inventory_2 Archive: Fall 2010 - Spring 2014
Survey reveals Samo students need to study up on their geography
Several weeks ago, 25 percent of 550 Samo students polled were able to identify Afghanistan on a map. In this geopolitical survey regarding the greater Middle East, students were asked to identify three Middle Eastern nations and state whether or not the United States has conducted military operations within those particular countries in the last five years.
Students "Grub Tough" at food truck fundraiser
With the ever-rising popularity of food truck dining, it is no wonder that when four of the tastiness food trucks in Los Angeles pulled into Barnum circle on Friday March 18 for "Grub Tough Truck Day," bands of hungry students eagerly waited in line to dine. Seniors Aidan Nathanson and Sean Robins brought forth the idea of a Grub Tough Truck Day fundraiser for the ROP’s Virtual Enterprise program and put their plan to create their own food truck into action.
Zoom in on hiking
The early riser awakes to get ready for his morning. He packs his backpack with his nikon camera, spf 40, and farmer's market fruit ready for the mountains. The hiker’s view is spectacular, offering a sense of perspective and the chance to breathe in the fresh air and experience nature first hand. Hiking is an activity that used to be about as popular among teenagers as early morning knee bends. Now it's a weekend must-do, especially in Santa Monica. Senior Aaron Pomerantz took note of the new trend at the beginning of this year.
New Delians requirements help beautify Samo campus
As of this month, members of the Delians Honors Society must complete five hours of mandatory community service hours, on-campus, at scheduled Delians events, on top of completing five hours of community service at a venue of their choice. While some students welcome this change, other students are skeptical.
Jimenez steps down, Bisson to replace him as Department Chair
After over 20 years as the head of the History Department, Samo social studies teacher Jaime Jimenez will hand over the reins to social studies teacher Amy Bisson.
ASB changes election format to reflect real world
The next ASB election will stay true to the democratic process: students will flock to the South Gym to vote for their representatives in booths.
Computer labs open after hours
Technology access just got easier for Samo students. The computer labs located at T110 and L202 are now open every day after school from 3:30-4:30 to give students a chance to complete required coursework and prepare for coming exams.
Latin is music to Samo's ears
Sophomore Chelsea Brandwein is hoping to spark more of an interest in the“dead” language through the Glee Club, which held its first meeting March 21 under Mr. Henderson’s patronage.
City of Santa Monica releases mobile application
Tree limbs in the street, potholes, graffiti. Santa Monica’s “On the GO” app can fix all of these problems.
Backpack flipping: unzipped
Who flipped the backpack? Was it the quiet overachieving “Professor Plum” with the Jansport in the English Building? Or maybe it was the flirtatious “Miss Scarlet” with the North Face in the Spanish classroom? Whomever it was, backpack flipping lends itself to the ongoing game of “CLUE” to identify the backpack flipper. There’s the usual flipping routine, the sneaking up behind the victim, the suppressed giggles and the waiting to see how long it takes “the flipee” to notice. The teacher sits motionless at the side of the classroom, fully aware — sometimes disappointed, other times completely amused.
Lee revives senior Shakespeare elective
“...the universal themes in his works, love and betrayal, are the same in 1650 and 2011. Love is love.”— Chon Lee, English teacher
School Board authorizes the cut of district nurses
Five distict nurses could be cut at the end of this year, leaving only nine Registered Nurses (RNs) for 16 district schools.
Samo student Carlee Jensen competes on “Jeopardy!”
“I didn’t win but I feel grateful to have been a part of the experience,” Jensen said. “I got to be part of a game I’ve loved since I was a little kid –– that’s more than enough.” -Carlee Jensen, senior.
Junior starts music therapy group for students with disabilities
Samo student Sam Harreschou works daily with students in Specialized Academic Instruction Classes, and recently founded a music therapy program.
Students speak at College Board Forum
Students travel to San Francisco to present at the AP College Board’s Western Regional Forum, in order to discuss the implementation of a post-AP exam project.
Whaley submits Samo for arts education honor
Samo makes advances in Arts Education programs, specifically jazz band and ROP Dance.
