February 2012

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DUCK, DIVE AND DODGE: Watch dodgeball teams compete every Monday in Hamilton and Taper gyms for the next four weeks.

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PERSONAL TOUCH: Junior spruces up cars with spray-painted emblems and other colorful details.

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The Harvard -Westlake

hronicle

Los Angeles • Volume XXI • Issue V • Feb. 8, 2012

Baseball, girls’ soccer reach top 10 nationally By Austin Lee

CHLOE LISTER/CHRONICLE

BRINGING “LARAMIE” TO LIFE: Nick Healy ’13 and Nadia Dubovitsky ’12 play Shannon and Jen, high school students who knew the accused attackers of Matthew Shepard, a

INDEPTH

gay teen in Laramie, Wyo. “The Laramie Project” depicts the aftermath of Shepard’s beating through dialogue from interviews with town residents. See A12 for further coverage.

Andrew LauGel: 1952 – 2011

3 AP curricula to change next academic year By Megan Kawasaki

The curricula of three Advanced Placement courses will change for the 2012-2013 school year, according to the College Board website. AP Biology, which has been taught for the past 20 years mostly through lectures and occasional lab work, will now emphasize student-directed labs and conceptual understanding rather than repetitive memorization of large quantities of information, said Upper School Science Department Head Larry Axelrod. “I’m looking forward to having more time for labs that are less cookbook-type and more open-ended or to have students put more effort into understanding the design and structure of a lab,” Axelrod said. The number of labs will increase and will be broader and more exploratory, including computer simulations, AP Biology teacher Walt Werner said. They will focus more on basic and essential biological processes and span over several days rather than take up one double-period class. This ensures that students can do extra hands-on work that there was not enough time to do previously. Continued on page A5

Baseball’s 3-2 victory over topranked Bishop Gorman High School from Las Vegas Saturday and a string of four consecutive wins for girls’ soccer solidified both teams’ ranks among the top 10 teams in the nation. The Collegiate Baseball Newspaper ranked Wolverines eighth in the nation and Bishop Gorman first in its preseason poll last month. In addition, Lucas Giolito ’12 and Max Fried ’12 were respectively ranked the first place right-handed and left-handed pitchers nationally of the senior class by ESPNHS. The team was also invited to play at the National High School Invitational over spring break in Cary, N.C., along with 15 other highly ranked schools from around the nation. “We’ll see a lot of highly regarded schools this year out in North Carolina,” Head Coach Matt LaCour said. “I saw something like nine of the top 30 teams in that first national poll are going to be there, so it’s going to be a highly competitive tournament.” Meanwhile, the girls’ soccer team also shot up in rank, reaching ninth place in the Powerade Fab 50 on ESPNHS in week nine of the rankings, based on games played until Jan. 29. This is up three places from the team’s 12th place ranking the previous week and does not take into account the team’s latest wins, which include a 3-1 victory over Chaminade, currently ranked 31st in the poll. “I think it’s well deserved,” Head Coach Richard Simms said. “But it’s sports, so whatever is written down on paper matters a lot less than what happens on the field. I hope the players understand that and just stay focused and don’t get distracted.” See C1 and C4 for further coverage

ANDREW LAUGEL

“AN INSPIRATION”: Visual arts teacher Andrew LauGel photographs himself in a “12 o’clock portrait,” one of the staple projects he taught. LauGel died Dec. 22.

Mourners remember LauGel as ‘guiding force’ in arts program By David Lim

A Buddhist service Thursday will conclude 49 days of special chanting marking the death of former visual arts teacher Andrew LauGel, who died of cancer Dec. 22 and was remembered at a memorial Jan. 27 in the middle school library. The memorial, titled “Andrew LauGel: A Celebration of Life,” was organized by Chaplain Rabbi Emily Feigenson as the first of three gatherings dedicated to LauGel, who headed the middle school visual arts department for part of his over 20-year tenure.

LauGel retired last spring after being diagnosed with cancer and moved to Connecticut with his family. His family will hold another service in the first week of March at a Santa Monica beach, Feigenson said. “[LauGel] was a man of fine character, and he was a character,” Head of School Jeanne Huybrechts said as the first of six faculty speakers. “He was a guiding force in the creation of our outstanding middle school arts program. He was a force for good, and he was a force to be reckoned with. Continued on page A4

INSIDE CRACKDOWN:

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The LAPD will begin enforcing speed limits more strictly on streets near campus.

PLAY MAKER: Midfielder Adam Wininger ’12 is one of the top goal scorers since he returned from a year in France.

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