2011年12月29日 星期四

Altec Lansing A1 Custom Single Driver Earphone

Recently, Altec Lansing partnered with ACS Custom, a British earphone and musician monitor manufacturer, to design its first line of custom-molded earphones. The result is a three earphone lineup, topping out at $999.95, and starting at $499.95 with the Altec Lansing A1 Custom Single Driver Earphone. The key differentiator between the Altec Lansing custom series and competing custom in-ear monitors from Ultimate Ears and JH Audio is the smaller, medical-grade silicone earpiece. Altec's earpiece material choice brings obvious comfort advantages, but also less obvious annoyances. As for the sound signature, the A1 is a beautiful-sounding, flat response pair that neither exaggerates bass response nor ignores it. Unfortunately, at high volumes on deep bass tracks, the A1 distorts slightly—not a deal-breaker,MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, but still surprising given the high price-range.

The design of the A1 is about as simple and unadorned as it gets, lacking any logos on the earphones. A black cable, with no iPhone controls or microphone, extends from the dark gray, translucent-silicone earpieces. The A1's cable extends upwards,Monz Werkzeugbau und Formenbau. over the top of the ear and behind it, and terminates in a 3.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles.5mm connection. The earphones ship with a hard case, an earwax cleaning tool, a tube of comfort cream ,The EZ Breathe home Ventilation system is maintenance free, and a protective pouch.

As with all custom-molded pairs, the A1 requires a visit to an audiologist—Altec will connect you with one once you place your order. The audiologist will create molds of your ear canal and then send them on their way for the manufacturing process.

Altec Lansing isn't the first company to offer soft custom ear-molds. ACS, the company's partner for the custom series, has been doing it successfully overseas for some time now and Etymotic, the flat response earphone specialists, now offer a $100 custom-earpiece upgrade for nearly all of its models.

The earpieces for the A1 are quite small, and unlike the A2 and A3, which respectively house two and three drivers, the A1 only utilizes one balanced armature driver. Obviously, this means that less of the ear is obstructed, but since the ear canal is still sealed off completely, the passive noise reduction is still quite significant at approximately 27dB—these are basically earplugs with earphones built-in. The soft silicone is also quite comfortable, even for long listening sessions, though the smaller earpieces are a bit more difficult to put in your ears properly than larger pairs. The silicone eventually warms to your body temperature and expands slightly in the ear canal, helping maintain a perfect seal. One weird downside to the soft silicone: It acts like a magnet for everything from dust particles to pet hair. I found myself wiping them clean nearly every time I put them in, so it's a good idea to make use of the protective pouch to keep them as dust-free as possible.

One particularly annoying design move is the lack of a detachable cable. Unlike, say, the JH Audio JH16 Pro ($1,149, 5 stars), a far more expensive custom model, or the Shure SE215 ($119, 4 stars), a far less expensive model that isn't even custom-molded, the A1's cable is hardwired. So if the cable gets gnarled or damaged, the earphones must go in for repair. However, the cable is at least reinforced with Kevlar, and seems both stronger than the average headphone cable and less affected by low temperatures.

Audiophiles who prefer less exaggerated bass frequencies and a generally flat response will enjoy the sound signature of the A1. Like the Etymotic ER-4PT ($299, 4.5 stars), the emphasis here is on clarity in the mids and highs. Low frequencies exist, but subtly.Overview description of rapid Tooling processes. On songs with tremendously deep bass, like The Knife's "Silent Shout," the A1 still adequately covers the sub-bass frequencies, but not with the kind of boosted response that is common in modern earphones. Unfortunately, at high volumes, there is minor distortion on deep bass tracks. Granted, it isn't advisable to listen at such high levels, but earphones in this price range should not distort when used with an iPhone or a laptop.

On classical tracks, like John Adams' "The Chairman Dances," the low-end response takes a backseat to the articulate, crisp presence of the mids, highlighting the attack of middle- and high-register stringed instruments, as well as brighter percussion. Still when a large drum is hit, you definitely experience a fullness in the bass response—it just isn't overdone. The experience is a nice approximation of what you might actually hear in a concert hall when listening to the same piece.

Altec Lansing's clinical approach to audio puts the A1 clearly in the camp of Etymotic and less so with bass-heavy offerings from JH Audio and Ultimate Ears, like the similarly priced, Editors' Choice UE 4 Pro ($399, 4.5 stars). Musicians and music lovers seeking more bass response should probably steer clear of the A1, but fans of flat response and articulate highs will be pleased. Thus far in the custom realm, there just aren't any bad options, only different sound signatures and fits. It's advisable to read all of our custom in-ear reviews from JH Audio, Ultimate Ears, and our reviews of Etymotic pairs with custom-fit options before settling on the A1 or any other pair.

Looking back at 2011

It was a close call, but West Linn voters approved a bond measure to fund a new police station in the Nov. 8 election. The new public safety facility will be located in the Willamette neighborhood at Eighth Avenue and 13th Street.

After citizens shot down a $10.8 million bond measure to fund a new public safety facility on Parker Road in May 2010, city officials credited the success of the latest bond measure to the efforts of the 16-member Community Police Facility Development Committee.

The group reviewed more than a dozen potential sites, alternative design and finance options and crafted an outreach and communication strategy for passing the bond measure. It presented its formal recommendations to the West Linn City Council in December 2010.

City staff said the $8.5 million bond will finance the cost of land acquisition and the building’s design, construction, as well as outfitting the new police department facility. During its Nov. 28 meeting, the West Linn City Council authorized the sale of $8.5 million in general obligation bonds with a 20-year term.

The current police station — located at 22825 Willamette Drive near the West Linn-Oregon City arch bridge — was built in 1936, is crowded but can’t expand past is current footprint, has little parking and isn’t seismically safe.

The Willamette neighborhood site required the city to acquire four parcels at the northeast corner of the intersection of Eighth Avenue and 13th Street, tucked on land between Les Schwab Tires and the Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue’s Station 59.

Measure 3-377 will cost taxpayers about $46 a year for a $285,000 home over 20 years, or about $3.80 a month.

City council approved a motion to appoint members to a newly formed Police Station Steering Committee at its Dec. 12 meeting, which will act as a go-between for the contractors and the city council during the design and construction process, making recommendations along the way.

The oversight committee will then form a larger design committee with up to 20 neighbors,Accept credit cards with a third party merchant account, stakeholders, police department employees and other community representatives. This group will provide input on what the building will look like inside and out, as well as the surrounding landscaping.

The employee-owned Blue Heron Paper Company abruptly went out of business in February, shutting down its plant with 175 workers in Oregon City and stopping use of a 39-acre parcel with a lagoon in West Linn.Our company focus on manufacturing Plastic mould , The company couldn’t pull back since filing for bankruptcy protection in Dec. 2009 and attempting to produce less newsprint and more of an environmentally friendly, commercial-grade towel material.

Company president Mike Siebers said that mills like Blue Heron were “where the actual recycling of the collected wastepaper you set out at the curb” took place.

Metro has expressed interest in the old mill site and Water Environmental Services (WES) wants to take over its West Linn property. However, the deadline for submitting bids on the parcels passed Dec. 14, and no official announcements or transactions were made.

If WES secures the property, the city of West Linn may develop and restore the property as parkland, which was formerly used as a wastewater treatment and discharge facility. The property sits along Volpp Street in the Willamette neighborhood.

In June, Walmart, the world’s largest corporation, announced it would open one if its “neighborhood markets” in the space formerly occupied by Bales Marketplace off Willamette Drive in West Linn, spurring controversy among city residents.

Walmart’s “market” stores typically measure about 42,000 square feet and feature groceries, a pharmacy, paper goods, health and beauty products and pet and household supplies — a similar range of products to what is available at most Fred Meyer stores.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,

West Linn’s store, which will likely open in 2013, will employ between 75 and 100 people, and hiring is tentatively scheduled to begin in summer 2012.

City of West Linn staff announced Sept. 19 that the building permits for the property at 19133 Willamette Drive had been approved and were available for the applicant — Walmart.

