Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Antonio's Freedom Debt Relief Review - Freedom Debt Relief Reviews

Antonio?s Freedom Debt Relief Review:

Posted by admin on Tuesday, October 30, 2012 ? Leave a Comment?

We just wanted to thank all of you at Freedom Debt Relief for all of your help and guidance to be able to accomplish our goal in paying off our debt. You were our light at the end of the road when we felt we were going in circles and getting nowhere, the hope we needed to financial stability. We will never stop talking about your helpful staff and recommending people to your company. Thank you so much!!! ~ Antonia, CA

Source: http://freedomdebtreliefreviews.com/antonios-freedom-debt-relief-review?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=antonios-freedom-debt-relief-review

red tails red tails heidi klum heidi klum red tails trailer joe pa dead laura dekker

Video: Sandy?s grim economic toll

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49616073/

UT Austin Lizzie Velasquez NFL Network att libya engadget twin towers

Synthetic magnetism used to control light: Opens door to nanoscale applications that use light instead of electricity

ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2012) ? Stanford researchers in physics and engineering have demonstrated a device that produces a synthetic magnetism to exert virtual force on photons similar to the effect of magnets on electrons. The advance could yield a new class of nanoscale applications that use light instead of electricity.

Magnetically speaking, photons are the mavericks of the engineering world. Lacking electrical charge, they are free to run even in the most intense magnetic fields. But all that may soon change. In a paper published in Nature Photonics, an interdisciplinary team from Stanford University reports that it has created a device that tames the flow of photons with synthetic magnetism.

The process breaks a key law of physics known as the time-reversal symmetry of light and could yield an entirely new class of devices that use light instead of electricity for applications ranging from accelerators and microscopes to speedier on-chip communications.

"This is a fundamentally new way to manipulate light flow. It presents a richness of photon control not seen before," said Shanhui Fan, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford and senior author of the study.

A Departure

The ability to use magnetic fields to redirect electrons is a founding principle of electronics, but a corollary for photons had not previously existed. When an electron approaches a magnetic field, it meets resistance and opts to follow the path of least effort, travelling in circular motion around the field. Similarly, this new device sends photons in a circular motion around the synthetic magnetic field.

The Stanford solution capitalizes on recent research into photonic crystals -- materials that can confine and release photons. To fashion their device, the team members created a grid of tiny cavities etched in silicon, forming the photonic crystal. By precisely applying electric current to the grid they can control -- or "harmonically tune," as the researchers say -- the photonic crystal to synthesize magnetism and exert virtual force upon photons. The researchers refer to the synthetic magnetism as an effective magnetic field.

The researchers reported that they were able to alter the radius of a photon's trajectory by varying the electrical current applied to the photonic crystal and by manipulating the speed of the photons as they enter the system. This dual mechanism provides a great degree of precision control over the photons' path, allowing the researchers to steer the light wherever they like.

Broken Laws

In fashioning their device, the team has broken what is known in physics as the time-reversal symmetry of light. Breaking time-reversal symmetry in essence introduces a charge on the photons that reacts to the effective magnetic field the way an electron would to a real magnetic field.

For engineers, it means that a photon travelling forward will have different properties than when it is traveling backward, the researchers said, and this yields promising technical possibilities. "The breaking of time-reversal symmetry is crucial as it opens up novel ways to control light. We can, for instance, completely prevent light from traveling backward to eliminate reflection," said Fan.

The new device, therefore, solves at least one major drawback of current photonic systems that use fiber optic cables. Photons tend to reverse course in such systems, causing a form of reflective noise known as backscatter.

"Despite their smooth appearance, glass fibers are, photonically speaking, quite rough. This causes a certain amount of backscatter, which degrades performance," said Kejie Fang, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Physics at Stanford and the first author of the study.

In essence, once a photon enters the new device it cannot go back. This quality, the researchers believe, will be key to future applications of the technology as it eliminates disorders such as signal loss common to fiber optics and other light-control mechanisms.

"Our system is a clear direction toward demonstrating on-chip applications of a new type of light-based communication device that solves a number of existing challenges," said Zongfu Yu, a post-doctoral researcher in Shanhui Fan's lab and co-author of the paper. "We're excited to see where it leads."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford School of Engineering. The original article was written by Andrew Myers.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kejie Fang, Zongfu Yu, Shanhui Fan. Realizing effective magnetic field for photons by controlling the phase of dynamic modulation. Nature Photonics, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2012.236

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/CN4E8DgHc7A/121031151609.htm

suzanne somers colbert colbert report legionnaires disease underwear bomber unclaimed money godspell

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Facebook campaign: Keep in touch with NIVEA and Lufthansa ...

NIVEA and Lufthansa are running a joint Facebook campaign to find the most romantic, moving and amusing long-distance relationship stories. A total of three Lufthansa flights and 500 NIVEA travel sets will be given away among all entrants.

All too often, those moving to a new city or a different country will leave a large part of their happiness behind ? with their friends, their family or even their partner. And of course it makes no difference whether their nearest and dearest are being left for a career or for the love of their life. And yet, day in and day out, many people show that ?long-distance? relationships of this kind can still work out.

As part of their joint ?Love & Care? Facebook campaign, which runs from November 1 to 28, 2012, NIVEA and Lufthansa are looking for the most romantic, moving and amusing long-distance relationship stories. And there are two good reasons to take part: Everyone who participates by posting their long-distance relationship story on the NIVEA Facebook page www.facebook.com/niveadeutschland or the Lufthansa Facebook page www.facebook.com/lufthansa and also uploading a suitable photo will automatically receive a promotion code for their next Lufthansa flight. And since long-distance relationships make it so important to see one another as often as possible, entrants can also win one of three Lufthansa flights and 500 NIVEA travel sets ? which means that the winners can visit their loved ones in comfort and arrive looking well groomed!

Source: http://newsroom.lufthansa.com/news/facebook-campaign-keep-in-touch-with-nivea-and-lufthansa

lsu alabama lsu game lsu game beezow doo doo zopittybop bop bop cordova demaryius thomas transtar

Weekly photo contest: The weather

snow

Tuesday means another AC photo contest! This week, let's talk about the weather. Good weather, bad weather, or evil weather like you see above. If it happens outside, we want to see it.

This isn't just confined to pictures of rain or snow. Feel free to think outside the box and show us something that makes us think of good (or bad) weather. We love it when you guys get all artistic and surprise us. It makes it that much more fun to look at all the pictures.

Since it is a contest, there are prizes involved. We dug around and found we still have five Android mini collectibles left to give away, so the best five photos each get one. Read the full rules in the forum contest thread and show us what ya got.

Enter this week's photo contest



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/6VqzYTd6Vbo/story01.htm

kashi neil diamond orange crush harden nor easter nor easter ted nugent

Friday, October 26, 2012

Hotels In Hyde Park, London

Hyde Park one of the most coveted destinations in London because it is one of the greenest and calmest places in London. The green of Hyde Park provides the much needed respite to Londoners who are caught in the fast urban life of the city. You can go to Hyde Park and relax in the lap of nature for as long as you want, soak in the sun and exercise to take out all the negative energy that is there in you because of daily living. This is the place where you can introspect or have a quiet walk alone or with someone.

