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Crazy Dave’s Wabby Wabbo being sold on iTunes for charity

Crazy Dave, whom you might remember as Plants vs. Zombies‘ power-up purveyor, can’t speak English. But that hasn’t stopped him from producing a rap song, apparently, which PopCap is now selling for 99 cents on iTunes in order to raise some money for charity this holiday season. The single, which features “Cray-Z” murmuring over a bombastic beat, has already picked up over 600,000 views on YouTube, and PopCap says all profits on the song’s sale are going to Concern Worldwide.

What’s Concern do with its nonprofit funds? It helps grow plants, of course. How else are we going to take on the coming zombie bobsled threat?Crazy Dave’s Wabby Wabbo being sold on iTunes for charity originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 20 Dec 2011 08:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments

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Reviewed by Lisa Schwarzbaum | B+<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/entertainmentweekly/movies/coverage/~4/ZQj_LBVTNYk" height="1" width="1"/>

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Olsen: &quot;I had to make some tough decisions&quot;

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Back from recent scouting trips across the globe, United’s technical staff has reconvened inside RFK Stadium this week before departing for additional travel in the coming days. Head Coach Ben Olsen takes time to break down his recent itinerary, the club’s evolving roster, and the difficulty of saying goodbye to several veteran players. How was your scouting trip to Europe?

Olsen: "I had to make some tough decisions"

Last California Guard unit home from Iraq

For 10 months Theresa Bruzzone kept herself as busy as possible — helping her family, starting a business with her sister — anything to keep her mind off her husband in a war zone in Iraq.

On Friday, the 23-year-old Monterey resident was able to stop worrying about the man from Millbrae she married shortly before he shipped out in March. Spc. Chris Bruzzone, 24, was part of a smiling National Guard unit, the men and women of the 297th Medical Company, dropped off in San Mateo to a cheering crowd.

“I always knew he was safe,” Theresa Bruzzone said, standing in the gym at the National Guard Armory on North Humboldt Street. “He’s really smart.”

The group — with members from Cupertino to San Francisco and Millbrae to Hayward — is the last California National Guard unit to come home from the war in Iraq. In October, President Barack Obama announced all U.S. troops would be out of Iraq by the end of the year. Soldiers said that news brought them home about a month ahead of schedule.

Even before the doors of their white bus peeled open there were tears, American flags, welcome home signs, but most of all the rush of relief. Everyone had come home — not a single one killed or wounded. About 4,483 American fighters have died in the war that started in 2003, according to icasualties.org. Of those killed, 26 were guard soldiers. One of their ranks, Spc. Sean Walsh, 21, of San Jose, is to be buried

Saturday.

The group of roughly 70 soldiers consisting of medics and medical technicians, was not on daily patrols of dusty streets that might conceal a handmade bomb or a nest of armed insurgents. But they lived and worked in a war zone, primarily in the southern Iraqi city of Basra. Their base was routinely hit with enemy rocket and mortar fire.

While the unit did its work in a dangerous place, families back home had to figure out how to carry on with lives that were missing a central piece.

Kim Nodora, 36, of Hayward had to keep up with 6-year-old daughter Angelina and 14-month-old son Kai, but also handle a leaky roof and a freak accident on the freeway that left her with two flat tires. She had to do it without her husband, Capt. Donald Nodora, the unit’s leader. The worst part, though, was living without the touch of her husband at the end of each day.

“Hugs are therapeutic. It’s totally true,” she said as he sat next to her balancing the wiggling kids on his knees.

While the Guard is a full-time job for Nodora, most of his troops are in the military part time. So in addition to leaving behind kids, spouses and friends they had to take off from work. Federal law obliges employers to let soldier-workers take leave. As a result, among the soldiers who arrived Friday there were professional nurses and even caterers.

Maribeth Cambridge, of Cupertino, said she is looking forward to going back to her job as a registered nurse at the VA Palo Alto Health Care System. After months of long periods of boredom, coupled with intense anxiety over her safety and the next severely injured patient she would help treat, she is looking forward to normal life.

But she will not look at life the same. The experience left with her with an even more acute sense of the brevity and the sanctity of life.

On April 30, the day before her 30th birthday, Cambridge had a few moments to wonder if the two soldiers sitting with her in a bunker would be the last people she ever saw. They could hear enemy rockets flying into the base and then they could hear the firing of the defensive rocket mounted atop their bunker. The launching of the defense rocket meant only one thing, an enemy missile was headed directly at them.

What came next? “Silence,” she said.

