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Inaugural Ubuntu scholarships awarded to three graduating M-A seniors

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Three seniors graduating from Menlo-Atherton High School are the first recipients of the Ubuntu Scholarships. They are Ja Cordy Hudson who will attend Southern University and A&M College, Daujae Degraffenreed who will attend Clark Atlanta University, and Keilee Shepard who will attend Langston University.

The new financial aid program is the brain child of M-A alum Rob Jensen in collaboration with Sherinda Bryant, an M-A teacher is who is advisor to the Black Student Union on campus. Named for the African term Ubuntu—which stresses a sense of community involvement and giving to others—the program provide two students each year with a $5,000 college scholarship funded over four years at $1,250 per year.

“With extra, generous support from a few of our donors, we were able to award three scholarships (rather than the planned two), and also grant ‘book/miscellaneous expense’ awards to our other two finalists,” says Rob. “One of our winners will study criminal justice with the goal of becoming an FBI agent and the other two plan to study nursing.”

Eric Stuart (City College of San Francisco) and Kayli Smith (either CSM or Canada) are the recipients of the ‘book/miscellaneous expense’ awards.

“We want to make this program ongoing and are actively fundraising for next year’s awards,” says Rob.

Donations can be sent to Menlo-Atherton High School, attention: Treasurer, 555 Middlefield Road, Atherton CA 94027. Checks should be payable to M-A Scholarships, with “Ubuntu Scholarship Program” in the memo line. Donations are tax deductible based on current IRS regulations.

Pictured left to right at the SUHSD Black Graduate Celebration are Eric Stuart, Keilee Shepherd, Ja Corey Hudson, Daujae Degraffenreed and Kayli Smith; Sherinda Bryant is behind the graduates.

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M-A students’ National History Day project is selected to represent California at Smithsonian

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A National History Day project created by Menlo-Atherton High School students Faustine Pierres, Natalie Dell’Immagine, Sydney Chung, and Ingrid Standifer (from teacher Anne Olson’s AP US History course) was selected to represent California at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History’s 2021 Virtual Exhibit Showcase It will run through June 29, 2021. Their project is titled The Truth of the 19th Amendment: Its Effect and What it Communicated to Women. 

Students researched a topic based on the 2021 National History Day Theme— Communication in History: The Key to Understanding. Their historical argument and analysis could be presented in the form of a paper, exhibit, website, documentary, or performance.

“This year, AP European History and AP U.S. History students completed NHD projects,” emails outgoing principal Simone Rick-Kennel. “In October, students selected topics and started their research. The students with the strongest projects at M-A advanced to the San Mateo County competition in March. From the San Mateo County competition, 13 M-A projects advanced to the NHD-CA state competition. This NHD-CA state contest featured 726 entries and over 1,100 students from 23 counties across California.”

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Next to the Doobie Brothers house is the M-A Greenhouse (now yellow!)

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Most locals have probably heard about the Menlo roots of the Grateful Dead and the Atherton roots of Fleetwood Mac—Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham both graduated from Menlo-Atherton High School.

But another group of M-A grads has surfaced now that the Doobie Brothers house at 285 S. 12th St. in San Jose (on right in photo) has been designated a historical landmark. According to the commissioner of the San Jose Historic Landmarks Commission, the house “hits all the bells and whistles”.

Here’s some lore about the group of M-A grads who lived next to the Doobies in the Greenhouse (now yellow in photo) in the early “70s. Emails Jeannine Conner (using maiden names):

“There were lots of us over the years who lived in the Greenhouse:  Gene Kester, Dave Young, Jack Daly (John’s brother), Vicky Stashuk, OJ Devincenzi. Also, several others were there often: Joan L’Hommedieu (can’t remember if she lived with us for awhile or not), Val Luthe, Jay Fraser, Stevie Nicks, and I’m probably forgetting others. It was a group gathering place, for sure.

“We’ve talked about having a Greenhouse reunion, but it hasn’t happened yet. Between the Doobies next door, we went back and forth between the houses. I met my boyfriend, Tiran, when he came up from LA to join the band. Long ago history!”

Footnote: Stevie Nicks announced that was canceling her fall tour this year due the delta variant.

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M-A grad Bob Melvin remembers his days as a two sport athlete in high school

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Editor’s note: We’ve had this post pending for years. With Bob Melvin leaving the Bay Area to manage for the San Diego Padres, we decided it was high time to dust it off and push it live! Bob attended Laurel and Encinal before heading on to M-A. In high school, He batted .474 with 11 home runs for the baseball team, including .529 his senior year when he was named to the San Jose Mercury News’ All-Central Coast Section baseball team. He also played basketball and is #25 in the photo above. Bob was the first student inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame. 

