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Challenge to school board
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Open forum is held at library
Runners trample competition Both Boys and Girls Win
Home sweet homecoming
Art by CVHS Teachers
Artwork is displayed at CFA
Economic Wish is Granted
CVHS receives a $180,000 grant for new technology By Brandon Lui staff writer
Malena Bell / Editor-in-Chief
Some of the senior song girls show their support for the performers during the homecoming assembly.
Skater haters?
A $180,000 software and hardware grant sounds nice, doesn’t it? Castro Valley Unified School Disrict has recently received some money thanks to a lawsuit filed against Microsoft by California’s businesses and consumers for overcharging customers. All this money isn’t going to one school since the district is deciding how much and where the money goes. If you think the grant hasn’t been used at all, think again. The new library’s computers were paid for with some of the grant. Castro Valley Elementary, Castro Valley High School and Redwood High School qualified to receive some of the money for hardware and software. Sadly, the district can’t save this kind of money for a rainy day
Campus crackdown planned; $25 tickets possible By Lisa Carmack staff writer
School Resource Officer Timothy Vales revealed a widespread plan to crack down on reckless and un-helmeted skaters in the senior lot, the courtyard and around the stadium. According to Vales, this careless skating is not only a huge safety hazard, but also a disturbance to those who reside close to the school. “We don’t want to go and hand out a bunch of tickets,” Vales stressed during an interview. “We just want it to stop.” Skaters have reportedly been weaving through traffic in the senior parking lot before school, after school, and during school
activities. There have been many complaints and testimonies of near hits that Vales described as unacceptable. Riding a bike or skateboard without a helmet is a traffic citation and is punishable by a $25 ticket. The punishment for disturbances in residential areas is decided by the court system. “It’s preposterous,” said senior Ryan Kelder in response to the new serious attitude about skating. “I don’t think that it’s dangerous; I mostly skate here when the parking lot is empty.” When asked about the ways in which he plans to catch delinquent skaters, Vales responded mischievously, “I’m going to be everywhere like the wind.”
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because the grant will expire by Sept. 25, 2012. The district doesn’t directly get money, but it purchases approved products, files a Microsoft K-12 voucher for the products, and then Microsoft pays back however much the products cost. The money is divided half to software and the other half to hardware, technical services and professional development. The Castro Valley Unified School District doesn’t often get an electronic grant like this. Lots of this money will go to replacing older, more out of date computers. Many of the older computers at CVHS are from an old district program called “Digital High School.”
Infection strikes CVHS student MRSA discovered; school disinfected By Lawrence Ham Staff writer
Lisa Carmack / Staff Writer
Layne Gonsalves does a trick on his skateboard in the senior parking lot.
The administration confirmed that a member of the boys football team contracted a staph infection on Oct. 14. The next day, Oct. 15, a letter which informed CVHS students and their parents of the infection. Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA), the type of bacteria that leads to staph infections, can cause serious skin infections. Healthy people can carry MRSA on their skin or even in their noses, but the amount is not large enough to make them sick. Some common symptoms of staph are red painful bumps underneath the skin, sores that feel and look like spider bites. INFECTION: Page 8