Author: adviser

  • Pink & Powerful

    Pink & Powerful

    Cancer. 

    It’s something that has affected many American families.  From adolescence to adulthood, trauma from this disease can last a lifetime.  It can not only affect the individual, but the people within their lives.  It can create emotional scars, but can also bring families closer together.  Cancer can come in all shapes and sizes.

    One of the most prominent forms of cancer is breast cancer. 1 in 8 women in the United States will develop invasive breast cancer, and the survival rate is 90%. Depending on the type of breast cancer, surgeries can range from lumpectomy, which is the removal of tissue in and around the tumor, to a  mastectomy, which is the total removal of the breast. After the surgery, many women receive chemotherapy, in which drugs or medicines are used to treat the cancer.

    The treatment of of breast cancer can be quite stressful, and patients need all the support they can get. That’s where Breast Cancer Awareness month plays a role. It is a month dedicated to supporting and celebrating patients and survivors of breast cancer.  It helps raise money for research into the causes and treatments as well. There is even a club dedicated to raising money, called Team Pink Plus.

    Senior Becca Gutierrez explained what Team Pink Plus does for Poly

    “So Team Pink+ is a cancer awareness club on campus,” Gutierrez said. “For the month of October (Breast cancer awareness month) we focused raising money for breast cancer, specifically for The Young Survivor Coalition. They are an organization that helps and supports women who are battling breast cancer and are under the age of 40. We fundraised through selling spirit packs at the breast cancer game, holding a silent auction for tickets to the We Can Survive concert and USC tickets, and most recently a Pie Your Teacher in the Face Rally. We raised over $1000 in October alone through these events and we plan on continuing to do the same through the end of the year!”

  • Extreme Makeover: Poly Edition

    Extreme Makeover: Poly Edition

    The back of Long Beach Poly is getting a brand new makeover beginning this school year. The track is being remodeled, and the bungalows are moving to make space for an outdoor pool.

    According to Poly track coach Crystal Irving the construction will start after the football season is over. The new track will be an all weather track with a turf field that will take 4 months to complete. During those 4 months a lot of adjustments will be made.

    Since the track will be under construction, Poly’s track team will not be able to practice, and it will affect the PE classes as well.

    For practices, Irving stated that practice will be held at multiple spots including Signal Hill, Browning High School, the beach, and Chittick Field Park.

    “I think it is amazing that we are getting something we should have had a long time ago,” Irving stated.

    The track’s remodel not only affects track but also soccer and any sport that relies on it to run and condition.

    Along with the track, teachers in the bungalows are having to switch classes because the bungalows are where the new outdoor pool will be located.

    One of the teachers from the bungalows that has already moved is Kristin Quevedo, an Algebra 2 and AP  Statistics teacher. Originally in P-7 Quevedo was transferred to room 412.

    Quevedo expressed that for her the move is stressful due to the fact that on top of moving and getting everything arranged, she has to make sure that the class is moving smoothly. Along with the stress, Quevedo said she misses teaching in P-7, because all the math teachers were close together so it made it easier for them to collaborate.

    In the end, all the teachers in the bungalows are going to be moving throughout the year, and their new classes that they will be going to will be permanent ones until reconstruction is done.

  • Sophomores Attend Sexual Harassment Seminar

    On Wednesday, September 20 PACRIM sophomores attended a sexual-harassment seminar in teacher Libby Huff’s classroom. PACRIM alumni Rodney Patterson was the guest speaker whose intention was to better educate students and to make them aware of the different types of “harassment.”

    Huff said that Patterson was brought back this fall to speak regarding eliminating the miscommunication between the male and female students.

    Huff went on to explain how the issue of sexual harassment is not taken seriously.

    “This came about, because we as teachers have noticed that girls tend to blow off a lot of the stuff

    guys do, sexting, the way they talk or how they act,” Huff said. “They either ignore it or laugh it off.”

    Girls were asked about their thoughts on harassment, and the lack of seriousness was apparent.

    Huff stated that when girls were asked about the harassment they responded that their male peers are ‘just like that,’ because they have been doing it since freshmen year.

    The male peers said they believe their ‘harassing’ was not harmful. Huff described that the male students believed the ‘harassing’ to be appropriate, because the girls did not say ‘no’ and they were laughing it off.

    “ ‘The girls didn’t say stop,’ and ‘they were laughing,’ ‘so it must be ok’ ” Huff described the male responses to harassment.

    Huff explained that in the news, there are several examples of

    sexual harassment among female celebrities and how [harassment] is treated.