Bob Melvin, who attended M-A between 1975 and 1979, and played both baseball and basketball, reflected fondly on his time at the school in an exclusive interview with The Mark [M-A’s magazine].

“Obviously it was sports oriented, but starting with Frank Bettencourt who was my baseball coach, it had a big impact on my life. I still take a lot of [Bettencourt’s] principles and philosophies with me right now,” he said.  “And then obviously I loved the high school basketball days, you know, packed gym. We had really good teams, so that was a lot of fun.”

Although basketball was his favorite sport in high school, Melvin always felt drawn to baseball as well. In the spring of his freshman year, he remembers legendary M-A coach Robert Ayers trying to convince him to run track. Melvin, however, could not focus because of the track’s proximity to the baseball field.

“I guess some of the baseball guys were out on the diamond and I was a little distracted. Because of baseball, it was kind of a tall order to get me to do track.”

From high school through the Major Leagues, Melvin played catcher, just like the Giants’ [former manager] Bruce Bochy and many other professional managers. He credits much of his success as a manager to playing that position throughout his time at M-A and UC Berkeley, and in the MLB.

“Being a catcher forces you to watch the game like your manager does because you’re in constant contact with him, whether you’re on the field and getting signs from him, or talking to him off the field,” he said. “In that position you’re really forced to think like a manager does, and I think that’s why you see so many catchers as big league managers.”

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M-A senior Katie Spivakovsky named U.S. Presidential Scholars Program Semifinalist

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Menlo-Atherton High School senior Katie Spivakovsky was named one of the 620 semifinalists in the 2022 U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. The semifinalists were drawn from a pool of 5,000 candidates.

Inclusion in the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program, now in its 58th year, is one of the highest honors bestowed upon graduating high school seniors. Scholars are selected on the basis of their accomplishments in many areas —academic and artistic success, accomplishment in career and technical fields, leadership, strong character and involvement in school and the community.

Annually, up to 161 U.S. Presidential Scholars are chosen from among that year’s senior class, representing excellence in education and the promise of greatness in America’s youth. Each year Scholars are presented with a Presidential Scholars Medallion.

A distinguished panel of educators have reviewed these submissions and selected 620 semifinalists. The Commission on Presidential Scholars, a group of up to 32 eminent citizens appointed by the President will select the finalists, and the U.S. Department of Education will announce the Scholars in May.

The Presidential Scholars Class of2022 will be recognized for their outstanding achievement in late June with an online National Recognition Program.

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M-A senior Ally Shaw honored as PAL Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year

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Menlo-Atherton High School senior Ally Shaw was honored as the Peninsula Athletic League Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year by the Central Coast Section of the California Interscholastic Federation. 

Ally played lacrosse for four years and was on the cross country team for two years, earning All League honors. Activities and honors include Rotary Club AP Scholar with Distinction, Williams College Book Award, Boys and Girls Club volunteer and participation at the California Coastal Cleanup.

With a GPA of 4.54, she plans to study chemistry and public policy at a yet to be determined college.

“Ally is sensitive and fun, striving to not only teach the game of lacrosse to varying levels of players but also to instill a love of the sports,” said co-Athletic Director Steven Kryger.”She was responsible for running practices, coordinating games with other teams, and creating a fun, lively team environment for 10-year-olds from a variety of schools and backgrounds. A few parents told me how much their daughters fell in love with the sport because of Ally.”

Ally is pictured with co-Athletic Director Paul Snow.

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M-A student Katherine Spivakovsky named 2022 U.S. Presidential Scholar

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Katherine Spivakovsky of Menlo Park, who attends Menlo-Atherton High School, is a 2022 U.S. Presidential Scholar, announced U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona.

Katherine is one of 161 outstanding American high school seniors who have demonstrated outstanding academic achievement, artistic excellence, technical expertise, leadership, citizenship, service, and contribution to school and community.

“Our 2022 Presidential Scholars represent the best of America, and remind us that when empowered by education, there are no limits to what our young people can achieve,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona. “Today, I join President Biden to celebrate a class of scholars whose pursuit of knowledge, generosity of spirit, and exceptional talents bring our nation tremendous pride. Throughout one of the most trying periods in our nation’s history and amid our recovery from the pandemic, our students have once again demonstrated their strength and that they have so much to contribute to our country. Thanks to them, I know America’s future is bright.”

Of the 3.7 million students expected to graduate from high school this year, more than 5,000 candidates qualified for the 2022 awards determined by outstanding performance on the College Board SAT or ACT exams or through nominations made by chief state school officers, other partner recognition organizations and YoungArts, the National Foundation for the Advancement of Artists.

As directed by Presidential Executive Order, the 2022 U.S. Presidential Scholars are comprised of one young man and one young woman from each state, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, and U.S. families living abroad, as well as 15 chosen at-large, 20 Scholars in the arts and 20 Scholars in career and technical education.

