Ok. Your numbers don't look too bad at all, but we really need that Calcium hardness reading. I suspect that maybe using cal-hypo exclusively for an extended period of time may have built up your calcium level quite a bit and that could possibly be the reason for your cloudy water. That may or may not be true. Also, the cal-hypo itself can cause cloudy water. I'd suggest no more cal-hypo and just use bleach. Glad you bought some.

Since your pool is still cloudy, I'm going to suggest that you go ahead and shock the pool with bleach. With a cya reading of 50, (which is a good level, by the way) you will need to shock up to a cl level of 15 and try and hold it there for a bit. Try and test a couple of times today and each time, add enough bleach to get the cl back up to 15. Do this sometime during the day today and then this evening when the sun is off the pool. Then, in the morning before the sun is on the pool, test again and see if you lost any chlorine overnight. If you lose no more than 1ppm from sundown to sunup, then it will tell us that you water probably doesn't contain any algae and you should be able to let the cl level drift down. With cya of 50, you'll want to always keep your chlorine between 3-5 ppm. If you go below 3, you'll risk another algae bloom.

In a 10,000 gallon pool, each quart of 6% bleach will raise the cl level by 1.5ppm.

Another thing that could be clouding your water is just the dead algae from your previous algae bloom that just needs to filter out. Continue running your pump/filter 24/7 while clearing your pool.

Another thing you can do that may help is to buy some skimmer socks to help catch the small particulate in the water. You may also want to try adding a little DE to your sand filter. Some of us do that and it helps. You can read about that here:

http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthread.php?t=3742

I've given you several things to try. Keep us posted how it is going and also repost with your calcium hardness reading.