[SPORTS]
[ENTERTAINMENT]
Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Road Palo Alto, CA 94306 Palo Alto Unified School District
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PA I D
Parkour showcase p. 21
Volume 46, Issue 2
Homecoming proposals p. 20
Talk to me Monday, October 12, 2009
http://gunn.pausd.org/oracle
Emily Zheng
Features Editor
On Oct. 1, students bought variations of a spray painted ”Talk to me” T-shirt designed by seniors Miles Mathews and Sam Zeif. Though the general design was relatively simple–a profile of a face speaking the words “talk to me”–the meaning that resonated from both the Tshirts and the event itself sparked a call for change at Gunn. This project was init iat e d a nd carried out by Mathews and Zeif in r esp onse t o t he r e c ent su icides. “We did this because we realized that the issue, whatever it was, wasn’t going to just go away by itself,” Mathews said. “We’ve done a lot of T-shirt making in the past, so when we thought of what we could contribute, we instantly thought of making these shirts. It’s a very simple thing that will hopefully have a large impact on the community.” Mathews, Zeif and other students who contributed to this project hope that through this event, there will be an increase of communicaKimberly Han tion and openness in the
Permit #44 Palo Alto, Calif.
community. “The deaths last year were shocking, and I feel that the entire community felt the intense pain of realizing that our little town isn’t always so happy-go-lucky,” senior Hillary Stangel, who helped publicize and distribute the Tshirts, wrote in an e-mail message. “Hopefully these shirts will let students know that we support them and that we really do care for them,” she said. “It is not a memorial for those who have passed away. Rather, it is a course of action to impress upon others the true importance of increased communication.” Students may be asked to wear their shirts to school on specific days scattered throughout the year. “It’d be really cool to see this project continuing beyond just the selling of the shirts,” Mathews said. “The ultimate goal is to really bring the community closer together and that cannot be done through a one-time event.” The T-shirts, which were five dollars each, were sold out within 30 minutes of the lunch period. With this money, Mathews and Zeif were able to completely pay back all expenses as well as raise some funds for the KARA Foundation. From now on, all future funds that are raised through this project will go towards the KARA Foundation, which is a support group that has helped and will continue to help grieving students and families. “Besides the fundraiser aspect of it, I think it’s just a really great thing that people in the community can wear these shirts,” Zeif said. “It’s not necessarily the money that we raise that’s important, but rather the fact that wherever we go, we can carry this message of communication with us.” To help convey the message more successfully, Mathews and Zeif came up with a design that they believed was both straightforward and sensitive to the issue. “We knew we didn’t want to be blunt and just write, ‘students against suicide,’ because that wasn’t at all what we were trying to say,” Zeif said. “There also needed to be a cool design that students could relate to, and hopefully that’s what we have going on right now.” Each of the T-shirts is handmade and has a unique color pattern which Mathews and Zeif designed themselves. To mass-produce the shirts, they built a rig where they could place a cardboard stencil on. One person loads the shirt onto a mat, and the other proceeds to spray paint it with the selected design. This process, on average, takes 30 seconds to two minutes for each shirt. “At first we were just going to do solid colors and everyone would end up having the same shirt, but we tried to make each shirt unique,” Mathews said. “It enhances the message of having different students T-SHIRTS—p.10
Photos by Melissa Sun and Victor Kwok
From left to right: Senior Miles Mathews creates “Talk to me” shirts using spray paint and a stencil; Junior Raz Steinhart places a “Talk to me” T-shirt on the table; The stencil that was used to create the T-shirts.
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
Testing day coincides with Homecoming Alvin Man Centerfold Editor
Gunn will be dedicating an entire school day on Wednesday to college admittance, testing and career exploration. Juniors, sophomores and freshmen will be taking the Preliminary SAT (PSAT), PLAN and EXPLORE respectively from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., while the seniors will attend Stanford Psychologist Fred Luskin’s stress reduction lecture. The school decided to host the PSAT on Wednesday instead of Saturday, the usual day of the test. “We did not want to have students come to school on Saturday for the PSAT, so we decided to host it on Wednesday,” Principal Noreen Likins said. College Board administers the PSAT and only offers the test on a specific Wednesday and Saturday of the year. The PSAT date this year will coincide with Homecoming week. “[The Student Executive Council (SEC)] knew in advance that the PSAT would be held during Homecoming week,” Special Events Commissioner junior Ting Ting Liu said. According to Liu, SEC could not change Homecoming week because it is usually set to coincide with the football schedule. However, the games and activities that the SEC planned for Homecoming week will still occur with the Jamba Chug taking place after school on Wednesday. TESTS—p.3
District approves construction plan Sophie Cheng & Sarah-Jean Zubair News Editor & Forum Editor
The Palo Alto Unified School District (PAUSD) Board of Education approved conceptual design plans on Sept. 22 to construct two new academic buildings and a second gym at Gunn in the next 10 years. The construction will cost about $80 million and will be funded by bond Measure A, passed in June 2008. “The construction plans have our full support,” Assistant Principal of Facilities Tom Jacoubowsky said. “It is a necessary step for us to cope with Gunn’s growing enrollment.” The district hopes to begin construction in fall 2010. The 27 portable buildings in the Village will be moved to the back of the parking lot near the tennis courts in summer 2010 to accommodate the construction of a new two-story building that will house 28 math and English classrooms. “In the short term, the kids will have a little farther to walk, but the learning will continue,” Superintendent Kevin Skelly PLANS—p.5