Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Bike Snob NYC: This Just In: Riding A Bike Makes You Special!



So what heroic exploits did you undertake on your bicycle this weekend? ?Did you sit on the saddle? ?Did you pedal the bicycle? ?Did you make the bicycle move forward? ?Did you do all of this alongside other people wearing similar clothing and riding similar bicycles, or did you do it all by yourself?

More importantly, how did you share your ride afterwards with the rest of the world? ?After all, that's the whole point of riding a bike. ?Whether you ride alone or with others, it's crucial that everyone have access to details about your ?inspirational life-changing recreational pursuits, because of course while plenty of people have bicycles, nobody rides them as interestingly as you do.

It's like singing "The Wheels On The Bus," only for grown-ups.

One good way to share your ride and have a great big sing-along is by using social Fredworking sites like Strava. ?Another way is to get sponsorship from some energy drink (or "douche juice") company and make a video of yourself using the wrong bike for something, like the rider known as Seabiscuit, as forwarded to me by a reader:


We've seen Seabiscuit's work before, and this time he's going over the Galibier or the Telegraphe or both of them or neither or who fucking cares on his track bike with the following ratio of who cares x who cares:
I'm sure someone out there who badly needs to get a life can tell you exactly how many skid patches that yields without even consulting their iPhone.

Anyway, thusly decked out in his charity ride chic outfit and astride his?N?-Fred fixie mountain meh-chine, he narrates the ride for us:


"I'll go through hell, I'll crawl through several layers of hell," he explains.

Oh, save it. ?You're not going on a tour of duty in Afghanistan, you're going for a bike ride. ?You won't crawl through any layers of hell. ?You'll go through a recreational bike ride, and you'll crawl through several layers of recreation--slowly, because you picked the wrong bike.

"The point is to achieve something by my very own means, and against myself," he continues. ?"Just by the power of will and physical strength. ?That's my nature."

Right, just himself. ?And his sponsor. ?And his support vehicle. ?And his film crew. ?And his Garmin:


If you need to tap into your "will and physical strength" in order to engage in your hobby, you should either find a new hobby, or else you should recalibrate your sense of "will and physical strength." ?If going for a bike ride draws from his reserves of "will and physical strength" then having a bowel movement must be off the charts. ?(I can't wait for that video.) ?And smile once in awhile, for chrissakes:

You're riding a freaking bike, not brokering a cease fire between warring countries--though you'd never know that by listening to him. ?Consider this rhetorical question, for example:

"This mountain. ?Is it my friend or is it my enemy?"

Maybe the mountain is neither. ?Maybe it's your "frenemy." ?Or, even more likely, maybe it's a millenia-old geological formation that doesn't give a flying fuck about you or your gear ratio.

Of course, it's perfectly normal to engage in some self-indulgent introspection while you're riding, though you should be worried if you start asking yourself dumb questions like this:

"Why is this road here? ?What is it doing here?"

The combination of thin mountain air and a thick-headed rider is a dangerous one indeed--though it makes me even more excited for that epic bowel movement video:

("Why is this toilet here? ?What is it doing here?")

Eventually, he grinds his way to the top of the mountain, at which point he commences with the descent and the idiotic skidding:

By the way, if you look closely you can see there are some skidmarks already on the road, which leads me to wonder just how staged this video actually is. Here's another shot in which you can also see earlier skidmarks immediately to his left:

I hear the skidmarks in the bowel movement "edit" are going to be sick.

Most amazingly, we're well into 2013 now, yet people are still attempting to impart spiritual significance to fixed-gear cycling:

"Cycling on a track bike certainly has deep spiritual aspects. ?It's repetitive to an extend that I achieve a trance-like state of mind."

That's actually called "boredom," and he's managed to convey the sensation very convincingly in the film.

And this is called "d?j? vu:"

Yes, no fixie downhilling video would be complete without the obligatory ruined rear tire shot. ?Could Red Bull buy this guy a road bike already? ?I wonder if the bowel movement video will feature close-ups of blown-out toilet paper squares. ?

In any case, with this landmark video, Seabuscuit has cemented his reputation as the David Blaine of fixies, in that he is a shadowy, wispily-mustached figure who resurfaces periodically to perform some outsized stunt nobody really cares about anyway.

After his positive test last year, Anthony offered some insight into the amateur's motivation to cheat, saying his obsession with winning drove him to use banned drugs. In a recent email, he said he supports all antidoping efforts, but wonders whether amateurs will simply learn to game the system, as many pros have done, particularly by easing off performance-enhancing drugs ahead of competition.

"Surprise out-of-competition tests seem more effective as a deterrent," Anthony said. "That would have likely made me think twice."

Well said. ?Yes, it's everybody else's job to save you from being a complete douchebag and cheating at your pathetic hobby. ?

The article also makes a good point, which is that amateur cyclists want to be tested so they can be just like the pros:

That cyclists are leading the push to test amateurs is likely no coincidence, considering the large number of pros in that sport who have cheated, most notably Lance Armstrong, who late last year was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and who has since acknowledged doping during his cycling career.

Once you've paid for the crabon bike and the crabon wheels and custom team kits and the power meter and the coach, what's left but to pay for someone else to take your pee in a cup after a race? ?Of course, at the same time, amateur bike racers are always looking for a discount, which is why they've only managed to raise a paltry $5,000: ?

Following suit, the New York bicycle association has raised $5,000 for testing, the same amount raised so far by the Bicycle Racing Association of Colorado. By all accounts, that is far from enough to adequately police amateur riders.

Indeed, $5,000 is not going to pay for an anti-doping program. ?In fact, $5,000 is the retail price of a typical New York City Cat 4 racer's wheelset. ?What they really should do is work with the manufacturers to introduce a surcharge on all this stupid equipment. ?This surcharge would then be used to fund drug tests on the purchaser. ?In fact, I think there should be mandatory drug testing on all purchasers of ridiculous crabon equipment. ?Here's how it would work:

1) Fred presents his USA Cycling license when he buys a Zippp Spud Wankery Firecrap Crabon wheelset with drug testing surcharge built into the already ridiculous price:

2) This surcharge is applied directly towards testing Fred's pee-pee throughout the season:

3) Fred's weenie-ism is thus completely self-sustaining and self-regulating, and anybody who doesn't want to pay for the stupid wheels or the stupid testing can just buy reasonable and durable equipment that they use year after year. ?(And as a bonus, the Freds who suddenly and inexplicably "downgrade" will be easily identified as dopers.)

Meanwhile, drug testing is poised to be the new must-have accessory for Freds, and the real winner in all of this is Usada, who get paid to do the tests--even on ballroom dancers:

Since cycling is an Olympic sport, Usada has the power to test at all sanctioned races, even amateur events. But Travis Tygart, chief executive of Usada, said elite events have traditionally taken priority. Tygart said amateur track and field competitions, archery events and even the Pikes Peak marathon have paid to have Usada testers on race day.

