Student models
Resolve to change
New JV swim coach
G12-13 B1
B1
C1
Student lands professional modeling job something
Students stick to new years resolutions
Athletes look forward to this season with a new leader
The Granite Bay Gazette GRANITE BAY HIGH SCHOOL w 1 GRIZZLY WAY w GRANITE BAY, CA w 95746 w VOLUME 16 w ISSUE 5 w FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2013
Commentary
Brown stays true to Prop. 30 intentions
Initiative ensures K-12 schools will receive $2 billion this year
nicole bales
nbales.gazette@gmail.com
At long last, it’s happened. California’s governor and the legislature – with a significant boost from the voters – have managed to create and pass a bill that most critics say is fair, balanced and for the good of the state. Pessimists move aside, because for once, the politicians have proved you wrong. Proposition 30, the long-awaited voter refer-
Disney’s lovely Princesses got Sandy Hook it all wrong starts safety conversations
‘D
reams do come true’ is the theme Disney has spent decades trying to instill in young minds through the Disney Princesses. Through story-telling, Disney tells children that as long as they work hard and wish, they can achieve all their dreams. Cinderella dreamed of leaving the life her stepmother and step-sisters forced upon her, and going to the royal ball to meet Prince Charming. Rapunzel dreamed of the day she would leave her tower and see the floating lanterns. Tiana dreamed of opening the restaurant she and her father always talked about. What they all have in common is that all their dreams come true and, of course, they all marry their “Prince Charming” in the end, just as their predecessor Cinderella had. But over time, as I’ve become less ignorant, I’ve found that the Disney Princess ideals are flawed, and yet I have come to appreciate them a lot more. Dreams don’t come true. You can achieve a goal, but a goal and a dream are two different things. A dream is how someone wants to see themselves on the surface once they achieve a long-term goal, but no one knows where the journey to their dream is going to take them and no dream or goal will ever go as expected. I’ve learned through observation and personal experience that pure hard work and wishing does not always work. Even if you achieve your “dream,” the reality of the final product is almost unrecognizable when compared to the original dream. Although I’ve had a rough wake-up call to that reality, I’ve found myself in a few more veg-out days watching Disney Princess movies lately. It’s not because I still have some delusional idea that I can fully control my future, and they don’t provide any reassurance that I can. It’s because I, like most Americans, have become addicted to the thought of achieving anything I want out of life, and when I fail, or it proves to be more difficult than Disney let on, I go back to Cinderella, Repunzel and Tiana because they simplify the whole process. Our problem is that we want too much. No matter what we achieve we are never content, and the minute we achieve a goal, we are already on the hunt for bigger and better. As a result, our dreams are never consoled because we’re never satisfied. I see this reality in every adult around me. Some accept and find love and joy where their dream has taken them, but unfortunately so many others find themselves stuck running in a hamster wheel wondering why their dream isn’t making them as happy as they thought they would be, ignorant to the fact that they will never be content with their “dream come true” until they’re content with their reality. I’ve grown up with Disney all my life and have found so many truths tied into the stories, but the company has failed to teach the beauty that comes from dreams not working out. Life never goes the way you want it to or expect it to. Dreams should guide you through life, but if I got to decide where I was going in life through every dream, then I would have missed out on all the lessons and beauties that failure has to offer. Once I recognized those lessons and beauties and learned to appreciate them, I realized that dreams are over-rated. *** Nicole Bales, a senior, is a Gazette co-editor-in-chief.