There are many hotels in Hyde Park which provide accommodation to the people who come to stay in London; there are many hotels in the area because there are many people who want to stay in Hyde Park because of its location and benefits. People want to be in Hyde Park because they want to enjoy London and at the same time have a relaxation space which is nearby to their hotel.

Hence there are hotels galore and they belong to all kinds of budget ranges. There are budget hotels for the budget travellers which provide good and comfortable places to stay with a warm ambience that makes you feel welcome in London. These places are the best bet if you are travelling, alone or with family, and do not want to spend a lot of money in expensive hotels.

There are hostels for student travellers and backpackers which also provide a very warm and comfortable place to stay for the students. There is a dormitory set up and you are warm and clean beds and a safe place to keep your luggage in these hostels. It is advisable for students to stay here because they do not have to spend money on hotels where they would hardly stay, being busy exploring the city.

For travellers who do not want to stay in budget hotels or prefer other kinds of hotels with more facilities in their hotels then they should choose the mid-range hotels in Hyde Park which provide more services than just the basic ones as provided by the budget hotels. These are also inexpensive hotels, some of them slightly more expensive than the budget ones. Though on the higher end of this range lie the 4 star hotels which are just a little less expensive to the five star and luxury hotels.

You can find these hotels interspersed with each other and other kinds of accommodations in Hyde Park. You can choose your hotels on the basis of its location within Hyde Park and stay there to enjoy the place and the park. There are plenty of restaurants and places where you can eat and drink and have a great night or morning and where you can taste the London for yourself.
You can book these places on the internet as most of the hotels in Hyde Park have their presence online. You can check out the details on the website and on the basis of the service and facilities choose a hotel in Hyde Park where you want to stay.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Hotels-In-Hyde-Park--London-/4232400

leprechaun night at the museum pope shenouda bolton muamba crystal cathedral sxsw st. patrick s day

New Obama Web Ad feat. Lena Dunham Sends Right Wing into Fainting Couch Frenzy (Little green footballs)

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/258329456?client_source=feed&format=rss

kirkwood chris brown and rihanna nightline brady quinn brady quinn bloom box fat tuesday

Obama lobbies casino workers in late-night pitch

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? President Barack Obama has wrapped up a long day of campaigning with a brief speech to hotel workers at the Bellagio casino in Las Vegas.

Obama told workers gathered in the employee cafeteria that they "represent the dignity of work" and the American dream. He asked them to vote and shook hands with some of them.

Buzz had built before Obama arrived, and Obama conceded that "the word got out." He never ventured to the casino floor or other parts of the hotel.

The next stop on Obama's two-day campaign marathon is Tampa, Fla. He planned to sleep on Air Force One during the red-eye cross-country flight.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-25-Obama-Vegas/id-851903b069ca440386a11a0c61743627

belize resorts nikki minaj grammy performance shel silverstein niki minaj grammy performance grammys 2012 deadmau5 phoebe snow

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Father And Son Find Niche In Art ? CBS Baltimore

By KATIE?CROWE
The Frederick News-Post

FREDERICK, Md. (AP) ? When Seth Moulden?was a boy, he would watch his father, professional artist Doug Moulden, paint in the family?s living room.

Seth would try to replicate the things his father created, he said, but would get angry when he realized he couldn?t. Instead, he would end up carving his name into anything and everything available to him, including furniture.

Later on in his youth, while still drawing and painting alongside his dad, Seth got into spray painting and wood burning. There was even one Christmas that he made wooden containers, hearts and other similar items and gave them to all his family members as gifts, he recalled.

?I?ve always just been drawn to art that had a long life,? said Seth, 23. ?The more permanent it was, the more I liked it.?

Seth graduated from Tuscarora High School in 2007, and after working numerous jobs and taking one art class at Frederick Community College, finally found his calling in tattooing. After completing a one-year apprenticeship at Snakeman?s Tattoo Studio in Frederick, he now works as an artist at Gus?s Tattoo Studio downtown.

Doug, 56, who has been a professional artist all his life, continues to show his work in Frederick and throughout the region, and has taught art at the Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center for about three years.

And despite having taken two different paths professionally, Seth said his father always encouraged him to be successful, and that attending all of Doug?s art shows growing up ? or, rather, being forced to attend, he joked ? has certainly had its benefits.
???
All in the family

Doug began painting and drawing when he was about 4 years old, sitting alongside his mother, who was also a prominent quilter, he said.

Influenced by artists such as Monet and Leonardo da Vinci, he was always interested in landscapes or paintings that invite the viewer into the scene, he said. He knew he wanted to be a painter and a sculptor and obtained a degree in sculpture from Virginia Commonwealth University.

After working in factories for about 12 years to support the family, Doug was able to pursue art professionally in 1996 after his wife, Beverly ? a fellow sculptor he met at VCU ? obtained her certified public accountant license, he said.

Doug typically shows his work in about two to three group exhibits a year and also has about two solo shows annually, he said. His work is on display at The Orchard Restaurant, the Brunswick Branch Library and C. Burr Artz Public Library, among other places.

It typically takes him 200 to 400 hours to complete one of his heavily textured acrylic paintings, he said. He mostly gets inspiration from scenes taken in on long morning hikes with his wife and dogs, he said, but he?s also painted from photographs of places he saw in Colorado, for example.

?It?s a painstaking process,? he said. By applying many thin layers of acrylic paint to wooden panels, he is able to achieve a unique, abstract look.

?The surface is sometimes very rich and thick from the built-up layers, so there?s almost a sculptural quality to the surface itself,? he said. ?And the wood panels add shape and form. Because a piece of wood can be bowed or curved in and out, it just adds another sculptural layer to the painting.?
???
Like father, like son ?-sort of

Seth said Moulden family vacations always included art in some way. When the family would travel to his roller hockey games (Seth reached the professional level in the sport), they would stop at art museums and galleries.

About five years ago, he was one of seven artists who won a $500 prize for designing a bike rack, all of which were built and installed in Cumberland.

It was around that time that Seth also attended a tattoo convention in Baltimore, which he said captivated him and sparked his interest in pursuing tattooing professionally.

He began tattooing himself at age 18, first working on a design on his calf using cheap equipment, he said.

?I stopped doing it because I realized I had no idea what I was doing,? he said. ?If I could promote anything, it would be to tell people to learn the proper, correct way to do (tattooing).?

Seth went around Frederick, getting tattooed at essentially every shop, seeking an artist to accept him as an apprentice, he said. He now has more than 20 tattoos.

?I basically was rejected by every place I went until I found Steve (owner of Snakeman?s),? he said. ?Steve had a similar story ? he had taught himself and never really had a teacher ? and saw that I really had the passion and the drawings.?