The city stated that it anticipates minor improvements will be made to the outside of the building as well, such as repainting and repairing cracked window trims. The square footage of the store will not increase. According to the Walmart website, the company does not have any of its neighborhood markets in Oregon yet, although it has permits filed for similar stories in Gresham and Beaverton. Another market is also planned for Lake Oswego off Jean Road. These stores will join Walmart’s 17 supercenters, 14 discount stores and a distribution center in Oregon.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles.

Supporters for an aquatic and recreation center in West Linn are still optimistic they can get the job done with a November 2012 vote for a $22 million capital bond.

Having tabled the push for the pool earlier this year to make room for the police station measure, aquatic center backers started gearing up again in December.

The proposed pool and recreation center would be built on 7.5 acres off Parker Road near Tanner Creek Park and would include a recreation pool, room to add a competition pool, indoor sport courts, an elevated running track, a fitness center with studios and amenities such as patio seating, a snack bar and recreation space for teens.

The hope is to work with a financial or operational partner.

The city parks and recreation department is seeking requests for information (RFI) to identify potential partners.

The city of Lake Oswego plans to double the amount of drinking water treated at a plant it owns in West Linn’s Robinwood neighborhood, expanding its capacity from 16 million gallons a day to 32 million gallons, with the potential to handle up to 38 million gallons.

Neighbors have been vehemently fighting all year against an expansion of the West Linn plant, but the expansion could provide vital emergency water to the city of West Linn while servicing Lake Oswego and Tigard, which have partnered up to install a larger pipeline from the river to the plant and increase the size and capacity of the plant.

This plant expansion is one element in a $200 million water supply partnership between Lake Oswego and Tigard.

The timeline for the project includes submitting the application for the plant at the beginning of 2012 and submitting the pipeline application in April. Design and permitting is scheduling to extend into 2013, with construction from 2013 to 2015 and completion set for 2016.

West Linn cut cable television ties with Oregon City and the Willamette Falls Media Center (WFMC) this year, making a move to the larger Metropolitan Area Communications Commission (MACC).

After the city questioned the media center’s financial responsibility, the center temporarily shut down in the spring for an investigation. No wrongdoings or mismanagement were found, but that didn’t satisfy some officials’ concerns.

Both cities jointly share the public access facility in Oregon City, where public, education and government (PEG) shows are created, edited and aired. WFMC is governed by the Clackamas Cable Advisory Board (CCAB), which is composed of three volunteers from West Linn and three volunteers from Oregon City.Buy oil paintings for sale online. Backers of the the media center are working to keep the center open and running as a nonprofit.

After Christmas, all well bred children write thank you notes

There is no such thing as the common cold. Each one is different and rather interesting. Right now I have a headache and a sore throat. I am hot and I am cold. I wonder how many days this will last. I have heard seven to 10 days is the usual run.

I hope you are faring better down there in Arizona as the New Year 2012 swiftly approaches. It was good talking with you on Christmas Day from Pittsburgh.They become pathological or Piles when swollen or inflamed. That was a wonderful day watching James, 11, and Carmen, 8, rip open their Christmas gifts.

I do believe their parents will be sitting them down to write thank you letters. I tell the grandkids that all well mannered children write thank you notes.

My flights out to Pittsburgh and back were a piece of cake. Everything on time. When I flew out of Grand Forks on Dec. 20, the pilot said we were cleared and No. 1 for takeoff. It kind of amused me because there wasn’t another plane on the runway.

And I tell you one thing, Shirley.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,Exclusive RUBBER SHEET flooring in 15 different colours and designs. If there’s anything you don’t want to watch, it is the loading of bags into the belly of the plane. They give them a heave ho and a toss. Yikes. Somehow, everything gets through and I presume mostly OK.

All in all, it is great flying out of our new airport terminal here in Grand Forks. And Delta Airlines personnel were courteous and sympathetic as they changed my return flight from Denver earlier in December because of a death in the family.

Snow has been scarce around here. So, instead of snow sculptures this week during Winter Fest at Turtle River Sate Park, they made clay sculptures Wednesday. Today’s schedule out there includes a winter scavenger hunt.

The Buena Vista Ski Area in Bemidji has been advertising great conditions. They make snow daily!

And here in Grand Forks, avid tennis players have been on the outdoor courts this week.Buy oil paintings for sale online. Christmas Day found UND tennis player Callie Ronkowski doing what she most loves — playing tennis. The temperature was almost 50 degrees. Callie and her dad, Keith Ronkowski, were able to spend the morning on the court at the entrance to Lincoln Park Golf Course.

That is where Callie, a Red River High School standout, got her start with lessons from Tim Wynne. She played on six state champion tennis teams and was state individual champion for two year with Tim Wynne as her coach. She now plays at UND for Tim’s brother, Tom Wynne.

Oh, and I should tell you, Shirley, that Callie wore a fur cap for her Christmas Day tennis match.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles.

The UND basketball team has its work cut out for it as they play Kansas on the last day of the year. The women hoopsters are spending the New Year weekend on the road, too. Tonight they play Idaho at tournament in Montana.

Love from your sister, Marilyn, with a red nose and bleary eyes on the west bank of the frozen Red River of the North.

2011年12月28日 星期三

Christmas crackdown on fireplaces yields 400 complaints

The Bay Area's air-quality police were out in force over Christmas weekend, cracking down on wood fires. And the smoke cops could be sending out belated stocking stuffers -- hefty fines -- to several dozen people caught using their fireplaces.

Regulators said more than 400 people tattled on their neighbors for lighting wood fires in their homes on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, a holiday tradition that was illegal this year because of poor air quality.

Authorities say they didn't issue any fines on the spot but are sorting through 77 cases of potential violations after working overtime, patrolling in Toyota Priuses and natural gas vehicles to spot chimney smoke and respond to complaints.

Those caught burning fires in their homes for the first time since the winter "Spare the Air" campaign began in 2008 will receive a warning, while repeat offenders will get $400 tickets.

But the Bay Area Air Quality Management District isn't worried about coming off like a grinch -- and doesn't plan on showing any leniency just because it's Christmas time.

"People don't get to take a break from breathing because it's a holiday," said Lisa Fasano,The EZ Breathe home Ventilation system is maintenance free, an air district spokeswoman. "And, unfortunately, this year people had very unhealthy air to breathe on Christmas Day."

Bay Area residents planning New Year's Eve house parties or hoping to watch the New Year's Day parades and football games by the fire,Overview description of rapid Tooling processes. take note: The air district said Tuesday it might also have to ban fireplace burns this weekend.

The air district prohibits fireplace use when air quality becomes too unhealthy, as it was over the weekend. The main culprit is the dry air that traps in pollutants, with this being the driest December since 1989, Fasano said.

Since the winter season began Nov. 1, the district has received 2,200 complaints about wood fires and banned fireplace burns on 10 days.

Frank Natale and his wife came back to their Concord home over the weekend after being away for a few months,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. still unable to use their furnace because the city hadn't finished inspecting their new gas pipes. With the house freezing and their electric heaters not cutting it, they lit the fireplace.

"I had three different strangers coming over ringing the doorbell a ton of times, and I open up the door, and they start yelling at me because I'm polluting the air," said Natale, a 60-year-old plastic injection mold maker.

"It was a full-on assault and attack, like I'm a bad, bad person for the environment," he added. "I'm just rolling my eyes going, 'Do they not understand that some people have a reason' " to use the fireplace.

An air district employee soon showed up and told Natale that if he gets a ticket in the mail to send it back with the city paperwork showing that his furnace was still inoperable -- a legitimate excuse for having to light a fire.

Then Natale slammed the door.

In the fireplace wars of 2011,MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,Buy oil paintings for sale online. the people doing the complaining are often concerned about the health of those with fragile lungs, especially the young and elderly.

Lucinda Dutcher, who had a heart attack on a Spare the Air day a couple of years ago, said she didn't report any fires over the weekend -- partly because she didn't want to walk around looking for violators with all the smoke in the air.

"We have to do something about this," said Dutcher, a semiretired paralegal in Oakland. "This whole sentimental fire-burning is hurting people."

