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OF, BY AND FOR THE CHILDREN : ‘Kidquiz’ finals on KCBS drive home the benefits of doing all your homework
Hey, kid, want to be on TV? That’s right, you. We bet you’ve always wanted to be a household name. You do? All right then, guess what you have to do to get on television? No, you don’t necessarily have to be beautiful or handsome, you don’t have to play sports or electric guitar. You just have to do your homework!
Check out the whiz kids on Kidquiz Championship Finals and you’ll see what we mean. Once just ordinary-albeit smart-sixth graders from Eliot Middle School in Altadena and Murchison Elementary School in Los Angeles, these students have parlayed their grasp of math, current events and literature into a shot at the big time. The winning team during the championship round will win a MacIntosh computer and a set of encyclopedias for its school. The show is hosted by KCBS news anchor Maclovio Perez, who probably did his homework when he was a kid, too.
“Kidquiz Championship Finals,” Saturday at 6:30 a.m. KCBS. For 11- to 13-year-olds.
MORE KIDS’ SHOWS
Born Free (Sunday at 6 a.m. and Friday at 10 a.m. Showtime) is a classic family movie about a lion cub named Elsa, who is raised as a pet in Africa. For all ages.
“People With Disabilities” (Monday at 4 p.m. Showtime) is an episode of Kids-TV in which D.J. Macaw dons a blindfold for a day to see what it is like to be blind. For 5- to 11-year-olds.
“Lies of the Heart” is the title of a new CBS Schoolbreak Special (Tuesday at 3 p.m. CBS) about a high-school senior who is responsible for a hit-and-run accident involving a teen-ager’s father. For 13- to 17-year-olds.
The Mind’s Eye: The Experience of Learning (Tuesday at 8 p.m. the Disney Channel) is a documentary that explores the physical and emotional effects of learning disabilities. For parents.
Legend of the Emerald Princess (Thursday at 7:30 p.m. the Disney Channel) is based on the classic Russian fairy tale about a princess who resists attempts At the end of the first round of “KidQuiz,” a locally produced children’s television program, teams representing the sixth graders of Carson’s Ambler Avenue Magnet School and Arleta’s Canterbury Avenue Magnet School were tied with 40 points each. As the second round began, emotions were high and the mood was tense. It was then that Canterbury team captain Dilip Ramji made his move. Dilip was quick on the buzzer as he confidently identified the animal on the monitor screen as a llama. Then it was Dilip again, identifying the photograph of baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth. And it was Dilip once more telling “KidQuiz” host Maclovio Perez that the photograph on the screen was an abacus before Perez had a chance to read the entire question. Dilip’s momentum continued as he beat out the Ambler team and his own teammates with his correct identification of Diane Sawyer as the first woman reporter to be a regular on the CBS television program “60 Minutes.” Record Winning Score When the Saturday morning taping of the program (to be shown on KCBS Channel 2 at 6:30 a.m. May 11) was completed, Canterbury had racked up 460 points, the highest winning score in the short history of “KidQuiz.” Ambler posted a more than respectable showing of 200 points. Canterbury will be invited back to participate in the “playoffs” to win a prize for the school. As classmates ran up to the stage to congratulate both teams, Canterbury’s Matt Klein gave teammate Gaby Calzadillas a “high-five” hand slap and the television studio took on the air of an athletic field filled with adoring fans congratulating their victorious heroes. This linking of academic achievement and team competition is becoming more commonplace in public education as teachers and administrators look for ways to give academic high achievers the same rewards and prestige as athletes. ‘Mental Agility’ Ignored “Educators have grown uncomfortable with the fact that a school U.S. House district for Texas "TX-27" redirects here. The term may also refer to Texas State Highway 27. Not to be confused with Texas's 27th House of Representatives district. Texas's 27th congressional district of the United States House of Representatives covers the coastal bend of Texas' Gulf Coast consisting of Corpus Christi and Victoria up to Bastrop County near Austin. Its current representative is Republican Michael Cloud. Cloud was elected to the district in a special election on June 30, 2018, to replace former Republican representative Blake Farenthold, who had resigned on April 6. The 27th district was created as a result of the redistricting cycle after the 1980 census. The district is slightly less than 50% Hispanic, down from the 70% Hispanic population in the 2002–2010 cycles when the district reached from Corpus Christi to Brownsville. In August 2017, a panel of federal judges ruled that the 27th district is unconstitutional, arguing that it displaces a Hispanic-opportunity district. However, the United States Supreme Court later reversed the ruling, pronouncing the district constitutional in Abbott v. Perez. For the 118th and successive Congresses (based on redistricting following the 2020 census), the district contains all or portions of the following counties and communities: AransasCounty(6) BastropCounty(7) BeeCounty(9) CaldwellCounty(7) CalhounCounty(6) DeWittCounty(4) GoliadCounty(1) GonzalesCounty(4) JacksonCoun .TV Show Shines Light on Academic Achievement
Texas's 27th congressional district
Recent election results from statewide races
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