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The student news site of The Harker School.

Harker Aquila

The student news site of The Harker School.

Harker Aquila

The student news site of The Harker School.

Harker Aquila

“I like making my art because it's a method of expressing yourself," Eric Andrus (12) said. "Being that I was quiet kid for the first 15 years of my life, art was a way I could speak. It was almost like a language to me. Because I am taking AP Studio Art, we have to do a concentration on our works, which is when there is a theme behind all the pieces. My theme is rhythmic motion, which represents a passage of time, so like growth and decay. Through time, relationships are formed and they grow and then they decay. Through all the challenges in life that I have been faced with, I’ve formed relationships and others have been broken, but I think the overall theme that is there is always something there and there is always something to be happy about."

Humans of Harker: Eric Andrus chronicles relationships through art

by Krishna Bheda and Reporter May 30, 2018

Every Sunday, Eric Andrus (12) can be found working at Lutticken’s, a sandwich shop located in Menlo Park. There, he spends his time making Tuna and Chicken Salad sandwiches, making drinks, cleaning,...

"My motivation to do research has always been more of 'here's a field that I'm interested in, let's tackle that and take it to its greatest extent,' rather than 'here's a problem I want to solve for the millions of people whose lives we'll save,'" Rajiv Movva (12) said. "I think the impacts of your research are more of a positive byproduct than the main motivation for me. For me, it was always just trying to find an answer."

Humans of Harker Video: Rajiv Movva strives for answers

by Nerine Uyanik, Humans of Harker Videographer May 29, 2018

This is the seventh installment of the Humans of Harker 2018 video series. Through this project, the Harker journalism program aims to tell the story of the senior class, one profile at a time. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N32ad2wEK84

"I started doing my eyebrows at the tail end of my sophomore year and that was where I started figuring out that what people think doesn’t really matter all that much," Mona Lee (12) said. "Because everyone has a different idea of what your eyebrows should look like, who you should be, what you should be like, what you should look like. I kind of realized that at the end of the day I realized it doesn’t matter; the only opinion that matters is your own."

Humans of Harker: Mona Lee applies makeup and embraces confident self-expression

by Sahana Srinivasan, Winged Post Editor-in-Chief May 29, 2018

Mona Lee (12) owns 50 lipsticks. But she only puts any of them on after lunch. She fills in her eyebrows by 9:30 a.m., in passing period, in class or in the car, for five minutes. Winged eyeliner occasionally...

"Every time I step on stage, I get this feeling where I just never want to stop dancing, so I think that just reminds me of how badly I want to become a professional," Anastasia "Ana" Cheplyansky (12) said.

Humans of Harker Video: Anastasia Cheplyansky balances athletics and artistry

by Heidi Zhang & Melissa Kwan May 28, 2018

This is the sixth installment of the Humans of Harker 2018 video series. Through this project, the Harker journalism program aims to tell the story of the senior class, one profile at a time. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuOq5W0yOck

“One time, I just went over to [my friend]'s house,” Rishi Iyer (12) said. “I asked him, 'What do you want to do?' and he was like, 'Let's just get in the car and drive around and explore.’ We went into downtown Saratoga, and we took a turn on some random road that looked pretty steep, and we went along it for thirty minutes, and it became this really narrow one lane road going up the mountain, and we eventually just made our way up the mountain, just exploring all these little side roads until we eventually found this little clearing with this amazing view of the entire Bay Area. It was so surreal, just going from being in the house, saying, 'Let's just find something' and just discovering this, just by messing around."

Humans of Harker: Rishi Iyer positions himself in the space between categories

by Melissa Kwan, Humans of Harker Managing Editor May 28, 2018

Rishi Iyer (12) handles obstacles in stride, choosing to see them as humorous “L’s” in the win-loss record of life. "Say some major setback happens in life, or you fail a test, or you get in a...

"Part of the reason I play music is to have some sort of human connection — to have an audience and be able to say something through the music," Andrew Semenza (12) said. "That's of foremost importance to me — the ability to be able to affect an emotional change in someone through music. And you know, if someone walks in to the concert hall and doesn't leave a different person, I think that's a failure of a performer."