Wings Over Atreia: Free 2 pain

For the second time in less than a month, NCsoft has shown wanton disregard for my already-prepared comments for the week, derailing the scheduled Wings Over Atreia with some out-of-the-blue announcement. And not just any announcement, but one that can have a profound effect on Aion in the coming months. What is this announcement, you say? Shall I help you out from that rock you've been slumbering under? Why, last Wednesday's bold free-to-play announcement, of course!

Now, before hyperventilation sets in -- either from glee or disgust -- note that there are set parameters to this specific conversion, including first and foremost that it is for the European market only. And while details aren't exactly pouring forth, there are a few tidbits to pass along, just enough to whet the appetite of future F2P Daevas or enrage current ones.

Breathe into the paper bag and join me past the break for a look at the details that have been revealed and some thoughts on those that have not!

Given such a major announcement but few details, I am sure readers have some questions. Never fear,Buy oil paintings for sale online. MJ is here! I shall guide you through what information is currently out there and offer some basic translation/personal commentary/wild speculation. Using my elite powers of information-gathering (no, I really don't have a captured developer locked down in my basement, but that's a good idea...), I bring you The Word.

So here's the scoop: Come February 2012,Our company focus on manufacturing Plastic mould , Aion will convert to a free-to-play subscription model in the European market.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. What does this mean for folks on that side of the pond? According to the PR machine, it means little will change except opening the market up to a wider audience. In fact, NCsoft expects that there will soon be plenty more Deavas flocking to Atreia for grouping and PvP goodness. Well,Accept credit cards with a third party merchant account, ignoring the likelihood of a launch-day fiasco, who can argue against more compatriots and more enemies filling out the server? Other than that, NCsoft's devs were quick to say that little would change for current players.

Surely there is more to it than that, you say. But of course, I reply! Though stop calling me Shirley.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, Of the details revealed, the outline of the payment models captured my interest most. There will be three distinct levels: Starters (the free group), Veteran, and Gold Pack. The free group is -- drum roll -- free! There will be no cost to sign up, install, or start playing. Starters will have access to every class, level, quest, region, and all equipment in the game. Sounds like a far cry from what many other free-to-play models offer, right? The Veteran group will be comprised of all those who have ever bought and subscribed to Aion in the past, whether the subscription is active or not. This group will enjoy privileges similar to the Gold Pack. The Gold Pack will be a temporary purchase that gives Daevas "full functionality" as well as bonuses like higher AP payouts and (see below) shorter instance cooldown timers.

Santorum: I'm more electable than Romney, Paul

Fresh from his sudden rise in the Iowa polls, Rick Santorum on Thursday had harsh words for the two Hawkeye State front-runners, contending that Rep. Ron Paul's foreign policy would "leave an enormous void around the world" and that Mitt Romney has "been all over the map" on too many issues.

Less than a week before Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses, a CNN/Time/ORC poll showed Santorum in third place with 16 percent, with Romney at 25 percent and Paul at 22 percent. The poll had Santorum gaining ground while Newt Gingrich, who had previously led in the state, saw his support collapse to 14 percent.

In an interview on CNN, Santorum attributed his new status to his dogged strategy of visiting all 99 Iowa counties to compensate for a lack of money and organizational support. "Hard work pays off," he said.

He said that Paul, who has the best organization in the state, has given many voters pause with his laissez-faire foreign policy views,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. which include withdrawing troops at U.S. bases abroad.

"My concern is that Ron Paul would walk in there,They become pathological or Piles when swollen or inflamed. day one, pull our troops back and leave an enormous void around the world," Santorum said. "He can do that day one without congressional approval. He can as commander-in-chief, move our troops anywhere in the world, disengage from every place from Europe to the Middle East, China,Exclusive RUBBER SHEET flooring in 15 different colours and designs. abandon the Straits of Hormuz, pull the Fifth Fleet back."

Meanwhile, the former Pennsylvania senator said, Romney has not been consistently conservative. He cited the ex-Massachusetts governor's views on overhauling health care and a "cap and trade" proposal aimed at reducing greenhouse gases blamed for global warming. "There's a whole laundry list of issues where Mitt's been all over the map," he said.

Although Romney is often described as the Republican most likely to win over Democratic and independent voters in a general election, Santorum said Romney has never won an election where he campaigned as a conservative and went after those voting blocs.

"I've run as a conservative in a blue state of Pennsylvania and won two elections," he said.Buy oil paintings for sale online. "Yes, I lost one in an election year where everybody lost [2006], but in the election years that were contested that are going to be more like 2012 than 2006, those are the elections I won in Pennsylvania, and we can win them again."

Santorum also took a swipe at Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Rep.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, Michele Bachmann, both of whom have played up their "outsider" status in being willing to take on the Washington establishment.

"What we've seen is experience is a valuable thing," he said. "We had the president, who came in with little experience ... If you look at the track record, I got a lot of things done when we were in the senate." He added that even though he disagrees with the policies of President Lyndon Johnson - a former Senate majority leader - he said Johnson was "a pretty effective president. He was able to understand the dynamics."

2011年12月27日 星期二

Ex-Church Hill mayor honored for contributions to fitness center

Former Church Hill Mayor Paul Morrison was instrumental in helping the city acquire affordable equipment for its municipal fitness center which opened in 2008.

Last week the Board of Mayor and Aldermen said thank you by presenting Morrison a plaque of appreciation and giving him free membership for life.

Aside from donating the rubber floor mats, Morrison brokered a deal with a commercial fitness center going out of business to acquire for the city professional workout equipment well below its market value.

“I really believe with all my heart that we would not have this fitness center today if were not for Paul Morrison,” said Mayor Dennis Deal at last Tuesday’s BMA meeting. “Paul called me and asked us to come down and look at the equipment. The board went and looked at it,MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, and the rest is history. It’s probably one of the best community recreation facilities I’ve seen in this city in many, many years.”

The plaque presented to Morrison last week reads, “In appreciation of Paul Morrison for his assistance in facilitating the acquisition of equipment for the Church Hill Fitness Center.”

A larger plaque with an identical message will be hung in the fitness center as well.

In January of 2008 the BMA agreed to purchase the exercise equipment for $26,000. At the time it was estimated that the equipment would cost as much as $200,000 to purchase new.

“Paul donated a lot of stuff over there and accepted no money for it,” Deal said. “People don’t know it,You can find best china Precision injection molds manufacturers from here! but from the (entrance) fence over to the wall is all rubber matting under that carpet that absorbs the weights when they drop them on the floor. He donated that to the city because he wanted this to work out as much as we did.Buy oil paintings for sale online.”

Morrison, who was surprised by Tuesday’s presentation,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. said the BMA also deserves credit for having the foresight to purchase the former IGA building for multiple purposes.

Church Hill’s municipal fitness center shares the old IGA building with the public library and the Senior Center. While the Senior Center faces Main Boulevard, and the library faces Highway 11-W,An Air purifier is a device which removes contaminants from the air. the fitness center is located at the side entrance.

Morrison also praised the staff at the fitness center, as well as the adjacent Senior Center. He said he plans on joining the Senior Center as soon as he’s old enough.

Eugenia Bone's 'Mycophilia' is fun and fascinating

The young woman sitting next to me on my flight to Portland, Ore., tapped me on the shoulder. "You've been marking up that book for a long time. What is it?"

" 'Mycophilia: Revelations from the Weird World of Mushrooms,' by Eugenia Bone," I said. "It's all about fungi. That might sound boring, but it's fascinating.Accept credit cards with a third party merchant account,"

"Would my mom like it? She's a gardener."

"Absolutely," I told her. "Everyone would like it."

Well, maybe not everyone,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. but Bone's book about mycophilia -- the love of mushrooms -- will delight many readers. Reading it muted the discomforts of my five-hour flight so thoroughly that I was actually shocked when the pilot said we were landing.

Bone is a New York food writer and author whose mushroom zeal began with her taste buds. She makes a charming and witty tour guide through the vast world of fungi, which make up 25 percent of the world's biomass and are more closely related to animals than plants. (This is why, she points out, it's so hard to rid ourselves of fungal infections -- the medications that attack the fungus also attack us).

