Annual Jazz Cab enjoyed by all ages April 3, 2014 — by Allison Lin Students, their families and alumni laced up their dance shoes and headed to the annual Jazz Cabaret and Swing Dance on the evening of March 1. read more » Saratoga rallies to triple crown at tournament April 2, 2014 — by Bruce Lou The History Bowl team, confident and heavily favored to win the March 22 Northern History Bowl Championships, once again proved its status as a powerhouse team by winning the tournament and becoming the first varsity triple crown winner — the winner of all three regional tournaments — in the history of the competitions. read more » First annual High School Hacks sees record attendance of over 800 April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Anant Rajeev More than 800 high school students, most of them from the Bay Area, went to the campus of PayPal with one goal in mind on March 7-8: win one of the handful of prizes in the High School Hacks Hackathon. read more » Music’s March Madness April 2, 2014 — by Devin Zhao “I will bet anybody five dollars that at the end of the first movement [of Maslanka’s ‘Give Us This Day’ Symphony], somebody is going to clap,” musical director Michael Boitz declared to the Symphonic Wind Ensemble the period before the March 7 performance. read more » Disappointment in downtown After less than a year in operation, Wildwood Market closes April 2, 2014 — by Ashley Chen One or two people linger in the store, halfheartedly browsing the shelves for something to buy. Outside, the tables sity empty; no one stays long enough to sit down and enjoy the mosaic pattern that adorns the deck. The same sign — big, careful letters — smothers each side of the wall: Sale. Everything 40 percent off. read more » New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
Saratoga rallies to triple crown at tournament April 2, 2014 — by Bruce Lou The History Bowl team, confident and heavily favored to win the March 22 Northern History Bowl Championships, once again proved its status as a powerhouse team by winning the tournament and becoming the first varsity triple crown winner — the winner of all three regional tournaments — in the history of the competitions. read more » First annual High School Hacks sees record attendance of over 800 April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Anant Rajeev More than 800 high school students, most of them from the Bay Area, went to the campus of PayPal with one goal in mind on March 7-8: win one of the handful of prizes in the High School Hacks Hackathon. read more » Music’s March Madness April 2, 2014 — by Devin Zhao “I will bet anybody five dollars that at the end of the first movement [of Maslanka’s ‘Give Us This Day’ Symphony], somebody is going to clap,” musical director Michael Boitz declared to the Symphonic Wind Ensemble the period before the March 7 performance. read more » Disappointment in downtown After less than a year in operation, Wildwood Market closes April 2, 2014 — by Ashley Chen One or two people linger in the store, halfheartedly browsing the shelves for something to buy. Outside, the tables sity empty; no one stays long enough to sit down and enjoy the mosaic pattern that adorns the deck. The same sign — big, careful letters — smothers each side of the wall: Sale. Everything 40 percent off. read more » New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
First annual High School Hacks sees record attendance of over 800 April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Anant Rajeev More than 800 high school students, most of them from the Bay Area, went to the campus of PayPal with one goal in mind on March 7-8: win one of the handful of prizes in the High School Hacks Hackathon. read more » Music’s March Madness April 2, 2014 — by Devin Zhao “I will bet anybody five dollars that at the end of the first movement [of Maslanka’s ‘Give Us This Day’ Symphony], somebody is going to clap,” musical director Michael Boitz declared to the Symphonic Wind Ensemble the period before the March 7 performance. read more » Disappointment in downtown After less than a year in operation, Wildwood Market closes April 2, 2014 — by Ashley Chen One or two people linger in the store, halfheartedly browsing the shelves for something to buy. Outside, the tables sity empty; no one stays long enough to sit down and enjoy the mosaic pattern that adorns the deck. The same sign — big, careful letters — smothers each side of the wall: Sale. Everything 40 percent off. read more » New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
Music’s March Madness April 2, 2014 — by Devin Zhao “I will bet anybody five dollars that at the end of the first movement [of Maslanka’s ‘Give Us This Day’ Symphony], somebody is going to clap,” musical director Michael Boitz declared to the Symphonic Wind Ensemble the period before the March 7 performance. read more » Disappointment in downtown After less than a year in operation, Wildwood Market closes April 2, 2014 — by Ashley Chen One or two people linger in the store, halfheartedly browsing the shelves for something to buy. Outside, the tables sity empty; no one stays long enough to sit down and enjoy the mosaic pattern that adorns the deck. The same sign — big, careful letters — smothers each side of the wall: Sale. Everything 40 percent off. read more » New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
Disappointment in downtown After less than a year in operation, Wildwood Market closes April 2, 2014 — by Ashley Chen One or two people linger in the store, halfheartedly browsing the shelves for something to buy. Outside, the tables sity empty; no one stays long enough to sit down and enjoy the mosaic pattern that adorns the deck. The same sign — big, careful letters — smothers each side of the wall: Sale. Everything 40 percent off. read more » New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
New SAT affects current freshmen April 2, 2014 — by Deepti Kannan and Michelle Leung A revised version of the SAT will be implemented in spring of 2016 in time for current freshmen to take it. The new test is intended to fix problems with the current version of the current test and to keep pace with the ACT, which has been outstripping the SAT in recent years in popularity. read more » Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
Love beyond blood: One-child policy brings junior from China as an infant April 2, 2014 — by Michelle Leung She was found on the steps of a factory in China one morning, almost 17 years ago, one of 23 million abandoned or killed baby girl victims of China’s one-child policy. read more » Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
Students raise awareness of harsh drought April 2, 2014 — by Tiffany Zheng California Gov. Jerry Brown made a “crucial step” toward conserving water on March 1 due to the recent drought. Brown signed a bill into law costing approximately $687 million that will be used to expand the usage of recycled water, the recapturing of storm water and an improved organization of underground water storage. read more » School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
School spends $8,000 on new murals April 2, 2014 — by Andrew Jiang and Jihau Yu The school finished painting two Falcon murals in front of the school and by the boys’ locker room at a cost of around $8,000, according to assistant principal Kevin Mount. The newly added murals and signs were finished March 10. The school hired an artist named Steve Hosuce from the company Stoke’s Signs in Santa Cruz. Hosuce has painted murals for other schools in the past. read more » The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast
The Synopsys race against time Students race against the hours to complete their scientific masterpieces April 2, 2014 — by Ariel Liu For many students, going to bed at 3 a.m. is no big deal. For sophomore Meera Rachamallu, who makes it her mission to go to sleep every night at 8 p.m., nothing — not death nor life, not even a strong cup of coffee — warrants staying up this late. Except, that is, Synopsys. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...237238239240241...250260270280290...nextlast