The Student Newspaper of Jackson-Reed High School

The Beacon

The Student Newspaper of Jackson-Reed High School

The Beacon

The Student Newspaper of Jackson-Reed High School

The Beacon

Elie Salem

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief

Reclusive Chief Editor, seen only moonwalking in slow motion while rap music plays. He is actually blind but uses the help of his other senses, especially smell and the things snakes do when they stick out their tongues, to figure out what’s going on in the layout room. Only photographed evidence of his existence is this staff bio and a series of blurry black photos collected by surveillance cameras and monster hunters around the United States. 

All content by Elie Salem
Wilson white population continues to increase

Wilson white population continues to increase

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief October 14, 2019

New enrollment data found that Wilson is getting more white and less Black, with a relatively constant proportion of Hispanics and students of other races. While the yearly change is small, it is part...

Accomodations challenge teachers, benefit students

Accomodations challenge teachers, benefit students

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief September 8, 2019

Senior Nick Koryukin is supposed to be given extra time on tests and assignments because of a IEP plan arranged years ago. In some classes, he gets exactly what he needs. In others, teachers either aren’t...

CHAMPS: Boys crew wins national title

CHAMPS: Boys crew wins national title

Chloe Fatsis and Elie Salem June 8, 2019

Senior Seb Murrell’s heart was pounding and his body ached, but all he could think about was the next stroke. It was the biggest regatta of the year, and everything was on the line. Pausing between breaths,...

Wards 7 and 8 schools lose $13.6 million in new budget

Wards 7 and 8 schools lose $13.6 million in new budget

Amanda McHugh and Elie Salem May 5, 2019

DCPS has drastically reduced the budgets of schools in Wards 7 and 8 due mainly to a significant decline in enrollment projections. Schools in that area make up just one third of DCPS schools, but face...

Wilson music through the ages: go-go, jazz, and punk

Wilson music through the ages: go-go, jazz, and punk

Elie Salem and Alex Holmes March 31, 2019

From jazz to R&B to rock to punk, throughout the decades Wilson students’ tastes have run the gamut of musical invention. But of all these musical funks, go-go is the most quintessentially DC. “Go-go...

Martin asks Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to speak at Wilson graduation ceremony

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief March 25, 2019

Principal Kimberly Martin asked star freshman congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to be a graduation speaker at Wilson on June 15th via twitter. While the chance of her visiting is unlikely, the prospect...

The Stands, shown above, is where each match is held. Two teams of three robots each compete in the center by tossing balls, placing hatches, and climbing pedestals.

Wilson robotics team District championship qualification in contention after underperforming at tournament

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief March 10, 2019

The offense and defense players scramble to their positions, the spectators cheer wildly in anticipation, the whistle blows, and the game begins. Immediately, Wilson leaps into the spotlight, seizing a...

PSAs featuring Wilson students to air nationally

PSAs featuring Wilson students to air nationally

Nate Belman and Elie Salem March 7, 2019

A series of public service announcements (PSAs) featuring Wilson students will be aired on television around the nation in the coming months. The three PSAs were contracted by Boys Town, a counseling and...

Acting Chancellor sits down with The Beacon

Acting Chancellor sits down with The Beacon

Ellida Parker, Zara Hall, and Elie Salem March 3, 2019

Acting Chancellor Dr. Lewis D. Ferebee is visiting schools and learning about the issues confronting DCPS as he wraps up his first months leading the school system. In an interview with The Beacon, Ferebee...

BSU coordinates BHM celebration

Elie Salem and Nate Belman March 3, 2019

Wilson administration and the Black Student Union (BSU) independently created a series of Black history activities, filling every school day in the month. Assistant Principal Gregory Bargeman kicked...

Wilson holds underclassmen assembly to address drug use

Wilson holds underclassmen assembly to address drug use

Alex Metzger and Elie Salem February 2, 2019

Wilson held assemblies in the auditorium on Wednesday and Thursday to inform freshman and sophomores of the dangers of drug use. Drug prevention practitioners brought by Wilson presented information via...

Art therapy, slam poetry, among topics of innovative professional development day

Art therapy, slam poetry, among topics of innovative professional development day

Sarah Morgan and Elie Salem January 27, 2019

Tuesday’s professional development for Wilson staff was unlike any other. Art teacher Avram Walters taught JROTC instructor Walter Davis how to draw like Picasso, social studies teacher Michelle Bollinger...

Wilson under watch, awaiting fire safety repairs

Wilson under watch, awaiting fire safety repairs

Max Karp and Elie Salem January 26, 2019

The DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department put Wilson under “firewatch” on December 8 after the Fire Inspector found that the fire alarm control panel and fire alarms were not functioning....

January’s News of the Month

Ella Pearlman-Chang and Elie Salem January 26, 2019

  All Wilson students and faculty will be eligible for a weekly discount in Tenleytown restaurants called “Tenley Tuesday.” The current list of participating restaurants are Bandit Taco, Beefsteak,...

