Saturday, December 31, 2011

Police plan tight security at Times Square

Less than two weeks after graduating from the New York City police academy, more than 1,500 rookie officers have a daunting first assignment: helping to protect Times Square on New Year's Eve.

The deployment is just one of an array of security measures ? many visible, many not ? that the New York Police Department rolls out each year for the event that turns the "Crossroads of the World" into a massive street party that stretches 17 blocks through the heart of Manhattan.

Behind the scenes leading up to New Year's Eve, city police officials meticulously map out how to control crowds that can swell to 1 million. The yearly ritual also means worrying about potential terror threats.

Itineraries: 9 odd New Year's Eve ball drops

"There will be several thousand police officers involved," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Thursday when asked about security. "I think we do this pretty well. We have a lot of experience in doing it."

Kelly said so far there are no specific threats against Times Square. But in the post-9/11 world, the department knows from experience ? especially a botched attempted car bombing in the summer of 2010 ? that Times Square is a potential terror target.

Backed by the Pakistani Taliban, Faisal Shahzad left a Nissan Pathfinder outfitted with a crude, homemade propane-and-gasoline bomb on a block teeming with tourists. The explosive malfunctioned, but the near-miss spread a wave of fear across the city.

Shahzad was arrested and, after a guilty plea, sentenced to life in prison. But he warned, "Brace yourselves, because the war with Muslims has just begun."

Since then, the NYPD has maintained a higher profile in Times Square, with mounted police and foot patrols outside hotels, restaurants and Broadway theaters. The department even elevated its neon "New York Police Dept." sign on West 43rd Street several feet so it's more visible.

The usual security is bolstered each New Year's Eve by an army of extra patrol officers who use police barriers to prevent overcrowding and for checkpoints to inspect vehicles, enforce a ban on alcohol and check handbags. Revelers will see bomb-sniffing dogs, heavily armed counter-terrorism teams and NYPD helicopters overhead.

What won't be as evident are the plainclothes officers assigned to blend into the crowd and other officers keeping watch from rooftops. Many officers will be wearing palm-size radiation detectors designed to give off a signal if they detect evidence of a dirty bomb, an explosive intended to spread panic by creating a radioactive cloud.

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The bomb squad and another unit specializing in chemical and biological threats will sweep hotels, theaters, construction sites and parking garages. They will also patrol the sprawling Times Square subway station.

The NYPD also will rely on a new network of about 3,000 closed-circuit security cameras carpeting the roughly 1.7 square miles south of Canal Street, the subway system and parts of midtown Manhattan. In recent years, police stationed at high-tech command centers in lower Manhattan began monitoring live feeds of Times Square, the World Trade Center and other sites.

Times Square isn't the only show in town this New Year's Eve ? or the only security concern. Police also will be beef up patrols in Central Park, site of a midnight run, and at fireworks displays at the Statue of Liberty.

The NYPD harbor unit will keep an eye on 33 dinner cruises on the city's waterways. Add to the list the Phish concert at Madison Square Garden.

On a smaller scale in outlying neighborhoods, police are concerned about a phenomenon seen in past years: people who ring in the new year by firing guns into the air.

"We urge people not to do that," Kelly said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45825919/ns/us_news-life/

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US warns Iran against closing key oil passage (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? The U.S. strongly warned Iran on Wednesday against closing a vital Persian Gulf waterway that carries one-sixth of the world's oil supply, after Iran threatened to choke off traffic through the Strait of Hormuz if Washington imposes sanctions targeting the country's crude exports.

The increasingly heated exchange raises new tensions in a standoff that has the potential to spark military reprisals and spike oil prices to levels that could batter an already fragile global economy.

Iran's navy chief said Wednesday that it would be "very easy" for his country's forces to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the passage at the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which about 15 million barrels of oil pass daily. It was the second such warning by Iran in two days, reflecting Tehran's concern that the West is about to impose new sanctions that could hit the country's biggest source of revenue, oil.

"Iran has comprehensive control over the strategic waterway," Adm. Habibollah Sayyari told state-run Press TV, as the country was in the midst of a 10-day military drill near the strategic waterway.

The comments drew a quick response from the U.S.

"This is not just an important issue for security and stability in the region, but is an economic lifeline for countries in the Gulf, to include Iran," Pentagon press secretary George Little said. "Interference with the transit or passage of vessels through the Strait of Hormuz will not be tolerated."

Separately, Bahrain-based U.S. Navy 5th Fleet spokeswoman Lt. Rebecca Rebarich said the Navy is "always ready to counter malevolent actions to ensure freedom of navigation."

Rebarich declined to say whether the U.S. force had adjusted its presence or readiness in the Gulf in response to Iran's comments, but said the Navy "maintains a robust presence in the region to deter or counter destabilizing activities, while safeguarding the region's vital links to the international community."

Iran's threat to seal off the Gulf, surrounded by oil-rich Gulf states, reflect its concerns over the prospect that the Obama administration will impose sanctions over its nuclear program that would severely hit its biggest revenue source. Iran is the world's fourth-largest oil producer, pumping about 4 million barrels a day.

Gulf Arab nations appeared ready to at least ease market tensions. A senior Saudi Arabian oil official told The Associated Press that Gulf Arab nations are ready to step in to offset any potential loss of exports from Iran. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the issue.

Saudi Arabia, which has been producing about 10 million barrels per day, has an overall production capacity of over 12 million barrels per day and is widely seen as the only OPEC member with sufficient spare capacity to offset major shortages.

What remains unclear is what routes the Gulf nations could take to move the oil to markets if Iran goes through with its threat.

About 15 million barrels per day pass through the Hormuz Strait, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

There are some pipelines that could be tapped, but Gulf oil leaders, who met in Cairo on Dec. 24, declined to say whether they had discussed alternate routes or what they may be.