Humans of Harker Video: Andrew Semenza charts his travels through the musical landscape

by Nerine Uyanik & Melissa Kwan May 27, 2018

This is the fifth installment of the Humans of Harker 2018 video series. Through this project, the Harker journalism program aims to tell the story of the senior class, one profile at a time. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNjkCnQzsFI

“I really identify with Santa Claus from the movie the Rise of the Guardians," Joanna Lin (12) said. "His center, which is what they are trying to preserve in children and what caused them to become a guardian, is wonder. That's kind of how I feel about the world. This summer I had a daily drive to Santa Cruz, and I was just so captivated by the fog in the redwood trees. It was so beautiful, and I'm so in awe of all the things it can do. And, because children are naturally this way before they grow up, I want to work with them to preserve a part of me and help them stay that way for a little longer.”

Humans of Harker: Joanna Lin plays the role of “mom friend”

by Kaitlin Hsu, Winged Post Editor-in-Chief May 23, 2018

Joanna Lin (12) is the quintessential “mom friend”. She frequently drives people home in her light blue minivan, worries that they’ll catch colds if they go to sleep with wet hair and gently chastises...

"Why wouldn't you like climbing trees? Super dangerous? C'mon. Sure it's dangerous, but unless you’re going to break your arm or leg you’re not going to die. There's a possibility that it can happen, but that's just the fun of it. You're not going to be able to climb trees your entire life, so you might as well do it now," Shikhar Solanki (12) said.

Humans of Harker: Shikhar Solanki rises to the competition

by Vijay Bharadwaj, Winged Post News Editor May 22, 2018

“I literally imagine myself as a Greek wrestler all the way back in Ancient Greece, and I think to myself I’m wrestling for rations of food and that I haven’t eaten in a long time, so I need to win...

"I knew that something was wrong with my shoulder because it was bothering me, but eventually it never went away, so I went the whole season through it. I was battling this pain," Nate Kelly (12) said. "At the same time, we were winning a bunch of games and had this kind of historic season, and that’s something I didn’t really want to miss out on. That was my incentive to keep going; that kept my adrenaline pumping, the fact that we were winning a lot in all these games. Quite honestly, I thought it would affect me, but I guess I overcame it. It hurt, but I battled through it, and I dealt with the pain afterwards.”

Humans of Harker: Nate Kelly perseveres on and off the field

by Nilisha Baid, Reporter May 21, 2018

Nate Kelly’s (12) enthusiasm for athletics originates from his “big sports family.” “It doesn’t really matter what kind of sport it is, as long as it is a sport, there’s something that my...

“Playing tuba in orchestra is not always the most rewarding experience. Most of the time I sit in the back and do my homework or sleep because I have that much rest," Meghana Karinthi (12) said. "You’re definitely not the most featured person in the group. At the same time, when I see the group do well and I know that I took a part in that, it gives me a lot more satisfaction than me having a whole bunch of solos.”

Humans of Harker: Meghana Karinthi makes the difference behind the scenes

by Nina Gee, Reporter May 20, 2018

Meghana Karinthi (12) is a 5-foot girl playing a 4-foot tuba. She also happens to play one of the most aggressive positions in water polo, a fact that surprises people to no end and frustrates Meghana...

"Sick started as just like a common saying, like 'oh, that's sick,'" Matthew Kennedy (12) said. "You know, common teen slang. Then I wrote it on my knuckles 'cause I thought it was edgy and thought it looked good. Fast forward, someone was telling a story which I didn't care about, and I said, 'sick, dude,' and gave him a fist pound. He thought it was funny, so I started doing it more often. Now it's a part of my life."

Humans of Harker: Matthew Kennedy builds character

by Jin Tuan, Reporter May 19, 2018

Walking down school hallways with a purposeful stride and a hand in his green sports hoodie pocket, Matthew “Matt” Kennedy (12) is simultaneously extroverted and introspective. “I’m in my head...

“[My mom would] take me to different places; she’d take me to a lot of the big cities to where a lot of the fashion designer brands came from," Alan Jiang (12) said. "She would spend hours and hours there — I used to be really mad, because she doesn’t know how to speak English, and we’d stay in the store for four-five hours just to pick one item that she really liked and I had to translate for her, so that’s why I was exposed to a lot of the stuff. Back then, I really hated it — I was really mad at my mom. But afterwards, I was kind of inspired by it.”

Humans of Harker Video: Alan Jiang weaves together family and fashion

May 18, 2018

This is the fourth installment of the Humans of Harker 2018 video series. Through this project, the Harker journalism program aims to tell the story of the senior class, one profile at a time. Videography:...

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