Sunday, August 4, 2013

Minister Facing Church Discipline Over Same-Sex Marriages

A local minister could lose his job as he shows his support for same sex marriage.
?
Reverend Steve Heiss of Binghamton's Tabernacle United Methodist Church met with his church's Bishop Mark Webb to discuss the charges against him as a result of officiating same sex marriages.

A 90 day resolution period started after a meeting on Thursday.? ? ?

Heiss wrote a letter to the bishop explaining that he had performed same sex marriages, which left a lot of people wondering why.

"But to constantly have to wonder about whether or not someone is going to turn you in --I know a lot of people asked yesterday why did Reverend Heiss write this letter to the bishop initially?? Why didn't he just fly below the radar?? And that's not what he wants, we're proud of what we do at this church," said Penny Stringfield,? the chair of Prayer Staff relations.
?
106 people from the Tabernacle United Methodist Church voted on whether or not the church and Heiss should reconcile.

Only six voted against it.

Around 150 people held a prayer service during Thursday's meeting to show their support.

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Source: http://www.wicz.com/news2005/viewarticle.asp?a=29166

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Missy Franklin wins record 6th gold at swim worlds

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Missy Franklin climbed to the top of the podium one more time in Spain before heading off to college.

With that step, the 18-year-old joined a very exclusive club.

Missy, we'd like to introduce you to Michael Phelps, Mark Spitz, Ian Thorpe and Kristin Otto.

"I still can't really believe that it happened," Franklin said.

She claimed her record sixth gold medal of the world championships Sunday night, swimming the leadoff leg for the Americans in the 400-meter medley relay. Franklin gave the U.S. a slight lead in the backstroke, and her teammates ? Jessica Hardy, Dana Vollmer and Megan Romano ? made it look easy from there.

The winning time was 3 minutes, 53.23 seconds, nearly two seconds ahead of runner-up Australia, with Russia claiming the bronze.

"I had some really great races that I'm really proud of, and there's still a bunch where I have a lot of room to improve," Franklin said. "So I'm really excited for the next year and the year after that and all the years following those."

It might be hard to top this one.

Franklin became the winningest female swimmer ever at a world meet, eclipsing the record that was shared by Tracy Caulkins, who won five times in 1978, and Libby Trickett, who did it in 2007.

Perhaps more impressively, Franklin became only the fifth swimmer to capture as many as six golds at either worlds or an Olympics.

Quite a club it is.

Phelps won six golds at the 2004 Athens Olympics, seven at the 2007 worlds and, of course, a record eight at the Beijing Olympics, eclipsing Spitz's mark of seven at the 1972 Munich Games. Otto won six golds at the 1988 Seoul Olympics ? an accomplishment since clouded by revelations of rampant doping in East Germany ? and Thorpe claimed a half-dozen victories at the 2001 worlds.

Now, there's Franklin.

She completed a grueling week in which she competed in eight events. She dropped out of the 50 backstroke after swimming in the preliminaries of the non-OIympic event, wanting to focus on more important races, and took fourth in the 100 freestyle. Otherwise, it was all gold.

She improved on her performance at the London Olympics, where she was one of the biggest stars with four golds and a bronze.

"I just wanted to see where I was after London," Franklin said. "It's kind of an unknown year. There are so many things that can happen."

Indeed. Check out what transpired with the American men in their 400 medley relay.

They celebrated what looked to be an easy victory, only to discover that 19-year-old breaststroker Kevin Cordes, the least experienced member of the foursome, left too soon on the exchange between the first and second legs.

The U.S., which touched nearly 1? seconds ahead of France, was disqualified. The French moved up to take the gold, while the silver went to Australia and Japan snatched the bronze.

"That's like a punch in the gut right there," said Bob Bowman, coach of the U.S. men's team.

Cordes stood on the deck in disbelief, hands on his head, but the replay showed he clearly left the block before backstroker Matt Grevers touched the pad. Ryan Lochte could only shake his head, having contributed a strong butterfly leg that didn't matter. He was denied his fourth gold medal of the meet, leaving him tied with Chinese star Sun Yang as the winningest male swimmers.