Since 1983, each U.S. Presidential Scholar has been offered the opportunity to name his or her most influential teacher. The teacher chosen for recognition by Katherine was Maria Luisa De Seta of Menlo Atherton High School.

The Presidential Scholars Class of 2022 will be recognized for their outstanding achievement this summer with an online recognition program.

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Memorial service for longtime M-A coach Plato Yanicks set for June 4

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There will be a memorial service for former Menlo-Atherton High School coach Plato Yanicks on Saturday, June 4, at 11:00 am at Bridges Community Church, 625 Magdalena, Los Altos. There will be maroon and gold balloons on the church sign.

In an email to M-A P.E. teacher Pam Wimberly, his widow Marilyn wrote: “A reception will be after the service, which is supposed to be about an hour long. Dress is dressy casual.

“We’re hoping that many of Plato’s athletes are able to come.

“Also we plan to make a video with a link so that you can watch it wherever you
are. I hope to see you at the service.”

From 1965 to 1994, Plato was M-A’s Cross Country and Track coach.

In the midst of his tenure as principal, Dave Theis approached Plato to inquire about the possibility of establishing a Sports Hall of Fame at Menlo-Atherton. The first induction ceremony took place in 1994 and Plato himself was inducted in 2014 (top photo).

He retired in 1994 as one of the most successful and respected track coaches in Northern California. He was responsible for founding the Cross Country program and instrumental in creating the CIF State Meet. Plato’s teams won 20 Varsity Championships. His teams posted over 300 wins and took second place at the CCS meet on three separate occasions. During his tenure, Plato coached 105 league and 14 individual CCS champions.

Plato passed away earlier this month at the age of 89.

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Menlo Atherton High School holds 71st commencement

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On Friday morning (June 3, 2022), Menlo-Atherton High School held its 71st annual commencement, graduating 533 students.

Many of the students decorated their mortarboards whimsically, some indicating the college they will be attending in the fall. Some wore colorful leis and also indicators of various honors, including California Scholarship Federation ropes and tassels, Recognition of Biliteracy medallions, and Thespian Scholar stoles and ropes.

This year, students were given the option of choosing which faculty or staff member they wanted to present them with their diploma. Henry Donald (left) chose John McBlair.

The ceremony is available on YouTube.

Bottom photo shows graduates who are headed to Cal Berkeley (at least most of them!).

Photos by John Donald (c) 2022

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Menlo Park Kiwanis Club presents 11 Menlo-Atherton High School Seniors with scholarships

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In keeping with a long-time tradition, the Menlo Park Kiwanis Club presented 11 Menlo-Atherton High School Seniors with scholarships at an awards luncheon on June 7. This year’s awards totaled $80,500, with scholarships ranging from $5,000 to $15,000.

For more than 40 years, the Menlo Park Kiwanis Club has provided college scholarships to Menlo-Atherton graduating seniors. Over $1.2 million has been awarded during the lifetime of the Club’s scholarship program.

Each recipient demonstrated a commitment to academics and service. The Kiwanis Club selected recipients on this basis, as well as the expectation that they will continue to dedicate themselves to academics and service going forward. Scholarship award amounts are also adjusted based upon need.

“This year’s scholarship winners are exceptional and highly motivated,” said John Martin, Chair of the Menlo Park Kiwanis Club’s Scholarship Committee. “They are tomorrow’s leaders, and we hope our Kiwanis scholarships help them achieve their dreams,” Martin added.

Following are the names of the scholarship recipients, and the college the recipient plans to attend:

  • Daisy Isabella Bolaños, UC Berkeley
  • Angelina Causor, University of Oregon
  • Henry Donald, UC Berkeley
  • Adriana Garcia, San Diego State University
  • Alexandra Lopez-Vasquez, UC Irvine
  • Guadalupe Maldonado Solorzano, University of San Francisco
  • Maria Maldonado Solorzano, University of San Francisco
  • Kaitlyn Pohlman, Chapman University
  • Sophia Sharif, UCLA
  • Leilani Valenci, St. Olaf College
  • Brianna Villalon, UC Berkeley

The Kiwanis Club of Menlo Park was founded in 1950 and is one of more than 15,000 Kiwanis Clubs — with more than 600,000 members worldwide.

As a service organization, Kiwanis supports many local programs and organizations, including St Anthony’s Dining Hall, Tour de Cure of Diabetes, Special Games for physically challenged youth, Key Club of Menlo-Atherton High School, Rebuilding Together, as well as scholarships for Menlo-Atherton High School graduates.

Kiwanis Club meetings are held on the first and third Tuesdays of every month at noon at Allied Arts Guild, and feature a variety of programs by community and business leaders. Membership is open to adults interested in committing time and energy to community service.

