FEBRUARY 2007 (VOL. 13, NO. 5)
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BrainPOP is a hit with LS students ........................... 5
N E W S L E T T E R
est. 1893 • K-12 college prep
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Musicians Perform, Explore in Inaugural Trip to Paris In a first-time-ever journey to France, the Harker Orchestra hopped the pond over the holidays
to perform in the Paris Parade Festival and at other venues.The group left Dec. 26 and returned Jan. 2,
Robotics rock in the MS..... 11 Student directors present final projects ............................. 8 Harker US art teacher, Jaap Bongers, is profiled .......... 15
Supplied by Chris Florio
See page 2 for details.
and, in between, covered a lot of ground. “We arrived to a very cold Paris,” said Chris Florio, orchestra and jazz teacher, who led the group. “We spent the first day on a bus tour of town, climbed the Eiffel Tower and visited various sights that night.” The group toured Versailles in grand weather the following day and performed its first show, at the American Cathedral, that evening. The following day it was a visit to Montmartre, followed by a show at the Mairie (city hall) of the 12th arrondissement (district).
events Mon., Feb. 5 • 7 p.m. Blackford Auditorium
S C H O O L
Continued on pg. 14
Three Named Intel Semi-Finalists at Surprise Assembly The 2007 Harker Fashion Show Fri., Feb. 23 The San Jose Convention Center See pages 4 and 5 for details. 2007 Middle School Dance Production
2007
Dance JAMZ Fri., March 16 • 7 p.m. Sat., March 17 • 7 p.m. Blackford Auditorium Middle School Campus For ticket information e-mail tickets@harker.org Harker News — February 07
In an unprecedented victory for Harker programs and students, three seniors have been named 2007 Intel Science Talent Search semifinalists. This is the first time any school has had three semifinalists in the same year since Intel took over sponsorship of the 65year-old program in 1998. Adam Creasman, Arkajit Dey and Carolyn Wang were awarded $1,000 prizes by representatives from Intel in a special assembly Jan. 17. There were over 1,700 entrants from 487 U.S. schools, and only 300 semifinalists named in the contest. The three Harker projects have real-world applications and the students spoke about their work with Bay Area reporters after the awards ceremony. Creasman’s project was “Characterization of siRNA Microparticle Formation and Encapsulation using Supercritical Fluids,” which addresses
immune system issues; Dey’s project, “Tree-Realizability of a Distance Matrix,” develops an algorithm that can be used in stimuli association in psychology or Internet performance evaluation; Wang’s project, “The Orientation of Polydiacety-
lene Ethanolamine Monolayers,” examines improving conductivity in transistors through a special coating. Congratulations to all three winners, their mentors, parents and Harker teachers. National finalists will be announced Jan 31.
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