Author: adviser

  • Poly’s Got Jazz!

    On November 2, 2017, Long Beach Poly’s Jazz program performed their annual fall concert at Hughes middle school.

    The night began with a performance from a Jazz C. Junior, Maya Cheav played the piano for Jazz C. “The concert was great. You wouldn’t believe the amount of talent at this school,” said Cheav. Jazz C performed four songs: “Second Line,” “Avalon,” “Sugar Train,” and “Tenor Madness.”

    Next in line was Jazz B, performing “Cheesecake,” “Butterfat,” “Teach Me Tonight,” and “Smackdown.”

    “We performed four songs, all pretty different. Two swing, one funk, and one ballad,” said senior Blake Leigh, who played the piano for Jazz B. “I think that the band’s hard work really showed in our performance.”

    Jazz A2 was second to last to perform. Drummer, junior Marcelo Murillo played for Jazz A and commented, “I felt as though from the beginning of our first rehearsal of the tunes, we struggled as a group. Then overtime, through practicing as a group and on our own, we developed the songs and shaped the music in a way that sounded amazing. On the whole, the concert sounded great.”

    Jazz A2 performed the songs: “Hey That’s Nacho Cheese”, “Body and Soul”, and “I’ll Be Seeing You”.

    Jazz A closed out the event with more spectacular performances.  Senior Kyle Van Lant played the saxophone for Jazz A. “We played New Mambo, Count Bubba, Duck Ankles, Helen’s Heart, and the Trolley song, which Jacob Wolff arranged. I had a ton of fun; we really pulled through at the performance, as did all the other groups,” said Van Lant.

  • A “Broad” Understanding of Art

    Founded by philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad, Los Angeles is home to the renowned art museum named The Broad. The iconic museum features exhibits from all corners of the Earth. The most current being Yayoi Kusama’s infinity mirrors. A few very lucky Poly students and teachers have been able to visit this collection. The Broad is known for over 2,000 pieces of contemporary and postwar art pieces. Since opening in September 2015, The Broad has welcomed more than 1.6 million visitors.

    Poly’s only Art History teacher, Christine Tram, said The Broad is one of her favorite places to go in her free time.

    Christine Tram
    The photo above features one of Kusama’s Infinity Rooms titled Dot Obsession. This work was inspired by the Kusama’s visual transformation from Love to Polka Dots.

    The Broad museum is also home to one of today’s most famous contemporary artists: Jeff Koons. He is most well known for his Balloon Dog piece and his Rabbit artwork which is now on display at the Los Angeles museum.

    At  this particular museum, contemporary and pop art styles are extremely popular. Many are familiar with  the artist Barbara Krueger who addresses media and politics in their native tongue: tabloid, sensational, authoritative, and direct.

    The Broad is worth spending a day in LA with your closest art-loving pals.

  • Dancers En Pointe!

    Dancers En Pointe!

    Courtesy of Ashley Lopez

    On November 16, the Long Beach Poly dance program had their annual winter show. This year’s recital included various levels of performers such as PE 10, Dance 7-8 tech, and the Dance Team. Poly’s first hip-hop dance team, H2M, was also featured in the show and gave a great performance.

    According to dance instructor, Cynthia Negrete, the show was comprised of  “everything, all forms of dance.” The range of performance for the young girls ranged from lyrical and contemporary dances all the way to character dances and even to hip-hop and Bollywood.

    Senior Megan Villaverde stated that this show was different for her: “I was able to immerse myself in a different range of styles.”

    Villaverde was “really glad to work with new choreographers and their dances for the show.” After taking a long break from the spotlight, Villaverde was ecstatic to return to the stage with her fellow teammates and peers.

    Another Long Beach Poly senior, Adrianna Luna, is in her fourth year with the dance program. Luna said that she was “most excited to be the first event performing in Poly’s new auditorium.” Luna, who was featured in a jazz and contemporary piece, couldn’t wait to show “how hard we’ve been working on the final presentation.”

    Long Beach Poly’s new auditorium has been a long time coming– and the performing arts students were more than happy to jump back into the theater lifestyle.

    The hard work paid off in the end. All of the dancers experienced the rush of adrenaline when they were on the stage as well as off. An audience member, senior Natalie Hun, said, “I really liked the different styles of the show… I had a fun time cheering everyone on!”

  • What in the World?!?

    Monday, November 20

    An Argentine submarine with a crew of 44 members went missing, and a satellite call raised hope only for officials to realize it was a false alarm.