Pictured left to right are: Maria Maldonado Solorzano, Guadalupe Maldonado Solorzano, Brianna Villalon, Adriana Garcia, Angelina Causor, Alexandra Lopez-Vasquez, Henry Donald and Sophia Sharif.

Editor’s note: Judy Horst contributed to this post.

Photo by John Donald (c) 2022

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Incident near Menlo-Atherton High School involving students and police

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Editor’s note: We received the article below from Katie Doran, one of the editors at the M-A Chronicle who wrote it along with Celine Chien. She emailed: “We just published a breaking news story about an incident with the police right outside M-A on Friday [April 28]. There have been a lot of rumors and discussion of this incident among students and the larger community in our area, so we thought it might be a good opportunity for collaboration with InMenlo. We’d love to get the story published on InMenlo’s site.”

This is a developing story which will be updated as more information becomes available.

Here is an important update to the article below provided by reporters Katie Doran and Celine Chien that covers the Atherton Police Department’s response.

On Friday [April 28], police officers handcuffed two students and pinned one of them to the ground right outside of M-A. Videos of the incident have been circulating on social media, accruing thousands of views, with comments expressing both anger and confusion over what happened. The incident occurred just before 3:30 p.m. at the bus stop by Oak Grove and Middlefield.

A sibling of the student who was pinned to the ground said, “The school called the police on him, without calling my mother first. He is a minor; he didn’t physically harm anyone or deserve this. He is currently depressed, scared, and shaky. He [had] never experienced police brutality or interactions with the police. As a Black male, he thought he was going to die.” The sibling said the student was physically injured in the interaction.

Sophomore Funaki Vunipola, who also witnessed the incident, said, “We were all waiting for the bus when the cops came, and we were wondering what was going on. They pointed at [the student] and said, ‘You have to come with me.’ [He] was of course confused and mad, so he was saying, ‘I’m not going anywhere.’ The cops told the rest of us to step back, while [the student] and two others stayed with the cops.”

“They tried to put [him] in cuffs, but he felt like he wasn’t in the wrong and told the police not to touch him. Then, next thing you know, they have him on the ground, and more and more police officers start showing up,” said junior witness Mahki Tippins.

A second student was also temporarily handcuffed. Vunipola said, “They tried arresting [the first student], but before they could, one of the boys [the second student] with him said, ‘I’m not gon’ let that happen.’”

Tippins said, “I started recording for our safety. Then, [the second student] was detained because he didn’t move when he was told.”

Vunipola continued, “We all started recording and the cops tried arresting [the first student], but he started to refuse, back up, and yell, ‘You can’t take me, I’m a minor.’ That’s when they pinned [him] onto the ground, and used unnecessary force on him. They were kneeling on his stomach, and didn’t get off after [he] repeatedly yelled in pain. They then bent his arms back to make him get up, and dragged him to the police car. [He] fought back a bit, refusing to get in the car.”

Sophomore Linda Gabele said, “[He] was confused, and he, I guess, refused a little and then [the police] pushed him to the floor and two police officers held him down. [He] started saying that it hurts, but they kept on going.”

In one of the videos, the student says, “Get off me. My hernia, my stomach.” A student in the background can be heard saying, “Hold on, he had surgery.” Interviewees have also said the student recently had surgery and that this contributed to his pain while pinned down.

In one video, the student asks officers to “Call my mom,” and proceeds to yell out his mom’s phone number.

Instagram account @thahoodnews posted a clip of the incident at approximately 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, which, as of 5 p.m. on Sunday, has more than 30,000 views.

In the comment section and reposts of this video, people have speculated on what caused the incident and why the police were called. Many students, including the student pinned to the ground, claimed on social media that Administrative Vice Principal Stephen Emmi was the one who called the police.

The M-A Chronicle has reached out to M-A Administration and the Atherton Police Department. Both have yet to comment. In most cases, state law prohibits releasing minors’ disciplinary information.

In an email to students on Sunday afternoon, principal Karl Losekoot said, “What I can share is that our site administrators did call for police department support due to an interaction with a student that escalated to the level that our site team felt concerned for their safety, as there was physical contact made against one of our site leaders along with several verbal threats made towards that staff member.”

Numerous students had suggested that the incident began with a water gun that the administration had confiscated earlier in the week, which the student wanted to get back from the office on Friday. Vunipola said the student had the water gun at school this week for Senior Assassin, a competition which involves seniors trying to spray assigned peers with water. Senior Ishy Mishra, who helped organize the game, said that 108 students are participating.

Losekoot said in the email, “The rumor that our site administrators contacted the police department because a student was in possession of a water gun is false. On Friday, countless water guns were confiscated from students, and not one of those school site interactions resulted in a call for police assistance from our site administrators.”

