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Valentine
themes raise money for clubs
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In an e-mail after the auction,
Kuanda said that the highest bid was $133 for
VVC Officer Jacquel. In all, the auction raised
$830, Kuanda said. Club members will use the money
for leadership training and financing community
events.
Meetings for the Black Student
Union are at noon Tuesdays in the SAC's Quiet
Room. The club's adviser is Jeffrey Holmes, director
of Disabled Students' Programs and Services.
At the other end of the SAC,
tickets for a raffle were being sold by the Future
Teachers of America. The raffle winners each received
a big basket of Valentine goodies.
By the end of the day, the
club had raised $400 to buy supplies for the Teaching-Learning
Center's June tech camp. The camp's purpose is
to teach 15 children leaving fifth grade how to
use handheld computers.
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Fifteen times every weekday up to 9:30 p.m.,
four Victor Valley Transit buses come to the college
to take students to and from their campus activities.
As reported by the Victor Valley Transit Authority,
49 percent of all transit bus riders are students.
Students use public transportation
to get to and from classes, some as far away as
Lucerne Valley and Wrightwood. The VVTA provides
more than a million rides a year and this opens
parking spaces on campus for other students.
For information, such as transit
services for the disabled, call the VVTA at 948-3030.
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