Her attention was first snagged when a Colorado massage therapist offered to take her mushroom hunting. She was dazzled to find orange chanterelleBuy oil paintings for sale online.s and a porcini. A few weeks later, Bone's husband wanted her to tromp to the top of a mountain with friends and she, a reluctant hiker, agreed. After about five minutes, though, her newly honed mushroom eye brought the natural world to life for her.

"One minute we were walking through the forest, and then, as if by magic,VulcanMold is a plastic molds and Injection mold manufacturer in china. we witnessed the conversion of the forest floor," she writes. "Everywhere, boletus [porcini]: big spongy mature specimens and hard young ones that looked like beige softballs growing in tidy rows along the side of fallen timber."

Bone was now hooked on wild mushrooms, but didn't like the prices back in New York. So she joined the New York Mycological Society, solely because the group offered guided mushroom hunts. At her first meeting, she realized that this subculture had interests far more esoteric than hers.

"I pretended to be interested in all mushrooms, nodding with phony delight at the slides of inedible molds or polypores or whatever," she writes. "I was embarrassed to admit I was participating in a scientific club mainly in anticipation of spring, when the morels came up and the hunting would begin.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,"

But as she started foraging, and attending mycological conferences around the country -- including a magic-mushroom festival in Telluride, Colo. -- she found her interest swelling. The book is rich with scientific detail on the classifications, habits and properties of fungi, as well as facts that are downright staggering.

Who knew that a cubic meter of air holds up to 10,000 fungal spores, which we inhale every time we breathe? Who knew that dense mats of mycelium -- the white, stringy fungal matter under the ground -- are the primary vector for nutrients to most plants? Who knew that dessert truffles in the Middle East may have been the "manna from heaven" described in the Bible?

The Mysterious California Case of a Bank Robber Turned Explosives Hoarder

Last year authorities arrested George Jakubec, a 54-year-old Serbic émigré, for possessing the single largest hoard of homemade explosives ever found in the U.S.

Investigators searching his rental home in the sleepy southern California town of Escondido found a startling stash of pentaerythritol tentanitrate, or PETN, an explosive used by Al Qaeda terrorists.

Jakubec was recently sentenced to 30 years in prison for multiple armed bank robberies in a plea bargain in which the bomb-making charges were dropped. But he admitted in court to possessing explosives and the materials to make them and to committing two additional bank robberies. Investigators say they found no link between Jakubec and any known terrorist network.

Prosecutors may have determined that an intent to harm others would be too difficult to prove in court, and so they offered him a plea agreement.External Hemorrhoids are those that occur below the dentate line. Jakubec’s reason for possessing massive quantities of explosives remain a mystery.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles.

So explosive a substance, federal authorities implemented full body scans at airports to find PETN, a prime ingredient in U.S. military ordinance, which was used by the unsuccessful shoe bomber Richard Reid.

San Diego County sheriff’s deputies removed nine pounds of the chemical hexamethylene tiperoxide diamine (HMTD) from Jakubec’s home, which they described as a “bomb factory.” HMTD is extremely sensitive to heat, friction and shock. Less than a gram can cause serious injuries. Investigators also discovered large amounts of sulfuric acid, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, detonators, grenade casings, hand guns, molds of human faces, and wigs.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,Buy oil paintings for sale online.

Jakubec was arrested after a gardener named Mario Garcia suffered extensive injuries from an explosion while working in Jakubec’s yard. Investigators arriving at the scene found the home so cluttered with explosives and debris that bomb experts deemed it unsafe to enter. And they could not use robots because many of the rooms were impassible. Neighbors were evacuated, and then-Gov. Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency to contain the potential disaster. Crews erected a 16-foot-high, 75-foot-long fence around the property to prepare for a controlled burn of the entire home.

I interviewed Lt. Commander Mark Milton of the Navy’s Explosive Ordinance Disposal Unit to learn why investigators determined Jakubec’s home needed to be demolished. “If there was a lot of debris in the home and the chemicals had fallen onto the floor or leached into surrounding materials,” he told me, “it would be unsafe to walk across the floor to remove those materials. The house, carpet, floor boards, everything, would have to be removed and destroyed piece by piece.”

Milton said that burning provides a safe and effective way to destroy explosives: “The bomb squad will likely use an accelerant such as fuel oil or diesel that can spread over the area, ignite evenly, and incinerate the contaminated material quickly before it can explode.”

A hoarder’s worst nightmare—no more stuff! Jakubec’s estranged wife asked for permission to enter the home to retrieve personal items. Because Jakubec’s lawyer claimed the house held exculpatory evidence,Promat solid RUBBER MATS are the softest mats on the market! authorities were faced with an unprecedented problem. If they allowed anyone in to get clothing or sentimental items, they’d risk lives. If they burned down the house, they would destroy a houseful of evidence. Investigators retrieved computers and other evidence, but photos taken at the scene revealed a chaotic mess. Authorities destroyed the home in a controlled burn in early December of 2010 at a cost of $541,000. A hearing is scheduled this month to determine restitution.

2011年12月26日 星期一

Bachmann touts her conservative credentials

This is the first in a series profiling Republican candidates in the N.H. primary.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds,

In the final days before the New Hampshire primary, it is almost hard to remember back when Michele M. Bachmann was leading the pack.

This year’s race for the Republican presidential nomination has seen a jostled series of candidates on top. Bachmann, a congresswoman from Minnesota with strong ties to the tea party movement, peaked in the polls in late July. In August, she won the Ames Straw poll in Iowa, the first woman to do so.

But since then, her campaign has fumbled and lost ground, first to Rick Perry, who announced his bid the same day as her win in Ames, and then to other candidates who rose and subsequently fell in the polls. Bachmann, it seems, has been unable to regain her early momentum.

And in New Hampshire, her on-the-ground organizing has struggled. She’s had limited visits to the state and has yet to come to the Monadnock Region. In October, her paid staff here quit en masse, citing poor relations with the national campaign. The state Republican Party now has no staff contact in New Hampshire.

“They just didn’t make an effort — there really was no effort,” said William Hutwelker, chairman of the Cheshire County Republicans.

When you look at her platform, he said, there is nothing inherent that would have turned New Hampshire voters off, he said. It was a just matter of visibility.

“I don’t think she was here enough for people to get a sense of who she is.”

Messages for her campaign requesting an interview were not returned.

Who she is is a self-described constitutional conservative who got her start as a stay-at-home mom concerned with the state of public education. In her short legislative career,As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China, Bachmann has at times gone against the grain of Republican leaders and, since arriving in Washington, D.C., in 2006, championed the tea party’s calls for smaller government.

Bachmann was born in Waterloo, Iowa, in 1956 but her family moved to Minnesota when she was 13 years old. After graduating high school in 1974, she attended Winona State University and, in 1979, entered law school at Oral Roberts University, a Christian school in Tulsa.

Bachmann was a Democrat until college and worked for Jimmy Carter’s campaign in the 1976 election, but was disappointed by his presidency, including his support for abortion rights. By 1980, she had switched parties and worked for Ronald Reagan’s campaign. She and her husband, Marcus Bachmann, also joined protests outside abortion clinics and did sidewalk counseling for women considering abortions.

At Oral Roberts, Bachmann studied under John Eidsmoe and worked as a research assistant on his 1987 book “Christianity and the Constitution,” in which he writes, “our culture should be permeated with a distinctively Christian flavoring.”

In a speech this year, Bachmann called Eidsmoe “one of the professors who had a great influence on me.”

She earned her law degree and another in tax law and went to work as a lawyer for the Internal Revenue Service in St. Paul, which she left after four years to become a stay-at-home mom.

She and husband have five children. They also took in foster children after Bachmann stopped working — 23 foster children stayed with the family between 1992 and 2000. And while her children were home schooled, her foster children’s experiences in public school drew Bachmann into the political sphere.

In 1993, she helped start the New Heights Charter School where the family lived in Stillwater, Minn., a publicly funded school with a religious influence. When parents complained the school’s Christian teachings violated state law, Bachmann left the school, just six months after it started.

She went on to hold rallies against federal education guidelines she called at the time “left-leaning” and “short on academic excellence.” In 1999, she ran unsuccessfully for the school board in Stillwater.

