Tuesday July 26, 2011
Volume CXXXI Issue 5
Mission Complete
Richard Weakley Photo Editor
“Mission complete, Houston. After serving the world for over 30 years, the space shuttle has earned its place in history. It’s come to a final stop.” Those were the words radioed to Mission Control in Houston by STS-135 Commander Christopher Ferguson after landing and wheel stop of the Space Shuttle Atlantis on the Kennedy Space Center’s runway 15 at 5:57 a.m. EDT concluding the 12 day long International Space
Station (ISS) assembly flight. Astronaut Barry “Butch” Wilmore acknowledged the completion of the mission from Mission Control in Houston. “We copy your wheels stopped, and we’ll take this opportunity to congratulate you, Atlantis, as well as the thousands of passionate individuals across this great, space-faring nation who truly empower this incredible spacecraft, which for three decades has inspired millions around the globe.” STS-135 was the 37th and final ISS assembly mission bringing the orbiting complex to one hundred percent com-
pletion of pressurized volume weighing in at 901,745 pounds. The crew of Atlantis brought 30,576 pounds of hardware to the ISS. The nearly flawless execution of the STS-135 mission by the ‘Final Four’ space shuttle astronauts concluded the 30 year long space shuttle program. Since the first shuttle flight in the 1981, the five orbiters have a combined total of 542,398,878 miles in space over 135 missions carrying 355 individuals. Of the 133 landings, 78 landings have been at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, 54 at Edwards Air
Force Base in California and one landing at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The space shuttle program has had a storied history of triumphs and successes. The space shuttle has exceeded its design expectations by surpassing the original mission of launching, repairing and recovering satellites by acting as an orbiting science laboratory with Spacelab, assembly platform for the ISS and delivery vehicle for supplies and crew members to the ISS and MIR space stations. Highlights also include Atlantis launching the Galileo spacecraft in 1989 to
study Jupiter and completing Hubble Servicing Mission 4 in 2009, the last mission to service and upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope. The space shuttle program has also had its dark times through which the many dedicated men and women at NASA and its contractors have persevered through to continue to make the Space Shuttle a shining beacon of science, technology and space exploration. The fourteen shuttle crewmembers that lost their lives in the Challenger and Columbia disasters will always be remembered for their bravery and con-
tributions to the space shuttle program. Today, several space vehicles are being designed by Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Sierra Nevada and SpaceX to possibly fill the role of lofting astronauts into Earth orbit and beyond. No matter which design is chosen, the space shuttle will always have its place in history. In the words of Commander Ferguson, “The space shuttle has changed the way we view the world and it’s changed the way we view our universe. There are a lot of emotions today, but one thing is indisputable -- America’s not going to stop exploring.”
RICHARD WEAKLEY/AVION
Campus . . . . . . . . . . A2 Student Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . A4 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A5 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A6
Upgrades & new ERAU Teams improvements in sweep FAA runway the student village challenge
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Stu. Life A3
Harry Potter 7 Part 2: The inevitable end of a saga PHOTO COURTESY WARNER BROS PICTURES
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Campus
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Julliet Okeke
Staff Reporter During the summer, a lot of construction and upgrading projects are being made to better the living conditions of ERAU students on campus. This summer, the housing and residence life department has embarked on implementing some changes in the following halls: Doolittle, O’Connor, Chanute and McKay. Also some changes are being made around the student village circle. O’Connor hall in the student village is being outfitted with stoves to enable students to prepare their own meals. Also, over the range
microwaves are being put in place as well in that hall. A new option for students who want to live in private rooms with full sized beds in the hall has also been approved. The student village circle fire lane area has also been repainted and redesigned for safety. Einstein’s cafeteria in the village is also being refreshed with a larger menu as a result of feedback from the students. Floor replacements have also been done in Stimpson hall. Kristen Getka, Associate Director of Housing and Residence life said that most of the planned changes depend on the financing received from the university. A 1.7 million dollar window replacement project is
