Math: Refresher pg. 121 SAT 5-9 pg. 124 SAT 6-10 pg. 126 1-6
History: Chapter 2 Chap. Assessment
Library books due sept. 21st
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Bartlett Police Search for BBQ Bandits
Police are looking for two men who held up the Pig N Whistle restaurant Saturday night. The men, armed with a sawed-off shotgun, went into the restaurant in Bartlett a few minutes after closing time, robbing the employees and forcing them into the walk-in coolers. They took the cash from the registers and got away, but not before their vehicle was seen by a man who had arrived to pick his daughter up from work. The men are described as 6 ft. tall, one wearing a light blue bandana over his face and a red t-shirt. The other was wearing a dark blue t-shirt and a red bandana over his face. If you have any information, call Bartlett Crimestoppers at 382-MONY.
Cloned Pandas?
Maybe we can all get one for Christmas.KRT Wire | 08/30/2004 | China announces gene bank in effort to clone pandas
Monday, August 30, 2004
Homework assigned today
Math: pre-alg correct test
Refresher pg. 113 DT 1-20 evens pg. 116 DT 1-20 evens
Civics: Party platform due Wednesday
Writing: Creation story due Thursday
Latin Test Thursday
Refresher pg. 113 DT 1-20 evens pg. 116 DT 1-20 evens
Civics: Party platform due Wednesday
Writing: Creation story due Thursday
Latin Test Thursday
Friday, August 27, 2004
Homework
Math due Monday: Refresher SAT pg. 103 #s 1-6 Pre-alg worksheets
History: Chapter two sec 1 & 2 due Tuesday
Little Tree due Wednesday
final draft of "Who am I" essay due Monday
History: Chapter two sec 1 & 2 due Tuesday
Little Tree due Wednesday
final draft of "Who am I" essay due Monday
Have no fear, Super earth is here!
if you like astronomy then this is for you MSNBC - �Super Earth� found circling nearby star
Men wired for REVENGE!
Read this story or vengeance will be mine- CBC News: Scans show brain hard-wired for sweet revenge
Thursday, August 26, 2004
Wednesday, August 25, 2004
Tuesday, August 24, 2004
Homework assigned today
History: Chapter 1 sec. 1 & 2 due Thursday.
Math: Refresher Math pg. 60 8-34 evens
Pre-algebra p. 41 RE 4-9 pg. 49 16-21 37,38.
Math: Refresher Math pg. 60 8-34 evens
Pre-algebra p. 41 RE 4-9 pg. 49 16-21 37,38.
Bodies of WWI Austrian Soldiers Found in Glacier
Soldiers found chilling out in a glacier
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040823/wl_nm/life_italy_mummies_dc_1
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040823/wl_nm/life_italy_mummies_dc_1
Monday, August 23, 2004
Homework assigned today
"Who am I" essay due Wednesday the 25th
First 39 pages of little tree due Wednesday Sept 1st
Math: Refresher Mathmatics pg. 37 DT #'s 1-10 Pre Algebra pg. 30 1-48 left col. Due Tommorrow
First 39 pages of little tree due Wednesday Sept 1st
Math: Refresher Mathmatics pg. 37 DT #'s 1-10 Pre Algebra pg. 30 1-48 left col. Due Tommorrow
Four airport screeners charged with stealing from bags
"These guy's are making sure everyone packs light" http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/ny-bc-ny--screeners-theft0811aug11,0,7724276.story?coll=ny-ap-regional-wire
Run for your life! There are sharks in the river!
This story interested all the swimmers in our class
Sharks, as the new movie "Open Water" shows, are the predators of the deep, lurking beneath the high seas. So it's a little strange to hear they could also be lurking a little closer to home.
Like in the Mississippi River. It's possible - although unlikely - that sharks could be swimming around in the Big Muddy. One species, called the bull shark, is capable of living in fresh water.
"It's very realistic. It's not something that probably happens with a lot of regularity," said Glenn Parsons, a shark expert and professor of biology at Ole Miss. "They probably move up into the Mississippi certainly with more regularity than we are aware of." In September 1937, two fishermen near Alton, Ill. - 1,400 miles north of the Gulf of Mexico - pulled a 5-foot-long, 84-pound bull shark from their nets. Bull sharks have been found hundreds of miles up the Amazon; in Lake Nicaragua, a freshwater lake in Central America; and 160 miles up the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana, among other spots, Parsons said. In 1916, in one of the country's most famous shark attacks, two boys were killed and another seriously injured while swimming in Matawan Creek, a small tributary - 40 feet wide at its biggest point - in New Jersey several miles from the sea. Although a great white has often been blamed in those attacks, it's considered likely that a bull shark killed the boys. Still, experts say you shouldn't get too worked up about the possibility of spotting a dorsal fin on the Mississippi. "If you think of the odds, you have a better chance of winning the lottery," said Jack Grubaugh, an associate professor of biology at the University of Memphis. "This is like the chimpanzee writing 'Hamlet.' "
- Jody Callahan: 529-6531
Sharks, as the new movie "Open Water" shows, are the predators of the deep, lurking beneath the high seas. So it's a little strange to hear they could also be lurking a little closer to home.
Like in the Mississippi River. It's possible - although unlikely - that sharks could be swimming around in the Big Muddy. One species, called the bull shark, is capable of living in fresh water.
"It's very realistic. It's not something that probably happens with a lot of regularity," said Glenn Parsons, a shark expert and professor of biology at Ole Miss. "They probably move up into the Mississippi certainly with more regularity than we are aware of." In September 1937, two fishermen near Alton, Ill. - 1,400 miles north of the Gulf of Mexico - pulled a 5-foot-long, 84-pound bull shark from their nets. Bull sharks have been found hundreds of miles up the Amazon; in Lake Nicaragua, a freshwater lake in Central America; and 160 miles up the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana, among other spots, Parsons said. In 1916, in one of the country's most famous shark attacks, two boys were killed and another seriously injured while swimming in Matawan Creek, a small tributary - 40 feet wide at its biggest point - in New Jersey several miles from the sea. Although a great white has often been blamed in those attacks, it's considered likely that a bull shark killed the boys. Still, experts say you shouldn't get too worked up about the possibility of spotting a dorsal fin on the Mississippi. "If you think of the odds, you have a better chance of winning the lottery," said Jack Grubaugh, an associate professor of biology at the University of Memphis. "This is like the chimpanzee writing 'Hamlet.' "
- Jody Callahan: 529-6531
Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Monday, August 02, 2004
Washington and N.Y. Put on Alert
A new terror alert puts cities on edge Yahoo! News - Washington and N.Y. Put on Alert
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Shane stays!