The sound of the air raid sirens that sent the soldiers running for bunkers would seem an unpleasant reminder of those scary moment, right? Apparently not for some soldiers who recorded the wailing warning with their cellphones, said Spc. Victorino Bis, a San Francisco resident. Someone even thought it was funny to let loose the recording after everyone had landed safely back in the United States.

“Your heart just jumps,” the 25-year-old student said. “But then you remember, ‘OK, you’re not there anymore.’ “

Contact Joshua Melvin at 650-348-4335.

Source: http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/localnews/ci_19458844?source=rss

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SupaBoy portable SNES, the most fun you can have without a soldering iron

We previewed Hyperkin’s SupaBoy back in the summer and loved the idea of toting ’round original SNES games without resorting to Ben Heck-style crafting. The handheld takes full-size cartridges, packs a 3.5-inch screen and a battery that’s disappointingly rated for just two point five hours (best keep a power cable handy). It’ll also double as a home console: there’s an AV-out port and slots for two classic controllers for when you wanna kick it old-school. It’s reportedly compatible with titles like Mario World, A Link to the Past and Starwing Starfox, but who needs them when we’ve got a mint condition copy of Tetris Attack at home? It’ll cost you $80 and is available from Amazon as of yesterday — we suggest you get to practicing blowing the dirt from the connectors, since you’ll be doing a lot of it soon.

Continue reading SupaBoy portable SNES, the most fun you can have without a soldering iron

SupaBoy portable SNES, the most fun you can have without a soldering iron originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Dec 2011 16:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/02/supaboy-portable-snes-the-most-fun-you-can-have-without-a-solde/

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S.Africa: Funds raised to fight rhino poaching

(AP) ? A fundraising campaign aimed at putting rhino poachers in jail was welcomed Friday by a South African conservationist.

Michael Knight, head of park planning and development for South Africa’s national parks department, said money raised by the Florida-based International Rhino Federation would be used to support such efforts as teaching park employees how to safeguard evidence at crime scenes.

More South African rhinos were poached ? 341 ? in the first 10 months of 2011 than in all of 2010, which was a record poaching year with 333 animals lost. The International Rhino Federation project is for parks in South Africa and neighboring Zimbabwe, which also has seen increased poaching.

An Asian economic boom in recent years is believed to be behind the spike in poaching, with a growing middle class in countries like China and Vietnam able to afford exotic purported remedies like powdered rhino horn.

“We’re losing animals like crazy,” Knight, who also chairs the rhino specialist group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, said in an interview. “But the prosecutions are falling way behind.”

Knight said police in isolated areas of South Africa are not always experienced in investigating environmental crime. He said rangers and others would be trained to support police and prosecutors.

In court, he said, “You need to have the most up-to-date information, you need to have the most convincing arguments.”

The federation launched its fundraising this week. Donations will fund training in collecting evidence and information. The federation also plans to distribute basic crime scene kits containing cameras, fingerprinting materials and evidence bags.

In an interview, federation director Susie Ellis said that an anonymous donor kicked off the fund with $25,000. She said she spoke with South African security officials in March about how best to use the money.

“It’s a small project that we hope will have a big impact,” she said, adding tthat he first training session is set for early February in South Africa.

____

Online:

www.rhinos-irf.org

____

Donna Bryson can be reached on http://twitter.com/dbrysonAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-12-02-AF-South-Africa-Rhino-Poaching/id-b5f02eff637f4aaea405a5885e644526

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Senate rejects, for now, extending payroll tax cut

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. speaks to reporters about extending the payroll tax cut, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. speaks to reporters about extending the payroll tax cut, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

House Speaker of the House John Boehner of Ohio gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

(AP) ? The Senate on Thursday sidetracked rival plans to extend a Social Security payroll tax cut, in dueling votes that pave the way for negotiations on a compromise on a core component of President Barack Obama’s jobs program.

First, Republicans defeated Obama’s plan to extend the payroll tax cut through the end of next year while also making it more generous for workers.

Minutes later, in a vote that exposed rare divisions among Senate Republicans, more than two dozen of the GOP’s 47 lawmakers also voted to kill an alternative plan backed by their powerful leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, to renew an existing 2 percentage point payroll tax cut.

Many Republicans and even some Democrats say the payroll tax cut hasn’t worked to boost jobs and is too costly with the federal deficit requiring the government to borrow 36 cents of every dollar it spends.