    Tuesday, November 21

    Thirty-two people were killed in an Iraqi town by a suicide bomber, which was confirmed by both the central government in Baghdad and Kurdish regional authorities.

    Wednesday, November 22

    A Filipino Catholic Priest was accused of molesting two boys from North Dakota in the 1990s. Chief State Counsel Ricardo Paras explained that the priest was arrested and flown to the United States because of his alleged sexual advances, which will soon appear in the North Dakota court.

    Thursday, November 23

    Three sailors went missing on Wednesday from a US Navy aircraft crash, and American and Japanese officials are searching the Philippine Sea.

    Saturday, November 25

    French President Emmanuel Macron began an initiative to tackle violent rhetoric against women in France and end the stigma around the harassment of these women.

    Sunday, November 26

    1.9 million doses of vaccines were delivered to Yemen by the United Nations Children’s Fund.

    Tuesday, November 28

    Peace talks were supposed to take place with a meeting involving Syria and the UN in Geneva but Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s delegation was absent.

    *Information was obtained from the World Digest section in the Washington Post*

  • ComplexCon Clambake*!

    Complexcon arrived to the downtown Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center during the weekend of November 4 and 5. Complexcon is a curated festival celebrating urban art and street wear.

    “I loved my time at Complexcon,” said Visalrich Sopha, a JUSTICE junior. “I enjoyed seeing everyone’s style and culture displayed in one concentrated area. I enjoyed seeing some of the artists that performed such as Smokepurpp, A$AP Ferg, and Ski Mask the Slump God.”

    Some famous influencers who showed up were Pharrell Williams, Takashi Murakami, Adrienne Ho, Pusha T, André 3000, and so many others. Although this event contained many stars, it was mostly packed with festival goers.

    “It was very crowded. People were yelling and eating and drinking. I had to wait at least 4 to 5 hours each line,” said Sopha. Many artists had meet and greets such as Takashi Murakami, who signed his art and personally greeted his fans. Despite the craze and masses of people, Complexcon was a great way for fans to get in touch with the contemporary influencers of street culture.

  • Downsides to the Time Change

    Being a sixteen year old girl, it is hard for me to go out at night and stay out past dark. During the summer, there is still light outside around 8 p.m. This whole time change does have major flaws and some advantages, although the advantages are more for some of us lazy peeps. Many of us, I know, struggle with getting out of bed in the morning. It’s harder to wake up when the mornings now seem so gloomy, and I wake up to a really depressing night sky after my evening nap. Apart from the one hour taken away from my glorious sleep schedule, I have less time to finish my daily chores.

    For the majority of people, our schedules consist of waking up early going to school and after school attending various activities that depend on the sun’s rays of light. By the time that we get out of school, the sun seems to shine as if it were five in the afternoon in the summer. By the time you get home, there are chores that need to be done, other activities to accomplish and places to go. Some high school students do not drive yet, so we have to take other sorts of transportation and this makes it dangerous because you never know what you may encounter on this small “adventure.”

    Long Beach isn’t the safest city, including this area in which Poly lives. Nowadays even going to a store on the corner is dangerous. This issue of violence changes many things and affects us all in many aspects. Parents now are not letting their children go out and honestly, I agree with this matter. When a parent tells you, “Don’t go out after 7,” or even, “ I want you home by 6,” it doesn’t mean that they don’t want you to be going out with friends or they don’t want you to be enjoying your life, but they are trying to prevent things that may happen.

    At the end, yes we may not be able to change the time back, all we can do is wait. All there is left to say is be careful because we all know that we live in a pretty messed up world and no one knows what awaits for us outside our door.

  • Recycling Should be a Priority at Poly

    Recycling has become a big issue in the 21st century. Americans produce an average of 4.4 pounds of trash per person every day while the rest of the world produces only 2.6 pounds of trash per person. Out of the 254 million tons of trash produced by Americans in 2013, only 87 million tons were recycled. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 75% of the American waste stream is recyclable yet only 30% is thrown into a recycle bin. This has caused a need for increase in recycling programs at schools around the country.

    However, I still continue to notice problems at Poly when it comes to recycling and campus cleanliness. It frustrates me that there are no recycling bins in the quad. Think of all the items that could be recycled but are thrown into garbage bins, contributing to the 254 million tons of trash that we Americans produce every year.

    This is not Poly’s fault alone. LBUSD does not provide funding for the blue recycling bins in select classrooms, said Libby Huff, the PacRim business teacher. The National Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) paid for the blue bins and Huff said the cost was about $1,000.

