November 2011

Page 1

HONORING A PLAYER:

BEST BUDS: Teachers, administrators develop life-long bonds on and off campus.

C

B2-3

Bake sale, baseball signing fundraiser, memorial service pay tribute to classmate.

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The Harvard -Westlake

hronicle Los Angeles • Volume XXI • Issue III • Nov. 16, 2011

Pool revamp finally begins, Kutler permits still pending By Eli Haims

CAMILLE SHOOSHANI/CHRONICLE

CHLOE LISTER/CHRONICLE

IN MEMORIAM: Alex Rand-Lewis ’12, center, comforts Kameron Lucas ’12, left, and Michael Wagmeister ’13, right, after Monday’s memorial service in honor of Chris Robinson. Arden Pabst ’13, above, contributes to a memorial by writing a message on a baseball.

Coach, teammates remember ‘Bee-Bop’ for upbeat spirit

“ You were always a reminder to me of how sweet life can be. You make life sweeter for me and my friends. And I thank you.” —Colburn Pittman ’12

By Judd Liebman

Friends remembered Christopher “Bee-Bop” Robinson at a memorial service Monday for his ability to bring levity to almost all situations, even during his sickness. Robinson died Nov. 9 after battling leukemia for two years. “I am blessed to have known Chris, because not only did he make me a better person, but he made every place he went a better place,” Austin Schoff ’13 said at the assembly Nov. 14 in Rugby Auditorium. Robinson came from Cathedral Chapel School as a new ninth grader in September 2009. Shortly thereafter, he was diagnosed with leukemia, cancer of the blood cells, and took a leave of absence to start treatment in November 2009. Although Robinson never rejoined the Class of 2013 at school, he always considered himself a part of the community. “Chris, ‘Bee-Bop,’ really did love Harvard-Westlake,” his father Quincy Robinson said. “When he was in the hospital, Chris always wore Harvard-Westlake gear, whether it was shorts or a T-shirt. He seemed to think he got better treatment that way.” Quincy Robinson spoke on behalf of the Robinson family after speeches from four friends, baseball coach Matt LaCour, ninth grade dean Betsy Ilg and President Thomas C. Hudnut. Members of the Chamber

Singers sang a rendition “He never wanted to of “Somewhere Over talk about what was gothe Rainbow,” and Max ing with himself during Quilici ’12 played “No those visits, how cheWoman, No Cry” on guimotherapy was affecttar. ing him, how his body Long-time friend was reacting, how he Aaron Lyons ’13 said was feeling, did he need Robinson’s impact on anything,” LaCour said. others was “obvious by “You would try to ask how many people wrote him a question about his letters to his parents. It health, and he would just DIDAX is also obvious based on shrug his shoulders and how many people came say ‘I’m okay.’” Christopher Robinson to Rugby today.” Robinson was a secTo help defray the Robinson fam- ond baseman and pitcher who played ily’s medical and funeral costs, stu- with a sense of urgency and took evdents raised more than $7,000 from ery ground ball at 100 percent, teama “name-your-price” bake sale and in mate Langston McElroy ’12 said. donations to a memorial by writing Sickness sidelined Robinson, but messages on baseballs. during hospital visits, he and LaCour Speakers said Robinson was an “put together a covert mission: to get avid Yankee fan and described his his year of eligibility back once he got hospital room as decorated with Yan- back to school,” LaCour said. kee paraphernalia. Robinson was drawn to Harvard“If you brought up the Yankees, Westlake partly because of the baseyou would be there for an hour,” Ka- ball players he knew from Ladera meron Lucas ’12 said in an interview. Little League, Quincy Robinson said. “He knew everything about the Yan“Chris never got to play a game in kees.” a Wolverine uniform,” LaCour said. During hospital visits, Robinson “We use words like toughness and rewould frequently divert conversation siliency all the time. Chris embodied from his condition to baseball. those traits each day throughout this “He was still wise-cracking, mak- process. As a program, we will make ing jokes,” Colburn Pittman ’12 said sure we embody the things Chris of his hospital visits with Chris. “He showed us, and forever go on about didn’t want to burden us with [his our business, both on and off the sickness], so he’d push it to the side field, knowing that Chris is watching when he was talking with us.” and rooting for us.”

The school has received permits and has begun construction on the pool, Head of Campus Operations and Construction J.D. De Matte said. He hopes the City of Los Angeles will grant the permits for the Kutler Center today. The pool permits were granted Nov. 7, and the next day, part of the road next to Taper Gymnasium was ripped up to begin the electrical phase of work. A new electrical system is being installed to increase the current power four-fold. The first stage of the pool construction will be laying the foundation. A retaining wall will be built adjacent to the main driveway, and a wall will be continued around the perimeter. De Matte said the pool has to be open by early-to-mid August, in time for the start of the 2012-2013 school year. There will be about seven months of “hard core construction” and the remaining time will be “fine tuning,” he said. President Thomas C. Hudnut said about half of the funding for the pool has been donated by Peter and Judy Copses (Henry ’14, John ’14), who turned over the first shovel at the ground-breaking Tuesday. The construction of the Kutler Center, which bridges Mudd Library and Seaver, will begin as soon as the permits are received. “Once I get the Kutler permit, we will be immediately inside the building, framing and doing our structural stuff to move forward,” De Matte said. De Matte said that he had hoped to get the permits for the Kutler Center before now. “It’s been difficult getting them,” he said last week. “The city is tough to get through, and it’s a complicated project with buildings connecting other Continued on page A9

INSIDE END OF THE ROAD:

C4 Loss to St. Paul squashes the football team’s playoff hopes.

CASE STUDY: What happens, step by step, after a teacher reports a possible Honor Code infraction?

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