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Updated 6:30 p.m. EasternAn attorney for the Army psychiatrist charged in the mass shooting at Fort Hood says his client will have his first court hearing in his hospital room on Saturday.Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan s civilian attorney, John Galligan, said Friday that military prosecutors notified him of their plans for the hearing at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.Hasan has been recovering there since the Nov. 5 rampage at Fort Hood that left 13 dead and more than 30 wounded. Hasan was shot by civilian members of Fort Hood s police force.The hearing is to determine whether Hasan will be placed in pre-trial confinement - which usually means jail. But Galligan says he ll argue that Hasan should remain in intensive care because he is paralyzed and still needs hospital care. Fort Hood officials didn t immediately return a call about the hearing.On Thursday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates of the circumstances surrounding the Fort Hood shootings. CBSNews Special Report: Tragedy at Fort HoodMeanwhile, a Democratic senator says there may be additional e-mails that could have tipped off law enforcement or military officials to Hasan before he went on his rampage. Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levi
stanley cup n said Friday after a briefing from Pentagon and Army officials that his committee will investigate whether those an
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stanley water bottle n were handled properly.The government intercepted at least 18 e-mails between Hasan and Anwar al-Awl Ztil China Is Deploying Smog-Busting Drones So Its Airports Can Stay Open
It hard to say if the Macintosh would ;ve been so successful if it hadn ;t had such a revolutionary interface鈥攏amely, the mouse. While Apple didn ;t invent the mouse, it did commission the now legendary engineer Jim Yurchenco to make it viable. And he looked to Steve Jobs ; former employer for inspiration. That company, of course, was Atari, an
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stanley thermobecher device that Atari called the Trak-Ball. The original mouse that Steve Jobs tinkered with during a visit to Xerox PARC in the early 1980s worked a bit like the Trak-Ball, but the whole set up was wildly expensive. Apple contracted the design firm Hovey-Kelley to bring the cost of a comparable device from Xerox estimated cost of $400 a piece down to $25 a piece, and Yurchenco took the lead. The problem with the Xerox design, Yurchenco quickly realized, was that it was just too complicated. The mouse forced a ball down onto the table and used a series of switches to track the movement of the ball which would send a signal to the graphic user interface to move a cursor around on the screen. While looking at other input devices, Yurchenco settled on the Atari Trak-Ball as a terrific alternative
stanley cups . As the name implied, the Trak-Ball also tracked the movement of a ball and rendered that movement on the screen of arcade games. Rather than force the ball onto the table, however, he design simply allowed the ball to float and let gravity do the work. And ra