| HS HOCKEY: Will East pulls away late for a 6-2 victory over Niagara ...
For the Flames, a six-goal outburst was a welcome change for coach Mike Torrillo."That's been our story the last five or six games, we've missed opportunities," he said. "We finally finished."Niagara Falls (3-14 overall, 3-8 Federation small schools) again cut the lead to one early in the third period, as Thomas Hanna banged home a loose puck in front, with assists going to Vinny Edwards and A.J. Catalano.As they did all afternoon, however, the Flames came back. Eric Bogart scored on a backhand from the left side at the 10:12 mark, opening the floodgates for Williamsville East (10-6-3, 6-3-2). Lucey then scored on a two-on-one off a nice pass from James Faran. Williamsville East finished the scoring with 1:29 left when Gary Styn beat Niagara Falls goalie Vincent Merante. The Flames finished with 27 shots, to 18 for Niagara Falls.
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It can help whet an audience's appetite, but it can also create expectations that the game won't meet and fuel a lot of bad press. For a number of reasons, the poison pens are already warming up. For one thing, there's the hype. Since ION Storm was founded two years ago, and even before it released a homegrown game, it has garnered as much ink as any developer in the $2.5 billion a year PC game business. According to internal company documents, ION has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on public relations, hiring New York and Los Angeles press agents to pitch them as the "it" boys of the information age. Then, too, there's the fact that Daikatana will carry the byline of John Romero, one of the gaming industry's most bankable stars. Romero is one of the originators of the "first-person shooter," a genre that casts the player as hero in a strange, Mad Max sort of fantasy world filled with violent weapons and ritual gore.
Check Old Policies for Hidden Value Before Cancelling and Other Ways ...
Old life insurance policies can now be sold for more than cash value, while new policies offer more ways to protect family and assets. "For those over 50, life insurance can protect home and business assets, cut taxes and improve lifestyles," says Paul Mauro, CLU ChFC, founder of Legacy Financial Advisors, Milford, MA. (PRWEB) June 29, 2006 -- Young couples with a whopping mortgage and small kids are rightly urged to buy inexpensive term life insurance, which provides maximum death benefits at the lowest possible cost. However, age and assets have a way of creeping up. By age 50 it is time to look hard at how life insurance can protect home and other assets, cut taxes, cover long-term medical care and keep a family business running efficiently. .
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