Author: Serkadis

  • Man arrested in decade-old attack on 9-year-old

    A Kenosha man has been taken into custody and charged with sexually assaulting a young Aurora-area girl in 2000, according to the Kane County Sheriff’s police.

    Jeroski A. Franklin, 28, was charged with one count of predatory criminal sexual assault and one count of aggravated criminal sexual assault. He was being held in Wisconsin, awaiting transport to Illinois.

    In 2000, Franklin had allegedly assaulted a 9-year-old girl, but the incident was not reported to police until 2008. Franklin knew the girl’s family, police said.

    The eight-year lag between the alleged assault and the report resulted in a lengthy investigation that culminated in a grand jury indictment on Jan. 13, Lt. Pat Gengler of the sheriff’s police said today.

    The sheriff’s department alerted Kenosha police about the indictment, and they took Franklin into custody. The most serious charge could result in a 30-year prison sentence, should Franklin be found guilty.

    Clifford Ward

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Daley pushes property-tax relief legislation

    The Tribune’s Clout Street blog reports: Mayor Richard Daley today renewed his push to get a property tax relief program put back in place, even as he acknowledged it will be difficult to get state lawmakers to along.

    Joined by several aldermen and state legislators, Daley wants the General Assembly to bring back a property tax exemption designed to limit the annual increase in a home’s value for tax purposes at 7 percent for residences in Cook County.

    The law is set to expire before tax bills hit the mail this fall.

    About half of the city’s homeowners will see their bills rise hundreds of dollars on the next round of bills, Daley said, because the legislature decided in 2007 to let the tax break expire.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Kelly Bensimon Playboy March 2010 [Naked Pictorial]

    Big Apple socialite Kelly Bensimon, star of Bravo’s top-rated docusoap The Real Housewives of New York City, will pose in nude on the pages of the March issue of Playboy Magazine. A rep for the groundbreaking men’s publication confirmed the scoop to HollywoodLife.com on Tuesday.

    Kelly, 41, will be featured “on the cover and in a 6-page nude pictorial,” a publicist for the celeb said in a statement. “The pictorial was shot by Kelly’s ex-husband, famed fashion photographer Gilles Bensimon,” publicist added.

    While Kelly is the first Housewives star to pose nude for Playboy, she’s not the first to strip off. Her on-screen nemesis — foodie Bethenny Frankel — got naked for a PETA billboard, which was unveiled in Times Square last month. And Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kim Zolciak posed topless for the NOH8 marriage equality last fall.


  • Nuevo foro

    Nuevo foro creado a peticion del moderador hondureño
    Raymonzhydra

    :cheers:

  • Connecting With Your Inner Earpiece [The Mossberg Solution]

    Apps are hot. These are the small programs that can be installed on a digital gadget to get it to do more than what it did when you bought it. Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch are the best app platforms right now thanks to the company’s App Store, which offers an estimated 125,000 apps. Research in Motion, Android, and Palm devices also work with apps.

    But why should smart phones have all the fun? Yahoo Connected TVs from Samsung, LG, Sony, and Vizio allow people to load app-like “widgets”—including Facebook, Twitter, weather and stock quotes—onto their big-screen TVs. And GPS navigation devices take advantage of apps for information on fuel prices and traffic.

    [ See post to watch video ]

    This week, I tested a Bluetooth earpiece that also can be made smarter with apps: Aliph’s $100 Jawbone Icon (http://us.jawbone.com). Like many other wireless earpieces, it connects to your Bluetooth-enabled phone so you can talk, hands-free. Unlike other Bluetooth earpieces, the Jawbone Icon can be plugged into a computer and loaded with different settings and apps. This works using Aliph’s Web-based software platform called MyTalk (http://mytalk.jawbone.com) and some apps enable more than hands-free talking.

    For now, there are only two apps that truly expand the functionality of the earpiece, in my opinion. But MyTalk is a good start in making this tiny Bluetooth device more sophisticated and encouraging more hands-free productivity.

    The idea of connecting an earpiece to a PC is helpful in two respects. First, it turns the Jawbone into a dynamic product that can be updated and enhanced over time, rather than never changing from the day you buy it. Second, it lets users more easily adjust the settings of a device that’s too tiny to have its own screen, thus eliminating the need for more confusing buttons on the device. Over time, these earpieces could become even simpler and smaller as more of their settings are adjusted on the computer.

