Obligatory: Obama plays 90th round of golf in Hawaii

posted at 6:00 pm on December 27, 2011 by Tina Korbe

This would be a blas? bit of news if 90 weren?t such a nice, round number, but, as it is, this represents a record of sorts. Not only did Barack Obama golf on Christmas day, but he hit the links yesterday, too ? and that round marked the 90th of his presidency. As Keith Koffler of WhiteHouseDossier.com points out, the time he?s spent on a golf course ? about four to five hours a round ? is the equivalent of three full months.

It?s not just that his perpetual self-indulgence signifies that ?kind of laziness? the president himself admits plagues him deep down. It?s also that this particular indulgence required an exceptional sacrifice from the military men and women who had to accommodate his desire to golf at the Marine Corps base. Melissa Clouthier breaks it down, including a few particularly devastating comments from wives of Marines:

Well, the big deal is that a bunch of Marines had to work?blocking roads and doing other miscellaneous security detail?instead of being home with their families.

Here are some of the comments from the wives of these men. (I am not going to include the link to this page, nor am I going to include names, because I don?t want anyone in trouble. I do, however, have the screen shot and have copy and pasted the comments verbatim.) ?

?Because he?s here, I didn?t get to see my husband all weekend, on our baby girl?s first Christmas, so he can have his vacation. So when I can?t get to my house because he wants to play golf it just adds insult to injury and yeah, gets on my nerves. I agree that it?s a sensitive subject for some of us who are more [a]ffected by his being here.? ?

I was so angry! They blocked off my driveway? -_-?

?It takes him forever to play too because he isn?t good at it either lol!?

She dubs him ?President Selfish,? and I think that moniker is more than appropriate.

?

Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2011/12/27/obligatory-obama-plays-90th-round-of-golf-in-hawaii/

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Progress report: Getting better globally

Up close, there are grave problems in the world -- hunger, repression, discrimination, violence. But when you take the long view, you can see evidence of progress on many fronts.

Half full or half empty? You can?t go wrong with half empty. It?s the serious person?s default mode. No one can say ?I told you so? when bad things happen. No one can accuse you of being a Pollyanna or glossing over the suffering in the world.?

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They?re right about the suffering. Progress is happening on many provable fronts. But it is not evenly distributed. In Syria, Somalia, Afghanistan,?Zimbabwe, North Korea, and too many other places, violence, fear,?hunger, and oppression still hold sway. These are real problems that demand intelligent, compassionate, and sometimes aggressive action.

With the reach of global media, we know more about bad things happening in the far corners of the world than ever before. Shining a light on bad things alerts good people to what?s going on. That can be the first step in rallying international aid or pressing governments to treat their people better.
But perspective is important. Focus only on present pain and suffering, and the world looks bleak. Take the long view, however, and there is strong evidence that war is actually decreasing, poverty is shrinking, women?s rights are improving, and democracy is awakening.

Up close, the pain is real and immediate. Step back, however, and you?ll see a world getting better.

Here?s a small illustration of what I mean. I recently scooped up a trove of old Life magazines at a thrift store and took the Wayback Machine to the late 1960s. Along with the amusing images and ads (wow, were cigarettes and booze hawked shamelessly!), the celebrity profiles (Candice Bergen, Joe Paterno) and slice-of-life features (?A Tom Sawyer Boyhood ? 1970 Style?), were stories of war, racial tension, and urban blight. And on one page was an interesting juxtaposition: book reviews of Joan Didion?s ?Play It As It Lays? and Alvin Toffler?s ?Future Shock.??

Ms. Didion?s reviewer noted how with ?eyes that will not shut properly? she eloquently described the suffering and pain too many people experience. On the same page, Mr. Toffler (a man of ?genuinely humane temper,? said his reviewer) was grudgingly applauded for seeing a coming world of greater diversity and freedom.

Both authors have been proved right. Forty years later, Didion remains an eyewitness to life?s pain, having written recently about the loss of her husband and daughter. And yet, over time, Toffler?s vision of a better future also rings true.