    LBUSD does not provide funding to its schools for recycling. Janitors are not paid to take care of school recycling. Recycling on campus is completely up to the students and the staff.

    One frustrating thing about the recycling on campus is that only paper, bottles, and aluminum cans can be placed in the bins. Think of the other items that could be recycled, such as plastic bags, styrofoam, milk cartons, and plastic containers. Long Beach takes all of these items through their recycling program. So why are we only allowed to recycle cans, bottles, and paper at school?

    It is very disappointing to hear that the district does not provide recycling funds to schools. I understand that they have a lot of expenses, but the environment is more important than those fancy Chromebooks students, including myself, are using.

    Instead of buying all those laptops, why not use the money to provide recycling bins and programs to all the schools in the district? Why are more teachers not interested in getting involved with recycling at school?

    We have environmental science teachers who lecture about the environment, air pollutants, trash, and global warming, yet our school is still far from being a clean and environmentally friendly campus. Practice what you preach!

    Last year, sophomore Cosmo Hebert and I tried to make a change in the school concerning the use of plastic straws in the student store. We wanted to replace them with paper straws.

    I know what you are thinking, “How could the straw not get all soggy and gross.” The company Aardvark makes paper straws that are durable and are environmentally friendly. We went to the student store armed with straw samples and pricing. Unfortunately, the student store was uninterested and the idea of paper straws did not get started. The paper straws only sell for about 2 cents more than plastic straws. The drinks that are sold with a plastic straw retail for $1.

    We also wanted to get styrofoam cups banned from the student store. The student store now uses paper cups, because of a district-wide ban. Although these paper cups are still not the most environmentally friendly it is a step in the right direction.

    I want the students of Poly to speak up if this concerns them too and talk to the principals and teachers about this.

  • Campus Food Delivery

    Many students here at Poly like to order food and have it delivered to the school for lunch. More of the freshmen and sophomores don’t know that students can’t order food. The fact is that students like to use Postmates, Uber eats, and Grubhub. I’ve noticed some things change since I’ve been here at Poly. When I was a freshman we were able to order food and have it delivered. Over the school years it stopped. Junior Anthony Castaneda said “It’s dumb they don’t let us order food, they swear they food good. Their food taste like dog food and they have no reason to not let us order because it ain’t even bothering them.” So he is not too happy with students not being able to order. Neither am I, I don’t see why we can’t order food. Some students don’t like school food and choose not to eat it. Some students have dietary restriction and can’t eat school food. That’s where Uber eats, Postmates, and Grubhub come into play.

    There are good outcomes to allowing us to have food delivered at lunch. On one hand, students can enjoy eating good food with their friends. They’re also getting a meal of their choice and not starving themselves.

    I, for one, believe we should still be allowed to order food because, just as Anthony Castaneda said, “It ain’t even bothering them.” All we want is to enjoy a good meal to fill us up at lunch. Most students oppose the restriction; they believe we should be able to order food at lunch. Some students have a lunch pass, which allows them leave campus at lunch to go somewhere to get food. Most students, however, can’t leave at lunch, so they should at least have the option to order food.

    Another reason Long Beach Poly should let kids order is because, parents are always saying “Make sure you eat while you’re at school,” but if some students don’t have a PIN number to eat and doesn’t like school food they should have an alternative option.

  • Freedom in Philly

    Two weeks ago on Thursday, November 2 through Sunday, November 5, three Poly students were chosen to be a part of the Freedom Foundation Youth Conference. Juniors Carina Ayala and Lenny Khan, along with Senior Elaina Miskiel were the chosen participants to go to Philadelphia and experience the fundamentals of the program. They stayed on the Freedom Foundation’s campus at Valley Forge.

    The Freedom Foundation was started in 1945 and has been running successfully ever since. It’s focused on “overcoming challenges to freedom by providing experiential educational programs while challenging participants to examine our history and discuss the issues of the day” according to their website. Each of their programs have been thoughtfully planned out and designed to ensure that both young people and adults gain new or deeper appreciation for the significance of the founding documents and acquire tools for engaged, responsible citizenship.

    Since its beginning, Freedom Foundation’s mission was and still is to educate Americans on rights and responsibilities, honor acts of civic virtue, and challenge all to reject apathy and get involved.

    Carina Ayala explained that her experience “definitely changed the way [she] think about Congress” and “[she’s] learned so much”. All participants expressed their enjoyment of the time they had and the new information that they learned. Lenny Khan said, “It was good to see other’s perspectives on how they view politics. It was fun to meet others from other states.”