    Since the Jawbone Icon and its MyTalk software platform launched this week, only five “dial apps” and 10 “audio apps” are available for synching to the earpiece. The former are apps that perform functions by dialing out on your phone, like hands-free text messaging; the latter are settings to adjust the voice making announcements in your ear, like telling you that the battery needs charging. As of now, only one of each app category can be synched onto the Jawbone Icon at any given time. Aliph plans to make the Icon capable of simultaneously running multiple apps sometime this year.

    If you ever used one of the earlier Jawbone models and thought you weren’t hip enough to remember how its hidden earpiece buttons worked, the Jawbone Icon’s refreshingly simple design will bring a sigh of relief. It uses two easily detected controls. One is an obvious button on the top of the earpiece that controls the earpiece’s functions. The other is a tiny on/off switch on the inside surface that couldn’t be easier to use.

    The Ace model personified

    The Ace model personified

    The Icon comes in six models with catchy names that match the “persona” of the audio apps: The Hero, The Rogue, The Ace, The Catch, The Thinker and The Bombshell—each literally has its own distinct voice. Each device weighs less and has a wider and shorter design than previous Jawbones. The Icons come in shades of black, silver, white, red and gold, depending on the model’s persona, and resemble handsome jewelry.

    Each earpiece has a short, gray bendable USB connector that allows for easy access to a PC’s USB port. This is used for synching and charging the earpiece, though a separate wall charger also comes in the box.

    I tested my Jawbone Icon by plugging it into both an Apple MacBook Pro and a Dell running Windows 7. I logged onto http://mytalk.jawbone.com and requested an invitation to use the MyTalk software by sending Aliph my email since it’s still in a “private beta” or experimental phase. You’ll have to do the same until MyTalk comes out of its private beta stage sometime in the next few months.

    After setting up an account using my email and a password, I followed on-screen instructions to get started with synching apps to my earpiece.

    MyTalk’s dial apps include five programs that help you do more with your voice, so you don’t need to look down to type on a mobile device. Once synched with your Jawbone Icon, the app will activate as soon as you press and hold the earpiece button.

    For now, only two of the five dial apps are really helpful for the headset: Jott and Dial2Do. Both let people use their voice to send themselves reminders, send tweets on Twitter, and send text messages—assuming the programs correctly interpret what is dictated. I had pretty good luck with this, though one test of the text-messaging function thought I said “needle” when I really said “noodle” and another interpreted “blinds” as “blind.”

    Of the two, I found Dial2Do a little easier to use. Its Basic Account is free but is limited to sending yourself reminders, while a Pro Account costs $40 a year or $3.99 a month, and offers social-networking, emailing and text-messaging, among other things. Jott can only be used free for one week, but requires a credit-card number for signing up and will charge $2.95 a month after the trial week is over.

    MyTalk’s remaining three dial apps aren’t too exciting: “Directory Assistance 411″ and “Voice Dial,” a feature that only works if your phone has built-in voice-dial capability, which most do now. Another app called 1-800-FREE411 lets users get 411 information without being charged carrier fees.

    MyTalk’s audio apps include six playful voices, three in different languages (German, Spanish and French) and one plain, unaccented English voice. Each of the playful voices has a coinciding photo and name when you’re picking settings on the Web site. One called “The Bombshell” is represented by an attractive, blonde woman who speaks in a sexy voice. A voice called “The Rogue” says, “I am ready for my assignment,” when the earpiece is turned on. During most of my testing, I kept my Jawbone Icon set on “The Ace,” represented by a woman with a smart British accent who said, “They can wait,” when I declined calls.

    The chosen audio app voice speaks every so often, like when the device is turned on, when you query the headset’s remaining battery life (an indicator light also tells you the remaining charge), when an incoming call is received or when you turn the headset off. But the Voice Dial app uses the standard voice that comes with your device’s voice-dialing capability—not the fun audio app voice you’ve chosen.

    Another downside to the headset is that it isn’t yet able to tell you the name of whoever is calling even if you have them as a contact in your phone; instead, it only reads the phone number aloud. If you’re like me, you don’t know have many numbers memorized anymore, so this isn’t helpful. Instead, it forced me to look at my phone for the caller ID, defeating the purpose of a hands-free earpiece. Aliph hopes to fix this problem within a year.