The defeat of the competing plans came as House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said for the first time that renewing the payroll tax cut would boost the lagging economy, a view many in his party don’t share. Boehner also promised compromise on a renewal of long-term jobless benefits through the end of 2012.

The payroll tax cuts and unemployment benefits are at the center of a costly, politically-charged year-end agenda in which Democrats seem poised to prevail in renewing a tax cut that many Republicans back only reluctantly. But Republicans are insisting ? in a switch from last year ? that the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits be paid for by cutting spending.

Both parties are seeking the political high ground as next year’s elections loom, with Democrats accusing Republicans of siding with the rich, and Republicans countering that Democrats were taxing small business owners who create jobs.

The first payroll tax plan to fall was a Democratic measure that was the centerpiece of Obama’s jobs package announced in September. It would cut the Social Security payroll tax from 6.2 percent to 3.1 percent next year and also extend the cut to employers, with its hefty $265 billion cost paid for by slapping a 3.25 percent surtax on income exceeding $1 million.

Republicans and a handful of Democrats combined to kill the measure on a 51-49 tally that fell well short of the 60 required under Senate rules. For the first time, a Republican, Susan Collins of Maine, voted to support the millionaires’ surcharge.

The White House issued a statement by Obama that accused Republicans of voting to raise taxes on 160 million people because they “refused to ask a few hundred thousand millionaires and billionaires to pay their fair share.” The statement didn’t mention the GOP alternative.

In a surprising result, Democrats and more than two dozen Republicans voted 78-20 to kill the $120 billion GOP alternative that would have simply extended the existing 2 percentage point payroll tax cut, financed by freezing federal workers’ pay through 2015 and reducing the government bureaucracy.

“Wouldn’t we be better off using the proceeds of these reductions in spending to reduce the debt and deficit,” said Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Republican opponents “insist on helping the very wealthy while turning their back on the middle class,” while another member of the leadership, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Republicans were in full-blown retreat just days after Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said on “Fox News Sunday” that “the payroll tax holiday has not stimulated job creation. We don’t think that is a good way to do it.”

On Thursday, however, Boehner disagreed.

“I don’t think there’s any question that the payroll tax relief, in fact, helps the economy,” Boehner said. “You’re allowing more Americans, frankly, every working American, to keep more of their money in their pocket. Frankly, that’s a good thing.”

Meanwhile, House Republicans readied legislation of their own that aides said likely would include the tax cut extension as well as renewed benefits for long-term victims of the worst recession in decades and a painfully slow recovery.

Boehner made clear that all costs must be paid for, and said higher taxes were a non-starter.

Thursday’s votes indicated there was lots of reluctance among Republicans to renew the costly payroll tax cut, which even some Democrats said hasn’t much helped the economy.

“I can’t find many people who even know that they’re getting it, okay?” said Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who opposed both plans. “So with that being said, we’re going to double down on something that we thought should have worked that didn’t work.”

With unemployment hovering around 9 percent nationally, Obama urged Congress in September to renew and expand the Social Security payroll tax cut for workers that he signed a year ago, and called as well for an extension of benefits that can cover up to 99 weeks for the long-term jobless.

State unemployment insurance programs guarantees coverage for six months, but as in previous downturns, Congress approved additional benefits in 2008. Expiration of those payments would mean an average loss of $296 in weekly income for 1.8 million households in January, and a total of 6 million throughout 2012.

On the tax cut extension, Republicans prefer a simple one-year continuation of the existing law, jettisoning Obama’s call to deepen the cut to 3.1 percentage points on workers’ first $106,800 in earnings, while expanding it to cut in half employers’ Social Security contributions for their $5 million in payroll.

To pay for the measure, Senate Republicans proposed freezing federal workers’ pay through 2015 ? extending a two-year-freeze recommended by Obama ? and reducing the bureaucracy by 200,000 jobs through attrition.

The Democratic plan would give a worker earning $50,000 a more than $1,500 tax cut; the GOP plan would provide a $1,000 tax cut for such an earner. A two-income family making $200,000 would reap a $6,000 tax cut under the Democratic plan and a $4,000 tax cut under the GOP version.

___

Associated Press writer Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-01-Congress-Payroll%20Tax/id-144ff87d5d2645e4bf2c50acb8b1c365

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Android Game Review: Apparatus

YouTube link for mobile viewing

Sometimes I come across a game that makes me feel really dumb really challenges the ol' noggin of mine, and I know I just have to share it with you all, the Android faithful (because Android users are inherintly smart). Apparatus is one such game, and by the time you're done with it, you'll deserve either a pat on the back or a tasty cold one (or both).

