HM- Colin Dickey, Hauntingly Poignant Author

This article was originally published in the Winter 2017 Harker Magazine.

Since he was a little boy, Colin Dickey MS ’91 had always dreamed of becoming an architect. But while at Harker’s middle school – inspired by highly respected and beloved English teachers, including the late Sylvia Harp – he had a change of heart.

“Harker nurtured a kind of creative rigor that I appreciate – not just memorizing and repeating information but getting us to think critically and to go beyond received truths,” Dickey said. “At some point, I realized that one could easier build things out of words than out of bricks and wood.”
And so, at 12 years old, while most boys his age were playing sports or video games, he spent his after-school hours reading books and writing stories on his mother’s word processor. With the nearby labyrinth-like Winchester Mystery House – designed and built by Sarah Winchester, widow of gun magnate William Wirt Winchester, and said to be haunted by ghosts – serving as his muse, his early interest in architecture would creep its way into his latest and greatest passion.

Fast-forward 25 years. Dickey holds a Master of Fine Arts in critical studies, as well as a doctorate in comparative literature, and is an associate professor of creative writing at National University. He is the co-editor of “The Morbid Anatomy Anthology” and author of three supernatural nonfiction books, including his most recent, “Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places,” which The New York Times Book Review called “a lively assemblage and smart analysis of dozens of haunting stories … absorbing … [and] intellectually intriguing.” The book also was lauded by the Los Angeles Times, Men’s Journal, Publishers Weekly, The Seattle Times and The Wall Street Journal.
Dickey also has received positive feedback from readers.
“Some random person on the Internet told me the other day that my latest book was helping her get through a difficult time, and I was honored and humbled to have had that kind of impact,” he said.

In writing “Ghostland,” which is “not overtly pro or anti any belief in the supernatural,” Dickey said his focus was on uncovering the answers to a series of questions: “Why do certain buildings come to be seen as haunted? Is there something architecturally about these spaces that may lend them an aura of the ghostly? Why do we tell some ghost stories and not others? Is there something to be learned about the way we tell ghost stories, something that reflects deeper anxieties, hopes and fears?” While some may be skeptical or even afraid of this particular genre, the author hopes everyone will be a part of the conversation.
Between books, Dickey carves out time as a guest speaker, and is a frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Review of Books and Lapham’s Quarterly. In his post at National University, he is primarily tasked with “sculpting and guiding a new generation of voices” – a privilege and a duty he takes very seriously.
“Most of my students come to me with a great deal of raw talent. My job is to act as a sounding board, giving them the space to adapt and refine those voices,” Dickey said. “One of the main pieces of advice I find myself giving is to simply write – and read. Students, even writers, don’t read as much or as widely as they should.”
For information on Dickey’s books, upcoming appearances and more, visit colindickey. com. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @colindickey.

Tags:

Student art showcased at lunchtime AP Studio Art Reception

AP Studio Art students showcased their work at last week’s AP Studio Art Reception, a lunchtime event that attracted a crowd of students and faculty. The annual event highlights the dedication and talent of Harker’s young artists, who every year create dozens of pieces across different media, including paintings, sculptures, drawings and photographs.

Tags:

Boys golf makes school history; kudos for Thompson; alumna Connell ’13 breaks own record

Boys Golf

The boys golf team started its season with a bang as it brought home the program’s first-ever tournament win. The victory at the Joe Gambetta Tournament in Antioch was highlighted by first place medalist Victor Shin, grade 11, shooting a 1-over-par 73, edging out teammate Jaimin Bhagat, grade 9, who had the same score, but took second with a scorecard playoff. Ryan Vaughan, grade 12, tied for third with a 76. This Wednesday, the Eagles travel to Livermore to compete in the Cowboy Classic at The Golf Course at Wente Vineyards.

Basketball

The boys and girls basketball season came to end last week as both teams lost in the first round of CCS.

In a 64-51 loss to Carmel, the boys team recovered from a 23-point first quarter deficit to pull to within 6 at halftime, but the Padres pulled away in the second half to move on in the tournament. Playing in their final high school game, Justin Jia and Jordan Goheen, both grade 12, led the Eagles with solid performances. Jia led the team with 13 points and four steals, while Goheen added 11 points and team-high seven rebounds.