    The Jawbone Icon is the first earpiece to use a software platform for adding apps, and MyTalk makes synching easy. Although Aliph plans to offer more apps and software updates for the Jawbone Icon (and subsequent devices), there will likely always be some activities that are simply too difficult to perform using voice alone. But MyTalk is a good first step toward making the Bluetooth earpiece more useful.

    Email [email protected]

    Write to Katherine Boehret at [email protected]

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Mass Effect 2 uses DLC “pipeline” to profit from used sales

    Mass Effect 2 is going to come with a nice surprise: “The Cerberus Network,” an in-game content delivery system that will be your place to grab new missions, new equipment, and even characters. You’ll be able to download the Network with a one-use code that comes with the game… as long as it’s new. If you buy the game used, the pipeline will be able to be activated by buying another code from EA.

    Players who buy the game new will have a nice surprise on the first day. “Players who access ‘The Cerberus Network’ will receive the first DLC pack on January 26th (launch day in North America) featuring new missions and in-game items,” EA explained. “Included in this pack is a mission that introduces Zaeed, a rugged and deadly gun-for-hire who is recruited to join Commander Shepard’s mission to save mankind.”

    There is even more content planned for after launch, including a hovering tank called the Hammerhead, new missions, and new in-game items. EA also notes that these downloads are tied to your EA Online account, which is non-transferable.

    After launch, when GameStop is pushing that used copy of the game for a few bucks less, gamers now have a reason to go with a new copy, as they won’t have to buy the Cerberus Network separately. Mass Effect 2 is coming to the Xbox 360 and PC on January 26.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Article

  • How quaint, a review of Sony’s very first CD player

    cd101
    This is great. Original reviews of classic gadgets and computers are fun because you can marvel at the things that were new and mysterious then, but beyond commonplace now. In this review of Sony’s CDP-101, it is noted that there are many buttons, but no knobs. How things have changed, and now we value knobs as high-end and disparage buttons as peasant interfaces.

    This one is lower and wider, has a horizontal drawer that slides out to accept the disc, and has much more flexibility of control. Audiophiles will however be dismayed to note that there is nothing on it to adjust; there isn’t even a knob to diddle. But there are plenty of buttons.

    After the unit is turned on, a touch of a button opens the loading drawer. The disc goes in label-side up, playing-side down. To close the drawer, you can push the same button again or simply select a band for playing.

    They also remind you of how far we’ve come. The digital encoding of music may have lost something in the early days (some would argue has never been recovered), but the medium made possible a perfect replicability and precision that some would say vinyl lacks.

    The most immediately noticeable characteristics of the CD sound are its awesome lack of background noise and its almost unbelievable freedom from strain during the loudest passages. After a while one starts to notice other things. For example, the low end seems to have no bottom limit. In fact I am willing to bet I was hearing stuff at the extreme bottom that the record producers hadn’t heard, because some of it was soft but obviously extraneous infrasonic noise—occasional thuds that were totally unrelated to the music.

    I mean, when was the last time you thought, “Ahh, what a refreshing lack of background noise!”

    Definitely an interesting read for anyone interested in the history of technology.

    [via Retro Thing]


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • The Phosphor watch – now in black!

    DigitalHourBlackLeatherWhiteBG2So we told you about the Phosphor watch back in May, and many people asked themselves, “but can I get it in black?” Admit it, you did. I could hear you. Really. Anyway, the answer to that burning question is “yes, the Phosphor watch is now available in black as well as silver.”

    We liked the Phosphor product when we last saw them, so it’s a safe bet that we’ll like them in black too. The new version features the aforementioned black case, and a reversible display that shows either black on white, or white on black text. It’s going to cost a little more for the black version however, $194 to be exact. The old silver cased versions were only $185, but I can totally see where the money is going. The Phosphor DH05 Black Leather is available now from Watchismo.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • 2 men accused of plotting to kill prosecutor, federal agent

    Two DuPage County men have been charged in a plot to kill a federal prosecutor in Chicago and an agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration, federal officials said today.

    Charged were Jack Mann, 41, of Naperville and Frank Caira, 39, of Downers Grove.

    A defense lawyer for an ex-convict reported to the FBI that his client had been solicited by Mann to target a prosecutor in a federal drug case against Caira and a DEA agent, according to a complaint filed in the case.