"We've even done ballroom dancing," Tygart said. "Athletes are stepping up and saying even if we're weekend warriors, we don't' want to be cheated."

Sure, cyclists may be bad, but there's no athlete more crooked than a dance floor Fred:

(Fred. ?Get it? ?Of course you do.)

Lastly, even though some people apparently find it flirtatious, there are few things more irritating then strangers chiding you for not wearing a helment:

Tompkins at Myrtle

You said, "Nice helmet." I made up some excuse about not wearing one...but maybe I should have ridden with you to safety instead of pedaling off. Thanks for looking out for me regardless.

"Nice tits" is generally the appropriate response in cases like these.

Source: http://bikesnobnyc.blogspot.com/2013/03/this-just-in-riding-bike-makes-you.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Skydive instructor, student killed in Florida jump

(Reuters) - Two skydivers from Iceland, one an instructor and the other a student, were killed in a skydiving jump on Saturday, Florida media reported.

The two men were part of a group of 22 skydivers who jumped from a plane in Zephyrhills, about 30 miles northeast of Tampa, according to the Tampa Tribune newspaper.

When only 20 of those who jumped returned, authorities launched a search and found the bodies of the two men a few hours later, Florida media said.

The two men were from Iceland, according to Skydive City, which planned the jump, the Tribune reported.

Their identities were not released.

A spokesman for the Pasco County, Florida Sheriff's Office could not be reached for comment.

(Reporting by Ellen Wulfhorst; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/two-die-skydiving-florida-said-iceland-042023396--spt.html

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

4 musts when hiring a home improvement c | Houston and ...

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Source: http://elw351.wordpress.com/2013/03/23/4-musts-when-hiring-a-home-improvement-c-2/

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RolePlayGateway?

One will live,
One will fall,
One will Surpass them all.
For the other it's too early to tell,
but all four shall go through hell...

~Coven Prophecy

Your world is nothing as it seems. Not at all. Ever since the beginning of time, we supernaturals-that is, Werewolves, Vampires, ShapeShifters, Fae (Fairies, Faeries), and Sorcerers have thrived on this earth. Most of us live in covens, which are scattered around the globe; we certainly do not get along.

Image

In Sicily, Italy: The Equinox Coven
In Montreal, Canada: The Coven of the Eclipse
In London, England (they also control Ireland, but don't live there),: The Rainfall Coven
In Redwood Forests in California: The Coven of Forests

The Supernaturals

Vampires: Have light shades of skin, red eyes, usually darker shades of hair. They have ability to drink blood, have immortal life, and are much stronger than humans. The younger you are, the worse you are at controlling your thirst.

Werewolves: Have average or tanned skin, and gold eyes. They have the ability to shift between human and wolf form. (not involved with the moon). The younger you are, the less control you have. As you age, you can learn to control it. They are also stronger and have better senses than average humans.

ShapeShifters: Have any skin tone, and any eye color. They have the ability to transform into any animal, but to turn into a new animal you must have interaction (see, smell, touch) with it. Once you do this, you can learn to change into that animal without ever interacting with it again. However, you are born with a birth animal, which you need to have no interaction with. This is the animal you first shift into after birth, and the first animal you learn to control yourself to change to.

Faeries/Fairies: Faeries and Fairies are very similar but have some differences; Faeries have feathery wings and have the ability to use charms, spells, and illusions. Fairies have wings like actual butterflies, and have the ability to control a certain element (water, fire, air, earth, lightning, nature, etc). They both have the ability to transport through Gates of the Fae, which enable them (and anyone touching them) to travel anywhere. They have the same light hair, candy color eyes, and fun, trickster personalities.

Sorcerers/Sorceresses: Sorcerer(s/esses) have normal hair color, skin tone, and shocking blue or purple eye colors (depending on gender). They have the ability of spells and magic tricks, but do not use wands. They control their powers through their hands. They also have the power of Transport, which enables them (and anyone touching them to travel to anywhere).

The Covens

The Equinox Coven: They Consist primarily of Vampires, and some sorcerers. They're camp (A huge, old mansion with outlying buildings) is in Sicily, but they control the whole Italy.

Leader:
Leader's spouse:

Healer:
Healer's apprentice:

Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:

Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:

The Coven of the Eclipse: They consist only of Werewolves. Their camp (A large group of houses in a forest) is in Montreal, Canada. They do not control the whole Canada, only the green section. They are the only group with an Alpha warrior, like a general in a human army.

Alpha:
Alpha's spouse:

Healer:
Healer's apprentice:

Alpha Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:

Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:

The Rainfall Coven: They primarily consist of Shapeshifters, but also have Sorcerers/esses and a few Vampires. Their camp (A fenced off group of old, Victorian houses ) is just out of London, England. They control the entire England and Ireland.

Leader:
Leader's spouse:

Healer:
Healer's apprentice:

Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:

Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:

The Coven of The Forest: They consist of a majority Fae. However, they also have a good number of sorcerers/esses and ShapeShifters, and a few werewolves. Their camp (A long string of large, normal home-like tree houses connected with bridges) is in the Redwood Forests in California.

Leader:
Leader's spouse:

Healer:
Healer's apprentice:

Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:
Warrior:

Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:
Apprentice:

If you want to join, follow the guidelines. For now, you can only have up to 3 characters.

Code: Select all
Name:
Age:
Appearance: (pics are best :) )
Coven:
Species:
Personality:
History:
Family: (if any)
Mate:( If any)

Keep in mind, you can mate and find a partner in-game, not necessarily by planning before hand!

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/RolePlayGateway

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Two teens charged with shooting death of Ga. toddler

BRUNSWICK, Ga. (AP) ? A pair of teenagers was arrested Friday and accused of fatally shooting a 13-month-old baby in the face and wounding his mother during their morning stroll through a leafy, historic neighborhood.

Sherry West had just been to the post office a few blocks from her apartment Thursday morning and was pushing her son, Antonio, in his stroller while they walked past gnarled oak trees and blooming azaleas in the coastal city of Brunswick.

West said a tall, skinny teenager, accompanied by a smaller boy, asked her for money.

"He asked me for money and I said I didn't have it," she told The Associated Press Friday from her apartment, which was scattered with her son's toys and movies.

"When you have a baby, you spend all your money on babies. They're expensive. And he kept asking and I just said 'I don't have it.' And he said, 'Do you want me to kill your baby?' And I said, 'No, don't kill my baby!'"

One of the teens fired four shots, grazing West's ear and striking her in the leg, before he walked around to the stroller and shot the baby in the face.

