Word: inked
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...important who wins, but it is important that Afghanistan makes its own future." HAMID KARZAI, Afghan interim leader, on the day of the country's first direct presidential election. The day would later be marred as some polling stations mistakenly used erasable ink to mark voters' thumbs, leading to allegations of multiple voting and fraud...
...Here's one emerging innovation: take a look at the plasma panels that are replacing signs and posters at cinemas and airports. If these devices are being used now, when they cost about $10,000 apiece, imagine what we'll see when technologies like light-emitting polymers and e-Ink allow us to make even larger, thinner and higher-quality displays for perhaps as little as $100. In the mid-1800s, the introduction of the blackboard revolutionized classroom education. These displays could have a similar impact, not only in classrooms (in the form of electronic whiteboards) but also for signs...
...unique, even if they are actually at the mall. Ruehl No. 925 is aimed at women and men ages 22 to 30 and includes casual sportswear, jeans, accessories, intimate apparel and outerwear. Then there are quirkier products, such as a fragrance that comes in a bottle shaped like an ink flask and limited-edition art T shirts that are signed by a different artist every month...
...artwork, attractively printed in blue ink on an off-white ground, has polish and clarity. Unfortunately, the experiences of "A Few Perfect Hours" do far less for us as readers than they evidently did for the author. The book's episodic nature defeats the raison d'etre of a travel book - to learn something new about the world. Neufeld never stays in one place long enough to give us a depth of understanding about the environs or people in the places he visits. "A Few Perfect Hours," ultimately reads more like autobiography set in exotic locals. But without the neurotic...
...White House did not check the memos for invisible ink either. And why should it have? After all, the documents were allegedly written some 30 years ago by Bush's squadron commander in Texas, who has been dead for 20 years. There was no reason the Administration would have known if the documents were real...