    Mann knew of the ex-convict’s past, including that he had been convicted of murder and was a member of the Latin Kings street gang, according to the court papers.

    Around November, Mann allegedly passed the man the names of the intended targets and said he had done some research on their addresses — with the understanding that the price for the killings would be four kilograms of cocaine.

    A meeting between Mann and the intended hitman took place on Dec. 27, and the FBI recorded it, authorities said. Mann was recorded complaining that Caira was unwilling to pay anything before the murders occurred.

    Mann allegedly said he told Caira, “If you want Jack Mann, you’re gonna (expletive) pay.” He was arrested Jan. 13, according to court papers, and told investigators he had contacted the member of the Latin Kings street gang on Caira’s behalf.

    Mann appeared in court Tuesday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Nan Nolan and waived a detention hearing for the time being. Caira is set to appear in court Thursday, officials said.

    The case is being handled by assistant U.S. attorneys from the Northern District of Indiana because the Chicago office recused itself from the case.

    – Jeff Coen

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Gene Munster: 2010 is the “Year of the Mac,” sales up significantly

    Filed under: , , ,

    When Gene Munster talks, people listen.

    The Piper Jaffray analyst delivered one of his missives this morning stating that his analysis of Mac retail sales in the U.S., based on numbers tracked by NPD Group, are up about 26% year-over-year for the December quarter. This is higher than the average Wall Street estimate of 19% year-over-year growth.

    What does that mean in terms of units sold? Munster, who is not pictured at right, believes that translates to about 3.1 million Macs sold in the U.S. last quarter. Munster’s last estimate was for Apple to sell around 2.9 million Macs, so even his own estimates are turning out to be somewhat conservative.

    Munster believes that Street estimates for 2010 will need to come up. The Street shows about 14% year-over-year growth in Mac sales this year, which is well below the 20% or so growth that Apple is demonstrating. In his note, Munster wrote that “2010 is shaping up to be the year of the Mac.”

    Munster concluded his note with a statement that he’s confident in his estimate of 9.3 million iPhone shipments last quarter. We’ll all find out for sure on Monday, when Apple reports the actual December quarter results. We’ll liveblog the financial fun right here on TUAW, so stay tuned next week.

    [via Business Insider]

    TUAWGene Munster: 2010 is the “Year of the Mac,” sales up significantly originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Will Lower Prices Help Sell More Albums?

    Before the recording industry effectively shut them down, the Russian website Allofmp3.com was doing a brisk business in showing that people were often more than happy to pay for album downloads if they were a hell of a lot cheaper than what iTunes and others were charging. Albums often were closer to the $2 or $3 range, which seemed a lot more compelling to many users. Of course, there were questions as to the legality of the service. However, it seems that some are finally realizing that it might help to make digital albums much, much, much cheaper. We’ve certainly seen this on limited attempts from individual bands, but apparently a large distributor of metal music has decided to lower the price on almost all of its digital download albums to $5.25. Who knows if that’s the right price (I’d guess it’s still too high), but it’s good to see more experimentation on pricing. Hopefully, we’ll begin to get more concrete data on how such pricing experiments work. We’ve already seen in the video game industry that price discounts can more than pay for themselves in increased sales. It’s hard to believe the same wouldn’t apply to music as well.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Viciedo working out at first base for White Sox

    Dayan Viciedo, one of the prized hitters in the White Sox’s organization, worked out last week in Miami at first base.

    Viciedo’s move from third base isn’t permanent yet, said coach Joey Cora, who conducted a three-day camp that included shortstop Alexei Ramirez and Gordon Beckham, who will move from third base to second.

    But the Sox wanted to get Viciedo, 20, acclimated to first, a position that could give him the best chance of reaching the majors with newly acquired third baseman Mark Teahen signed for three more years and Brent Morel making a strong impression in the Arizona Fall League.

    Also, incumbent first baseman Paul Konerko is in the final year of a five-year contract.

    The 6-foot-1, 240-pound Viciedo impressed the Sox with his hitting last spring as a non-roster invitee but spent the 2009 season at Double-A Birmingham.

    Nevertheless, he showed some promise at first, according to Cora.

    “He may be big, but he’s a good athlete,” Cora said. ”His bat will carry him. That kid has some serious, serious talent.”

    By Mark Gonzales

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Spy Shots: Engineers still testing Saab 9-5 SportCombi, should somebody tell them?