While some comments on social media have suggested that the police may have been reacting to a toy that looked like a real weapon that the student had with him at the time, multiple interviewees have said that the student did not have the water gun with him during the incident, and that the water gun looked like a pool noodle, not a real weapon.

One anonymous student said, “I told [the student] that I got his water blaster tube taken from me, so he went to the office [on Friday] to get it back because he wanted to use it. When he went, the office was going to give it to him, but then Mr. Emmi came out and said he wasn’t going to get it back. They started arguing. Then [the student] was gonna grab it, but Mr. Emmi blocked him. They raised voices, mostly [the student], but he didn’t want to continue, so [he] walked out and left, [coming] back to us at the bus stop.”

The anonymous student continued that, after the incident, “Once Mr. Emmi came out to see what happened, the cops said, ‘You called for the disturbance in the office.’ Mr. Emmi said yes and that he would like to file a report. [The student] was already in the police car.”

Losekoot said in the email, “As educators, trained in the vocation of supporting students, the idea of calling for police department support is something that we absolutely do not take lightly. It is always the final option when all attempts to de-escalate a situation are not producing the desired result, and there is a clear threat to the safety of our students and/or staff.”

Students have reacted on social media with anger and are calling for accountability and transparency. One group of students has planned a protest during lunch on Monday in B-5. Freshman and co-organizer Nora Acosta Aparico said, “We wanted to start this protest because we want to build a safe and trusting community at M-A, and we want more people of color’s voices to be heard.”

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M-A Principal Losekoot responds to Friday’s incident advising students to “keep asking questions”

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Editor’s note: InMenlo continues to update information about the incident last Friday between students and the Atherton police as M-A Chronicle reporters clarify details with additional information.

This is a developing story. Click here for the original story about Friday’s police incident. Click here for an update from the Atherton Police Department.

After his email on Sunday afternoon, M-A Principal Losekoot appeared on M-A Today! today with another message for all students and staff in response to Friday’s incident where a student was pinned down by police officers right outside of school.

Losekoot began, “I will start by acknowledging that this weekend and this morning have been difficult and emotional. You cannot watch the video from the police interaction and say it is not troubling. It is.”

He continued to describe an anecdotal conversation he had with a student this morning who said, “I do not feel safe on campus,” and asked Losekoot what he should do.

Losekoot responded, “What a great question. My suggestion to this student and to anyone asking, ‘What can I do?’ is to keep the question alive. I don’t think we can answer that question today, but I think it is important that we keep asking it, and keep working towards a goal where every student feels safe and where each student feels that they are an integral member of this community.”

He continued, “My first answer to this student and others is to try and understand the details of this incident as much as possible. Unfortunately, on social media many misconceptions and inaccurate assumptions are being made. I urge you to examine these assumptions and ask questions.”

Then, Losekoot asked viewers, “What questions do you need to ask us or the police to more fully understand the situation?”

In an email sent on Sunday afternoon to all students and parents, Losekoot clarified that the rumors about the police call being in regards to water guns confiscated on campus are false. In the email he also shared that a site administrator called for police department support due to a harmful interaction with a student involving physical contact and several verbal threats made towards a staff member.

In an update Atherton Police Commander Dan Larsen reported, “The Atherton PD was dispatched to M-A following a call for service when a subject was reported to have pushed a school administrator against a wall and yelled homophobic slurs at him.”

Still, the administration has communicated no comment on the physical condition of the student and little about the actions of the police officers in the circulated videos of the incident. See footage of the incident here.

In the email Losekoot said, “I cannot speak to the decisions made by Atherton police when interacting with the student; However, given the rumors circulating, I would like to share the site’s perspective as to what led to the interaction.”

M-A’s administration provided teachers a Google Form to record questions or concerns students have about the incident, and Losekoot encouraged teachers to welcome that conversation.

Later in the announcement, Losekoot mentioned a student organized protest, intended to “provide an opportunity for students to speak.”

Black Student Union leaders organized this protest during lunch today in B-5, while dozens of other students created posters for it in the PAC cafe. The protest is planned for Wednesday, May 3rd, at 4 p.m.

Losekoot added that M-A had extra counselors for students to speak with at lunch in the PAC.

He concluded, “Again I wanted to say thank you to M-A for being great.”

Watch Principal Karl Losekoot’s announcement here:

https://www.youtube.com/live/NJcRtkSt7VU?feature=share&t=300

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Updates about what’s happening at M-A following the April 28 incident

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Following the incident on April 28 when Atherton  police officers handcuffed two students and pinned one of them to the ground at a bus stop near the Menlo-Atherton High School, this story continues to develop.

Student journalist — and InMenlo contributing writer — Dylan Lanier reported on a protest that took place on May 11. He wrote:…”students assembled in and around the PAC Café to participate in the M-A Protest Organization’s scheduled walkout. They marched throughout campus to protest the police incident on April 28, which many viewed as an example of police violence specifically towards BIPOC [Black, Indigenous, and People of Color] individuals. Students then headed off campus towards Burgess Park, where they planned to reconvene.”