    During their trip Ayala, Miskiel, Khan, other students from other schools had the chance to go around the city and sight see some of Philadelphia’s landscapes. Some of the landmarks that they had the opportunity to see in person were the Liberty Bell, the Independence Hall, the Philadelphia Courthouse, and where George Washington’s home used to stand. They had the opportunity to be a part of a mock trial of the Masterpiece Cake Shop, Ltd. versus Colorado Civil Rights Commission while in the courthouse which is in fact a real case that will occur on December 5 of this year.

    Khan described the lessons that the trip taught him personally: “Be more open, don’t shut other people’s thoughts down. Consider other’s ideas not only your own.”

  • Hollywood Perpetuating the Objectification of Women

    Romantic comedies make men stupid. Picture your favorite rom-com. Guy meets girl, guy falls in love with girl, girl is either engaged, married, or just not interested. A normal, sane man would just accept this as a fact and move on, but a movie man won’t.

    A movie man will go to great lengths for the girl to ditch her current love interest to be with him. He’ll play music really loud outside of her house early in the A.M. He’ll buy a nonrefundable plane ticket to catch her before her wedding to win her back with a song he wrote on the cab ride there. These men are creeps to the extreme and we root for them!

    And they get the girl!

    Films and TV shows like that have created a generation of men who just expect women to give into their perverted advances.

    Women aren’t excluded from this either. Take Julia Robert’s character from My Best Friend’s Wedding. Her best friend, a man, was engaged and she does everything in her power to humiliate his fiance and ruin the wedding, and when that doesn’t work, she confesses her feelings the day before the wedding.

    Hollywood has invented “the friend zone” where people pity themselves because the person they have feelings for only sees them as a friend. They actually get angry and degrade women for not being attracted to them. News flash, you are not entitled to anything from me and I am not stuck up for not wanting to hook up with a guy just because he’s been a good companion to me.

    For most people, the point of friendship is to be friends, not to eventually get into someone’s pants – that is so messed up.

    I’m sick of it. I don’t care what the situation is, if they are taken, or do not want you in any way, give up. Romantic films make zero sense in the reality of dating.

    There is a scene in the Empire Strikes Back where Han Solo and Princess Leia have a moment, and he goes in to kiss her. She tells him three times to stop. Does he? No, he grabs her arm, which she said hurt, and he forced a kiss. They go on to have a long and loving relationship after that for some reason. If that were to happen today, in the real world, things would have ended very differently. Young people look up to these characters and consider everything they do to be golden, which isn’t the case in these so called classics. We may think we’ve improved over time, but we haven’t.

    The fault in our Stars tells the same story, just sadder. Hazel Grace repeatedly tells Gus that he is just her friend, and he still continuously flirts with her, takes her on picnics, and to freaking Amsterdam! In the beginning, she is obviously uncomfortable with these advances, even if it all worked out in the end.

    Do not under any circumstances take a person you’ve only known for a few months to a foreign country just to get laid! I should not have to say this.

  • Poly’s Day in Court

    On November 2 Poly’s mock trial team tackled the first round of the court case People vs. Davidson and were rewarded by a winning verdict. The trial happened at the Los Angeles Superior Court with real judges and attorneys.

    Charlie Dodson is an AP World History teacher and is the advisor of the mock trial club at Poly.

         “The Constitutional Rights Foundation sets this [mock trial] up every year,” Dodson said. “A competition for LA county, which over 60 schools participate in  and our school has participated for a number of years. Teams are divided into prosecution and defense. We are given a single case.”

         Sophomore Tammy Pham described the experience  she encountered as a member of the club.

    “You are presented with a case and you would have to go into court and present to the judge whether the defendant is guilty or innocent, depending on the side you are on,” said Pham.

    Poly’s mock trial team was given the case, People vs. Davidson, and Dodson explained that the case was centered around Casey Davidson’s felony of the murder of Alex Thompson with a walking stick.

    “The case was about murder,” he said. “There are forensic reports for the prosecution and a rebuttal. There are witnesses for the prosecution and for the defense. For round one, our job was to defend Casey Davidson, the defendant, to prove him not guilty by creating reasonable doubt, which we did.”

    Senior Marco Romero is the president of the Mock Trial club. He was on the defense team for the case and described the difficult, yet exciting experience.

    “I think it is a great way to expose people who either want to be lawyers, want to step out their comfort zone, or just want to get a taste of what lawyers do,” Romero said. “The competition is judged by a real life judge and scored by either lawyers or law students.”