and fight for a victory that will earn them bragging rights for a lifetime. what do you do if you run the ball for navy and your dad is one of the greatest running backs for army of all time. i caught up with calvin cash junior to ask him about this family dynamic. i have a very tangible goal to achieve with my father being the great running back at my rival school. it s something that gives me add add motivation when i have that ball in my hand, to get that extra yard or watch. knowing my dad was doing it a couple years ago for the opposition, so i have to do this. where does mom stand in all of this? well, i think she is supposed to be impartial, her husband graduated from army, son is about to graduate from navy. it seems she is a full-on navy fan right now. if anybody looks at her at the game, see what she is wearing, full navy gear head to toe. she goes above and skrond getting her gear ready for her
deputy s body camera. he s been on the job two week and he s already saving lives. rescue and relief teams from australia reaching the shores of vanuatu, which was hit by a powerful cyclone. it s a small south pacific nation that was ravaged by a cyclone called pam over the weekend. there s major damage to homes and other buildings. most of the 29,000 people who live there were able to survive by hiding in schools and churches. at least 11 people were killed. but that number is expected to rise as those crews get there to help out. back here at home, the redskins no more. a school district in new york voting to change its mascot s name. we told you about thits school last week. there was a rival school that boycotted lacrosse games claiming the redskins mascot was too offensive. here s what one outraged parent told us. it s been our mascot for, you know, years. and so to not play us now and
and i don t feel safe in school, i can t concentrate. and having the feeling that you can actually talk to someone in your school and talk to your parents. i think that s one of the main things schools need to focus on is building that trust. and speaking of building trust, i want to go back. krystal, i know you have one other student there who s got a story very similar to the story we heard earlier. i do. yeah, well, i go to information technology high school and my school had an innocent where another a rival school, i guess you can say, came to our school and didn t care who they could have hurt. they just came with knifes and bats and stuff with intentions to hurt people. but actually, i would like to say that the police and our school reacted really well to it, to the point where in a matter of seconds, it was in a matter of minutes, actually, it was pretty much over with and nobody actually got hurt. but the risk was still there. so i think they handled it pretty well.
bullying, but also in this case, of a rival school coming. is there and we are almost out of time here, but is there one thing that we need to take away from this sense of insecurities in schools, that is beyond the question of armed guards for generating safety or a sense of security? it s a tough question. i think there s a correlation between when we ve been talking about the criminalization in schools and the bullying in schools. we can either stop violence by having external solutions, but that creates more of a sense of, i m a criminal, i m going here because i m a criminal, this is an unsafe environment. or we can tray to change the attitudes of the children. we can make it a safe, emotional place for them to go and feel safe. and if we can change the environment, not through armed guards, but by having a sense of camaraderie and having a sense of safety, i think many of these violent acts will stop. my thanks to dennis, tiffany, ross, and israel. up next, a bold new l
well, it happened in 1992, before i was teaching there, but the seniors that year decided to paint the roof of our round school building withmiley face, and it was visible from 40,000 feet, so it was there for the first internet map pictures. got a lot of notoriety for your school. exactly. all right. and if you win iant sis tournament, a lot more fame for your school. john botti from bethesda, maryland. eleventh grade history and english teacher who once set fire to his necktie. that sounds as if you were involved in something in chemistry lab. i was actualching the varsity basketball team, and i, uh, wore the, uh, colors of a rival school on my necktie, and to inspire the team, i pulled it off to set it afire. ah. but that was all that caught fire, right? uh, the other team did as well, but, uh. okay. you re in command of the board right now. you re a shade off the lead and you get to pick our next clue. thank you. could i have skyscraper city for $400, please?