Much as this is miserable to see, I cannot relate so much. Because the man I know, no matter how much he hates spending time shopping and malling, he sticks by my side and makes sure I finish it fast. Because I, too, hate shopping and malling. But while we're at it, he spends his time flirting with me and whispering silly little things in my ear whenever he's got the chance. It makes shopping a delightful experience.
Miserable Men of Instagram Photos Show Dark Side of Holiday Shopping
The stereotypical man hates shopping and avoids it until the last possible moment. My father has been known to get escorted out of department stores at 5:59 p.m. on Christmas Eve before he's checked off all the items on his holiday to-do list. Instagram's miserable_men posts hilarious photos of the most morose and melancholy men at the mall, proving that clichés exist for a reason. Here, find photos of men who have lost all of their Christmas cheer, as well as some informative facts about holiday shopping.
What does the youth have to say? In the midst of all this hullabaloo, where does the youth stand? Do they feel something about anything at all? What are their feelings and thoughts about what's happening in the world? This blog is about me as a young individual wanting to share my two cent's worth. I am young. And this is my language.
Biyernes, Disyembre 27, 2013
Huwebes, Disyembre 26, 2013
sex etc
Was reading this today and it made my eyebrow raise.
1. More
housework, less sex?
Egalitarianism in household chores may
not lead to scorching hot action in the sack, according to research published
in February in the journal American Sociological Review. The study researchers
found that men who did "feminine" chores such as cooking and washing
had less sex than those who did not.
The research
was correlational, so chores may not be a direct turnoff, but egalitarian
relationships may be less spicy, the researchers said. However, research does
show that people in equal partnerships are happier. [Busted! 6 Gender Myths in the Bedroom & Beyond]
I used to be married to someone who didn’t help in the house
at all. He would just bum around if not waching dvd. Or porn. Yes. Maybe that’s
about it. Abnormal enough to just be interested in watching porn but not want
to do it with his own wife. Anyway, I left him for another man. Who I think
will not deprive me of anything.
4. Sex for
headache relief
"Honey,
I have a headache" may be more of a come-on than an excuse, at least if a
study published in March in the journal Cephalalgia is to be believed.
According to the study, about a third of migraine sufferers get relief from
getting busy.
It's not
clear why sex would relieve some migraines, but endorphins released by
the brain during sex may explain the soothing effect, the researchers said.
Much has been said about it, but still, for me as a woman,
having migraine doesn’t give me so much encouragement to have sex at all. It is
like a punishment. For me that is not fair to be expected to have sex even if I
already complained of a migraine.
5. Bats have
oral sex
Humans aren't
the only species to get sexually creative. A bat species called Indian flying
foxes (Pteropus giganteus)
does, too. Male flying foxes perform oral sex on females before penetration,
researchers reported in March 2013 in the journal PLOS ONE. The oral sex seems
to prolong the sexual encounter, the researchers said, perhaps increasing the
chances of conception. The male bats may also be removing competitors' sperm
from the females' vaginas, they added.
This one is really amazing. Good for these females bats lol
6. Hookup
culture isn't so wild
Popular
media often portrays modern college students as hopping from bed to bed in a
series of casual sexual relationships. But "hookup culture" is overblown, according to research
presented in August 2013 at the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association.
Researchers
compared responses from national representative surveys of 18- to 25-year-olds
taken in 2002-2010 and in 1988-1996. They found that in both groups, about 31
percent said they'd had one sexual partner in the last year. Only half reported
having more than two sexual partners after age 18. In other words, college kids
don't appear to be getting more promiscuous.
Well, it’s good news enough. Very encouraging to hear. I
have great fear of FB these days, how it can easily spread evil in the world.
7. Sex as
exercise?
Those college
kids could be missing out on some moderate caloric burning, according to
research published in October 2013 in the journal PLOS ONE. The study used wearable fitness monitors to
track couples as they had sex in the course of their everyday lives. It found
that sex burns an average of 4.2 caloriesa minute for men and 3.1 calories a
minute for women. [Sexy Tech: 6 Apps That May Stimulate Your Sex Life]
That's better
than a walk, but not as good as a jog. While sex may not be the most efficient
exercise for weight loss, the authors noted that at moderate intensity, it
could count as part of someone's daily workout.
Of course it can! The last time I have done it with someone,
we did it for an hour straight, without stopping. It was exhausting enough to
make me sweat like a horse and I felt this kind of fatigue I usually feel when I
am having my workout.
8. Hookups
don't lead to orgasm for women
Casual
"hookup" sex is anticlimactic for women much of the time, according
to a November study of 600 college students. Hookup sex was
half as likely to lead to an orgasm as sex within a relationship for women, the
researchers found. Relationships may be more orgasm-friendly for women, because
her partner learns what she likes and cares about her needs, the researchers
suggest.
In other
climax news, orgasms may start in the foot. A 55-year-old woman whose
experience was reported this year in the Journal of Sexual Medicine said the
sensation started in her left foot, traveled up her leg to her vagina, causing
what felt just like an orgasm achieved during sex.
True. I guess vibrators can help for quickies.
9. How
hormones influence sex
The hormonal
influences on the female sex drive are tough to uncover, partially because many
women in relationships may have sex when they're not necessarily "in the
mood." But for a study published in October 2013 in the Journal of Sexual
Medicine, researchers took a hard look at how the hormones associated with
ovulation influence sex drive. It turns out that single women have more sex around ovulation, suggesting this window of fertility
may nudge women toward sex. However, women in relationships were less
influenced by biology, the study found.
Too bad for those undergoing hormonal imbalance L
10. Male
birth control blocks sperm
The search
for effective and safe male birth control beyond condoms continued in 2013,
with a promising rodent study suggesting there may be hope for manly
contraception. The method uses a combination of drugs that allow sperm to be
produced as usual, but prevent that sperm from traveling through the vas deferens and out of
the urethra during ejaculation.
The road from
rodent studies to human drug trials is long, but researchers are hopeful, they
wrote in December in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences — though there is one catch.
"A lack
of ejaculate has the potential to be disconcerting," the researchers wrote
in their study.
Male birth control. The first time I heard of this. And it
amazes me no end. As a women I am delighted to hear. It’s about time men share
part of the woes.
Lunes, Nobyembre 25, 2013
Tom Brady
Sure, Tom Brady led the New England Patriots to three Super Bowl victories, but let's be honest: It's his boy-next-door good looks that really made an impression.
The University of Michigan alum, who earned two Super Bowl MVP trophies, first made headlines in 2007 when his ex, actress Bridget Moynahan, announced she was three-months pregnant with his baby. But the all-American quarterback had already moved on with Brazilian cover girl Gisele Bündchen.
In August that year, the exes welcomed their son John, and two years later the little boy was present at his father's nuptials to his supermodel stepmom. In December 2009, Bündchen gave birth to his second son, Benjamin, and welcomed daughter Vivian three years later.
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Sandy Hook report
Sandy Hook killer took motive to his grave
(CNN) -- In the years leading up to the December 2012 massacre at Connecticut's Sandy Hook Elementary School, Adam Lanza went from a merely shy pre-teen to a mentally ill recluse obsessed with school shootings.
But during that long descent, Lanza never gave anyone any indication that he would one day turn a gun on his mother and then storm his onetime grade school with a semiautomatic rifle, killing 20 first-graders and six adults, investigators reported Monday.
