May 2022 Issue 6
Final Letter From the Editor Dear Harvey Community, The time has bittersweetly come for me to say my goodbyes to The Pulse and The Harvey School. From September 2021 to June 2022, I was honored to serve as The Pulse’s editor-in-chief and layout editor.
Featured in this issue:
Reports
Sports News
Reviews
For as long as I can remember, I loved reading and writing. By the age of 5, I could get so lost in a book that my preschool teachers didn’t want to interrupt to tell me it was circle time. At 8 years old, I would hide under my bed covers with a book and a reading light, and my parents couldn’t even yell at me for staying up past my bedtime. I mean, how are you going to yell at your kid for reading? My love for literary arts first stemmed in the form of creative writing. In first grade, I wrote a short story about a unicorn named Amanda, which I presented in front of my entire elementary school at a learning assembly along with a painting I made of her. Hmmm, I wonder where I got the name from? By the time I reached middle school, there were no more “Read 10 books for a pack of stickers” competitions, and writing stories about unicorns didn’t cut it. For every book I even touched in middle school and high school, an analytical essay followed it. Eight years of MEEAL, TRIIC, or whatever anagram you want to use for body paragraphs, ultimately was the main contributor to a decline in my love and passion for literary arts. And then … 2020. The start to every great story nowadays. All you could do is sit around and watch or read the
news, and when you couldn’t go out and see things happen beyond a screen, you started to wonder what’s real and what’s not.
Readers, I leave you with a condensed version of my ComBy 2020, I was ready for mon App personal statement, the truth. Any good journalist endless appreciation for all your knows that it should be the facts support for The Pulse and The that are printed. As editor-in-chief, Harvey School, and five simple I strived to give readers not only words: Do what makes you happy. articles that they want to read but also the ability to say they have Sincerely, a solid and factual foundation of what they have just read. I will Amanda Mohamad continue to tell the truth as a journalism major this coming fall at Editor-in-Chief and Layout Editor the University of Miami in Coral of The Pulse Gables, Florida, and I have many to thank for helping me get to this point. Coming out the other side of a global pandemic (knock on wood) is no easy feat, but some pandemic habits have followed me out the other side. I want to thank my junior editor and friend, Emma Galgano, for always keeping me motivated and having such a keen eye on the occasional days when I could not be my best self for The Pulse. You are the brightest star in a sky full of NASA satellites, and I cannot wait to see you thrive as the next editor-inchief of The Pulse and beyond. Additionally, I would like to give an immense thank you to the faculty advisor of The Pulse, Ms. Holmes. Ms. Holmes, among your many talents in both the classroom and theater, your best strength has to be dealing with me for four years. Four years of being my biggest cheerleader, always having my best interest, keeping me sane, and reminding me how appreciated I am. From the bottom of my heart, I thank you for your love and support and want you to know how appreciated YOU are. Entering high school, everyone wants to find a place to belong, whether they are the prettiest, the smartest, the most athletic, etc. On the other hand, I just wanted to be doing something that made me happy. When in doubt, I always came back to The Pulse, whether it was writing my articles, editing, or creating the layout, because it made me happy. Perhaps my childhood joys
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Spring Pulse Seniors Photo Courtesy of Hudson Chris
of reading and writing are coming back into my life.
Photo Courtesy of Catherine Burges