Of tattooing, Seth said he most enjoys taking people?s ideas and turning them into more than they can imagine.

?This is more permanent than graffiti. My art is living in these people, walking around, and it speaks for itself.?
???
Lessons learned

Doug, who works out of a chicken-coop-turned-home studio, has an upcoming solo show at the Washington County Arts Council Gallery next month.

At one point, he said he would have preferred Seth to pursue a career with a higher earning capacity, but realized as Seth kept creating that this was his passion, he said.

?I?m really proud of the fact that he?s been able to create his own path and do what he needs to do to be a successful artist, and that he?s been working so hard at it,? Doug said.

Seth said he always did his own thing and never desired to be just like his father; he knew that all Doug wanted was him to be successful and happy, he said.

?It wasn?t until after high school ? after I had made a lot of mistakes and went through a million dead-end jobs ? that I realized the only way I could truly be happy was around art,? he said.

?When I realized doing art was something that could make my parents proud, that?s when I stopped doing what I was doing and took it seriously.? He noted that from his father, he learned how to network in the art community, sell himself, and that ?greatness takes time and effort.?

Doug said he understands Seth?s compulsion to create art, because it is in him as well.

?He would continue to draw and make things even if he didn?t have a job in it, even if it didn?t make him any money,? Doug said. ?Sometimes you can make a good amount of money doing art, sometimes you don?t make anything at all ?
?But you continue doing it.?

(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2012/10/22/father-and-son-find-niche-in-art/

cynthia nixon cspan state of the union drinking game oscar noms capital gains tim thomas

Google Reportedly Revealing 10-inch Nexus And 3G-Capable Nexus 7 Tablets At Upcoming Event

inviteAccording to a new report from The Next Web today, Google is readying a number of new devices for announcement at the event it recently announced for October 29, including new Nexus tablet hardware and Android 4.2 features. Some notables from the list of upcoming reveals include improved Nexus 7 tablets (one boasting 3G connectivity), a 10-inch Nexus tablet and a new Nexus reference phone.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/0kdqg4sXiSo/

guild wars 2 adrian gonzalez Jerry Nelson Foo Canoodle Isaac path Tropical Storm Isaac path

Monday, October 22, 2012

Lynyrd Skynyrd ? Sweet Home Alabama (Americablog)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/256987077?client_source=feed&format=rss

earth day 2012 jon jones rashad evans ufc jones vs evans watergate mlb pregnant man outside lands 2012 lineup

San Diego media baron promotes conservative causes

In this photo taken Oct. 10, 2012, John Lynch, CEO of the U-T San Diego newspaper, poses for a picture outside his office in San Diego. Lynch and his partner Douglas Manchester gave their 143-year-old newspaper a new slogan ? "The World's Greatest Country & America's Finest City" ? ran a front-page editorial that declared their plan to reshape the city's downtown waterfront their highest priority, and forecast doom if President Barack Obama wins re-election. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

In this photo taken Oct. 10, 2012, John Lynch, CEO of the U-T San Diego newspaper, poses for a picture outside his office in San Diego. Lynch and his partner Douglas Manchester gave their 143-year-old newspaper a new slogan ? "The World's Greatest Country & America's Finest City" ? ran a front-page editorial that declared their plan to reshape the city's downtown waterfront their highest priority, and forecast doom if President Barack Obama wins re-election. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

In this photo taken Oct. 10, 2012, John Lynch, CEO of the U-T San Diego newspaper, reads mail in his office in San Diego. Lynch and his partner Douglas Manchester gave their 143-year-old newspaper a new slogan ? "The World's Greatest Country & America's Finest City" ? ran a front-page editorial that declared their plan to reshape the city's downtown waterfront their highest priority, and forecast doom if President Barack Obama wins re-election. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

In this photo taken Oct. 10, 2012, a man runs on a path in front of the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal in San Diego. The new media barons of San Diego, America's eighth-largest city, are upfront about wanting to use their newspaper to promote their agenda of downtown development and politically conservative causes ? and they are making their points in a brash, bare-knuckle style. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

SAN DIEGO (AP) ? The new media barons of America's eighth-largest city are upfront about wanting to use their newspaper to promote their agenda of downtown development and politically conservative causes ? and they are making their points in a brash, bare-knuckle style.

Douglas Manchester and his partner John Lynch gave their 143-year-old newspaper a new slogan ? "The World's Greatest Country & America's Finest City" ? ran a front-page editorial that declared their plan to reshape the city's downtown waterfront their highest priority, and forecast doom if President Barack Obama wins re-election.

Manchester, who became wealthy building hotels during the dawn of San Diego's downtown renaissance and insists on being called "Papa Doug," bought The San Diego Union-Tribune last year and its most serious competitor, the North County Times, this month. As he and Lynch eye expansion to Los Angeles and other major cities, they are frank about seeking to use their new platforms to advance their agenda ? and they think they can make a profit while they're at it.

Lynch calls the editorial viewpoint pro-family, pro-military and pro-America.

"We think our country is on the edge of real, real danger, and you have to stand up, and that was a huge part of why we bought this," said Lynch, vice chairman and chief executive officer of U-T San Diego, the newspaper's new name.

The editorial page named Obama the worst U.S. president and predicted a second term will result in "Arab terror states" attacking Israel, "death panels" rationing health care, income tax rates between 60 and 70 percent for many Californians and an attempt to get taxpayers to pay for late-term abortions. It warned of an effort to erase "In God We Trust" from U.S. currency.

Manchester, 70, is likened to a smaller market version of Rupert Murdoch and earlier moguls like William Randolph Hearst and Robert McCormick who used newspapers to wield influence. The unusually strong editorial tone stands out in an era when many newspapers are owned by corporations.

"Hard to believe UT could go further to the right and for the developers but now it is owned by the developers!" Ron Belanger, a 70-year-old retired Navy aviator, wrote on a Facebook page for critics of the new owners called "Bring the L.A. Times back to San Diego."

"It's a strong voice for a minority viewpoint in the media," countered Josef Horowitz, a 67-year-old retired college administrator who renewed his subscription in March, having canceled it under previous owners because he felt the editorials were mealy-mouthed and too liberal.

Lynch said editor Jeff Light has complete control of news coverage and that neither he nor Manchester, as chairman and publisher, meddle.

"Aside from the activist stance of the owners, I am someone who is scrupulously concerned with fairness," Light said.

Lynch, a former radio station owner with a linebacker's build at age 65, speaks bluntly. He recently wrote to Scott Peters, a Port of San Diego commissioner and Democratic nominee for Congress, demanding to know his position on a shipping contract to unload bananas that could complicate the publisher's plans for the downtown waterfront redevelopment. He wanted an exit clause.

"Otherwise this will become a major issue in the campaigns and the UT will be forced to lead a campaign to disband the PORT," he wrote.

The email correspondence, dated in early August and released after a public records request by KPBS/I-Newsource, came as Peters wages a bid to unseat U.S. Rep. Brian Bilbray, a Republican endorsed by the newspaper.