And so Connecticut authorities closed the book on the second-deadliest shooting in U.S. history with the motive still a mystery. Lanza shot himself at the end of his 11-minute rampage, and police found no sign that he "voiced or gave any indication to others that he intended to commit such a crime himself," according to a 44-page summary of the investigation, released Monday.
"The evidence clearly shows that the shooter planned his actions, including the taking of his own life, but there is no clear indication why he did so, or why he targeted Sandy Hook Elementary School," the report states.
Reaction to Newtown school killings Reaction to Newtown school killings
Report: Sandy Hook motive inconclusive
Though he had attended Sandy Hook from first through fifth grades, investigators found no sign the 20-year-old was targeting any student, teacher or other employee at the school.
"In fact, as best as can be determined, the shooter had no prior contact with anyone in the school that day," the report states.
Read the report (.PDF)
Lanza "had significant mental health issues that affected his ability to live a normal life and to interact with others," the report states. "What contribution this made to the shootings, if any, is unknown as those mental health professionals who saw him did not see anything that would have predicted his future behavior."
The killings in Newtown, about 60 miles outside New York, happened less than five months after a similar bloodbath at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, outside Denver. Those mass slayings triggered a nationwide debate over gun violence, school safety and mental health -- a debate that produced some new restrictions on firearms in several states. But it also yielded a backlash against those laws by gun-rights advocates and only limited action on a federal level after a Republican filibuster blocked expanded background checks for gun buyers.
Various witnesses described a fifth-grade Lanza as quiet but bright: "He wouldn't necessarily engage in conversation, but wouldn't ignore one," the report states. He attended parties, enjoyed music and played the saxophone.
But the same year, according to investigators, Lanza produced something called the "Big Book of Granny" -- in which a woman armed with a gun in her cane goes on killing sprees with her son, with children sometimes the targets. The story was related to a class project, but apparently never was handed in to the school, the report notes.
"It can't be a red flag if nobody sees it," Casey Jordan, a criminologist at Western Connecticut State University in Danbury, told CNN's Erin Burnett OutFront.
By late middle school, Lanza "did not like noise and confusion and began to have issues when he had to walk to different classes," the report states. He didn't want to be in a crowd. He started receiving tutoring and home schooling. By ninth grade, he was "shutting himself in the bedroom and playing video games all day."
"He was so enormously isolated," Jordan said. "His mother was not allowed in his room. No one was. So this didn't happen overnight. This was years of him slowly withdrawing, and we have that history going back to fifth grade, sixth grade."
As a child, Lanza had seizures and washed his hands excessively. In 2005, he was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, with doctors noting he "lacked empathy" and showed "extreme anxiety and discomfort with changes, noise, and physical contact with others." In high school, where he took part in a school tech club, Lanza never spoke of violence, but "was also remembered for pulling his sleeves over his hand to touch something," the report states.
After the shooting, investigators found that Lanza had sorted out the details of school shootings and other mass murders in spreadsheets. Among the clippings he kept was a reprint of a story in The New York Times about a man who shot at schoolchildren in 1891, wounding several with a shotgun. His computer contained two videos depicting gunshot suicides, two pictures of Lanza pointing guns at his own head and movies depicting school shootings.
But while many of his video games were violent, others were not. For months before the killings at Sandy Hook, he would go to a movie theater on weekends to play the dance game "Dance Dance Revolution" for hours, the report recounts.
Lanza lived with his mother, 52-year-old Nancy Lanza, after his parents split up in 2001. Nancy Lanza "took care of all of the shooter's needs" and "worried about what would happen to the shooter if anything happened to her," according to the report.
It didn't sound easy: The shooter was particular about the food that he ate and its arrangement on a plate in relation to other foods on the plate," the report recounts. "Certain types of dishware could not be used for particular foods. The mother would shop for him and cook to the shooter's specifications, though sometimes he would cook for himself."
Nancy Lanza did her son's laundry every day, but was not allowed into his room -- "No one was allowed in his room," where the windows were covered with black plastic trash bags, the report notes. Adam Lanza "disliked birthdays, Christmas and holidays," forbidding his mother from putting up a Christmas tree: "The mother explained it by saying that shooter had no emotions or feelings."
Connecticut panel: Release 911 calls in Newtown massacre
He was not medicated: Lanza "did not drink alcohol, take drugs, prescription or otherwise, and hated the thought of doing any of those things," investigators found. An autopsy found no sign of drugs in his system at the time of the killings, the report states.
One person described Lanza's relationship with his mother as "strained," while another told investigators he didn't appear to have "an emotional connection to his mother." But others said Nancy Lanza "was the only person to whom the shooter would talk."
Lanza's mother "tried within her limits" to help her son live a normal life, Jordan said, but "we have a society that shames mental illness."
"The mother was overwhelmed, did not know what to do with him and did allow him to isolate," Jordan said. "She tried to bring him out with the one activity they had in common, which was going to the shooting range."
Nancy Lanza grew up with firearms and "thought it was good to learn responsibility for guns," the report states. Both she and Adam Lanza shot pistols at a local range, where Adam "was described as quiet and polite." There was a large but undisclosed number of weapons in the home, all of which had been purchased by Nancy Lanza.
On December 14, 2012, the morning after Nancy Lanza had returned from a trip to New Hampshire, her son shot her four times in the head with a .22-caliber rifle. Then it was off to the school where he once had been a relatively happy child, packing four other guns and nearly 500 rounds of ammunition. He fired more than 150 shots from a .223-caliber Bushmaster rifle before turning a 10mm Glock pistol on himself once police arrived, according to the report.
Monday's report is separate from a much longer evidence file that Connecticut State Police will release at an unspecified date. That cache will be "thousands of pages long," according to Connecticut State Police spokesman Paul Vance.
The documents will include witness statements, a timeline of events and background on Lanza, and Vance said he believes they will offer a motive. The file is still being reviewed, with witness names and other identifying information being redacted, and there is no scheduled date for its release, Vance said.
But the family of Victoria Soto, a teacher who shielded her students before being shot to death, said Monday's release is "yet another blow that our family has been dealt."
A statement from the family said, "While others search for the answer as to why this happened, we search for the how. How can we live without Vicki? How do we celebrate Christmas without Vicki? How do we go on every day missing a piece of our family? Those are the questions we seek the answers for. There is nothing in the report that will answer those for us."
Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said the report's release "will no doubt be difficult" for the relatives of those killed at Sandy Hook.
"But if there is one thing that I believe we must do, it's that we must honor the lives that were lost by taking steps to protect ourselves from another horror like this," Malloy said. "I hope that the information in this summary and in the supporting documents that will be released by the State Police takes us closer to that goal."
Victims' family members were informed of the report, said Mark Dupuis, a spokesman for Danbury State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky, whose office conducted the investigation.
"We are sensitive to the needs of the families, and those needs are being addressed," Dupuis said.
source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/11/25/justice/sandy-hook-shooting-report/index.html
(CNN) -- In the years leading up to the December 2012 massacre at Connecticut's Sandy Hook Elementary School, Adam Lanza went from a merely shy pre-teen to a mentally ill recluse obsessed with school shootings.
But during that long descent, Lanza never gave anyone any indication that he would one day turn a gun on his mother and then storm his onetime grade school with a semiautomatic rifle, killing 20 first-graders and six adults, investigators reported Monday.