now taking place in the student village. The windows now are impact resistant; this allows lighting and also makes the room cooler Changes in the Doolittle hall started last year with the repainting of the walls and the replacement of the floors. The changes being made inside Doolittle is as a result of the last year contract of .5 million dollar being finalized. According to Tom Hilgers, the Director of housing and Residence life, in 2005, upgrades where done in McKay hall. The floors, toilets and bathrooms were replaced, new railings were also put in place, and the window units were also changed. Refrigerators were also replaced from the small
Time is running out.... Orientation Issue Deadlines are Around the corner!! Advertising Deadline: August 1, 2011 Article Deadline: August 9, 2011
Contact the Avion ofce for more information at: Phone: (386)226-6049 E-mail: theavion@gmail.com
Executive Board Editor-in-Chief ............................ Peter Tan Managing Editor ............. Alena Thompson News Editor ............................... Peter Tan Business Manager .................... May Chan Photography Editor ........ Richard Weakley Advertising Manager ........ Ainsley Robson
Staff Advisor Aaron Clevenger, Director of Student Activities and Campus Events
Editorial Staff Front Page Editor ...................... Peter Tan Campus Editor ............... Alena Thompson Student Life Editor.......... Richard Weakley Entertainment ............... Hannah Langhorn Comics Editor ................. Tilford Mansfield Copy Editor....................... Alena Thomson
Contact Information Main Phone........................(386) 226-6049 Advertising Manager..........(386) 226-7697 Fax Number.......................(386) 226-6727 E-mail.......................theavion@gmail.com Website....................avionnewspaper.com
The Avion is produced weekly during the fall and spring term, and bi-weekly during summer terms. The Avion is produced by a volunteer student staff. Student editors make all content, business and editorial decisions. The editorial opinions expressed in The Avion are solely the opinion of the undersigned writer(s), and not those of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, the Student Government Association, the staff of The Avion, or the student body. Letters appearing in The Avion are those of the writer, identified at the end of the letter. Opinions expressed in the “Student Government” and “Student Life” sections are those of the identified writer. Letters may be submitted to The Avion for publication, provided they are not lewd, obscene or libelous. Letter writers must confine themselves to less than 800 words. Letters may be edited for brevity and formatted to newspaper guidelines. All letters must be signed. Names may be withheld at the discretion of the Editor-in-Chief. The Avion is an open forum for student expression. The Avion is a division of the Student Government Association. The Avion is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press. The costs of this publication are paid by the Student Government Association and through advertising fees. The Avion distributes one free copy per person. Additional copies are $0.75. Theft of newspapers is a crime, and is subject to prosecution and Embry-Riddle judicial action. This newspaper and its contents are protected by United States copyright law. No portion of this publication may be reproduced, in print or electronically, without the expressed written consent of The Avion. Correspondence may be addressed to: The Avion Newspaper, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, 600 S. Clyde Morris Blvd., Daytona Beach, Florida 32114. Physical office: John Paul Riddle Student Center, Room 110. Phone: (386) 226-6049. Fax: (386) 226-6727. E-mail: theavion@gmail.com.
to big ones. This year, the McKay hall exterior is being repainted In Chanute, the off-campus hall the doors are being replaced from wooden doors to metal door frames so as to enhance the safety of the students. The windows in Chanute were made with impact resistant panes to make the room cooler and also enhance safety. A study lounge is being created in the off campus hall. Students are encouraged to give there feedbacks on changes they want to see take place in the upcoming summer semesters and should be aware that Embry-Riddle Resident Student Association (ERRSA) is always there to take care of their concerns.
