Katherine Zhang ’30
Uncategorized
Late Night Thoughts With Lu: What Changes and What Doesn’t Change
By Mr. Alfred Lu I was fighting with Ms. McGee. We were debating the pratfalls of AI writing. She considered it soulless while I countered the quality of writing was subjective. We didn’t get anywhere, but the back and forth was enjoyable, and not something I get to experience day to day. Ms. McGee is…
Welcome Back: 2025-2026
Dear Wolfpack, Welcome back! Now returning for its 8th inaugural year, the Wolfington Post will continue its legacy of providing top-tier articles on WPGA school life, student culture, and current events. As always, we strive to create content that aligns with our motto: for students, by students, and we hope to present an authentic perspective…
OCD and Hit Country Artist Luke Combs
By: Anonymous Luke Combs, a thirty-five-year-old redhead from North Carolina with a thick accent and thicker beard, is my favourite country artist. His voice is great. He has the perfect amount of rasp, and combined with his rolling, smooth lyricism, his songs are tender and sweet and melancholic all at the same time. My current…
How ShakeAlert Will Keep Us Safe When the “Big One” Comes
By Annie Wagner (‘27) Buildings crumble. Power lines fall. A wave of water sweeps through towns and cities, carrying debris and people with it. We are all familiar with the destruction that high-magnitude earthquakes can cause, but most of us have never experienced one. However, an earthquake like this could occur at any moment here…
Inheriting Inequality
By Jason J. Zhang “The rich get richer and the poor get poorer,” or so the aphorism goes. In the context of U.S. wealth and income inequality, this is the bleak truth. Statistics from the World Inequality Database show 21% of the U.S. national income is going to the population’s richest 1%, with nearly 50%…
Love you always,
So. Here’s goodbye.
Love you always,
Emma
The History of Halloween
By Grey Tang, ’26 Halloween is one of the most iconic holidays we celebrate in North America. Whether you spend your night going door-to-door trick or treating, getting scared at the PNE’s Fright Nights, or bobbing for apples at one of the many other commemorative festivals that are hosted, it is clear that the tradition…
Christmas Turkey Shortage Anticipated
By Annie Wagner, ’27 As an update to my article in our last edition (“Avian Flu, What can you do?”) the avian flu has now infiltrated many BC turkey farms. If you are dreaming of a delicious turkey with all the fixings this holiday season, be warned: your dinner may be in danger! Similar to…
Vancouver’s Wacky Weather
By Elliott Deyell, ’26 Once again, British Columbia is being hit with a series of atmospheric rivers, causing downpours of rain after an elongated drought. An atmospheric river is a large, narrow stream of water vapour that travels through the sky. Last year, the historic rainfall caused the flooding of 15,000 hectares of land, and…




