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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

"What do I want to be remembered for?" Adriano Hernandez (12) said. "I don't know. I wouldn't want to be remembered as obviously a bad person. I don't think there's anything really different about my moral code than anybody else's. With the current state of affairs, it would be nice to be remembered comically, as a meme or something."

Humans of Harker: Adriano Hernandez tinkers with electronics

by Sara Yen, Reporter November 13, 2017

A pattering of clicks from typing away at his keyboard fills the atmosphere. Line after line of code, each for its own function, materializes on his laptop screen. Adriano Hernandez (12) loves to build...

“My brother was a juvenile delinquent,” Anthony Contreras (12) said. “To see him struggle and everyone else struggle with him, it made me sad at home. I really didn't want to be sad outside of home. That's when it sort of came to me to 'fake it 'til you make it.’ Fake being happy, and eventually you'll become happy, rather than staying sad about everything. I tried to not let things like that affect me. I tried to stay calm… I could have been exactly like my brother, but I chose the path to see my mom as a complete idol. She is exactly like me—or I am exactly like her—in terms of being calm and stress-free and relaxed. I am trying to be more like my mom, rather than letting my biological dad or my brother influence me.”

Humans of Harker: Anthony Contreras channels his mother’s strength

by Gloria Zhang, Aquila Asst. Features Editor November 10, 2017

“He’s my son. He’s a funny boy. He likes to compete. When he is committed to something, he tries his best. Sometimes he’s quiet. Sometimes he’s not.” Anthony Contreras’ (12) mother, Aida...

“A lot of people are skeptical of [my startup] idea; they're not too sure whether it's going to work or not,” Nirban Bhatia (12) said. “They don't necessarily support me in trying it out, and they find ten flaws that people have already told me about. They’re trying to almost pull me down just because they feel it’s something that’s really not going to work. I’ve just got to learn how to take everything with a grain of salt, so I can continue to push forward and make my idea a reality.”

Humans of Harker: Nirban Bhatia reflects on “grit”

by Varsha Rammohan, Reporter November 9, 2017

Nirban Bhatia (12) sits on the steps of Shah patio, his sky blue turban standing out in the sea of dark attire. “I guess generally I’m the one person who will stand out in a crowd, and that is because...

“I try to be as outgoing as possible the first time you meet me. It’s hard, because when you first meet someone they think you’re a different person,” Karina Butani (12) said. “When people first meet me, they think I’m really introverted, but when they get to know me it’s like an opposite person. But it’s fun to prove people wrong, like—surprise, this is who I really am.’”

Humans of Harker: Karina Butani combats her commute with conversation

by Kaidi Dai, Reporter November 8, 2017

Despite her 5’9’’ stature, Karina Butani (12) maintains a low profile at Harker. She lives in Pleasanton and spends three hours in the car on an average day, making it difficult to spend time with...

“I feel like sometimes at Harker, we students have this urge to control everything in our lives,” Matthew Lee (12) said. “Like if you don’t get an A on that test, it’s because you didn’t work hard enough, or if you don’t get into this school, it’s because you didn’t work hard enough, or if you don’t get into that school, it’s because you didn’t do enough. But sometimes that’s just not true. Sometimes things are out of your control."

Humans of Harker: Matthew Lee finds meaning in contradiction

by Irina Malyugina, Reporter November 7, 2017

Matthew Lee (12) speaks softly, but his words carry weight. Whether delivering a wry comment during Modern International Affairs or writing for his Near research paper, he phrases his sentences with care. “Basically,...

“My dad is very curious,” Neelesh Ramachandran (12) said. "He is an engineer, so he obviously knows about electrical engineering and fiber optics, which is what he does, but if you ask him about whatever happened in the War of 1812, he can give you a sort of concise response. The way he thinks is by connecting broad principles, and that’s the way I try to approach learning as a whole. Nobody learns biology and only uses biology, because inherent in biology [are] concepts in chemistry and concepts in physics, so you have to look at everything. Especially this is true within STEM and outside of STEM—you have to be looking at the broader picture and [know] how to combine different domains, different aspects in science. That’s where the power really comes through.”

Humans of Harker: Neelesh Ramachandran seeks to understand

by Saloni Shah, Reporter November 6, 2017

The book sits on a table; the table exerts a normal force on the book. You remove the book from the table; the table relaxes that force in proportion to the speed of your motion. In elementary school,...