The Saudi official's comment, however, appeared to allay some concerns. The U.S. benchmark crude futures contract fell $1.98 by the close of trading Wednesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, but still hovered just below $100 per barrel.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner played down the Iranian threats as "rhetoric," saying, "we've seen these kinds of comments before."

While the Obama administration has warned Iran that it would not tolerate attempts to disrupt traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, U.S. officials do not see any indication that the situation will come to that. Nor do they believe that Iran, which is already under increasing pressure from sanctions, would risk disrupting the Strait because doing so would further damage Iran's own economy.

Instead, the administration believes Iran is playing the only card it has left: issuing threats and attempting to shift focus away from its own behavior.

U.S. officials have not said whether there is a concrete response plan in place should Iran seek to block the Strait. But the administration has long said it is comfortable with the U.S. Naval presence in the region, indicating that the U.S. could respond rapidly if needed.

The White House has been largely silent on Iran's threat, underscoring the administration's belief that responding at the White House level would only encourage Iran.

While many analysts believe that Iran's warnings are little more than posturing, they still highlight both the delicate nature of the oil market, which moves as much on rhetoric as supply and demand fundamentals.

Iran relies on crude sales for about 80 percent of its public revenues, and sanctions or even a pre-emptive measure by Tehran to withhold its crude from the market would already batter its flailing economy.

IHS Global Insight analyst Richard Cochrane said in a report Wednesday that markets are "jittery over the possibility" of Iran's blockading the strait. But "such action would also damage Iran's economy, and risk retaliation from the U.S. and allies that could further escalate instability in the region."

"Accordingly, it is not likely to be a decision that the Iranian leadership will take lightly," he said.

Earlier sanctions targeting the oil and financial sector added new pressures to the country's already struggling economy. Government cuts in subsidies on key goods like food and energy have angered Iranians, stoking inflation while the country's currency steadily depreciates.

The impetus behind the subsidies cut plan, pushed through parliament by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was to reduce budget costs and would pass money directly to the poor. But critics have pointed to it as another in a series of bad policy moves by the hardline president.

So far, Western nations have been unable to agree on sanctions targeting oil exports, even as they argue that Iran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon. Tehran maintains its nuclear program ? already the subject of several rounds of sanctions ? is purely peaceful.

The U.S. Congress has passed a bill that penalizes foreign firms that do business with the Iran Central Bank, a move that would heavily hurt Iran's ability to export crude. European and Asian nations use the bank for transactions to import Iranian oil.

President Barack Obama has said he will sign the bill despite his misgivings. China and Russia have opposed such measures.

Sanctions specifically targeting Iran's oil exports would likely temporarily spike oil prices to levels that could weigh heavily on the world economy.

Closing the Strait of Hormuz would hit even harder. Energy consultant and trader The Schork Group estimated crude would jump to above $140 per barrel. Conservatives in Iran claim global oil prices will jump to $250 a barrel should the waterway be closed.

By closing the strait, Iran may aim to send the message that its pain from sanctions will also be felt by others. But it has equally compelling reasons not to try.

The move would put the country's hardline regime straight in the cross-hairs of the world, including nations that have so far been relative allies. Much of Iran's crude goes to Europe and to Asia.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran has adopted an aggressive military posture in recent months in response to increasing threats from the U.S. and Israel of possible military action to stop Iran's nuclear program.

The Iranian navy's exercises, which began on Saturday, involve submarines, missile drills, torpedoes and drones. A senior Iranian commander said Wednesday that the country's navy is also planning to test advanced missiles and "smart" torpedoes during the maneuvers.

The war games cover a 1,250-mile (2,000-kilometer) stretch off the Strait of Hormuz, northern parts of the Indian Ocean and into the Gulf of Aden near the entrance to the Red Sea and could bring Iranian ships into proximity with U.S. Navy vessels in the area.

The moderate news website, irdiplomacy.ir, says the show of strength is intended to send a message to the West that Iran is capable of sealing off the waterway.

"The war games ... are a warning to the West that should oil and central bank sanctions be stepped up, (Iran) is able to cut the lifeblood of the West and Arabs," it said, adding that the West "should regard the maneuvers as a direct message."

___

El-Tablawy reported from Cairo. Associated Press writers Adam Schreck in Dubai, Julie Pace in Honolulu, Hawaii, and Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_oil

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Friday, December 30, 2011

GotSagaLatino: The incredible #Roman Forum in #Rome http://t.co/rpse8Qc2 #travel #tips #Italy

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In Iowa, Obama toils while GOP roars, then departs (AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa ? One presidential campaign claims an impressive effort in Iowa this year: eight offices opened, 350,000 phone calls to potential supporters and 1,280 events to recruit and train volunteers.

It's not Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich or Ron Paul. It's Obama for America, the president's re-election campaign, which badly wants to win this battleground state in November, as it did in 2008.

"The Republicans are here today, gone tomorrow," said Obama volunteer Pat Walters, of Johnston, a suburb of Des Moines. "We've been doing this since 2009."

Next Tuesday's Republican caucus has dominated political conversations. Largely overlooked is that Obama is running unopposed in the Democratic caucus the same night.

It's a dramatically different scene from four years ago, when Obama set his course for the White House by beating John Edwards and Hillary Rodham Clinton after months of intense campaigning in Iowa.

Obama can coast as far as this year's nomination is concerned. But Iowa remains a general election swing state, and no one assumes his 9-point win here over John McCain in 2008 will give him a cushion next November.

Obama's campaign never entirely left Iowa or several other competitive states, where he hopes relentless organizing can overcome a weak economy and his mixed record of fulfilling campaign pledges in the face of strong GOP opposition in Congress. If thousands of volunteers flocked to Obama's 2008 campaign, this time he's having to work a bit harder to recruit and energize them.