The Avion, July 26, 2011
Student Life
The Avion, July 26, 2011
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Three Embry-Riddle teams sweep FAA challenge Press Release
ERAU Communications In an unprecedented achievement, three student teams from Embry-Riddle’s Daytona Beach campus recently took first, second, and third place in the Runway Safety/Runway Incursions Challenge category of the 2010-2011 Design Competition for Universities sponsored by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The annual event, now in its fifth year, engages undergraduate and graduate students at U.S. colleges in designing innovative solutions for technical challenges in airport infrastructure and operations. The competition requires students to reach out to airport operators and industry experts to advise them and help them assess the efficacy of their proposed solutions. Representatives of the FAA, industry, and academia select the winning proposals, and teams with promising designs may receive FAA funding to take their concepts to the next stage of development. Embry-Riddle’s first-place team submitted a design titled Tactile Stimulation System that
proposes the development and installation of aviation-grade rumble strips on taxiways near runway intersections to alert pilots that they are about to enter a potentially dangerous area. The student team members were Katherine Kaste, Heidi Klein, Marshall Lloyd, Kristi Lontz, Scott Matzke, Aaron Paul, and Wilfredo Rodriguez-Jimenez. The notification letter sent to Embry-Riddle stated, “The panel was impressed with the students’ proficiency in the development of a simple design to help increase situational awareness and felt they provided an impressive package in support of their concept.” The second-place team’s design, titled Runway Incursion Prevention Lighting System (RIPLS), uses an in-pavement lighting system at hold-short lines supported by a user-centered interface for air traffic managers, to provide for safe entry for aircraft and ground vehicles across active runways. The student team members were Erik Schmidt, Casey Smith, Nicholas Stapleton, Tammy Strauss, Glenn Surpris, Anna Vitalis, Travis Wiltshire, David Yacht, and Zhengzhong Yu. The third-place team’s
design, titled EyePort, offers controllers, pilots, and airport personnel anytime, anywhere access to the existing technologies and information sources that support air operations. The student team members were Daniel Antolos, William Dructor, Augusto Espinosa, Jolie Gascon, Abigail Gaston, Jerry Gordon, Joshua Hagar, and Maggie Hart. All three Embry-Riddle teams developed their design projects as part of a graduate human factors course taught by Dr. Kelly Neville, associate professor of human factors and systems. Dr. Neville and Marty Lauth, assistant professor of air traffic management, served as advisors to the teams. The teams had to learn about airport operations in order to identify a specific challenge to address, draw on engineering principles and tools to develop a feasible solution, and work as a team to produce a technical proposal describing their solution and the work behind it. In order to win the FAA Design Competition, teams are required to reach out to and learn from industry experts. The operations staff at the Daytona Beach International Airport, led by John Murray, shared
their time and expertise with all three Embry-Riddle teams. The teams’ interactions with these airport operations personnel gave them a strong advantage over competing teams and also helped them come up with feasible and useful designs. “I felt each group did an outstanding job, and it appears the FAA agreed with me,” said Lauth. “Once again this reaffirms the caliber of our students and the motivation they display for future aviation endeavors.” The first-place Embry-Riddle team received a $2,500 prize from the FAA and presented their design at the Summer Workshop Series held by the FAA, the Transportation Security Administration, and the Airport Consultants Council from July 13-14, 2011, in Arlington, Va. The award plaque for the university was also presented at that time. The partnering organizations this year were the Airport Consultants Council, the Airports Council International – North America, the American Association of Airport Executives, the National Association of State Aviation Officials, and the University Aviation Association. The partners helped to
PHOTO COURTESY ERAU COMMUNICATIONS
PROFESSORS MARTY LAUTH (BACKGROUND) and Kelly Neville (far right) pose with members of the first-place team (left to right): Kristi Lontz, Wilfredo Rodriguez-Jimenez, Heidi Klien, Katherine Kaste, and Marshall Llyod, Not pictured are Aaron Paul and Scott Matzke. develop competition guidelines, provided members to serve as expert advisors to the students, and assisted in proposal reviews. The Design Competition for Universities is administered by the FAA Office of
Runway Safety and is managed by the Virginia Space Grant Consortium for the FAA. The prize-winning proposals can be viewed at the competition website, http://FAADesignCompeti tion.odu.edu.
Family fun in Daytona Beach Megan Demmert Staff Reporter
Home to the Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach Bike Week and spring break, Daytona Beach may not be the first place that comes to mind when you think “family destination”. However, you may be pleasantly surprised to find that this spring break hot spot offers a wide variety of family friendly, fun filled attractions to bring out your inner child. To cool off and enjoy some great ice skating fun, visit the Daytona Ice Arena, home of the Embry-Riddle Ice Hockey Team. This 35,500 square foot
facility located on 2400 South Ridgewood Ave in Daytona, consists of a NHL regulation size ice sheet, bleacher seating for 300 guests and a full service snack bar overlooking the ice. Not only do they offer daily public ice skating sessions with music and dancing lights, but they also offer ice skating lessons, youth and adult hockey, private rentals, broomball, and dodgeball on ice. Public skating is only $5 with a military or college ID plus the cost of skate rental. For more information on events and pricing, visit www. DaytonaIceArena.com. Enjoy a local baseball game at the almost 100 year old Jackie Robinson Ball Park,
located on 105 E. Orange Ave in Daytona. This historic ballpark is home to the Daytona Cubs and served as host to the first racially integrated baseball game in history. With 4,200 seats, this impressive ballpark offers general admission for only $7. To view the game schedule or additional information, visit www. DaytonaCubs.com. For fast action and speed visit Speed Park Motorsports located on 201 Fentress Blvd in Daytona. This motorsports venue features three of the fastest go-kart tracks in the area as well as well as Nitro Alley, the only attraction in Volusia County where you are in control of a real dragster.
