This is the archive for 22 October 2007
LUNCH: Egg Roll with Rice, Milk, Fresh Fruit, Fun Chips
Main Cafeteria Pizza: Hawaiian with Turkey Ham and Pineapple
ACTIVITIES:
Jostens will be here at lunch in Colt Court tomorrow. Order your cap & gown or class ring!
Haunted Homecoming Dance tickets will be sold during both lunches all week in Colt Court. Attire is semi-formal or costume with certain restrictions. Check publicity posters for details.
You may have noticed, this week is Spirit Week! Spirit days for Wednesday - Wild West for Seniors; Greek Day for Juniors; Rock Star Day for Sophomores; and Old School Day for Freshman. Show school & class spirit!
Posted by courier at 05:30 PM. Filed under: Daily Bulletin
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By Sarena Bains, Courier Staff Writer
With a new hip, CST Molly Rudnick
is back doing what she loves.
Sarena Bains/Courier PhotoAfter a major hip operation, Molly Rudnick, one of Logans Campus Security Technicians (CSTs), is back on the job trying to make sure that all of the students at school feel safe.
In her ninth year as a CST, Rudnick, called Molly by students, says she still loves her job.
Each CST has a certain section of the school that they have to supervise and control. She helps in any situations that might occur.
Posted by courier at 07:53 AM. Filed under: News
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By Christine Surna Khayat, Courier Staff Writer
Ever wondered what people look like with no skin? Or with their skulls removed and their brains exposed? Well, neither had I until I heard about
Body Worlds 2 and The Three Pound Gem, at the San Jose Tech museum, an exhibit of real human bodies, with a current special focus on the brain.
The Body World displays reveal how humans look during normal, everyday activities such as playing sports, reading, dancing, and more. The displays focus on specific body systems to further help students, teachers, and the general public alike to learn more in depth about the human body by actually seeing one, rather than a poor model.
Posted by courier at 07:39 AM. Filed under: Features
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By Shashank Bengali
McClatchy Newspapers (MCT)
NAIROBI, Kenya — One of the Bush administration's key foreign policy successes — brokering an end to a 21-year war between northern and southern Sudan — is coming apart even as U.N. and African diplomats step up peace efforts in Sudan's other crisis, the conflict in the western Darfur region.
Signers of the 2005 truce ending Africa's longest civil war have missed every major deadline, and tensions in the south have increased amid reports of a military build-up by both sides. Last week, former southern rebels took the dramatic step of withdrawing from a national unity government, accusing northern officials of blocking the peace agreement and failing to remove thousands of its troops from southern oil fields.
Posted by courier at 06:34 AM. Filed under: News
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From 1915 Genealogical Memoir, published by the Huntington FamilyAssociation:
Collis Potter Huntington, son of William and Elizabeth (Vincent) Huntington; born April 16, 1821, in Harwinton, Conn.; married, first, September 16, 1844, Elizabeth T. Stoddard, of Cornwall, Conn. She died in 1883. He married, second, July 12, 1884, Mrs. Arabella D. Worsham. He died at his camp, Pine Knot, in the Adirondacks, August 13, 1900.
Extract from Hartford Daily Times, August 14, 1915: At his death he was one of the six men who were at the head of the American railroad system, an art connoisseur and patron, a humanitarian and financier.
Read Collis Potter Huntington, Volume One, a 1954 biography by Cerinda W. Evans, free from Questia.
Posted by courier at 12:09 AM. Filed under: In Quotes
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