But the following year, Bachmann, then 44, beat an 18-year incumbent for the Republican nomination for her district’s seat in the state Senate — the seat she won that November.

In her memoir titled “Core of Conviction,” published in November, Bachmann writes that the decision to enter the race was a sudden one, that she woke up the morning of the district’s Republican convention in April 2000 and decided she would “send a message to those entrenched insiders, reminding them … that we didn’t like what they were doing to us and our children.”

A profile of Bachmann in The New Yorker this summer, however, suggested the decision was more thought out than this and quoted her as saying she considered running the previous year.

Once in office, Bachmann focused on social issues, opposing abortion and gay marriage. She twice proposed a constitutional amendment that would bar the state from legally recognizing same-sex marriage; that failed to get on a referendum ballot.

She was appointed to a leadership position in 2004 but removed the next year, which she said was because You can find best china Precision injection molds manufacturers from here!of philosophical differences with Republican leaders.

Bachmann was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2006, the first Republican woman to represent the state in Congress. In Washington, Bachmann was a frequent guest on cable news shows with provocative opinions, often representing the position of the tea party, a conservative, anti-government movement that contends the federal government has outgrown its constitutional role.

Bachmann started the Congressional Tea Party Caucus in mid-2010 and worked to build the movement’s influence in Congress.

After the 2010 elections, she announced she’d seek the position of House Republican Conference Chair. But senior House Republican staff members told The New York Times that party leaders were concerned Bachmann would be unwilling to deliver the party’s message rather than her own, and she withdrew from that race days later.

Still, Bachmann’s favor among tea party voters remained. She delivered a response to President Barack Obama’s State of the Union speech this year for a tea party website, which was also broadcast live on CNN. Some saw this as competing with the official Republican party response, given this year by Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. In her response, Bachmann blasted the president’s failure to create jobs and lower the deficit. She called for spending cuts and a repeal of Obama’s health-care reform law.

Bachmann told The New York Times last year that she would continue to be an advocate for tea party causes, saying, “I’ve been willing to take on my own party, my own leadership, my own president before, so I would be willing to do that again, if I felt there’s a principled reason to do so.”

Bachmann announced her candidacy at an event in Waterloo in June.

Lawrence R. Jacobs, a political science professor at the University of Minnesota who has followed Bachmann since her days in the state Senate, says there and in Washington,An Air purifier is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Bachmann was willing to take on party leaders. He described her as a “conviction candidate” and “at odds with the establishment.”

“She’s someone who’s driven by a core set of values and beliefs,” Jacobs said. This compared to current front runners Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, who in their political careers have shifted positions, he said. Bachmann, Jacobs added, has been a stringent social and economic conservative throughout.

Her presidential bid thus far has focused on Iowa — for good reason, says Jacobs. Voters there know the congresswoman from their neighbors to the north better than Granite Staters. Republicans there may also connect more with her socially conservative views than here, where economic conservatism wins out, he said.

But if she wants to have any life beyond Iowa, he said, she has to play up her populist economic message.

And watch what she says.

Bachmann’s campaign has been derailed on a few occasions when she publicly misspoke: she’s suggested that the vaccine for the human papilloma virus causes mental retardation; that Obama emptied the country’s strategic oil reserves; that the “shot heard ’round the world” happened in New Hampshire, not Massachusetts.

“People tend to dismiss her as an airhead because of the misstatements — big mistake ...” Jacobs said. “She’s very strategic, and she’s toppled some formidable foes here in Minnesota and in Washington.An offshore merchant account is the ideal solution for high ,

“She fights with a smile.”

Two great years forecast for automotive tooling industry

Just in time for Christmas comes evidence that Windsor’s bellwether industrial sector – automotive tooling – is pointing to two exceptionally strong upcoming years.

Not only are the survivors of the machine, tool, die and mould making (MTDM) industries finishing 2011 in robust financial health, they promise to do even better in 2012 and 2013 – much better, in fact, observers and insiders say.

“The next two years should be rock solid, better than we’ve seen in a decade,” say Craig Wiggins, whose T & C Capital Inc. arranges financing for tooling programs on both sides of the Detroit River.

“2011 wasn’t bad – it was picking up. But I’ve been looking at the forecasts and 2012 is double that, 2013 is looking even better,” Wiggins said this week. Much of the work is already booked and the steel already ordered or “sitting on the floor” as inventory ready to be cut into new automotive tools and dies.

During six years of downsizing and bankruptcies, the region’s 200 MTDM employers were slashed in half or worse, putting thousands of people out of work and leaving dozens of empty plants scattered through local industrial parks.

In 2009, the number of jobs in the sector stood at about 8,500, down 6,000 from its peak. Up-to-date figures are not available.If you wish to use a third party payment gateway with your ecommerce solution,

Most of the surviving companies are now flush with work,MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, going seven days a week again, stockpiling steel and even turning down offers to bid on new vehicle programs.

This is good news for the region and the provincial economy. If there’s an infallible canary in Ontario’s economic coalmine it’s the huge MTDM sector, one of the largest in the world and once the largest employer in the Windsor region.

“If we’re not still first, we’re second to automotive parts and assembly,” Wiggins says.

When too many of those shops start to slow down, as they did in 2005, or start going out of business as they did in 2008, hearts freeze with fear around these parts.

Professor Tony Faria, a long-time automotive consultant and expert observer at the University of Windsor’s Odette School of Business, says he detected a distinct improvement of the mood in the MTDM sector this fall as he took classes on tours of a half dozen of the leading local shops.

“In most of our visits they were very busy and really upbeat about the new business coming in,” Faria said this week. “They all talked about hiring. I think things are perking up.”

Wiggins says the improvement is due to a confluence of factors, from a rush of new cars and trucks being brought to market by the automakers to renewed competition between fewer surviving plants.

“We have a nice effect going on right now – the dollar is a little bit better,Our company focus on manufacturing Plastic mould , there’s lots of work out there and the tight lead times don’t allow the manufacturers to go overseas to get their tooling,” Wiggins said from his Tecumseh office on Friday.

Billions of dollars worth of mould-making and other tooling work has gone to China in recent years. But there are timeline penalties for the companies that do so in an industry where short launches produce higher profits, because fresh product is a major competitive edge.

In some cases, delayed automotive programs have been given the green light too close to the launch dates for work which recently would have been outsourced to China. “Now they can’t afford to have it sitting on a boat for three weeks,” Wiggins said.

Nagging quality issues with some Chinese suppliers have also reduced the appetitite of the automakers and their Tier One suppliers for some of the outsourcing, he said.

The short lead times has also lead to a shortage of tooling steel, which is a specialty product, rather than a commodity readily available.

Wiggins said many tool shops have found waiting lists of up to six months for the kinds of steel they need, which is unusual, and some automakers have even been cutting cheques in advance for the steel to ensure their toolers have it, which is unheard of.

Faria said the slow pace of the recovery “has been a bit of blessing in disguise” for the industry. It prevented MTDM companies from over investing when the downturn ended, and they weren’t tempted to quickly hire people as soon as some work started re-appearing.

“This bodes really well” for the OEMs, Faria said – the Original Equipment Manufacturers, as the Detroit, Japanese and German automakers call themselves.

Thanks to a flood of new models being planned by a rebounding automotive industry, the order pipeline for the MTDM sector is now crowded for months in advance, Wiggins said.

General Motors, Ford, Fiat-Chrysler and Toyota all have full portfolios of new product booked years out that require new tooling, “Honda not so much.”

The shops are getting toward the end of the new dies and moulds they have been cutting for the 2013 model year. The last of those tools must be shipped to the manufacturers by mid summer of 2012 for production ramp-up.

“The 2014 stuff is what’s jamming up the floor right now, and the 2015 stuff is starting to materialize,” Wiggins said.

The record year for work in the MTDM sector was 1995, when all the automakers had plenty of new product in their pipelines and General Motors put the mother of all tooling programs out for bids: the GMT 800, otherwise known as the GM truck family of full-size body-on-frame pickups and SUVs. The value of the GM work totalled several billion dollars.