If the name didn't completely give it away, Apparatus is about just that: building apparatuses. To do what, you may ask? To make sure a dark blue ball makes it's way safely into a sky blue box. That's it.

Now if you're wondering what makes Apparatus so difficult, it's because the game uses physics and all, so if any of your parts aren't stable and attached to something, they'll fall away into the nothingness pit that makes up the bottom of the screen.

Fortunately there's no penalty for completely botching the job (sometimes it's the only way to learn what's going on), and a simple tap of the pause button will get all of your objects reset on the screen.

For the first couple of levels there are hints that'll show you the ropes on apparatus-building (like how batteries work, how to tell which way your plank of wood will spin, and how to attach pieces of material together), so you're not totally out in the cold, but once you've been taught the basics, it's up to your own ingenuity to get the job done.

Perhaps even more amazing than the levels the game has you work through are the community-designed levels and the sandbox. From within the sandbox, you can build either an apparatus or a building challenge. When you're done designing your masterpiece, you can upload it to the community levels to people can try and beat it or just watch it unfold.

It's absolutely amazing to see someone construct a rudimentary gun using only these simple tools, or an impressive fireworks show with the only trigger being a wheel rolling over them, and more than makes this app worth it's price.

Apparatus feel like one of those "must have" games on Android. It's cheap, forces you to be creative, and is filled with levels. Even if you never touch the main game, the sandbox and community sections can easily take hours out of your otherwise productive day, as you build and see what others have built. In a word, it's stellar.

Apparatus is $2.45 in the Android Market. We've got download links after the break.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/kro8_teYzdg/story01.htm

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E. coli bacteria engineered to eat switchgrass and make transportation fuels

E. coli bacteria engineered to eat switchgrass and make transportation fuels

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

A milestone has been reached on the road to developing advanced biofuels that can replace gasoline, diesel and jet fuels with a domestically-produced clean, green, renewable alternative.

Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) have engineered the first strains of Escherichia coli bacteria that can digest switchgrass biomass and synthesize its sugars into all three of those transportation fuels. What’s more, the microbes are able to do this without any help from enzyme additives.

“This work shows that we can reduce one of the most expensive parts of the biofuel production process, the addition of enzymes to depolymerize cellulose and hemicellulose into fermentable sugars,” says Jay Keasling, CEO of JBEI and leader of this research. “This will enable us to reduce fuel production costs by consolidating two steps ? depolymerizing cellulose and hemicellulose into sugars, and fermenting the sugars into fuels ? into a single step or one pot operation.”

Keasling, who also holds appointments with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California (UC) Berkley, is the corresponding author of a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) that describes this work. The paper is titled “Synthesis of three advanced biofuels from ionic liquid-pretreated switchgrass using engineered Escherichia coli.”

Advanced biofuels made from the lignocellulosic biomass of non-food crops and agricultural waste are widely believed to represent the best source of renewable liquid transportation fuels. Unlike ethanol, which in this country is produced from corn starch, these advanced biofuels can replace gasoline on a gallon-for-gallon basis, and they can be used in today’s engines and infrastructures. The biggest roadblock to an advanced biofuels highway is bringing the cost of producing these fuels down so that they are economically competitive.

Unlike the simple sugars in corn grain, the cellulose and hemicellulose in plant biomass are difficult to extract in part because they are embedded in a tough woody material called lignin. Once extracted, these complex sugars must first be converted or hydrolyzed into simple sugars and then synthesized into fuels. At JBEI, a DOE Bioenergy Research Center led by Berkeley Lab, one approach has been to pre-treat the biomass with an ionic liquid (molten salt) to dissolve it, then engineer a single microorganism that can both digest the dissolved biomass and produce hydrocarbons that have the properties of petrochemical fuels.

“Our goal has been to put as much chemistry as we can into microbes,” Keasling says. “For advanced biofuels this requires a microbe with pathways for hydrocarbon production and the biomass-degrading capacity to secrete enzymes that efficiently hydrolyze cellulose and hemicellulose. We’ve now been able to engineer strains of Escherichia coli that can utilize both the cellulose and hemicellulose fractions of switchgrass that’s been pre-treated with ionic liquids.”