Here?s a prediction: Forty years from now, there will still be pain and broken hearts. But year by year, human progress will have increased, too.?

* * *

Hope is an important ? but not a sufficient ? condition for progress.

Last spring, The Monitor published Jina Moore?s powerful cover story on peacebuilding (?The Peacebuilders,? April 4). If you haven?t read it, it is well worth your time. As Jina noted, after war and social breakdown, after peacemaking and peacekeeping, something more needs to be done. ?Peacebuilding,? she wrote, ?is about what comes next ? the slow and thankless slog of building a country back up.?

On Dec. 14, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon awarded Jina the highest honor of the UN Correspondents Association for her cover story. (Her reporting was made possible by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.)?

The award is named in honor of Elizabeth Neuffer, a correspondent for The Boston Globe who died in Iraq in 2003. I was privileged to work with Elizabeth. Like Jina, she traveled the world writing not just about conflict but its causes and aftermath. Her 2001 book, ?The Key to My Neighbor?s House,? examined the search for justice in post-conflict Bosnia and Rwanda.

Violence and hatred do terrible damage. It takes hope and hard work to build peace.

John Yemma is the editor of The Christian Science Monitor.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/kXIUWcEX5mo/Progress-report-Getting-better-globally

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Get Siri on your iPhone 4, 3GS, iPod Touch or iPad. Legally, and easily.

This feels like old news. When news breaks in chunks like this, it tends to feel a lot less fresh.

siri iphone4 hack large Get Siri on your iPhone 4, 3GS, iPod Touch or iPad. Legally, and easily.

We?ve seen multiple times a private port of Siri to unsupported iOS 5 devices.

TODAY IT?S LEGAL AND EASY

However, today Chpwn and Ryan Petrich went public today with a Siri port called Spire.

The port mirrors all the iPhone 4S Siri functionality and works on the jailbroken iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, third generation iPod touch, fourth generation iPod touch, and first generation iPad.

Don?t get your hopes up on the iPod Touch though. The microphones in those devices tend to be less powerful, and make for a poor Siri experience.

Spire is available free on the Cydia jailbroken application market, and the download comes in at approximately 100mb, according to a blog post from Chpwn. The developers recommend that users connect to a Wi-Fi network for downloading, not a standard cellular network, because of the large file size.

?Spire uses a new method to obtain the files necessary for Siri, so it doesn?t have the copyright issues encountered by previous attempts,? said Chpwn

YOU STILL NEED AN iPHONE 4S

Of course, with any port of this kind, there will be a caveat: you have to still gain authorization through your own server and an iPhone 4S. Chpwn explained the issue:

However, Spire is not a complete solution. Apple still requires authorization to use Siri, so information from an iPhone 4S is still required. To insert this information, Spire allows you to enter your own proxy server address. By using this (ancient) SiriProxy fork, you can setup a proxy using your own iPhone 4S to insert the needed information reasonably easily. Other solutions for proxying Siri will be listed here as they are developed ? perhaps that sort of proxy might be included in the main SiriProxy repository.

Long story short, you can absolutely get Siri working on your iPhone 4 in a fully legal way. You just need to convince your best friend with an iPhone 4S to let you use their ?halo-connection? with Siri.

?Until the iPhone 4S is jailbroken, this is the best Siri port,? said Steven Troughton-Smith, ?when the iPhone 4S is jailbroken, then we can avoid the proxy server issues.? Spire can be downloaded from this link, if you are on a jailbroken iOS 5 devices.

Update: The iPhone Dev team posted an update to their redsn0w jailbreak. You can now jailbreak any non-A5 device untethered (meaning you can reboot the device without hooking it back up to a computer). This of course, makes this Siri news a lot bigger.

Source: http://www.zagg.com/community/blog/get-siri-on-your-iphone-4-3gs-ipod-touch-or-ipad-legally-and-easily/

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Afghanistan sets ground rules for Taliban

Afghanistan will accept a Taliban liaison office in Qatar to start peace talks but no foreign power can get involved in the process without its consent, the government's peace council said, as efforts gather pace to find a solution to the decade-long war.

