This article was originally supposed to address a question that I asked myself one day while walking by the Attendance Office: how many pieces of paper does Calvert Hall use on just bulletins alone? But this question of paper use sparked an even larger debate between both students and teachers. The following is part 1 in a series.
It's exam week, and we are seniors: we know what to expect. This is not our first rodeo; we are not green like some freshmen. However this year, we were thrown a curveball from Senior religion almost as if Sandy Koufax had hurled it. It was a 200-question exam with a chart and an in-class essay.
Apple Airpod memes are a peerless example of uniquely twenty-first century, ironically satirical, anti-materialist criticism on an increasingly globalized, capitalistic society.
With the cancelation of Channel One at the end of the previous school year, Calvert Hall has decided to implement CNN 10 as its replacement. This change has come with some backlash from students, but is the negative response truly warranted?
The John G. Noppinger Commons were presented to the students as a place for them. An alternative, a place quieter than the Dining Hall, but students could still talk unlike the library. For the first few years, this has been the case. Students have been able to get work done and still socialize amongst classmates. This fall, that trend has changed in the morning. The Commons have become a place for parents, but students are allowed to work silently. This change has come as a result of the presentations to the parents of prospective students in the Commons in the mornings.