The Talon | Issue 2 | November 8, 2019

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Los Altos High School, Los Altos, CA ■ November 8, 2019 ■ Volume XXXV, Issue II

ASB and SCL grading policy violates Calif. Ed. Code

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE

CEDRIC CHAN VAISHU SIRKAY Staff Writers

RV BAN Find out about Mountain View’s recent ordinance that restricts RV parking. News, 5

Grading Check out staff writers Cedric Chan and Vaishu Sirkay’s solutions for ASB and SCL’s illegal grading policy. Opinions, 7

Nutcracker Read about Los Altos dancers performing in the Nutcracker. Features, 11

KYLIE AKIYAMA

Los Altos to pass tobacco ordinance The new ordinance aims to restrict teen vaping and tobacco use NINA CROFTS VAISHU SIRKAY Staff Writers

Jesus Is King Read senior writer Lucas Bricca’s take on Kanye West’s new album “Jesus Is King.” Arts & Culture, 12

Twin Athletes Hear about the twin athletes at Los Altos and how their bonds are stengthened through sports. Sports, 14

Los Altos City Council has plans to pass an ordinance restricting the sale and advertisement of tobacco products in the city of Los Altos. This will affect grocery and convenience stores, in addition to gas stations and Los Altos’s one tobacco store, Edward’s Pipe and Tobacco. Businesses selling tobacco products will be re-

quired to follow certain guidelines. Assembly bill AB-1639, which will prohibit the sale of flavored e-cigarette products excluding menthol, mint and tobacco flavors in most retail stores, passed in the California Assembly in August and is expected to pass in the Senate. However, adult-only stores and age-restricted online retailers will still be able to sell flavored products. Los Altos’ ordinance builds on this by further restricting tobacco and tobacco-fla-

vored products. According to Management Analyst Fellow for the City of Los Altos Trevor Marsden, this ordinance came amidst concerns of vape tobacco products being used more frequently among teenagers. Marsden cited a 2017-2018 summary of the California Healthy Kids Survey on tobacco use, which has been a reference point on tobacco statistics for the city.

“Vaping”

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Staff Writer

WARNER BROS. PICTURES YOUTUBE CHANNEL

Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) smiles as he officially takes on the role of Joker. The film fails to fulfill its lofty goals but presents an interesting study of an iconic character.

CATHY WANG

Copy/Content Editor

November 9

National Art Honor Society Art Auction November 11

Veteran’s Day November 15

LAHS Grad Night Silent Auction November 21/22

Broken Box Production: It’s A Wonderful Life November 28

Thanksgiving Day November 29

Black Friday

News Editorial Opinions

2 6 7

In-Depth Features Arts & Culture Sports

8 10 12 14

“Grading”

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Joker is no laughing matter Krista Greksouk: Bringing life to a ‘dead’ language TOMOKI CHIEN

UPCOMING EVENTS

ASB’s and SCL’s (Associated Student Body and Student Community Leadership) grading policies, which require students to sell merchandise and tickets in exchange for their grade, violate the California state Educational Code, Santa Clara County education policies and Mountain View-Los Altos (MVLA) District policies. With slight variation, ASB and SCL policies require that students sell a certain number of merchandise and tickets. If they are unable to meet this quota, their grades are negatively affected. To avoid this, some students end up paying for unsold goods themselves. “For Eagle cards, we were given 10, and they’re each worth $20, so if we didn’t sell them, we had to pay for them, or else [the unsold tickets] showed up as a zero in the grade book,” former SCL student senior Carolyn Yih said. “I had to pay $100 because I only sold five Eagle cards, and that’s not pocket money.”

I saw “Joker” with my mom on a Friday night. I spent the first half hour flinching at every sound in the theater, at every person that stood up, terrified that some angry man invigorated by this film had come in to terrorize us. I spent the second half hour checking my phone to see how much time had passed. “Joker,” with all its dramatic shots and cello-heavy music, doesn’t pack the punch it thinks it does. “Joker” follows Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix), a failed stand up comedian turned party clown, and his slow descent into madness as the world around him seems determined to beat him down. From the premise alone it’s clear to see this Joker is unlike any of his

previous iterations portrayed by the likes of Jack Nicholson, Mark Hamill and Heath Ledger. But this difference does not put the film at a disadvantage largely due to how intelligently Phoenix has remade this character. Although his version differs so drastically that comparisons can’t even be made, his portrayal still manages to feel true to the core of the character. Few, if any, actors can say they’ve done that, let alone with as much grace as Phoenix did. His Joker, with a skin and bones frame, is vulnerable, easily hurt (which he is, physically and emotionally, numerous times) and painfully unsure of who he is. But beneath it all, beneath the seeming weakness, there is a danger and intensity that Phoenix brings which is simply remarkable.

“Joker”

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Latin is a dead language, some might say. They’re not technically wrong—it’s conversationally dead. You’d be hard pressed to find a place where you could order a pizza or hail a cab in Latin. So fine, maybe they’re right. If the essence of a language is solely dependent on its conversational speak, Latin has long been dead as a doorknob. Krista Greksouk’s Latin class, however, is very much alive. Decorated with student artwork and filled with the productive chatter of students even during lunch, room 912 stands as a space for col-

laboration and positive engagement. By placing an emphasis on community, Greksouk hopes to engage her students with the difficult task of learning a foreign language, spoken or not. “When learning a foreign language, you have to take risks and be wrong a lot,” she said. “It’s important for people to feel safe with their classmates to make those mistakes because if you're not willing to make mistakes, you’re never actually going to learn anything.” The emphasis on community isn’t just a vehicle to teach content; Greksouk cares about her students.

“Greksouk”

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ELLI LAHDESMAKI

Latin teacher Krista Greksouk helps sophomore Ceasar Palting as the students decipher texts together. Greksouk values collaboration and hopes to create an interactive, welcoming community in her classroom.


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