Afghanistan's High Peace Council, in a note to foreign missions, has set out ground rules for engaging the Taliban after Kabul grew concerned that the United States and Qatar, helped by Germany, had secretly agreed with the Taliban to open an office in the Qatari capital, Doha.

U.S. officials have held about half a dozen meetings with their insurgent contacts, mostly in Germany and Doha with representatives of Mullah Omar, leader of the Taliban's Quetta Shura, this year to prepare the way for face-to-face talks between the group and the Afghan government.

A representative office for the group is considered the starting point for such talks and Doha has in the past served as a meeting ground for initial contacts.

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But the Afghan peace commission which has suffered a series of setbacks including the assassination of its head in September said that negotiations with the Taliban could only begin after they stopped violence against civilians, cut ties to al Qaeda, and accepted the Afghan constitution which guarantees civil rights and liberties, including rights for women.

The council, according to a copy of the 11-point note made available to Reuters, also said any peace process with the Taliban would have to have the support of Pakistan since members of the insurgent group were based there.

"The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is in agreement regarding the opening of an office for the armed opposition, but only to move forward the peace process and conduct negotiations," the council said.

Story: Suicide bomb kills at least 20 in Afghanistan

The government would prefer such an office in either Saudi Arabia or Turkey, both of which it is close to, but was not averse to Doha as long as the authority of the Afghan state was not eroded and the office was only established for talks, officials said.

"We are saying Saudi or Turkey are preferable, we are not saying it has to be there only. The only condition is it should be in an Islamic country," said a government official.

President Hamid Karzai's administration recalled its ambassador from Doha last week, apparently angry that it had been kept in the dark about the latest round of contacts with the insurgent group.

Officials said Kabul was also deeply concerned about reports that the United States was considering the transfer of a small number of Afghan prisoners from Guantanamo Bay military prison to Doha as a prelude to the talks.

"We are a sovereign country, we have laws. How can you transfer our prisoners from one country to another. Already it's a violation to have them in Guantanamo Bay," the official said.

The Afghan government wanted the prisoners to be returned to its custody, the official said.

Reuters reported this month that the United States was considering the transfer of an unspecified number of Taliban prisoners from Guantanamo Bay into Afghan government custody as part of accelerating, high-stakes diplomacy.

"We have no problem with this. In fact we have been demanding this for a while. These are Afghan prisoners," said the official, who declined to be identified.

The tension between the Karzai administration and the United States over engaging the Taliban underscores the challenges of seeking a political settlement as the West prepares to withdraw most combat troops from the country by 2014.

Efforts to engage the insurgent group have faced a string of setbacks, the most recent being the assassination of the head of the peace council and former president, Burhanuddin Rabbani, in September at the hands of a suicide bomber who pretended to be a Taliban emissary.

Hardening of positions
It led to a hardening of positions with Karzai saying the government could not talk to suicide bombers and that there should be an address for the Taliban so that negotiators know they are talking to the right representatives.

"We are committed to the reconciliation process, the experience of the last 10 years shows no military solution is possible. Talking to the armed opposition is the key in this regard," said presidential spokesman Aimal Faizi.

White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said the United States backed steps toward reconciliation that bring Afghans together and allow insurgents eschewing violence and abiding by the Afghan constitution to come off the battlefield.

"We will join initiatives that support Afghan-led reconciliation. Pakistan also has an important role to play in supporting the Afghan-led process," she said.

A State Department official added Washington will continue to work very closely with Kabul authorities to draw in Taliban fighters who break from al Qaeda terrorists and agree to respect the rights of Afghans, including women and ethnic minorities.

"We believe it is in the interests of both of our countries, as well as the region as whole, to work together to support a stable, secure, and prosperous Afghanistan inside a stable, secure, and prosperous region," the State Department official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The Afghan peace council, laying down the markers for engagement with the Taliban, said well known figures from both the Taliban and the government had to be involved in talks.