“A lot of new boats got bought that year, and a lot of new houses got built on (Riverside) Drive,” Wiggins said.

The entire GMT family – the Chevy Tahoe, Chevy Suburban, Chevy Silverado, Cadillac Escalade, GMC Yukon and GMC Sierra – is being either redesigned or re-engineered again for the model year 2014, which is causing part of the industry’s latest cyclical boom.

Tooling for each of those vehicles is dominating the work order sheets in local plants, along with last minute work on the 2013 Cadillac CTS crossover, the all-new 2014 Jeep Grand Wagoneer and a re-engineered 2014 Dodge RAM 1500.

Also being refreshed that year are the Chevy Cruze and the Impala and Corvette are being redesigned, but less of that work has been awarded in Windsor, Tecumseh and Lakeshore.

For 2014,As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China, Automotive News reports that Ford is redesigning the Edge and the Lincoln MKX, restyling the Fiesta (which requires less new tooling than a redesign), and “freshening” the Explorer and F-Series Superduty, although the last two could be pushed out to the 2015 model year.

There’s only one cloud on the horizon, Wiggins said: “Hopefully the banks will lend them the the money” to do the work, he says of the tooling sector. Toolmakers are normally paid for each billion-dollar tooling program after production starts and the new cars and trucks are rolling into showrooms, not before.

Two years ago much of the MTDM industry was facing bankruptcy along with GM and Chrysler. But persistent lobbying of the U.Buy oil paintings for sale online.S. and Canadian government convinced Ottawa and Washington to force the automakers to pay off their debts to the sector.

OmniGuide’s Flexible Lasers Make Surgeries Safer

Rather than use scissors as per traditional technique, he operated with a flexible laser scalpel that a small manufacturer called OmniGuide had started selling earlier that year. It enabled Michaelides to avoid touching the inner ear’s delicate bones, which could cause more damage and more hearing loss. “It’s very accurate because you can place the tip of the instrument exactly where you want, change angles, and deliver precise amounts of cutting energy and coagulation throughout the middle ear,” says Michaelides. “The bottom line is that it is very precise and safe.”

Operating with flexible lasers isn’t new—surgeons have been using versions powered by carbon dioxide since the 1980s. Compared with a metal scalpel, carbon dioxide laser cuts are shallower, which means patients experience less postoperative pain, heal more quickly, and scar less. OmniGuide’s laser is one of the first to use optical fiber to guide its beam; previous versions used hollow metal tubes. The fiber permits even more precision, says OmniGuide founder Yoel Fink, making tricky procedures in challenging areas of the body safer.

OmniGuide, which has $80 million in venture capital investment, is one of a handful of companies that make flexible optical lasers. While competitors such as LuxarCare market mostly to small medical offices and veterinarians, OmniGuide, a 130-employee Cambridge (Mass.) manufacturer,As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China, has been gaining traction at hospitals across the U.S. So far, surgeons in about 500 hospitals are using OmniGuide's devices to perform about 1,400 surgeries a month—mostly for surgeries above the neck.

Now the company, which Fink expects will generate $21 million to $22 million in 2011 revenue, up from $18 million in 2010, is expanding its factory and developing a new line of laser fibers for procedures to treat disorders such as fibroids and other gynecological disorders.

Dr. Sharyn Lewin, a gynecologist specializing in oncology at Columbia University Medical Center, has used OmniGuide’s system to treat growths from papilloma virus and sees potential advantages for other procedures, such as endometriosis. “It’s a little more flexible for getting into smaller crevices,” says Lewin, comparing it with a traditional carbon dioxide laser. “It’s more precise, and there’s less tissue trauma.Promat solid RUBBER MATS are the softest mats on the market! It’s easy to use and appears to be quite safe.”

Laser surgery isn’t without hazards. Accidents can happen if, for example, the laser beam touches a patient's sterile coverings or if oxygen and anesthetic gases build up while a surgeon is operating on the patient’s airway, says Michaelides. “But these instances are rare. It’s not a dangerous tool any more than a scalpel is, and surgeons are trained to use both to minimize risk.”

OmniGuide’s laser scalpel, which attaches to a small machine typically mounted on a rolling stand in an operating room, costs about $80,000, including two years of service.MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, The laser, controlled by the doctor holding the fiber, acts as a scalpel to cut tissue close to the fiber’s tip. The fibers, which are designed to be used during a surgery and then thrown away, cost $500 to $1,500, depending on the procedure. "We try to be as [clinically] specific as we can," says Fink. "It's important because we want to do value pricing ... obviously the amount a patient or insurance agency will pay to restore hearing is less than to remove cancer from your brain."

Worldwide sales for surgical lasers will be $1.3 billion this year, up from $96 million in 2000, according to a 2010 report on medical laser systems by market research firm Global Industry Analysts.

Fink’s invention was sparked by a 1996 challenge by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to scientists to design a highly reflective mirror. Then-graduate student Fink’s winning structure reflected objects from all angles, what he calls a “perfect mirror.” Fink’s mirror worked on differently shaped surfaces—flat, cubic, tubular. He reasoned that alternating rings of the chemical linings—an insulator and a semiconductor—would transmit the light through a hollow glass fiber. Because the laser beam could be controlled with the fiber’s tip, he envisioned, it would enable surgeons to reach difficult nooks and crannies more easily.

Fink, who holds a PhD in materials science from MIT, returned to academia this fall to run MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics, passing the reins at OmniGuide to Chief Executive Scott Flora,They become pathological or Piles when swollen or inflamed. formerly a division president at surgical products maker Covidien. Fink’s lab is looking for other applications for his fibers, using funding from the U.S. Army to research material that images surroundings and garments that capture information from the body such as blood flow, temperature, and calories burned. And he envisions clothing woven of fibers that recharge cell phones, as well as chameleon-like apparel that changes color when the wearer leaves work. “Material will become a high-tech object, or the object of high-tech,” says Fink.Buy oil paintings for sale online.

2011年12月25日 星期日

Lee Dunne's Christmas story: You can call me lucky

I was born on December 21 at 7.30am on a sofa-bed at 162 Mount Pleasant Buildings, which I called The Hill in my first novel, published in 1965.

Here is a line from the book: "The Hill was a scab, a sort of dry sore on the face of Dublin," and to this day I believe that it was just that, a custom-built slum -- of cold-water flats,Buy oil paintings for sale online. situated on Dublin's south side.

It was a concrete and iron-bars place, like a prison unit that, to my young mind, was barely fit for people to exist in, but deemed more than good enough by the powers that were in a position to dump the poor anywhere they liked, without one among us being able to do a thing about it.

Down the years, my mother often spoke of how bare was the cupboard, how empty her purse, as I landed in our kitchen, which was also the living room. We had one very small bedroom and a narrow loo designed to accommodate people that didn't get enough to eat. Our family -- my parents, my four brothers and my sister lived here, in and around and on top of each other -- there was always somebody up your nose and you up theirs -- until the absolute lack of money drove my eldest brothers and my sister away to England, this happening when I was about 10 years old.

Being financially poor was not a new situation for my mother, Katy Rogers, about whom I was just plain crazy. This was my position from the moment I became enough of a person to have likes and dislikes, and the like.An Air purifier is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Truth is, I thought she was my personal property and, by the time I was 12 I was calling her Katy.

"Don't you call me Katy," she used to say, half joking -- whole in earnest -- while I -- yes, I was very precocious, and already admitting to the fact that I was going to be famous and the like -- would reply "Yes Katy" and she would go "Where in God's name did I get you from?" to which I would rejoin, "Do you want me to tell you, Ma?", leaving the punchline to the lady of the manor: "Shut your mouth! You always knew too much for your age!"

The truth is she did talk to me like she didn't do with anybody else at home, and I regarded her as mine. From the time I was eight years old, I worked two small jobs with a good heart, because the few shillings I earned helped Katy get something for the table.

A lot of the time she looked weary, as did my poor father, Mick Dunne -- a truly decent skin, who was just one of many thousands that were unable to find any kind of job -- the country being on its uppers -- with little sign of relief happening any time soon.