New state law requires whooping cough vaccine
California is experiencing a widespread outbreak of pertussis, commonly known as whooping cough. In response to 10 recent pertussis-induced infant deaths, the state implemented a new law that requires all students starting 7-12 grade next year be vaccinated for pertussis before the beginning of the school year. The law applies to all students — new, returning or transferring, studying at public or private school.
Jazz musicians triumph at Berklee music festival in Boston
Samo’s jazz band and jazz combo participated in the 43rd Annual Berklee College of Music’s High School Jazz Festival in Boston on the weekend of March 5-6. Under the direction of SMMUSD Visual and Performing Arts coordinator Tom Whaley, the musicians placed first in the highest division.
Samo alum returns to research upcoming documentary
As the college acceptance and rejection letters trickle in to anxious seniors, questions of “Where do we go from here?” inevitably arise. Although not getting into Harvard may seem like life’s end, it’s not — and Rose Bloomfield is here to prove it.
Community support propels “For the Arts” to success
In times of economic downturn, public schools are some of the first to feel major budget cuts. In many districts, art programs take some of the hardest blows to funding; but in the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District (SMMUSD), the arts receive solid community support. Evidence of this could be seen on Saturday March 5, when Barnum Hall was packed to the rafters for the eighth annual “For the Arts Concert.”
SMC: where unacknowledged dreams come true
Many seniors pass through the offices of Gatell and the other college counselors with well-defined dreams of studying biomedical engineering or attending a music conservatory; others enter clueless. These students may be at a loss as to where their futures are headed, but they will still turn their noses at one suggestion: community college.
It’s always sunny in Santa Monica with junior Lucas Lofaro
“Its funny when I tell people that I work as a visual effects designer because I can’t see that well. I feel that I kind of have an eye for things that are beautiful. I appreciate beauty a lot because of my condition,” Lofaro said. “Other people just view beautiful things everyday and take them for granted.”
Recovering drug addict offers cautionary tale to English class
Frankly, it’s impossible to watch the television phenomenon “Cops” and not be intrigued. The audience is captured by the thrill of watching police tackle and serve justice to no-good low-lives. We get a certain satisfaction from seeing our tax dollars at work, keeping the streets of this great nation safe. And there’s no doubt: everyone likes watching criminals get busted.
SMC cuts late-start summer classes
Effective this year, SMC’s late-start summer classes will be cut, leaving some students to rethink their plans regarding credits.
Café Samo: Tales from a Latté Girl
So much at Samo is a competition, but Café Samo was different. It was about making music.
Spotlight: Eli Brown and Cyrus Allyar
Eli Brown is a budding conductor; Cyrus Allyar is a polyglot already dreaming of conservatory life. But they have one very important thing in common: their love of trumpet. "The Samohi" sat down for a conversation with these two very different music men.
Bilingual students reflect: la familia de Edison
According to Edison’s website, the school immerses students in Spanish starting in kindergarten, and the curriculum gradually evolves to include half instruction in English and half in Spanish.“We walked into kindergarten on the first day of school and they completely spoke to us in Spanish,” Keller said. “I wasn’t afraid because I knew Spanish, but I remember my friend Dalia was. I had to help her out and tell her what the teacher was saying.”
All- "American" Girls: in the flesh
You can see them perched on a cliff in the Hollywood Hills, eyes wide and breasts bared to the city of Los Angeles down below. They lay sprawled seductively on your coffee table or patio furniture, or swing bare-bottomed from low-hanging tree branches. They beckon to you from billboards and magazines, peddling clothes largely absent from the images in which they appear.
Prices expected to increase for community activities
To offset the spending and revenue gap predicted to occur in Santa Monica over the next five years, the Santa Monica City Council has proposed a price increase on many recreational activities, which would be effective July 1, 2011.
Samo welcomes new S-House principal
Jason Kurtenbach has taken over the position of S-House Principal, and is quickly settling in to the Samo lifestyle.
District schedule to be changed over two years
The process of changing the district calendar is distributed over two years; the next school year is scheduled to start in late August.
The beating heart of Samo's marching band
At Samo, Drumline plays the tricky role of being a group within a larger group. As a smaller section of marching band, they also perform as a smaller ensemble at games and have extra practices.