    “We have a lot of examples of culturally acceptable [harassment], and we wanted to make that not culturally acceptable within our academy,” said Huff. “The kids worked on their own definition together as a class based on what [Patterson] explained to them. In the end, they understood that it is a cultural thing and that there is no gray area. It helps them learn to be respectful of each other and setting their own priorities.”

    The students wrote a sexual- harassment policy based on their definitions of harassment. The students then discussed what would be the appropriate consequences for such behaviors.

    The focus of the seminar was not only on female victims, but also male victims as well.

    “We defined it as something as bullying, power, and dominance. There were incidents and stories of every combination you could thinkof.Thetieinisthatitisa power thing,” Huff said. “We also talked about false accusations and what are the consequences of those accusations. And we also talked about how [false accusations] are damaging and what happens to the person who does that.”

    Huff explained that it is important to educate students on what harassment is and means for those affected by it.

    “That being able to say it and recognize it [harassment] stops it dead in its tracks, because there are people who just don’t know what they are doing is bad,” Huff said. “In their mind they have never been educated about what is inappropriate or what is appropriate.”

  • What in the World?!?

    Friday, October 6

    Long-ranged missiles are being prepared in North Korea. Russian lawmaker said that the missiles can potentially reach United States’ West Coast.

    Saturday, October 7

    Eleven pedestrians were injured in a car crash near London’s Natural History Museum. In the police statement it said, “The incident is a road traffic investigation and not a terrorist-related incident.” Sunday, October 8 in Jakarta, Indonesia, 58 men were arrested during a protest for gay rights. Seven of the 58 arrested are being charged under Indonesia’s pornography law, and they may serve up to 10 years in prison. The others will be released if they are not criminals or possess narcotics.

    Monday, October 9

    German conservative parties decided that there would be a limit on the amount of migrants who wish to seek refuge in Germany. Tuesday, October 10 the head of Thailand’s military government has announced the need for elections to help decide who will hold office. Thailand has not had elections for the past 3 years since the military took over in 2014.

    Wednesday, October 11

    An Anthrax outbreak has been found in Botswana’s dead hippos. Anthrax is an infectious disease that is spread by wild animals, and in this case, the outbreak originated with wild hippos. Thursday, October 12 in India’s top court, it was ruled that having sexual intercourse with a female under the age of 18 is considered rape. This ruling will potentially decrease the number of child marriages.

    Sunday, October 15

    The long-range missiles that were being prepared by North Korea on October 6 were tested and ended up failing. After the missiles were fired, they soon exploded. The U.S. military announced that the attempted firing did not pose a threat to the United States. Monday, October 16

    Hillary Clinton told spoke with an Australian state broadcaster, and she explained WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was used as a tool by Russia during the 2016 presidential election. Tuesday, October 17 United Nations (UN) said aid workers in the Central African Republic had to cut rations in half because of underfunding. Aid by air became too expensive to fund.

    *Information was used from the World Digest section of the Huffington Post*

  • Poly celebrates Hispanic Heritage at Rally

    Poly celebrates Hispanic Heritage at Rally

    On October 9, Club Leia organized a lunch rally to honor Hispanic Heritage Week.

    Hispanic Heritage week is a big deal for many of the Hispanic students because it gives them a week to really honor their backgrounds and where they come from.

    Senior Jessica Garcia explained the purpose and meaning behind the rally.

    “The purpose of the rally was to reach out to our Hispanic community and give them the sense that they are not alone,” Garcia said.

    During the rally, students were seen donating and participating.

    Senior Adrian Lopez said what the rally meant to him.

    “The rally did not only unify Hispanics, but as well as other cultures, which in many ways was touching because many that felt that they did not have support,” Lopez said.

    Club Leia members were going around during the rally and asking for donations for the earthquake catastrophe that happened in Mexico City. With these unfortunate events in Mexico and in Puerto Rico, the students and teachers had a chance to donate and come together to help everyone suffering.

    Donations for Mexico are also being accepted in every English class. Puerto Rico’s toiletry drive

    is also being accepted in room 155 where they ask students to donate hygienist products that will be sent to the people affected by the hurricane.

    Senior Ella Christensen explained her perspective on the rally.
    “The Hispanic Heritage Rally showed the multicultural elements of Poly’s Hispanic community,” Christensen said. “Along with several enthusiastic prideful Jackrabbits, the rally was successful.”

    There was a big turn out when “El Caballo Dorado”and “Suavemente” started playing, as many students rushed to the stage to dance.