    Filed under: , ,

    Saab 9-5 SportCombi spy shots – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We know automakers like to test prototypes in remote, freezing locations to ensure that they’ll start and run properly when sold to a family of five in Buffalo, New York. Perhaps these Saab engineers are in such a remote corner of Sweden that they haven’t heard the mothership has crashed. While Saab’s future is still undecided, hope seems to dwindle by the day that we’ll ever see the new 9-5 go on sale to the public – at least while wearing a Saab badge. Nevertheless, these engineers are still at their mobile desks in case a miracle happens.

    The next-gen 9-5 has already been outed and is a looker for sure. The SportCombi version (Saab-speak for wagon) adds an extra dose of practicality to those unique lines of the sedan and, from the look of the things, appears to operate just fine in crazy cold conditions. Not much else to report unless, you know, Saab survives.

    [Source: CarPix]

    Spy Shots: Engineers still testing Saab 9-5 SportCombi, should somebody tell them? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Pocket God sells 2M units on the iPhone, first paid app to do so

    pocket godIt looks like a lot of us enjoy torturing island natives during our spare time. Bolt Creative said today that its Pocket God game has sold more than two million copies on the iPhone.

    The company contends that it is the first to create a paid app that has crossed the two-million sold sales mark. Other higher-priced apps have generated more revenue, but the 99 cent Pocket God app has had tremendous staying power since its launch in January, 2009.

    The game, which has a sick sense of humor, is the brainchild of Dave Castelnuovo and Allan Dye, a two-man team whose efforts have become a textbook case on how to launch a hit game on the iPhone. In the game, players can play with the natives on an island, as if you were a god. You can pick the little people and feed them to the sharks, hoist them on spears, burn them and otherwise inflict cruelties on them. My kid plays it and pretends that she’s doing these various things to mommy and daddy.

    The clever thing about Pocket God is that the regular updates keep you coming back. Castelnuovo said the company has launched more than 30 updates since the launch of the game, effectively turning the game into an ongoing service rather than a one-time product.

    Castelnuovo said that the game has benefited from a strong community of fans who keep the buzz going. Players have made thousands of YouTube videos inspired by Pocket God, and the company created collectible characters that users can buy.

    Pocket God held the No. 1 spot for a whole month in March, 2009, and has declined in rank ever since. But the game saw a resurgence during the holidays. At the peak, the game sold 53,000 copies in a day, and it sold more than 100,000 units per week during the 2009 holiday season. One of the things that has helped is good PR. Castelnuovo recently appeared on Bloomberg TV, has been interviewed by the New York Times and other outlets.

    Castelnuovo has no plans to build a big company, though he sees big competitors such as Electronic Arts moving into the market. Rather, he is focused on running an independent studio where he can focus more on creative work than business. He has hired a consultant for business development to license the game to other platforms. The company is in the midst of wrapping up a lot of contracts on those licensing deals, and Bolt Creative is also working on a second game as well.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Jury to decide if defrocked priest stays incarcerated

    A jury will decide if former Roman Catholic priest and convicted sex offender Daniel McCormack will remain incarcerated under the Illinois Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act, a judge ruled today.

    Siding with prosecutors, Judge Dennis Porter said McCormack will remain in a secure treatment facility until a verdict is reached in a trial.

    McCormack fondled five boys between ages 8 and 12 in St. Agatha Catholic Church’s rectory, misconduct that dated to 2001. Some victims were members of the basketball team he coached at nearby Our Lady of the West Side School. Other victims were friends of boys who attended the school, where McCormack also taught algebra.

    Two audits commissioned by the Chicago archdiocese later found a trail of abuse allegations dating to McCormack’s seminary days in 1988, all of which the archdiocese had failed to investigate properly. They found that although a priest had been assigned to monitor McCormack at St. Agatha, he still had contact with children.

    McCormack pleaded guilty in July 2007 to five felony counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse and was sentenced to five years in prison. Removed from the priesthood, he was scheduled to be released on parole last September.

    Lawyers for the Illinois Attorney General and the Cook County State’s Attorney are seeking civil commitment based on a medical evaluation, the number of victims, McCormack’s “offending pattern” and the fact that he molested a child after initial allegations surfaced.

    That last fact was what led Porter to determine probable cause on Tuesday.