And so Connecticut authorities closed the book on the second-deadliest shooting in U.S. history with the motive still a mystery. Lanza shot himself at the end of his 11-minute rampage, and police found no sign that he "voiced or gave any indication to others that he intended to commit such a crime himself," according to a 44-page summary of the investigation, released Monday.
"The evidence clearly shows that the shooter planned his actions, including the taking of his own life, but there is no clear indication why he did so, or why he targeted Sandy Hook Elementary School," the report states.
Reaction to Newtown school killings Reaction to Newtown school killings
Report: Sandy Hook motive inconclusive
Though he had attended Sandy Hook from first through fifth grades, investigators found no sign the 20-year-old was targeting any student, teacher or other employee at the school.
"In fact, as best as can be determined, the shooter had no prior contact with anyone in the school that day," the report states.
Read the report (.PDF)
Lanza "had significant mental health issues that affected his ability to live a normal life and to interact with others," the report states. "What contribution this made to the shootings, if any, is unknown as those mental health professionals who saw him did not see anything that would have predicted his future behavior."
The killings in Newtown, about 60 miles outside New York, happened less than five months after a similar bloodbath at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, outside Denver. Those mass slayings triggered a nationwide debate over gun violence, school safety and mental health -- a debate that produced some new restrictions on firearms in several states. But it also yielded a backlash against those laws by gun-rights advocates and only limited action on a federal level after a Republican filibuster blocked expanded background checks for gun buyers.
Various witnesses described a fifth-grade Lanza as quiet but bright: "He wouldn't necessarily engage in conversation, but wouldn't ignore one," the report states. He attended parties, enjoyed music and played the saxophone.
But the same year, according to investigators, Lanza produced something called the "Big Book of Granny" -- in which a woman armed with a gun in her cane goes on killing sprees with her son, with children sometimes the targets. The story was related to a class project, but apparently never was handed in to the school, the report notes.
"It can't be a red flag if nobody sees it," Casey Jordan, a criminologist at Western Connecticut State University in Danbury, told CNN's Erin Burnett OutFront.
By late middle school, Lanza "did not like noise and confusion and began to have issues when he had to walk to different classes," the report states. He didn't want to be in a crowd. He started receiving tutoring and home schooling. By ninth grade, he was "shutting himself in the bedroom and playing video games all day."
"He was so enormously isolated," Jordan said. "His mother was not allowed in his room. No one was. So this didn't happen overnight. This was years of him slowly withdrawing, and we have that history going back to fifth grade, sixth grade."
As a child, Lanza had seizures and washed his hands excessively. In 2005, he was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, with doctors noting he "lacked empathy" and showed "extreme anxiety and discomfort with changes, noise, and physical contact with others." In high school, where he took part in a school tech club, Lanza never spoke of violence, but "was also remembered for pulling his sleeves over his hand to touch something," the report states.
After the shooting, investigators found that Lanza had sorted out the details of school shootings and other mass murders in spreadsheets. Among the clippings he kept was a reprint of a story in The New York Times about a man who shot at schoolchildren in 1891, wounding several with a shotgun. His computer contained two videos depicting gunshot suicides, two pictures of Lanza pointing guns at his own head and movies depicting school shootings.
But while many of his video games were violent, others were not. For months before the killings at Sandy Hook, he would go to a movie theater on weekends to play the dance game "Dance Dance Revolution" for hours, the report recounts.
Lanza lived with his mother, 52-year-old Nancy Lanza, after his parents split up in 2001. Nancy Lanza "took care of all of the shooter's needs" and "worried about what would happen to the shooter if anything happened to her," according to the report.
It didn't sound easy: The shooter was particular about the food that he ate and its arrangement on a plate in relation to other foods on the plate," the report recounts. "Certain types of dishware could not be used for particular foods. The mother would shop for him and cook to the shooter's specifications, though sometimes he would cook for himself."
Nancy Lanza did her son's laundry every day, but was not allowed into his room -- "No one was allowed in his room," where the windows were covered with black plastic trash bags, the report notes. Adam Lanza "disliked birthdays, Christmas and holidays," forbidding his mother from putting up a Christmas tree: "The mother explained it by saying that shooter had no emotions or feelings."
Connecticut panel: Release 911 calls in Newtown massacre
He was not medicated: Lanza "did not drink alcohol, take drugs, prescription or otherwise, and hated the thought of doing any of those things," investigators found. An autopsy found no sign of drugs in his system at the time of the killings, the report states.
One person described Lanza's relationship with his mother as "strained," while another told investigators he didn't appear to have "an emotional connection to his mother." But others said Nancy Lanza "was the only person to whom the shooter would talk."
Lanza's mother "tried within her limits" to help her son live a normal life, Jordan said, but "we have a society that shames mental illness."
"The mother was overwhelmed, did not know what to do with him and did allow him to isolate," Jordan said. "She tried to bring him out with the one activity they had in common, which was going to the shooting range."
Nancy Lanza grew up with firearms and "thought it was good to learn responsibility for guns," the report states. Both she and Adam Lanza shot pistols at a local range, where Adam "was described as quiet and polite." There was a large but undisclosed number of weapons in the home, all of which had been purchased by Nancy Lanza.
On December 14, 2012, the morning after Nancy Lanza had returned from a trip to New Hampshire, her son shot her four times in the head with a .22-caliber rifle. Then it was off to the school where he once had been a relatively happy child, packing four other guns and nearly 500 rounds of ammunition. He fired more than 150 shots from a .223-caliber Bushmaster rifle before turning a 10mm Glock pistol on himself once police arrived, according to the report.
Monday's report is separate from a much longer evidence file that Connecticut State Police will release at an unspecified date. That cache will be "thousands of pages long," according to Connecticut State Police spokesman Paul Vance.
The documents will include witness statements, a timeline of events and background on Lanza, and Vance said he believes they will offer a motive. The file is still being reviewed, with witness names and other identifying information being redacted, and there is no scheduled date for its release, Vance said.
But the family of Victoria Soto, a teacher who shielded her students before being shot to death, said Monday's release is "yet another blow that our family has been dealt."
A statement from the family said, "While others search for the answer as to why this happened, we search for the how. How can we live without Vicki? How do we celebrate Christmas without Vicki? How do we go on every day missing a piece of our family? Those are the questions we seek the answers for. There is nothing in the report that will answer those for us."
Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said the report's release "will no doubt be difficult" for the relatives of those killed at Sandy Hook.
"But if there is one thing that I believe we must do, it's that we must honor the lives that were lost by taking steps to protect ourselves from another horror like this," Malloy said. "I hope that the information in this summary and in the supporting documents that will be released by the State Police takes us closer to that goal."
Victims' family members were informed of the report, said Mark Dupuis, a spokesman for Danbury State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky, whose office conducted the investigation.
"We are sensitive to the needs of the families, and those needs are being addressed," Dupuis said.
source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/11/25/justice/sandy-hook-shooting-report/index.html
Best Buy Black Friday
Black Friday 2013: 3 Waves of Doorbuster Deals
- Shop when stores open at 6:00 p.m., Thursday, November 28.
- Take an online sneak peek at Midnight Mystery Doorbusters at 10 p.m. Thursday, November 28. Deals are available in store at 12 a.m. (midnight) on Friday.
- Find even more Doorbusters, available in store at 10 a.m. Friday.