  • Additional Beauty on Campus

    Additional Beauty on Campus

    Poly’s very own Japanese garden is under construction. Seniors Lily Brossus and Aidan Harper are two of this year’s International Ambassadors who are in the process of creating the garden. The two students are working on this project along with project director Jeanette Schelin, who also worked on the Japanese garden at California State University Long Beach. According to Brossus, “It started when Aidan and I were accepted as the 2017 Trio Ambassadors to visit [Long Beach’s] sister country in Yokkaichi, Japan.”

    Seeing as Brossus and Harper are both very passionate about the Japanese language and culture, International Ambassadors gave them an opportunity to spread that love to Poly from now until forever. The garden’s purpose is to represent friendship between the cities of Long Beach and Yokkaichi while highlighting Poly’s Japanese program and student diversity. Brossus and Harper both hope to educate others on the Japanese culture through the making of this garden.

    “Together, as ambassadors, our ultimate goal is inclusion.” Brossus said. “We want to leave a legacy that benefits and includes all the members of the Poly family.”  When asked how she felt about the project on a personal level, Lily Brossus went on to say that, “Personally, the three weeks I spent in Japan this summer are very special to me. This garden will be a physical presentation of my love for Japan, and kind of my thank you for the experience. I hope the uniquely kind, and welcoming spirit of Japan will exist in the garden.”

    Poly is now waiting for the plot of land, which is next to the language building, to be constructed. The project is hoped to be completed by the end of November. The Japanese club has agreed to tend not only to the physical aspect of it but also the legacy and publicity. Club members will receive service learning hours for their time.

    Brossus explained how grateful she and Harper are for the grounds keepers who are currently working on the plumbing and preparation for the garden’s land. At the homecoming game  on Friday, October 20 Brossus, Harper, and other Ambassadors will be honored.

  • An Ongoing Trial

    On April 23, 2013, 42-year-old Christopher Waters was murdered, and it hasn’t been until recently that the trial for the alleged perpetrators began.

    In a phone interview, Deputy District Attorney Brian Kang said the crime scene was discovered shortly after the murder took place.

    “The police were notified, and the fire department were notified of a fire that was happening in Rancho Palos Verdes,” Kang said. “When the fire department arrived, they found that on a private property that had a basketball court on it was [an] SUV that was on fire. The homeowner, you know, didn’t know where the SUV came from. They put out the fire, and when they put out the fire, they found that in the back of it was a human body.”

    According to Kang, police were notified after the fire department found the body, and the homicide detectives began their investigation.

    “What they found through the investigation,” Kang said, “was that there were two Long Beach Poly students who were involved.”

    Kang explained that one of the students was 18 years old at the time and considered an adult, while the other was 17 years old and considered a minor.

    The adult was Jose Angel Martinez. The Press Telegram and the LA Times have reported that the minor, who was originally charged as an adult, was Angel Beruman. At the time, both were seniors at Poly.

    The crime was committed long before the burning SUV was discovered by the authorities, according to Kang.

    “We found out that the crime actually occurred at the home of one of the two students,” Kang said. “They beat him, they strangled him, and killed him.”

    Kang said that afterwards, the two drove the body to what they thought was a remote, private location and then burned the car with Waters inside.

    According to an LA Times article, the minor went to the Long Beach Police Department (LBPD) to speak to the homicide detectives on Waters’ case. However, authorities were not able to comment on what he said during that time.

    Deputy Los Angeles County District Attorney Diana Martinez explained that, after the minor spoke with the LBPD, the suspects were taken to county jail to be held until trial. However, if found guilty, they will be sent to state prison.

    Kang said that the motive for the murder of Waters was robbery.

    Poly health teacher Danielle Sawyer explained that one of the alleged suspects, Jose Angel Martinez, was in her AVID class for his first three years of high school.

    “When I first had him freshman year, he was one of my smartest kids in the class,” Sawyer said. “He understood complicated concepts better than any other kid in my 9th-grade class. He was supreme in math and was usually ahead of his peers when it came to math, and he had a nice breadth of vocabulary for a 9th-grade student.”

    Sawyer said that she noticed Martinez right away and was instantly impressed. However, she explained that he often downplayed his intelligence and would act as if he were the class clown.

    Martinez and his family became close with Sawyer, and she explained the teacher-student-family relationship.

    “I developed a really close relationship with [Martinez] because I was helping him in that way, but also developing a relationship with his dad,” Sawyer said. “His dad and I got really close, because I saw a different side of Jose, so I had a good relationship with his family, his teachers, and with him, and he was a really good kid.”

    For Martinez’s senior year, he started a business, according to Sawyer.

    “Senior year, he met another young man who is currently being tried for the same crime as a minor,” Sawyer said. “They started a business together, and they were doing really well. It was a graphic T-shirt design business, and Jose felt like it was really going somewhere. I know they were doing pretty good at it. Then, someone they were doing business with, their relationship went awry, and now they are at where they are at.”