"A relay disqualification is not a particular individual's fault," said Nathan Adrian, who swam the anchor leg in vain. "It falls on all of our shoulders."

Franklin was not even chosen as the top female swimmer of the meet. That award went to fellow American Katie Ledecky, who won four golds and set two world records.

She edged out Franklin based on a formula that doesn't count the relays and gives bonus points for world marks.

Franklin had no complaints.

"It could not go to a better person," Franklin said. "I am sooooooo proud of Katie. She was absolutely unbelievable. I think she has probably been my absolute favorite swimmer to watch ever."

Sun was honored as the top male swimmer after sweeping the freestyle distance events. He closed with a victory in the 1,500, adding to his titles in the 400 and 800. After dueling with Canada's Ryan Cochrane most of the way, the Chinese star turned it on the last two laps and won going away in 14:41.15.

Cochrane took silver and Italy's Gregorio Paltrinieri bronze. Americans Connor Jaeger and Michael McBroom finished off the podium in fourth and fifth.

"I really appreciated (that) my opponent pushed, otherwise I wouldn't have been able to make it," Sun said through a translator. "After all my races I felt a bit fatigued. But I just tried to convince myself to stay with him, because I knew that in the last 100 I had the advantage."

Sun's week also included the fastest leg by far on the 800 free relay, which almost singlehandedly give China a bronze medal in that event.

In other events on the final night at the Palau Sant Jordi, Japan's Daiya Seto held off American Chase Kalisz to end U.S. domination of the men's 400 individual medley, Hungary's Katinka Hosszu won the women's 400 I.M., and Ranomi Kromowidjojo of the Netherlands took the women's 50 freestyle.

Seto touched in 4:08.69 to take gold in a race that had been won by U.S. stars Lochte and Michael Phelps at every major meet since the 2005 worlds in Montreal.

Phelps is retired ? for now ? and Lochte has dropped the grueling race, at least for this season.

The 19-year-old Kalisz, who trains at Phelps' club in Baltimore, was far back after the butterfly and backstroke legs. But he began to close on the breaststroke and nearly caught Seto on a freestyle dash to the finish. He settled for silver, with the bronze to Brazil's Thiago Pereira. American Tyler Clary was fourth after taking the silver behind Lochte at the 2011 worlds.

Hosszu was more than 2 seconds under world-record pace through the first three legs, giving her a big enough lead to hold on in the freestyle. She touched in 4:30.41, while Spain's Mireia Belmonte thrilled the home crowd by taking silver. Elizabeth Beisel of the United States earned the bronze, just ahead of hard-charging teammate Madeline Dirado.

Kromowidjojo's victory was a reversal of the 100 free, which was won by Australia's Cate Campbell with the Dutch sprinter taking the bronze. Campbell took silver this time, just 0.09 behind the winner's time of 24.05. Francesca Halsall grabbed the bronze, Britain's only medal of a hugely disappointing meet.

The U.S. had a grand ol' time, finishing atop the swimming medals table with 13 golds and 29 overall ? matching its total haul at the 2011 worlds in Shanghai.

In non-Olympic events, Yuliya Efimova won the women's 50 breaststroke in 29.52, edging world-record holder Ruta Meilutyte of Lithuania, while Hardy took the bronze. Camille Lacourt of France won the men's 50 backstroke with a time of 24.42. Grevers tied for the silver with another Frenchman, Jeremy Stravius.

Franklin saved the best for last.

Now, she's off to college at Cal in a few weeks.

"I can't wait," Franklin said. "It just feels more real every second, and I can't wait for the experience."

This one wasn't too shabby, either.

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/missy-franklin-wins-record-6th-gold-swim-worlds-181345659.html

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Syria turmoil stirs Iraqi tribal sympathies, hopes

RAMADI, Iraq (Reuters) - In guesthouses and mosques across Iraq's Anbar province, the talk at Sunni tribal gatherings has turned from the usual debate over local politics to a matter even more pressing - the war next door.

