved in the process. Some of the things I mentioned in my speech, like some more outdoor spaces to study and work in. We’re on an urban campus so it’s nice to take advantage of the space we have. In addition, I think more fun activities. For example finals week having treats for people, and addressing the way students want to feel at school both with excessive coursework and stress and school spirit.”
Cole Eckes ‘26 was voted the sophomore class president with the hope of bringing the student body more transparency regarding Forum. “I wanted to help the class out,” he says. “A lot of people say that Forum doesn’t really do a lot. Over the last year, I had not become aware of any action that had happened. I didn’t even know they had a column in the newspaper, so I wanted to build the transparency that Forum had been working on. I wanted to make the students more aware of what happens.” Eckes also wants to impact “how the students view their government, because it seems pretty negative right now. [I] want to make sure people know that [Forum] does have the power to get things done.”
Mackenzie Higgins
Karn Kaura ‘24 was elected student body president for next year. He’s currently the junior class president and wanted to run because “there’s a lot of issues that exist in the school, particularly [with] diversity and equity, but also smaller issues with lunch and school schedule.” Kaura plans on asking “all the people who ran and won for Forum in all the grade levels to make a list of [plans] that they ran [on]. I think that gives me a baseline point in order to understand what people actually voted for and what people actually care about.” He also wants to “create an impact in the dayto-day lives of the students… there’s a lot of divisions that exist in this school and tackling these divisions is the way to go about increasing that school culture.”
Yoni Zacks
Evan Vezmar
Reporting by: Mackenzie Higgins, Cleo Kilpatrick, Evan Vezmar, & Yoni Zacks | Co-Editor-in-Chief, Photo Editor, Managing Editor, & Sports Editor
Events @metoo_blake Documents Survivor Stories June 5 8:50 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Junior College Admission Simulation
June 7 8:30 a.m. -10:00 a.m. US Senior Program Sharing 10:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. Upper School Closing 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Upper School Awards Ceremony
June 8 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Upper School Commencement
New task force to combat issues Anna Tao | Staff Writer
O
n Mar. 3, an Instagram account under the handle @metoo_blake started publicly sharing the anonymous stories of sexual violence in the community. Referencing the MeToo movement popularized in 2017, the account intends to share the unsettling frequency and normalization of sexual violence on the smaller scale within the community. The account, run by an alumna, has recently garnered the attention of administration. Both the alumna and Anne Graybeal, Associate Head of School, set up a meeting with an aim to have “a conversation about different ideas and opportunities for Blake to continue to assess and enhance our practice of responding to certain cases of sexual ha-
rassment at school.” The alumna explained her reasoning for action, “My goal during advocacy is just to try to protect other people from experiencing what I’ve experienced… I felt it important that I use the privilege that I have to advocate on behalf of survivors at Blake.” The alumna expressed that although she’s been trying combat sexual violence within Blake beginning back in 2018, her dedication to sharing instances of sexual violence has increased since creating the Instagram account. She said, “I still hadn’t resolved the trauma I experienced [and] in a last ditch effort to try to get closure on the situation… I took the social media approach and then also ended up having these meetings with an administrator and a member of the Board of Trustees.” Since the owner of the account works completely outside of the
school, administrators have little agency over actions within posts. The alumna believes that the current measures set by administration are rather generalized and do not completely include extensive support for survivors. She adds that some of the responsive measures stated within the Family Handbook are not accurate to her experience with sexual violence during her time at Blake. “I felt like the response that I got from Blake administrators was retraumatizing… It actively contributed to the physiological harm that I was experiencing at the time,” she said. In an email, Director of Counseling Erin Adams said, “While our school policy references student support as a part of our response to reports of sexual assault, the specific aspects of support are not detailed since that can look different for everyone. Some students
need individual support to process a single event of harassment or assault or to recognize aspects of an unhealthy relationship. Other students need support or advocacy in determining how to share information with parents, the school or law enforcement.” The concept of using social media to influence the school’s policies involving sexual violence was an attempt for the owner to “exert some sort of influence on Blake administration to try to get them to change their policies,” and so through using social media she was able to gain a platform for the school to place policy reforms high on their lists. Graybeal too expressed her thoughts on the use of social media, as it offers a different forum for discussion. Graybeal said, “There is something really important and freeing in the spirit of posting anonymously… that’s
a sign that this [account] is good. There has to be a platform where people share their experiences.” The alumna said, “I’m an alum, I haven’t been in the school for a long time, so I want current students to feel like they have a voice, and they know the school better than I do.” “What I admire so much about this person is that as an alum, they are really invested in partnering with the school to ensure that we are continuing to grow and evolve and improve our practices,” Graybeal said. She continued, “I think it’s always easy for a person to walk away and say ‘I’m not a student there anymore, that’s not relevant anymore’ and I just think that it’s tremendously cool that somebody who graduated from this school a number of years ago wants Blake to be better and is taking numerous steps to make it work.” Continued on page 2
SURVIVOR STORY
Truman Morsman ’23 bought 12,000 salt shakers for no reason.
What is a prank? Oxford languages dictionary defines prank as “a practical joke or mischievous act.”
Julia Nowak ‘23 technically started her Senior Program months ago, when she began training for the Newport Marathon in Oregon.
Student Life: Page 3
Perspectives: Page 11
Student Spotlight: Page 16