Black Friday 2013 Deals and Doorbusters
- Experienced deal shoppers know: There's no place like Best Buy for incredible Black Friday savings – and the Best Buy deals for Black Friday 2013 will blow you away. Our Black Friday 2013 sales event on November 28 will offer you an amazing list of products on sale, both in Best Buy stores and at BestBuy.com. You'll find outstanding prices and doorbusters on select products, so don't miss out – mark your calendar now for our Black Friday 2013 event.
Yale gunman
They say this was a hoax?
Police say Yale University gunman report may be hoax, lockdown lifted
Yale University Police are leaning toward the theory a warning of a gunman on campus earlier Monday was a hoax, as a school lockdown was lifted and the campus declared "safe."
No evidence of any gunman was found despite a room-to-room search by police.
Authorities lifted a lockdown for the entire Ivy League campus late Monday afternoon, according to the university's Twitter feed.
"New Haven is safe," said New Haven Police Chief Dean Esserman. "The Yale campus is safe."
A 911 call was received at 9:48 a.m. from a man at a pay phone about a mile from the campus who said his roommate was on the way to the university to shoot people, said Officer David Hartman, a New Haven Police spokesman.
"Though it is starting to tilt in the direction of an innocent mistake, it started with a purposeful and malicious call," Esserman said, vowing to track down and arrest the person who made the call.
The hunt, which came as the school was on November break, was stymied by students who had stayed behind and were afraid to open their doors, police said.
Police later received reports from witnesses who reported seeing someone with a gun, Hartman said. But he said it was possible they had simply seen officers responding to the initial call.
There was nothing specific about the threat, he said, and the call lasted only seconds. There were no reports of shots fired or anyone injured.
Police blocked off several streets near the university's Old Campus, in the heart of New Haven, where they were concentrating their search. Several local schools also were placed in lockdown. Police in tactical gear entered several campus buildings, and a helicopter hovered over the area. Pedestrian traffic in the normally bustling area was sparse, with cold and windy weather keeping many people inside.
The response included several police departments, the FBI and other federal agencies, Hartman said. Authorities were conducting a room-by-room search of buildings, he said.
Yale advised students and staff members to shelter in place. The school also issued an advisory asking people off campus to stay away from the area. The shelter advisory was lifted for most of the campus by 3:30 p.m.
Many students and staff members left campus for the Thanksgiving holiday following Saturday's traditional football game against Harvard.
But many others were still in their dorm rooms, Hartman said. Police were having difficulty gaining access to some rooms because those locked inside were not convinced they were dealing with law enforcement, he said. Most rooms don't have peepholes.
Yale sent out an email telling community members that officers would be slipping a Yale ID under the door or using keys to gain access.
Undergraduate classes are set to resume Dec. 2
Yale has been the target of violence in the past. In May 2003, a bomb damaged an empty classroom and adjacent reading room at the law school.
A Yale professor, David J. Gelernter, was seriously injured in 1993, when a mail bomb mailed by Theodore Kaczynski, the man known as the Unabomber, exploded in his campus office.
Monday' search came several weeks after a scare on another Connecticut campus.
Central Connecticut State University was in lockdown for several hours Nov. 4 after reports by witnesses of a masked man carrying a gun or sword.
Police arrested a student, David Kyem, who said he had been wearing a ninja-like Halloween costume and meant no harm. He faces charges including breach of peace.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
source: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/25/yale-students-told-to-shelter-in-place-as-school-investigates-unconfirmed/
Amtrak derailment
Amtrak Crescent with 218 aboard derails in SC
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Several cars of the New York City-bound Amtrak Crescent with 218 people aboard went off the tracks in South Carolina early Monday as bags flew and jolted passengers clung to each other, authorities and passengers said.
There were no serious injuries, Amtrak said of the 207 passengers and 11 crew members aboard when the cars derailed shortly after midnight in the countryside on a frosty night with 20-degree readings from a cold front sweeping the Southeast.
Passenger Carrie Lambert told The Associated Press by telephone that she was at the back of the train when she felt the car start to sway and then tilt.
"The car felt like it was about to flip over ... I was holding on to my brother for dear life," the Atlanta woman told AP by phone. "Bags went everywhere. It was crazy. Really scary."
Amtrak said alternative transportation was hastily arranged for buses and trains to take stranded passengers to their destinations further up the East Coast as the busy Thanksgiving holiday travel week was opening. Most spent hours aboard the disabled train through the pre-dawn hours.
Seven of the nine cars on Train 20 from New Orleans went off the track but stayed upright, Amtrak said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press. It said it had no immediate word on the cause as investigators from several agencies and work crews converged at the site.
Spartanburg County Deputy Fire Marshal Tony Barnett told AP by telephone that the cars had derailed. But Amtrak in its later email said only that the train had become disabled when the seven affected cars lost contact with the tracks.
Two locomotives remained on the tracks, authorities said.
"There are no cars overturned," Barnett said, speaking from the semi-rural scene about six miles west of Spartanburg.
Buses transporting people after Amtrak derails in …Play video."Buses transporting people after Amtrak derails in Spartanburg …
Railway officials, firefighters, law enforcement and first-responders also were on hand.
Capt. Derrick Miller with the Westview-Fairforest Fire Department told WSPA-TV the seven cars came off the tracks onto gravel. The station reported that work crews were at the scene deciding how to clear the area.
Barnett said there were no serious injuries, though he added four passengers with some minor injuries were taken to a hospital for further evaluation.
Amtrak said the two locomotives of Train 20 also remained upright along with the passenger cars and a baggage car at the rear.
"Heating, lighting and other systems were quickly re-established aboard the train, with meals and other refreshments provided to the passengers," said Amtrak in a statement.
Temperatures were in the 20s during the early morning hours as much of the Southeast braced for a wintry storm promising sleet and freezing rain in many areas.
She said afterward only two cars had heat as passengers waited for hours aboard the disabled train on a frigid morning.
Lambert told AP the train had electricity, but only two cars had heat, as the passengers sat in the dark and waited for help on a wintry morning.
"We're just sitting in the middle of the woods," she said.
Some eight hours after the train derailed, more than 200 passengers were taken off the disabled cars and put aboard buses, WYFF-TV reported.
Amtrak said the train had left New Orleans on Sunday morning and had been due in New York City on Monday afternoon. It added that transportation was arranged to deliver passengers to their scheduled stops between Spartanburg and New York on buses that arrived around 7 a.m. Some passengers were being taken to Washington, D.C., to be placed on other trains.
Amtrak said the matter was being investigated by Amtrak and Norfolk Southern, which owns and controls and maintains that portion of the Crescent's route. The Federal Railroad Administration also was involved in the investigation, Amtrak added.
Norfolk Southern spokesman Robin Chapman said that one of two parallel tracks in the area was open, and other trains were moving through Monday morning. Normal track speed in that area is 79 mph, and Chapman said conductors were slowing down other passenger trains to "walking speed" in the area around the accident.
"Traffic is going through," he said.
Chapman said he did not know how fast the Amtrak train had been going when it left the tracks. He said there had also been some damage to the rails but he did not have details.
source: http://news.yahoo.com/amtrak-crescent-218-aboard-derails-sc-130035420.html
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Several cars of the New York City-bound Amtrak Crescent with 218 people aboard went off the tracks in South Carolina early Monday as bags flew and jolted passengers clung to each other, authorities and passengers said.