The girls team traveled to Santa Cruz, where it played to a tough 57-53 loss in a game that was close throughout. Jordan Thompson, grade 12, finished her illustrious high school career with a game-high 24 points.

Last week, Thompson also was recognized for her amazing career:

http://www.calhisports.com/2017/02/21/norcalsocal-players-of-the-week-52/

Wrestling

Daniel Reidenbach, grade 12, Eric Fang, grade 9, and Davis Howard, grade 12, competed at the CCS wrestling championship over the weekend. Howard picked up the only win for Harker with a win by fall over Half Moon Bay in his second match. Congrats on a great season, wrestlers!

Baseball

The baseball team opened its season with a 28-0 victory over Yerba Buena last week. Logan Frank, grade 10, had three hits and drove in two runs to lead the offense. Dominic Cea, grade 11, Zach Hoffman, grade 10, and Anthony Meissner, grade 10, each drove in three runs. This week the Eagles travel to Del Mar on Thursday and host O’Connell on Saturday.

Softball

The softball team kicked off its 2017 season with a 13-3 victory over Del Mar. Kristin LeBlanc, grade 11, and Cameron Zell, grade 10, led the Eagles with three hits each. LeBlanc, Mahi Gurram, grade 10, Grace Park, grade 12, Marti Sutton, grade 12, and Lily Wancewicz, grade 10, each drove in two runs. This Thursday, the Eagles host Terra Nova at Blackford.

Boys Tennis

The boys tennis team gets its season going this Tuesday versus Sacred Heart Prep before traveling to Clovis this weekend for the California Tennis Classic.

Lacrosse

The lacrosse team officially opens its 2017 season this Wednesday as it hosts Newark on Davis Field, followed by home games versus Los Altos on Thursday and the York School on Friday.

Swim

Harker swimming opened its season at the Palo Alto Invitational. Vivian Wang, grade 11, won the 200 IM and broke the school record in the 100 breaststroke while qualifying for CCS in both events. Ethan Hu, grade 9, broke the school record in the 200 free and also qualified for CCS in the 200 free, 100 fly, and 100 backstroke. On March 18 the swim team travels to Sacred Heart Prep to compete at the Small School Invitational.

Track and Field

The track and field season gets started this Saturday at the Willow Glen Invite.

Boys Volleyball

It will be a busy week for the boys volleyball team as it travels to Monterey High on Tuesday, before hosting Oak Grove on Wednesday and Cupertino for its opening league match on Friday.

Alumni Track

Izzy Connell ’13 lowered her own Pepperdine school record in the 400-meter run last week as she took second place during the three-team meet with her Waves, host Westmont and UC Santa Barbara. Connell also holds the Pepperdine school records in the 100m, 200m, 4×400 relay, as well as indoor records in the 60m, 200m and 4×400 relay. Check out the full story: http://www.pepperdinewaves.com/sports/c-track/recaps/021817aaa.html

Tags: ,

HM- Blossoms to Buildings

WORDS BY ALYSSA AMICK ’15 AND PRISCILLA PAN ’15
PHOTOGRAPHS BY SHAY LARI-HOSAIN ’16

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in Wingspan, a Harker student magazine, on Jan. 28, 2015. It was re-published in the inaugural issue of Harker Magazine in Winter, 2016.

A blanket of white enveloped the valley, which extended for miles as far as her eyes could see. It was summer in the Valley of Heart’s Delight, which would later be better known as the Silicon Valley, where endless blossoms marked the transition from spring into the beginning of a season when she would excitedly pick cherries.
Ten-year-old Kristin Giammona ’81, now Harker’s elementary division head, frequently rode her bike down the lanes of cherry orchards in her Willow Glen, San Jose neighborhood in the 1970s. Year after year, though, she noticed more and more houses replacing the fruit trees, usurping the green, empty vastness of the Valley of Heart’s Delight.