Many people in Iraq's Sunni heartland, once al Qaeda's stronghold in the country, are most concerned with helping their kin. Tribal ties span the border, and Sunni chieftains and community leaders say Iraqi tribes regularly send Syrian relatives food and supplies.

Some openly support Free Syrian Army rebels with arms when border controls allowed.

But many also are anticipating the day when Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is overthrown and replaced by a Sunni regime that will give them a counterweight to Shi'ite power that has grown steadily in Baghdad since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

"Baghdad is helping Assad for sectarian reasons," Sheikh Abdul Rahman Ali, chief of the tribal council in Falluja. "But when Assad goes, we will have a brother regime at our back."

For Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and other Shi'ite leaders, the prospect of a possibly radical Sunni leader next door is a nightmare scenario. They fear it will embolden the country's own Sunni leaders and could tempt insurgents in Syria to turn their sights on Iraq.

Maliki has tried to walk a delicate line on Syria. He must avoid alienating both his non-Arab ally Shi'ite Iran, who supports Assad, long Tehran's closest supporter in the region, and the United States, as well as Iraq's Sunni Gulf Arab neighbors and Turkey, who support the mostly Sunni rebels.

With Anbar province awash in weapons and the fighting close across a porous border, security concerns are building.

Iraq says Sunni Islamists are crossing into Syria and security experts believe al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq has been reinvigorated by money and arms from Syria's turmoil.

In a sign Syria's crisis is dragging its neighbors into a proxy war, Iraqi Shi'ite militants are also fighting there, often alongside Assad's troops, claiming fidelity to Iran's supreme religious leader. Iraqi officials and arms dealers acknowledge the intensifying conflict has already spurred demand in weapons markets in Iraq.

Fearing insurgents slipping back across the border, Maliki earlier this year ordered the al Qaim border crossing in Anbar closed, only recently allowing women and children refugees to cross. Army divisions from outside Anbar have reinforced the frontier, where troops occasionally exchange fire with Syrian rebels and smugglers.

His actions have served to stir up resentments in the vast, sparsely populated desert province that makes up a large portion of the 600-km (375-mile) Syrian-Iraqi frontier.

Since the 2003 invasion and rise of the Shi'ite majority through the ballot box, many minority Iraqi Sunnis say they feel sidelined in a power-sharing agreement among the Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurds blocks. They believe Maliki is consolidating his own authority at their expense.

Syria's crisis is worsening those political tensions. At one meeting this month in a Ramadi tribal guesthouse, leaders sat among its red-marble pillars organizing committees to collect money, food and supplies to help Syrian refugees. Tribal meetings now regularly turn to talk about Syria.

"We have asked our tribal sons to support the Syrian people ... they choose the way they find suitable," Sheikh Ali Hatem Sulaiman, the head of the powerful Dulaimi tribe, told Reuters in his Baghdad home.

"Why can Iran and Maliki support a criminal regime, while it is taboo for us to support the Syrian people?"

SOME CAUTION TOO

Anbar's relationship with Baghdad is complex. After initially joining the insurgency against U.S. forces, Sunni tribal leaders turned against al Qaeda and helped form the "Awakening" movement, a loose coalition of fighters who helped turn the tide of the war in 2007.

Tribal leaders say Maliki has failed to keep a promise to incorporate Awakening fighters into the national security forces.

Still, some Anbar leaders believe they must work with Maliki's government or risk losing political influence, and are more cautious about how much to help the Syrian rebels.

"Historically no one has been able to control our borders with Syria," said Anbar governor Qassim Mohammed, who says his frequent disagreements with Maliki over development projects for the province do not stop him working with Baghdad.

"But on the ground, there is no serious military aid going to Syria, there is some humanitarian aid, like medicine and food."

Other tribal leaders reject calls for the province to send arms to their Syrian brethren, remembering the darker days of Iraq's conflict when insurgents used Syria as a base to send suicide bombers into Iraq.

