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Kitchen Chat and more…
Kitchen Chat and more…
The New York Times is reporting that the American government, concerned about biological attack, has stockpiled millions of doses of smallpox vaccine:
The United States government is buying enough of a new smallpox medicine to treat two million people in the event of a bioterrorism attack, and took delivery of the first shipment of it last week. But the purchase has set off a debate about the lucrative contract, with some experts saying the government is buying too much of the drug at too high a price.
Critics worry that the U.S. is unnecessarily overspending for the drug:
Dr. Richard H. Ebright, a bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, said there was little need for so much Arestvyr since the country has raised its stockpile of smallpox vaccine to 300 million doses now, up from only 15 million in 2001.
“Is it appropriate to stockpile it? Absolutely,” he said. “Is it appropriate to stockpile two million doses? Absolutely not. Twenty thousand seems like the right number.”
Friday’s wilderness exam for AP will cover all of the readings we’ve discussed from the packet, our notes and discussion, Into the Wild, and for, Period 4, A River Runs Through It.
On the test, you’ll be expected to thoroughly answer five paragraph-long questions and identify the author of quotes from the readings.
Period 4 has some additional questions; be sure to click “Read More” to view them.
The Christian Science Monitor is reporting about a father who hacked the arcade classic Donkey Kong so that his daughter could play as a female protagonist:
While women make up about half of all gamers, the hobby isn’t always the friendliest place for female players. In a marketplace dominated by muscle-bound space marines and ineffective female sidekicks, it’s not hard to see why women might feel alienated.
Retro gaming is not much better: The old-school game “Donkey Kong” details one of Super Mario’s earliest adventures, in which the plumber rescues a woman named Pauline from the titular brutish ape. When one programmer’s young daughter asked why she couldn’t play as Pauline instead, her father mulled it over and replied with a hacked version of the game, completely reversing the characters’ roles.