Una patética visión de la vida desde lo más profundo del pozo del alcoholismo
jueves, diciembre 29, 2005
lunes, diciembre 19, 2005
viernes, diciembre 16, 2005
SHOW MUST GO ON
lunes, diciembre 12, 2005
DIE JUGEND MARSCHIERT
bei Sonnenschein und Regen;
die Jugend marschiert mit sieghaftem Drang
dem gro�en Ziel entgegen.
Wir st�rmen die Welt, geh'n fest unser'n Schritt
wer jung ist der f�gt sich freilich mit,
die Jugend marschiert, kein Pfad ist zu steil,
dem Siege entgegen zu eil'n.
Sieg Heil!

Colonel Casey Wardynski is the Director of the U.S. Army’s Office of Economic and Manpower Analysis (OEMA) at the United States Military Academy. Colonel Wardynski also serves as an Associate Professor of Economics within the Department of Social Sciences.
BE all you can be"? Ancient history. "An army of one"? Last
year's news. The military's newest promotional campaign is
not even televised; it is America's Army, a free computer
game produced by the military and aimed at winning the
The Army is looking to hire 79,500 young adults this year -
and, as Colonel Wardynski said, "Gaming tends to be very
The Army is hoping the game will help cut down on one of
its biggest expenses - filling its ranks. Doug Smith, a
spokesman for the Army Recruiting Command in Fort Knox,
Ky., said the Army spends about $15,000 to recruit every
soldier.
Colonel Wardynski said the government will have spent about
$7.6 million to develop the game by September; he said he
expected the cost of creating new missions and other
updates to be about $2.5 million a year and the cost of
maintaining the multiplayer infrastructure to be about $1.5
million.
If the game draws 300 to 400 recruits in the next year, he
said, it will have been worth the cost - especially since
the game is considered likely to attract people attending
or considering college, who tend to be more expensive to

