C hronicle Photo illustration by candice Navi
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Performers show off talents at coffee house. Page B12
Harvard-Westlake School • North Hollywood, CA • Volume XIX • Issue 4 • Dec. 16, 2009 • chronicle.hw.com
Cross country girls run to state championship By Austin Block
chloe lister/chronicle
pRESIDENT sANTA: Head of Upper School Harry Salamandra (left) sits on the lap of President Thomas C. Hudnut, playing the role of Santa Claus, during the Winterfest during Monday break in Chalmers lounge.
Holiday cheer comes to Chalmers By Anna Etra
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Erin Moy
Santa Claus came to Chalmers Lounge Monday as part of the the annual Winterfest festivities hosted by the Prefect Council and Social Committee. The celebrations included Christmas carols by the Chamber Singers, cookie decorating, hot cider, the opportunity to buy Wintergrams, pictures with Santa and a video display of holiday-themed movies. “I think it was successful this year,” Senior Prefect Aarti Rao who helped plan the event said. “I’m really grateful for the hard work everyone put into planning this.” Winterfest was supposed to include an all-senior Secret Santa gift exchange. However, it was cancelled when the Facebook event profile indicated that participants should choose to be listed as “naughty or nice.” The event was organized by senior Prefects Sylvia Gintowt-Gindick, Chase Morgan and Aarti Rao, as well as Emma Gilhuly ’10 and Heidi Chung ’10. Under the advice of their advisers, school chaplain Father J.
Young and Jordan Church, the administrators of the group cancelled the Facebook event. Church said that Secret Santa got shut down because although the naughty vs. nice was just a reference to holiday cheer, the prefects “didn’t realize the student body would misconstrue the intentions of the gift exchange.” “I assume they misconstrued it because I have heard from students that in years past, some kids in Peer Support had done a naughty gift exchange,” Church said. “This was supposed to be a community building holiday event but people misinterpreted it to being inappropriate.” Instead of continuing the event without any connection to naughty vs. nice, the “misconception was already out there, so the administrators of the group did not want to risk inappropriate activity being associated with senior prefect members,” Church said. Nevertheless, decorations will remain up for the rest of the week.
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Queen’s iconic “We are the Champions” blared through speakers set up in the lounge. Two pillars of red, white, and black balloons flanked the stage. School President Thomas C. Hudnut waited on the stage, students crowded the room, and the girls’ cross country team walked up to receive recognition for winning the school’s first state cross country title. Hudnut recognized the coaches, gave a short speech congratulating the students on their accomplishment and called out each of the nine players by name, including sophomore Cami Chapus ’12, who placed first overall in the state for Division IV, and Amy Weisenbach ’12, who placed fourth overall in the same division. Each player was given a lei and Jamba Juice and the cookies were served. The girls’ cross country team became state champions for the first time in school history on Saturday, Nov. 28. Coupled with the boys’ fifth place finish, the day quickly became, in the words of the head of the cross country program Jonas Koolsbergen, “the single greatest day for running in the school’s history.” “They have run in the dark and they have run up hills with no one watching and they have run in places that others of us only have nightmares about and they have excelled and they have done wondrously well,” Hudnut said of the state champions. “In cross country everybody counts. It is the ultimate team sport and so everybody up here has contributed to this great day and to a new state champion banner…being hung down in Taper.” The team won state at Woodward Park in Fresno on Saturday Nov. 28 after taking the CIF title on Nov. 21 and league title on Nov. 4. Chapus won the individual state title with a time of 17:59, a minute faster than her time from the state meet last year for which she individually qualified, and the 18th fastest girls’ time run that day for any division. Weissenbach followed in fourth place, running 18:24 and making Harvard-Westlake the only school to score two runners in the top 10. Lily Einstein ‘11 finished third for the team, passing several runners in the final stretch and coming in 32nd place at 19:26. Claudine Yee ‘10 (46th) and Yasmin Moreno ‘13 (66th) came through next, running 19:42 and 20:05 respectively and finishing off the team’s scoring. Nikki Goren ‘12 (70th) was next at 20:09 and Caitlin Yee ‘13 (78th) followed with 20:22, the first seventh runner to come through for any team by 35 places. The Wolverines’ team time of 1:35:36 became the fastest time ever run at the state meet by a Div. IV team.
Cyber-bullying policy stands despite ruling By Michelle Nosratian
A Beverly Hills school that suspended a middle school student for cyber-bullying violated her 1st Amendment rights, a Los Angeles federal court has ruled. The ruling addresses the question of whether school administrations can have jurisdiction over the verbal conduct of students outside of school. “To allow the school to cast this wide net and suspend a student simply because another student takes offense to their speech, without any evidence that such speech caused a substantial disruption of the school’s activities, runs afoul” of the law, U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson wrote in his deci-
sion. “The court cannot uphold school discipline of student speech simply because young persons are unpredictable or immature, or because teenagers may often fight over hurtful comments,” he wrote. Harvard-Westlake’s policy, spelled out in the Student Parent Handbook, maintains that if a student makes a serious threat using school computers or makes negative comments about another student while identifying him or herself as a Harvard-Westlake student from their home computer, the school has the right to punish the student. “If someone is using hardware or software or networks supplied by the school, then it is an honor
code issue,” math teacher and Educational Technology Committee Chairman Jeff Snapp said. “It really doesn’t go back to whether it is a school computer or not, it goes back to who you want in your community, and as a private independent school, we have the opportunity to say who we want in our community,” Salamandra said. “I know public schools don’t have that opportunity but we do.” The administration has many ways of dealing with online transgressions, running the spectrum from a slap on the wrist to expulsion. “We over the years have evolved and changed things so that now online harassment is more strictly punishable,” he said.
Mary Rose Fissinger
INSIDE Questioning faith a common experience. Page B3 Jordan Freisleben
Video art adds cell phones to classics. Page A6
allan sasaki