"People say, `The mood is different this time, it's not the same,'" said Peggy Whitworth, an Obama volunteer in Cedar Rapids. "Well of course it's not the same. But it's not about mood or feeling. It's about the future of the country."

Whitworth, 69, said she joins other Obama volunteers four hours every Tuesday night, and sometimes on other evenings as well, to telephone potential supporters. Many say they will vote for Obama again, she said, and some volunteer to help the campaign. But some are disappointed or angry that the president fell short on campaign promises such as ending the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy, and bringing a greater spirit of bipartisanship to Washington.

"Sometimes they simply want to have someone listen to them," Whitworth said. Most say they will stick with Obama after they've had a chance to vent their frustrations, she said.

Obama lacks some key advantages he enjoyed in 2008. They include a deeply unpopular GOP president who was largely blamed for a faltering economy, and a widespread excitement about Obama's precedent-breaking campaign built on "hope and change."

In exchange, of course, he has the power of the presidency and a well-oiled political organization that has been refining its practices for five years. Obama will raise many millions of dollars, although his eventual Republican opponent may do nearly as well.

Nowhere does Obama have a bigger base to build on than in Iowa, where he campaigned for months in 2007. Romney, Gingrich and other GOP contenders have not made comparable efforts, although they say the economy and other issues will make Obama's task much harder next year.

In activities that rarely compete with the hoopla of the GOP nominating contest, Obama's campaign has placed a handful of paid staffers in each of several key states. They try to leverage their clout by recruiting and training scores of volunteers. The volunteers, in turn, knock on doors, organize house parties and, above all, place phone calls to voters in hopes of identifying likely Obama supporters and tracking them through Election Day.

In a tortoise-versus-hare strategy, Obama supporters hope their steady chugging will build support precinct by precinct, town by town, while Republicans spend resources chasing the nomination for a few more weeks or months. The Republican candidates and their broadcast ads are flooding Iowa this week, but they will abruptly shift to New Hampshire on Jan. 4, the day after the caucuses.

Walters, a 60-year-old insurance executive, said he is a "neighborhood team leader" who helps organize house parties, phone banks and other activities. His chief recruiting tools, he said, involve reminding Iowans of Obama's accomplishments that include expanding medical benefits in the hard-won 2010 overhaul of the nation's health care system.

Walters said he hopes the week-by-week, month-by-month effort will build a strong ground operation to turn out Obama's voters next November. The Republican nominee will have to play catch up, he said.

Obama's ground game "is already in place," Walters said. "It's just a matter of growing it."

Iowa Democratic Chairwoman Chair Sue Dvorsky underscored the methodical nature of the efforts in a conference call with reporters Wednesday.

Since April, she said, "this has been a systematic grassroots effort. The same exact way we did it last time. It isn't very glamorous. It's not a very secret plan. It is voter to voter, one-to-one, then a street, then a precinct, then a county."

Dvorsky said Obama will beam "a live address to Iowa Democrats in every caucus site next Tuesday night.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_campaign_iowa

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Mount Newt erupts! (Politico)

DES MOINES - - Nobody erupts like Newt Gingrich. While his face remains largely placid, the words flow from his lips like lava.

?I think Ron Paul?s views are totally outside the mainstream of virtually every decent American,? Gingrich tells CNN?s Wolf Blitzer Tuesday evening.

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Ron Paul, Newt says, has ?not yet disowned? his own newsletter that has contained ?racist, anti-Semitic? slurs, ?called for the destruction of Israel? and ?called for a race war.?

Further, according to Newt, Ron Paul believes ?the United States was responsible for 9/11.?

?He?s not going to get the nomination; it won?t happen,? Gingrich says. ?The people in the United States are not going to accept somebody who thinks it?s irrelevant if Iran gets a nuclear weapon.?

And in the laughably unlikely event that Ron Paul does get the Republican nomination, Newt says he will not vote for him.

Nor does the lava flow stop at Ron Paul.

Mitt Romney has made the mistake of twitting Newt?s campaign for comparing its failure to get on the ballot in Virginia to ?Pearl Harbor.?

?I think it?s more like Lucille Ball at the chocolate factory,? Romney tells reporters with a laugh.

Uh-oh. This somewhat oblique reference to incompetence causes a new eruption from Mount Newt.

Newt challenges Romney to a 90-minute debate in Iowa where, Newt says, ?I want to see him say that to my face.?

?If you want to attack people,? Newt says, ?at least be man enough to own it.?

At least be man enough.

Newt also accuses Romney ?of paying for abortions with state money,? but that is nothing compared to the ?man enough? attack. Newt has promised to stay positive, but his being able to do so has severe limits.

Romney is not a real man, Newt is saying, because he attacks people via television rather than in person. (That Newt is engaging in precisely the same behavior is neither here nor there.)

A Romney spokesman dismisses the eruption as another sign that Gingrich has ?had a really bad week.?

A Paul spokesman says it is a sign of Newt?s ?frustration from his floundering campaign.?

But is Newt floundering? From mid-November to mid-December, a series of polls taken in Iowa showed Gingrich in first place. Three recent polls taken here show him in third place.

Could this be because the attack ads by Romney and Paul have taken their toll? Could be, but there are so many warring ads on Iowa TV these days, that it is hard to believe anyone is taking them very seriously. Just trying to follow them all puts one at the risk of whiplash.

There are no more debates before the caucuses on Tuesday. (Romney has declined Newt?s invitation to prove his manhood.)

The last major event probably will be the publication Sunday of the Des Moines Register Iowa Poll, a poll with a record of accuracy in a state that is difficult to poll. (It is difficult to poll because it is difficult to cast an actual ballot in the Iowa caucuses compared to answering a pollster?s questions.)

The keys to victory will be passion, organization and electability: the ability to evoke passion from caucus voters, an effective campaign organization that identifies supporters and gets them to the polls and the perception of who will be most electable next November.