    Sawyer then went on to explain her reaction to the 2013 news at the time of the crime.

    “[Martinez] came into my room a week earlier to print out a paper, and I was asking him about his life. I said that I hadn’t seen him in a couple of weeks, and he said everything was great,” she said. “Then, a week later, [the AVID students] heard before I did, and told me that he was arrested and what the potential crime was, and I cried when I heard about it, and when I cried, some of the other kids cried, because they were definitely Jose fans and were sad about what they heard.”

    Martinez was one of Sawyer’s students, so she was able to speak on his behalf. However, Sawyer explained that she didn’t know the other student, and thus, she couldn’t do the same for the minor.

    Though the crime took place in 2013, the trial phase of the investigation did not start until recently. Kang explained a few reasons as to why the trial has been delayed for the last four years.

    “As prosecutors, what we do is we get the evidence from the police agencies, and then we turn that over to the defense,” Kang said. “Sometimes it gets delayed. I can’t speak to what happened before I got on the case, but when I got on the case there were a couple of different delays because either the defense attorneys were on trial or we would get new information, and once we got that new information, we would give it to the defense, then they have to have time to prepare the case.”

    Kang explained that for the case it was important for the defense to have as much time and information as possible going into the trial.

    The verdict has already been delivered for the adult defendant, Martinez, who was the suspect Kang prosecuted.

    “One of the defendants, Mr. Martinez, he was convicted,” Kang said. “We are going to have sentencing in about a month and a half.”

    As for the minor, Kang said that they have to go through a completely different process than Martinez had to undergo. “Before, I guess, a year ago or a year and a half ago, if a minor committed certain types of crime that met certain criteria, we used to be able to file directly in adult court,” Kang said. “So, what would happen is, we would file, even though the person is a minor, we would direct file because it’s how serious the crime is or some other factors.”

    Initially, the minor was to be tried as an adult, however, after the passing Prop 57 in 2016, the minor’s case was moved to juvenile court which will decide whether he should be tried as an adult. Prop 57 states that the juvenile court has the right to decide whether a minor 14 years or older should be prosecuted in adult court or juvenile court.

    This also explains why the two defendants’ cases had to be prosecuted separately, and it is one of the reasons why the adult defendant had a quicker trial.

    Kang said that after he prosecuted Martinez, he was transferred and was no longer on the minor’s case.

    Even though Kang is not on the juvenile’s case any longer, he stated that he thinks the trial’s end should be no sooner than six months from now.

    Overall, Kang explained that the case has been sensitive for the Waters family, and the end is finally near after the four years of waiting for answers.

    “I was just really glad to allow the family to get some measure of closure,” Kang said. “It’s been a long journey for them, and to allow justice to be served in a sense. In this case, it came very slowly, but we got there.”

  • Golf N’ Stuff

    The Long Beach Poly girls golf team had two matches in the past week. The first match took place on Tuesday, September 26 which Poly lost with a score of 213 – 264. The second match was Thursday, September 28 against Lakewood and Poly won with a score of 256 – 269. Both matches took place at Recreation Park.

    The girls prepared for their matches by practicing four days a week. During practice, they use the driving range to learn how to use all the clubs and when to use them. The girls also work on what is called their short game at the pitching green, and finally they go to the putting green to work on their putting. Besides that the girls have also had additional help this year.

    According to co-captain and junior Ellie Andrews, “For practices we also have a professional golfer helping us during our practices. His name is Dave Heinan.” Heinan has been helping the team since the season has started which is about a month ago.

    “Wilson has always been hard for us to beat because they are pretty much the best, but we have been getting better and Dave has really been a big help for becoming better and improving as a team,” Andrews stated.

    When asked about her opinion on how the team could improve other co-captain of the team and sophomore Hannah Vanwagner stated, “It is hard for everyone to have a good day all on the same day, so I think that consistency would help us to improve.”

    When asked about the disparity between their matches this week, Andrews said, “Wilson is the best in Moore league which makes them our toughest competition, but Lakewood we usually tend to beat every year.”