CNN Hero speaks in Barnum Hall
When her mother, who was still living in Malawi at the time, informed da Silva that a school in her hometown was shutting down, she decided to make a difference. Using money she had saved up from her work as a nanny, she started a school in her childhood home. Forty-eight children began attending her makeshift school in 2001.
Samo dress code to be revised, strictly enforced
After the standard of student dress has come into question, administrators have begun to reexamine the dress code.
Cody Williams: captain off the field
Cody Williams returns to the football field to cheer on his teammates after a long season without him. This year he will star in a documentary highlighting football players who have suffered similar injuries.
S-House Principal Gregory Runyon to retire
“I just need to start taking more time to be thoughtful about myself,” Runyon said. “I’ve had a rough year. I’ve lost three friends, and I just have to get my life in order.”
ASB divides to improve classwide efficiency
ASB focuses specifically on events and policies by dividing into two groups during class.
One Tree Hill actor Tyler Hilton performs for Samo students
Hilton’s hopes for his career path always included performing his own songs.“I always wanted to do music, I always wanted to be a musician – I loved it,” Hilton said. “My family all played so I was singing from when I was really little, always performing in coffee houses, different ice cream parlors or wherever they’d let me sing.”
Butterbeer to Heineken: Harry Potter growing up
Though it’s not celebrated every week, Harry Potter related events are welcomed by hoards of parties, thrown by people who have convinced themselves that their owl just got lost and any day now their acceptance letter to Hogwarts will be arriving, possibly bursting out through their chimney to defy the rule of their cruel, manipulating uncles with handlebar mustaches.
New school year proposed, put to vote
Samo teachers are among those to vote on a new school year for SMMUSD, which would begin in August and end in early June.
Daniel Katz: up in the air
Daniel Katz was infatuated with aviation from an early age. He always looked forward to watching the planes take off from the observation deck at Santa Monica Airport and visiting the Museum of Flying with his parents. While these experiences planted the seed in his mind of becoming a pilot later in life, Katz’s love didn’t really reach the skies until the summer of 2006.
NCAA makes new policy regarding Division I athletes
Effective Aug. 1, 2010, the NCAA will no longer accept online courses for any of the 16 “core subjects” required to graduate high school. College-bound athletes who take online classes after that date will then become ineligible to play sports in Division I or Division II schools.
ASB members resign in the wake of Homecoming events
In response to what some believe to be irresponsible student behavior at the homecoming pep rally and football game on Oct. 22, Associated Student Body (ASB) members Charlie Schmittdiel and Meghan Loftin have been asked to step down from their elected positions, and all school-wide activities and events related to ASB are postponed indefinitely.
A new soda parlor with an old-time feel
Tucked away in a corner of the 1916 Landmark Carousel building, a vintage soda fountain harkens from the past like the carousel itself. “Soda Jerks” is a new concession that opened on the Santa Monica Pier in July. For the record, a soda jerk isn’t an obnoxious person who spits up Coke. The soda fountain gets its name from the 1930s slang used to describe the youths who worked behind the counter jerking silver levers to hand-pump syrup and soda water.
The men and the music: Man Choir
Jain said. “It is one of my favorite days of the week. I spend lunch singing with my friends and we do fun songs that you wouldn’t usually see in a classical choir.”
Canball Club scores as membership grows
The object of the game is to throw the volleyball and hit the “can” or beach trashcan. There are four members on offense and three on defense, plus a goalie in a circular court. If the defenders tag the offender who has possession of the ball, there is a turnover and the offense and defense switch positions. The sport, although unique, is similar to team handball and soccer.
Steven Gordon: all that’s jazz
“In recent months, I’ve really started diving into writing my own music. Over the summer I worked on the music for a short film, and since then I’ve been writing music focused around a story or a character,” Gordon said.
Samo student assaulted near campus
School safety is examined after a student is robbed and assaulted while on her way to school.
School evacuates after gas odor is detected
The Samo community evacuates after students and faculty detect an odor in the History building.
Amy Clark: from rap beats to art tweets
“What I really wanted to do was to make art out of something that wouldn’t usually be considered art.”– Amy Clark
Gardening Club cultivates veggies with district foodies
The Food and Nutrition Department and Samo’s Gardening Club share the same soil — but is there room for two cooks in the kitchen?