BY MEGHAN CARLSEN mcarlsen.gazette@gmail.com
A
merica was all geared up to watch the San Francisco 49ers play the Baltimore Ravens in the Super Bowl when a small group of children graced the field. There were noticeable gaps between some of the students in the choir, and it’s been reported that the gaps were there to honor and represent their fellow students who couldn’t be with them to sing on this day. They opened their mouths to sing “America the Beautiful” and suddenly tears were brought to the eyes of millions, as they were deeply reminded of the horrors these children underwent in the now infamous Sandy Hook shootings. *** On Dec. 14, when Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., received an unexpected visitor in the form of Adam Peter Lanza, 27 students and staff lost their lives. But many more have been affected by the grief, disbelief and fear that have surrounded this national tragedy. However, what this calamity has also caused is a reevaluation of safety and security procedures all over America, including at Granite Bay High School. Jill McKinney, who teaches social psychology, has had experience dealing with these types of lockdown situations while teaching at other schools earlier in her career at both Kennedy and Rosemont high schools. McKinney described what a chilling experience it was to be a teacher at Rosemont when the school went into a serious lockdown because of a potential shooter when she was six See RESPONSE, page A9
endum designed to save the California K-12 and higher education systems, passed in the November election with an almost 55 percent approval from the state’s voters. The bill will raise, and set aside in a separate account, $250 million for the University of California/ California State University systems and $2 billion for the state’s K-12 schools. The real victory isn’t the amount of money Prop. 30 will raise, but that the money raised will be used exactly where it’s supposed to be.
Response to a tragedy
School Shooters wMost attackers have had previous access to weapons and had used them before. w In most cases adults noticed behavior prior to the attack that worried them. wMost school shooters have been males, 11 to 21, most between 13 and 18 years old. Source:Teen Violence Statistics
Gazette photo illustration /Kristin Taylor
Because of the recent school shooting in Newtown, Conn., schools around the country including Granite Bay High School have started to re-evaluate their safety policies in order to prevent another similar event from happening again. Kyle Holmes In a last minute change Holmes was placed to teach English instead of Intro to Journalism.
Magazine, Intro. Journalism combined BY KATE HURLEY
On Monday, Jan.7, the day before the spring term was scheduled to start at Granite Bay High School, drama teacher and journalism adviser Kyle Holmes got a text message from assistant principle Brent Mattix asking Holmes to please come and chat with him. “That’s when they let me know that I would no longer be teaching Intro. to Journalism,” Holmes said. Earlier that day, Linda Dickson,
See PROP 30, page A10
FAST FACTS
Classes cut in sudden administrative move khurley.gazette@gmail.com
“Often politicians will play a budget bill one way, then as it passes, they put the money in areas completely unrelated,” Advanced Placement American government teacher Jarrod Westberg said. “The cool thing is that it appears (Gov. Jerry Brown) kept his word. There are no increases in funding for other programs unrelated to education.” However, the discussions about Prop. 30 aren’t
Gazette illustration/LENA EYEN
BY ASHCON MINOIEFAR
aminoiefar.gazette@gmail.com
who teaches physical education and psychology and is the Magazine Club advisor, was told she would be taking over the Intro. to Journalism class and would be able to combine it with her magazine class that was underenrolled. According to Dickson, the administrators gave her the choice of choosing between teaching magazine and Intro to Journalism combined into one third-period class, or teaching English – and whatever she chose, Holmes
would get the other. “I wanted magazine to stay alive,” Dickson said. “(The) magazine is something I created and I didn’t want to lose it.” Last spring, Holmes taught the Intro. to Journalism class and, with the help of a few students and other media/journalism teachers, he created a new school journalism and media website, See SCHEDULE, page A10
In feverish anticipation of worsening flu season New teachers carry on their predecessors’ previous successes BY HALEY MASSARA
hmassara.gazette@gmail.com
Heidi McKeen has three bottles of hand sanitizer, five bottles of soap, and two packages of disinfectant in her classroom – all silent harbingers of this year’s hard-hitting seasonal flu. “I have definitely experienced the highest number of losses I’ve ever had as a teacher,” said the Granite Bay High School physi-
ology teacher. “A large volume of students (absent) on a daily basis, but also students out longer than normal.” According to the Center for Disease Control, California’s flu season this year reached its peak in January, though GBHS remains heavily impacted. School nurse Linda Warfield said she’s been sending around 20 to 30 students home per day with flu-like symptoms, some with high fevers. “I definitely agree that the cold and flu season is particularly bad this year,” she said in an email. See FLU, page A10
inside this issue News
A2 – A10
Voices
A9 – A14
Second Look
A14
Features
B1 – B8
Sports
C1 – C6
Green Screen
G1 – G24
Slut Shaming
Robotics
A2
A3
Traditional versus risky clothing at school.
The robotics team starts a new season.