Class of 2020: Humans of Harker compilation, part three
by Saloni Shah, Humans of Harker Editor-in-Chief
• May 17, 2020

Humans of Harker: The humble artist
by Irene Yuan, Asst. Photo Editor
• May 11, 2020

Class of 2020: Humans of Harker compilation, part two
by Saloni Shah, Humans of Harker Editor-in-Chief
• May 10, 2020

Humans of Harker: Questions and curiosity
by Anika Mani, TALON Reporter
• May 7, 2020

Humans of Harker: The power of industry
by Jessie Wang, Senior Copy Editor
• May 7, 2020

Humans of Harker: Problem-solving the world
by Emily Tan, Winged Post Asst. Features Editor
• May 6, 2020

Humans of Harker: Infinite possibility
by Saloni Shah, Humans of Harker Editor-in-Chief
• May 5, 2020

Humans of Harker: Connecting confidence and compassion
by Gloria Zhang, Winged Post Co-Editor-in-Chief
• May 3, 2020

Class of 2020: Humans of Harker compilation, part one
by Saloni Shah, Humans of Harker Editor-in-Chief
• May 3, 2020

Humans of Harker: Jack of all trades
by Michael Eng, Reporter
• May 3, 2020

Humans of Harker: Growing with the T-Fam
by Eric Fang, Winged Post Co-Editor-in-Chief
• May 2, 2020
!["[Interning] was a really eye-opening experience for me because before when I thought of San Jose, I thought of skyscrapers and tech firms and big companies, but working with my councilman, I realized that it’s a lot more than what it pretends to be. I realized that people are struggling even in my own community, and that was one of my blind spots. I hope that with community service and political activism, I can change that," Eric Fang (12) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/EricFang_AnthonyXu_HoHPhoto-596x900.jpg)
Humans of Harker: Seeking the story
by Anthony Xu, TALON Co-Editor-in-Chief
• May 2, 2020
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