These 300 horsepower dragsters can top 75 mph and pull almost 3 G’s. If you are not in the mood to go fast, you can enjoy the 7,000 square foot arcade with games in every corner. For more details and pricing, visit www.SpeedParkDaytona.com. For a world of excitement and adventure, visit Congo River Golf located on 2100 South Atlantic Avenue in Daytona. This award winning mini golf course takes you on an unforgettable African adventure through mysterious caves and tropical rainforests as you follow in the footsteps of famous African Congo explorers, Henry Stanley and David Livingstone. This attraction also offers an
PHOTO COURTESY CONGORIVER.COM
arcade, gem mining, an exploration game, and a gator feeding
experience. For rates and hours visit www.CongoRiver.com.
Student Forum
“What is your zombie invasion preparedness plan?”
- Compiled by Megan Demmert
Matthew McKenzie Junior Aeronautical Science
Josh Reymundo Junior Aviation Maintenance Science
Josh Maxwell Grad Student Human Factors
Rebecca Zgorski Junior Human Factors
Najee Bailey Sophomore Aerospace Engineering
Kuren Patel Junior Aerospace Engineering
“Statistics show 99% of zombie bites occur in traffic, so I’m holding up right here.”
“Hold out inside a prison cell, because they’re built to hold people in and keep people out.”
“Steal a sailboat, head to St. Augustine and man the Castillo De San Marcos.”
“Go to Walmart”
“Live on a boat for the rest of my life.”
“Follow all the rules from the movie, Zombieland.”
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The Avion, July 26, 2011
The saga’s epic finale Totally plotless action
Harry Potter 7 - Part 2
Tilford Mansfield Comics Editor
If you plan to see it, I suggest maintaining low standards for the final film of the Harry Potter series. Harry Potter 7 Part II grossed over 40 million USD its first night and I can only hope whoever watched it then was satisfied that the film series finally concluded, because that
is about the only thing I left the theater content with on opening day. What you will find in the film includes ghosts, cyclops, stone guardians, wisps of smoke, volleys of energy bolts (maybe they were magic missiles!), and fire being whipped around constantly, but what you will not find says that much more. Anybody who has read the books could tell you that the movie leaves much to be desired regarding the plot and background content to the story being told. The worst part of the whole movie is the lack of creative spells or enchantments for viewing pleasure. I counted four or five spells by name, but visually I saw only energy flying around and sometimes lashes of fire, which I could honestly get with a Tesla coil and flamethrower, so where was the magic in this last film? I mean there are wizards waging a war and the best David Yates (Director) can muster with the huge budget is a giant magical shield? The final showdown between
Harry and Lord Voldemort was pretty much the same scene from their showdown in the graveyard in the fourth movie minus the ghosts of either wands’ past kills, and believe me when I say that is not a spoiler because if you’re watching the second installment of the seventh film, you have probably seen the fourth. The epilogue from the book is shown, and I say this only so that you are prepared to see children pretending to be 40 years of age with children of their own. You can not give a kid a belly and make it look like he is balding and expect that he will appear older; he will just look like a kid with some medical issues. I hope the next generation of theatrical entertainment, as in holographic 3-D films, virtual reality, or what have you, has the tenacity to remake this film series in a better way. I do not recommend this film for anything but closure, and this is the grieving closure like following a breakup; there were good times, but the breakup was still sad. I give this film one airplane out of five.
PHOTO COURTESY PARAMOUNT PICTURES
WHILE THE FIRST TWO Transformers movies were good, this last movie in the series throws plot entirely out the window, not unlike how main character Sam got thrown out the building in the picture, however, you can be certain the plot died in that fall.
Transformers 3
Floyd Perkinson
Guest Reporter
PHOTO COURTESY WARNER BROTHERS
SOME WILL LOVE IT, some will hate it, but everyone will still head to the cinemas to witness the completion of a saga. While the plot is already known to most people, the special effects do not do justice to the expectations created by the earlier movies.
