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This is the archive for 20 April 2010

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

MISCELLANEOUS
For those students that purchase lunch in the Student Union, we now provide cards as proof of payment. You must use your card the same day you purchase your lunch. You cannot use it on another day.

If you receive a free or reduced lunch and are caught selling your lunch card, you will be reported and may lose your free or reduced lunch privileges.

Drop-In homework/tutoring in Room 77. Daily before school 7:30 to 8:30 a.m., Tuesday-Friday 3:30 to 4:30 p.m., and Saturdays 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.







Supreme Commander 2
Reviewed for: Xbox 360
Also available for: Windows PC
From: Gas Powered Games/Square Enix
ESRB Rating: Everyone 10+ (fantasy violence)


By Billy O'Keefe
McClatchy-Tribune (MCT)

The bad news about "Supreme Commander 2" is the same bad news that's held true for every real-time strategy game developers have attempted to migrate from PCs to consoles: If you're playing it this way, you're settling.

The good news? You're settling a lot less this time around.

Contrary to the buggy volcano that erupted when Hellbent Games ported the first "Supreme Commander" to the Xbox 360, "SC2" generally functions as it should. It isn't as pretty as on a top-shelf PC, but it's pretty enough, and outside of the occasional framerate dip, it keeps up on the performance side as well.

From wikipedia:
Gwendolyn Knight (April 20, 1914 – February 18, 2005) was an African American artist from Barbados, in the West Indies.

Gwendolyn Knight painted throughout her life, but did not start seriously exhibiting her work until the 1970s. Her first retrospective when she was nearly eighty years old ("Never Late for Heaven: The Art of Gwen Knight," at the Tacoma Art Museum (2003)).

Visit the Jacob and Gwen Knight Lawrence Visual Resource Center.