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Revision as of 23:00, 22 April 2007 by Miss Mondegreen (talk | contribs) (new section: filming on campus--other minor changes)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)- Alternate meaning: University High School (disambiguation)
University High School (known as Uni) is a secondary school located in West Los Angeles, a neighborhood of Los Angeles, California near the border of Santa Monica. University High School is part of the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). The campus also holds Indian Springs Continuation High School. The school contains the Gabrielino Tongva Springs, a California State Historical Landmark.
University High School's current mascot is the Wildcat, and the school colors are blue and persimmon (orange).
The weekly school newspaper, the Wildcat, is part of the High School National Ad Network. Print issues from the school's inception as Harding High are available in the journalism archives. More recent issues are archived online at the My High School Journalism site operated by ASNE (American Society of Newspaper Editors).
History
Originally known as Warren G. Harding High School when built in 1924, the school was renamed in 1929 after UCLA moved its campus from East Hollywood to Westwood, and the reputation of former President Harding had declined. The name University is supposed to have originated because it became a site where teachers-in-training from nearby UCLA worked as assistant teachers.
One third of its class of 1942 did not graduate because of the internment of Japanese-Americans.
"Uni" was opened in 1924, and is one of very few pre-World War II high schools in Los Angeles which have been partially spared by three major earthquakes since its inception. Although the gymnasium and a beautiful and widely admired auditorium were condemned following the 1971 Sylmar earthquake, the school's original main building from 1924 remains in use to this day. The music building and gym (rebuilt in the early 1980s) are scheduled to be taken down because they sit on a fault line, against district policy. Although the music building is not in use, the gym currently is. Because the main building presents a very traditional and dignified appearance, with weathered brick and arched doorways, the campus is popular with film crews. See #Filming on campus
Native American heritage
Located on the grounds of University High are the Gabrielino Tongva Springs, California Historical Landmark #552. This natural spring (called Kuruvungna) was used by the native Gabrielino Tongva people, the descendants of whom continue to be active on the campus. The springs, which produce 22,000 gallons of water each day, have never failed, even in the driest years, and their presence suggests strongly that the site was a meeting and stopping place for Native Americans over thousands of years. In 1975 a grave was discovered, just below the southwest end of the main building, containing a small skeleton and soapstone bowls. This grave was dated to approximately 4000 BCE and the character of the bowls suggested kinship with the culture of Santa Catalina Island in the same era. The Kuruvungna springs are one of the last sacred sites to the Gabrielino Tongva people.
Mascot controversy
The school's mascot was formerly the Warrior, but was changed after the Southern California Indian Center petitioned the LAUSD to eliminate the mascots and names of all schools that had American Indian mascot and names. In 1997 the LAUSD decided to eliminate all American Indian mascots. The LAUSD decision was upheld in federal court, but the California Racial Mascots Act, a bill which would eliminate American Indian mascots and names state wide, was vetoed by Governor Schwarzenegger twice.
Ficus Tree Preservation
Underground water from the Kuruvunga springs sustain seven mature Indian Laurel Ficus trees on the campus which line a walkway between the classroom building and one of the two teachers' parking lot. In September of 2002, LAUSD Area D announced that they would remove the seven ficus trees lining the outside of the classroom building, because the roots were had grown into and were pushing up the concrete in the parking lot causing a potential hazard. In response to the removal announcement a campaign was launched to stop the removal of the trees. Notably, a student petition got 1,200 signatures (almost half of the student population), and community involvment came from the city of Santa Monica and from the neighborhood councils of Brentwood and West Los Angles.
In response to the public outcry, the LAUSD held meetings to determine what would happen to the trees. Walter Warriner, the Arborist of the city of Santa Monica proposed installing rubber sidewalks, which could be easily lifted in order to prune the tree roots for maintainance. After months of negotions, the LAUSD decided not to remove the trees and agreed to install rubber sidewalks, making University High School the first high school in the country to use rubber sidewalks in order to preserve its trees. Installation for the rubber sidewalks started on November 20, 2003, over a year after the LAUSD had originally condemned the trees. Installation of the rubber sidewalks was covered by Huell Howser for California's Gold. The episode covering Uni High's rubber sidewalks aired on KCET on January 28, 2004. Uni High also used rubber asphalt to repave the pushed up concrete in the teachers' parking lot.
Filming on campus
The usage of the school for filming has been mildly controversial over the years. Students and teachers regularly complain about the distruption caused when areas of the campus are not accessible, or when classes and lockers are moved. These complaints are captured by occasional editorials in the school newspaper about the filming on campus. The editorials however focus mainly on money. The constant filming on campus helps University High make up some portion of whatever is lost in budget cuts.