No candidate has all three keys, but two will be good enough, and one may do in a pinch.

The results next Tuesday will probably eliminate only the very bottom of the pack. The top finishers will storm, stroll or limp into New Hampshire for yet another round of bloodletting.

?It?s a very confusing field right now,? Gingrich says.

And he is doing his best to keep it that way.

Roger Simon is POLITICO?s chief political columnist.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1211_70890_html/44017744/SIG=11m380pin/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70890.html

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Why India pulled the welcome mat for Wal-Mart

Intense protest prompted India to shelve plans this month to allow box stores like Wal-Mart. But many say the retail sector is backward and needs the jobs and investment such stores would bring.

The Indian government's recent plans to open the retail sector to foreign big-box stores like Wal-Mart was met with such vehement pushback from people across India that the plans had to be shelved earlier this month.

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Unlike in the United States, where more than 80 percent of Americans shop at supermarkets and chain stores, most Indians still shop in kirana, or tiny mom and pop stores. The 15 million small retail outlets here employ tens of millions of people.

While India has welcomed many Western companies under two decades of economic liberalization, the move to megastores has proved to be a tough sell.

The idea of driving long distances on bad roads, battling for a parking spot, and choosing between hundreds of brands perplexes many consumers who say they are happy with the current small-and-local model. But the domestic resistance frustrates Indian technocrats and business elites who are focused on keeping India's growth rates high.

While Wal-Mart worries many shopkeepers, some are banking on customer loyalty and shopping habits to save them.

Rajiv Malik owns a kirana in the alleyway of a middle-class neighborhood in Delhi. His shop, a mini-version of Wal-Mart, offers everything from shampoo and vegetables to underwear and plastic beach balls.

"Over half of my customers buy on credit, and I will deliver anything from a loaf of bread to a few eggs," says Mr. Malik, who keeps track of purchases in a big, yellow notebook. "I don't think that Wal-Mart will be able to provide this kind of service."

Ilyas, who goes by one name, plays dual roles as a middleman buying fruits and vegetables from whole-salers and running a roadside stand. Like Malik, he thinks he can compete. "Even though big stores may be able to sell for less, they can't keep their fruits and vegetables as fresh as mine," he says. "My customers are willing to pay more for quality."

Job jitters

While Malik and Ilyas may not seem concerned about the coming of the big shops, millions of others worry that they could lose their jobs. Responding to that anxiety, opposition parties blocked the government's decision to allow foreign, multibrand retailers, such as Wal-Mart and Tesco.

"The economy as a whole can only gain if the presence of foreign retailers creates more opportunities for the manufacturing sector, as opposed to being threatened by it," says Rajeev Chandrasekhar, one of the members of Parliament who blocked the measure.

The failed resolution left economist Rajiv Kumar, the secretary-general of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, fuming.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/wgx2e4bg9AM/Why-India-pulled-the-welcome-mat-for-Wal-Mart

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

GTA III para iPhone y iPad [A primera vista]

Me declaro mal?simo para los videojuegos. Hace varios a?os me regalaron una Xbox 360 y ah? permaneci? botada, s?lo la usaba cuando venian mis amigos a la casa. El ?nico juego que compr? y juegu? para aquella consola fue el GTA IV, precisamente porque hace muchos a?os hab?a jugado Vice City y San Andreas en la PS2 y sin duda este ?ltimo es mi juego favorito hasta el d?a de hoy.

Acerca de la saga Grand Theft Auto

Grand Theft Auto es un juego del siglo pasado, y fue el que revolucion? el estilo de juego Sandbox y lo llev? a 3D, naciendo as? en el a?o 2001 el primer GTA en 3D: GTA III. Para aquel entonces, el juego atrajo grotescamente la atenci?n de los medios, de hecho Meristation en aquel entonces le otorg? calificaci?n m?xima (10/10).

La jugabilidad y la realidad en la que te sumerg?a el juego era algo que en ese entonces no se hab?a visto; tal fue el caso que en varios medios salieron declaraciones de delincuentes afirmando que practicaron sus asaltos en el videojuego.

YouTube Preview Image

Pasaron los a?os, y vio la luz el GTA Vice City, una historia ambientada en los 70?s y posteriormente el GTA San Andreas que est? ambientado en la d?cada de los 90?s raz?n por la cual fue muy jugada por mi generaci?n.

YouTube Preview Image
(Trailer del GTA San Andreas. Lo agrego al tema netamente porque me encanta y considero un pecado no mencionarlo aunque tenga nada que ver)?

Sumado a la realidad que te brinda el juego, la ambientaci?n es espectacular al contener elementos que se encargan de situarte en el espacio temporal; tal es el uso de Estaciones de Radio que contienen canciones que fueron famosas por aquellos a?os. En el GTA San Andreas puedes encontrar cl?sicos como Welcome To The Jungle, Strutter, Killing In The Name, etc.

A 10 a?os del primer Grand Theft Auto

Luego de que han pasado 10 a?os desde el lanzamiento del GTA III, Rockstar Games decidi? llevarlo a los dispositivos m?viles con motivo del D?cimo Aniversario del juego.

La gran duda es: ?Qu? tal correr??. Aprovechando que era navidad, compr? el juego que es compatible tanto con iPhone/iPod como con iPad a US$2.99, un precio bastante accesible considerando que antes estaba a US$4.99.

Al iniciar el juego, pude ver que part?a igual que con el GTA III de PC que jugu? hace much?simos a?os. El men? principal fue totalmente redise?ado y las letras e ?conos parecen estar vectorizados porque la definici?n es incre?ble.

Me puse a jugar en mi iPhone 4 y funciona como la seda, no hay lags. La gr?fica no es brutal, pero se ve bastante bien e incluso parece como si tuviera anti-aliasing; lo anterior probablemente sea por la Retina Display.