"We just have to watch out for the what kind of evil comes back across," said Sheikh Hameed Turki al-Shook, who heads a tribal council in the provincial capital Ramadi.

POROUS BORDER, GUN SMUGGLING

Arms dealers and Iraqi security officials say prices for Kalashnikovs, sniper rifles and pistols in Iraq have multiplied as much as four times with the growing demand from Syria.

Anbar borders not only Syria but also Saudi Arabia and Jordan, and its remote hillsides, hidden caves and tracks have made the province a haven for smugglers for generations. Contraband even makes its way on barges along the Euphrates river flowing between Iraq and Syria.

"It is not a secret. Demand for weapons started since the Syrian uprising began, and weapons were sent to Anbar and Mosul on their way to Syria," said Qassim, an arms dealer, told Reuters in Baghdad, puffing on a cigarette.

"We know it is going to Syria, we were trying to help them. Our theory is, we should support our Muslim brothers with money and weapons."

National police intelligence reports that indicate Sunni provinces in Iraq are stockpiling weapons for a flare-up in sectarian violence recently prompted four leading Shi'ite religious leaders to issue an edict forbidding arms shipments out of Shi'ite areas.

One senior Iraqi police official said authorities believe young Syrians who took refuge with relatives in Iraq at the beginning of the uprising are being organized and trained inside Iraq to prepare them for the post-Assad era.

That is a change that cannot come soon enough for many in Anbar.

"We will be stronger. Stronger to face to the east, to face the government in Baghdad," said Sheikh Adnan Khames, a Sunni chieftain in Ramadi. "For years they have given us little of what we are entitled to."

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-turmoil-stirs-iraqi-tribal-sympathies-hopes-142645743.html

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Humane Society President on Nevada Wildlife Board - 8 News NOW

  • Obama Arrives in Las Vegas for Campaign Stop

    Obama Lands in Las Vegas for Campaign Stop

    Thursday, October 25 2012 12:31 AM EDT2012-10-25 04:31:05 GMT

    LAS VEGAS -- President Barack Obama has landed at McCarran International Airport. He is headed to Doolittle Park for a campaign stop. Before he arrives, Rep. Shelley Berkley and state Sen. Steven HorsfordMore>>President Barack Obama has landed at McCarran International Airport.More>>
  • President Obama Departs California for Vegas

    President Obama Departs California for Vegas

    Wednesday, October 24 2012 11:05 PM EDT2012-10-25 03:05:49 GMT

    LAS VEGAS (AP) -- President Barack Obama is heading to Nevada for a campaign rally featuring a free concert by pop singer Katy Perry at a park near downtown Las Vegas. Obama embarked Wednesday on aMore>>President Barack Obama is heading to Nevada for a campaign rally featuring a free concert by pop singer Katy Perry at a park near downtown Las Vegas.More>>
  • RealtyTrac: Las Vegas Ranks 25th in Foreclosure Activity

    RealtyTrac: Las Vegas Ranks 25th in Foreclosure Activity

    Thursday, October 25 2012 12:01 AM EDT2012-10-25 04:01:23 GMT

    LAS VEGAS -- The Las Vegas metro area ended the third quarter of the year ranked 25th nationally in foreclosure activity, RealtyTrac reported Wednesday night. The foreclosure analytics firm from Irvine,More>>The Las Vegas metro area ended the third quarter of the year ranked 25th nationally in foreclosure activity, RealtyTrac reported Wednesday night.More>>

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -- An animal advocate has been named to the Nevada Wildlife Commission -- a board that critics say is unfairly stacked with hunters.

Karen Summers Layne is president of the Las Vegas Valley Humane Society. She was appointed to the nine-member policy board on Oct.3 by Gov. Brian Sandoval. Her appointment follows that of former Clark County Sheriff Bill Young in July.

Layne opposed establishing a black bear hunting season in Nevada two years ago and has worked on trapping regulations for the Mount Charleston region outside Las Vegas.