Seventeen-year-old De'Marquis Elkins is charged as an adult with first-degree murder, along with a 14-year-old who was not identified because he is a juvenile, Police Chief Tobe Green said. It wasn't immediately clear whether the boys had attorneys.

Police announced the arrest Friday afternoon after combing school records and canvassing neighborhoods searching for the pair. The chief said the motive of the "horrendous act" was still under investigation and the weapon had not been found.

"I feel glad that justice will be served," West said. "It's not something I'm going to live with very well. I'm just glad they caught him."

West said detectives showed her mugshots of about 24 young men. She pointed to one, saying he looked like the gunman.

"After I picked him, they said they had him in custody," West said. "It looked just like him. So I think we got our man."

West said she thought the other suspect looked much younger: "That little boy did not look 14."

The slaying happened around the corner from West's apartment in the city's Old Town historic district. It's a street lined with grand Victorian homes from the late 1800s. Most have been neatly restored by their owners. Others, with faded and flaking paint, have been divided into rental units like the apartment West shared with her son. The slain boy's father, Luis Santiago, lives in a house across the street.

A neighbor dropped off a fruit basket and then a hot pot of coffee Friday as a friend from the post office dropped by to comfort West.

Santiago came and went. At one point he scooped up an armload of his son's stuffed animals, saying he wanted to take them home with him. He talked about Antonio's first birthday on Feb. 5 and how they had tried different party hats on the boy.

"He's all right," Santiago told the boy's mother, trying to smile. "He's potty training upstairs in heaven."

West said her son was walking well on his own and eight of his teeth had come in. But she also mourned the milestones that will never come, like Antonio's first day at school.

"I'm always going to wonder what his first word would be," West said.

Beverly Anderson, whose husband owns the property where West has lived for several years, said she was stunned by the violence in what's generally known as a safe neighborhood where children walk to school and families are frequently outdoors.

Jonathan Mayes and his wife were out walking their dogs Friday, right past the crime scene, and said they've never felt nervous about being out after dark.

"What is so mind-numbing about this is we don't have this kind of stuff happen here," Mayes said. "You expect that kind of crap in Atlanta."

It's not the mother's first loss of a child to violence. West said her 18-year-old son, Shaun Glassey, was killed in New Jersey in 2008. She still has a newspaper clipping from the time.

Glassey was killed with a steak knife in March 2008 during an attack involving several other teens on a dark street corner in Gloucester County, N.J., according to news reports from the time.

"He and some other boys were going to ambush a kid," Bernie Weisenfeld, a spokesman for the Gloucester County prosecutor's office, told the AP Friday.

Glassey was armed with a knife, but the 17-year-old target of the attack was able to get the knife away from him "and Glassey ended up on the wrong end of the knife," Weisenfeld recalled.

Prosecutors decided the 17-year-old would not be charged because they determined that he acted in self-defense.

___

Associated Press Writer Christina A. Cassidy in Atlanta and news researcher Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-arrest-2-teens-ga-baby-killing-204023308.html

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

WSU researchers to study effect of fatigue on attention

WSU researchers to study effect of fatigue on attention [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Judith Van Dongen
jcvd@wsu.edu
509-358-7524
Washington State University

Results could improve 24-hour operations, safety

SPOKANE, Wash. A team of researchers at Washington State University has received a three-year, $895,558 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense's Office of Naval Research to study the effects of fatigue on attention, decision making and their underlying biology. The study is part of a continuing line of WSU research looking at the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive functioning.

The study may lead to more efficient staffing of Navy ships and other around-the-clock operations or safety-sensitive work environments.

The study takes off on earlier work that yielded two new findings, said principal investigator Hans Van Dongen, a research professor with the WSU Sleep and Performance Research Center. He and his collaborators showed that how we respond to sleep deprivation differs from person to person, based on our biology.

They also discovered that it depends in part on the task we're trying to perform. One person may handle sleep deprivation well in one task but badly in another. The reverse may be true for someone else.

"So how do we know how someone will do on a task that is operationally relevant but that cannot be readily practiced, such as decision making under challenging circumstances?" said Van Dongen.

To find the answer, Van Dongen teamed with: cognitive scientists and longtime research collaborators John Hinson and Paul Whitney, both professors of psychology in the WSU College of Arts and Sciences; military operational task expert Bryan Vila, a professor of criminal justice and criminology in the WSU College of Arts and Sciences; and Dr. Matt Layton, a clinical associate professor of medicine at WSU and the physician of record for the study.

The research team designed an experiment that will look specifically at the effects of sleep deprivation on distinct attention systems that can be separated out.

Whitney said that when making decisions based on information that comes in over time, people generally use one of two strategies to focus their attention: a bottom-up strategy, in which they wait until they have all information and can compare the earlier with the later; or a top-down strategy, in which they use early information to make a decision and use later information to confirm the accuracy of that decision.

During the experiment, study participants will complete laboratory attention tasks before, during and after a period of sleep deprivation to determine whether they tend to use a bottom-up or top-down attention control strategy. Based on the participants' performance, the researchers will predict their response to a set of deadly force judgment and decision making scenarios while sleep deprived.

The scenarios will be played out in the Sleep and Performance Research Center's simulation laboratory, which contains two high-fidelity shooting simulators. Depending on the scenario, the use of a firearm may or may not be justified.

"When people must rapidly determine whether deadly force is warranted, they may be primed to shoot or not to shoot, depending on the circumstances," said Whitney. "For those people who are top-down processors, when they make an error, we think it's going to be more likely an error of shooting when they shouldn't have shot. People who are bottom-up are more likely to make an error in the other directionthey may hold off to wait for more information until it's too late."

The researchers will use data to enhance an individualized fatigue prediction model they are developing to enable task-specific predictions of fatigue-related performance impairment. They will also look for genetic markers that explain the individual differences in how people respond to fatigue for the top-down and bottom-up control strategies.

Van Dongen said the study ties together a decade of collaborative work on different but related tracks to address questions of individual differences in vulnerability to sleep loss, all the way from the laboratory to the operational world.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


WSU researchers to study effect of fatigue on attention [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Judith Van Dongen
jcvd@wsu.edu
509-358-7524
Washington State University

Results could improve 24-hour operations, safety

SPOKANE, Wash. A team of researchers at Washington State University has received a three-year, $895,558 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense's Office of Naval Research to study the effects of fatigue on attention, decision making and their underlying biology. The study is part of a continuing line of WSU research looking at the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive functioning.

The study may lead to more efficient staffing of Navy ships and other around-the-clock operations or safety-sensitive work environments.

The study takes off on earlier work that yielded two new findings, said principal investigator Hans Van Dongen, a research professor with the WSU Sleep and Performance Research Center. He and his collaborators showed that how we respond to sleep deprivation differs from person to person, based on our biology.

