Advocating for all: A day in the life of Los Altos High School’s Cristy Dawson
Town Crier reporter Traci Newell shadowed Los Altos High School Assistant Principal Cristy Dawson Jan. 24. Following is her account of a day in the life of Dawson.
New Safeway, double in size, clears final hurdle
More construction is coming to First Street, but not in the form of a streetscape project.
A proposal to build a two-story, 45,265-square-foot Safeway at 160 First St. received its final nod of approval Jan. 24 when the Los Altos City Council voted in favor of the project that will replace the existing 45-year-old grocery store.
Panthers race past Priory
The Pinewood School boys basketball team has proven nearly impossible to keep up with this season. Opponents are usually outmanned, outrun and tired out by the league-leading Panthers.
That certainly was the case Friday night, when host Pinewood overwhelmed Woodside Priory 81-38. The Panthers outscored Priory 34-10 in the first quarter and led by so many points in the fourth that the game went to a running clock.
Closure for family members of pilot shot down during World War II
The story began in a farmer’s field in Germany. It is an amazing odyssey, inspired by a woman’s 100th birthday, impacted by a vacation visit to an Air Force museum in Georgia and furthered by spots on the nightly news.
It’s a story about a soldier finding his way home.
While discussing the responsibilities of county government with members of the Silicon Valley Association of Realtors last month, Santa Clara County Supervisor Liz Kniss said high-quality schools continue to draw homebuyers to the area.
“Schools are the bottom line of every community,” said Kniss, who represents District 5, which includes Los Altos, Los Altos Hills and Mountain View.
Board business: Budgets, Bullis Charter School and the county
Los Altos School District officials are crafting a preliminary budget for 2012-2013 to present to the board of trustees Monday.
After reviewing Gov. Jerry Brown’s education budget proposal, Randy Kenyon, assistant superintendent for business services, said at the Jan. 24 board meeting that the district clearly faces another year of fiscal uncertainty.
Skewer hearts for your honey
No one ever claimed February had to be all about sweets and champagne – animal slaughter and dripping hunks of meat resonate with the alt-romantics among us. We know almost nothing about the early Christian martyr for whom many greeting-card legends have been spun. But in the spirit of bloody persecution, consider skewering a lamb heart in honor of St. Valentine.
Offal recipes derive from more than just morbid humor – eating an animal’s lesser-known bits is economical, prevents waste and provides a chance to flex new kitchen skills.
In India, one can more often than not identify another’s religion by his or her dress. Sikh males sport turbans, well-kept beards and silver bracelets. Muslim women wear head coverings for varying degrees of modesty, depending on local traditions of orthodoxy, from simple scarves to full-body burqas with only a slit to see through. Hindus, male and female, will often wear makeup on the forehead to identify their sect. Certain members of the Jain religion and some Hindu hermits of the sadhu sect wear nothing at all.
In North American Jewish communities, Hassidic males identify their degree of orthodoxy by the manner in which they manage their haircut and beard and by the type of hat they wear. Amish communities wear distinctive handmade clothing. Black Muslim members of the Nation of Islam can be identified by their bow ties for men or their sashes for women.
"Believing the Lie" challenges George fans
Elizabeth George’s latest mystery, “Believing the Lie” (Dutton Adult, 2012), has shot to No. 1 on The New York Times’ and Bay Area Best-Sellers’ fiction lists, an impressive feat given that it was published Jan. 10.
Friendship Force
Los Altos residents Dee and Dave Gustavson shared stories of the lukewarm response they received when they attempted to start a Friendship Force International chapter in Iceland last August.
President Jimmy Carter introduced the Friendship Force organization in 1977 to promote grassroots diplomacy – earning the group a Nobel Peace Prize nomination for encouraging international understanding. The non-profit cultural exchange program arranges home stays, which allow participants to experience how citizens in other countries live.
| Tue, Feb 7th, @7:00am - 08:00 Weekly meditation practice group |
| Tue, Feb 7th, @8:00am - 05:00 Oola Zumba |
| Tue, Feb 7th, @12:00pm - 01:30 Los Altos Kiwanis Club |
| Tue, Feb 7th, @6:30pm - 07:00 Wellness classes |
| Tue, Feb 7th, @7:15pm - 08:15 Mid-Peninsula Widows and Widowers Association |
| Tue, Feb 7th, @7:30pm - 08:30 American Fuchsia Society, Santa Clara Valley |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @8:00am - 09:30 Jazz-Adults & Teens |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @8:30am - 09:30 Jacki’s Strong Step |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @10:00am - 02:00 Moffett Field Historical Society Museum |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @10:30am - 11:30 Moving On |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @12:00pm - 04:00 Computer History Museum |
| Wed, Feb 8th, @5:30pm - 06:30 El Camino YMCA off-site aerobics |