CHRONICLE the harvard-westlake
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Los Angeles • Volume 24 • Issue 2 • Oct. 14, 2014 • hwchronicle.com
Fair
Game By Zoe Dutton
W
hen Sandra* ’15 slips on her kneepads and strides onto the volleyball court, she isn’t there to play nice. As a member of a volleyball team that was CIF runner-up last year, she and her teammates are among the top players in Southern California. Their games are also among the school’s most popular, drawing crowds of hundreds of chanting, face-painted fans. And how does she feel when students casually reference the appeal of players’ teensy spandex shorts? Sandra says it doesn’t bother her. “That’s just a joke,” she said. “I think because the volleyball girls are comfortable with it, it’s not really disrespectful.” Sandra’s statement is part of a larger debate over the treatment of female athletes at Harvard-Westlake. According to a Chronicle poll of 421 students, 65 percent believe that female athletes are treated differently from male athletes by students, while 45 percent think they are treated differently by the administration. • Continued on page A4
GRAPHIC BY JACOB GOODMAN
Thefts prompt revision of security protocol
By Lauren Kim
When Clara McCarthy ’15 arrived at her locker on the morning of Sept. 20, she noticed that her lock was missing. She had left it hanging on the loop unlocked, and as she checked for other missing items, she realized that her Nikon D3100 camera was gone. After filing a missing items report with Head of Security Jim Crawford, McCarthy told her friend Katie Hohl ’15, who checked her own locker and realized that her camera was also missing. “I think we didn’t want to believe it was taken, because we’re kind of taught that
our school is safe,” McCarthy said. “We leave backpacks and phones everywhere.” McCarthy’s and Hohl’s cameras were two of four items stolen on Sept. 19, when visiting water polo players from Los Osos High School were caught on security cameras wandering around campus opening unlocked lockers. Three student cameras were stolen from lockers near Mudd Library and a laptop from a backpack in Taper Gym, Crawford said. “I keep telling everybody that I’m not worried about the kids here stealing from each other, I’m worried about the kids and fans from other schools,” Crawford said.
Soon after both McCarthy and Hohl reported their cameras missing, Crawford received a report of the missing laptop. The following Monday, a senior, who asked not to be identified, also noticed her camera was missing. Crawford went through security videotapes and showed them to Head of Athletics Terry Barnum, who identified the Los Osos school shirts. Barnum called the Los Osos water polo coach, who identified the suspects, Crawford said. Los Osos officials recovered the cameras and returned them to Harvard-Westlake soon after. The laptop was never recovered, but Los Osos reim-
bursed the student for the loss, Crawford said. “The students that had removed those items are being disciplined by [their] school, and are in complete cooperation with their administrator and head of school,” Crawford said. As a result of the thefts, Crawford and the security team are banning visiting sports team members from walking around campus. Team members waiting for a team of the same sport to finish a game must now stay in the venue and watch. Visiting fans are not restricted, but Crawford said security has been beefed up at home games.
School adjusts water use in face of severe drought By Su Jin Nam The school is taking measures to conserve water in response to the worst California drought of the century, but some students and faculty think that it could do more. The watering program at Harvard-Westlake has been cut back “a considerable amount,” President Rick
Commons said, since California passed emergency drought regulations in July. The pools on both campuses are now covered when they are not in use, which decreases evaporation. The school has stopped watering the lawn behind the library at the Middle School, and sprinklers for the houses the school owns on campus now operate only twice a week,
in accordance with the regulations. “We take all issues, rules and laws very seriously and make proper decisions on how we are going to react to issues based on all the facts we have,” said Jim DeMatte, director of campus operations and construction. The new state regulations prohibit runoff when watering
outdoor landscapes, washing cars without a shut-off nozzle, watering concrete, and running fountains that do not recirculate water. The fountain in front of Feldman-Horn and waterfall in front of the main office both recirculate water and must be run to avoid the infestation of • Continued on page A3
INSIDE B4
CYBER PIRATES: Many students pirate books, movies and music from the Internet illegally without a second thought.
ONLINE
HOMECOMING: Check out full coverage of Homecoming 2014, including a video recap of the event.