The school gets paid $1,700 for every day companies film on campus, but only recieves $1,190 of that money after the LAUSD takes 30% of what the school earns. Of the money that the school makes, the first $12,000 made each year is distributed amoung the departments. The Budget Committee makes spending recommendations for any additional monies.
In November of 2006, Drillbit Taylor starring Owen Wilson started filming at University High. As of April 2007, the amount for filming Drillbit Taylor, 90,000 is this most money that University High has ever made on an individual filming contract.
University High underwent massive renovations in order to prepare for the filming of Drillbit Taylor. The interior and exterior of the main building were painted, and the main building was retiled as well. The facade of the building altered to read "McKinley High School", and plants and grass patches were added throughout the school. These changes were particularly unusual not only because the extent of the changes meant that construction took place during the school days and was not delayed for vacation, but also because Drillbit Taylor production did not pay for the retiling. The district had provide money to retile floors throughout the LAUSD, so the retiling of the floors itself was not unusual or controversial. However, as Drillbit Taylor production needs guided the colour choices for the retiling, as well as the schedule for construction, many students were upset by the behavoir of the movie company and the school.
Below is an incomplete list of productions that have filmed at University High:
Movies
- Bruce Almighty, 2003
- The Battle of Shaker Heights, 2003
- Raise Your Voice, 2004
- Surviving Christmas, 2004
- Drillbit Taylor, 2008
Television Episodes
- The Flannerys, pilot, shot 2003
- High School Undercover, pilot, shot 2004
- Filmore Middle, pilot, shot 2005
- Day Break, pilot, shot 2007
- The Division, season finale, shot May 2004
Television Shows
- My So-Called Life
- 7th Heaven From 1995 - 2007, University High served as Glen Oak High School
Other
- JoJo's music video Leave (Get Out), 2004
Neighborhoods served
Neighborhoods served by University High School include West Los Angeles, portions of Brentwood (including Brentwood Glen), Beverly Glen, Beverly Hills Post Office Westwood, Bel-Air, Sawtelle, Benedict Canyon, the Wilshire Corridor , and Holmby Hills. Also included in its service area are relatively distant canyon neighborhoods adjacent to the city of Beverly Hills; since the neighborhoods are in Los Angeles, the students are not in the Beverly Hills Unified School District boundaries.
Like other Westside high schools such as Westchester and Palisades, University High School enrolls a diverse mix of students from its enrollment area and various parts of the city. Much of its student body arrives by bus each morning from Koreatown and South Los Angeles. The school also enrolls many "Capacity Adjustment Program" students which come from areas zoned to heavily overcrowded high schools.
Two new LAUSD high schools opened in fall 2005 and four more in fall 2006, decreasing the number of transfer students in other high schools.
Notable alumni
- Mackenzie Astin (actor)
- Eric Avery (rock bassist - Jane's Addiction)
- Jan Berry, 1959 (singer and songwriter of Jan & Dean fame)
- Jeff Bridges (actor)
- James Brolin (actor)
- Darby Crash born Jan Paul Beahm (punk rock pioneer)
- Sandra Dee born Alexandra Zuck (actress best known for her role as Gidget)
- John Densmore (rock drummer - The Doors)
- Elonka Dunin, 1976 (cryptographer and game developer)
- Danny Elfman, (Oingo Boingo, film composer)
- Megan Follows, 1986 (actress)
- Kim Fowley (rock musician/music producer)
- Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme (Manson Family member/attempted assassin of Gerald R. Ford)
- Judy Garland, (Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz)
- Jill Gibson, 1960 (singer and artist)
- Omar Gooding (actor)
- Peggy Ann Garner (actress, A Tree Grows In Brooklyn)
- Kim Gordon (rock bassist - Sonic Youth)
- Brad Brunberg, 1982 a.k.a. Johnny Cocktails, (entertainer, actor)
- Greg Grunberg, 1983 (actor)
- Jane Harman, 1962, (Congresswoman for California's 36th Congressional District 1993 - present)
- Jason Hervey, 1990 (actor)
- Robbie Krieger (rock guitarist and songwriter - The Doors)
- Connie Marshall, (actress, Sentimental Journey)
- Maria McKee, 1982 (rock musician - Lone Justice)
- Samantha Mathis, 1988 (actress)
- Kevin Millar (professional baseball player - Baltimore Orioles)
- Penelope Ann Miller (actress)
- Marilyn Monroe (actress)
- Dave Navarro (rock musician - Jane's Addiction)
- Ryan O'Neal (actor)
- Stephen Reinhardt (judge - United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit)
- Tommy Rettig, 1958, (Jeff Miller in Lassie)
- Herb Ritts (photographer)
- Pat Smear born George Ruthenberg (punk rock pioneer, musician)
- Nancy Sinatra, 1958 (singer)
- Steve Smith (Carolina Panthers wide receiver)
- Peter Stone (writer for theater, television and film)
- Elizabeth Taylor (actress)
- Marshall Thompson (actor - To Hell and Back)
- Tone Lōc born Anthony Terrell Smith (hip-hop artist known for Wild Thing and Funky Cold Medina)
- Dean Torrence, 1958 (singer from Jan & Dean)
- Howard Wolpe, 1956, (Congressman for Michigan's 3rd Congressional District from 1979 to 1993.)