It said that "before any negotiations can take place, violence against Afghan people must stop and that the armed opposition must cut ties to al Qaeda and other terrorist groups".

It also said that the Taliban must accept the constitution and honor the gains made in the last 10 years since they were ousted from power, conditions that the Taliban have shown no sign of accepting.

The Taliban do not accept the constitution and have vowed to carry on fighting until all foreign troops have left the country.

The peace council said Pakistani support was necessary for talks to take place, another condition that makes the task harder because of fraught ties between the United States and Pakistan which fears it is being shut out of the process.

Opening a Taliban office in a third country is seen as a way to create distance from Pakistan which has longstanding ties to the insurgent group.

But the government official said he did not think the peace council had laid down such tough conditions that the talks would fail even before they started.

"We don't think it's a deal breaker. We are quite optimistic," he said.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45791868/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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Kim Jong Un Succession: Heir Called Head Of Workers' Party Central Committee

PYONGYANG, North Korea ? North Korea's state media on Monday called Kim Jong Il's heir the head of the ruling Workers' Party Central Committee, a job that gives Kim Jong Un power over one of the country's highest decision-making bodies more than a week after his father's death.

The reference in a commentary by the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper came as a former South Korean first lady and a prominent business leader traveled with two private delegations to North Korea to pay respects to Kim Jong Il, who is being mourned by millions as the North prepares for his funeral Wednesday.

North Korean soldiers, Rodong Sinmun said, are upholding a slogan urging them to dedicate their lives "to protect the party's Central Committee headed by respected comrade Kim Jong Un." Kim Jong Il's youngest son is in his late 20s and was unveiled in September 2010 as his father's choice as successor.

The slogan, which state media had frequently used when rallying support for Kim Jong Il, suggests the heir will likely be appointed as Workers' Party general secretary, the ruling party's top job and one of the country's highest positions.

North Korea is in official mourning for Kim until after a memorial Thursday. But the country is also offering hints about Kim Jong Un's rise as ruler. North Korea began hailing him as "supreme leader" of the 1.2-million strong military over the weekend.

Kim Jong Un will be the third-generation Kim to rule the nation of 24 million.

Also Monday, a total of 18 South Koreans crossed the heavily fortified border for a two-day trip that includes a visit to Pyongyang's Kumsusan Memorial Palace where Kim's body is lying in state, according to Seoul's Unification Ministry.

The two groups are led by the widow of former President Kim Dae-jung, the creator of the engagement "sunshine" policy with the North who held a landmark summit with Kim in 2000, and Hyundai Group Chairwoman Hyun Jeong-eun, whose late husband had ties to the North. The North sent delegations to South Korea when the women's husbands died.

South Korea has only allowed the two groups to visit and pay condolences for the death of Kim on Dec. 17. That has angered Pyongyang, which subsequently warned that obstructing mourning trips to the North would lead to "catastrophic consequences" for relations between the rivals.

Even as North Koreans brave frigid weather to visit mourning stations set up at landmarks around the country, the state media are providing details about Kim Jong Un's rise to power.

Koreans should become "eternal revolutionary comrades" with Kim Jong Un, "the sun of the 21st century," Rodong Sinmun newspaper said Sunday in a commentary carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

State television also showed Sunday footage showing Kim Jong Un's uncle and key patron, Jang Song Thaek, wearing a military uniform with a general's insignia, a strong sign he'll play a crucial role in helping the young man hold a grip on power and inherit his father's trademark "military-first" policy. Seoul's Unification Ministry said it was the first time Jang, usually seen in business suits, had been shown wearing a military uniform on state TV.

Jang, a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, is the husband of Kim Kyong Hui, younger sister of Kim Jong Il and a key Workers' Party official. South Korean lawmakers say intelligence officials have predicted that Jang and his wife will play larger roles supporting Kim Jong Un.

The North's state TV repeatedly showed footage Sunday of wailing uniformed soldiers, many with shaved heads, and other citizens professing their tear-choked longing for Kim Jong Il as they visited mourning sites.