They also discovered that it depends in part on the task we're trying to perform. One person may handle sleep deprivation well in one task but badly in another. The reverse may be true for someone else.

"So how do we know how someone will do on a task that is operationally relevant but that cannot be readily practiced, such as decision making under challenging circumstances?" said Van Dongen.

To find the answer, Van Dongen teamed with: cognitive scientists and longtime research collaborators John Hinson and Paul Whitney, both professors of psychology in the WSU College of Arts and Sciences; military operational task expert Bryan Vila, a professor of criminal justice and criminology in the WSU College of Arts and Sciences; and Dr. Matt Layton, a clinical associate professor of medicine at WSU and the physician of record for the study.

The research team designed an experiment that will look specifically at the effects of sleep deprivation on distinct attention systems that can be separated out.

Whitney said that when making decisions based on information that comes in over time, people generally use one of two strategies to focus their attention: a bottom-up strategy, in which they wait until they have all information and can compare the earlier with the later; or a top-down strategy, in which they use early information to make a decision and use later information to confirm the accuracy of that decision.

During the experiment, study participants will complete laboratory attention tasks before, during and after a period of sleep deprivation to determine whether they tend to use a bottom-up or top-down attention control strategy. Based on the participants' performance, the researchers will predict their response to a set of deadly force judgment and decision making scenarios while sleep deprived.

The scenarios will be played out in the Sleep and Performance Research Center's simulation laboratory, which contains two high-fidelity shooting simulators. Depending on the scenario, the use of a firearm may or may not be justified.

"When people must rapidly determine whether deadly force is warranted, they may be primed to shoot or not to shoot, depending on the circumstances," said Whitney. "For those people who are top-down processors, when they make an error, we think it's going to be more likely an error of shooting when they shouldn't have shot. People who are bottom-up are more likely to make an error in the other directionthey may hold off to wait for more information until it's too late."

The researchers will use data to enhance an individualized fatigue prediction model they are developing to enable task-specific predictions of fatigue-related performance impairment. They will also look for genetic markers that explain the individual differences in how people respond to fatigue for the top-down and bottom-up control strategies.

Van Dongen said the study ties together a decade of collaborative work on different but related tracks to address questions of individual differences in vulnerability to sleep loss, all the way from the laboratory to the operational world.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/wsu-wrt032213.php

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Defense Department says it will delay furloughs (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/293742851?client_source=feed&format=rss

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SmackDown Five-Point Preview: Mar. 22, 2013

All WWE programming, talent names, images, likenesses, slogans, wrestling moves, trademarks, logos and copyrights are the exclusive property of WWE, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. ? 2012 WWE, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This website is based in the United States. By submitting personal information to this website you consent to your information being maintained in the U.S., subject to applicable U.S. laws. U.S. law may be different than the law of your home country. WrestleMania XXIX (NY/NJ) logo TM & ? 2012 WWE. All Rights Reserved. The Empire State Building design is a registered trademark and used with permission by ESBC.

Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/smackdown/2013-03-22/five-point-preview

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Yoko Ono Tweets Include Bloody John Lennon Glasses, Plea for Gun Control

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/yoko-ono-tweet-includes-bloody-john-lennon-glasses-plea-for-gun/

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The Reference Frame: Equinox, astronomical spring: now

Now, at 12:02 PM (after the noon), Pilsner Winter Time, the astronomical spring is getting started. The axis of Earth's spin is orthogonal to the plane in which the Earth orbits the Sun i.e. both Southern and Northern Hemispheres are equally far from the Sun.

If you ignore the fact that the length of the day and the night may be "easily" measured just once a day, the day and the night are equally long right now.

What I find bizarre is that people keep on repeating wrong dates of the equinoxes and solstices.

If you check the table of the equinoxes, you will see that at least between 2010 and 2020, the Northward (spring) equinox always comes on March 20th. As kids, we would learn that the date was March 21st. Maybe the same is true for you, too.

These days, children ? at least in Europe ? should learn March 20th as the date when the spring begins. Is that the case?

Where does the discrepancy come from? Let's look at the times (in Greenwich mean [winter] time i.e. Universal Time which is delayed behind the Pilsner Winter Time by 1 hour) of the Spring equinoxes over a decade:

2010: 17:32
2011: 23:21
2012: 05:14
2013: 11:02 (TODAY)
2014: 16:57
2015: 22:45
2016: 04:30
2017: 10:28
2018: 16:15
2019: 21:58
2020: 03:50
The date is always March 20th. What is the rule? You may see that every non-leap year, the precise moment is about 5 hours and 50 minutes, plus minus 5 minutes or so (the Earth just isn't as regular as you may expect ? the irregularities come from the disordered impact of the Moon, Jupiter, and others), after the moment we saw in the previous year.

On the leap years, the special moment takes place about 18 hours and 10 minutes, plus minus 5 minutes or so, before the moment we remember from the last year. Needless to say, the increments are roughly +6 hours and ?18 hours i.e. +1/4 and ?3/4 of the solar day. This agrees with the fact that the spacing between two spring equinoxes is about 365.25 solar days while the civic calendar records either 365 or 366 new dates during that interval. The difference between 365.25 on one side and 365 or 366 on the other side manifests itself as those +6 or ?18 hours.

Note that 18 hours and 10 minutes above is exactly one day minus 5 hours and 50 minutes; these numbers aren't independent.

But you may see that even after 4 years, the timing isn't quite periodic. For example, in 2016, the equinox will arrive 44 minutes earlier than in 2012. In 2020, it will be 40 minutes earlier than in 2016. In average, you may see that every 4 years, the equinox comes about 42 minutes earlier than 4 years earlier. In average, this drift gives you 10.5 minutes per year i.e. 1,050 minutes per century. Because the equinox will be at 3:50 am in 2020 and every 4 years, we will remove 42 minutes or so, 24 more years ? roughly in 2044 ? the date will jump to March 19th instead of March 20th, Greenwich Mean Time.

On the contrary, in 2011, the time was 23:21. So 4 years earlier, in 2007, it was probably 42 minutes later or so, in the morning of March 21st. If you return deeper to the 20th century, you may encounter many years in which the equinox occurred on March 21st.

I said that the drift gives you about 1050 minutes per century. That translates to about 18 hours per century. Why is this second-order discrepancy 18 hours? You may notice that it's 3/4 of a solar day again. And again, it's no accident. This new discrepancy arises because the year isn't quite 365.25 solar days. It's a little bit less than that. 365.24219 or so. We deal with this fact by stealing the leap year status from the years that are multiples of 100 (1700, 1800, 1900, 2100), even though they're multiples of four, but we restore the leap year status to multiples of 400 again (most prominently 2000), even though they're multiples of 100 as well.

