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The Knight Times / October 2022 Issue 3

Page 1

News that Stands Out

THE KNIGHT TIMES Official Student Newspaper of Episcopal High School

October 2022

4650 Bissonnet, Bellaire, Texas 77401

www.ehshouston.org

Volume 38, Issue 3

EHS community Students of Service plan projects for November comes together to SOS offers students ways to give back to their community honor founders CLARA CRENSHAW Staff Writer Founders Day Chapel is a time when the EHS community comes together to honor the men and women who founded Episcopal High School. Many founders attended this year’s service. The Reverend Laurens A. Hall, a founder and Life Trustee, delivered a compelling sermon about the founding of Episcopal High School. His children and grandchildren attended EHS, and he is very proud to be a part of the community. He spoke about the struggles and hardships the founders had to endure and overcome while founding EHS. Despite all the people pushing back on the founders’ dream of an Episcopal school in Houston, they were able to successfully create an amazing school. In the late 70s, Bishop Benitez decided he wanted to start an Episcopal school in the Houston area. He began looking for locations and came across the old Marion Christian High School, which would later become EHS. He bought a part of the property in 1983, and soon after began the remodeling process. The location where the Chapel would be built was purchased soon after. Through the nationwide search to find a Founding Headmaster, Reverend Dr. Jess Borg was chosen and hired in 1983. The first Opening Day was on August 14, 1986, and commenced with a flag raising ceremony. All the faculty, staff, and students gathered around the flag poles in the front of the school, which was Furnace Avenue at the time, as the United States, Texas, and Episcopal Church flags were raised.

Volunteers Valentina Morales, Mary Wareing, Julia Bragg, Vivian Turbidy, and Sarah Margaret Hill help package kids meals. Photo by Alyssa Wall. ALYSSA WALL Staff Writer

“SOS, or Students of Service, is a school-wide organization which aims to provide relief to many different areas of need in Houston. Some areas of need include hunger, homelessness, education, the environment, elderly care, and health. Each student, when becoming part of the Episcopal High School community, is automatically made a member of this organization.” Learn more about SOS projects on Page 3

Freshmen experience class retreat to Camp Allen IZZIE SONG Staff Writer

INSIDE New religion column debuts in KT Check out the first Lessons in Faith

PAGE 2 Traveling through past trends A fun look at what was popular in the past

PAGE 6-7 Features ........................ 2-3 Culture ......................... 4 Entertainment .................. 5 Opinions........................... 8-9 Sports................................ 10-11 Knight Shift...................... 12

On October 12, the Freshman Class attended the annual retreat to Camp Allen. A landmark in the Episcopal experience, Freshman Retreat provides an opportunity for new students to form bonds with their classmates and learn more about their peers. Camp Allen has long been the place to go for retreats, offering a variety of activities, expansive grounds, and verdant scenery. Alongside these enjoyable options, the Class of 2026 spent the day cycling to different stations with their advisories. Among the many notable activities, they wrote letters to their future, senior selves to one day read and look back on who they were at the beginning of their high school careers. They faced a high ropes courses and sped down zip lines before spending free time mingling out on the grounds. A lesson with Reverend Callahan was also offered during which they explored both their religion and spirituality within their groups. The advisory groups would go on to participate in icebreaker games. The aim of the day was to foster community among the freshmen, while also allowing for an enjoyable experience.

“My favorite part was doing the ropes course,” said freshman Anya Pant, “and getting to know my advisory. The Get-toKnow-You games helped me learn more about their personal lives.” Every Episcopal student has been through their complicated first year at a new school,

so this opportunity to better connect with fellow freshmen was beneficial. Despite the exhaustion and awkwardness a retreat like this may bring, the experience was shared among all, physically challenging them and creating connections that will carry them through high school.

Freshmen Rodney Thomas, Miles Young, and Sela Provenzano gather with their advisory to play Get-to-Know-You games. Photo by Mya Broughton.


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