  • Strange Clock-Work

    New school year, new everything. They say change is good, but that does not apply to everything people! So far this school year has started off on okay terms, as for the weather, not so much. Actually no, nothing has been as good as I thought it would be this year. Particularly this whole new bell schedule. It’s been driving so many students crazy, myself included. I know most people don’t like to be rushed, but this whole seven minutes we’re getting compared to the ten minutes we had last year is a joke. The average person’s attention span is at most forty-seven minutes. Yup, that’s the most. These ninety minute classes are too much for my worn-out soul to bear. Just writing this article took me around an hour because I can’t even dedicate fifteen minutes without going off task. So many students can relate to this whole struggle to keep track on what is going on in class. Unscheduled periods are the best, apart from the fact that I have to wait in line and not being let in right away or being let out on time. What is up with the whole line things? I just think it is very unnecessary because I would just like to walk to school and not have to wait for a line and loose the little time I have to do what I have to do during nutrition. Unscheduled eighth is as much a mess as first and second unscheduled periods, because students have to wait in a line to get out. Why? I don’t really know why; I mean if we’re already in the school why do our IDs and schedules need to be checked for us to get out? With this is also the issue that the gate on 15th Street isn’t open, only the gate on Jackrabbit Lane is. How much does it hurt to open both gates? This causes a lot of us some more extra stress. Like, can’t people see that I can barely come to school without having an anxiety attack and when it’s time to leave I want to leave ASAP?

  • Getting to Know the Poly Campus

    New school year, new lost freshman, new staff members and I am stuck in one of the largest high schools in the district without knowing the locations of all my classes. Poly is a sizeable campus with 5 additional parking lots and over 4,400 students. Above is a picture of a map of the Poly campus. The map sits on the side of the big gym facing the Jackrabbit Lane entrance. With Poly being such a large school, a map of the campus is great for new students, or at least it would be if it were accurate. Since the campus is so large and confusing and the only map available isn’t even an accurate map, allow me to help by telling you where everything is. First, all the even room numbers are located on the second floor of all buildings, leaving the odd room numbers on the bottom floors with the science building being the exception to this unusual pattern. Every building except the 200’s, 400’s, 550’s, 800’s, and 900’s, have student restrooms, and the boys restrooms seem to follow a pattern of constant closure and reopening. The 100 building holds all the offices except for the attendance office, which is located in the main entrance off of Jackrabbit Lane. The 250 science building juts away from the “clockwork design” and is found further East than the 150. The science building also shares its area with the south gym, better known as the small gym and staff parking. I might also wonder why an English class in placed in the science building, but all I can say is the world may never know. Even though the point of having a Science building is to be able to access the science department and its resources not copies of Mythology by Edith Hamilton. The upper south corner of the 300 follows where building becomes to a dead end, and out of my own experience I warn you to not go past the clear doors because you will get locked out. Then the 500 building follows with the 600 on its end at which point we face West looking away from the 100. The library is located at the front of the 600 building which. The 700 sits with the 800 building behind the 600, closer to Jackrabbit Lane. The student store is pretty obvious since it’s always overpopulated with loud, obnoxious children. The three locations of the vending machines include the language building, behind and around the library, and the blacktop but your best bet is to use the vending machine closest to the language building which has a history of providing two for one. Next,the P bungalows are located in the very end corner next to the tennis courts. The Tony Gwynn baseball field may seem like it’s hiding, once you reach the 900 bungalows you have a full view of the field. The JROTC shooting range is under the bleachers. Yes, we have a nurse office located to the left of the pool. Don’t forget that being lost is normal, until you walk into the wrong classroom and all 35 pairs of eyes look in your direction. Also, good luck trying to find the entrance of the hidden locker rooms, especially the girls’ one.

  • Horoscopes

    Signs As Most Likely To 

    ARIES:  Break a world record

    TAURUS: Become a billionaire

    GEMINI: Win the lottery but lose the ticket

    CANCER: Marry their high school sweetheart

    LEO: Become famous

    VIRGO: Become president of the US

    LIBRA: Win a Nobel Peace Prize

    SCORPIO: Never be seen again

    SAGITTARIUS: Travel the world

    CAPRICORN: Rule the world

    AQUARIUS: Become an inventor

    PISCES: Cure a disease

  • Activists of Poly: Lauren Calderon

    Activists of Poly: Lauren Calderon

    Over the past two summers, Lauren Calderon, Poly PACE senior, has run a successful Power to the Period community service project. Power to the Period is run by U by Kotex and with the objective to collect feminine hygiene products for homeless or needy women. She has collected a remarkable total of 8,792 products for donation.

    Photo above featured on Seventeen magazine. Taken August 26, 2017

    “I became involved with this campaign because I think all women deserve the right to have easy accessibility to menstrual hygiene. This is a campaign that I joined that encourages people, like myself, to collect products like pads, tampons, feminine wipes, etc., for women’s shelters in the community” said Calderon.

    Some of the products from her most recent campaign have been donated to women in the Virgin Islands, who were left without feminine hygiene products in the face of Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria.

    Calderon still continues to accept donations and help out her Long Beach community.