Read the full story and see the photos here.

The M-A Chronicle also reported on May 11 that “the family of the M-A student recently pinned down by Atherton police has retained John Burris, of Burris, Nisenbaum, Curry, & Lacy, as their attorney.” Burris, a noted civil rights attorney, confirmed that he has taken the case, but has not filed a lawsuit or taken legal action against the Atherton Police Department. Read the full story here.

Yesterday [May 12], reporter Emily Mibach wrote a story for the print edition of the Daily Post saying that the paper had learned that there is a video of the incident that caused school administrators to call the police, which the Post has requested from the Sequoia Union High School District.

According to Mibach, “a spokesman for the district told the Post to make a formal California Public Records Request, which give the district 10 days to delay its release.” She further explains that the district is evaluating whether the recording needs to be redacted before it’s released to the Post.

“The Post contends the recording is a public document for several reasons, not the least of which is that it was recorded in a public place and it was played to the entire school board,” she writes.

We will continue to follow developments in the story as they occur.

Photo courtesy of M-A Chronicle

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Menlo-Atherton High School’s Pamela Wemberly to retire after 55 years

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Pamela Wimberly, beloved P.E. teacher and pillar of M-A’s athletics department, will retire at the end of this school year. She has spent her entire career at M-A, teaching through 55 of M-A’s 72 years and under 14 different principals. Wimberly helped create the interscholastic girls athletics program, led her girls basketball teams to 24 championships, and taught over ten thousand students.

She said, “I could’ve retired 15 years ago, but I enjoyed what I was doing and wanted to touch the lives of as many students as I possibly could.”

P.E. teacher Tim Bowler said, “The one word that describes her is passionate, and Ms. Wimberly’s passion was physical education. She was the kindest person, an icon.”

M-A is throwing a small party for Wimberly in Ayers Gym on Thursday, June 1st at 2:30 p.m. Interested community members are welcome.

Raised in a military family, Wimberly grew up living around the world. “Every couple of years, we were going somewhere else,” she said. “From Atlantic City, to Naha, Okinawa, back to Atlantic City, to Fort Devens, Massachusetts, then to Germany, and then to Fort Holabird, Maryland.” Throughout all of this, the consistency in her life was athletics. She said, “I would always be playing softball or baseball with my brothers.”

Recalling a family vacation, Wimberly said, “At nine years old, sailing underneath the Golden Gate Bridge, I told my parents, ‘I want to come back to California.’”

As she grew older, Wimberly wanted to attend West Chester University in Pennsylvania since it had a top P.E. program. However, she said, “As an African-American person, I really couldn’t attend the colleges that were all white.”

“When I was growing up, you couldn’t eat in a restaurant, you couldn’t sit at the counter, you couldn’t ride at the front of the bus. Those things have all been resolved, but now there’s a subtle undercurrent of racism. And that’s what we have to get out of the way, and I think it’s going to take a long time,” she added.

She is proud to have received her degree in Physical Education from Morgan State University, a historically Black university in Maryland.

During her senior year at Morgan State, the Sequoia Union High School District assistant superintendent visited several historically Black colleges and universities as part of a campaign to recruit Black educators. Wimberly said, “They were looking for Black teachers because there were many African-American students in the District and that was one of the things that the African-American community was asking for.” After a phone interview, she flew across the country to begin a lifelong career at M-A.

Wimberly described her start at M-A as “tumultuous.” Several policies, like a new bussing policy that made buses available only to those living more than two miles from campus, contributed to heightened racial tensions on campus and race riots in the late 60s.

She explained, “[M-A] didn’t have many students of color from different cultures at all. People used to call this school the country club of the Peninsula.”

When asked about her first day, she said, “I was outside with my first class and all of a sudden I saw a garbage can go through the window of what is now the E-wing. I didn’t know what was going on. It was frightening. I can’t remember how many windows were busted in on campus, but there were a lot of them, rows and rows. The next thing we knew, people were spilling out of the classrooms. Some kids were getting hit and hurt. Then, the National Guard had been called in. There were helicopters above us. And boy, that was like fire and fury; it was crazy. But that first day of school was, I think, very tragic and very surprising to me.”

Initially, Wimberly had wanted to be an English teacher, but decided that she would much rather teach P.E. She said, “Why would I want to be surrounded by four walls all the time? I’d rather be outdoors or moving around in a gymnasium.”

