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This is the archive for 24 March 2009

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

LUNCH
Salsa Bar at the Creations booth! Pizza, Chinese, grill items such as burgers & chicken strips, deli sandwiches and, of course, burritos!

ACTIVITY
Attn. Students: Cheerleading tryouts will be held in May. Anyone who wishes to try out must have and maintain a 2.0 GPA with no F’s.

MISCELLANEOUS
2 New community service opportunities available. Union City Little League Baseball and Free the Trees both need volunteers. Pick up flyers in the Career Center.

"Watchmen: The End Is Nigh"
(Xbox 360, PlayStation 3)
What's Hot: Killer graphics tech
What's Not: Lame voice-acting;
Levels are too long and unvaried;
Lack of depth
The Verdict: Fry It


By Evan Narcisse
Crispy Gamer (crispygamer.com) (MCT)

Of all the comics properties that seem least likely to translate to videogames, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' thoughtful masterpiece of superhero deconstruction, "Watchmen," leads the pack. But, in the Age of the Inevitable Tie-In, all fans of beloved creations can do is grit their teeth when favorite comics, books or television shows get plucked out of their native soil and placed into the hands of game developers and publishers.

Now, Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and developer Deadline Studios offer "Watchmen: The End Is Nigh" -- a $20 digital release connected to Zack Snyder's big-budget adaptation of "Watchmen." What will fans who want to take control of Rorschach and Nite Owl get in the downloadable title?

By Tawab Fakhri, Courier Staff Writer

Technology grows more advanced everyday. This progress is seen everywhere from our homes to our cell-phones- especially our cell phones. With models like Apple’s iPhone, or Verizon’s Voyager, people have become more connected than ever. With a simple connection to a hotspot or router, the internet can be at one's fingertips easily. However this freedom dies instantly when students step onto Logan's campus, which lacks a wi-fi connection for students and staff.
From wikipedia:
George Francis Train (March 24, 1829 – January 5, 1904) was a businessman, author, and an eccentric figure in American history.

Train was born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1829. At the age of four he was orphaned in New Orleans after a yellow fever plague killed his family. He was raised by his strict Methodist grandparents in Boston, who hoped he would become a minister.




Read My Life in Many States and in Foreign Lands by George Francis Train, free from googlebooks.com.