There were no serious injuries, Amtrak said of the 207 passengers and 11 crew members aboard when the cars derailed shortly after midnight in the countryside on a frosty night with 20-degree readings from a cold front sweeping the Southeast.
Passenger Carrie Lambert told The Associated Press by telephone that she was at the back of the train when she felt the car start to sway and then tilt.
"The car felt like it was about to flip over ... I was holding on to my brother for dear life," the Atlanta woman told AP by phone. "Bags went everywhere. It was crazy. Really scary."
Amtrak said alternative transportation was hastily arranged for buses and trains to take stranded passengers to their destinations further up the East Coast as the busy Thanksgiving holiday travel week was opening. Most spent hours aboard the disabled train through the pre-dawn hours.
Seven of the nine cars on Train 20 from New Orleans went off the track but stayed upright, Amtrak said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press. It said it had no immediate word on the cause as investigators from several agencies and work crews converged at the site.
Spartanburg County Deputy Fire Marshal Tony Barnett told AP by telephone that the cars had derailed. But Amtrak in its later email said only that the train had become disabled when the seven affected cars lost contact with the tracks.
Two locomotives remained on the tracks, authorities said.
"There are no cars overturned," Barnett said, speaking from the semi-rural scene about six miles west of Spartanburg.
Buses transporting people after Amtrak derails in …Play video."Buses transporting people after Amtrak derails in Spartanburg …
Railway officials, firefighters, law enforcement and first-responders also were on hand.
Capt. Derrick Miller with the Westview-Fairforest Fire Department told WSPA-TV the seven cars came off the tracks onto gravel. The station reported that work crews were at the scene deciding how to clear the area.
Barnett said there were no serious injuries, though he added four passengers with some minor injuries were taken to a hospital for further evaluation.
Amtrak said the two locomotives of Train 20 also remained upright along with the passenger cars and a baggage car at the rear.
"Heating, lighting and other systems were quickly re-established aboard the train, with meals and other refreshments provided to the passengers," said Amtrak in a statement.
Temperatures were in the 20s during the early morning hours as much of the Southeast braced for a wintry storm promising sleet and freezing rain in many areas.
She said afterward only two cars had heat as passengers waited for hours aboard the disabled train on a frigid morning.
Lambert told AP the train had electricity, but only two cars had heat, as the passengers sat in the dark and waited for help on a wintry morning.
"We're just sitting in the middle of the woods," she said.
Some eight hours after the train derailed, more than 200 passengers were taken off the disabled cars and put aboard buses, WYFF-TV reported.
Amtrak said the train had left New Orleans on Sunday morning and had been due in New York City on Monday afternoon. It added that transportation was arranged to deliver passengers to their scheduled stops between Spartanburg and New York on buses that arrived around 7 a.m. Some passengers were being taken to Washington, D.C., to be placed on other trains.
Amtrak said the matter was being investigated by Amtrak and Norfolk Southern, which owns and controls and maintains that portion of the Crescent's route. The Federal Railroad Administration also was involved in the investigation, Amtrak added.
Norfolk Southern spokesman Robin Chapman said that one of two parallel tracks in the area was open, and other trains were moving through Monday morning. Normal track speed in that area is 79 mph, and Chapman said conductors were slowing down other passenger trains to "walking speed" in the area around the accident.
"Traffic is going through," he said.
Chapman said he did not know how fast the Amtrak train had been going when it left the tracks. He said there had also been some damage to the rails but he did not have details.
source: http://news.yahoo.com/amtrak-crescent-218-aboard-derails-sc-130035420.html
Stoning adulterers
Pitbull rapper
Is Pitbull 'Mr. Education'? Rapper Opens Charter School In Miami
by CLAUDIO SANCHEZ
Rapper Pitbull (Armando Christian Pérez) is the latest in a long list of celebrities lending their star power to the flourishing charter school movement. Alicia Keyes, Denzel Washington, Shakira, Oprah — all support or sponsor charter schools.
The Sports Leadership And Management Academy (SLAM), Pitbull's new public charter school for students in grades six through 12, opened this fall in Miami's Little Havana neighborhood. Pitbull says SLAM's sports theme has a vocational bent as a way to hook kids for whom school is boring.
"If sports is what you love, one way or another, it's a business you can get involved with ... whether you're a therapist, an attorney, a broadcaster," he says. "They're already labeling me 'Mr. Education.' "
It's an interesting twist, considering that at the last school Pitbull attended, the principal couldn't wait to get rid of him. "He literally told me, 'I don't want you in my school ... gonna give you your diploma ... get out of here.' "
Pitbull's parting words were: "Thank you."
Seventeen-year-old Austin Rivera says he transferred to SLAM after Pitbull spoke at his previous school. "He came from nothing and became something huge. ... It shows like not a lot of people are handed everything," Austin says.
"[A] lot of these kids are so creative ... but no one believes in them. ... No one motives them," Pitbull says. "I relate to them ... but then I give it to them raw."
The rapper's parents fled Cuba and settled in Miami, where they struggled. His father went to jail for dealing drugs. And at 16, Pitbull began dealing, too — and rapping. He chose the name "Pitbull" because, he says, pit bulls are too stupid to lose. The name and the "outlaw" image stuck.
Pitbull's breakthrough hit came in 2004 with a song titled "Culo," a vulgar word in Spanish and "booty" in the rap vernacular.
It wasn't long before Pitbull was making millions, touring with rappers Eminem and 50 Cent. Pitbull's problems with drugs and alcohol, his womanizing and his profanity-laced lyrics didn't exactly qualify him for opening a charter school. Surprisingly, parents and educators at SLAM didn't think that should disqualify him, either.
Critics say Pitbull is not the issue. It's the school itself that they find objectionable.
"[I] don't know if it's going to provide something useful at the end of the day," says Raquel Regalado, who is on the Miami-Dade County Public Schools' school board. "I guess you can expect Pitbull to show up every now and then, and that's cool if you're a Pitbull fan ... [but] how does that translate into academic achievement? That's the difficult part of this that parents don't understand. ... I think it's a marketing ploy, honestly."
Nina Rees, who heads the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, says she's not about to apologize for supporting the rapper's school.
"Whether it's Pitbull or Meryl Streep in Rhode Island or Sandra Bullock in Louisiana," she says, "charters do benefit from celebrities because public schools, they do have to market themselves to families because these are schools of choice."
Rees says she has no problem with Pitbull's music, either.
"We're not endorsing his music, but welcoming him as an investor," Rees says. Besides, she adds, everybody is entitled to their own tastes. "I admit that I'm a fan of his music."
Three of Pitbull's six children attend charter schools.
"I'm not just a charter school advocate. ... I'm a charter school parent," Pitbull said when talking at this year's National Charter School Conference in D.C. "And that makes me one of you."
by CLAUDIO SANCHEZ
Rapper Pitbull (Armando Christian Pérez) is the latest in a long list of celebrities lending their star power to the flourishing charter school movement. Alicia Keyes, Denzel Washington, Shakira, Oprah — all support or sponsor charter schools.
The Sports Leadership And Management Academy (SLAM), Pitbull's new public charter school for students in grades six through 12, opened this fall in Miami's Little Havana neighborhood. Pitbull says SLAM's sports theme has a vocational bent as a way to hook kids for whom school is boring.