This combined rule brings the average year to 365.2425 average solar days which is close enough. The remaining discrepancy accumulates to one day each 3,000 years or so, see my remarks about the leap years from January 1st, 2012.

Fine. So those 1050 minutes or 18 hours per century occur exactly because once per century ? more precisely 3/4 times per century ? we remove one leap year i.e. one day (February 29th) again. The times must adjust themselves so that the timing is pretty much the same as 400 years ago. And this is exactly achieved by making the equinox 42+ minutes earlier than 4 years earlier, each four years, except for years like 2100 when it's 18 hours (minus 42+ minutes) later than four years earlier. These required 42+ minutes in 4 years exactly explain why the non-leap-to-the-following-leap-year annual shift was 18 hours and 10 minutes rather than just 18 hours. All these corrections are ultimately calculable from the number of solar days per year, 365.24219.

At any rate, if you're teaching this stuff to kids, you should tell them that the spring begins on March 20th, summer solstice occurs on June 21st (although 20th will be increasingly more often), autumn equinox is on September 22nd or 23rd (this will be almost 50-50), and winter mostly starts on December 21st. Those days will be "mostly OK" when these kids become adults.

Oops, I noticed that I wrote a blog entry about the same topic one year ago. Find the five differences. ;-)

Source: http://motls.blogspot.com/2013/03/equinox-astronomical-spring-now.html

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Voyager 1 has left the solar system, sudden changes in cosmic rays indicate

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Thirty-five years after its launch, Voyager 1 appears to have travelled beyond the influence of the Sun and exited the heliosphere, according to a new study appearing online today.

The heliosphere is a region of space dominated by the Sun and its wind of energetic particles, and which is thought to be enclosed, bubble-like, in the surrounding interstellar medium of gas and dust that pervades the Milky Way galaxy.

On August 25, 2012, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft measured drastic changes in radiation levels, more than 11 billion miles from the Sun. Anomalous cosmic rays, which are cosmic rays trapped in the outer heliosphere, all but vanished, dropping to less than 1 percent of previous amounts. At the same time, galactic cosmic rays ? cosmic radiation from outside of the solar system ? spiked to levels not seen since Voyager's launch, with intensities as much as twice previous levels.

The findings have been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

"Within just a few days, the heliospheric intensity of trapped radiation decreased, and the cosmic ray intensity went up as you would expect if it exited the heliosphere," said Bill Webber, professor emeritus of astronomy at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. He calls this transition boundary the "heliocliff."

In the GRL article, the authors state: "It appears that [Voyager 1] has exited the main solar modulation region, revealing [hydrogen] and [helium] spectra characteristic of those to be expected in the local interstellar medium."

However, Webber notes, scientists are continuing to debate whether Voyager 1 has reached interstellar space or entered a separate, undefined region beyond the solar system.

"It's outside the normal heliosphere, I would say that," Webber said. "We're in a new region. And everything we're measuring is different and exciting."

###

American Geophysical Union: http://www.agu.org

Thanks to American Geophysical Union for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 71 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127388/Voyager___has_left_the_solar_system__sudden_changes_in_cosmic_rays_indicate

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Researchers' new method may sharpen microscopic images

Researchers' new method may sharpen microscopic images [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Katherine Morales
kxm109320@utdallas.edu
972-883-4321
University of Texas at Dallas

UT Dallas researchers are developing a new low-light imaging method that could improve a number of scientific applications, including the microscopic imaging of molecules in cancer research

UT Dallas researchers are developing a new low-light imaging method that could improve a number of scientific applications, including the microscopic imaging of single molecules in cancer research.

Electrical engineering professor Dr. Raimund Ober and his team recently published their findings in the journal Nature Methods. In the journal, they describe a method which minimizes the deterioration of images that can occur with conventional imaging approaches.

"Any image you take of an object is translated by the camera into pixels with added electronic noise," Ober said. "Any distortion of an image makes it harder to obtain accurate estimates of the quantities you're interested in."

This method could greatly enhance the accuracy with which quantities of interest, such as the location, size, and orientation of an object, are extracted from the acquired images.

Ober and his team tackled this problem by using the EMCCD camera (a standard low-light image detector) in a highly unconventional setting. Using this method, scientists can estimate quantities of interest from the image data with substantially higher accuracy than those made with conventional low-light imaging.

"We have figured out through rigorous theoretical developments that when you run an EMCCD camera in such a way that very few photons hit each of its pixels, the resulting image is minimally corrupted by the camera noise," he said. "Our method is about using the EMCCD camera to its fullest potential, beyond what is commonly believed to be possible by the scientific imaging community."

By increasing the magnification of the image to reduce the number of photons detected in each image pixel, they were able to significantly reduce the camera noise and considerably lessen the deteriorative effect of pixilation.

In fact, the team managed to attain particle localization accuracy that was twofold higher than those obtained with conventional EMCCD imaging.

Ober and his team applied UAIM (Ultrahigh Accuracy Imaging Modality) to the live-cell tracking of a standard protein marker for breast cancer. By being able to accurately follow the movement of the marker, valuable insights on the biology of breast cancer could be gained.

"The tracking of individual proteins represents an important way to study cancer and other diseases at the molecular level," Ober said. "The applications of UAIM for diagnostics and research are promising."

###

The research team included Jerry Chao and Sripad Ram, post-doctoral researchers at UT Dallas, and Dr. Sally Ward, professor of immunology at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Researchers' new method may sharpen microscopic images [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Katherine Morales
kxm109320@utdallas.edu
972-883-4321
University of Texas at Dallas

UT Dallas researchers are developing a new low-light imaging method that could improve a number of scientific applications, including the microscopic imaging of molecules in cancer research

UT Dallas researchers are developing a new low-light imaging method that could improve a number of scientific applications, including the microscopic imaging of single molecules in cancer research.

Electrical engineering professor Dr. Raimund Ober and his team recently published their findings in the journal Nature Methods. In the journal, they describe a method which minimizes the deterioration of images that can occur with conventional imaging approaches.

"Any image you take of an object is translated by the camera into pixels with added electronic noise," Ober said. "Any distortion of an image makes it harder to obtain accurate estimates of the quantities you're interested in."

This method could greatly enhance the accuracy with which quantities of interest, such as the location, size, and orientation of an object, are extracted from the acquired images.

Ober and his team tackled this problem by using the EMCCD camera (a standard low-light image detector) in a highly unconventional setting. Using this method, scientists can estimate quantities of interest from the image data with substantially higher accuracy than those made with conventional low-light imaging.

"We have figured out through rigorous theoretical developments that when you run an EMCCD camera in such a way that very few photons hit each of its pixels, the resulting image is minimally corrupted by the camera noise," he said. "Our method is about using the EMCCD camera to its fullest potential, beyond what is commonly believed to be possible by the scientific imaging community."