In May, Lynch lashed out when the city warned of a fine for hanging a promotional banner outside its offices. He agreed to take it down while seeking approval for a large video screen atop the five-story building.

"If it weren't for the digital sign pending approval, I would instruct our folks to run a piece on how this is so reflective of this city being anti-business," Lynch wrote a city councilman's aide, according to an email published by the San Diego Reader.

Lynch said his missive about the sign was intended as a joke and questions why other news organizations haven't taken a harder look at the port.

Dean Nelson, director of Point Loma Nazarene University's journalism program, said he hasn't seen blatant examples of editorial views seeping into news coverage and is skeptical how much newspaper editorials shape public policy. The question that will be watched most closely in the beleaguered U.S. newspaper industry, he said, is whether the business succeeds.

Tim McGuire, a journalism professor at Arizona State University, said San Diego is at the forefront of what he predicts will be a major trend of wealthy people buying newspapers to push for their agendas.

"People are going to buy and treat newspapers like sports teams," he said. "It's a toy, it's fun to have, and it gives you great power."

Manchester embraced the "Papa Doug" moniker after a Little League coach used it to distinguish him from a son, also named Doug. "Papa Doug" sold interests in two giant downtown hotels but still has major holdings in San Diego and is pursuing prospects, including a $1.3 billion hotel and office complex on the downtown waterfront.

Lynch said Manchester was unavailable for an interview. The pair are old friends and allies since they led a failed campaign to move San Diego's airport out of downtown in the 1990s.

Manchester spent $550,000 on his 65th birthday bash, as well as traveled extensively around the world and stayed at luxury hotels, Elizabeth Manchester said in court filings that ended their 43-year marriage in 2010. She claimed in the court documents that he had $57 million in the bank.

His $125,000 donation to support a 2008 ballot initiative to ban gay marriage in California drew protests ? a decision Lynch says his partner regrets.

"If you're a Catholic, marriage is between a man and a woman," Lynch said. "He had no idea there would be these kind of ramifications."

Manchester invested in San Diego-area resident Dinesh D'Souza's hit documentary, "2016: Obama's America," which portrays a gloomy future if the president is re-elected, according to Lynch.

Manchester bought the U-T from private equity firm Platinum Equity LLC for $110 million and picked up the North County Times from Lee Enterprises Inc. for $12 million. Last week, the Times' print edition was folded into the U-T.

The U-T has spent $5 million on a television venture with a studio in the middle of the newsroom and 12 hours of daily cable programming that highlights Lynch's radio background. The Sunday edition features more in-depth reports and military coverage.

Lynch said the privately held U-T is "significantly profitable" but declined to be specific about revenue or earnings. One test comes when the Audit Bureau of Circulations releases semiannual paid circulation figures Oct. 30.

Amid a brutal decline in the newspaper business, Manchester and Lynch hope to extend their San Diego empire to other major U.S. cities, eyeing adjacent markets like Los Angeles.

"We're trying to do what we can to change the direction of this country," Lynch said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-21-San%20Diego%20Publisher/id-fecf8bf8ef0a484f98c54f9a6d6b2f18

stop sopa justified southland sopa blackout protect ip act jim caldwell internet blackout

Can I become my own real estate broker and buy my ... - Zillow Real ...

Thanks everyone for your advice and suggestions. I have already looked into the classes offered in Chicago, and like John stated, I can do the majority online which is awesome. Joshua, I mentioned in my original post that I can not find any "experienced" realtor willing to work with me with so low budget purchases. If I could, believe me I wouldn't want to come out of my pocket with the real estate broker education, but I simply can't find anyone that is why I am so frustrated. I do appreciate the advice.?

Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/Can-I-become-my-own-real-estate-broker-and-buy-my-own-properties/464994/

demarcus cousins savannah brinson mount rainier capital one bowl winter classic 2012 georgia bulldogs football rashard mendenhall

Saturday, October 20, 2012

GRAMMY In The Schools Programs For Youth And Schools In Your ...

Hi :

Please help
us spread the word in your community about our GRAMMY in the Schools programs
for U.S. high school students and schools! The programs are described in detail
below, but I'll give you a snapshot here: GRAMMY Camp is a residential summer
camp for teens interested in a career in the music industry, GRAMMY Camp
? Jazz Session brings together
talented young jazz musicians for an all-expenses paid trip to Los Angeles for
GRAMMY Week 2013, and GRAMMY Signature
Schools provides cash grants for high school music programs. October 22 is the
deadline to apply for GRAMMY Camp ? Jazz Session and GRAMMY Signature
Schools, and it's the early decision deadline for GRAMMY Camp. Please let me
know if you need any other information.

Thanks,
Christina
Cassidy

Communications Director

christina.cassidy@grammy.com

310.581.8670 p.
310.392.2188 f.

?

GRAMMY Foundation/MusiCares

3030 Olympic
Blvd.

Santa Monica, CA
90404

310.392.3777


For Immediate Release?? ?????????????????????????????? PRESS RELEASE


THE GRAMMY FOUNDATION? LAUNCHES ONLINE
APPLICATIONS FOR GRAMMY IN THE SCHOOLS? PROGRAMS SUPPORTED IN PART
BY

BEST BUY, CONVERSE AND THE HOT TOPIC FOUNDATION

?

Oct. 22 is the Deadline to Apply for GRAMMY
Camp? ? Jazz Session, GRAMMY Signature Schools and Early Decision for GRAMMY Camp

?

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (Oct.
1, 2012) ?
The GRAMMY Foundation?is currently accepting
applications for its 2013 GRAMMY Camp?, GRAMMY Camp ? Jazz Session, (formerly GRAMMY? Jazz Ensembles), and GRAMMY
Signature Schools
programs for high school students and high school
music programs. These programs are part of the Foundation's GRAMMY
in the Schools
? offerings and are supported in part by Best Buy and Converse.


"GRAMMY Camp and GRAMMY
Camp ? Jazz Session allow high school students to experience firsthand
what it feels like to have a career in the music industry, and our
GRAMMY Signature Schools program provides generous financial resources to high
schools for the benefit of their music programs," said Neil Portnow,
President/CEO of The Recording Academy? and the GRAMMY Foundation.
"These GRAMMY in the Schools
initiatives are helping to inspire and educate the next generation of
music makers."

Students and schools interested
in participating in the 2013 GRAMMY Camp
? Jazz Session
and GRAMMY Signature
Schools
programs can apply at www.grammyintheschools.com. Completed
applications are due Oct. 22 for both
programs
. Oct. 22 is also the
early decision deadline for students interested in attending the 9th annual
GRAMMY Camp to be held in summer 2013
. Early decision applicants will
receive a 10 percent tuition discount if selected to attend GRAMMY Camp. They
receive this discount whether they are selected as part of the early decision
process or drawn from the regular applicant pool. Applicants not selected via
early decision will be reconsidered with the final pool of applications. The final
GRAMMY Camp application deadline is March 31, 2013. In the past, approximately
75 percent of GRAMMY Camp participants who have applied for financial aid
received assistance.