  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 1.19.10

    Review: Icon CJ3B more than the sum of its impressive parts

    The Icon CJ3B’s remarkable capabilities play second fiddle to the insane level of detail put into each and every example.

    Next Dodge Durango to be called Magnum

    The Dodge Magnum may be dead, but its name is set to return in 2011 as the Durango’s successor.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 1.19.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Watch Any Vimeo Video in Freaky ASCII-O-Vision [ASCII]

    I have no idea how this works, but I do know that it’s one of the strangest, coolest things I’ve seen in a while. Search for any Vimeo video on ASCIImeo, and it’ll play back to you as text.

    Not sure that this fills a specific need of any kind—although avant-garde film students and alternate dimension enthusiasts, feel free to correct me—and I recommend switching to black and white (“simple ASCII”) to cut down on the headaches. Otherwise, though, this is the exact kind of wonderful oddball thing that makes/wastes my day perfectly. [ASCIImeo via The Daily What]






  • Guilty plea in Bloomingdale beating death

    baileywoodsonmug125.jpgA 25-year-old Chicago man was sentenced today to 25 years in prison after pleading guilty to murdering the owner of a Bloomingdale truck repair business last March.

    Timothy Bailey-Woodson admitted taking a metal machine part and beating David Coungeris, 53, on the head as many as 25 times on March 5 at the High Tech Auto & Repair, 250 S. Gary Avenue, following a “physical altercation” between the men, Assistant DuPage County State’s Atty. Steven Knight said.

    At a court hearing in March, prosecutors said Bailey-Woodson told authorities the victim had made sexual advances toward him prior to the beating. But on Tuesday neither Knight nor Assistant Public Defender Jeff York went into detail about the fight or about any other motive.

    Bailey-Woodson had been released from the DuPage County Jail on Feb. 7, 2009, after serving 78 days on a motor theft conviction and moved in with Coungeris shortly thereafter. York said Bailey-Woodson worked at the truck repair shop during odd jobs for the defendant.

    Knight said that after the fight between the men, Bailey-Woodson picked up a machine part, put on gloves and proceeded to beat the victim “until his arm got tired.”

    Bailey-Woodson then emptied the shop’s cash register, Knight said. He was arrested later that day by Chicago police near his listed West Side address.

    Knight said that prosecutors agreed to the 25-year sentence because of Bailey-Woodson’s plea and his cooperation with police following the murder.

    Art Barnum

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Andrew Grene, UN official with University of Chicago ties, among victims of Haiti earthquake

    Andrew Grene, UN official with University ties, among victims of Haiti earthquake

    Andrew Grene, 44, a senior United Nations official in Haiti with longstanding ties to the University of Chicago community, was among those killed in the Jan. 13 earthquake, officials with the UN and the Irish government said Tuesday.

    Through his career in public service, Grene was “a true humanitarian,” said Ireland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Micheál Martin, TD, in a statement Tuesday.

    Grene, who graduated from the College in 1987 with a B.A. in Romance Languages and Literatures, was based in Port–au–Prince and served as assistant to the head of the UN’s special representative in Haiti, Hedi Annabi, who also died in the earthquake along with numerous UN workers. Grene held citizenship in the U.S. and Ireland.

    “Andrew is part of a long and honourable Irish tradition of public service with the United Nations,” Martin said in a statement. “His family, and indeed Ireland, can be very proud of his work.”

    Two of Grene’s children currently are students at the University of Chicago — Alex, a second–year student; and Patrick, who is in his third year. Andrew Grene’s father, David Grene, was a University faculty member and an internationally recognized expert on the classics. He was among the founding members of the John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought. A native of Ireland, he died in 2002.

    Andrew Grene was born in Chicago and raised here and in Ireland. In a brief note to University colleagues, Grene’s son Alex said his father had inspired many people through his example.

    “He was a hero to me in every sense of the word, but it wasn’t just me; he inspired everyone around him,” Alex Grene wrote.

    “The amount of love and joy in his heart was more than anyone could fathom; so much so that when I looked at my 44–year–old dad, I could see clearly in him the youthful 18–year–old college student who wandered the University of Chicago with wonder in his eyes, and the young boy who once ran and played amid the soft, green, rolling hills of Cavan.”

    In addition to his two sons, Andrew Grene is survived by his wife, Jennifer; and a daughter, Rosamund. Services will be held in Ireland.