Author visits cancelled with loss of Title I status

Author visits cancelled with loss of Title I status

Hannah Bocian and Elie Salem January 26, 2019

The PEN/Faulkner Foundation terminated their relationship with Wilson, ending a program that had sent authors to the Wilson library to give presentations regularly for years. The foundation ended the program...

Stories of the government shutdown

Stories of the government shutdown

Elie Salem, Tiffany Missembe, Zara Hall, and Anna Dueholm January 26, 2019

The recent government shutdown has been the longest, and likely most catastrophic, in American history. 800,000 federal workers have remained furloughed for close to a month. Tens of thousands have been...

Athletic obsession squanders students’ academic potential

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief December 17, 2018

Hard, fist-sized balls, seemingly unbattable, rain down from the sky to wreck homes and destroy lawn ornaments. Plastic pucks, seemingly unwhackable, slide across the frozen tundra to injure pedestrians...

November/December News of the Month

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief December 17, 2018

ABC news anchor Diane Sawyer visited Wilson and interviewed administrators, teachers, and staff on Wednesday as part of an upcoming news segment about Yondr bags. Wilson JV boys and girls basketball...

Deputy Mayor of Education sets sights on reform

Deputy Mayor of Education sets sights on reform

Zara Hall and Elie Salem December 16, 2018

Mayor Muriel Bowser appointed prominent education consultant and administrator Paul Kihn to the position of Deputy Mayor of Education in October. Bowser has asked Kihn to focus on two specific goals: narrowing...

Shakespeare fan becomes Shakespeare fam

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief December 16, 2018

Junior Ella Schneider had been a Shakespeare fanatic since middle school, acting in a range of his most famous plays, from the tragic “Romeo and Juliet” to the whimsical “A Midsummers Night Dream.”...

Wilson rated highly in flawed DCPS report

Wilson rated highly in flawed DCPS report

Elie Salem and Zara Hall December 15, 2018

The Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE) released report cards for every public and charter school in the District last Friday, with a series of metrics and a rating out of five stars....

Roadblocks prevented SGA from using surplus funds

Roadblocks prevented SGA from using surplus funds

Elie Salem and Ethan Leifman December 15, 2018

Wilson’s Student Government Association (SGA) made over $10,000 from ticket sales for the Homecoming dance and spent less than $1,000 on decorations and entertainment for the event. The organization...

DC Council suspends bill to lower voting age to 16

DC Council suspends bill to lower voting age to 16

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief December 3, 2018

The DC Council voted seven to six to table the bill that would have lowered the voting age in DC to 16. The Vote16 activists vowed to continue to push for the legislation despite the setback. The bill,...

America should side with principle, not politics, for Jamal Khashoggi

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief November 13, 2018

For decades, America has been dancing the geopolitical dabke with two left feet. On one foot, American politicians loudly tap away, preaching the doctrine of democracy and de-escalation in the Middle East,...

One in three Yondr bags broken after first advisory

One in three Yondr bags broken after first advisory

Elie Salem and Maya Wilson November 10, 2018

Over one-third of Yondr bags are broken, according to a Beacon survey of all the Yondr bags in Wilson math and science classes. The damages are caused primarily by student vandalism and overuse. Many...

Over 300 Wilson students special education information leaked

Over 300 Wilson students’ special education information leaked

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief October 31, 2018

Wilson students with IEPs or 504 plans had their special education information leaked to multiple sources outside of DCPS. The breach stymied efforts by administration to consolidate the information of...

Overcrowding exacerbates scheduling issues

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief October 8, 2018

The scheduling scene at the beginning of the school year is hectic; dozens of students line up in front of Administrative Assistant Diana Morataya’s desk to change classes. In the past few years, the...

Summer repairs fail to fully fix bathrooms

Summer repairs fail to fully fix bathrooms

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief October 5, 2018

Throughout last school year, Wilson amenities in the bathrooms and hallways were often broken or missing. In February, The Beacon reported that the broken items totaled 52, including 27 soap dispensers....

DCPS softens short-lived attendance policy

Hannah Bocian, Elie Salem, and Zara Hall October 5, 2018

DCPS modified the strict attendance policy enforced halfway through last year, removing all attendance penalties besides the mandated failure for more than 30 unexcused absences. The reform is part of...

Coach Hernandez returns to Wilson following DCPS investigation

Elie Salem and Zara Hall September 9, 2018

Angelo Hernandez has been reinstated as pathway coordinator and boys basketball head coach after being put on administrative leave last April. Hernandez was suspended while DCPS investigated the residency...

Climate change: America is denying disaster

Climate change: America is denying disaster

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief September 3, 2018

The warning signs are relatively mild: small disruptions on the surface, a moderate increase in temperature, and a few failed health tests. As the disease progresses, the symptoms become harsher: mass...

Eight DC private schools to remove AP courses

Chloe Fatsis and Elie Salem September 3, 2018

Eight of DC’s most renowned private schools have committed to ending their Advanced Placement (AP) courses by 2022. The schools stated that AP courses discourage students from taking other classes they...