This was the situation when Katy was delivering me, the midwife being a neighbour that I adored, Missus Doyle. This impoverished lady lived with a Woodbine stuck to her bottom lip and, was never less than a delightful presence, and a major source of encouragement to me from the time I began to share my dreams with all and sundry.

My fantasies were nothing very heavy, merely, that I was going to be a famous book writer, and even a film star, as well, because all the local girls claimed that I was better looking than Scotty Beckett, who had played the Young Al in The Jolson Story, and I had no problem at all in believing them.

And because I shared my Technicolor dreams like this, without even a blush, naturally, I was thought of as not being the full shilling. This reaction was par for the course when you consider that I was unloading my stuff on people that were, right up to the time I left Ireland as 1950 landed, living still in a country that was deflated in every possible way.

In time I came to consider the very strong possibility that Katy, my mother, surely helped me arrive like a serious pain in the posterior, since she herself was a hi-low merchant, who told me so often how she was up to ninety as Christmas was upon her, without her having managed to gather the makings for the very special Pudding she was famous for, due to the lack of the all important ingredient -- money.

No matter how often Katy retold the story of what happened on Christmas Eve, her face would light up, and her eyes would shine with a hint of pride, but, allow me share the revelation. . .

She was sitting on the sofa-bed, having given herself a bird-bath, while I, having sucked her dry, was sleeping like a baby.

As she was about to rise and take the basin of water out to the scullery, the key was being turned in the lock of the hall door.

Calling 'come in', Katy got back into the sofa-bed and as she told me so often: "It was as well I did, if I'd been standing, the legs could well have gone from under me from the shock."

A tiny troupe of women made it into the kitchen -- there was nobody home but my mother and yours truly, out for the count.

The quartet of females took turns to embrace and kiss and hug Katy -- all of them weeping in the joy of reunion after a good many years. Even as the party were hugging and kissing and weeping and half laughing, they were divesting themselves of the food, and the other gifts that they had brought to wet the head of the new baby, the lucky little sleeper who was the main reason for their unexpected visit.

The quartet of middle aged women that had been Katy's companions and friends during the years they had spent working side by side in Jacobs, the biscuit factory on the edge of The Liberties, chuckled and laughed and cried in the embrace of this reunion, my mother almost overwhelmed by emotion and gratitude.

One of the one-time workmates, having heard on the grapevine that my mother had given birth to a Christmas baby boy, contacted the other three -- a natural gathering followed -- and there they were, in the door of our flat, bearing gifts that were precious beyond the gold it took to purchase them.

My mother felt blessed beyond belief about the practical nature of the presents -- chickens and ham, and minerals, a Christmas pudding, and an envelope containing 15 pounds.

When they handed my mother the beautiful shawl they brought for me, it was too much altogether, causing Katy to weep copiously every time, down a lot of years at Christmas time, when she delivered another reprise of one of the finest moments of her life.

Of course, I have no memory of that first beginning, but the story was burned indelibly into my mind by the time I reached puberty, and I often thought of it during my travels and my travails, or I would draw it up to comfort me when I needed to remind myself that I was lucky, that I had always been, that somehow, even when things seemed really dire, something showed up as though it was just part of the day that was in it.

Not a miracle or anything, just a happening that was part of the present.

I believe that my overall good fortune in life was in some way due to my devotion to Katy Rogers, whose father died from alcoholic poisoning at the age of 42. As it happens, I am the living spit of my grandfather,Omega Plastics are leading plastic injection moulding and injection mould tooling specialists. Paddy Rogers, and I got myself lost for close on 20 years before I managed to put the plug in the jug and save my own life.

The story of how this happened is, to me, huge, but it is for another day. Suffice to say that when I quit drinking alcohol, it was already too late to save my marriage to a good woman, deserving of a better deal than she got with me.

We managed to part amicably, and I signed over the house we had lived in, with a heart and a half. This earned me the right to see my children, have them for holidays, call them and write to them,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. and be there when they needed to hear my voice, easing the cruel demands that the final separation caused for Jean and me.

To aid my recovery I came home to Dublin because I liked the feel of the AA meetings here more than I had done anywhere else. I wanted too to devote time to my mother's well being. This turned out to be another lucky break for me, and indeed for Ma, who never tired of me coming into the kitchen where we had first met face to face.

Katy was, almost inevitably, destined to end up with cancer of the throat, something she had lived in fear of with every cigarette she smoked down too many years. She was in, and out, of the Adelaide Hospital just across from Peter Street where she had spent the happiest days of her life working with her pals in Jacobs. Because I was fancy free, I was in a position to give Ma all the time she needed, along with visiting, and generally taking care of her, feeling privileged and indeed, once more with feeling, very lucky, to be spending all the time I did, down the last furlong of her life.

When her time was nigh, I kept up my two visits a day routine, not wanting her to sense any heavy change in how I viewed her condition. Three months earlier I had asked her specialist how long had Katy left. He told me frankly: "Lee, all I can guarantee you -- your mother will not be on this earth in three months' time.You can find best china Precision injection molds manufacturers from here!" He would be proved right, and I was blessed that I could be there when Ma's time arrived.

I walked in as I usually did, ready to offer a cheerful presence only to find Katy, eyes closed, apparently asleep.

As I moved a chair to sit by the bed, her eyes opened, and she took my hand even as I was about to sit down. I managed to accommodate both needs, and was about level with my dearest Katy, who told me in the instant: "I'm dying, Lee."

Normally, when I arrived, she might say she didn't feel all that well, and I would say something like, "your dodgy heart could kill you alright" with a view to avoiding the word cancer. It was a kind of game and usually we played pretty well, but, not this time.

Katy clasped my hand fiercely, surprising me by the strength of her grip, and she told me in a surprising matter-of-fact voice, "I'm dying Lee," and she sank back against her pillows with her eyes closing.

Being speechless is not a condition I've had a lot of connection with, but, on this occasion, I could not even make a joke to try and sidetrack this line of thinking. So I sat there, leaning forward as I held her hand, sniffing back tears that were burning my eyes.

Half a minute later, she opens her eyes again, a tiny change in her demeanour warming her eyes for a moment, and I am facing my mother, Katy, rather than filling the role of hospital visitor.

Without any preamble, she asks me, while she is actually laying down the law, "You won't go back on the drink!" It took me a few moments before I could reply and I was surprised that she could hold my eyes -- a minute earlier I had accepted that she was passed over.

I reply to her muted outburst: "Are you kidding me, Katy? I got a reprieve. Somebody was praying for me."

"It was me," she said, discomforted by the use of all her energy. "I blistered Heaven with prayers for you."

The effort caused her to sink back into the pillow and, once again, I thought she had actually passed on.

But she came back to me, and she took my hand again and she said, "Don't worry about me, I'll be in God's pocket."

And with those words, Ma lay back, and I felt her hand slip from mine. And I cried tears that had a life of their own, and I felt blessed that I had been granted this time with one of the great loves of my life.

And, lo and behold, just 40 minutes later, I was standing over her body in this little mortuary. The Sisters at the Adelaide had attended to her appearance -- she wore a cotton nightdress that I had picked up a few weeks earlier, and she looked like a 40-year- old woman with a head of snow-white hair.

Ohio museum celebrates work of late Toledo artist

His passion for painting burned so hot,Accept credit cards with a third party merchant account, it fueled two roundtrip walks from Ohio to New York City, three stints studying in Europe, and 62 years of intense creativity and teaching.

Karl Kappes, born to German immigrants in Zanesville six weeks after the first shots of the Civil War were fired, liked to quote a Chinese saying that no man is an artist until he’s painted 10,Our company focus on manufacturing Plastic mould ,000 pictures.

"I am an artist," he would then declare.

We’ll never know whether his grand claim was true, but he churned out oils, watercolors, and pencil drawings until he died in 1943 at 82 in his crammed, walk-up apartment/studio at 1822 Adams St. in Toledo. Still in the studio six years later, his widow said, "How can a person be lonely when she has more than 2,Omega Plastics are leading plastic injection moulding and injection mould tooling specialists.000 paintings to keep her company?"

