November Chronicle Issue 2014

Page 1

CHRONICLE the harvard-westlake

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Los Angeles • Volume 24 • Issue 3 • Nov. 19, 2014 • hwchronicle.com

Community grieves for science teacher By Zoe Dutton

BENNETT GROSS/CHRONICLE

Water polo team to face Corona del Mar in CIF Semifinals DEFENDING THE TITLE: Attacker Evan Rosenfeld ’17 raises his arm to block an Orange Lutheran player as goalie Anthony Ridgley ’15 prepares to defend the goal. The Wolverines defeated Orange Lutheran 22-8 in the CIF quarterfinals Nov. 15 and will face off against Corona del Mar Nov. 19 at William Woollett Aquatic Center in Irvine. For more coverage of the game against Orange Lutheran and the Semifinals, see page C4.

Toxic Turf ?

as Vice President John Amato and history teacher John CorStudents, teachers, friends sello. Brink served as a football and family will remember sci- coach, baseball coach and science teacher Jim Brink at a ence teacher. In 1985, he won memorial service this Thurs- the Garrett Hardin Award for day in St. Savior’s Chapel on early promise in teaching. the upper school campus. He is survived by his wife Because the chapel is ex- Vivian and daughters, Marispected to fill, there will be a sa, 13, and Lacey, 19. live feed of the service shown “Jim was a big-hearted man on the screens in the plaza, who taught because he wanted in the Feldman-Horn Gal- to help young people recognize lery and in Feldman Horn 107. and achieve their full potenThose who cannot be present tial as students and members will be able to view it online. of the community,” Science Brink, 64, died as a result Department Chair Lawrence of a single-car accident Nov. Axelrod said. “Jim touched 12, and President many lives on many Rick Commons anlevels at Harvardnounced his death at Westlake, and we are an upper school asall richer for having sembly Nov. 13. known him.” Brink had attendThe Science Deed a faculty developpartment hung a picment workshop and ture of Brink on their returned to his classoffice door, and sturoom to prepare for dents surrounded it nathanson’s classes the next day. with remembrances Jim Brink He apparently lost on Post-it notes. control of his car on his way “Mr. Brink truly cared home at about 7 p.m. about us students,” Imani “Our hearts go out to his Cook-Gist ’15 said. “I had a wife, children and family, in- tough time in chemistry, but cluding his brother-in-law, he never gave up on me.” our colleague, [Senior Alumni Cook-Gist recalled how, Officer] Harry Salamandra,” when she had difficulty graspCommons and Head of School ing the concept of ‘moles,’ Jeanne Huybrechts said in a Brink did a dance to illustrate letter to the community. “We the idea. are grateful for the goodness “It was so hilarious,” she and strength of the commu- said. “Just wiggle around and nity every day, but especially do an air guitar solo, and any at times like these.” kid who has had Mr. Brink as Brink had taught at the a teacher will instantly recogschool for more than 35 years. nize his mole dance.” He graduated from Princeton Father J. Young will officiin 1972 and joined the faculty ate at the memorial service, at the Harvard School for and the interment will be priBoys in 1978, the same year vate.

Concerns that the rubber pellets in Ted Slavin Field could be carcinogenic have led the administration to look into the safety of the school’s artificial turf fields.

By Benjamin Most

for Scholastic Sports Science and Medicine discussed the Every time field hockey issue in a closed-door meetplayer Caitlin Neapole ’16 re- ing Oct. 22, and the board is moves her shoes after prac- in the process of consulting lotice, tiny pieces of ground-up cal doctors to gauge whether tires fall out. Field hockey the turf could harm students’ player Alexandra Grande ’16 health. is also intimately familiar with Artificial turf consists of the crumb rubber pellets that synthetic fibers coating a layer form the base of the school’s of crumb rubber pellets made artificial turf from used field. tires. This infill “I’ve gotcushions the We’ve consulted ten those in turf and gives my hair and it the feel of doctors to find out clothes and dirt. Some fear what they think, and even once in my that toxic maeye,” Grande terials in these we’ve decided to stay said. “It was rerubber pellets ahead of the research. ally painful.” could cause At this point, I think An invescancer. tigative report In a state[the concern] is mainly by NBC News ment distribmedia-driven.” in October on uted to parents cancer clusstudents —David Skaggs and ters in young who expressed orthopedic surgeon concern, the soccer players prompted school said questions from that “currently parents. The school is review- there is no medical evidence ing the safety of the artifi- to demonstrate a link between cial turf on upper school and artificial turf and lymphoma.” middle school playing fields However, an analysis of safety and any threat that the crumb studies on artificial turf conrubber pellets may pose. ducted by NBC was inconcluThe Advisory Board of sive. Crumb rubber contains Harvard-Westlake’s Institute ingredients such as butadiene

INSIDE A4 COLE FELDMAN/CHRONICLE

JOSEPH SCUDERIO/CHRONICLE ARCHIVES

SHINY AND NEW: A worker cuts and installs new turf at Ted Slavin Field in 2011. Now, some parents are concerned the crumb rubber pellets, made from recycled tires, may cause cancer. and styrene, both listed as toxic substances by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Used tires also contain carbon black, labeled a potential human carcinogen by the CDC and the California Environmental Protection Agency. In its statement, the school recommended that athletes “wash their hands after playing outside, especially before eating.” In 2003, the grass of the upper school’s natural grass football field was replaced with

artificial turf made by turf FieldTurf for $1.5 million. The turf started to shed strips of plastic eight years later and was replaced in 2011. Members of the Institute for Scholastic Sports Science and Medicine said that parents should not worry. “We’ve consulted doctors to find out what they think, and we’ve decided to stay ahead of the research,” Institute member and orthopedic surgeon David Skaggs (Jamie ’15, Clay ’21) said. “At this • Continued on page A2

THE VOICE: Henry Platt ’17 sings “Everything” by Michael Bublé at the first coffee house of the year Nov. 17.

ONLINE NIKTA MANSOURI/CHRONICLE

COMPANY: Check out a behindthe-scenes look at the characters of the fall musical, “Company.”


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November Chronicle Issue 2014 by The Harvard-Westlake Chronicle - Issuu