Corona del Sol
November 13, 2009 Vol. 36, No. 3
u l f w e N ona r o C
s t c e f n i ents d u st
1001 E. Knox Road Tempe, AZ • 85284
Corona administration offers ideas to help absences BY KELSEY LAWSON Life & Times Editor
ERIN BLEVINS
The H1N1 or “swine” flu has been affecting high school students at a higher rate than normally seen during the regular flu season. Corona experienced an increase of student absences for a time, but the number has dropped off again. According to Registrar Holly Secor, Corona is operating as normal. Teachers are not giving special concessions to students out with illnesses, although there are special circumstances given to students enrolled in dual enrollment classes. Students enrolled in those classes are allowed fewer absences to remain getting dual enrollment credit. A student would not be dropped from a class due to being sick. “We have rules, but we work with people,” Secor said. “We look into absences.” Teachers at Corona are noticing an increase in the number of students absent from their classes. “Before fall break I had ten to 12 students out in some classes,” Social Studies teacher Cheryl Jannuzzi said. See ABSENCES
Swine flu thrives Sickness, most prevalently the flu, is spreading around Corona, and students this year have been getting sick more so than in previous years. “There’s been an increase in young people in influenzalike symptoms across the Valley,” school nurse Sandra Young said. According to the Arizona Department of Health Services, 1,159 cases of the flu were confirmed from the week of Oct. 11 to Oct. 17: 471 of those people were diagnosed with the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu. The swine flu made headlines during the spring of this year when a widespread panic swept across the world. Swine flu is extremely
BY SARAH DINELL Opinions Editor
contagious, much more contagious than the regular flu, and at the time it was thought to be extremely dangerous. Some schools even temporarily closed down when a student contracted swine flu, like Chandler schools Tarwater Elementary School and Sylvia Encinas Elementary S c h o o l . However, since then, swine flu has been proven to be a
News Former Corona student, Lauren Tamburrelli found guilty Page 2
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normal strain of flu that can be deadly, but death is not common. Symptoms of swine flu include a fever, chills, runny nose, sore throat, tiredness, muscle aches, headaches and vomiting. The unusual aspect of swine flu is it’s survival in warmer temperatures, unlike the regular flu. “Typically students get sick from influenza starting in November, but this year they started getting sick in the summer,” Young said. “That’s what so different about the H1N1 virus.” At Corona, there are several different types of sicknesses present, from the common cold to more serious strains of the flu. “Some people are being diagnosed with the flu, (they have) coughs, sore throats, and that kind of thing,” Young said. See SICKNESS
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INSIDE Sunrise Sports
Corona diver also synchronized swimmer Page 8
KAELI LAW
Opinions Keith Wagner, journalist or critic? Page 6