Nearly six decades later, generations of M-A students have passed through her classes. M-A alum DeBraun Thomas ’01 said, “At the beginning of each class, we would each run laps around the track. I found out a family friend of mine had passed away right when I was going to leave for class one morning. When I got to M-A, I was really sad, grieving, and in general not moving with much enthusiasm. Instead of running with everyone else, I walked, and Ms. Wimberly ran around the track to catch up with me. I thought she was going to get on me for not running or that I was going to get a lecture of some kind. Instead, we spent the next 15 minutes talking about my friend and focused on the positive aspects of knowing him. Those 15 minutes have stayed with me since that day.”

He continued, “That’s Ms. Wimberly — she’ll be on you to make sure you’re getting your work done, but she’ll always be there to support her students through anything.”

Wimberly strives to leave all of her students with lifelong lessons from their time in P.E. “I’m just hoping that [my students] find some enjoyment in some of the activities that we did and continue playing them down the road as a lifelong activity.”

She feels that student athletics provide more value than simply exercise. She said, “Athletics is so important because it teaches you to be a good citizen, teaches you discipline, teaches you about your sport, teaches you how to organize yourself, how to organize your life, and how to organize your studies.”

Wimberly has learned from her teaching career as well. She said, “Teaching P.E. has made me more organized and more able to work with different people and different personalities, and taught me how to handle conflict. I’ve learned to also listen to [my students], because even though they’re young adults, they have good ideas and good intentions.”

In addition to teaching, Wimberly has coached both basketball and softball. She said, “One of my fondest memories was taking the softball team to their first CCS game because we had always been the doormat.” She has a deep appreciation for both sports, and said, “Basketball is my first love to coach; softball to play.”

When Wimberly first arrived at M-A, girls could only play sports during designated “play days” in the spring, when girls throughout the District would gather at one school to play various sports. Only in her second year did girls have the opportunity to play sports in interscholastic leagues under the newly-formed South Peninsula Girls Athletic League.

Wimberly coached six-player girls basketball for the first two years of her coaching career, until the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) changed game rules to the standard five-player game. “I was one of the people who helped to move girls from six-player basketball to five-player basketball,” she said. “[Officials] felt that we were so weak that we could not run across the half-court line and dribble the ball more than two dribbles.”

Wimberly went on to coach basketball for 42 years. She said, “I felt that we had a program that we were building and we wanted to keep a dynasty going.”

Wimberly believes that a good coach has a responsibility to their students beyond what happens at practice. She said, “Number one, a good coach has knowledge of the game that they’re coaching. Secondly, they take good care of their student-athletes, talking to them about nutrition and making sure they are doing their academics because it’s not ‘athlete-student,’ it’s ‘student-athlete.’ What it comes down to is that you have an education and you’re ready to go out in the world.”

Wimberly found more value in coaching than simply winning. “Sometimes we played super tight games, and sometimes we should have won the game but we didn’t. I learned how to teach the team to take a loss and show good sportsmanship to opponents who had just beaten us,” she said.

Alongside her coaching and teaching careers, Wimberly has served as Athletic Director for 24 years and hired many of M-A’s longtime staff members. Wimberly explained, “I tried to bring in a rainbow of colors to coach the students here because our students are a rainbow of colors, so they would have a role model that they can look up to.”

Wimberly hired her former student Ted Minnis to coach boys water polo in the 90’s. Minnis said, “I remember the day she hired me. She said to me, ‘I’m not sure why I’m doing this. I remember you from when you were in high school, and I’m gonna give you a chance because I think you’ll do a great job.’ And that’s something that always stuck with me; I was gonna make sure to do her proud.”

He added, “I don’t know if I’d be coaching at Harvard if it wasn’t for her giving me a chance to coach and learn how to do what I do.”

Wimberly also hired Bowler, who said, “I’m fortunate and very proud to say that I was her very first hire as department head.”

Wimberly’s efforts transformed athletics at M-A. She said, “I helped to develop and grow the girls athletic program, but also the boys. We started lacrosse, added golf for girls, and added water polo for girls. I helped to build the athletic program.”

As coach, Wimberly’s varsity basketball teams won 20 Peninsula Athletic League (PAL) championships and four Central Coast Section (CCS) championships. Wimberly had a win-loss record of 663-340, which, according to The Mercury News in 2017, ranked her “No. 1 in Northern California and third in the state.” One of her fondest memories at M-A is winning her first basketball CCS championship in 1983.

Wimberly earned dozens of honors throughout her coaching career. She was inducted into the San Mateo County Sports Hall of Fame and received the CIF Model Coach Award, the Women’s Sports Foundation Coaches Award, and the California Coaches Association Coach of the Year Award. M-A recently renamed the basketball court in Ayers Gym to Wimberly Court in her honor.

So, what is Wimberly’s secret to having the longest tenure in M-A history?

