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This is the archive for 24 October 2006

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

By Matt DiPietro, Courier Staff Writer

Matt DiPietro, #5 for the James Logan Varsity football team,is one of the team captains, and the team's quarterback. He's writing a weekly diary of his experiences, exclusively for The Courier

At the beginning of the game there was not as much excitement as usual. Most of the players were thinking about how big the next game against Irvington is. When the game started the defense went on the field and stopped Kennedy. Our defense played very well in this game. The key players on defense were Josh Neal who had four interceptions, Fenuki Foketi who had big hits and an interception, and Nathanial Lealao.

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Matt DiPietro
ACTIVITIES:
Jostens will be here all day today! It is minimum day, so they will be here at lunch and after school in Colt Court!!

The girl frosh/soph cross country team placed 2nd in the Mariner Invitational. Great job to Victoria Humphrey, Mason Hartwell, Donnise Powell, and Pablo Moreno, who each medaled.

By Lisa M. Krieger
San Jose Mercury News (MCT)

PALO ALTO, Calif. ‚ Like a roll of the dice or a sip of bourbon, the glow of the computer screen has an irresistible and dangerous allure to many people, according to a new nationwide study by Stanford University.



The Seattle Times
(MCT)

SEATTLE — Mozilla will release the latest version of its browser, Firefox 2, today, the company said Friday.


The Courier recommends Firefox for viewing The Courier.

By Billy O'Keefe
McClatchy-Tribune News Service (MCT)

KILLZONE: LIBERATION
For: PSP
From: Guerilla Games/Sony
ESRB Rating: Teen


Problem: You made a first-person shooter named "Killzone" on the Playstation 2. People really liked it. You want to make more "Killzones" on more systems. But your next destination, the PSP, handles first-person games about as well as the Washington Generals handle the Harlem Globetrotters.

Solution? Make a "Killzone" game _ but don't make an FPS.

killzone.jpg

James Logan Principal Don Montoya threatened to end the popular "one-minute" bell next week unless students get to class on time more often.

"If tardies don't go down far enough, the one-minute bell goes away," he said via the school's public address system Monday morning