"If sports is what you love, one way or another, it's a business you can get involved with ... whether you're a therapist, an attorney, a broadcaster," he says. "They're already labeling me 'Mr. Education.' "
It's an interesting twist, considering that at the last school Pitbull attended, the principal couldn't wait to get rid of him. "He literally told me, 'I don't want you in my school ... gonna give you your diploma ... get out of here.' "
Pitbull's parting words were: "Thank you."
Seventeen-year-old Austin Rivera says he transferred to SLAM after Pitbull spoke at his previous school. "He came from nothing and became something huge. ... It shows like not a lot of people are handed everything," Austin says.
"[A] lot of these kids are so creative ... but no one believes in them. ... No one motives them," Pitbull says. "I relate to them ... but then I give it to them raw."
The rapper's parents fled Cuba and settled in Miami, where they struggled. His father went to jail for dealing drugs. And at 16, Pitbull began dealing, too — and rapping. He chose the name "Pitbull" because, he says, pit bulls are too stupid to lose. The name and the "outlaw" image stuck.
Pitbull's breakthrough hit came in 2004 with a song titled "Culo," a vulgar word in Spanish and "booty" in the rap vernacular.
It wasn't long before Pitbull was making millions, touring with rappers Eminem and 50 Cent. Pitbull's problems with drugs and alcohol, his womanizing and his profanity-laced lyrics didn't exactly qualify him for opening a charter school. Surprisingly, parents and educators at SLAM didn't think that should disqualify him, either.
Critics say Pitbull is not the issue. It's the school itself that they find objectionable.
"[I] don't know if it's going to provide something useful at the end of the day," says Raquel Regalado, who is on the Miami-Dade County Public Schools' school board. "I guess you can expect Pitbull to show up every now and then, and that's cool if you're a Pitbull fan ... [but] how does that translate into academic achievement? That's the difficult part of this that parents don't understand. ... I think it's a marketing ploy, honestly."
Nina Rees, who heads the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, says she's not about to apologize for supporting the rapper's school.
"Whether it's Pitbull or Meryl Streep in Rhode Island or Sandra Bullock in Louisiana," she says, "charters do benefit from celebrities because public schools, they do have to market themselves to families because these are schools of choice."
Rees says she has no problem with Pitbull's music, either.
"We're not endorsing his music, but welcoming him as an investor," Rees says. Besides, she adds, everybody is entitled to their own tastes. "I admit that I'm a fan of his music."
Three of Pitbull's six children attend charter schools.
"I'm not just a charter school advocate. ... I'm a charter school parent," Pitbull said when talking at this year's National Charter School Conference in D.C. "And that makes me one of you."
Huwebes, Nobyembre 21, 2013
iPhone 5s
Why are people getting crazy over these gadgets? I miss those days when life was simpler and I won't have to stay in front of the computer to feel less lonely. Its seems that everybody has to be online, has to connect with people online. I wonder what really is in there. It is like there is a spell in it. I remember 10 years ago, I was more productive. I read books voraciously. I sent letters sincerely. I looked at the stars at night and felt alive, in the morning I could draw the curtains open and felt the sunshine flashing on my face, the breeze refreshing my lungs. There were flowers everywhere, I could see and feel beauty at its most innocent form. Life was slower, and more meaningful. This high-tech world of never ending technologies has made most of us emotionally drained, stoic robots. At least that's what I have felt, and observed around me.
New Japan island
New Japan island: Volcanic eruption builds new island in Pacific Ocean (+video)
New Japan island: Ash and lava spewing out of the Pacific ocean have consolidated into a new island about 620 miles south of Tokyo, Japan.
Ash and lava fragments blasting out of the ocean announced the birth of a new volcanic island about 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) south of Tokyo in the Pacific Ocean.
The black cone is the newest member of the Bonin Islands, a chain of tropical and subtropical islands created by volcanic eruptions that includes Iwo Jima.
The eruption was heralded by several moderate earthquakes (around magnitude 4.5) on Nov. 18. Billowing steam and boiling seas appeared on Nov. 20 as the island raised above the sea offshore of Nishino-shima, a small island that marks the summit of a massive underwater volcano, according to the Japanese Coast Guard, which monitored the eruption by air. [Stunning Pictures: Japan's New Volcanic Island]
RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
The island is still small: The volcanic crater is about 500 feet (150 meters) in diameter and the island itself is only 650 feet (200 m) wide and 980 feet (300 m) long, the Coast Guard reported on its website today (Nov. 21). The ash plume shot 2,000 feet (600 m) into the air.
This is the first time the giant submarine volcano beneath the sea has erupted since a major outpouring in 1973 to 1974 that created another small island, according to the Coast Guard.
Oceanic volcanic eruptions can leave lasting landmarks or vanish beneath pounding waves. The most famous example is Surtsey Island near Iceland, which appeared in 1973. Wind and waves have shrunk Surtsey nearly by half in the past four decades. Without fresh lava, the island could disappear completely.
If the new volcano, which has not yet been named, does erupt long enough to build a permanent island, it could play a role in ongoing territory disputes between Japan and China, according to news reports.
"If it becomes a full-fledged island, we would be happy to have more territory," government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told The Associated Press.
RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook & Google+. Original article onLiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.
The 10 Biggest Volcanic Eruptions in History
The World's Five Most Active Volcanoes
Amazing Images: Volcanoes from Space
Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Related stories
Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
Active volcano found buried in Antarctica
Mt Etna eruption spectacular, captured on video
Indonesia volcano, Mount Sinabung, spews ash 23,000 feet high
source http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2013/1121/New-Japan-island-Volcanic-eruption-builds-new-island-in-Pacific-Ocean-video
The black cone is the newest member of the Bonin Islands, a chain of tropical and subtropical islands created by volcanic eruptions that includes Iwo Jima.
The eruption was heralded by several moderate earthquakes (around magnitude 4.5) on Nov. 18. Billowing steam and boiling seas appeared on Nov. 20 as the island raised above the sea offshore of Nishino-shima, a small island that marks the summit of a massive underwater volcano, according to the Japanese Coast Guard, which monitored the eruption by air. [Stunning Pictures: Japan's New Volcanic Island]
RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
The island is still small: The volcanic crater is about 500 feet (150 meters) in diameter and the island itself is only 650 feet (200 m) wide and 980 feet (300 m) long, the Coast Guard reported on its website today (Nov. 21). The ash plume shot 2,000 feet (600 m) into the air.
This is the first time the giant submarine volcano beneath the sea has erupted since a major outpouring in 1973 to 1974 that created another small island, according to the Coast Guard.
Oceanic volcanic eruptions can leave lasting landmarks or vanish beneath pounding waves. The most famous example is Surtsey Island near Iceland, which appeared in 1973. Wind and waves have shrunk Surtsey nearly by half in the past four decades. Without fresh lava, the island could disappear completely.
If the new volcano, which has not yet been named, does erupt long enough to build a permanent island, it could play a role in ongoing territory disputes between Japan and China, according to news reports.
"If it becomes a full-fledged island, we would be happy to have more territory," government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told The Associated Press.
RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook & Google+. Original article onLiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.
