Jim Barr
Limiting college letters Teachers cap number of recommendations
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Fall event guide
Ex-star continues coaching at GBHS
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Fashion, trends, food
The Granite Bay Gazette GRANITE BAY HIGH SCHOOL w 1 GRIZZLY WAY w GRANITE BAY, CA w 95746 w VOLUME 21 w ISSUE 2 w FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2017
mckenna aram maram.gazette@gmail.com
Twelve more years, here I come
S
ince I was 14, I’ve known that I want to be a doctor. But the thing that solidified my decision was not the idea of making money, nor my family’s will – it was the dedicated people within the medical field that inspired me. The catalyst for my journey was a week-long, summer medical camp at UCLA my freshman year. I bonded with hundreds of students, who, like myself, are driven by the future. I had every opportunity from touring the USC Keck School of Medicine to observing dozens of real cadavers. Within a seven-day span, I got to meet, converse and learn from the greatest leaders of our world. Within two months of returning from my camp, I had secured an internship at Kaiser Hospital that ended up being one of the They are greatest the heros experiences of of our my life. world I got to work and I alongside want to the top anesthesibe one of ologists, them. neurosurgeons, orthopedic surgeons, cardiologists, radiologists and more. Every week, I stood next to those pioneers of advancement. Every week, I received life advice. Every second spent in that atmosphere, I was inspired. I got to observe and experience things that most people, throughout their entire lifetimes, never will – holding appendixes, watching amputations, helping read CT scans … the list is almost endless. I want to get into 3 a.m. arguments over whether the radius or ulna is the cooler bone during the sixth hour of a tedious operation. I want to debate who’s queueing the next Black Eyed Peas song 20 years from now in the operating room. I want that family-like bond that lies within each and every hospital. While interning at Emergent Medical Associates in Los Angeles this past summer, I got a feel of both the business–and hospital–side of the medical field. Every moment of my experience there impacted my life in some way, no matter how small. Heck, even the modes of transportation to get to the emergency room were noteworthy. I took the public train (which was very interesting) for an hour and then proceeded to walk on the side of the freeway for half a mile to get to the emergency room (that was also quite interesting). Yet, the humorous memories came with harsh realities. I saw a mute, homeless woman come in who was covered in so much dirt that you couldn’t see an inch of her skin. I assisted a doctor in treating a murderer who was just released after serving 20 years in federal prison. I saw a lot. Yet, all of those scary and gruesome moments just made me realize I could handle working in a trauma department – they opened up more doors. But most of all, those moments made me respect those driven physicians so much more. They treated that mass murderer without hesitation. They helped that woman without any form of communication. They are the heros of our world, and I want to be one of them. *** McKenna Aram, a senior, is a Gazette co-editor-in-chief.
SOULMATE CELL-MATE
Your perfect . . . could be someone’s . . .
Gazette photo illustration /MCKENNA ARAM
In California, sexual intercourse between an adult and a minor is illegal, even if the age difference is only one year.
As seniors turn 18, couples with age differences might be at risk for statutory rape conviction BY KATIE COLOGNA
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H
igh school is a time for students to not only expand their education, but a time for them to learn lessons from their friendships, schoolwork and relationships. But how hard should those lessons be? A slap on the wrist, a bad grade, a falling out with a friend – or maybe a conviction for statutory rape. Students in sexual relationships – often seniors – can face this concern. If students are in a relationship where one of the partners turns 18 before the other and they are engaging in sexual activity, the older partner can be prosecuted – no matter their gender.
