The Oracle (April 2011)

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[News] Catch your teach-

[Centerfold] Two The

[Features] Recent

ers before it’s too late: Tips to snag rec letters pg. 3 [Forum] The Internet: Communication tool or poltical battleground? pg. 8

Oracle teams face off in a sweet dessert bake-off to remember pg. 14-15

Gunn alumna produces sweet chocolate creations pg. 17

THEORACLE

Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306 NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. Postage

PA I D

Permit #44 Palo Alto, Calif.

Henry M. Gunn High School

http://gunn3.pausd.org/oracle

Monday, April 25, 2011

Volume 47, Issue 7

780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306

Rising gas prices concern Gunn community Ashley Ngu

News Editor

As gasoline prices continue to rise following tumultuous events in the Middle East, students and staff are starting to feel the pinch in their wallets. According to the Energy and Information Ad m i n ist r at ion ( EI A), t he average price for a gallon of gas in California climbed to $4.20 this past week. The rising prices have made several community members more conscious of how much they drive, including junior Alex Allen, who drives to school on a daily basis. “I’m a lot more stingy about driving people around and going to lunch,” she wrote in an e-mail. “My friends and I switch off driving if we go out on weekends or during lunch and preps.” The prices are reminiscent of the $4 record highs set back in July 2008. “If you look at the price of gas in inflation adjusted terms, gas today is no higher than it was in 1918, 1981, or 2008,” economics and history

teacher Phil Lyons wrote in an e-mail. “People have simply g r ow n a c c u s t ome d t o t he unrealistic trend of gas prices falling in real terms.” In 2008 when gas prices passed $4, Lyons began to carpool with other teachers who lived in San Francisco. English teacher Justin Brown carpools with Lyons, but because of recent parking and scheduling conf licts, has had to drive solo for the majority of each week. Due to this, Brown has to fill up his tank about three times every two weeks and tries not to drive on weekends. “I live in the Mission District of San Francisco, so I’m in a pretty central area and I make an effort to go completely on foot during the weekends,

for environmental and financial reasons,” he said. According to Gary Richards, a transportation columnist for the San Jose Mercury News, the price of gasoline is largely based on the cost of crude oil. “For every $1 increase [in crude oil barrel prices] there is about a 2.5 cent increase in the price [of a gallon of gas] at the local station,” he wrote in an e-mail. “However, there are many other factors in play. Califor nia has a special reformulated fuel that ma kes ou r prices about 25 cents more than the national

average.” A gas station owner in Palo Alto, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to company policy, cited the turmoil in the Middle East as another driving factor in gas prices. “Even if the supplies aren’t affected by what’s happening in the Middle East, the fear and speculation of supply interruption are what causes the prices to go up,” he said. “The oil is still

Left: Prices at a local ARCO gas station on March 29. Right: Prices three weeks later at the same gas station.

All-girls robotics team draws Gunn students Monica Cai

Sports Editor

Students are annually alerted to the beginning of the robotics competition season by the brightly-colored hair commonly spotted around campus. While the most obvious shade is “Vampire Red”, the color of the Gunn Robotics Team, another hue has begun popping up as well. The cerulean blue hair tips seen on the occasional girl represent her dedication to Space Cookies, a Silicon Valley robotics team that works in partnership with the Girl Scouts of Northern California and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Ames Research Center. The all-girls group consists of 37 girls from 10 different schools in Cali-

Gunn Figures

»

fornia, primarily those in the Bay Area. “The main goal of our team is to inspire youth to follow careers in technology,” junior Cara Lai said. “Because we’re an all-female team, we’re especially reaching out to females.” The team is led by its troop leader, Ann Wettersten, who has a background in mechanical engineering. “I mostly help with providing the girls the materials tools and information that they need to be successful,” Wettersten said. “They take it from there.” During the off-season, Space Cookies often attend Girl Scouts events where they demonstrate the skills of their robots and also participate in Girls Exploring Tomorrow’s Technology (GETT), a program for young girls to learn about what the National Science Foundations

220,000

The approximate number of copies made monthly throughout Gunn

calls Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) careers. Earlier in the year, the Space Cookies also worked with the Golden Surfers, a robotics team of the East Palo Alto Charter School. A team of mostly elementary school boys, the Golden Surfers participated in For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) LEGO League competitions, working for several months with the help of the Space Cookies. However, from the beginning of January to the end of April, the Space Cookies are busy developing and building a robot that can get them to the FIRST Championship, the final stage of the FIRST Robotics Competitions. The team works at the NASA Ames Research

GASOLINE—p.4

Photos and Graphics by Henry Liu and Kimberly Han

Important AP Information What: Fill out your AP Answer Sheet before your exams begin! If you don’t attend a session, the testing schedule will be delayed while you fill out your forms. When: This Tuesday-Friday, during lunch

ROBOTICS—p.18

$2,086

there; it didn’t go anywhere.” Along with the costs of crude oil, federal and state taxes account for another 15 percent of the cost of gas according to the EIA. However, Lyons and auto tech teacher

The total amount donated by Japanese and Korean Culture Club to the relief effort in Japan

Where: The library

10

The average number of Formspring questions the SEC receives weekly


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