The GRAMMY Foundation is also
pleased to announce that recordings from the jazz program can now be purchased
on iTunes, Amazon.com and other quality online music outlets. Albums released
from 2007?2012 are now available for download. These projects were recorded at
the world-famous Capitol Recording Studios (EMI Music)
in Hollywood, Calif., by GRAMMY-winning engineers Manny Marroquin and Al
Schmitt, and mastered by GRAMMY winner Bernie Grundman.


GRAMMY Camp

The program offers selected high school students an interactive residential summer
music experience. Focusing on all aspects of commercial music, this unique
opportunity provides instruction by industry professionals in an immersive
creative environment with cutting-edge technology in professional facilities.
The program offers seven music career tracks: Audio Engineering; Concert
Promotion/Production; Electronic Music Production; Marketing & Management, Music
Journalism; Songwriting and a Performance Track for Bass, Drums, Guitar,
Keyboard, Vocal, and Winds & Strings. All tracks culminate in media
projects, recordings and/or showcase performances.


GRAMMY Camp ? Jazz
Session

High school (public, private, parochial, home-schooled,
etc.) singers and instrumentalists are encouraged to audition for GRAMMY Camp ? Jazz Session (formerly GRAMMY
Jazz Ensembles). Selectees will receive an all-expenses-paid
trip
to Los Angeles, the host city for the 55th Annual GRAMMY Awards?, Feb. 1?11, 2013. Students
will perform in high-profile GRAMMY
Week events and recording sessions and will attend the 55th Annual GRAMMY
Awards telecast on Feb. 10, 2013. Musical directors for the GRAMMY Camp ? Jazz
Session are Justin DiCioccio
(Manhattan School of Music), Dr. Leila Heil
(Colorado State University) and Dr. Ron McCurdy (USC Thornton School of Music).
Students are also eligible for college scholarships through the college
incentive program (more than $2 million available) offered by program partners
Berklee College of Music, USC Thornton School of Music, the New School for Jazz
and Contemporary Music, and Manhattan School of Music. The school of each
selectee will receive a professional cymbal courtesy of Zildjian. The GRAMMY
Camp ? Jazz Session program receives additional support from the Ella
Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation, Zildjian, Capitol Recording Studios (EMI Music), CenterStaging,
and Guitar Center.

?

GRAMMY Signature Schools

Just as the GRAMMY Award recognizes excellence in
recording, the GRAMMY Foundation's GRAMMY Signature Schools program
recognizes top public high schools across the country for outstanding
commitment to their music education programs. Each of the GRAMMY Signature
Schools will receive a custom award and a monetary grant to benefit its music
program. The top programs are designated Gold recipients. The best of the Gold
recipients is designated the National GRAMMY Signature School. For schools that
are economically underserved, the GRAMMY Foundation established the Enterprise Award category to recognize
the efforts in music education made by these schools.. GRAMMY Signature Schools
recipients are determined by the Blue Ribbon Committee, a panel of top music
educators and professionals.


The GRAMMY Foundation has also established
the GRAMMY Signature Schools Community
Award
, an extension of the GRAMMY Signature Schools program in partnership
with Best Buy Mobile and the Hot Topic Foundation. To celebrate the
opening of new Best Buy Mobile stores, the GRAMMY Foundation identified
deserving public high school music programs to receive the award and a $2,000 grant.
During the past year, approximately 100 schools have received the GRAMMY
Signature Schools Community Award, and total dollars granted were in excess of
$200,000. For a list of schools, visit www.grammy.com.


The GRAMMY Foundation was established in 1989 to cultivate
the understanding, appreciation and advancement of the contribution of recorded
music to American culture ? from the artistic and technical legends of the past
to the still unimagined musical breakthroughs of future generations of music
professionals. The Foundation accomplishes this mission through programs and
activities that engage the music industry and cultural community as well as the
general public. The Foundation works in partnership year-round with its
founder, The Recording Academy?, to bring national attention to
important issues such as the value and impact of music and arts education and
the urgency of preserving our rich cultural heritage. Campbell's Labels for
Education program is proud to be the official education partner of the GRAMMY
in the Schools programs. For more information, please visit www.grammyintheschools.com. For
breaking news and exclusive content, please like "GRAMMY in the
Schools" on Facebook at www.facebook.com/grammyintheschools
and follow @GRAMMYFdn on Twitter at www.twitter.com/GRAMMYFdn.

?

# # #

?

Program Contact:

David R. Sears/GRAMMY
Foundation/310.392.3777/david@grammy.com

?

Media Contacts:

Hannah Berryman/The GRAMMY
Foundation/310.392.3777/hannah.berryman@grammy.com


Christina Cassidy/ GRAMMY Foundation/310.392.3777/christina.cassidy@grammy.com

Source: http://oswego.patch.com/announcements/grammy-in-the-schools-programs-for-youth-and-schools-in-your-community-8f005173

jessica capshaw seattle times seattle times walker recall censor pipa and sopa sopa pipa

EU drugs agency has "no new concerns" about GSK's flu shot

{ttle}

{cptn}","template_name":"ss_thmb_play_ttle","i18n":{"end_of_gallery_header":"End of Gallery","end_of_gallery_next":"View Again"},"metadata":{"pagination":"{firstVisible} - {lastVisible} of {numItems}","ult":{"spaceid":"2145892301","sec":""}}},{"id": "hcm-carousel-2136937717", "dataManager": C.dmgr, "mediator": C.mdtr, "group_name":"hcm-carousel-2136937717", "track_item_selected":1,"tracking":{ "spaceid" : "2145892301", "events" : { "click" : { "any" : { "yui-carousel-prev" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"prev","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } }, "yui-carousel-next" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"next","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // no more pages, don't beacon again // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } } } } } } })); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function() { try{ if (Math.floor(Math.random()*10) == 1) { var loc = window.location, decoded = decodeURI(loc.pathname), encoded = encodeURI(decoded), uri = loc.protocol + "//" + loc.host + encoded + ((loc.search.length > 0) ? loc.search + '&' : '?') + "_cacheable=1", xmlhttp; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); else xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); xmlhttp.open("GET",uri,true); xmlhttp.send(); } }catch(e){} })(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings = '"projectId": "10001256862979", "documentName": "", "documentGroup": "", "ywaColo" : "vscale3", "spaceId" : "2145892301" ,"customFields" : { "12" : "classic", "13" : "story" }'; Y.Media.YWA.init(Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if(document.onclick===YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.newClick){document.onclick=YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.oldClick;} }); }); });

O2 UK begins rollout of Jelly Bean to Galaxy S3, Vodafone to follow

Galaxy S3

Yesterday, Three UK began to send out the Andorid 4.1 (Jelly Bean) update to Samsung Galaxy S3 phones, and now we have two more British carriers following closely -- Vodafone and O2. O2's rollout will begin today, it says, while Vodafone customers will have to wait until Monday.

