Combing out cigarette butts High school students...
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Combing out cigarette butts
High school students scoured the beach last week, filling bags
with cigarette butts.
The cleanup was sponsored by Stop Tobacco Abuse of Minors Pronto,
a nonprofit group, and organized with the help of English teacher
Pamela Hostetler, who brought 33 students from Huntington Beach High
School and schools in Anaheim and Cypress.
“We got a lot of bags of cigarettes,” said Jim Walker, director of
the nonprofit group.
The elimination of smoking on beaches is a movement that appears
to be gaining steam. The San Clemente City Council enacted such a ban
in March.
Designer clothes to fund students’ trip
Student artists will be selling designer fashions to help pay for
a performance in Scotland.
Women’s clothing, sold in department stores like Macy’s and
Bloomingdale’s, will be marked down as much as 93%. The clothing will
be on sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on April 18 at the Huntington Beach
High School Student Center. The high school is at the corner of Main
Street and Yorktown Avenue.
The money raised will be used to pay travel bills for selected
students who will be performing “The Secret Garden” at the American
High School Theatre Festival scheduled for August in Edinburgh,
Scotland.
The sale will be the primary fundraiser as the school prepares for
the trip.
“We’re counting on this one, a big turnout on this one,” parent
organizer Terry Amundson said.
Higher-tech goods are on the way
Two schools in the Ocean View School District have been awarded
grants that are planned to boost the use of technology in the
classroom.
Spring View Middle School was named the recipient of a $5,000
award from Reader’s Digest.
Spring View Principal Cameron Malotte said the school would use
the grant to help pay for computers and tools called “smartboards,”
which allow a teacher to write notes on a whiteboard and have those
notes transferred into a computer’s memory banks.
One benefit of the program, Malotte said, is that students can
have easy access to a copy of a teacher’s lesson.
“Say there’s a kid who has trouble taking notes ... the teacher
can just push print,” Malotte said.
Hope View Elementary School was awarded $2,500 from Best Buy. The
funds are slated to beef up technology in the school’s kindergarten
classes.
Hope View kindergarten teachers plan to use scanners and digital
cameras in lessons so children can make and print out books on what
they learn, teacher Joan Whitfield said.
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