She holds a doctorate degree in public administration, and is retired from both UNLV and the Las Vegas Police Department, where she worked as planning director.

She becomes only the sixth woman to serve on the commission.

Source: http://www.8newsnow.com/story/19906264/humane-society-president-on-nevada-wildlife-board

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Traditional fisheries management approach jeopardizes marine ecosystems worldwide

Traditional fisheries management approach jeopardizes marine ecosystems worldwide [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Cindy Yeast
720-542-9455
The Institute for Ocean Conservation Science

Fisheries expert and executive director of Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University presents assessment of current fisheries management in the journal Science

STONY BROOK, NY In a Perspectives article, "The Risks of Overfishing," published today in the journal Science, Dr. Ellen K. Pikitch, executive director of the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science and professor at Stony Brook University, cautions against continuing traditional fisheries management. According to Dr. Pikitch, current and recent studies demonstrate the need for "a more precautionary approach to fisheries management, in which fishing is restricted to those places and amounts where it can be conducted safely and with minimal risk of jeopardizing the integrity of marine ecosystems."

Commenting on a study published in the same issue by Costello et al., which found that globally, the abundance levels of fish populations are well below those recommended by conventional fisheries management guidelines, Dr. Pikitch writes, "Of even greater concern, most species are on a continuing trajectory of decline."

Costello et al. found that fisheries that represent 80 percent of the world's catch are in worse shape than those than those on which global status reviews have been conducted. Dr. Pikitch writes, "Costello et al.'s findings are even more alarming in the context of the evolving understanding of fishing and its ecological effects." Dr. Pikitch explains that traditional fisheries management focuses on obtaining maximum sustainable yield (MSY), which is a single-species approach that does not take into consideration the effects of the fishing on the entire ecosystem, including declines of other fish and marine animal species.

The findings of a recently published report, "Little Fish, Big Impact: Managing a Crucial Link in Ocean Food Webs," by the Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force, found that moving away from a single-species management approach toward an ecosystem-based approach requires more precautionary management. The task force, of which Dr. Pikitch is the chair, determined that the amount of information available about the ecosystem and the fishery should establish the level of precaution managers should apply, requiring a shift in the burden of proof for fisheries management. In the Perspectives article, Dr. Pikitch writes "[This shift] is justified not least because the risks of continuing fishing when it results in serious negative consequences are generally much greater than the risks of curtailing fishing when it does not have a deleterious impact."

###

The Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University is dedicated to advancing ocean conservation through science. The Institute transforms real-world policy while pursuing serious science, both of which are essential for ocean health. For more information, go to www.oceanconservationscience.org.

For more information about the Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force and to view the report, Little Fish, Big Impact: Managing a Crucial Link in Ocean Food Webs, please visit: http://www.oceanconservationscience.org/foragefish/.

Editor's Note: Reporters can obtain a copy of "The Risks of Overfishing." To do so, please contact the AAAS Office of Public Programs at 202-326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org.

Members of the general public may order a copy of this article through the Science Web site at: http://www.sciencemag.org/site/help/readers/order.xhtml.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Traditional fisheries management approach jeopardizes marine ecosystems worldwide [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Cindy Yeast
720-542-9455
The Institute for Ocean Conservation Science

Fisheries expert and executive director of Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University presents assessment of current fisheries management in the journal Science

STONY BROOK, NY In a Perspectives article, "The Risks of Overfishing," published today in the journal Science, Dr. Ellen K. Pikitch, executive director of the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science and professor at Stony Brook University, cautions against continuing traditional fisheries management. According to Dr. Pikitch, current and recent studies demonstrate the need for "a more precautionary approach to fisheries management, in which fishing is restricted to those places and amounts where it can be conducted safely and with minimal risk of jeopardizing the integrity of marine ecosystems."

Commenting on a study published in the same issue by Costello et al., which found that globally, the abundance levels of fish populations are well below those recommended by conventional fisheries management guidelines, Dr. Pikitch writes, "Of even greater concern, most species are on a continuing trajectory of decline."