- Diva Zappa (actress, garment designer, daughter of late rock legend Frank Zappa)
- Jordan Zevon, 1988 (musician/music producer, son of late singer/songwriter Warren Zevon)
- Kathy Kohner-Zuckerman, 1958 (the actual Gidget, whom the novel Gidget, The Little Girl With the Big Ideas and subsequent film and television adaptations was based on)
References
- Zarinshenas, Reza (4/15/2005). "Native American Mascots Rascist". Wildcat. Retrieved 2006-12-29.
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(help) Article on the California Racial Mascots Act
Notes
- Recent issues of the Wildcat
- Annual "Life Before Coumbus Day Event"
- Gabrielino / Tongva Springs Foundation
- Gabrieleno/Tongva Band of Mission Indians of San Gabriel
- Southern California Indian Center
- "MOTIONS/RESOLUTIONS PRESENTED TO THE LOS ANGELES CITY BOARD OF EDUCATION FOR CONSIDERATION" (PDF). Elimination of American Indian Mascots. LAUSD. September 8, 1997. pp. 55–56. Retrieved 2006-12-29.
- Willman, Martha L. (April 7, 1998). "District Ban on Indian Nicknames Is Upheld". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2006-12-29.
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suggested) (help) - California Racial Mascots Act - AB 858
- California Racial Mascots Act - AB 13
- Schwarzenegger vetoes bill banning 'Redskins'
- ^ Lue, Ryan (9/19/2003). "Committee Seeks Arborist to Prune Trees". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ Man, Shirley (4/28/2003). "Classroom Building Trees Saved". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Berezin, Jacob (6/17/2003). "Theresa Gray". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - "Public Television Programs Highlight City's "Rubber Sidewalks"". Santa Monica SEASCAPE V.4 Issue 11. City of Santa Monica. Summer 2004. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
- "KCET Host Films Sidewalk Installation". Wildcat. 12/05/2003. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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ignored (help) - Visiting...With Huell Howser #1114 - High School Sidewalks
- ^ Aragon, Karen (01/16/2004). "Crews Repave Parking Lot". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ Berezin, Jacob (9/26/2003). "Filming Abates Budget Cuts". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Pan, Chenlu (11/21/2003). "Film Crews Arrive, Funds Misused". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ Galedary, Ali (12/05/2003). "Film Donations Valued". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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ignored (help) - Sharma, Jayanti (11/05/2004). "Dispersing $20,000 from Lease Account Fund". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ Haber, Ben (11/21/2006). "Film Crew Sets Up Shop for Upcoming Movie". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Tefolla, Joanna (10/20/2006). "LAUSD Re-floors Administration Bldg". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ Shapiro, Regina (9/23/2005). "7th Heaven Films Episode on Teen Pregnancy". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - ^ "'Shaker Heights' Films Battle on Campus". Wildcat. 3/21/2003. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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suggested) (help) - Piterberg, Uri (4/11/2003). "Hollywood Films on Campus". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - The Flannerys at the Internet Movie Database
- Shapiro, Regina (3/19/2004). "FBI Agents and Cheerleaders Shoot Pilot". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Dubon, Lynda (4/29/2005). "Film Crews Cruise Uni's Halls". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Shapiro, Regina (3/24/2006). "Taye Diggs Films Pilot". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - Simanian, Jessica (5/28/2007). "Lifetime Networks Films The Division on Campus". Wildcat. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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(help) - My So-Called Life at the Internet Movie Database
- Spitz, H. May (July 11, 2004). "Canyon homes and that famous ZIP Code". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2006-12-29.
- ^ University High School, Los Angeles, CA at NNDB
- Brad Brunberg at the Internet Movie Database
- Connie Marshall at the Internet Movie Database