Lo prob? en el iPad de primera generaci?n y not? que no andaba tan fluido como en el iPhone, de hecho, a pesar que cerr? todas las aplicaciones hab?an momentos en que el auto andaba lento y se lagueaba. Debo ser honesto y decir que en varias oportunidades se cerr? la aplicaci?n inesperadamente. Sin embargo pod?a retomar el juego gracias a que cuando se cierra inesperadamente no libera lo ocupado en la RAM, as? que si se cae, lo ?nico que hay que hacer es hacer doble click en el bot?n Home y reanudar la aplicaci?n.

Les recuerdo que este es un A Primera Vista, y tengo muchas ganas de hacer un review con un GamePlay ?nunca tan bac?n como Vardoc, pero algo similar.

?

Nos vemos en el WLabs,
?Besitos!

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Source: http://www.wayerless.com/2011/12/gta-iii-para-iphone-y-ipad-a-primera-vista/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

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vectorpoem: Rescued some ancient data off dozens of ~15 year old attic floppies. Anyone need any IPAS routines for 3D Studio R4 for DOS?

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Monday, December 26, 2011

beSpacific: What Can We Learn from Law School? Legal Education ...

* What Can We Learn from Law School? Legal Education Reflects Issues Found in All of Higher Education

What Can We Learn from Law School? Legal Education Reflects Issues Found in All of Higher Education, Julie Margetta Morgan, Center for American Progress, December 2011

  • "This report explores the field of legal education with the hope that putting a magnifying glass to this small part of higher education will help us better understand the problems that face all colleges. It details the steady rise in law school enrollment, despite high tuition rates and a heavy reliance on student loan debt. And it describes the unpleasant surprise that awaits law students upon graduation: Though a few lucky grads will make more than $130,000 per year, most new lawyers can expect annual salaries of around $63,000. With monthly loan payments near $1,000, graduates are finding that membership in the legal profession is not the golden ticket they thought it would be. These observations show that in legal education ? as in the rest of higher education ? forces such as rising tuition and limited availability of jobs are changing the value proposition of earning a degree. Schools, students, and policymakers, however, are slow to respond."
  • Source: http://www.bespacific.com/mt/archives/029102.html

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    Rapper ?Tyler The Creator? ArrestedFor Felony Vandalism

    The rapper known as “Tyler, the Creator,” was arrested after authorities say he got rowdy following a show at The Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood. Los Angeles County sheriff’s Sgt. Arthur Famble Jr. said the rapper was arrested Thursday night after he appeared in a show by his group, Odd Future, and destroyed the Sunset [...]

    Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/rapper-tyler-the-creator-arrestedfor-felony-vandalism/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rapper-tyler-the-creator-arrestedfor-felony-vandalism

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    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    Why ?Reform? Makes Problems Worse: A Case Study (Powerlineblog)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178478864?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    16 killed in violence in Mexican state (AP)

    VERACRUZ, Mexico ? A group of five gunmen sprayed three passenger buses with bullets in Mexico's Gulf coast state of Veracruz on Thursday, killing seven passengers, before being chased down and killed by soldiers.

    Veracruz state government spokeswoman Gina Dominguez said the gunmen apparently resisted detention and died in the ensuing confrontation. They all had rifles and were traveling in a bulletproof vehicle.

    While the attackers' identities and cartel affiliation have not yet been established, the men killed match witness descriptions of the assailants in the bus attacks, Dominguez said.

    Earlier, gunmen killed four people in the town of El Higo in northern Veracruz, where drug gangs have been particularly active, but Dominguez said those killings appear not to have been related to the bus attacks.

    The bloody pre-Christmas bus shootings brought up memories of the brutal murder of dozens of bus passengers whose bodies were found in mass graves in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas in April. A total of 193 bodies had been found in 26 graves, and officials say most of those were Mexican migrants heading to the United States who were kidnapped off buses and killed by the Zetas drug cartel.

    But there appeared to be differences between Thursday's killings and the murders in Tamaulipas.

    In the Tamaulipas killings, the Zetas gunmen stopped and boarded buses and removed male passengers and killed them, either because they believed a rival gang was trying to send reinforcements into the region aboard buses or because they wanted to force some of the passengers to join their gang.

    Thursday's attacks on buses may have been more random; the gunmen apparently just sprayed passing buses with gunfire. The buses hit were covering local routes in northern Veracruz, though authorities did not release the names of the bus lines operating the route.

    There was no immediate information on the identity of the dead bus passengers, or the four people killed in El Higo.

    The area has been the scene of bloody battles between the Zetas and their former allies, the Gulf cartel.

    The two gangs split in 2010.

    The U.S. Consulate General in Matamoros, a Mexican border city north of where the attacks occurred, said in a statement that "several vehicles," including the buses, were attacked, but did not specify what the other vehicles were.

    The consulate urged Americans to "exercise caution" when traveling in Veracruz, and "avoid intercity road travel at night."

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_bus_attack

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    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    AUGoldMine: RT @AUALERT: Auburn University is under a Tornado Watch until 5:00 PM CST. Monitor the weather and be prepared to seek shelter if a warn ...

    Twitter / AU ALERT: Auburn University is under ... Loader Auburn University is under a Tornado Watch until 5:00 PM CST. Monitor the weather and be prepared to seek shelter if a warning is issued.

    Source: http://twitter.com/AUGoldMine/statuses/149926719690776576

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    US rep apologizes to first lady on 'big butt' quip

    (AP) ? Wisconsin Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner has apologized to first lady Michelle Obama for reportedly saying she has a "big butt."

    Sensenbrenner's press secretary says the Republican sent the first lady a personal note and released a statement Thursday saying he regrets his "inappropriate comment."

    Sensenbrenner's office would not release the note.

