
Humans of Harker: Pinpointing passions
by Claire Su, TALON Conservatory Editor
• January 17, 2023

Humans of Harker: The art of learning
by Sidak Sanghari, HoH Profiler
• December 7, 2022

Humans of Harker: From figure skater to figure creator
by Sally Zhu, Co-Editor in Chief
• November 29, 2022

Humans of Harker: From chorus to course
by Vika Gautham, Assistant Features Editor
• November 8, 2022

Humans of Harker: It’s all in the details
by Margaret Cartee, Opinions Editor
• November 8, 2022
![“[High school is] finite but not finite. It's finite in the sense that it's going to eventually end. If you realize the finiteness of it, you learn to value the experiences you gain from it more, but it's somewhat infinite too because the influences you gain from high school and the experiences of your high school journey are not over once you graduate high school," Austina Xu (12) said.](https://harkeraquila.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/AustinaXu_IM1-900x540.png)
Humans of Harker: Expressing the infinite through the finite
by Isha Moorjani, Co-Editor-in-Chief
• October 31, 2022

Humans of Harker: Taking kicks and taking risks
by Gemma Chan, Reporter
• October 23, 2022

Humans of Harker: In between pages
by Saahil Herrero, Reporter
• October 20, 2022

Humans of Harker: Archives and algorithms
by Ella Yee, Co-News Editor
• October 19, 2022

Humans of Harker: Planting seeds of care
by Sarah Mohammed, Winged Post Co-Editor-in-Chief
• October 9, 2022

Humans of Harker: Our moments captured
by Sabrina Zhu, Winged Post Co-Editor-in-Chief
• October 7, 2022
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