New Year’s events Students head to SnowGlobe fest
Winter sports
Pleasure Reading?
G10-11
B1
School has reduced joy from books
C1
Skiing and snowboarding
The Granite Bay Gazette GRANITE BAY HIGH SCHOOL w 1 GRIZZLY WAY w GRANITE BAY, CA w 95746 w VOLUME 19 w ISSUE 4 w THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2015
COMMENTARY
savitri asokan sasokan.gazette@gmail.com
In many ways, life imitates art
You can’t
...racial tension
IGNORE
L
ast December, I visited the Albertina museum in Vienna, which holds my favorite work of art: Albrecht Durer’s “Great Piece of Turf.” As sophomores, we all read Plato’s Allegory of the Cave: the inexorable light and goodness of truth, the necessity, for all humans, to “learn by degrees … to turn round to the true day of being.” He saw a world beyond the feeble, limited constructs of reality which we assure ourselves is indubitably correct. But it was only in my AP Art History class that I first encountered the “Great Piece of Turf.” that I was abruptly struck with the full import of Plato’s words. Tracing the gracefully curving stems – dandelions, daisies, speedwell, yarrow, plantain – I drew an intake of breath: Oh, this is what he meant. It was a watercolor, but unbelievably photorealistic – thousands of clear strokes forming this lifelike image. It was incredible. Durer is considered one of history’s greatest painters, and for very good reason. In the watercolor “Turf,” he meticulously renders, with scientific precision, a small patch of watery earth along with the plants which inhabit it. It’s both astonishing and wholly unprecedented for a sixteenthcentury artist, and the effect is not lost on modern viewers. One of my most inviolable beliefs is that genius exists: in uncompromising dedication to the truth, in refusing to accept the simpler story. And just as Plato said, anyone can achieve this state of being where awareness is inextricably bound up with existence. It’s the reason why, to so many of my peers’ bewilderment, I actually relish the concomitant pains of perfectionism. Why I’m not ashamed of coffee-stained hands and permanent shadows under my eyes. Even, to some extent, why I chose to undertake the notoriously rigorous IB pathway. There’s something beyond just intellectual potential to be experienced – complete presence and complete awareness. It’s that which I perceived to be reflected in Durer’s brushstrokes and pen marks. The painting has been called a work of realism; but to me, it was truer than reality. But that afternoon in Vienna, pressing my nose against the glass, I saw the gaps between the strokes. I saw the droplets of color, the soft blurring and the faint scratches of pen on paper. The clarity faded; Durer was naked. Here, finally, were the vulnerabilities I had convinced myself he didn’t have. It was as if I had uncovered some terrible secret. I always wonder whether artists actually give out their best work, and Durer was admitting he wasn’t. It constituted a betrayal of sorts, but it was the only honest thing to do. I suppose he still had a lot left to learn. For most of my life, I’ve trusted that the uncompromising pursuit of greatness is not only possible but compulsory. But it was too easy to neglect the minor treacheries. In the meantime, I think, staying at the threshold has its own beauty. *** Savitri Asokan, a senior, is a Gazette co-editor-in-chief.
Model /RYAN JOY
Gazette photoillustration/TROY PAWLAK
Race-related protests have increased recently after racially charged incidents at highly-regarded colleges and universities across the nation occurred.
Race relations on campuses lead to discussions on tension BY HANNAH HOLZER
C
hholzer.gazette@gmail.com
olleges across the nation have felt the backlash of a growing movement of people – young people in particular – who will no longer stand for racial intolerance. At schools such as Yale (where racially insensitive events involved fraternities), the University of Missouri (where students protested multiple racial incidents and one student engaged in a week-long hunger strike) and Claremont McKenna College (where racial tensions came to a head after questionable Halloween costumes were worn by students at the college and the staff’s response was unsatisfactory), students were demanding action on events they believed were not properly addressed. At Claremont McKenna, racially insensitive Halloween costumes were worn just a day after students at the college sent a message of solidarity to Yale and the University
‘Bang Bang You’re Dead’ focuses on school shootings
of Missouri with an organized protest in response to those schools’ own bouts with racially fueled controversy. “It all started when a couple of girls
dressed up in stereotypical Mexican attire for Halloween (and were photographed with) our junior class president – who was not dressed like they were,” Granite Bay High graduate Sydney Talmi, who attends Claremont McKenna, said in an electronic interview. “This created uproar, because prior to Halloween there were a bunch of posters and emails stating ‘Our culture is not your costume’ and (expressing) that it (is) wrong to wear (essentially) what the girls wore. “This picture then circled Facebook and was pretty much the tipping point for many students of color. Now that they had the administration’s attention, they were able to declare the other wrongs done to them and work toward a solution. During the week or so of protests, tensions were high for everybody.” Following the protests prompted by the picture, dean of students Mary Spellman and Claremont McKenna’s junior class president resigned.
skhurana.gazette@gmail.com
Nearly 300 mass shootings have occurred in the United States in 2015, more than 40 of which took place at schools. Feeling a need to send a mes-
See RACE, page A7
Hidden IB cheating culture? Members of school program do not always adhere to rules of conduct BY ANJALI SHRIVASTAVA
ashrivastava.gazette@gmail.com
Among the traits delineated in the International Baccalaureate (IB) Learner Profile is “principled,” which is defined as “(acting) with integrity and honesty, with a strong sense of fairness, justice and respect … (and taking) responsibility for their own actions and the consequences that accompany them.” Although this description is accurate for most of the students in the program, a small – yet significant – portion of the students have been participating in unprincipled behaviors. The IB program has a certain amount of notoriety when it comes to cheating; several students have reported activities such as taking a smartphone to the bathroom while taking a test in order to look up an
Gazette photo /MADELINE WILLIAMS
GBHS drama students perform in front of their peers on Dec. 10.
Production shown to students followed by a discussion BY SURINA KHURANA
GBHS senior Brandon Miyashiro, who is applying to Claremont McKenna, said he knows nothing of the events which have recently taken place and that these events would not affect his decision to attend if he’s accepted. However, Miyashiro said he does think student relations are an essential aspect of college life and necessary “when building a strong college community.” Sabrina McCord, a GBHS senior, said the events which have occurred on the campus at the University of Missouri, or “Mizzou,” might affect her decision to attend the college if she’s accepted. At Missouri, racial tensions came to a head when threats to shoot black students were made on the social media app, Yik Yak. After the university’s football team backed the protest and threatened not to play, both the president and chancellor of the university announced their resignations. “I’ve been seeing a lot of stuff in the news
sage to the student body of Granite Bay High School about this growing issue, a group of students – seniors Erica Lucia, Nick Martinez and Mira Pexa – decided to direct a play about the haunting effects of shootings. The produc-
inside the Gazette news
tion, titled “Bang Bang You’re Dead,” follows a high school student named Josh, played by senior Mark Kostyuk. “The play starts in (Josh’s) jail See BANG, page A6
English teacher says some IB guidelines are less than clear
See CHEATING, page A6
Emerald Brigade breaks records
Teens reevaluate their daily diets
GBHS marching band places first and then fifth at WBA Championship
For some, what they put into their bodies is becoming more important
A2
Jody Van Dusen
voices 9
A4
Time is merely a man-made concept We shouldn’t worry about time because it is just made up by us
A10