Eye of the Tiger (Issue 7, Volume 13)

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TOP NEWS Features

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Opinion

Entertainment

Sports

Special Olympics gives four RHS students place to be comfortable, loved

Eye of the Tiger board: Lack of student-felt challenge alarming

Selma tackles, honors, humanizes history of 1960s Civil Rights Movement

Tigers step up game to fill Crouch, Delgado, Modeste injury holes

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EYE OF THE TIGER Roseville High School’s student-produced publication

www.eyeofthetigernews.com

facebook.com/eyeofthetigernews

1 Tiger Way, Roseville, CA

JANUARY 26, 2015 | ISSUE 7, VOLUME 13

Student search policy murky This article is the second of a two-part series. See eyeofthetigernews.com for the first installment, published Dec. 15 (‘Admin uses social media to monitor, indict students’). BY MADIE WHALEN

m.whalen@eyeofthetigernews.com

Roseville High School administrators may be trespassing against some students’ stateprotected rights, Eye of the Tiger found during an investigation of administrative monitoring of student social media. These rights include those to deny re-

quests for unreasonable body and property (including cell phones) searches and to avoid self-incrimination by doing so. The issue largely centers around RHS administrators’ interpretation of the concept of “reasonable suspicion,” which harkens back to the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee against “unreasonable searches and seizures” and was upheld in the school setting by the Supreme Court of California in 1985 in People v. William G. Last November, RHS sophomore Jesse Garcia was accused of selling drugs on campus by assistant principal Jon Coleman. While

he was walking back from the bathroom to his second-period class, Garcia was stopped by two campus monitors, who searched him and his backpack and sent him up to the office. When he got there, youth service officer Carlos Cortes conducted another search of his person before sending him to Coleman’s office, where Cortes sat in as Coleman accused Garcia of the crime. According to Garcia, the campus monitors took his phone during their search, and Coleman told him his number appeared in phones  RIGHTS | Page 3

ROBBIE SHORT EYE OF THE TIGER

Though youth service officer Carlos Cortes (above) has the right to search students based on “probable cause,” the application of the loosely defined legal concept to RHS students isn’t always clear.

Soccer may face switch SJS to consider winter season for both genders BY MARINA EFSTATHIU & MIKAYLA STEARNS sports@eyeofthetigernews.com

Both boys and girls soccer seasons will be moved to the winter, if a new proposal being considered by the Sac-Joaquin Section is adopted. If passed, the new schedule would take effect for the 2016-2017 season. According to SJS commissioner Michael Garrison, the decision – which we be determined in April – could go either way since the committee is split fairly evenly on the matter. Roseville High School will consult with administration and school coaches before deciding their stance on the subject. “When we talk about it, we will include the coaches to get their opinion.” assistant principal in charge of athletics Jason Wilson said. According to Wilson, the school wants to make sure they think about all the options, because this change would make a huge impact on the school.

LEAD THE WAY

 SOCCER | Page 11

Engineering, biomedical programs coming to RHS BY GEORGE HUGHES

g.hughes@eyeofthetigernews.com

I

n the spring term of next year, Roseville High School will implement a new program centered on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) curricula, called Project Lead The Way. These classes will be available to sophomores, juniors and seniors as elective classes. PLTW offers three branches of learning at the high school level: Engineering, Biomedical Science and Computer Science. Each

branch is taught at a beginner level, an intermediate level and an advanced level. RHS science teachers John Fuller and Erin Granucci will teach two of these three branches at RHS next year. Fuller will manage a beginner’s level engineering class and Granucci will manage a beginner’s level biomedical class. Each of these classes will involve many  PLTW | Page 2

ROBBIE SHORT EYE OF THE TIGER

Above, Antelope High School students work in their Project Lead The Way Engineering (top) and Biomedical Sciences classes. RHS science teachers John Fuller and Erin Granucci will introduce both courses at RHS next year.

School to make use of EOS data

Survey results show gaps to be smaller than expected BY SEIÉNNA PAPINI

s.papini@eyeofthetigernews.com

Local officers to crack down Extra enforcement on permit parking begins next week BY SAM MAILEY

s.mailey@eyeofthetigernews.com

ROBBIE SHORT EYE OF THE TIGER

Starting next week, students and parents who park and idle illegally in designated areas around Roseville High School without permits will be subject to a renewed crackdown by the Roseville Police Department. This effort comes after a spike of complaints from local residents and will affect students who park during school and parents who park in permit areas while they wait to pick up their students. The areas affected

include those along Campo St., Alta Vista Drive and surrounding streets, as well as the staff parking lot. Youth service officer Carlos Cortes announced the effort last week in an email to RHS staff. He said most of the complaints have come from residents in the neighborhoods surrounding RHS during the heavy traffic times just before and after school. Cortes believes the size of the current freshman class – which is the largest in RHS’ history – has contributed to the increase in complaints. “The majority of the complaints this year have come because, obviously, there’s more  PARKING | Page 2

After identifying the gap between students of varying economic and ethnic backgrounds, Roseville Joint Union High School District – in partnership with Equal Opportunity Schools (EOS) – hopes to move forward in their plan to eliminate the difference. Last semester, EOS helped administer a survey at Roseville High School to all administrators, 96 percent of staff members and 91 percent of students. This survey was then used to get a grasp on what exactly the students think about the AP courses at RHS, as well as to offer insight as to why some students were not taking AP courses. After examining the EOS data, RHS admin learned that the gap was not as significant as they thought.  EOS | Page 3

INSIDE: Upcoming Events......2 | News......2-3 | Español......4 | Features......5-6 | Opinion......7-8 | Entertainment......9-10 | Sports......11-12 | Read more at eyeofthetigernews.com.


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