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rsrr This must be the quirkiest Lego set ever made
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 Every type of violent crime fell last year with one notable exception: Murders were up for the fourth straight year, according to an annual FBI report released Monday.After reaching a stanley flasche  low point in 1999 of about 15,500 homicides, the number has crept up steadily since then to more than 16,500 in 2003 mdash; or almost six murders for every 100,000 U.S. residents.That was a 1.7 percent increase from 2002 and a jump of more than 6 percent since 1999. Still, the latest figure was 29 percent lower than the homicides in 1994.James Alan Fox, criminal justice professor at Northeastern University, said the recent rise in murders is partly traceable to an upsurge in urban youth gang violence. The FBI report indicates there were 819 juvenile gang killings last year, compared with 580 in 1999. It s quite clear that at least in terms of homicide, the great 1990s crime drop is officially over and has been for some time,  Fox said.  While this does not signal any epidemic of homicide in this country, we cannot ignore what has happened in the past few years.         The 1.4 million total violent crimes reported to law enforcement agencies in 2003 mdash; murder, manslaughter, rape, robbery and aggravated assault mdash; marked a 3 percent drop from the year before. Aggravated assaults,  stanley cups uk which make up two-thirds of all violent crimes, have dropped for 10 straight years.The Bush administration seized on the more positive numbers mdash; overall violent crime is down 3.1 percent since stanley cup  1999 mdas Baox How to Turn Cutting-Edge Science into a Page-Turning Thriller
 Once upon a time computers were for thinking 82 stanley cup website 30; That   no longer true. Computers are for communicating now, and networks allowed that to happen. That   Harvard astronomer-turned-computer expert Clifford Stoll, quoted in the November 20, 1988 edition of the Washington Post. And yes, that   the same Cliff Stoll who just a few years later would proclaim that the in stanley quencher ternet   potential to transform the way we live was largely just a bunch of hype.     The Internet  Bah!  1995   Barton Gellman   1988 article about the internet for the Post is quite a fascinating artifact. We see the introduction of terms that hadn ;t yet ent stanley mugs ered the national lexicon, such as  8220 nail mail, virus, and netiquette. And we see the writer slowly introducing the public to the idea that this network could be something important to their lives in the future. We also see the warnings that a more connected world will have its downsides, as in the case of computer viruses able to spread at lightning speed. From the November 20, 1988 Washington Post: Using Internet and overlapping networks, thousands of men and women in 17 countries swap recipes and woodworking tips, debate politics, religion and antique cars, form friendships and even fall in love. But the networks that link tens of thousands of computers 24 hours a day also allowed the computer virus to spread much more rapidly, and with far greater potential for damag