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (http://bit.ly/s1kBwP ) reports Sensenbrenner referred to Michelle Obama's "big butt" while talking to church members at a Christmas bazaar at St. Aidan's Episcopal Church in Hartford earlier this month.

    Church member Ann Marsh-Meigs told the newspaper that she heard Sensenbrenner's remarks. She said the 16-term congressman was speaking about the first lady's efforts to combat childhood obesity, and added, "And look at her big butt."

    Michelle Obama's press office didn't immediately return a request for comment Thursday.

    ___

    Information from: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, http://www.jsonline.com

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-22-Sensenbrenner-First%20Lady%20Apology/id-8de5f5b38c3e4ac594638a738de5f1ea

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    Thursday, December 22, 2011

    Oy vey! Yiddish making a comeback at colleges (AP)

    ATLANTA ? A group of American college students stands in a semicircle, clapping and hopping on one foot as they sing in Yiddish: "Az der rebe zingt, Zingen ale khsidim!"

    "When the rebbe dances, so do all the Hasidim," the lyrics go.

    This isn't music appreciation or even a class at a synagogue. It's the first semester of Yiddish at Emory University in Atlanta ? one of just a handful of college programs across the country studying the Germanic-based language of Eastern European Jews.

    The language came close to dying out after the Holocaust as millions of Yiddish speakers either perished in Nazi concentration camps or fled to other countries where their native tongue was not welcome. Emory and other universities like Johns Hopkins in Baltimore and McGill University in Canada are working to bring the language back, and with it, an appreciation for the rich history of European Jewish culture and art.

    "If we want to preserve this, we need to do so actively and consciously," said Miriam Udel, a Yiddish professor at Emory who uses song to teach the language. "The generation that passively knows Yiddish is dying out. There are treasures that need to be preserved because we'll lose access to them if we let Yiddish die."

    Experts estimate there are between 1 million and 2 million native Yiddish speakers in the world, but only about 500,000 speak it in the home ? mostly orthodox Jews. When YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York City began offering summer programs in Yiddish in 1968, they were the only such program in the world.

    Now, they compete with summer intensive Yiddish programs in Tel Aviv, Israel; Ottawa, Canada; Indiana and Arizona, said YIVO's dean, Paul Glasser. About 20 colleges and universities in the U.S. and Canada now offer some Yiddish courses, though just a few of them have degrees in the language.

    The interest has grown because of the younger Jewish generation, which doesn't feel their parents' embarrassment that their family spoke Yiddish rather than English, Glasser said.

    "Eighteen-year-olds today don't have that," he said. "There's nothing to be embarrassed about. No one can question their American-ness."

    Emory student Matthew Birnbaum, a junior, said he took Udel's Yiddish class because he feels a personal connection to the language ? his grandparents still speak it.

    "It's taught me a lot about my own roots and where my people have come from," he said. "It's been a really interesting learning experience, not just from the language perspective but also from the historical perspective."

    It's not just college classes where the interest in Yiddish has grown.

    Klezmer music has made a comeback with young musicians like Canadian Yiddish hip-hop artist Socalled ? whose real name is Josh Dolgin ? and Daniel Kahn, a New York-based folk singer who is recording with some of the most popular Yiddish performers in the world.

    At the Folkspiene national Yiddish theater and the New Yiddish Rep theater company, both in New York City, young actors flood auditions for "Gimpl Tam" and "The Learning Play of Rabbi Levi-Yitzhok, Son of Sara, of Berditchev." The Congress for Jewish Culture holds coffee houses monthly where young Yiddish musicians perform and bring in guest speakers like graphic novel artist Ben Katchor, hoping to appeal to a younger audience.

    A search for Yiddish on Facebook produces dozens of links to groups like "Di Kats der Payats (The Cat in the Hat in Yiddish)" and "Yiddish Slang Dictionary."

    "This is what everyone in Yiddish is trying to do: to get to the younger generations and show people what's out there," said Shane Baker, president of the congress and a non-Jewish actor who appears in Yiddish productions at Folkspiene and New Yiddish Rep. "They used to say in the family: `Speak Yiddish so the children don't understand if you're talking about something serious or arguing.' Now a hook is: `Speak Yiddish so your parents won't know what you're saying.'"

    At Emory, Udel's students spend a semester learning Yiddish grammar through songs and reading before performing the music a cappella at Atlanta nursing homes and Emory's Jewish student center. The performances give them more confidence in their language abilities and help them connect with older Yiddish speakers, she said.

    All the students in this semester's class are Jewish, Udel said, but she's had non-Jews ? or goyim ? in past years.

    The class had only a handful of students when upperclassmen registered for courses over the summer, but the class filled up during freshman registration, Udel said.

    Emory freshman Elizabeth Friedman, 18, said she signed up because she was unsure what to take during her first semester at college. She said the class, which has become like a family, is a fun respite from her "dense" pre-business coursework.

    "That is why I love this class ? there's so much interaction, so much teamwork and much talking, it's like you're learning so much without feeling the stress," the Los Angeles native said. "In the final, I realized how much I learned from the beginning because I was never naturally good at languages."

    ___

    Associated Press writer Kate Brumback contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow Dorie Turner at http://www.twitter.com/dorieturner.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_us/us_yiddish_resurgence

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    Sunday, December 18, 2011

    SKorean president presses Japan on sex slaves (AP)

    TOKYO ? South Korea's visiting president pressed his Japanese counterpart Sunday to resolve a long-standing grievance regarding Korean women forced to serve as sexual slaves during World War II, calling it a "stumbling block" in their relations.

    Japan maintains that the matter was settled by a bilateral treaty in 1965 that normalized relations, and Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said he reiterated that stance during their meeting in the ancient capital of Kyoto.

    Japanese officials have apologized to the victims, who say they still want compensation and the prosecution of wrongdoers.

    President Lee Myung-bak said only 63 women who have identified themselves publicly as former wartime sex slaves are still alive, average age 86. He said 16 such women died this year.