“I just enjoyed working here, I enjoyed the community, the teachers that passed through here, and the students. And, just staying active. I always say, ‘Keep moving!’ and I think that’s helped me,” she said. “You’ve got to enjoy what you’re doing and enjoy the school you’re at. I know for myself, this was the place. The key thing is that being a physical educator, with all this land out here separate from the rest of the school, I was able to be the teacher I wanted to be, supported by the administrators and supported by the teachers. The hard part for teachers nowadays is you can’t really live in the community because it’s so doggone expensive. I used to live here, around East O’keefe, and now I live in Redwood City. I really think that’s why a lot of our teachers move on, because they can’t afford to live in this area or drive millions of miles to teach here.”

Wimberly’s tenure will remain an essential part of M-A’s history and her impact on campus will continue for years to come.

Minnis said, “I hope I could just touch half as many people as she has and be half the person she is. Some day there has to be a Pam Wimberly shrine of some sort on campus because she’s meant so much to the Menlo-Atherton community for so long.”

When asked what she will most remember, Wimberly said, “The people — different cultures, different races — at M-A that try to work together as a team.” She said, “It’s a work in progress, always, but I just believe that the man upstairs placed me in a place where I can work with people from all walks of life.”

With her retirement, Wimberly looks forward to continuing to coach her senior softball team, which plays in tournaments throughout the country. She plans to stay athletic in other ways as well, continuing to exercise, playing pickleball at Mitchell Park. She also plans to learn more about her genealogy. She said, “It’s very difficult to figure out where my people came from because they always said that you were a Black person even if you were of mixed races, but I’m going to figure it out.” Wimberly also plans to write a book and learn to play guitar. Finally, she’s going to visit her siblings and her daughter’s family in New Jersey.

As a closing message to the M-A community, Wimberly said, “I just wish everybody the best here. I know things will keep rolling. There’ll be good days, there’ll be bad days, but this is the place to be. There are many teachers and staff members here who want to see students be successful and are working hard to do that. Hopefully students will accept that and do their very best, because four years goes by very fast. Before you know it, you’re off to a J-O-B. The time I’ve spent here has been enjoyable—there’s been ups and downs, but it’s been an enjoyable journey—and now it’s time for me to move forward to the next chapter of my life.”

Read more about Wimberly’s wisdom and experiences at M-A and her experience with M-A’s race riots.

Amala Raj wrote this article with Megan Lam for the M-A Chronicle; formatting issues prevents us from showing a joint byline

Top photo of Pam by Irene Searles taken for InMenlo in 2017

The post Menlo-Atherton High School’s Pamela Wemberly to retire after 55 years appeared first on InMenlo.

Laurel School First Graders receive dolls made by M-A High School students

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Laurel Lower Campus Administrative Counselor Ashley Guilliot collaborates with M-A High School stagecraft teacher Ms. Bathauer-Grinstead on a project that builds understanding and brings joy to all students involved.

It begins with the adorably different town of Uglyville where weirdness is celebrated, strangeness is special, and beauty is embraced as more than meets the eye. After traveling to the other side of a mountain, Moxy and her UglyDoll friends discover Perfection, a town where more conventional dolls receive training before entering the real world to find the love of a child. Soon, the UglyDolls learn what it means to be different, ultimately realizing that they don’t have to be perfect to be amazing.

At Laurel, Ms. Guilliot guided first grade students through creating a sketch of an Ugly Doll of their own. The class watched a film clip to familiarize themselves with the Ugly Dolls movies/books and then got to work on their designs. The idea behind the Ugly Dolls lesson is that everyone is lovable and that there shouldn’t be an emphasis on perfection.

Then the high school stagecraft class used the first graders’ designs to sew the dolls by hand, while learning during their creating of the dolls that “being perfect” isn’t the goal, rather they can create something that brings joy without it being perfect.

Back at Laurel, the young students have been patiently awaiting their Ugly Doll delivery and the day finally arrived — they are all excited to be bringing home their very own Ugly Doll to keep and love forever!

The post Laurel School First Graders receive dolls made by M-A High School students appeared first on InMenlo.


Hometown favorite Cynai Thomas commits to Oregon State

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With an impressive 3.7 GPA, Cynai Thomas, who started his high school football career at Menlo-Atherton High School, recently committed to attend Oregon State University.

Now a rising senior at Riordan HS in San Francisco, Cynai had 17 college offers — most notable Cal, Oregon State, Auburn, Iowa State, Arizona, Michigan State.

He played multiple positions growing up, including quarterback and running back eventually becoming a wide receiver in the 8th grade. He began his high school career with his former basketball buddy, Jack Preston (pictured together recently and in a childhood basketball photo below — Cynai is wearing the Nike shirt and Jack is #40 at the far fight).

In his downtime from football and studying, he enjoys unwinding by hanging out with friends, family and journaling.

The post Hometown favorite Cynai Thomas commits to Oregon State appeared first on InMenlo.

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