Congratulations
from the Flight Department to the following students for receiving their: Private Pilot Certificate
Commercial Pilot Certificate
Christoffer Laulund 6/28/11 Pit Lex Jean Probst 6/24/11 Richard Steven Hoskins, Jr. 6/29/11 Kurt Lima Pedrosa 7/5/11 Venancius Soares Kassandji 7/7/11 Jacob Josiah Schindler 7/7/11 Eric Joseph Coggin 7/11/11 Troy David McClure 7/11/11 Lara Nicole McKowan 7/5/11 Ronnie Glenn Evans III 6/13/11 Joshua Allen Hughes 6/13/11
Eric Andrew Boyd 7/6/11 Matthew Christopher Ippolito 7/5/11 Logan Michael Melchionna 6/18/11 Eric Thomas Sobolewski 6/21/11 Zoe Cunningham 6/22/11 Hyung Seob Kim 6/28/11 Gregory Francis Weglewski 7/9/11 Christopher Michael Freeman 6/11/11 Teodoro Fernando Calderon 7/12/11
Private Pilot Multi-Engine Add-on Rating Khalid Yousif Moll 7/6/11 Steven Russell Campbell 7/6/11 Instrument Rating Certificate Jordan W. Jones 7/6/11 Daniel Alexander Reid 7/5/11 Thomas Sullivan Teague 7/1/11 Balraj Sidhu 6/25/11 Michael Russell Murphy 6/24/11 Ramiche Tofan Ramsay 6/22/11 Seth Douglas Pripps 6/23/11 Jo Daniel Daloso Relucio 7/11/11 Jesse Michael Boyette 7/6/11 Julia Allison Bury 6/30/11 Justin Lee Boone 7/6/11 Mark Andrew Bono 7/2/11 Ryan Angelo Collins 6/21/11 Davonte Kristopher Deloney 5/31/11 Jahmar Dexter Jackson 6/21/11 Kristopher Karim Atabaki 6/23/11 David Antonio Rodriguez 6/11/11 Gabriel Gonzalez 6/14/11 Jordan Dale Heuerman 6/15/11 Jerome Aroldo Lawrence 7/7/11 Zachary Arantes Bevon Stewart 7/11/11
Commercial Single Engine Add-on Rating Jesus Alberto Colon 6/21/11 Taylor Richard Konell 6/22/11 Ashley Elizabeth Smith 6/22/11 Corey Ryan Roth 6/27/11 Sheldon Robert Reed 6/29/11 Commercial Multi-Engine Add-on Rating Eduardo Sardi Acevedo 6/18/11 Kyle Cameron Butler 6/21/11 Brendan John Parker Moran 6/21/11 Matthew David Fleenor 6/22/11 Robert Emilio Rice 6/24/11 Nicholas John Di Nardi 6/29/11 Steven Russell Campbell 7/6/11 David Warren Adams 7/5/11 Sean David De La Bastide 6/29/11 Flight Instructor Airplane Certificate Grace Elizabeth Malley 7/6/11 Bryan George Weisenburger 7/9/11 Flight Instructor Instrument Certificate Rembert Cliatt Houser Jr. 6/18/11 Gina Marie Smolar 6/20/11 Danielle Rose Erlichman 6/20/11 Victor Miguel Fraticelli Rivera 6/20/11 Jonathan Wade Pharr 6/29/11 Caroline Grace Brozovich 7/11/11 Caitlin Morgan Holcomb 6/30/11
Everybody knows Transformers, it is the beloved cartoon franchise we all watched as kids about alien robots who can transform into cars. In his latest attempt to recreate a supernova, Michael Bay decided that after having two successful Transformers films he needed to massacre the last film and ruin the franchise forever. The movie begins with over half an hour of watching Sam (Shia LaBeouf) applying
for jobs and interviewing in what can only be described as everything you should not do when interviewing for a job. While trying to stay awake through LaBeouf’s portrayal of an A.D.D. addled character doing a menial job, the audience is bombarded by Michael Bay’s overt message that Carly (Rosie Huntington-Whitley) is just as good as Mikaela (Megan Fox) from the first two movies. There are several scenes where characters compare Carly to Mikaela; however, her acting prowess is even less than that of Megan Fox. Finally after what seems like two hours you get to see some new Transformers, but you are instantly let down when you realize that these look nothing like actual Transformers and will not be seen for the rest of the movie. The action begins to pick up after the main villain is revealed and it seems like the good guys have abandoned us to the wolves. We see the Decepticons laying waste to Chicago because we are no match for their armored blimp Transformers; until finally the Autobots, the “good guys”, show up because they felt it was necessary for the Decepticons to devastate an entire city before they would step in and help.