    "They could all die in a few years," Lee said, according to his spokesman Park Jeong-ha. "In such a case, (the issue) will remain a big burden the two countries cannot resolve ... We can only resolve (the issue) now."

    Historians say up to 200,000 women, mainly from the Korean peninsula and China, were forced to provide sex for Japanese soldiers in military brothels during the war.

    "South Korea and Japan should become true partners for co-prosperity and regional peace and stability. For that, I think we need to have the genuine courage of resolving as a priority the issue of comfort women, which has been a stumbling block in relations between the two countries," Lee told Noda, according to a media pool report posted on the president's website.

    The issue has emerged after South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled in August that it's unconstitutional for the government not to make specific diplomatic efforts to settle the matter, essentially pushing Lee's government to raise that matter with Tokyo.

    Also, protesters in Seoul on Wednesday placed a statue of a girl representing the victims in front of the Japanese Embassy to mark the 1,000th weekly rally for the women forced to work in the wartime brothels.

    Several former comfort women, along with some lawmakers, joined the rally, around the life-size statue of the girl, who is sitting on a chair in traditional Korean clothes.

    Noda called the statue "regrettable" and said he asked Lee to remove it.

    "Our nation's legal position on the issue of comfort women has already been settled," Noda told reporters. He added that Japan would continue to make efforts from a "humanitarian standpoint."

    Lee said such a statue would have not been built if Japan came up with more sincere measures to resolve the issue, the presidential spokesman said.

    In 1993, then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono apologized to victims after documents were uncovered showing military involvement in the brothels.

    Tokyo in 1995 initiated a fund of private donations as a way for Japan to pay former sex slaves without providing official compensation. But many comfort women have rejected the fund, demanding a government apology approved by parliament, along with compensation paid by the government.

    Noda said the leaders also discussed speeding up the start of free trade negotiations.

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul contributed to this report.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_south_korea

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    PSU formally requests more time from NCAA (AP)

    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ? With a Friday deadline looming, Penn State has asked for more time to respond to an NCAA inquiry over the university's handling of accusations of child sex abuse against former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

    Penn State general counsel Cynthia Baldwin said in a letter to NCAA president Mark Emmert released Thursday that answers to the NCAA's questions about the Sandusky case might come from other, separate probes already in progress. Among them is a university trustees investigation spearheaded by former FBI director Louis Freeh.

    Baldwin spoke to Emmert and other NCAA staff by phone Nov. 23 about the concurrent inquiries, according to the letter dated Dec. 12.

    "The university understands that the NCAA will continue to monitor these investigations and will have access to the report" from Freeh and the trustees, Baldwin said.

    "At that time, the NCAA will determine if further response from the university is necessary," she wrote before requesting more time.

    Both the NCAA and Penn State have signaled in recent weeks the school may not make the Friday deadline to provide complete answers to questions posed by the college sports governing body.

    The Big Ten announced last week it would also conduct its own review and reserved the right to hand down sanctions pending its findings. The 12-member league also planned an immediate review of institutional control of athletics at its schools.

    The Department of Education also is looking into Penn State, along with the separate criminal case by the state attorney general's office.

    Sandusky has pleaded not guilty and waived his preliminary hearing Tuesday on charges he molested 10 boys. He has requested a jury trial.

    The Sandusky scandal led to the departures last month of Hall of Fame coach Joe Paterno and school president Graham Spanier, amid mounting pressure on trustees and criticism that school officials should have done more to prevent the alleged abuse.

    University trustee Kenneth Frazier said this week at a business forum hosted by The Wall Street Journal in New York that he hoped Freeh's team would have findings by the end of the academic year. Penn State's spring semester ends in mid-May.

    Spanier's replacement, Rodney Erickson, has pledged the university's full cooperation with the NCAA and other inquiries.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_penn_state_ncaa

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    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Video: ?Downton Abbey? star discusses new season

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054368/vp/45684228#45684228

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    GOP's Gingrich scrambles in Iowa for caucuses

    Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich makes his way to speak to a group of students, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, at the University of Iowa College of Public Health in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

    Republican presidential candidate former House Speaker Newt Gingrich makes his way to speak to a group of students, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011, at the University of Iowa College of Public Health in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

    (AP) ? Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich has little choice but to rely on momentum to carry him to victory in the Iowa caucuses.

    He has a skeleton campaign organization in a state where successful caucus candidates typically have had well-built machines aimed at turning out supporters. To build a stronger operation with less than three weeks until the leadoff 2012 contest, he has to scramble.

    The former House speaker is hoping the typical rules don't apply to him, in a campaign that already has been far from typical.

    "You're not going to have a successful campaign in the caucuses on organization alone," said John Stineman, an uncommitted Iowa Republican who ran Steve Forbes' 2000 caucus campaign. "You have to have some heat. Newt's getting hot at the right time. It's a matter of whether he can sustain the heat."

    Getting a winning share of support from caucusgoers in 1,774 precinct-level party meetings across the state on a cold, early January night requires some level of coordination, such as nailing down supporters in each of Iowa's 99 counties.

    Gingrich, whose mass staff departures in June stunted his Iowa campaign, is trying to cobble together his Iowa team using emerging social media methods and time-tested grass-roots work.

    He has only nine staffers in Iowa, fewer than most of his rivals. He opened his campaign office just two weeks ago, while others have had state headquarters for months. And while Gingrich's fundraising has picked up, he hasn't had the vast sums former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry have had at their disposal.

    But just as his late rise in Iowa has had more to do with his performance in the national debates than campaigning in the state, his Iowa organization is benefiting from the notice he's sparked nationally.

    Gingrich has argued that his message, timing and the Internet can help him close the organizational gap.

