NON-PROFIT ORG
Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306
Freshman competes for French national swim team.
U.S. Postage
PA I D
Permit #44 Palo Alto, Calif.
PG. 11 SPORTS
THEORACLE Henry M. Gunn High School
http://gunnoracle.com/
Friday, May 18, 2018 Volume 55, Issue 8
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
Elisa Moraes-Liu and Eric Epstein Sports Editors
An outbreak of vandalism has swept through campus in recent weeks. According to Principal Kathleen Laurence, the graffiti has mainly affected the school bathrooms, and the strong chemicals used to wash off the markings resulted in students being prohibited from using the facilities in the hours following cleanup by campus supervisors. Other spots around campus have also been vandalized, according to Custodian Supervisor Luciano Hernandez. “It has been in the N building, the J building and the Village,” Hernandez said. “It has also been in the F wing where the lockers are.” There was graffiti on the side of the N building stairs on April 30, resulting in the area being closed off with caution tape to be repainted. A trend of vandalism of this magnitude has so far been unheard of at Gunn. “There’s always been graffiti, but nothing really bad like this,” Hernandez said. “Nothing like this has happened in my 20 years of being here, not to this extreme.” The graffiti has included negative messages directed at Gunn administrators and the Palo Alto Unified School District (PAUSD) officials. “From what I read on the graffiti, it is targeting the admin, targeting the [school] board, maybe the board members,” Hernandez said. Other than messages that were directed to the administration, the graffiti included a variety of drawings, jokes, poems and political statements, many of which were posted and circulated on students’ social media. In one message, students protested against the Social Emotional Learning and Functionality (SELF) program by writing on a bathroom stall, “Your SELF is just causing pain, this class is a bore, to you, I implore ditch SELF or we’ll all go insane.” Other messages have included pop culture references such as “Star Wars is better than Star Trek.” The vandalism has also addressed concerns presented by the school regarding vandalism, including a message that said, “So how are we hurting people? Explain and we might reconsider.” Another calls Palo Alto a bubble, and says graffiti is a way to “pop” it. VANDALISM—p.2
Rise of vandalism provokes school-wide response
On April 30, the N building wall was sectioned off with caution tape to be repainted. Sofia Sierra-Garcia
Hallway fences expand to keep construction on schedule Joy Huang
Features editor
On May 10, the construction fences facing the K and L buildings were expanded so that only the hallway remained available to students. This was done to keep construction on schedule, according to Assistant Principal Tara Keith. Throughout this school year, Keith has been working with construction company Alten and project management company fs3|Hodges to prioritize the needs of the students. “When [the construction crew] asks about expanding fence lines and making adjustments, the conversation is always around how it will impact students in getting to class,” Keith said. “Sometimes the banging and the drilling are very disruptive to students at the K building when they are testing, so we ask them to pause and work on the other side.” The overall construction progress is being completed on schedule, according to Keith. Out of two phases, Phase One is a renovation of the front portion of the Spangenberg Theater
and the addition of new choral and instrumental classrooms. It is projected to be done by the end of August. The lobby area of Spangenberg will be revamped and the bathrooms will be made more accessible in accordance with the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA). Phase Two is the Central Building Project, which is expected to be finished by the beginning of second semester next school year. The district would determine then whether to move in over winter break or during the summer. The first floor of the Central Building will house the Student Activities Center, two Makerspaces, which are workplaces for people, and classrooms for journalism, yearbook and graphic design, according to Keith. On the second floor, there will be counselor offices, a wellness center and classrooms for positive psychology and psychology, yoga and Living Skills. Junior Karly Hou is happy with the progress of the construction over the school year. “You can really see all the work they have been doing and how quickly the project is
coming along,” she said. “It’s actually pretty cool because a lot of students weren’t expecting them to do so much in this amount of time.” However, junior Patrick Gersh feels that there should be more workers. “In 1931, the Empire State Building was constructed in one year and forty five days,” he said. “I would expect that in 2018, a building with a hundred fewer floors would take less time to construct.” In addition to the Spangenberg renovation and the Central Building project, there are also other projected construction projects on campus; Gunn plans to update the sound system in the Bow Gym after AP testing is done. During the summer, there will be a City of Palo Alto project on Charleston and Arastradero in order to make the entrance of Gunn more ADA-accessible and safe. There will also be football field renovations, where a new sound system, pressbox and scoreboard will be added to support the school’s soccer teams after the football season starting next school year.