___

Associated Press writers Foster Klug and Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, South Korea, and AP Korea bureau chief Jean H. Lee, contributed to this report. Follow on Twitter at twitter.com/newsjean and twitter.com/APKlug.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/26/kim-jong-un-succession-he_n_1169702.html

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Seeking justice for victims across borders

The nonprofit group CJA tracks down those who commit crimes in one country and flee to another ? and hauls them into court.

Last August, federal agents in Massachusetts arrested a man in his late 60s. The man, Inocente Montano, had lived quietly north of Boston since 2002. Then, in May, Mr. Montano, who had been a military officer in El Salvador in the 1980s, was indicted by a judge in Spain for his involvement in the 1989 killings of six Jesuit priests and two women during the civil war. Now Montano endures home detention, facing US immigration charges, held by one government and wanted by another.?

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American law enforcement has arrested hundreds of people like Montano ? foreign former military commanders or officials now living in the United States despite involvement abroad in torture, extrajudicial killings, or other serious human rights abuses. These hundreds are dwarfed by the survivors around the world who are themselves victims of such acts or are relatives of the abused or dead.

For many survivors it has been decades since they were harmed. They have been denied by politics or corruption any redress in their home countries. Their histories show that one consequence of war is that peace may offer no justice.

A small San Francisco-based nonprofit organization called the Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA) works to find a measure of justice ? and, just as importantly, truth ? for such victims.

??So often what happens in cases involving state-sanctioned violence is the state also hides any evidence,? says Pamela Merchant, the CJA?s director.? ?It?s hugely important for survivors to have their stories acknowledged at all.?

Montano was named in a 1993 United Nations report on human rights abuses during the Salvadoran war. It was the CJA that in 2008 first filed a criminal complaint in Spain for the Jesuits? killings (20 people were included in the May indictments).? It was the CJA that finally found Montano living outside Boston and publicized his past, leading to his arrest by US authorities for not disclosing his military career on his immigration applications.?

Yet much more of CJA?s work has focused on litigation in US courts to achieve civil judgments for clients from Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia.?

?Most of our cases are civil litigation ? often we never see any money [from judgments]; it?s more about [having] your day in court and confronting the atrocity and the abuser, and having the opportunity to tell the truth,? Ms. Merchant says.

Along with pro bono counsel, the CJA (with just 10 employees) has won millions of dollars in judgments for its clients and has brought the importance of human rights to the attention of American politicians and news media.?

Even in victory, though, the CJA?s cases often depict a dismaying reality: After a war, peace, no matter how welcome, can fail to deliver justice and transparency.

In a 2008 result in Florida, the CJA won a $37 million judgment against a former army officer in Peru who led a 1985 massacre of villagers high in the Andes Mountains. The incident was one of the worst in the conflict between Peru and the Shining Path insurgents. The CJA?s clients, two women, then 12 years old, watched the officer and his men shoot their families and burn them alive. As many as 69 people were killed in what became known as the Accomarca Massacre.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/wT_wEl79A00/Seeking-justice-for-victims-across-borders

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China activist given 10 years' jail for subversion (AP)

BEIJING ? A Chinese court sentenced a veteran dissident who organized a pro-democracy activist network to 10 years' imprisonment Monday for inciting subversion, his wife said, the second heavy punishment for a dissident in recent days.

The stiff sentences come near the end of a year in which the Chinese government has used various means to silence dissent, from lengthy imprisonment to months of disappearances, in a crackdown aimed at preventing Arab Spring-style uprisings.

A court in the southern city of Guiyang found Chen Xi guilty of the charge of "incitement to subvert state power" for 36 essays he wrote and posted online, his wife said by phone.

Chen maintained his innocence but will not appeal the verdict, Zhang Qunxuan said.

"This is utterly absurd," Zhang said. "Chen Xi told the court it did not take into consideration the things he has written as a whole, and has interpreted his words out of context. But they have power and they don't listen."

"The court said he was a repeat offender and also that this is a very serious crime," she said. Chen was active in the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests and was sentenced to three years in prison, and several years after that, he was jailed for 10 years on charges of counterrevolutionary offenses, Zhang said.

