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The Granite Bay Gazette GRANITE BAY HIGH SCHOOL w 1 GRIZZLY WAY w GRANITE BAY, CA w 95746 w VOLUME 16 w ISSUE 2 w FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2012
Commentary
haley massara hmassara.gazette@gmail.com
Life sucks sometimes, but that’s all right.
I
t’s inevitable. The quintessential senior year column in which I attempt to wax poetic about my short, sheltered little life. You already know what I’m going to say, right? That through the good and the bad, the hopelessly optimistic scholastic aspirations and the crushing disappointment; the glitz of Homecoming and the grit of 3 a.m. cramming; the pointless “drama” and the heartwarming camaraderie – that through all of it, everything happens for a reason? Nope. I’m not religious, but I am a big believer in the butterfly effect – that is, that everything we experience is the result of a long, unpredictable, and largely uncontrollable series of coincidental events. There is no deeper meaning to be had in our misfortunes, nor is there any cosmic reward in our successes. What happens to us simply happens. Said so plainly, I’ll admit, it’s kind of a downer philosophy. If you enter a raffle and win a free burrito from Chipotle, no higher power wanted you to have that burrito. You aren’t a better or worse person for winning it. And that steaming tube of meat, rice and cheese isn’t karmic payback for donating to UNICEF or introducing yourself to a terrified freshman. You won because you won. That’s it. But, if that burrito gives you E. coli, rest assured it’s not because you cheated on that quiz last week or because you slept through church. That’s the flipside of the chaos theory – when bad things happen, there’s no person or vague spiritual concept to blame. It just is. That, to me, is immensely more comforting than any organized belief could be. That I am not singularly to blame for what’s gone wrong in my life (admittedly, quite a lot). That the serious, unpreventable things – cancer, cardiopulmonary disease, economic ruin, mental illness – have no higher, constructive purpose. They simply are. I haven’t had the luxury of having high-school-age-appropriate problems for a long time now. But what’s keeping me a decently functioning human being is the knowledge that sometimes, life sucks, bad things happen to people who don’t deserve it, cells copy their DNA wrong and metastasize – and that’s OK, because I could be the next Ghandi or the next Hitler, and nothing would change. Instead of trying to force catharsis in the bad, I’m just more appreciative of what good I do stumble upon. Despite my heavy eyeliner and my taste for Amanda Palmer’s music, I am not a creature without joy in her life. I bake muffins on Sunday mornings, and watch Game of Thrones with my mom. I play card games with a group of friends at the Whole Foods’ builtin café, and grind through Japanese video games with my boyfriend by my side. These little rituals of mine might not be the kind of profound, top-ofMaslow’s-hierarchy kind of selfactualization we all hope to achieve. But they’re very dear to me. Game of Thrones might not offset all the crap, but honestly, it doesn’t have to. I’d be insincere if I ended this on some broad platitude about desperately seeking out the positive. Not all of us can believe in that. But we all have those tiny, frivolous pleasures. Isn’t that worth something? *** Haley Massara, a senior, is a Gazette co-editor-in-chief.
IT’S ON! Granite Bay students, families gear up for 2012 election season From pews to polls: does our religion change how we vote? BY LENA EYEN
leyen.gazette@gmail.com
A group of more than 1,000 pastors planned to purposely break the law last Sunday. According to the website for The Speak Up Movement, a group of such individuals believe that “the voice of the Church has been silenced by the Johnson Amendment – an unjust and unconstitutional law.” They claim this law breaks the Constitutional right of freedom of speech. The Johnson Amendment, passed in 1954, says churches that want to maintain their tax-exempt status cannot participate in any actions that specifically endorse a political candidate. On Sunday, in a protest the participants are calling
“ P u l p i t Freedom S u n d a y, ” the group of pastors planned to each specifically endorse a presidential candidate in their sermon and then send a videotape of them doing so to the Internal Revenue Service in order for it to be sent directly to the Supreme Court. Whether or not the Johnson Amendment is constitutional, the question as to what extent a religious organization can play a role in the implementation of See RELIGION, page A4
For young voters, politics runs in the family BY ALEXA ZOGOPOULOS azogopoulos.gazette@gmail.com
With every four years comes an especially tense few months for Americans, filled with arguments over who is the better candidate, what needs to be done with our country and why one specific political view is “the right one.” This election year also happens to be one in which many 18-yearolds, including students at Granite Bay High School, plan on voting.