In 1919, fruit trees were planted in approximately 12 percent of Silicon Valley’s (then the Santa Clara Valley’s) 839,680 acres, according to the County of Santa Clara’s database. Vineyards made up an additional 2,850 acres, says the History of Santa Clara County. Also, with 18 canneries, this region, with abundant job opportunities and fertile land, was one of the largest centers for American food production until the 1960s.
Socially and economically, Silicon Valley revolved around its agrarian roots. Growing up, Giammona relished in watching the seasons change through several different fruits and vegetables. A San Jose native, Giammona hails from a long line of Silicon Valley food workers; her father was both a broker between farms and grocery stores as well as a canner, while her mother was one of many who tinned tomatoes at a cannery.
In the summer, Giammona was surrounded by families who sold cherries grown in their yards. Several small stands, run by cash businesses, worked around the timing of the seasons throughout the popular hubs in San Jose.
“If you wanted corn, you knew to go to Almaden Expressway,” Giammona said. “There were different areas you knew. In Los Gatos, there was a dairy farm, and I remember driving up this dirt road and we’d get fresh eggs.”
In 2014, though, picking fresh produce is a rarity in Silicon Valley, as the majority of arable land has been taken over by city developers and technology companies. Nevertheless, traces of the valley’s agricultural past linger in residents’ memories and protected expanses of land, such as recreational orchard gardens scattered throughout the area.
Giammona’s mother, Dorothy Scarpace, recalls spending her childhood summers cutting and drying apricots with her sister. “It was really a very wonderful area because everybody got to work in the canneries, and you only had to be 14 years old to work in them,” Scarpace said. “We could work in the summertime and then save our money for school to buy our own clothes and such.”
It didn’t end there, though. Giammona’s maternal grandfather worked for a trucking company, where he hauled tomatoes for the brand Contadina.
Like Scarpace, fellow San Jose native Mike Bassoni was raised during Silicon Valley’s agricultural times. Bassoni, Harker’s facilities manager, grew up in San Jose before urbanization.
“The houses across the street from me were the end of developed San Jose [in 1947],” he said. “From that point you could run through the orchards – prune orchards and apricot orchards primarily – all the way to Blossom Hill Road.”
The early 20th century had ushered in opportunities for fruit stand workers and food brokers. The canning industry was particularly prominent after the can manufacturing process became viable during World War I.
Specifically, this procedural efficiency followed the creation of the assembly line and mechanization of factories. Tin cans filled with fruit grown in Silicon Valley soil lined supermarket shelves. People even immigrated both nationally and internationally to California to find jobs in the canning industry and to be farmers.
In 1905, Bassoni’s grandfather opened a grocery store four blocks from Japantown in downtown San Jose.
“Probably 12 or 14 of my family members all worked in the canneries,” he said. “My father drove the trucks, and his brother fixed the trucks. Many of my aunts worked on the assembly line. You had to hand-process the fruit. You literally would have an army of people watching fruit go by and see if it was bruised, or maybe had a worm in it. There was no other quality control.”
According to Bassoni, the canning industry is what made San Jose originally, so much so that the Bay Area’s economy was driven by it. That is, until the technology revolution, which led Silicon Valley to what we know it as today, dawned.
In 1938, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard began work on a product that would eventually lead to the birth of Hewlett- Packard, the company behind the well-known HP computers. With this invention, they ignited a new tech age. Soon after came the hoard of renowned tech companies that now characterize Silicon Valley – Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter, to name a few.
In addition, the population of San Jose swelled from below 100,000 during Bassoni’s childhood to over a million. “In my lifetime, I’ve seen the population of San Jose double tenfold,” Bassoni said. “I used to be able to get on my bicycle and within about four, six pedal strokes, I could be out in the country; I could be out in orchards. You can’t do that anymore. It’s hard to escape what your generation views as just norm. If you get to a high point and you look across the valley, you see structures.”
As business offices and homes went up, the orchards came down.
The technology industry also displaced the valley’s food-based industries such as canneries, dislodging jobs that people had relied on. According to Giammona, families were unable to keep up with the times, as canning was the only life they knew.
“Because the food industry was such a big part of my family, it was sad to see my dad’s business kind of drop off,” Giammona said. “The images of big [and] open trucks carrying tomatoes that [we’d] see all the time in the summer, just gone.”
With the disappearance of canneries, Scarpace believed that her children missed out on firsthand insight into their roots.
