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Features
Orienteering leads players to hidden treasures (11/07)
Written by Logan Weir   
    Want to find some treasure? Well then forget about X marking the spot and pick up a Global Positioning System. It's the ultimate tool in a new, high-tech and worldwide treasure hunt called Geocaching.
 
Players perform wacky, creative tasks with other crazy San Franciscans (11/07)
Written by Ana Billingsley and Camille Smyth   
    You might have seen strangers super-gluing objects to the sidewalk, sensed them taking photos of your butt or observed them disguising themselves as garbage cans. These strangers aren’t just acting crazy – they're also playing the city’s newest online game, SFZero (www.sf0.org).
 
Friendly local markets offer green greens (11/07)
Written by Rachel Hwang   

     Imagine shopping for groceries without the hum of florescent lights overhead. No familiar chill of the blasting air conditioner. No wax-coated apples and no crates of green-tinged oranges shipped from across the country or even the globe.
      

 
Three towns, three Lowells, three ways of life (10/07)
Written by Lydia O’Connor and Angel Au-Yeung   
We’ve all heard the old superstition that somewhere, thousands of miles away, lives our yet-to-be-encountered twin — a mysterious double who wanders the face of the earth, unbeknownst to us. Well, high schools have twins too — triplets apparently — and ours live 3900 and 2313 miles away, to be precise.
 
Trend setting punk rock album reissued (10/07)
Written by Arron Light and Dylan McHugh   
On Oct. 28, 1977, cacophony screamed from record players. This noise created a worldwide public outcry and was described by Rolling Stone as "two subway trains crashing together under 40 feet of mud.” The source of this noise was Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols.

Now, on Oct. 28, 2007, EMI will reissue this classic album of raw sound and sweat on re-mastered vinyl, packaged as it was 30 years ago. It will come with the song “Submission” on a smaller 7” vinyl, exactly how it was released in 1977 due to a printing error that accidentally took the song off the full-length album.

 
Teachers jump, slam, faceplant their way into victory (5/07)
Written by Maahum Chaudhry   
Faculty members narrowly defeated student volleyball players in a thrilling May 18 game which was filled with girls clad in spandex shorts and the smell of middle-aged sweat.

 
Talkin’ Trash (5/07)
Written by Eliza Hidalgo and Soraya Okuda   
Molding banana peels, festering apples and squirming earthworms: Your lunch is undergoing transformation in the school recycling program’s compost bins.

 
Albums for Summer (5/07)
Written by Elena Chin   
It’s time for summer. Long hours of doing absolutely nothing.
 
Calculus classes discover secrets of the Rubik’s cube (5/07)
Written by Angela M. Chen   
Known as the fastest selling toy in the world and the most popular puzzle in history, the Rubik’s cube is making its annual grand entrance into math teacher Karl Hoffman’s Advanced Placement Calculus BC class, where his students are learning the perplexing mathematical theories behind the cube.
 
Cancelled trip disappoints physics students (5/07)
Written by Liana Huang   
Physics teachers changed their traditional field trip destination after the administration determined that the proposed date of the trip was too close to senior finals, which will begin on June 1.
 
An Uncertain Fate: A senior's account of undocumented immigrant life (5/07)
Written by Anonymous, as told to Connie Chung   
I consider myself an American, but the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (formerly Immigration and Naturalization Services) does not.
 
The Vinyl Review (5/07)
Written by Aaron Light   
In this world of constant technological improvement, buying music has become an impersonal affair.
 
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