“You have to embrace high school while it lasts,” Olivia Long (12) said. “I really wasn't doing much in my freshman year—it was just gymnastics, school, sleep, repeat. You hear about the stereotypical high school experience, and it seems so fun and everybody’s so involved, so I wanted to take part in that. Cheerleading lets me show school spirit.”

Humans of Harker: Olivia Long balances old and new

by Krishna Bheda, Columnist November 3, 2017

As a gymnast since age two, Olivia Long (12) loves the feeling of flying. “It's just so free,” she said. “I know I'm in control, and it's so fun. When I tumble, I can get so high in the air. I...

“Life is just a super big combination of bad and good things,” Abha Patkar (12) said. “When I look back on all the things in my life, I freaked out over so much, and there was no point, because it all just… passed. Just recognizing that nothing is permanent is something that’s helped me.”

Humans of Harker: Abha Patkar prioritizes her friendships

by Jenna Sadhu, Aquila Broadcast & Multimedia Editor November 2, 2017

Few people know about Abha Patkar’s (12) community service accolades—a Red Cross “Youth of the Year” Award and a Fisher House Challenge prize, to name two—because she chooses not to broadcast...

“The [performance] I probably remember the most is the first time I ever did a solo. Everything changes when you walk out and you’re by yourself. There’s a panel of 5 judges just sitting there staring at you, and you kind of stand there and wait for the music to start, and sometimes it doesn’t start super quickly and so you stand there awkwardly. I was terrified, because I was so used to having everybody else around. But then the minute the music started and I knew what I was doing, it just felt like every other performance,"  Gracean Linthacum-Janker (12) said.

Humans of Harker: Gracean Linthacum-Janker dances to her own rhythm

by Nicole Chen, Aquila Features Editor November 1, 2017

Gracean Linthacum-Janker (12) remembers the moment—the blinding lights casting her figure in a silhouette, her heart beating nervously as she waited for the music to begin. But when she heard the first...

“When I think about my high school as a unit, I find it's defined by a lot of events and a lot of trends, it's just that some of those trends, like especially me starting to sing—they're not connected at all to any goal I had when I stepped onto the campus,” Praveen Batra (12) said. “I remember at the first club fair I heard Guys’ Gig, they were touring, and I thought, ‘Wow, that's one club I'm never going to join.’ So if you look, there's a big disconnect between what my vision of what my high school would be like and where it actually turned out being.”

Humans of Harker: Praveen Batra masters both types of keyboard

by Derek Yen, Winged Post Opinion Editor October 31, 2017

Praveen Batra (12) has resolved to enter college with a singular conviction: to pursue computer science to the greatest degree. But when he entered high school, Praveen had no strong expectation of what...

“Life should have variation,” Karena Kong (12) said. "It's boring to live every day, day to day on the same schedule. You should always do what you really want, live by your interests and have fun instead of living by this rigid standard. There's times when you're experimenting, and it's okay to be spontaneous and make a mess. You never know what might turn out.”

Humans of Harker: Karena Kong values variety

by Julia Huang, TALON Academics Editor October 27, 2017

One shiny steel pot. One block of cheddar cheese. A mission to create cream of broccoli soup. As Karena Kong stared down into the pot, she wondered why the cheese did not melt properly into liquid form. “We...

“I think the biggest thing I was forgetting to think about is what I truly believed in,” Eleanor Xiao (12) said. "Even though I guess I’m pretty sociable, I think that made me scared to be opinionated because I didn’t want to rub anyone the wrong way. Because I was so scared of voicing my opinion, it just turned into a point where I didn’t really have any opinions. For a while, I thought, ‘Oh, I’m just taking everyone into account,’ but eventually, I realized it was just me escaping the possibility of not being liked by everyone.”

Humans of Harker: Eleanor Xiao opens up about empathy

by Megan Cardosi, TALON Student Life Editor & Sports Managing Editor October 26, 2017

“Hi, I’m Eleanor, and I’m from TALON yearbook.” Accompanied by a sheepish smile, Eleanor Xiao’s (12) classic yearbook announcement opening has become a running joke in the senior class. Her bubbly...

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