Giammona also felt that a distinct, natural beauty was replaced in the valley when its vast land was supplanted by big companies, urbanization, and other industries that placed buildings in their stead.
“I think in some ways it’s kind of sad because the valley was so green and so beautiful, and all these buildings have been built upon soil that’s very fertile,” Giammona said. “I think we’ve really lost an agricultural area that was really important to California, and now you have to import things that you could have grown here.
“It’s just so overbuilt, and when you visit other areas like Italy and even other states, you see that they’ve preserved those areas, and we just really haven’t. You’re wasting all this beautiful soil on building buildings on top instead of putting the housing farther out or in different areas. It’s unfortunate it wasn’t thought out; how do you do both?”
An increasing resistance to the urbanization has recently gained momentum by local farmers and ranchers, many of whose families have stayed in Silicon Valley for generations in an attempt to revive the old agrarian culture of San Jose.
The family of Harker alumna Franny Thompson ’05 owns a cattle ranch, Rancho Yerba Buena, in Evergreen, San Jose. The property has belonged to the family for four generations, since 1910. Although originally a dairy, the family gradually added an orchard with apricots, prunes and walnuts. Today, it focuses on beef cattle.
“We feel proud that we get to help carry on the legacy of our family’s ranch,” Thompson said. “Our family has a deep-rooted history in the Santa Clara Valley because of our ranch, and there is definitely a sense of feeling connected to the past and looking towards the future, which is both interesting and exciting during this ever changing time in the area.”
Despite interest from developers for their land, the Thompson family chooses to keep the property. It remains as one of the few surviving ranches in the area.
Similarly, the Corn Palace, located in Sunnyvale, has been a landmark to locals since 1926.
The 20-acre food stand co-owned by brothers Ben and Joe Francia is frequently used by their children and grandchildren to grow corn, among other produce. Despite several multimillion dollar offers to buy the land and not to mention the townhouses and condominiums encroaching on their property, the brothers refuse to part with their family’s land.
Farmers and ranchers who do not sell their Silicon Valley land cultivate it through a distinct market niche of fruit stands, grocery store produce sections and weekly farmer’s markets.
The Old Olson Cherry Orchard, located off Mathilda Avenue in Sunnyvale, continues to produce cherries to this day. For four generations, the Olson family has worked in the orchards growing cherries, and for a short while apricots and prunes. Though their fruit stand sits in the same location it did in 1899, it now shares the same parking lot space with a nearby Chipotle, Starbucks, and a new Trader Joe’s less than 100 yards away.
Some farmers, however, have taken advantage of the urbanization. Andy Mariani, owner of Andy’s Orchard in Morgan Hill, for instance, benefited from the recent trend to consume whole and artisanal foods by easing his orchard’s transition into the technological era.
“When you have agriculture near an urban area, [you have] a different outlook,” Mariani said in a phone interview. “[I grow fruit] that you can demand a higher price for instead of just growing commodities. I’m trying to grow fruit like my parents did, but I have the advantage that this whole [food] trend has come about.”
Several towns have also set aside parks and preserves to capture the beauty of what was nearly 100 years ago, and cities have started to preserve or replant orchards. The Los Altos library sits next to apricot trees, and Sunnyvale has a Cherry Orchard Park.
Furthermore, programs urging citizens to return to growing some of their own produce, including Silicon Valley Grows, have sprung up. Silicon Valley Grows is a group started by six local libraries to “lend” seeds to members. They plant and grow the crop, collect the seeds after harvest, and return them to the library for others to use.
In an announcement of the program, the group elaborated on the organization’s goals.
“By growing and saving heirloom seeds, home gardeners can help maintain diversity in the food supply, preserve our cultural heritage, and generate seeds for seed libraries,” wrote Silicon Valley Grows on the Santa Clara County Library website.
The cultivation of the memory of Silicon Valley’s agricultural days is manifested on the Harker campus as well. The Class of 2014 recently gifted an orchard of apricot, apple and citrus trees to the school in honor of Jason Berry, an upper school English teacher who passed away in 2013.
“The class gifted the Orchard Garden in honor of the South Bay’s agricultural roots,” said Christopher Nikoloff, head of school, in a schoolwide email. Now, students have the opportunity to sit on benches and enjoy the beauty that once filled almost all of the valley.
Although the technology incubator of the Silicon Valley continues to expand, those who grew up from a different legacy remember a distinct connection to the land. “I grow fruit,” Mariani said. “To me that’s an art — orchestrat[ing] the sun and the soil, [watching] people bite into it and say, ‘That’s the best fruit I’ve ever tasted.’ Or a little kid tasting [the fruit], and he says, ‘This is better than candy.’ That’s very satisfying.”

