Winged Post Volume 19 Issue 6

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WINGED POST THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 2018 | THE HARKER UPPER SCHOOL STUDENT NEWSPAPER, VOL. 19, NO. 6

TAKING IT TO THE STREETS

WHAT’S INSIDE?

HOSCARS 2 History of Manzanita 6 Clean Power Plan 13

Facebook embroiled in data breach controversy anika rajamani & arushi saxena reporters

KAITLIN HSU

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is investigating Facebook to see if it violated its 2011 agreement to keep users’ data private, after the information collected through Aleksandr Kogan’s app was used by Cambridge Analytica on President Trump’s campaign. The data was used to target specific digital ads to users. University of Cambridge researcher Aleksandr Kogan developed a personality app, which utilized Facebook as a platform for its users. 270,000 users took the quiz on the app, but data was also taken from 50 million people, including the friends and other contacts of those who played the quiz. Facebook permitted the data to be used for only academic research purposes, and it removed the app from the online website once it found out that the data taken from Kogan’s app had been turned over to Cambridge Analytica.

OUR GENERATION Seniors Jerrica Liao and Olivia Long brandish signs favoring gun control at the March for Our Lives rally in San Jose on March 24.

Thousands march in youth-organized rallies for gun control legislation

ANVI BANGA

Robotics takes second at regional competition

ROBOTICS REGIONAL Members of the robotics team work on their robot in preparation for competition season.

nicole chen, prameela kottapalli, kathy fang, anmol velagapudi, & katherine zhang

Aquila features editor, features edior, photo editor, reporter, and STEM editor

“Protect lives, not guns.” “Schools are for learning. Not for lockdowns.” Scrawled in black and red paint, these two phrases emblazoned the posters of best friends Gemma Favaloro and Isabella Casteion from Kent Middle school in Marin County. As seventh graders, they were among the youngest activists at the March for Our Lives protest in San Francisco. That morning, they had urged their parents to take them to the demonstration, eager to experience a protest for the first time but even more enthusiastic to support a cause close to their hearts. They were only twelve, but they felt for the young survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas (MSD) High School shooting. They were only twelve, but they wanted their voices to be heard, for politicians and policymakers to act upon the demands they shared with thousands of protesters.

zoe sanders reporter

The upper school robotics team, team 1072, qualified for the final round of and took second place in the FIRST Sacramento Regional competition, which took place at UC Davis from March 21 to March 24. Team 1072 had seven wins and one loss. With the help of two alliance teams, Tiki Techs from Kailua-Kona, Hawaii and Armijo Robotics from Fairfield, California, the upper school qualified for the World Championship in Houston for the first time since 2005. This year’s competition was a game called “FIRST Power Up,” in which teams find their robots trapped in an 8-bit video game. The team competes next at the Silicon Valley Regional competition on March 28.

They were only twelve, but they’d had “enough.” Gemma and Isabella participated in just one of the more than 800 March For Our Lives protests, which took place worldwide on March 24 to rally for tighter gun control and safety measures in light of the school shooting at MSD in Parkland, Florida, that killed 17 students and faculty members last month.

ing such a big group of students caring about one singular issue would definitely motivate Congress to take some action, hopefully, and if not, we’re all able to vote next year in the upcoming election.” The demonstrations are part of a larger movement spearheaded by MSD students Emma González, David Hogg and several others. González and Hogg

“Seeing such a big group of students caring about one singular sisue would definitely motivate Congress to take some action, hopefully, and if not, we’re all able to vote next year in the upcoming election.” MEGAN HUYNH ASB TREASURER, MEMBER OF SAN JOSE MFOL OUTREACH COMMITTEE “I got really inspired by the Parkland students after the shooting, how they decided to begin their own movement, completely student-led and student-run,” said Megan Huynh (12), who is a member of the San Jose outreach committee of the March for Our Lives. “See-

co-founded the initiative Never Again MSD, an organization committed to promoting gun control. Unlike previous efforts to enact tighter gun legislation, the revitalized movement led by these students and their allies comprises of high-schoolers.

Leaders of the campaign spread their message across the country, organizing marches, challenging politicians, delivering speeches at rallies and speaking to national news outlets. Most recently, the MSD activists appeared on the March 23 cover of Time Magazine alongside a single word: “Enough.” Carrying forward the advocacy of the MSD students, high school and college students across the nation coordinated and attended marches in their respective communities. In the Bay Area, more than eight mass protests took place on March 23rd, including demonstrations in San Francisco, San Jose, Santa Rosa and Oakland. Harker students and faculty joined the movement and took to the streets to express their own opinions on current policies involving gun regulation. Student council invited students and faculty to sign up for the March for Our Lives as a sign of solidarity support for the students of MSD High School, and posters around campus encouraged students to participate in the demonstration in the weeks prior to the march. Continued on page 8.

SAHANA SRINIVASAN

VIJAY BHARADWAJ

KATHY FANG

KATHY FANG

GOLD CROWN Kshithija “KJ” Mulam (‘17) and Meilan Steimle (‘17) were the editors-in-chief of The Winged Post for the 2016-2017 school year.

PROVIDED BY ELLEN AUSTIN

Winged Post wins Gold Crown at CSPA convention

maya kumar

managing editor

The Winged Post won a Gold Crown award in the print news category for the 2016-2017 school year at the Columbia Scholastic Press Association’s Convention in New York on March 16. This award was given to 15 print news publications in the country.

FOR OUR LIVES (TOP LEFT) High school students protest at March for Our Lives San Jose on March 24. (TOP RIGHT) Sumati “Sumi” Wadhwa (12) and Esha Deokar (11) cheer during the San Jose rally. (BOTTOM TWO) Senator Dianne Feinstein spoke at the San Francisco rally in front of City Hall.


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Winged Post Volume 19 Issue 6 by Harker Aquila - Issuu