By increasing the magnification of the image to reduce the number of photons detected in each image pixel, they were able to significantly reduce the camera noise and considerably lessen the deteriorative effect of pixilation.

In fact, the team managed to attain particle localization accuracy that was twofold higher than those obtained with conventional EMCCD imaging.

Ober and his team applied UAIM (Ultrahigh Accuracy Imaging Modality) to the live-cell tracking of a standard protein marker for breast cancer. By being able to accurately follow the movement of the marker, valuable insights on the biology of breast cancer could be gained.

"The tracking of individual proteins represents an important way to study cancer and other diseases at the molecular level," Ober said. "The applications of UAIM for diagnostics and research are promising."

###

The research team included Jerry Chao and Sripad Ram, post-doctoral researchers at UT Dallas, and Dr. Sally Ward, professor of immunology at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/uota-rnm032113.php

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Slabs of ancient tectonic plate still lodged under California

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Large chunks of an ancient tectonic plate that slid under North America millions of years ago are still present under parts of central California and Mexico, according to new research led by Brown University geophysicists.

Around 100 million years ago, the Farallon oceanic plate lay between the converging Pacific and North American plates, which eventually came together to form the San Andreas fault. As those plates converged, much of the Farallon was subducted underneath North America and eventually sank deep into the mantle. Off the west coast of North America, the Farallon plate fragmented, leaving a few small remnants at the surface that stopped subducting and became part of the Pacific plate.

But this new research suggests that large slabs from Farallon remain attached to these unsubducted fragments. The researchers used seismic tomography and other data to show that part of the Baja region and part of central California near the Sierra Nevada mountains sit atop "fossil" slabs of the Farallon plate.

"Many had assumed that these pieces would have broken off quite close to the surface," said Brown geophysicist Donald Forsyth, who led the research with Yun Wang, a former Brown graduate student now at the University of Alaska. "We're suggesting that they actually broke off fairly deep, leaving these large slabs behind."

The findings are published today (March 18, 2013) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Geologists had known for years about a "high velocity anomaly" in seismic tomography data near the Sierra Nevada mountains in California. Seismic tomography measures the velocity of seismic waves deep underground. The speed of the waves provides information about the composition and temperature of the subsurface. Generally, slower waves mean softer and hotter material; faster waves mean stiffer and cooler material.

The anomaly in California, known as the Isabella anomaly, indicated that a large mass of relatively cool and dehydrated material is present at a depth of 100 to 200 kilometers below the surface. Just what that mass was wasn't known, but there were a few theories. It was often explained by a process called delamination. The crust beneath the eastern part of the mountains is thin and the mantle hot, indicating that part of the lithospheric plate under the mountains had delaminated?broken off. The anomaly, scientists thought, might be the signature of that sunken hunk of lithosphere, which would be cooler and dryer than the surrounding mantle.

But a few years ago, scientists detected a new anomaly under the Mexico's Baja Peninsula, due east of one of the known coastal remains of the Farallon plate. Because of its proximity to the Farallon fragment, Forsyth and Wang thought it was very likely that the anomaly represented an underground extension of the fragment.

A closer look at the region showed that there are high-magnesium andesite deposits on the surface near the eastern edge of the anomaly. These kinds of deposits are volcanic rocks usually associated with the melting of oceanic crust material. Their presence suggests that the eastern edge of the anomaly represents the spots where Farallon finally gave way and broke off, sending andesites to the surface as the crust at the end of the subducted plate melted.

That led Forsyth and his colleagues to suspect that perhaps the Isabella anomaly in California might also represent a slab still connected to an unsubducted fragment of the Farallon plate. So they re-examined the tomography data along the entire West Coast. They compared the Baja and Isabella anomalies to anomalies associated with known Farallon slabs underneath Washington and Oregon.

The study found that all of the anomalies are strongest at the same depth ? right around 100 kilometers. And all of them line up nearly due east of known fragments from Farallon.

"The geometry was the kicker," Forsyth said. "The way they line up just makes sense."

The findings could force scientists to re-examine the tectonic history of western North America, Forsyth said. In particular, it forces a rethinking of the delamination of the Sierra Nevada, which had been used to explain the Isabella anomaly.

"However the Sierra Nevada was delaminated," Forsyth said, "it's probably not in the way that many people had been thinking."

His research colleague asnd co-author Brian Savage of the University of Rhode Island agrees. "This work has radically changed our understanding of the makeup of the west coast of North America," Savage said. "It will cause a thorough rethinking of the geological history of North America and undoubtedly many other continental margins."

###

Brown University: http://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau

Thanks to Brown University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 37 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127359/Slabs_of_ancient_tectonic_plate_still_lodged_under_California

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Subway worker stuck in chest-high mud 75 feet below ground

NEW YORK (AP) ? A subway construction worker was stuck in mud for hours in an underground tunnel in New York City before being rescued.

Fire officials say the worker was pulled out shortly after 12:30 a.m., about four hours after he became stuck up to his chest in the tunnel 75 feet below ground. Authorities say he was treated for hypothermia and is in serious but stable condition at a hospital.

More than 150 firefighters responded to the site on Manhattan's Upper East Side, where the Second Avenue subway line is under construction. Three firefighters have suffered non-life threatening injuries. A Consolidated Edison vacuum truck helped remove debris.

It happened at around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday.

In September, a controlled blast at the subway construction site sent rocks flying into the streets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-subway-worked-rescued-hours-stuck-mud-103801165.html

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Where Are They Now?: Harvey Wippleman

From setting up rings to backing Giant Gonzales against The Undertaker at WrestleMania IX, there isn?t too much that Bruno Lauer hasn?t experienced in the sports-entertainment industry. The man better known as Harvey Wippleman has done pretty well for a scrawny guy from northwest Mississippi. (CLASSIC PHOTOS?| CURRENT PHOTOS?| VIDEO PLAYLIST)

Growing up in The Magnolia State, Lauer admitted he wasn?t a huge wrestling fan when he got the opportunity to get into the business in 1979 as a ring crew member, setting up and tearing down the ring for a promotion that toured as part of a carnival. Little did he realize at that time that he?d be working in sports-entertainment until this very day.

?I was a big fan of eating, paying the bills and having some money,? he told WWEClassics.com of his carefree teenage days.

Although he was never formally trained, Lauer stuck with wrestling and soon became a manager, using goofy names like Dr. Lennerd Spazzinsky. After a few years, he got his first big break in 1984 in one of the hottest territories in the country thanks to a WWE Hall of Famer.

?It all came from Jerry ?The King? Lawler,? Lauer explained. ?I owe him my career. Every bit of knowledge, every break is from him. I owe him everything, 100 percent.?