The 10 Biggest Volcanic Eruptions in History
The World's Five Most Active Volcanoes
Amazing Images: Volcanoes from Space
Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Related stories
Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz
Active volcano found buried in Antarctica
Mt Etna eruption spectacular, captured on video
Indonesia volcano, Mount Sinabung, spews ash 23,000 feet high
source http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2013/1121/New-Japan-island-Volcanic-eruption-builds-new-island-in-Pacific-Ocean-video
Kendall Jenner
Kendall Jenner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kendall Nicole Jenner (born November 3, 1995) is an American television personality, model, and brand ambassador for Seventeen Magazine. She is best known for appearing on the E! reality TV show Keeping Up with the Kardashians that she shares with her family.
She has modeled for the Sherri Hill dress line, which specializes in dresses for proms and pageants.[2] Jenner was featured in People's "Beautiful People" article.[3] Jenner is also a runway model and appears at public events.
Personal life[edit]
Jenner was born in Los Angeles, California. She is the first daughter of William Bruce Jenner and Kristen "Kris" Mary Jenner (born 1955; formerly Kardashian, née Houghton). She has a younger sister, Kylie Kristen (born 1997). Through her mother's side, she has three older half-sisters: Kourtney Mary (born 1979), Kimberly Noel "Kim" (born 1980) Khloé Alexandria (born 1984), and one half-brother Robert Arthur "Rob" Kardashian (born 1987). From her father, she has three older half-brothers: Burton William "Burt" (born 1978), Brandon Thompson (born 1981), and Sam Brody (born 1983), and an older half-sister, Casey Jenner (born 1980). Jenner was a cheerleader at Sierra Canyon School,[4] but became homeschooled in the 2012-2013 school year.[5]
Career[edit]
Jenner was first featured in Paper magazine's "Beautiful People" article series with Kylie.[3] She began her modeling career by signing with the Wilhelmina modelling agency at age 14. Her first modeling job was a campaign for Forever 21. She has done photo shoots with OK! magazine,[6] Teen Vogue, and photographer Nick Saglimbeni. Kendall has also expressed an interest in acting as well, but has explained that college is a greater priority.[7] Also she has modeled for the Sherri Hill dress line, which specializes in dresses for proms and pageants.[8] Once again, she pursued runway by modeling for the official Hello Kitty Launch for Forever 21 in Los Angeles.[9] Also, Seventeen Magazine has chosen Kendall along with Kylie Jenner as Style Stars of 2011 and also the new 'Style Ambassadors' for the magazine. Kendall and Kylie have also been given the opportunity to host events such as the Glee 3D Concert Movie red carpet and the Breaking Dawn Part 1 red carpet event in Los Angeles; the two also did an interview in the Bing Box at The Hunger Games premiere on March 12, 2012.
Jenner has ventured into runway modelling,[10] Her first runway modeling job was the Sherri Hill show in New York on September 14, 2011.[11] She and Kyle have also hosted fashion week parties.[12] Kendall has two nail lacquers from the Nicole O.P.I nail polish brand called "All Kendall-ed up" and "Kendall on the Katwalk". In 2012, Jenner was on the cover with her sister Kylie on Teen Vogue. Also, she was on the cover of Seventeen Magazine's Back-To-School September issue along with her younger sister, Kylie Jenner.
On February 8, 2013, PacSun announced it launched a women's clothing line designed and inspired by the Jenner sisters called "Kendall & Kylie" available exclusively at PacSun.[13]
Amanda Bynes
Amanda Bynes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amanda Laura Bynes (born April 3, 1986) is an American actress. Bynes rose to prominence in the late 1990s and early 2000s on the Nickelodeon series All That and The Amanda Show. From 2002 to 2006, she starred on the sitcom What I Like About You on The WB. Bynes has also starred in several films, including What a Girl Wants (2003), She's the Man (2006), Hairspray (2007), Sydney White (2007) and Easy A (2010).
Early life
Bynes was born on April 3, 1986[1] and raised in Thousand Oaks, California (part of the Greater Los Angeles Area), the youngest of three children of Lynn (née Organ), a dental assistant and office manager, and Rick Bynes, a dentist.[2] Bynes' ancestors immigrated from Ireland, Poland, Russia and Romania,[3] and her maternal grandparents are from Toronto, Ontario.[4] Her father is Catholic and her mother is Jewish. In 2007, regarding her religious beliefs, Bynes stated: "As far as religion, I was raised both. I learned about both Judaism and Catholicism. My parents said it was up to me to decide [which faith to adhere to] when I grew up. I'm sort of a spiritual person anyway. I haven't decided yet on a religion. I don't know yet exactly what I believe."[5]
Bynes is interested in illustration and fashion design.[6] Bynes has previously had her own fashion line sold nationwide and moved from Los Angeles to New York in order to facilitate her fashion career.[7]
Acting career
In 1993, Bynes attended a comedy camp, and began professionally acting at the age of seven, appearing in a television advertisement for Buncha Crunch candies.[8] During her childhood, she also appeared on stage in versions of Annie, The Secret Garden, The Music Man, and The Sound of Music.[9] Bynes became a regular cast member of Nickelodeon's Figure It Out and All That. She was a regular cast member on All That for seasons three through six. She also starred in her own sketch comedy show, The Amanda Show (1999–2002).
Bynes made her film debut in 2002's modest box office success, Big Fat Liar. Her first leading role was in 2003's What a Girl Wants, co-starring with Colin Firth, Oliver James, and Kelly Preston. From 2002 to 2006, Bynes starred alongside Jennie Garth in The WB Television Network's sitcom What I Like About You. Bynes had voice parts in 2003's Charlotte's Web 2: Wilbur's Great Adventure and 2005's CGI animated comedy, Robots. She appeared in Arliss as Crystal Dupree. Bynes appeared on the cover of Vanity Fair's July 2003 edition with nine of Hollywood's other young female stars.[6][10]
Martes, Nobyembre 19, 2013
Medtronic
Medtronic is the global leader in medical technology - alleviating pain, restoring health and extending life for millions of people around the world. You can learn about Medtronic's mission and business on this site as well as information about operations in the Adriatic Region.
Eva Longoria
Eva Longoria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eva Jacqueline Longoria[3] (born March 15, 1975)[4] is an American television and film actress. She has received two Screen Actors Guild Awards and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award. Longoria promotes humanitarian causes and was named Philanthropist of the year.
Longoria is known for her roles as Isabella Braña on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless from 2001 to 2003, and as Gabrielle Solis on the ABC television series Desperate Housewives. For her work on Desperate Housewives, she received a Golden Globe Award nomination. She has also starred in films such as Harsh Times (2005), The Sentinel (2006), and Over Her Dead Body (2008).
Elk euthanized
A young elk was euthanized Friday after he was recorded headbutting a nature photographer on the side of a road in Asheville, N.C. road. The footage went viral last week on the Internet, which heightened concern for wildlife officials that the animal would grow increasingly aggressive towards humans.
NBC News reports Nov. 18 that the elk was euthanized after the famous incident in which he jabbed his antlers into cameraman, James York. The one-and-a-half-year-old elk was described by Great Smokey Mountains National Park spokeswoman Dana Soehn as an animal posing "an unacceptable risk." With children in the area, it was even riskier not trying to prevent a future accident.
"The decision (to euthanize) was not made lightly," Soehn said of euthanizing the elk.
The euthanized elk was had a history of bad behavior and had been "hazed" about 28 times. This meant the elk was shot at with bean bags and paint balls. Some ran after the elk or lit firecrackers to scare him off.
"Most (elks) respond to this," Soehn said.
The man who recorded the elk headbutting the cameraman -- Vince M. Camiolo -- feels responsible for the elk being put down.