But, many may wonder, how susceptible are teens to the influence of their parents when it comes to political beliefs? In 2004, the Gallup Youth Survey was conducted on American teens ages 13-17 and asked the question, “Thinking about social and political issues, how do your views compare to those of your parents? Are your views more conservative, more liberal, or about the same?” Overwhelmingly, 71 percent of
the respondents claimed to have political views that are “about the same” as their parents, while 21 percent were more liberal and 7 percent were more conservative. It is apparent that teenagers are easily influenced by their parents in many different ways. Not to say that all teens with similar political beliefs to their parents have not done the research for themselves. Many GBHS students have made it a point to keep up with politics, especially during an election year.
“I want to know w h a t ’s going on in our country,” said Amanda Bassett, a junior, who generally shares the same political beliefs as her parents, but she still tries to stay as informed as possible. “Mostly I have the same
Source: A poll of 227 Granite Bay High School students conducted by the Granite Bay Gazette. Gazette infographics/ LENA EYEN
conservative views as my parents, but I’m sure there are some issues where I disagree,” said Bassett. Whether or not parents talk See PARENTS, page A4
RJUHSD School Board race heats up Three incumbents, one newcomer vie for 2012 openings BY HALEY MASSARA
hmassara.gazette@gmail.com
The campaigns might be quieter and the issues narrower in scope, but this November, the presidential electoral race isn’t the only one young voters should keep an eye on. The Roseville Joint Union High School
District’s Board of Trustees has three vacancies, and four candidates are pursuing those positions. Three incumbents – Paige Stauss, Garry Genzlinger, and R. Jan Pinney – are running for re-election. The fourth candidate, current Roseville City School District board member Rene Aguilera, is running for his
Online content filter to relax, district says
Jarrod Westberg GBHS teacher, says he thinks teachers should have unrestricted online access.
Facebook, Twitter and others proven to have legitimate educational uses BY NICOLE BALES
nbales.gazette@gmail.com
It’s safe to say, most Granite Bay High School students have seen the “content has been blocked” page pop up a few times on a school computer, either while looking up
inside this issue
News
A2 – A5
Voices
A6 – A7
Second Look
A8
Features
B1 – B8
Sports
C1 – C6
Green Screen
G1 – G20
a picture for a project or going on Facebook to check something that a teacher posted for their class. But the filtering system is about to get a lot more student and teacher friendly. The Roseville Joint Unified High
first term on the RJUHSD Board. Brandon Dell’Orto, a Granite Bay High School teacher who has been watching the race, said the Board and its policies can, depending on its members, have a profound influence on the district’s students. “We’ve had boards in the past that have decided they’re going to legislate social
(and) moral guidelines,” he said. “(And we’ve had) boards … that, more or less, just want to know everything’s OK … They trust the managers, from the superintendant down to the principals, to do their jobs.” The Gazette conducted telephone or email interviews with all four candidates and asked them to respond to several issues that will impact student life both directly,
A makeover to the Core Common Core exam to replace STAR standardized testing BY AUSTIN DOWNS
adowns.gazette@gmail.com
School District is hopeful it will have a policy fully adopted allowing social media by the end of this semester in December. RJUHSD Director of Technology Mike Fury said these newer See BLOCKED, page A5
See SCHOOL BOARD, page A4
Standardized testing will be overwhelmingly different by the time the Granite Bay High School class of 2016 becomes juniors. Instead of taking the notorious S t a n d a r d i z e d Te s t i n g a n d Reporting (STAR) exams in the
spring, these students will be the first class at GBHS to take the new standardized test for all high school students known as Common Core State Standards (CCSS). Introduced to the California Department of Education in 2009 and adopted by the state in August 2010, the CCSS has, along with 45 other states who have adopted it, set new standards for preparing students from grade levels K-12 to be successful in college and the workforce. See CORE, page A5
Burglaries hit home
Fashion police
A2
A3
Granite Bay residences face a growing threat.
Dress codes often change with the times.