E. coli bacteria normally cannot grow on switchgrass, but JBEI researchers engineered strains of the bacteria to express several enzymes that enable them to digest cellulose and hemicellulose and use one or the other for growth. These cellulolytic and hemicellulolytic strains of E. coli, which can be combined as co-cultures on a sample of switchgrass, were further engineered with three metabolic pathways that enabled the E. coli to produce fuel substitute or precursor molecules suitable for gasoline, diesel and jet engines. While this is not the first demonstration of E. coli producing gasoline and diesel from sugars, it is the first demonstration of E. coli producing all three forms of transportation fuels. Furthermore, it was done using switchgrass, which is among the most highly touted of the potential feedstocks for advanced biofuels.

Gregory Bokinsky, a post-doctoral researcher with JBEI’s synthetic biology group and lead author of the PNAS paper, explains that the pre-treatment of the switchgrass with ionic liquids was essential to this demonstration.

“The magic is in the ionic liquid pre-treatment,” Bokinsky says. “If properly optimized, I suspect you could use ionic liquid pre-treatment on any plant biomass and make it readily digestible by microbes. For us it was the combination of biomass from the ionic liquid pretreatment with the engineered E. coli that enabled our success.”

The JBEI researchers also attribute the success of this work to the “unparalleled genetic and metabolic tractability” of E. coli, which over the years has been engineered to produce a wide range of chemical products. However, the researchers believe that the techniques used in this demonstration should also be readily adapted to other microbes. This would open the door to the production of advanced biofuels from lignocellulosic feedstocks that are ecologically and economically appropriate to grow and harvest anywhere in the world. For the JBEI researchers, however, the next step is to increase the yields of the fuels they can synthesize from switchgrass.

“We already have hydrocarbon fuel production pathways that give far better yields than what we obtained with this demonstration,” says Bokinsky. “And these other pathways are very likely to be compatible with the biomass-consumption pathways we’ve engineered into our E. coli. However, we need to find enzymes that can both digest more of the ionic liquid pre-treated biomass and be secreted by E coli. We also need to work on optimizing the ionic liquid pre-treatment steps to yield biomass that is even easier for the microbes to digest.”

###

DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: http://www.lbl.gov

Thanks to DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115553/E__coli_bacteria_engineered_to_eat_switchgrass_and_make_transportation_fuels

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Libya leaders acknowledge abuse of prisoners

(AP) ? Libya’s new leaders said Tuesday that some prisoners held by revolutionary forces have been abused, but insisted the mistreatment was not systematic and pledged to tackle the problem.

The acknowledgment comes a day after the U.N. released a report a detailing alleged torture and ill treatment in lockups controlled by the forces that overthrew dictator Moammar Gadhafi. The report says that Libyan revolutionaries still hold about 7,000 people, many of them sub-Saharan Africans who are in some cases accused or suspected of being mercenaries hired by Gadhafi.

Libya’s new leaders, who received the backing of the U.S., France, Britain and other countries in their fight against Gadhafi, are eager to assure the world of their commitment to democracy and human rights. Interior Minister Fawzy Abdul-Ali acknowledged that abuses have occurred but said the new government is trying to eliminate them.

“We are trying our best to establish a legitimate system that is authorized to make arrests, detain and interrogate people,” he told The Associated Press. “We are trying to minimize the possibilities of violations taking place.”

Abdul-Ali said the government plans to create special security units under the authority of the central government that will handle prisoners. Leaders are working to bolster “the authority of the new government all across the country,” he said.

Responding to the U.N. report, Deputy Prime Minister Mustafa Abushagur also acknowledged there are problems with detainees.

“Are there illegal detentions in Libya? I am afraid there are,” Abushagur told a news conference. He said any abuses have been committed by militias not yet controlled by central authorities.

Libya’s new leaders have struggled to stamp their authority on the country since toppling Gadhafi’s regime. One of the greatest challenges still facing the leadership is how to rein in the dozens of revolutionary militias that arose during the war and now are reluctant to disband or submit to central authority.

Abushagur also denied some news reports claiming that Libyan leaders are arming rebels in Syria.

“We are with the Syrian people but we are not going to send fighters or arms,” he said.

Also Tuesday, dozens of people with relatives who went missing in Libya’s recent civil war rallied in front of the main government building to demand that authorities speed up the search for their loved ones.

Most of the missing were fighters, but there are also civilians among them. There are an estimated 20,000 people missing, according to the prosecutor for the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo.

Authorities have started trying to find and identify the missing but face many problems. For one, they need to build a DNA laboratory from scratch to match genetic material from living people with the remains in mass graves now spread across this large desert country.

___

Associated Press writer Rami al-Shaheibi in Tripoli contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-29-ML-Libya/id-434a5517fea74b66b99e1f5df319304f

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