Profiles of 2018-2019 SGA Officers

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief September 2, 2018

Leo Saunders- Student Body President “I want to make sure everyone knows what we’re doing, get what we’re doing out. We want people to come in and give us their voice. That is what I feel the...

Meet your Student Body President: Leo Saunders

Meet your Student Body President: Leo Saunders

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief September 2, 2018

Leo Saunders, well-known Fortnite god and unknown Bahamian, is the President of our student body. He will be the one in shouting matches with administration urging them to buy paint for the bleachers....

SGA members swearing themselves into office during their orientation on June 1st. For the first time starting the upcoming 2018-2019 school year, SGA officers will be elected only partly by the popular vote and will be organized under four main branches.

SGA unveils new constitution

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief July 1, 2018

A new SGA constitution will restructure the association into four main branches, with specific responsibilities assigned to each, as well as change the qualifications for elected office. Advocates of the...

Eight electives removed from Wilson

Alex Metzger and Elie Salem June 18, 2018

As of next year, eight electives are being removed from the course catalog. The changes appear to be in response to a myriad of different factors: a lack of teachers and interested students as well as...

Academy of Hospitality & Tourism Staff, Photo courtesy of wilson.org

Hospitality academy’s funding to decrease

Chloe Fatsis, Zara Hall, and Elie Salem June 10, 2018

Only one Wilson academy goes on college tours, visits local fish wholesalers, and meets executive business owners. Next year, however, it might not be able to due to a decrease in funding. The Academy...

DCPS graduation rates to drop following stricter requirements

DCPS graduation rates to drop following stricter requirements

Elie Salem and Zara Hall June 9, 2018

A midyear report DCPS released April of this year found that only 46 percent of DCPS seniors are on track to graduate, 27 percentage points fewer than the graduation rate of last year. At Wilson, 62 percent...

A series of DCPS investigations have found an alarming rate of residency fraud across the District. In Duke Ellington, pictured left, nearly a third of the student body is attending without paying legally-mandated nonresident tuition.

Investigation of DCPS uncovers widespread residency fraud

Marc Peña and Elie Salem June 9, 2018

A series of probes, investigations, and audits released in the past few months found widespread residency fraud throughout the District. The first of these reports, by DC Inspector General Daniel Lucas,...

Recent events in Israel leave Tigers on both sides of the debate

Recent events in Israel leave Tigers on both sides of the debate

Ethan Leifman, Aviv Roskes, and Elie Salem June 8, 2018

America needs to stand up to Israel Elie Salem America’s love for Israel is as stubborn as it is strong. In the past decades, Israel’s stunning military successes in the Middle East have been accompanied...

Lack of preparation leads to Tigerfest cancellation

Lack of preparation leads to Tigerfest cancellation

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief June 7, 2018

After being rescheduled from March 23 to May 4, the “Tigerfest” carnival was cancelled by Wilson administration. A series of interviews with SGA members and staff found that the delays and eventual...

Rubio proposes bill to repeal DC gun laws

Rubio proposes bill to repeal DC gun laws

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief May 9, 2018

Florida Senator Marco Rubio recently reintroduced legislation to weaken DC gun laws. If the bill manages to pass, multiple DC firearm restrictions would be repealed and local legislators would be unable...

Student Government Association lacks real Authority

Student Government Association lacks real Authority

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief May 9, 2018

Three weeks ago, freshmen, sophomores, and juniors watched nearly a dozen candidates speak about why they deserve to be elected secretary, treasurer, vice president, president or student body president....

Plumbing issues at Anacostia High School initiates staff-led school walkout

Plumbing issues at Anacostia High School initiates staff-led school walkout

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief May 9, 2018

More than 60 teachers and staff, along with a few students, walked out of Anacostia High School on April 4 to protest a major plumbing issue in the building. At 7 a.m., Anacostia Principal Eric Fraser...

Council member introduces bill to lower D.C. voting age

Council member introduces bill to lower D.C. voting age

Ethan Leifman and Elie Salem April 10, 2018

A bill introduced Tuesday in the DC Council would lower the voting age for federal and local elections from 18 to 16 years of age within the District. Ward 6 Councilmember Charles Allen, who proposed the...

Thurgood Marshall senior honors brother lost to gun violence

Thurgood Marshall senior honors brother lost to gun violence

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief April 3, 2018

Thurgood Marshall Senior Zion Kelly was returning home when a man asked to use his phone in Brentwood Park. Zion refused. The man immediately flashed his firearm, demanding that he hand over his valuables....

Ballou investigation prompts policy change

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief January 26, 2018

In a directive sent via email to the DCPS community on January 16, Chancellor Antwan Wilson outlined several changes to DCPS policy that will be implemented in the coming months. The changes involve verifying...

Congress proposes expansion of school choice programs in DC

Elie Salem, Editor-in-Chief January 20, 2018

Texas Senator Ted Cruz recently introduced a bill entitled the “Educational Freedom Accounts Act,” (EFAA) that aims to provide Education Savings Accounts to all DCPS students. Though the chances are...

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