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	<title>The Bridge</title>
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		<title><![CDATA[The Bridge]]></title>
		<link><![CDATA[http://my.hsj.org/Portals/2/Schools/Newspaper/tabid/100/view/frontpage/newspaperid/186/Default.aspx]]></link>
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			<title><![CDATA[Students Jam to Tunes on their ipods.]]></title>
			<link><![CDATA[http://my.hsj.org/schools/newspaper/tabid/100/view/frontpage/schoolid/210/articleid/284574/students_jam_to_tunes_on_their_ipods.aspx]]></link>
			<description><![CDATA[ <div class='ArticleAuthor'>By Allie Lombardi and Franny LeBoeuf</div><br><div class='ArticleImgDesc'><img style='width:350px' src="http://my.hsj.org/Portals/2/Schools/210/Article284574_musicgraph.jpg" /><br /><p>Allie Lombardi<br></p></div> 
     
 
 
 
 
     
 
 
  After surveying one
homeroom from each grade, 90% of students use an Apple iPod to listen
to music. Most kids have five-hundred or more songs that they listen
to on their iPods daily, and most update their iPods weekly as new
songs or videos come out on the charts.   
 
 
  However, where do
the students download their music from?    
 
 
  According to
students in upper-class the right way to download music is to
illegally download off of the website “Limewire.” An anonymous
source stated, “Just don’t pay, and don’t get caught.”    
 
 
  Why?   
 
 
  According to
anonymous seniors in Mr. Charles Rara’s AB Prep class, “It’s
way better! “ “Why pay when you don’t have to!”   
 
 
  The seniors could be
right after all, but is it legally right? Of course not.   
 
 
  According to lower
class students, they just pay for their music on iTunes. The freshman
and sophomores have the right idea according to illegal music
downloading laws.    
 
 
  Sophomore Renee
Laurencelle feels the same way, “It’s just not right to download
illegal music,” she stated. “Those artists work hard, and then
you just take it away,” she laughed. Laurencelle has a whole other
approach to look at it.   
 
 
  But do students
really have five hundred dollars to pay for music?    
 
 
  Of course not.   
 
 
  With songs on iTunes
costing ninety-nine cents how do you expect a high school student to
pay for those five hundred plus songs they jam to? Junior Liz
Schatzkin says “My dad’s credit card.”   
 
 
  One thing is for
sure, Tyngsboro does love their music.   
 
  According to the
survey, almost every student listens to their iPod on their school
busses, getting pumped up before the big game as well as working out
after school .   
 
 
  One fact is certain,
Tyngsboro students listen to hundreds of songs on their iPods but
when it comes to paying the five hundred dollars, the money charged
is the issue.     
  
 ]]></description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2009 12:49:21 GMT</pubDate>
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