Again, we're pleasantly surprised at how fast the British and European carriers have been able to get the updates to their devices and hope those on the American side are paying attention. Both updates will be a gradual rollout and are available via OTA over WiFi or via Kies.

If you have questions about a specific carrier's implementation, hit up the source links. We'd love to hear from you if you're on one of these carriers and update your Galaxy S3.

Source: O2Vodafone; via Techradar



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/vbbegb79mxw/story01.htm

sherri shepherd sherri shepherd arkansas razorbacks trisomy 18 ozzie guillen ozzie guillen buster posey

The Cataclysm: "One of the Most Dramatic Mass-Movement Events of Historic Time"

In memory of Dr. Harry Glicken, 1958-1991.

Dr. Harry Glicken, USGS. His work on the Mount St. Helens debris avalanche has greatly increased our recognition and understanding of these catastrophic events. Image courtesy USGS.

Eruptions seem like simple matters: pressure builds, something goes boom, lots of stuff comes out. But that?s not the story of every volcanic eruption, and it doesn?t capture the complexity by half. Pressure was building within Mount St. Helens. It had been booming, and promised a bigger boom, and delivered on that promise ? but not in the way anyone expected.

Dr. David Johnston and his colleagues had expected the bulge to come down eventually ? things that steep aren?t stable ? but no one knew just how big that fall would be, or that it would only be the beginning of a complicated, cataclysmic chain of events. It would take painstaking geologic detective work on and around a still-smoldering volcano and some fortunate photos to piece the sequence together.

It began with an earthquake, an insistent 5.1 magnitude shake at 8:32:11 am. Jolting an already overstressed mountain causes issues: on St. Helens that morning, the heavily fractured summit split dramatically. In less than ten seconds, cracks raced one and a half kilometers (nearly a mile) across the apex of the bulge. This was Act I in a three-act landslide that would become the largest in volume in recorded history.

Mount St. Helens pre-eruption profile and diagram of May 18, 1980 debris avalanche. Detail of illustration by USGS geologist Lyn Topinka. I've added numbers labeling each landslide block. Image courtesy USGS.

Slide I, as Harry Glicken, Barry Voight and their colleagues named it, took the face off the mountain. It included broken blocks of old basalt and andesite flows, along with loose volcanic breccia, that had comprised the pre-eruption edifice. It took down Goat Rocks dome, and incorporated a chunk of the dacite summit dome. It hurtled down the mountainside at a speed of 50 meters per second (over 160 feet/second), accelerating as it went. Twenty-six seconds after it started, it had slid 700 meters (about 2,300 feet) down the mountain. As it fell, it ripped the confining pressure off the cryptodome that had caused all that dramatic bulging and the phreatic fireworks.

As slide I plunged, the summit area continued failing behind the brand-new, 600 meter (nearly 2,000 foot) landslide scarp. Slide II took down the rest of the summit north of the graben; it sliced deep, excising most of the rest of the summit dome and appreciable portions of modern St. Helens, and ripped out part of her ancestral heart. In the next eleven seconds, as the two slides moved downslope almost as one unit and stripped the cover off the magma of the cryptodome beneath, pressurized gasses found themselves free to expand. Water that had been heated to high temperatures by hot, fresh magma flashed to steam. Gasses in the magma came out of solution. And with the face of the mountain gone, steam and gas emerged sideways: the lateral blast had begun.

These illustrations show the landslide (green) and directed blast (red) that occurred during the first few minutes of the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980. Before the eruption, an estimated 0.11 km3 of dacite magma had intruded into the volcano (equivalent to sphere about 600 m in diameter!). The rising magma forced the volcano's north flank (right side of illustration) outward about 150 m and heated the volcano's ground water system, causing many steam-driven explosions (phreatic eruptions). The hot magma and surrounding hydrothermal system were unroofed by the landslide (green), and the resulting rapid depressurization caused a series of steam- and volcanic-gas-driven explosions. The explosions burst through part of the landslide, blasting rock debris northward. The resulting pyroclastic surge quickly overran the landslide and spread over ridges and valleys across an area of 550 km2. Image courtesy USGS and Wikimedia Commons.

Those gasses propelled the slides: they were now screaming downward at speeds of 70-80 meters per second (230-260 feet/s), and covered the next 700 meters in 11 seconds. Portions of Forsyth Glacier broke free, cascading over Sugar Bowl dome. The remains of the mountaintop behind the slide II scarp came apart. We?ll never know the precise details of how it failed ? blast clouds now shielded it from view ? but we know this slide III contained the remains of St. Helens?s summit, including the hydrothermally-altered base of her summit dome. Brand-new dacite from the cryptodome mixed in with slides II and III.

2.5 cubic kilometers (1.5 cubic miles) of Mount St. Helens thundered in to the valleys below.

As it hit the stream-carved topography below, the debris avalanche divided. One lobe leapt a 380m (1250 foot) ridge, filling South Coldwater Creek?s valley with up to 195m (639 feet) of hummocky debris. It carried blocks of basalt and andesite up to 100m (330 feet) across. Pause for a moment to think of the kind of force it takes to transport massive rock that far from its source.

Oblique aerial view of Coldwater Lake, which resulted when the debris avalanche of May 18, 1980, filled the Toutle River Valley, damming a side channel. (Photo by Lyn Topinka. Skamania and Cowlitz Counties, Washington. October 12, 1983. Image courtesy USGS.

Another lobe slammed into Spirit Lake. Its speed and bulk sent a catastrophic water wave up the ridges bordering the lake, mowing down any trees not felled in the blast for 260m (850 feet) up the slopes. Erosion happened in an instant as the lake water sloshed back and poured over the avalanche deposits. At the end, the lake stood 60m (200 feet) above its former level, choked with debris, covered in a raft of logs, a shadow of its former self.

View to west of Spirit Lake after May 18 eruption of Mount St. Helens. On May 18, 1980, part of the Mount St. Helens debris avalanche slid into Spirit Lake, raising its level nearly 60 meters and damming its natural outlet to a higher level. Water displaced by the avalanche surged up the surrounding hill slopes, washing the blown-down timber from the lateral blast into the lake. Skamania County, Washington. May 23, 1980. Image courtesy USGS.

The bulk of the avalanche headed for the North Fork Toutle River valley. It carried chunks of rock up to 170m (560 feet) across, and it didn?t stop until it had gone over 20 kilometers (12 miles) down the valley. It plowed up trees and hauled them along, leaving a distal deposit of chaotic logs, splinters, plowed-up soil, and other detritus at its terminus. Fragments of ripped-apart glaciers up to 12 meters (40 feet) across, were buried within. Debris up to 150m (500 feet) deep buried the river.

Aerial view east along North Fork Toutle River at Elk Rock bend. Hummocky avalanche deposit of May 18 filled the valley to 45 m average depth. This area is near the southern fringe of the blast zone. Photo by A. Post and R.M. Krimmel. Skamania and Cowlitz Counties, Washington. June 30, 1980. Image courtesy USGS.

