FEATHER MANIA Why are so many girls putting feathers in their hair? (Hint: it’s not for fowl purposes!)
HOMECOMING ANALYSIS At the big game the competitive spirit that characterizes Buckingham matches spilled over into the victory celebration.
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VOL. XXXV, NO. 3
NOVEMBER 8, 2011
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RACECAR CRASH Driver Dan Wheldon’s death in a 15-car pileup at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Oct. 16 shocked many, including teacher Daniel Neukom, a long-time fan of auto racing, who was at the track. Neukom was in Las Vegas with a group of friends. At his suggestion, they spent an afternoon at the racetrack to watch the 2011 IZOD IndyCar Championships. Only 11 laps into the race, just outside of turn two, several cars grazed each other, causing many others to spin out of control. Wheldon’s car hit another and went airborne into the catch fence.
It’s easy to cheat on the SAT if the proctor isn’t paying attention. Many proctors read or check their phones during the test, and some never walk around the room, even though they’re supposed to. (Photo illustration by Christina Petlowany)
SAT makes it easy for cheaters RECENT SCANDAL PROMPTS COLLEGE BOARD TO INCREASE TEST SECURITY By Mollie Berg
Editor-in-Chief
I
f you’re taking the SAT next month, there’s a simple way to score a 2400. It takes no studying; it requires no tutors; and it certainly doesn’t involve an early Saturday morning wake-up. All it takes to achieve a perfect score on the dreaded standardized test is $2,500, a fake ID, and a col-
lege student who is willing to spend four hours taking the test for you. Just ask “Gossip Girl” character Chuck Bass—this scheme worked for him in the episode “Desperately Seeking Serena.” But cheating via fake identities may not be as easy as it used to be. An Oct. 25 hearing of the New York state senate’s subcommittee on higher education addressed increasing security for the standardized test. In the testimony, Governor Gaston Caperton, the See SAT, page 6
Example
How do you cheat on the SAT? extra time on another section. Most proctors don’t walk around the room, so they won’t catch you. (B) Have another student get a fake ID and take the test for you. Or if that student looks enough like you, they can use your ID. The proctors don’t scrutinize the IDs closely enough to notice. (C) Look at someone else’s answers. If the proctor’s not watching, you won’t get caught. (D) During breaks, discuss the sections with a friend. If you have different versions of the test, you can get clues about upcoming questions. (E) All of the above
A B C D
Online grade books appeal to some, appall others By Zach Lemos
Copy Editor
M
eet Jett Arbogast. He’s a sophomore at Rio Americano High School, and his mom usually knows his grades before he
does. Thanks to Rio’s online grade policy, Arbogast’s teachers must plug their grade books into an online program that both students and parents can access—something Arbogast’s mother makes full use of. She checks up on her son after every class, sending him an angry text if he didn’t turn in his homework or received a bad grade.
Helping or Helicoptering? Part 1 in a series of 2 “She doesn’t even get email alerts when (the grade book) has been updated—she’s just always checking it!” he said. “It’s hardly motivating, I’d call it more of an annoying pressure.” It’s stories like Arbogast’s that convinced headmaster Stephen Repsher not to switch the school to an online grade book policy.
online grades in a letter to parents last March. However, even in sending it, he worried his letter would not satisfy parents who lobbied ardently for the change. “I don’t expect that this communication will change minds because the topic of online grades is passionately controversial for some parents,” he said. And he was right. Regardless of the administration’s staunch opposition to online grade books, many parents continue to call for them. In fact, the vast majority of students in the Sacramento area can access their See Grades, page 3
Series since 2006. Neukom saw the crash unfold from the other side of the track. “You could see lots of big, black, oily smoke coming from the wrecks and a lot “After about 10 minutes they covered Dan Wheldon’s car with a yellow tarp. At that point I knew that it was serious.” Neukom and thousands of others waited in the stands for two hours until the news of Wheldon’s death—and the termination of the race—were announced. Many fans wept openly, he said. As he was leaving, a young woman coming in with her boyfriend asked if the race was over. Hearing of Wheldon’s death, she fell sobbing to the asphalt, refusing her boyfriend’s attempts to console her, Neukom said. —Morgan Bennett-Smith
DARING LIZARD CAPTURE watched principal Sue Nellis and assistant Shara Reeves go about their work. lizard peeking out from under her desk but thought it was a twig. So she was taken aback when the “twig” darted into the That day, the lizard evaded capture by Reeves, Nellis, two junior boys and the maintenance crew. Reeves assumed the lizard had left until it reappeared the next day on a shelf above Nellis’s desk. “I just calmly get up and I go out and see (junior) Will Wright walking by,” Reeves recalled. “And being the cowboy he is, I asked him (to capture the lizard).” As Wright bravely removed the trespasser, it bit him more than once. —Garrett Kaighn