Humans of Harker: Brendan Tobin lives his life as a creator
by Maya Kumar, Winged Post Features Editor
• April 14, 2017
Upper school debaters finish strong at NDCA National Championships
by Nerine Uyanik, Reporter
• April 13, 2017
Journalism students attend national convention in Seattle
by Jenna Sadhu, Cameron Zell, Heidi Zhang, and Tiffany Wong
• April 13, 2017
Fifty years later: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Vietnam War address
by Prameela Kottapalli, Winged Post Asst. Features Editor
• April 12, 2017
Varsity baseball loses game 0-4 to Mills High School
by Ruhi Sayana and Nicole Chen
• April 11, 2017
Flash Food: Lavender Honey Scones
by Ria Gupta and Anika Rajamani
• April 11, 2017
Humans of Harker: Eddie Shiang finds a passion for dance
by Lavinia Ding, TALON Organizations Editor
• April 10, 2017
ReCreate Reading 2017 kicks off with pre-summer meetings
by Tiffany Wong, Aquila News Editor
• April 10, 2017
Humans of Harker: Shasvat Jawahar listens to the legends of rap
by Prameela Kottapalli, Winged Post Asst. Features Editor
• April 4, 2017
Humans of Harker: Judy Pan finds ways to relieve stress despite busy school schedule
by Brandie Vanlonden, Reporter
• April 3, 2017
Humans of Harker: Woody Ye balances his life with both arts and sciences
by Anjay Saklecha, Sports Editor
• March 30, 2017
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by Ram Batchu, Aryana Bharali, Eva Cheng, Victor Gong, Suhani Gupta, Minal Jalil, Sam Li, Isabella Lo, Mendy Mao, Katerina Matta, Ashley Mo, Emma Milner, Young Min, Sarah Mohammed, Lily Peng, Caden Ruan, Lily Shi, Kairui Sun, Jonathan Szeto, Claire Tian, Heather Wang, Charlie Wang, Alison Yang, Chelsea Xie, Cynthia Xie, Connie Xu, Jonathan Xue, Claire Yu, Brandon Zau, and Tiffany Zhu

by Jonathan Szeto, Winged Post Managing Editor
View this profile on InstagramHarker Aquila (@harkeraquila) • Instagram photos and videos



![LALC Vice President of External Affairs Raeanne Li (11) explains the International Phonetic Alphabet to attendees. "We decided to have more fun topics this year instead of just talking about the same things every year so our older members can also [enjoy],” Raeanne said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/DSC_4627-1200x795.jpg)


















![“[Building nerf blasters] became this outlet of creativity for me that hasn't been matched by anything else. The process [of] making a build complete to your desire is such a painstakingly difficult process, but I've had to learn from [the skills needed from] soldering to proper painting. There's so many different options for everything, if you think about it, it exists. The best part is [that] if it doesn't exist, you can build it yourself," Ishaan Parate said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/DSC_8149-900x604.jpg)




![“When I came into high school, I was ready to be a follower. But DECA was a game changer for me. It helped me overcome my fear of public speaking, and it's played such a major role in who I've become today. To be able to successfully lead a chapter of 150 students, an officer team and be one of the upperclassmen I once really admired is something I'm [really] proud of,” Anvitha Tummala ('21) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Screen-Shot-2021-07-25-at-9.50.05-AM-900x594.png)







![“I think getting up in the morning and having a sense of purpose [is exciting]. I think without a certain amount of drive, life is kind of obsolete and mundane, and I think having that every single day is what makes each day unique and kind of makes life exciting,” Neymika Jain (12) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Screen-Shot-2017-06-03-at-4.54.16-PM.png)








![“My slogan is ‘slow feet, don’t eat, and I’m hungry.’ You need to run fast to get where you are–you aren't going to get those championships if you aren't fast,” Angel Cervantes (12) said. “I want to do well in school on my tests and in track and win championships for my team. I live by that, [and] I can do that anywhere: in the classroom or on the field.”](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/DSC5146-900x601.jpg)
![“[Volleyball has] taught me how to fall correctly, and another thing it taught is that you don’t have to be the best at something to be good at it. If you just hit the ball in a smart way, then it still scores points and you’re good at it. You could be a background player and still make a much bigger impact on the team than you would think,” Anya Gert (’20) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/AnnaGert_JinTuan_HoHPhotoEdited-600x900.jpeg)

![“I'm not nearly there yet, but [my confidence has] definitely been getting better since I was pretty shy and timid coming into Harker my freshman year. I know that there's a lot of people that are really confident in what they do, and I really admire them. Everyone's so driven and that has really pushed me to kind of try to find my own place in high school and be more confident,” Alyssa Huang (’20) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/AlyssaHuang_EmilyChen_HoHPhoto-900x749.jpeg)