His sentence comes three days after another veteran activist, Chen Wei, a dissident in the southwestern city of Suining, was sentenced to nine years' jail for the same offense.

The lengthy sentences against the two, who are not related, are in line with the Chinese government's long practice of punishing heavily veteran activists who have refused to give up despite decades of harassment. This appears to have worsened after anonymous online calls urged Chinese to imitate the uprisings of North Africa and the Middle East earlier this year.

"The fear factor ? the government's panic over sparks of the Arab uprising ? is no doubt driving the severe punishment of its critics," said Renee Xia, international director of Chinese Human Rights Defenders. "But suppression of views and expression will not address the root causes of social unrest."

Other recently jailed veteran dissidents include Liu Xianbin, a democracy activist who has previously spent a decade in prison and was given another 10 year sentence in March. On Christmas day in 2009, Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in prison for co-authoring Charter 08, which called for an end to single-party rule and advocated democratic political reforms.

In Chen Xi's case, the subversion charge is also likely aimed at punishing and silencing him for his work with the Guizhou Human Rights Forum, a network of activists that organized human rights and pro-democracy activities in the southern Chinese region.

"The arrest and sentencing of dissidents is essentially motivated by a logic of information control, that the government wants to prevent the exposing of the real human rights situation on the ground," said Human Rights Watch Asia researcher Nicholas Bequelin. "Therefore people who report those kinds of news are generally the ones who get arrested."

Several of the members of the network have served prison sentences for related activities, according to the Chinese Human Rights Defenders.

Chen Xi was arrested Nov. 29 and charged in the southern province of Guizhou. Calls to the Guiyang Intermediate People's Court, where the trial was held, rang unanswered Monday.

The Chinese government has held these trials during the Christmas period to limit the criticism it receives for the heavy punishments being handed down, Bequelin said.

"It does work really well because there's no diplomatic activity around Christmas," he said. "By the time the diplomats get back to their desks, the sequence of events has moved on already. Therefore it does ensure the government receives less criticism for this."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_as/as_china_human_rights

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Timothy Stephen Uhlik, 56, Naples, Florida

Timothy Stephen Uhlik, 56 of Naples passed away December 21, 2011. He was born in Cleveland, Ohio April 19, 1955. He worked many diligent years as a truck parts salesman where he built friendships with numerous individuals across the Cleveland area. He often enjoyed trips to parks to play with his dogs and coached his son through many years of baseball. He became a member of the Naples community shortly after his retirement in 2003. He was an active member in the Corvette of Naples car association where he enjoyed weekend outings and car showing events. He spent the final years of his life, with his love Diane Missig, enjoying the relaxing atmosphere of Naples, which was always his dream after spending summers here as a boy.Timothy was the son of Stephen Uhlik (Deceased) and Marie Uhlik; Brother to Lynn (Daniel) Novy; Father to Timothy J (Mary) Uhlik; Love of Dianne Missig, and Grandfather to Gregory Uhlik and Carson Uhlik.Relatives and friends may call Wednesday, Dec. 28th from 10 am until Noon at Fuller Funeral Home, 4735 Tamiami Trail East. A funeral mass will follow at 1:30pm at St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church, 5130 Rattlesnake Hammock Road. Inurnment will be held later at St. Peter the Apostle Columbarium. Flowers may be sent to the funeral home.

Source: http://nbc2.tributes.com/show/Timothy-Stephen-Uhlik-92979515

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Team Canada Table Hockey scores on iOS

In partnership with Hockey Canada, Stinger Games today introduces Team Canada Table Hockey 1.0 to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch this Christmas. Challenge a friend to a game of table hockey over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth in this face paced Red vs. White game. Showcasing realistic 3D physics using the Bullet Physics, with great graphics and challenging CPU opponents. Compete against other players worldwide to see who has the best skills using OpenFeint and Game Center Leaderboards and more.

Read more

Source: http://www.appnewsbureau.com/1629/team-canada-table-hockey-scores-on-ios/

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