Grade 6 students learn about different cultures, make Valentine’s Day cards for Meals on Wheels

On Jan. 31, the grade 6 advisories spent the afternoon rotating among three different activities, while the grades 7 and 8 students watched the Upper School Dance Show. 

Sixth graders were split into three groups. Students spent time with English teacher Rebecca Williams doing an activity called “My Multicultural Self” in which they looked at the different things in their lives that make up their individual cultures. Students then discussed the similarities and differences among the groups. With P.E. teacher CJ Cali, the advisories had fun running relays and doing team-building activities in the gym. Finally, with math teacher Margaret Huntley , the students made Valentine’s Day cards, which will be distributed to the elderly through Meals on Wheels. In all, the students made 275 cards with origami hearts and special notes for the recipients.

The kids had a great time and feedback from the advisors was positive.

Tags: ,

Steel in the sky: performing arts and athletic centers’ strength on display

The powerful ironwork structure of the performing arts (PA) center is reaching for the sky – the great frame can be seen from Harker’s middle school parking lot a mile away. The athletic center is farther along: its steel structure is rapidly being covered up. Here is a little insight into how all that steel – 575 tons for the PA center and 225 for the athletic center – moves from the steel shop to being bolted into place at Harker.

Neither building is a simple box structure, and the performing arts center is especially complex, noted the Devcon Construction managers. Just to order and refine steel needs, Kyle Olugbode, the project’s field engineer, handled more than 500 requests for information (RFIs) and submittals on the various items, exchanging scores of emails with the architect on steel alone, mostly due to the complexity of the PA center design.

Along with Olugbode on “Team Devcon” are Matt McKinley, a project engineer; Barth Nelson, the on-site superintendent who runs the field and manages the overall project schedule; and Cameron Page, the project manager who works hand-in-hand with Nelson on the schedule, project budget, etc. All the managers work to get steel shop drawings approved, help deal with RFIs and building information modeling coordination, as well as the myriad other tasks necessary to build complex structures.

The path of a girder, from manufacture to mounting, is complex. About 85 percent of the steel is from the U.S., the Devcon team said, with the remaining 15 percent mostly from Korea. All the girders used in the Harker structures are from suppliers’ stock-on-hand, as opposed to specially ordered sections.

The material itself, for the wide flange beams and columns, is a carbon steel alloy called grade ASTM A992. Uncut girders are shipped first to Concord Iron Works, a local steel shop, currently featuring a lot of photos of the Harker projects on their website.

Virtually all the steel is in I-beam configuration, with some trusses (flat connector pieces). At the CIW shop, the uncut girders are shaped into a variety of configurations, including wide flange (W) beams and columns, HSS (tube) columns and truss members. Other parts are channels and angled sections.

CIW preps beams to the architect’s specifications, cut and drilled with computer number controlled (CNC) machinery to 1/16-inch tolerance – the clearance for the bolt holes to match up – so each section is ready to bolt up when it leaves the shop. When a rare trimming is required, it is usually when fitting members to connections cast into the concrete foundations or retaining walls, Team Devcon noted.

The sections are then sent to Harker in primer on 40-foot trailers, and that’s when the action really gets going. Sections are off-loaded with fork trucks and staged where workers from CIW and O’Brien Steel Erectors of Stockton can hook up and swing the beams up to workers.

Anyone observing the site can’t help but marvel as girders, from a few feet long to a massive 73-foot girder in the athletic center, sway gracefully into place, guided the last few feet by steel workers. Erecting steel structures is a particular skill for crane operators, said Team Devcon. Harker’s crane workers, an operator and an oiler, are specialists from Bragg Crane & Rigging Co.

Once the girders are in the air, workers from O’Brien Steel take over. Steelworkers typically serve a four-year apprenticeship to learn how to handle the steel, then go on to train in welding if desired, said Team Devcon. For the Harker buildings, beams are bolted into place, with some receiving additional welding using flux core arc welding (FCAW) NR232. This process uses a continuous wire electrode with a flux core to create a powerful bond between sections.

If welds are concealed within the building envelope, touch-up primer is sometimes applied, but little to no corrosion occurs on inside welds. Exterior, exposed welds receive rust resistant priming, said Team Devcon.

For each building, all steel exposed to the weather is required to be hot dip galvanized. This is a zinc coating applied to the steel following fabrication and before it arrives at the site.

