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Sports

This Week in Balls - March 26

Balls are on the tip of everyone's tongue this week as March Madness widdles down to the final four and Tim Tebow becomes a Jet.
Lou Doggs
Sports Staff
3.26.12
News

Syrian Slaughter Update - Week Seven

Assad went furniture shopping and Lionel Messi helped supply the rebels with weapons.
Henry Langston
3.26.12
Dogmageddon

What You Pay For

It's all part of my extremely small-range, highly focused, and not super difficult—self-immolation, it is not—one-man protest.
Rick Paulas
3.26.12
Stuff

We're Throwing a Party in Pakistan!

It's about goddamn time.
VICE Staff
3.26.12
Photo

Dead Traffic - Faces from Sierra Leone

Kim Thue has spent the past few years shooting in Big Wharf, one of the the biggest and most dangerous slums of Freetown, Sierra Leone, where the locals affectionately call him "The Notorious K.I.M." 
Kim Thue
3.26.12
VICE News

SOFEX: The Business of War

SOFEX takes place every two years in Amman, and is largely the brainchild of Jordan's king, Abdullah II, who has a penchant for special operations and massive displays of artillery.
Shane Smith
VICE Staff
3.26.12
Travel

Date These Kiwis - Auckland

More awkward small talk with cute strangers in New Zealand.
VICE Australia
3.25.12
Photo

AUNZ Photoclub 2

Our repository for pictures taken by readers like you.
Maxwell Finch
3.25.12
Comics!

Miss Juniper's Dating Disasters - Part 5

You can make a killing selling used panties on the internet.
Rick Altergott
3.25.12
Motherboard Blog

At Fermilab, Imagining Neutrinos As Light-Speed Carrier Pigeons

It's safe to say that a whole lot more of the world knows what a neutrino is -- or at least that it exists -- than just a year ago.
Michael Byrne
3.25.12
Motherboard Blog

Google Wants To Target Ads Based On "Environmental Conditions"; Let's Imagine What That Could Actually Mean

Google's new (newish) idea is this: sometime in the future, you might have sensors on your "remote device" that can monitor said device's current environment. Based on this information, the company can then better target ads on that remote device...
Michael Byrne
3.24.12
Motherboard Blog

NASA Didn't Learn To Fly in Space Until It Was Seven Years Old

NASA learned how to fly in space 47 years ago. At least, that’s when it first started figuring it out. The Mercury program that launched the first American astronauts really just took them along for a ride. But the second program was different.
Amy Shira Teitel
3.24.12
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