Costello et al. found that fisheries that represent 80 percent of the world's catch are in worse shape than those than those on which global status reviews have been conducted. Dr. Pikitch writes, "Costello et al.'s findings are even more alarming in the context of the evolving understanding of fishing and its ecological effects." Dr. Pikitch explains that traditional fisheries management focuses on obtaining maximum sustainable yield (MSY), which is a single-species approach that does not take into consideration the effects of the fishing on the entire ecosystem, including declines of other fish and marine animal species.

The findings of a recently published report, "Little Fish, Big Impact: Managing a Crucial Link in Ocean Food Webs," by the Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force, found that moving away from a single-species management approach toward an ecosystem-based approach requires more precautionary management. The task force, of which Dr. Pikitch is the chair, determined that the amount of information available about the ecosystem and the fishery should establish the level of precaution managers should apply, requiring a shift in the burden of proof for fisheries management. In the Perspectives article, Dr. Pikitch writes "[This shift] is justified not least because the risks of continuing fishing when it results in serious negative consequences are generally much greater than the risks of curtailing fishing when it does not have a deleterious impact."

###

The Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University is dedicated to advancing ocean conservation through science. The Institute transforms real-world policy while pursuing serious science, both of which are essential for ocean health. For more information, go to www.oceanconservationscience.org.

For more information about the Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force and to view the report, Little Fish, Big Impact: Managing a Crucial Link in Ocean Food Webs, please visit: http://www.oceanconservationscience.org/foragefish/.

Editor's Note: Reporters can obtain a copy of "The Risks of Overfishing." To do so, please contact the AAAS Office of Public Programs at 202-326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org.

Members of the general public may order a copy of this article through the Science Web site at: http://www.sciencemag.org/site/help/readers/order.xhtml.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/tifo-tfm102312.php

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Baltimore, MD 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport New SUV Glen Burnie, MD Annapolis, MD Bob Bell Ford/ Hyundai/ Kia

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    • Front-wheel drive
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    • Fuel economy EPA highway (mpg): 33 and EPA city (mpg): 22
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    • Passenger Airbag
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    • Reclining rear seats
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    • Rear wiper
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*The advertised price does not include sales tax, vehicle registration fees, finance charges, documentation charges, and any other fees required by law. We attempt to update this inventory on a regular basis. However, there can be lag time between the sale of a vehicle and the update of the inventory.

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2013 Hyundai Glen Burnie, MD

Source: http://bobbell.com/2013-Hyundai-Santa-Fe-Sport-Baltimore-MD/vd/12150923

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13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display unveiled

2 hrs.

Apple unveiled its smallest notebook that uses its highly regarded Retina display, a 13-inch MacBook Pro weighing "just over 3.5 pounds, almost a pound lighter than the previous generation," said Phil Schiller at the company's San Jose event Tuesday.

The laptop, available immediately, starts at $1,699 with a 2.5 GHz, dual-core Intel Core i5 processor, 8 GB RAM and 128 GB of flash storage; with?256GB of flash storage, it starts at $1,999.?

The regular 13-inch MacBook Pro, without a Retina display, starts at $1,199.

Schiller said that Apple's best-selling notebook is the 13-inch MacBook Pro, "in fact it's our No. 1 selling Mac." The new model, with the Retina display is .75-inch thin, "a full one-fifth?thinner than the old model."

The display itself 2,560-by-1,600 pixels???"four times the number of pixels of the previous generation???that makes it the world's second-highest resolution notebook computer" he said, adding that "our 15-inch" MacBook Pro with Retina display "is the first."

The Retina display will bring a "29 percent higher contrast ratio, and a 75 percent reduction in reflection or glare," said Schiller,?Apple's senior vice president of worldwide marketing.

The laptop also has 7 hours of battery life, he said, and the new "Power Nap" feature lets the MacBook Pro with Retina display?do software updates when it's plugged in, as well as back up the computer using Time Machine.?

Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on?Facebook,?and on?Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/13-inch-macbook-pro-retina-display-unveiled-1C6632130

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