Wherever welds are made to the galvanized steel, the coating in the welded area must be replaced with a zinc-rich spray primer. If required by the project, galvanized steel can receive a painted finish. However, the galvanized coating can stand alone without a topcoat.

Once steel is bolted or welded into place, workers will cloak the frame in the upholstery of interior finishings. Hidden, the steel of both buildings will provide the wonderful physical structure for Harker athletes, performers and the community in general, just as Harker faculty and staff will provide the intellectual structure, to aid Harker students as they progress through the school.

Check out the latest construction update video!

Beginning in June 2016 Harker launched two new state-of-the art building projects on the upper school campus, the result of a $45M capital campaign. The 33,000 square-foot athletic center, opening August 2017, features a 12,000 sq.-ft. gym, athletic training room with advanced hydrotherapy unit, and spacious team rooms. The Rothschild Performing Arts Center, opening spring of 2018, features a 450-seat theater with fly loft and hydraulic orchestra pit, a state of the art scene shop, vocal, instrumental, theater/musical theater classrooms and dressing rooms. For more information visit the news and video links below or contact communications@harker.org

Theater and Gym Project Videos

Articles
Construction Starts with Demolition and Cleanup – Short Video
Groundbreaking for Athletics and Performing Arts Complex on Track for Spring 2016

Harker Breaks Ground on New Theater and Gym

Harker Takes Historic First Step at Groundbreaking Ceremony
Athletic and Performing Arts Centers Construction Starts in Earnest

Updated: The Latest Video – Construction on Performing Arts and Athletic Centers Moves Ahead With First Concrete Pour

Rising Walls of PA and Athletic Centers Excite Students, Bring Maturity to Campus

Steel in the sky: performing arts and athletic centers’ strength on display

Athletic center interior components tailored to function throughout

Final athletic center amenities going in, grand opening coming Aug. 18

Tags:

Grade 1 students learn the process of invention through annual language project

Cindy Proctor and Larissa Weaver’s grade 1 language arts students participated in a special project in January that had them conjuring up inventions as a tie-in with their literature readings. The project, first conducted three years ago, involves students using items from an Idea Box to invent something that can be used to make everyday life easier or more enjoyable. Students were required to invent items that could be utilized by lots of people, but they could not be used for time travel or violent purposes.

“We read stories in language arts class that highlight the importance of new ideas, the history of real inventions and books that teach the children about inventors, adult and child, fiction and non-fiction,” said Proctor. “We guide the children to understand that inventing is a process and that mistakes are part of this process.”

Students work on their inventions at home and periodically update their classmates on their progress, including the challenges they’ve faced. Classmates often respond with assistance and encouragement, which teaches the students that invention is often a collaborative endeavor.

The young inventors also learn how to give a presentation on their inventions to their classmates at an Invention Convention, during which grade 2 students who participated the previous year visit the class.

This year, Sam Mazin, who created the technology behind the company RefleXion Medical, made an appearance to speak with the students about the invention process. He also met individually with students to talk about their inventions.

“All the children did an amazing job extending themselves and approaching the task with eagerness, creativity and perseverance,” Proctor said. For example, Augusta Chen devised a machine for students who have trouble remembering to do homework, while Omya Vidyarthi’s “Fly Chair” helps the physically disabled enter and exit their homes. The “Camping Fooder,” invented by Jacob Chung, prepares food for outdoors enthusiasts, while Aarav Mann’s “Rolling Shoes” aim to provide locomotion to those who cannot easily walk.

Over the two-week period from idea to invention to presentation, the students learn important lessons about “ingenuity, perseverance, problem solving and communicating an idea,” Proctor said. “We encourage the children to allow themselves to think, reflect, and make their ideas grow into something tangible. The Invention Convention is a celebration of their thinking process from the abstract to the concrete.”

Tags: ,

Anderson and Thompson push records; wrestling, basketball start CCS; soccer ends on high note; spring sports begin

Boys Soccer

The boys soccer team finished its season last week with a 4-1 win over Eastside College Prep and a 5-3 win over The King’s Academy. The wins were part of an impressive 7-0-2 finish to the season, but the Eagles fell just 1 point shy of qualifying for CCS, which would have snapped an 11-year drought. The boys ended the year with a 10-6-2 record.