Other units of the debris avalanche choked tributary valleys and clung to the remnants of the mountain. In the end, it buried an area of almost 39 square kilometers (24 square miles), leaving a lunar landscape of bumpy, jumbled rock, ice and dirt.

Oblique aerial view of North Fork Toutle River valley, north of Mount St. Helens. Note topography of the blast material, large gullies cut by the subsequent mudflows, deposits of mud splashed on the hummocks of the blast material, and subsequent slumping of material into the gullies, creating natural barriers to flow. Cowlitz County, Washington. May 19, 1980. Image courtesy USGS.

When we think of avalanches and rock slides, we think of ice and snow, chilly stones, cool earth. We don?t expect intense heat. But this wasn?t an ordinary debris avalanche: it wasn?t just glaciers and old, cold rock coming down, but parts of the cryptodome. And that dome was hot - parts of its dacite ended up embedded in the avalanche deposit at temperatures above 600?C (1,100?F). The avalanche itself was heated by magmatic gasses and steam to temperatures approaching 100?C (212?F). Slides II and III, especially, were toasty ? they incorporated appreciable bits of the cryptodome and the hydrothermal system that had developed around it, and they?d gotten mixed up with the blast cloud. They became large portions of the North Fork and Spirit Lake lobes. Measurements of the temperatures of the North Fork lobe ranged from 98?C (208?F) close to the mountain to 68?C (154?F) at its end. This smeared-out temperature profile wasn?t an effect of cooling in transit ? the avalanche moved too fast for that, and there wasn?t enough mixing with surface water to cool it so drastically, so it?s likely hotter material from deeper within the mountain didn?t travel quite so far.

But some hot material was about to travel very far indeed?

?

References:

Lipman, Peter W., and Mullineaux, Donal R., Editors (1981): The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1250.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=7fd639af8c53d7a5e308bd14bc05d39e

vanessa minnillo super tuesday epidemiology total eclipse of the heart jionni lavalle earthquake san francisco donald payne

Friday, October 19, 2012

Seahawks lead 49ers 6-3 at half - Herald Online

? Two of the NFL's top defenses dueled it out in a low-scoring game just as everybody expected - and San Francisco's offense did just enough to give the 49ers a narrow lead in the NFC West.

For the time being, anyway. This is hardly the kind of firm hold on the division they owned last October.

Alex Smith threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to Delanie Walker late in the third quarter and San Francisco held off the Seattle Seahawks 13-6 on Thursday night as the 49ers won their long-awaited division opener.

"We expect these games in the NFC West to be 60 minutes of physical football," said 49ers left tackle Joe Staley, who returned to the field four days after suffering a concussion against the Giants.

Frank Gore ran for 131 yards and the 49ers (5-2) hung tough on defense late in a game featuring two teams allowing fewer than 16 points per game.

Smith went 14 of 23 for 140 yards in a second straight subpar performance.

"That was the most physical 30 minutes of football in the second half that I have ever seen our football team play," 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh said. "It's a sweet win. It was a real football fight, and our guys won it."

Walker's score was San Francisco's first touchdown in seven quarters after an embarrassing 26-3 loss to the New York Giants on Sunday in a lopsided rematch of the NFC championship game. The tight end broke his jaw in two places at Seattle last Dec. 24 and sat out until the title game.

NFC rushing leader Marshawn Lynch finished with 103 yards for Seattle (4-3).

It's now Harbaugh 3, Pete Carroll 0 since these coaching rivals started facing off in the NFL last year after all those memorable moments in the college game.

Harbaugh's teams sure have shown they are quick to forget their losses. The 49ers improved to 5-0 after regular-season defeats since reigning NFL Coach of the Year Harbaugh took over before last season.

Pulling off this one could give the 49ers some momentum, too. It was the first of two straight prime-time games for San Francisco, which doesn't play again until Oct. 29 at Arizona.

The defensive fight left the animated coaches shaking their heads and hollering on opposite sidelines all game, offering plenty of entertainment for the sellout crowd of 69,732 at balmy Candlestick Park.

"We found ourselves in a real slugfest here today," Carroll said. "I'm not surprised it could have gone that way with two good defenses and two teams committed to running the ball."

These teams met in Weeks 1 and 16 last season, with the 49ers beating Seattle 33-17 at home for Harbaugh's first victory as an NFL coach.

This one was close until the end.

"We had a long drive in the third quarter. We just kind of felt them start to give up a little bit, and they knew we were just going to keep running the ball on them," 49ers right guard Alex Boone said. "It was more of, 'Let's get back to our roots and do what we're good at,' that's being physical, pounding the ball. Frank's a great runner."

After Walker's touchdown, Dashon Goldson intercepted a deep pass by Russell Wilson to thwart Seattle's next drive after NaVorro Bowman clobbered the rookie quarterback as he was trying to throw.

Smith gave the ball back with an interception of his own early in the fourth quarter. His fifth interception of the season matched his total from all of 2011.

Harbaugh went to backup Colin Kaepernick for one keeper play that lost a yard, then Smith returned for third-and-goal on the 7. He scrambled to his left looking for an open receiver and Brandon Browner jumped in front of a pass intended for Randy Moss.

That gave Seattle the ball back with 11:58 remaining. Yet again, the Seahawks couldn't capitalize on a night of missed opportunities and dropped balls.

Gore had his third 100-yard game of the season, not to be outdone by Lynch on the other side.

"I just got in that rhythm, and once I get in that rhythm, I feel I can't be stopped," Gore said.

Lynch carried 19 times and bounced back from a 41-yard outing in Sunday's comeback 24-23 home win against the Patriots. The 49ers and their top-ranked defense hadn't allowed a 100-yard rusher in 22 consecutive home games before New York's Ahmad Bradshaw ran for 116 yards and a touchdown Sunday - and now the Niners made it twice in five days.

Not that they should have been too surprised. This is Lynch, after all.

The last time they faced off, on Dec. 24, Lynch ran for 107 yards as San Francisco's defense had its streak of not allowing a 100-yard rusher end at 36 games. And his 4-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter also was the first TD rushing allowed by San Francisco all season.

Wilson, who spoke leading up to the game that he couldn't wait for his introduction to this heated rivalry, went 9 of 23 for 122 yards, an interception and two sacks. Aldon Smith sacked him with 1:25 left, then Paul McQuistan was called for a chop block on Smith in the end zone with 43 seconds left. It would have been an automatic safety, but the 49ers declined the penalty. The play was reviewed and Seattle was short of the first down.

Wilson faltered after he threw two late touchdown passes as the Seahawks rallied for 14 points over the final 7:31 to stun New England on Sunday.

"The way we lost was frustrating. We could have done some things better," Wilson said. "I could have done some things better."

San Francisco was in control of the division at this stage last season - sitting at 5-1 - but needed a big second half Thursday after a quick week of preparation.

