To help you figure things out, there is a Scoop Admin Guide which can hopefully answer most of your questions.
Some tips:
Most of the layout is changed in "Blocks", found in the admin tools menu
Features can be turned on and off, and configured, in "Site Controls" in the admin tools menu
Stories have an "edit" link right beside the "Full Story" link on an index page, and right beside the "Post a Comment" link on the full story page. They can also be edited by clicking the story title in the "Story List" admin tool
Boxes are what allow you to write new features for Scoop; they require a knowledge of the perl programming language to work with effectively, although you can often make small changes without knowing much perl. If you would like a feature added but cannot program it yourself, ScoopHost does custom Scoop programming as one of its services.
If you aren't sure where to look for a particular feature or piece of display, try the "Search Admin Tools" link in the admin tools menu.
You most likely associate it with the military making equipment and personnel less visible to detection methods.
But did you know that this is also a tactic used in the business world?
And if you haven't caught it already, our governor is a business guy and likes to adopt business methodology wherever he can to accomplish his agenda. Especially when he feels that his agenda won't go over very well with the people he purportedly serves.
Phil Letten, a Howell resident who has never met McDowell, started a "Support Jay McDowell" page on Facebook. There are about 440 members of the group, and more than 30 people plan to attend Monday night's school board meeting, Letten said.
"I just found it outrageous and appalling," Letten said of the district's response to the incident. "People in authority are perpetuating a culture of bullying, fear and violence."
Precisely. So, who is this Phil Letten of Howell that is perpetrating bullying in our public schools?