GSA wears purple for hate-crime awareness
On the “Spirit Day,” page, the creators Tasha Gawkowski and Malcom Zawaci wrote, “Purple represents spirit on the LGBT flag, and that’s exactly what we’d like all of you to have with you. Please know that times will get better and that you will meet people who will love you and respect you for who you are, no matter your sexuality.”
Samo saves lives one pint at a time
Samo faculty and students piled into the South Gym on Oct. 15 to donate a total of 200 pints of blood at the first Blood Drive of the year.
McKeown proposes free bus passes for Santa Monica Residents
Although the Big Blue Bus is currently facing a $6.4 million deficit, city council member Kevin McKeown has proposed giving free bus passes to all Santa Monica residents.
School spirit back in blue
When a Samo student thinks of school spirit, they probably visualize a raucous group of juniors and seniors fervently screaming their graduation years until their lungs burst. Blue Crew aims to push that image aside, and take school spirit to an entirely new level.
From campus to cabin, Ramos is no chicken
To get away from city chaos, each month Irene Ramos heads home to Mount Pinos, her cabin and chickens — a welcomed respite.
Tayllor Johnson: rhythm and soul
Every word Tayllor Johnson utters is poetry. One of her passions, poetry enriches her life so that she speaks in verses, walks in dances. Her life is dictated by her passions to the point that being Tayllor Johnson is an art.
Dear Samo,
We are forgetting that earning good grades and college acceptance are not the only things that should come to mind when we look back on our years at Samohi.
ASB starts new homecoming traditions
After a recent decline in attendance to the Homecoming Dance, ASB takes over in an effort to increase ticket sales.
City Council poised to vote on plastic bag ban
After a statewide law banning the distribution of single-use plasic bags was rejected, city council will vote this month on a local ban.
The “lawn-gest” five minutes of the day
Samo students find peace of mind every day between third and fourth period on the grass in front of the History Building.
David vs. Goliath: Vidiots triumphs over Blockbuster
While Netflix offers convenience, Vidiots and Cinefile have begun offering more than just movies. In July, Vidiots began Vidiots Annex, which offers film study classes in everything from censorship in cinema to anime mythology to cult films as well as free screenings every Saturday night at 8. The movies they show on Saturdays are brilliantly selected, from Run Lola, Run to The Apartment. Their website includes ‘playlists’ of movies with common themes ( “Beyond Harry Potter” and “Manhattan Fabulous” to name a few).
Tardy Machine raises concerns from students
“Doing it by hand was infinitely longer,” Semik said. “I think it was money well-spent; less kids can fall through. Today, we scanned 203 kids for tardies.”
Measures Y and YY would raise $6 million for district
According to Allen, if the measures fail, SMMUSD will once again be faced with teacher layoffs, increased class sizes, closing of elementary libraries, and other harmful cuts.“Measure Y and YY money would help continue the programs that we already have; some of the things we really enjoy – drama, athletics, music, dance, as well as classroom supplies and things like that,” Semik said.
Malibu school applies for charter status
“Being a charter school gives us more power and with the power comes more control,” Kristy said. “... We can be part of LAUSD without being completely under its authority.”
Samo alum and “Titanic” star dies at 100
Gloria Stuart, the 1930s Hollywood beauty who went on to become the oldest Academy Award nominee for her role in “Titanic,” died in her sleep on Sept. 26, 2010 at age 100.
SAGE team travels to South Africa, places second
Samo’s ROP Students of the Advancement of Global Entrepreneurship team of Global Entrepreneurship team placed second in the SAGE World Cup 2010 business competition this summer in South Africa.
Coach Cady to run for Board of Education
Longtime Samo coach and teacher Patrick Cady has will be representing Malibu this year as a candidate for a spot on the Board of Education
In the face of loss, Escalera remains positive
Difficult though it may have been for him to step into the position, Escalera still gleans an obvious pride and pleasure from his participation in Samo athletics. A longtime football coach and former high school athlete, he harbors a deep-rooted belief in the power of sports to improve individuals and unite communities.
Are Samo students on a “Race to Nowhere?”
In education today, students always feel the need to please, with the fear of failure and the feeling that no learning is really occurring ever-present. Instead, it feels as if we’re just taking in our daily dose of information and spitting it out again at someone’s request, like machines.