Steven Hauschka kicked a 52-yard field goal as Seattle scored first for the seventh time in as many games this year. He added a 35-yarder early in the second quarter but missed wide left on a 51-yard try later in the quarter.

David Akers, who had eight of his NFL-record 44 field goals in the two games against the Seahawks last season, booted a 38-yarder late in the first quarter to make it 3-3.

NOTES: Seattle lost LB Malcolm Smith to a concussion on the opening kickoff, then WR Doug Baldwin later injured his ankle and did not return. ... 49ers WR Mario Manningham was inactive with a shoulder injury. ... Ted Ginn Jr. had a 38-yard return late in the first half for the 49ers.

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP-NFL

Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/2012/10/18/4348623/seahawks-49ers-tied-3-3-after.html

right to work mike kelley puxatony phil josh harvey clemons college football recruiting rankings ground hog day 2012 aaron carter

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Woman reports giving birth on Philly subway train

(AP) ? It was a very unusual delivery on a Philadelphia subway line.

Police say a woman riding the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority's Broad Street line told officers she gave birth aboard a northbound train Tuesday afternoon.

KYW-TV reports (http://cbsloc.al/OGCkgG) transit police Officer Loyd Rodgers and his partner gave the stork a helping hand after the woman approached them at the Olney (AHL'-nee) station. Nestled in her clothing was her baby boy, umbilical cord still attached.

Rodgers wrapped the newborn in a blanket and called for medics.

He says all activity in the busy subway station halted as riders snapped pictures and congratulated the new mom.

Mother and baby are doing fine at a hospital. The new mom's name wasn't released.

___

Information from: KYW-TV, http://www.kywtv.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2012-10-17-Subway%20Baby/id-fbbd3588163b44e69189f7ce7cad10f2

laurent robinson dantoni gillian anderson leah remini desean jackson kyle orton kyle orton

Steve Aoki, Knife Party Team Up For Track, Bring Back The Word 'Phat'

Aoki talks to MTV News about hitting the studio with Knife Party for 'Pile Driver,' which he call his 'phattest banging record' so far.
By Akshay Bhansali


Steve Aoki
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1695783/steve-aoki-knife-party-phat.jhtml

academy awards 2012 albert nobbs a star is born oscar nominees oscar nominations 2012 kombucha tea separation of church and state

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Shuttle inches toward retirement home at LA museum

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? At every turn of Endeavour's stop-and-go commute through urban streets, a constellation of spectators trailed along as the space shuttle ploddingly nosed past stores, schools, churches and front yards.

Having escaped out of Earth's atmosphere two dozen times, Endeavour's slow-speed trek Saturday to its retirement center took it through the working-class streets of southern Los Angeles.

In an instant, the shuttle crossings became part of history.

Along the 12-mile course, thousands marveled at the engineering. Some rooted for Endeavour when it appeared it might clip a light post. Others wondered if it could just hurry up to its destination.

Early birds gathered in front of lnglewood High School before sunrise to watch Endeavour roll by at a pokey 2 mph. Dean Martinez, who lives in Los Angeles but works in Inglewood, could not miss the moment.

"This is great for the city as a whole. It makes us proud," said Martinez, a project director for a nonprofit.

Endeavour had been scheduled to inch into the California Science Center on Saturday evening to spend the rest of its years as a museum piece. But as the night wore on, even inching became a challenge, and the journey looked likely to spill into Sunday.

The second day of the move started off promising, with Endeavour 1? hours ahead of schedule. But hurdles and hiccups caused it to run some five hours behind. There was no major single reason for the slowdown ? it was the accumulation of small problems involving maneuvering and maintenance.

They included a small tree on the narrowest section of the move that planners hadn't thought needed removal but ended up bringing the procession to a stop. As crews tried to find ways to tilt and twist the shuttle past the tree, they came close to deciding to cut it down before Endeavor squeezed through. Another slip-up came when it appeared the shuttle was going to hit a light post, and crews again began plans to remove it as the ship slid through.

The crowd had its problems too. Despite temperatures in the mid-70s, more than two dozen people were treated for heat-related injuries after a long day in the sun, according to fire officials.

But incredibly, given the size of the crowd, police reported no arrests.

Unlike other high-profile events like the Academy Awards or the Rose Parade, the procession was centered in some of the area's most economically downtrodden and troubled places. The shuttle passed several gritty areas and shuttered businesses, and rolled down many streets that were aflame two decades earlier during the 1992 riots brought on by the Rodney King beating.

"Having a shuttle come through this area of high poverty, it can only be a good thing" for the community," said Damian Pipkins, a volunteer at Eso Won Books.

Endeavour hit the pavement before dawn Friday, trundling out of the Los Angeles International Airport on a remote-controlled 160-wheel carrier past diamond-shaped "Shuttle Xing" signs. When it reached a freeway overpass that night, it was towed by a truck.

The shuttle made a late-morning pit stop Saturday at the Forum ? former home of the Los Angeles Lakers ? where it was greeted in the arena's parking lot by a throng of cheering spectators. It was late to its second public celebration that included a dance performance choreographed by Debbie Allen.

For most of the way, Endeavour straddled wide boulevards ? Manchester, Crenshaw, Martin Luther King Jr. The one exception was when the shuttle ambled through a slightly curved residential street lined with apartment buildings on both sides ? a spot that caused some delay.

As it wound through South Los Angeles, residents welcomed its presence. Before the move, some lamented over the loss of shade as trees were chopped down to provide clearance.

Others thought it was a decent trade.

"If you have to go through a little bit of pain to have something nice for the community, then it's worth it," said Pamela Tucker, who lives a block away from Crenshaw Boulevard in Los Angeles.

When Endeavour rolls down King Boulevard, special attention will be paid to the pine trees planted in honor of the slain civil rights leader.

Endeavour may have circled the globe nearly 4,700 times, but its roots are grounded in California. Its main engines were fabricated in the San Fernando Valley. The heat tiles were invented in Silicon Valley. Its "fly-by-wire" technology was developed in the Los Angeles suburb of Downey.

It's no longer shiny and sleek, like when it first rolled off the assembly line in the Mojave Desert in 1991 to replace the lost Challenger. As it cruised block-by-block, it's hard to miss what 123 million miles in space and two dozen re-entries can do to the exterior.

Shuffling Endeavour through city streets was a laborious undertaking ? nearly a year in the making. It could not be taken apart without damaging the delicate tiles. Airlifting it was out of the question. So was driving on freeways since it was too massive to fit through underpasses.

There were consequences. Several hundred Inglewood residents suffered hours-long outages when power lines were temporarily snipped. Some businesses lost customers because of street and sidewalk closures.

Such a move is not cheap. The cross-town transport was estimated at $10 million, to be paid for by the science center and private donations.

___

Associated Press writer Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed to this story.

___

Follow Alicia Chang at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/shuttle-inches-toward-retirement-home-la-museum-195002257.html

dickens greg kelly cujo karen handel hangout todd haley kareem abdul jabbar