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There is a misconception that only times relationships consist of an men can be prosecuted for statutory older guy and a younger girl… (and rape. That not true, that) age differand yet men are still ence (can) be the ones who are steless than a year, it is for reotyped as the ones First of all let me like (my boyfriend who will get charged. They’re also often say that the law is and I), or more as the ones who tend to the law, so there’s substantial it is with some get more tense about the subject when they no getting around older couples.” The statuturn 18. it. “I think guys usually tory rape laws worry more because are different in – Natalie Elkin, GBHS different states. they are often labeled as the predator in In California, teacher those types of situastatutory rape is sexual intertions,” said a senior girl who asked to recourse between main anonymous and whose sig- an adult (anyone over 18) and a minificant other is turning 18. “Many nor (anyone under 18).
This is because the legal age of consent in California is 18. Even if the minor thinks they are consenting, legally they are not. Any third party can report the relationship as a crime if the one being reported is in a relationship with a minor and if both partners are sexually active. “First of all let me say that the law is the law, so there’s no getting around it,” Advanced Placement psychology teacher and therapist Natalie Elkin said. “It’s a risk that they will take, and they will risk conviction and they will risk being on the (sexual offender) registry and they will risk jobs and essentially everything. They will risk their future.” Many other states have enacted
Immigrant youth are affected by new order BY SABINA MAHAVNI
T Gazette photo illustration /KATIE COLOGNA Source /CAASPP
CAASPP scores skyrocket
GBHS redeems itself from last year’s testing
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t’s said there are no secrets to achieving success – it’s the result of preparation, hard work and learning from failure. Granite Bay High School’s current seniors, staff and administration can wholeheartedly agree after the seeing the results from the
2017 Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, which are part of the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress tests administered this past April. The CAASPP, which replaced the Standardized Testing and Reporting tests in 2013 as See CAASPP, page A7
inside This Section news
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he Trump Administration announced in early September to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals act, denying “dreamers” deferred action. DACA, proposed by the Obama Administration in 2012, allowed immigrants who came illegally to the U.S. before the age of 16 to apply for deferred action. This basically means that if these “dreamers,” as they are known, prove themselves as hardworking citizens contributing to society, they can avoid deportation for two more years. Dreamers could also apply for DACA renewals to extend their protected time. There were many requirements for prospective applicants – they must have immigrated here before their 16th birthday, they cannot be convicted felons and they have to have lived in the U.S. since June of 2007, as well as other criteria. However, on Sept. 5, President Trump ordered an end to DACA. Anyone who applied after this date was denied deferred ac-
School wifi limits web surfing
Natural disasters are becoming frequent
With implemented restrictions, certain sites can’t be used.
Recently, there has been an increased amount of catastrophes.
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See RAPE, page A7
DACA children are at risk
CAASPP Results
BY BRAYDEN JOHNK
the Romeo and Juliet laws, which are laws that modify the statutory rape laws for teens from 13 years of age to 19 years of age engaging in consensual sexual activity. The laws were created to protect relationships from ridicule when there is a minor age difference between the partners. These laws vary from state to state. Yet, in all states, same-sex relations were excluded from being protected. In states such as Hawaii and Maine, the age difference that is allowed between a minor (at the age of 16) and an adult is five years. In California, Florida and North Dakota, where the age of consent is 18, there have been no modifica-
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tion, and renewals were accepted until Oct. 5, last Thursday. These new restrictions are now clearly stated on the Department of Homeland Security’s webpage. President Trump is giving Congress six months to develop a solution for the 800,000 DACA recipients now at risk for deportation. Because of all the resistance Pres. Trump has received from both parties on this decision, he has been meeting with Republican lawmakers to brainstorm a different solution for the DACA recipients in danger, but nothing has come from it yet. Shahid Manzoor is an attorney at Manzoor Law Firm in Roseville who specializes in immigration law and understands how this new development could impact residents in this area. “In the greater Sacramento area, including Sacramento County, there is a large population (that) qualified for this program – that got certification for this program,” Manzoor said. “If it gets cancelled and they are not able to get recertification, then they are subject to deportation.” Even at Granite Bay High, immigrant students can speak with experience about beSee DACA, page A7
Gender jokes are degrading The common insult of doing something ‘like a girl’ remains in use.
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