"It wouldn't be an exaggeration to say that it was devastating," he said. "I felt very responsible. I still do."
York, the man who was headbutted by the elk just euthanized, said he's tired of being blamed for the animal's demise.
"It was a no-win situation for the park," York said. "If they hadn't put him down the park would be liable. I think (the elk) was a problem waiting to happen."
The euthanized elk was likely fed a lot by humans and didn't fear them. When that happens their behavior can be unpredictable and highly dangerous.
source: http://www.examiner.com/article/elk-euthanized-a-decision-not-made-lightly-park-official-says
iOS 7.1
1:21 PM
iOS device users are still getting used to the new look and feel of the redesigned operating system and Apple is already preparing its next major release. Apple on Monday updated its iOS developer portal with its first iOS 7.1 beta. The release comes just four days after Apple updated the public version of its mobile software to iOS 7.0.4. The iOS 7.1 beta is available to developers beginning immediately for all compatible iOS devices including the iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5, iPhone 4S, iPhone 4, iPad Air, third- and fourth-generation iPads, iPad 2, iPad mini with Retina display, iPad mini and the fifth-generation iPod touch. Apple has not yet updated its developer portal with release notes for the new iOS 7.1 beta.
UPDATE: A developer has supplied BGR with Apple’s full iOS 7.1 release notes:
source: http://bgr.com/2013/11/18/ios-7-1-beta-download-release/
Wes Welker
listen welker was great wideout probably the best in the slot position to this day but if you look at his histroy he got cut by the chargers and was traded by the dolphins so before playing in ne he wasnt really that good now hes playng for peyton another good qb but he is still the best slot receiver in the nfl no doubt wish patriots resigned him but shit happends lol unfortunate he will be missed a true ne patriot
Lion kills lioness
DALLAS (AP) — Officials at the Dallas Zoo say they can't explain how one lion was killed by another in full view of visitors and families watching the exhibit.
The female lion, 5-year-old Johari, was bitten on the neck by one of the male lions Sunday afternoon, zoo officials said. Witnesses watched two lions approach Johari.
"The male lion that startedhttp://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/11/18/dallas-lion-killed/3629169/ it just had his mouth over her throat, and everyone thought they were playing at first," Michael Henshaw told Dallas television station WFAA. "But then they could see she was struggling."
Zoo staff members were seen throwing meat at the lions to try to distract them, and eventually security moved away witnesses and closed off a restaurant with windows overlooking the exhibit.
Lynn Kramer, the zoo's vice president of animal operations and welfare, says five lions in total are typically in the exhibit and have never appeared to endanger each other before. The three lions in question have been in the same exhibit for three years, Kramer said.
"I would have to think something caused the males to react that they don't normally see every day," he told The Dallas Morning News. "Lions can be aggressive, but they don't kill each other."
The zoo says the aggressive lions were not euthanized.
source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/11/18/dallas-lion-killed/3629169/
Brittany Murphy
Chorus: Can anybody
find me
somebody to...
Love
Ohh Ohh Oh Ho
Each morning I get up I die a little
Can barely stand on my feet
(Take a look at yourself) Take a look in the mirror and cry (in the mirror)
Lord what you're doing to me
I spend all my years in believing you
I just can't get no relief Lord
Somebody (somebody, somebody) ooh somebody
Can anybody find me
somebody to love?
I work hard (she works hard) everyday of my life
I work till I ache my bones
At the end (at the end of the day)
I take home my hard earned pay on m own
I get down (down) on my knees (knees)
And I start praying (praise the Lord)
'Til the tears run down from my eyes
Lord somebody (somebody) please somebody (please)
Can anybody find me
So-ooomebody to looooove
(She works hard)
Every day (every day) Oh I try and I try and I try
But everybody wants to put me down
They say, they say I'm goin' crazy
They say I got a lot of water in my brain
Got no common sense
I got nobody left to believe in
yeah-yeah-yeah-yeah-oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
Oh baby find me
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
C'mon put your flippers in the air now
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
Ooooh-oo-oooooo-ooooo
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
Ooh-ooooo
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
Ooooh-oo-ooh
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove, lo-ove, lo-ove)
I'm searchin' high 'n' low
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
I'm searchin' hi-igh (high note) 'n' low
(Find me somebdy to lo-ove)
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
There's just somebody out there who needs to find me
(Find me somebody to lo-ove)
Somebody, anybody, find me
(Somebody, somebody, somebody)
(Lo-ove, lo-ove, lo-ove, lo-ove, somebody to love)
I wanna love somebody
I'm sufferin' over here
(Can anybody find meeee)
Ah-aaaaaa-haaaa-aaaah
Somebody tooooooo lo-ooooooooooove
(oooo-oooo)
Love me, love me, love me-love
(oooo-oooo)
Where is my Penguin ?
(oooo-oooo)
Everybody find me, find me, find meee, somebodyyyyyyy
(oooo-oooo)
Thank you, thank you
[Thanks to Shahnae for lyrics]
Miyerkules, Setyembre 25, 2013
Kurt Cobain
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This site serves as a tribute to Kurt Donald Cobain, and the mystery surrounding his "suicide note"
source: http://kurtcobainssuicidenote.com/
Kurt Cobain (February 20, 1967 - April 5, 1994)
Kurt Cobain was the lead singer, guitarist, and songwriter of the Seattle-based rock band Nirvana. Nirvana served as outlet for millions of people the world over with their music and their passions. The last few years of Kurt Cobain's life were filled with drug addiction and the media pressures surrounding him and his wife Courtney Love.
On April 8, 1994, Cobain was found dead in his home in Seattle. His death was ruled by authorities as a suicide by self-inflicted shotgun wound to the head.
The circumstances surrounding Kurt Cobain's death have fueled much analysis and debate. One of the most compelling points surrounding his death was the suicide note that we left.
This site does not take an official stance on the arguments surrounding Kurt Cobain's death, just mearly supplies you with some tools so you can make your own decisions.
The bottom line is that Kurt Cobain's life was cut to short and he will be continue to be missed for generations to come.
source: http://kurtcobainssuicidenote.com/
Kurt Russell
Kurt Russell
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kurt Vogel Russell (born March 17, 1951)[1] is an American television and film actor. His first acting roles were as a child in television series, including a lead role in the Western series The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters (1963–64). In the 1970s, he signed a ten-year contract with the Walt Disney Company, where he became, according to Robert Osborne, the "studio's top star of the '70s".[2] In 1979, Russell was nominated for an Emmy Award for the made-for-television film Elvis.
In 1983, he was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture for his performance opposite Meryl Streep in the 1984 film, Silkwood. During the 1980s, Russell was cast in several films by director John Carpenter, including anti-hero roles such as former army hero-turned robber Snake Plissken in the futuristic action film Escape from New York and its sequel, Escape from L.A., Antarctic helicopter pilot R.J. MacReady in the horror film The Thing (1982), and truck driver Jack Burton in the dark kung-fu comedy/action film Big Trouble in Little China (1986), all of which have since become cult films.
In 1994, Russell had a starring role in the military science fiction film Stargate. In the mid-2000s, his portrayal of U.S. Olympic hockey coach Herb Brooks in Miracle (2004) won the praise of critics. In 2006, he appeared in the disaster-thriller Poseidon, and in 2007 Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof segment from the film Grindhouse.
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