    His full-frontal attack on President Barack Obama has been what some GOP activists in Iowa say is the confrontational approach they've been looking for in a potential challenger to the well-funded incumbent.

    Gingrich, who has asked his supporters to remain positive as he faces attacks, is on the air in Iowa with a positive spot. Time is running out for effective advertising messages to stick, with candidates unlikely to air attack ads over the holidays.

    Gingrich's message attacking Obama and pledging a positive campaign versus his GOP rivals has helped bring potential supporters to his website. It's netted supporters around the country who have made, on average, 1,200 telephone calls per night to Iowa Republicans in the past week, Gingrich deputy Iowa director Katie Koberg said.

    Through the same site, a dozen supporters from out of state have traveled to Iowa to log days helping the campaign, Koberg said.

    It's a far cry from Texas Rep. Ron Paul's campaign, with its statewide supporter network that includes niche groups such as students and doctors.

    Although Romney has campaigned in Iowa less often than he did four years ago, his team has kept after supporters of his 2008 campaign, a massive $10 million effort that earned him second place.

    That year, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee won the caucuses with a threadbare staff. He was the overwhelming favorite of evangelical conservatives, who functioned as an influential network but were not necessarily organized by the Huckabee campaign.

    Gingrich is not the unanimous favorite of evangelicals, but he has the momentum Huckabee did.

    "You can't confuse organization with paid staff," said Tim Albrecht, who was Romney's 2008 Iowa campaign spokesman but is uncommitted this year. "Gingrich has a Huckabee quality to him ? late getting in place but with a ready audience, those longtime caucus veterans who don't need any hand-holding to get them to caucus."

    Given the fluidity demonstrated in Iowa polls, Gingrich could benefit from late-deciding caucusgoers. And he has picked up a number of key GOP activists. The campaign rolled out a list of them from across the state and different segments of the party late Wednesday, aimed at portraying Gingrich as a unifying candidate.

    They include former Iowa Republican Party Chairman Ray Hoffmann and Dean Kleckner, former president of the American Farm Bureau Federation. Kleckner had been a top Iowa backer of Herman Cain before the Georgia businessman quit the race Dec. 3.

    Another key pickup known for his organizational heft is Darryl Kearny, a former finance director of the Iowa Republican Party and now the key finance official for Polk County, Iowa's most populous.

    "I realize they have a lot of catching up to do," said Kearny, who has amassed a massive Rolodex in his 30-plus years as an Iowa party activist and campaign operative. "But I'm networking with everyone I know, calling and emailing, trying to pass on the word about Newt."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-15-Gingrich-Skeleton%20Organization/id-6a9069dc76a846428fd3fbd49794c382

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    US Politics | AMERICAblog News: Judge dismisses legal challenge ...

    And the push-back begins.

    You may recall that Obama's FDA, in internal deliberations, recommended removing age restrictions on over-the-counter birth control ? so-called "Plan B One-Step" ? but Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, to whom the FDA reports, rejected the recommendation of the FDA scientists.

    This caused a huge outcry among women's rights groups, both on the merits (the arguments didn't make sense) and because of Obama's campaign promises not to overrule regulatory scientists on political grounds, as Bush II had done.

    Plan B approval has been a political football since the Bush years. One of the reasons for the decision in the first place is a 2009 court order. (More Bush II?era background summary here.)

    And that's were we are today, with Sebelius rejecting the recommendation of FDA scientists, women's rights advocates up in arms, Obama in re-election mode, and a court order that, in part, caused the reconsideration in the first place.

    So it's back to the courts, in this case to federal judge Edward Korman in Brooklyn, with whom the 2009 complaint was filed. In a move that cheered women's rights advocates, Judge Korman did two things (my emphasis):

    A federal judge Tuesday rejected a request to hold the Food and Drug Administration in contempt of court over its policy on the emergency contraceptive Plan B but said he would consider reviewing the government?s refusal to make it easier for girls and women to get the drug.
    Rejecting the request to hold the FDA in contempt of court is small potatoes compared to the suggestion that he would put Sebelius's (and, one must assume, Obama's) decision under court review:
    Korman said he was willing to hear arguments over whether the agency should have allowed the sale of the morning-after pill to girls younger than 17 without a prescription, and he instructed advocacy groups to file the appropriate legal motions. Korman specifically suggested adding Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to the lawsuit.
    There's much good information in the article; it's well researched and written.

    I'm looking forward to the decision; I hope it comes before Mr. Obama opens the 2012 package he hopes will contain his $1 billion electoral pony.

    Which is, of course, the other half of this story, that nagging sense of "betrayal" that Obama expects his base to roll with as they enter the voting booth.

    Let's see how they roll.

    GP

    Source: http://www.americablog.com/2011/12/judge-dismisses-legal-challenge-to-plan.html

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    Graphene: The Pencil Material That Will Revolutionize Our Lives [Video]

    Features | Technology

    What's with the excitement over these single-atom carbon sheets? Find out in this short primer


    For materials-science fans, graphene is one of those substances that's easy to get excited about. Not only is graphene transparent and superstrong?a sheet with the thickness of Saran Wrap could support an elephant?but it also conducts electricity very quickly. It could lead to computer circuits that run 100 times faster.

    Ainissa Ramirez, a Yale University professor of mechanical engineering and materials science, explains the basics of graphene and demonstrates its electrical property with pencil marks on paper. The video is part of her "Material Marvels" series.

    One of the discoverers of graphene, Andre Geim, won the 2010 Nobel prize in physics (he indeed used adhesive tape on graphite to make graphene) and wrote about his work in his article, "Carbon Wonderland," in the April 2008 Scientific American (subscription required).

    If you feel inspired, you might want to click on over to this: D.I.Y. Graphene: How to Make One-Atom-Thick Carbon Layers With Sticky Tape
    ?

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    Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=11c8c9f8737d99bfdbcfafdabf6f9efc

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