Girls Soccer

After a 3-0 loss to Mercy Burlingame last week, the girls soccer team defeated Eastside College Prep 5-1 with Joelle Anderson, grade 12, scoring all five goals. Anderson ended the season leading the CCS with 43 goals and 90 points. In addition, Anderson ended her career at Harker as the all-time leading goal scorer with an amazing 101 career goals! The girls team finished the season with an 11-5-1 record.

Girls Basketball

Last week, the girls basketball team lost to The King’s Academy 38-31 with Jordan Thomson, grade 12, scoring 16 points and Selin Sayiner, grade 11, adding 9 points. Later in the week, the Eagles defeated Crystal Springs Uplands 53-19 on Senior Night. Thompson scored 28 points, which included six 3-pointers, and Haley Arena, grade 9, added 9 points. In the win over CSU, Thompson surpassed the 2,000 career point mark, further extending her lead as the all-time scorer in Harker basketball history. The 13-11 girls team will begin its CCS journey Tuesday night at Santa Cruz High School.

Boys Basketball

The boys basketball team dropped its final two games of the season last week. In a 63-47 loss to Menlo, Jordan Goheen, grade 12, led the Eagles with 8 points. Later in the week, the boys lost to Pinewood 65-37 with Jarrett Anderson, grade 10, and Eric Jeong, grade 11, each scoring 8 points. Despite the losses, the 7-17 Eagles qualified for CCS and will travel to Carmel on Thursday.

Wrestling

The CCS Wrestling tournament begins this weekend with Daniel Reidenbach, grade 12, Eric Fang, grade 9, Davis Howard, grade 12, and Anthony Contreras, grade 11, all representing Harker.

Spring Sports

The spring season kicks off this week with lots of action:

Baseball: Thursday vs. Yerba Buena at Blackford

Softball: Friday at Del Mar

Boys Golf: Wednesday at Lone Tree Golf Course for the Joe Gambetta Invitational

Boys Tennis: Tuesday at Priory

Boys Volleyball: Friday vs. San Lorenzo Valley at Blackford

Swim: Saturday at the Palo Alto Invitational

Lacrosse: March 1 vs. Newark at Davis Field

Track and Field: March 4 at the Willow Glen Invitational

Niki Iyer, grade 12, began her final high school track season with a bang as she placed second in the 3000-meter at the California Track & Field Winter Championships last week at Arcadia High School. In April, Iyer will compete in the 3200m at the Arcadia Invitational, which is one of the top high school meets in the country. Check out a post race interview with Niki:

http://www.dyestat.com/gprofile.php?mgroup_id=44531&do=videos&video_id=197837

Tags:

Kudos: Grade 6 archery enthusiast aiming high at national and international levels

Last month, sixth grader Sarah Mohammed won a gold medal at USA Archery’s California State Indoor Competition, taking first place in the Bowman Women Recurve category. The event lasted two days, with each day consisting of six hours of intense competition. In the 2016 indoor competition, Mohammed took third and was ranked ninth at the national level. 

In February, Mohammed traveled to Las Vegas for the World Archery Championships, where she finished at a highly respectable fourth place in her division, which included competitors from all over the world. Later this month, Mohammed will head to the national indoor competition and state outdoor competition, with plans to compete at the international outdoor competition in the summer.

Congratulations and good luck!

Tags:

Science Bowl team headed to nationals after winning regional competition

On Feb. 11, Harker’s Science Bowl team won the regional competition held at the Stanford Linear Accelerator’s National Accelerator Laboratory. Senior Venkat Sankar and juniors Rajiv Movva, Shaya Zarkesh, Swapnil Garg and Derek Yen now move on to the national competition, to be held in Washington, D.C., April 27-May 1. Yen filled in for Arjun Subramaniam, grade 12, who could not compete due to a family obligation. Per the rules of the National Science Bowl, Yen will be part of the team that competes at nationals.

Organized by the U.S. Department of Energy since 1991, the National Science Bowl has teams of students compete against one another in a Q&A format similar to television game shows. Questions deal with a variety of topics, including biology, physics and math.

Nice articles from the Mercury News and Stanford on the win!

https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/news/2017-02-23-harker-school-wins-2017-slac-regional-science-bowl-competition.aspx

Science Bowl: Harker team advances to national finals

Tags: , , ,