He was perfect as a manager for all the monsters that took on the heroes of the Memphis, Tenn., territory. Short and skinny, Lauer was dwarfed by his charges, making them even more imposing to the fans. Still, the so-called Dr. Spazzinsky was looking to get rid of his goofy moniker and find something that could incorporate his real name while keeping his irritating persona. He found his inspiration from an unlikely source.

?I was watching Tim Reid, he was ?Downtown Brown? [on the 1980s detective show ?Simon and Simon?],? Lauer said. ?I thought that sounded great, so I became Downtown Bruno.?

Downtown Bruno led a vast variety of villains into battle against Lawler, Jeff Jarrett and many of Memphis? other white hats. Handling the affairs of stars like Sid, Cactus Jack, The Moondogs and Robert Fuller, Lauer made a lot of connections during this time, some of which would pay off in the long run.

After some time in Memphis, he branched out into other territories, going to Alabama, Hawaii and anywhere in-between that would have him. Although he was trying to get his name out there, Bruno often found himself wanting to go back to Memphis, which he considered his home promotion.

?Lawler would always tell me to go other places and learn other styles, but it was hard,? Lauer said.? ?In Memphis, I?d run around and get involved in the match, but then I?d go to Kansas City for Bob Geigel and they didn?t want me to do anything ? just sit in a chair. I wasn?t used to that.?

Still, Lauer learned and eventually came back to Memphis, where the territory was still running strong, putting on shows at the Mid-South Coliseum every Monday night. With most of the city and the surrounding area tuning in to see Bruno and his baddies, Lauer enjoyed a level of celebrity that most local wrestlers today couldn?t imagine.

?In our little world, we were superstars,? he said. ?I couldn?t go anywhere in Memphis or the surrounding areas.?

As the ?80s turned to the ?90s, though, Bruno began to think about life beyond managing. He took on jobs overseeing the ring crew and box office for the Memphis territory. He felt like he had a solid gig that he could stay in for a long time.

?I said I was never going to leave again,? he said.

That all changed with one phone call from WWE.

View Comments

Source: http://www.wwe.com/classics/wherearetheynow/where-are-they-now-harvey-wippleman

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Capitol Hill food+drink | Billiards, bowling and Broadway ? 18-year ...

IMG_6825

Sorry for the delay in this week?s food+drink notes. CHS suffered a major disruption thanks to a power outage with our site hosting service. If you?re not a friend of our social media accounts, you might consider making a note of the CHS Facebook page and @jseattle on Twitter to keep in touch during any site outages.

The Garage pre-dates the food and drink neighborhood that has grown up around it ? and is coming its way by foot and by train.

?When we opened in 1995, there wasn?t that much going on on Capitol Hill,? the bowling and pool hall?s Mike Bitando tells CHS.

?When they were talking about the patio ? back then, they wanted to create a space to get away from Broadway.?

This week, the 18-year Hill nightlife veteran begins an overhaul of its connection to the street with a couple hundred thousand dollar redesign of its Broadway patio that will transform the space into a stage to be seen and see the energy of the street outside ? and add a new bar, a sure to be popular fire pit and, of course, a Seattle rain-inspired roof to keep the space active year round.

?Let?s open it up so you can sit out there, be seen, see other people, see the streetcar,? Bitando said about the project.

IMG_6860IMG_6852The changes are expected to be in place by the start of June ? perfect timing for the heater-warmed space given Seattle?s typical starts to summer.

In the scheme of things, an overhaul of the a?2,000 square-foot patio might not seem highly significant to a food and entertainment complex filling some 44,000 square feet on Broadway near the intersection with Madison. But the change will be the latest reinvention and investment in the business that has continued to grow around the Garage.

The business started, Bitando said, as a restaurant and bar in 1995. Alex and Jill Rosenast purchased the building and made the first expansion in 2003 as they grew the Garage into a higher end pool hall. Today, with bowling lanes and a full hall of pool tables, the Garage has grown into an event-hosting machine with Bitando estimating business split 50/50 between the events and walk-ins.

Improving the Garage?s connection to Broadway as elements like the streetcar increase activity even on this less pedestrian-focused area of the street could swing that split more toward walk-in business. Bitando says the plan is to wait and see. There?s a new chef in place in Lee Hunter who is charged with helping the Garage keep up with the competitive neighborhood and feed hundreds of people at the constant flow of events hosted there.

Like other veterans of Capitol Hill food and drink?we?ve profiled, the Garage is working to optimize its assets both to compete and to take advantage of the opportunity in the neighborhood?s burgeoning entertainment economy.

?It?s amazing how many people say they drive by and didn?t know we were there. This will eliminate the separation,? Bitando said.??We?re changing with Capitol Hill.?

?Food+drink notes

    • Speaking of the Garage, you can visit Sunday for the 11th annual Seattle Bowling for Equality fundraiser for the Human Rights Campaign.
    • If you missed it, CHS featured some big development news for 15th Ave E with food and drink implications. A four-story apartment building is slated to replace longtime Indian favorite Chutney?s. We?ll have more from Chutney?s on the situation soon.
    • Across the street on 15th Ave E, there?s nothing new in the Canterbury situation, at this point.
    • You eager for the new The Old Sage on 12th Ave from the guys behind Tavern Law? We?re told you still have a few more weeks until space is ready for business. Time to start checking in on Bakery Nouveau Capitol Hill and Capitol Cider, too.
    • The Pine Box has a new menu created by chef Scott Carsberg: ?He came in, tore apart our kitchen, retrained our staff or changed staff where necessary, and wrote us a nice menu to work with.?
    • Ethan Stowell is among three Washington chefs still in the running for James Beard Award.
    • Here?s what his new Bar Cotto neighboring Anchovies & Olives looks like.
    • The new Rain Shadow Meats expansion to Pioneer Square includes a menu of lunch items.
    • The Stranger checks out happy hour at Speckled & Drake and finds free Cheetos.
    • 15th Ave E?s The Shop Agora is proud of their Food & Wine Magazine nod.
    • First Hill?s The Hideout is turning 8. Which reminds us that we need to catch up on Hill restaurant and bar birthdays. Soon, friends.
    • 8? Big deal. The Eagle is turning 32.
    • Basement wanted for small Capitol Hill winery?
    • Seattle Times says Plum Bistro?s vegan food truck will hit the street in May.
    • Capitol Hill?s Li?l Woody?s has the best hamburger in the city? according to this.
    • Seattle Magazine looks at ?future homes of five Seattle restaurants (and one bar)? ? each on or near Capitol Hill.
    • Longtime Cuff security lead Daddy Jeff is retiring (with a party!) to focus full-time on his E Pike shop Doghouse Leathers.
    • Across I-5, Minor at Howell is getting a Pho Bac, liquor license says.
    • Would you go to a Calf & Kid cheese bar? Yes/No
    • How to make (and pronounce!) pho featuring Eric Banh of Ba Bar.