The action then turns back to Sam as we follow him through another of his banal quests, this time to get his girlfriend back from the Decepticons; because in an alien invasion you always storm the alien fortress for some girl who is not Megan Fox. After finally getting his girlfriend back we get to see Shia LaBeouf and some minor characters play slip and slide with an office floor and the side of a building. The final turning point of the movie comes as Carly manages to convince Megatron, who had apparently rusted away due to the lack of Megan Fox in this movie, to commit suicide by attacking the single Transformer who was letting him live. The special effects in the movie are good but only because it follows the basic Michael Bay recipe of bigger explosions and a plot that makes less sense; there are several movies still playing in theatres with sound plot lines and good special effects (Green Lantern) to prove you can have plot and action. This movie’s ridiculous plot line, implausible scenes, and many plot holes, the biggest being a complete disregard of tidal forces, has earned it 2 airplanes out of 5 and two thumbs way down.
Classifieds
The Avion, JuLY 26, 2011 EMPLOYMENT/ JOBS Our company name Mystery Guest Inc have a vacancy in our office for the post of a team player and a shopper, Requirements Should be a computer Literate. 24 hours access to the internet weekly. Must be Efficient and Dedicated. If you are interested and need more information, Contact Rab John, Email: rab.john922@gmail.com
As part of our expansion program, we are looking for an Account Managers and Sales Representatives, Should be a computer Literate. 2-3 hours access to the internet weekly Must be Efficient and Dedicated. If you are interested and need more information, Contact: Jerry Jones Email: jerryjones110@gmail. com
Customer Service rep needed to work for our aid . 18yrs and above needed. Must possess good typing skills, speak English fluently . Will earn $3000 monthly . E-mail me at jwood433@gmail.com if interested.
Bartending School: Have Fun Make Money and Job Placement call (386) 673-6477 for more details
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Housing - Non Smoking: Furnished home: 2 bedroom for rent with house privilages washer/dryer - garage - close to campus. Call (608) 742-4552, (608) 697-7967
2 bed 1 bath apartment for rent. Includes screen porch, covered garage, storage, water and cable, close to Embry-Riddle $700 per month with $45 background, $700 deposit. Contact Tammy 386-316-9255
CARS/BIKES 1987 Jeep Ranger, 5 Speed Manual, 6 Cylinder reconditioned engine, 4 WD, Black with a bikini top is for sale looking for $4,000. Contact: Bill at 386-846-4172 HOUSING/ ROOMMATES
Personal Assistance needed urgently, to handle personal and business with good benefit. Interested and qualified candidate should get back as soon as possible with resumes and details. at Trudy5291@gmail.com
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Beach side apartments for rent. All renovated, some with garages and porches, 1 & 2 bedroom AC, 3 minute walk to beach $400 - $640. Information: cleemasaunsup@ netscape.net.
Submitting a Classified Simple 1-2-3
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Have a job that needs to be filled? Need to sell something? Have an empty room or apartment to fill? Place a classified! There is still plenty of room and time to place it one in the Avion.
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It has recently come to the attention of The Avion newspaper that certain classified advertisements are suspect. These advertisements have since been removed and we regret any inconvenience caused to the readers of the Avion
The Avion would like to remind all readers to be careful of any deal that requires you to send money through any service before you have had a chance to personally inspect what is being bought.
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Once again, be cautious, and The Avion sincerely apologizes for the inconvenience caused and we have since updated our classifieds screening process.
$
!+#$,-.&/$0123
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3
. Go to Post Ads and select which type of classifieds you would like to post. Continue filling in all the information to your specifications.
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7/11/11 11:36 AM
Comics
The Avion, July 26, 2011
Classic Peanuts
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Mystery strength Sudoku! Can you solve them all?
D i l b e r t
Crossword
Sudoku Easy
Congratulations to Floyd Perkinson for Submitting a correctly completed crossword puzzle! Please stop by The Avion office to claim your prize. Before Next Issue: Enter The Avion crossword contest! Submit your completed crossword to The Avion office in SC 110 before Wednesday, Aug. 3, at 5 p.m. to be considered.
Medium
Hard
Only students can enter, please bring the completed crossword and your Student ID.