?

Source: http://www.capitolhillseattle.com/2013/03/capitol-hill-fooddrink-billiards-bowling-and-broadway-18-year-veteran-garage-building-new-connection-to-the-street/

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I need packing tips for women!

I need packing tips for women!Great discussions are par for the course here on Lifehacker. Each day, we highlight a discussion that is particularly helpful or insightful, along with other great discussions and reader questions you may have missed. Check out these discussions and add your own thoughts to make them even more wonderful!

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Investors Seeking Gold And Silver On Banking Instability :: The ...

Global Financial and Commodity Market Forecasts 2013

Commodities / Gold and Silver 2013 Mar 19, 2013 - 01:20 PM GMT

By: Jeb_Handwerger

Commodities

For weeks, I alerted you to a yen devaluation and warned that it may next turn into a Euro decline, which could then be followed by a U.S. greenback collapse. All of these global bailout attempts and now this levy on depositors in Cyprus could destabilize the European banking system and boost the discounted gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) prices.


In ancient Greece, farmers would plant crops based on prophecies from an oracle. Today investors look to spreadsheets and minute by minute charts to try to predict the future. Trying to be a prophet is an unprofitable occupation. The secret to wealth is buying wholesale, waiting and hopefully selling it retail. Gold (UGL) and silver (AGQ) should bounce off key support levels

We all love sales and discounts when prices drop for fast food, clothing or cars. However, when it comes to mining stocks investors look for momentum and major price rises continuing to bid up the price to overbought levels. Instead, they should look for quality assets on sale in mining friendly jurisdictions when they are out of favor with the public.

The key to making money in the mining market (GDX) is when you buy not when you sell. Mining equities (SIL) are priced at irrationally discounted levels and many in the business for many decades have never seen such a disconnect between the share prices and the underlying assets. This may be exactly the time to seize on opportunities of buying mining shares (GDXJ) on sale.

Wall St. will intoxicate investors with a poison that takes away reason and force us to follow the flavor of the month. This is happening right now in the ignored and undervalued resource sector and true contrarians who can dismiss the negativity in the market and press could make a fortune if they have patience and fortitude. Technically, gold is basing at $1550 and should reverse at support and could break out of $1800 later this year. Likewise silver is holding $27.50 and has been basing for close to two years.

There is no doubt that 2011-2013 has been one of the toughest markets for junior miners (JUNR) in several decades, but it should be shortly coming to an end. Although the 2008 panic was more severe and quick, this 24 month downtrend has been very long in duration and has shaken out the common speculator. Retail and momentum investors believe good times are here again and are chasing the overbought large cap equities into new highs, especially the banking and housing sectors. Contrarian, patient and smart money is stealthily acquiring quality juniors and precious metals at pennies on the dollar. This may be the calm before the storm.

The hard asset contrarians like myself realize that Central Banks have been printing fiat currency incessantly over the past decade. Record sovereign debt and Central Bank Balance Sheets should support an eventual breakout for gold and silver into new highs. This will eventually cause speculation to return to the junior mines. New gold discoveries have fallen to new lows despite records amount of exploration capital spent. This may lead to an eventual growth crisis for the gold majors who have made poor acquisition choices in questionable risky jurisdictions.

Despite the bearish markets and irrational price declines, the quality juniors with experienced management teams, exploring in stable mining jurisdictions with supportive backing will survive and separate themselves from the pact. They will come out stronger after this bear market is completed. This may provide investors with potential long term gains as they are able to buy these quality juniors at ridiculously low valuations.

Disclosure: No position in stocks mentioned.

Subscribe to my free newsletter to get up to the minute updates on rare earths, uranium, gold and silver.

By Jeb Handwerger

Disclosure: I am long GLD, SLV. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Source: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article39542.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Colleges, It?s Time to Admit You Have a Problem

Growing up, I did exactly what was expected of me. I worked hard through high school and was the first in my family to graduate from college, thanks to the federal Pell Grant, an academic scholarship and work-study program.

Despite that, I still walked away with massive student loans. I don?t regret my choice because my education is the one thing no one can take away from me. But, like too many of my friends, I am now?buried in student debt.? ?

By the time I pay off my loans, I?ll be in my 50s. And like many of my peers, I?m thinking differently about major life decisions, like buying a home or car or having kids, because I have too much student debt to pay off first.

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My story isn?t unique. More and more, skyrocketing college costs are forcing students to take on crippling debt in order to get the education they need. Since the early 1980s, tuition and fees have increased 538 percent?that?s almost twice as fast as healthcare costs. Over two-thirds of all college students currently borrow in order to finance their education. Even so, I was shocked to learn that Americans now owe more than $1 trillion on student loans. ?

Far too many hardworking students are being priced out of higher education. College should be about creating opportunity, not debt. The time to make college affordable is long past due.

Higher education is critical to ensuring a bright future. Not having at least a bachelor?s degree costs the average high school graduate about $1 million in lost lifetime earnings. But every year, more than 100,000 college-qualified, low-income students don?t enroll at all, citing cost as a major barrier.

Right now, the conversation about our nation?s student debt crisis is being dominated by policymakers, researchers and college administrators?which means that it?s more about dollars and numbers than real-world implications for real-life students and their families. It?s time for this conversation to be driven by the individuals who are most directly impacted: current and aspiring college students and recent graduates.

That?s why I got involved with I AM NOT A LOAN , a new national campaign to raise the voices of young people who are fed up with soaring college costs and student debt.

As a first step, I AM NOT A LOAN is calling on colleges across the country to pledge to reduce student debt. The leaders of many of these institutions already acknowledge that college costs are growing at an unsustainable rate, but have yet to take needed action to solve the problem.

No two colleges are the same and no two solutions will be identical, but every one of them must do their part to make higher education affordable and ensure that a college degree is within financial reach for their students.

Without my education, I don?t know where I?d be. And despite my best efforts to repay them, my student loans will follow me for decades. But it doesn?t have to be that way. Through I AM NOT A LOAN, students are standing up for college affordability. And it?s time for action to reduce student debt.

Related Stories on TakePart:

? 10 Shocking Truths You Need to Know About Student Loan Debt

? Federal Student Loan Debt Nearing $1 Trillion, Depressed Yet?

? No Income? No Problem! How the Gov't Is Saddling Parents with College Loans They Can't Afford


Iris Maria Ch?vez is assistant field director for The Education Trust? an organization that promotes high academic achievement for all students at all levels?pre-kindergarten through college. ?TakePart.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colleges-time-admit-problem-182400102.html

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