Kappes’ productivity, along with an enduring appreciation for his talent, has earned him a berth among the region’s best artists. Fifty of his pieces are displayed in Karl Kappes: Ohio Painter, 1861-1943, through Jan. 28 at the beautiful Zanesville Museum of Art, 190 miles southeast of Toledo.

Museum director Susan Talbot-Stanaway said she decided to build the show because she draws on the museum’s collection as a starting point for exhibits, and it owns about 43 works by the artist. It is the 150th anniversary of Kappes’ birth. Moreover, dozens of people in the area share his name; three Kappes [pronounced KAP-pes] families emigrated to Zanesville from Germany in the 19th century, she said.

In August she put a notice online saying the museum was planning to feature him, and was amazed when 20 people responded. From nine collectors, she borrowed pieces representing different periods and styles.

"We ended up with a lot more paintings than we thought, so the show expanded to two landings, a hallway, and the gallery," said Talbot-Stanaway, who’s in her seventh year as director. The last time the Zanesville museum had a solo Kappes show was in 1945.

Tall, handsome, athletically built, and one of 12 children, Kappes was the valedictorian of his high school class. He studied in Cincinnati and then with the celebrated American artist William Merritt Chase, whose famous New York City atelier was a magnet for young artists. Chase had learned traditional painting at the Royal Academy in Munich, as had many other Americans. Kappes, 12 years younger than Chase, determined to do the same, and at 20, 22, and again at 28, with modest help from his parents, he sailed for Germany, throwing himself into intense study at the academy that had hundreds of pupils from the United States and Europe.

In letters to his parents, he described his spartan lifestyle, assuring them he was working hard and being frugal.

"At school I am drawing a half-nude figure of a man and when finished will get it photographed and send home a copy. The professor likes it very much and praises me every time he sees it," he wrote in March, 1884. "For the short time I have been in the nature class the students think I have made remarkable progress."

His Munich portraits were excellent examples of what he was taught: realistic images of women and men, with particularly fine renderings of eyes, foreheads, and noses. As the best portraitists do, he was able to impart something of the individual’s personality, a quality that engages the viewer.

Returning to Zanesville, he taught art. And at Weller Pottery, one of several companies in town that used its abundant clay soil to make decorative pottery, he created designs and taught staff artists. He wedded a beautiful milliner who brought children to the marriage, a fact he did not consider an asset.

By 1912, he moved to Toledo, but it’s unclear whether it was a full-time move and whether he divorced his wife. He spent summers in a country home in Texas, Ohio, along the Maumee River, where he created a lavish garden in the Henry County hamlet about 33 miles southwest of Toledo. An artists’ colony developed there, and on summer weekends, up to 100 people, mainly from Toledo, would drive out for lessons, painting in the fresh air, and Sunday potlucks.

"I had a little trouble at first, getting myself trusted in the town," he was quoted in a 1929 Toledo Times article.Buy oil paintings for sale online. "I wore a khaki suit and went about sketching which was enough to arouse the neighbors’ worst suspicions. They thought I was a prohibition agent doing painting as a blind."

The late Vardinique North, the widow of Earl North, one of Kappes most well-known students, spent summers at her grandparents’ home in Texas across the garden from Kappes’ studio. "In the summer,Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. it seemed there was a painter for every tree in Texas," she once told The Blade. She said her grandmother had her deliver apple pies to Kappes and Wilder Darling, another Toledo artist who had also studied painting in Europe and was invited out to paint with Kappes.

It's not hard to stay hydrated

In the past, it was believed that most people should drink eight eight-ounce glasses of water each day. Today, that recommendation is most often made by the bottled water industry. Studies suggest that women who appear well-hydrated take in about 2.7 quarts of water a day and men about 3.7 quarts of water. However, all sources of fluid can contribute to those total water needs; these sources include juice, soda, coffee, tea, milk,External Hemorrhoids are those that occur below the dentate line. soup, beer, wine and foods that contain water.

The water in foods accounts for about 20 percent of our total water intake. Many fruits and vegetables, such as watermelon and tomatoes, are 90 percent or more water by weight; apples are 84 percent and broccoli 91 percent.

Water, however, has the advantage over other drinks such as beer, wine, sodas, etc., because it is calorie-free, inexpensive, readily available and environment-friendly, especially when it is right out of the tap.

There is no clear evidence of any benefit from drinking increased amounts of water. Drinking lots of water does not improve kidney function or help kidneys eliminate toxins. It does not, as some claim, improve overall health, lower blood pressure, boost concentration in kids, prevent headaches, improve skin tone, or cause weight loss by suppressing appetite. It can, however, help with weight control if water is substituted for high-calorie beverages such as sodas, beer, wine and juices.

There are occasions and situations when our bodies do need more water. Exercise that produces sweat causes fluid loss,Buy oil paintings for sale online. dependent on the type and length of the exercise.Promat solid RUBBER MATS are the softest mats on the market! Longer bouts of intense exercise also will require fluids that contain sodium.Omega Plastics are leading plastic injection moulding and injection mould tooling specialists. Hot or humid weather can require extra fluid intake.Bathroom Floor tiles at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. Exercising or even visiting at altitudes above 8,200 feet can stimulate or increase urination and more rapid breathing, which can result in fluid loss. Illnesses with fever, vomiting, diarrhea, bladder infections or kidney stones also require increased fluid intake.

Older people do not need to drink more water. As we age, however, thirst becomes a less reliable indicator of need for fluid intake, and our bodies are less able to cope with heat and humidity. Therefore, seniors should drink fluids regularly, even before noticing thirst.

How much then should you drink? If you are healthy and not exercising or working hard, thirst is your best guide. Some experts recommend having a beverage with meals and drinking again when you are thirsty. In general, if you drink enough fluid so that you rarely feel thirsty and produce about 1 quarts or more of colorless or light yellow urine each day, you are probably taking in enough fluid. If you have health issues or sports-related concerns, you should check with your physician.

It is possible to take in too much water/fluid, and this can potentially cause problems, especially in those with kidney or other medical problems, or in endurance athletes.

And remember, just as with bottled water, don’t waste your money on “oxygenated water,” which claims to help your muscles, improve athletic performance and even “purify” your body. We have in the past and will continue to get oxygen into our blood by breathing — using our lungs, not our stomachs.

2011年12月22日 星期四

Cross-U.S. Cyclist Had Only One Flat

A seasoned triathlete, mountain-biker, marathoner, and long-distance swimmer, Emi Berger,We focus on solar panel products that function in the harshest environments, a vivacious 34-year-old veterinarian, said during a recent conversation at The Star that she didn’t think one could train for the 4,000-mile bicycle trip that she and Kevin Harrington had recently made across the United States.

“We’ve each been doing these endurance races for years . . . he’s done Ironman, I’ve done a half-Ironman and four marathons. . . . We had this idea of biking across the country to raise money for causes we supported about a year ago. Kevin wanted to raise money for the Wounded Warrior Project; I wanted to raise money for Mentor Connect, a nonprofit organization that helps people overcome eating disorders. But it wasn’t until this past summer that Kevin — he runs a plumbing and heating business in Southampton and had never taken a vacation like this in 30 years — said he was definitely going to do it. I said I’d do it, too, but I’d have to quit my job [as a veterinary hospital associate in Westchester County]. I was living in the city and my lease was up. It seemed like the ideal time.”

Her parents, Phyllis and Bernard,This page contains information about molds,You can find best china Precision injection molds manufacturers from here! a semiretired dermatologist and an avid triathlete himself, who live in East Hampton, were “very worried” when the news was vouchsafed,The EZ Breathe home Ventilation system is maintenance free, “but not surprised. I’m a type A person; I’m always worried about working and having a job and getting money. It was a big step for me to stop working, but I figured I’d never have this opportunity again. My mother was more worried about what might happen along the way, but I’ve always traveled a lot — I went to college in Chicago, to vet school in London. . . .”

“It was a bit like going into the unknown,” she acknowledged in reply to a question. “I didn’t want to injure myself. I’ve had two orthopedic surgeries, on my right knee and right hip, because of running. I didn’t want to get hurt again. That was one of the most important things, apart from finishing and raising money.”

“We began at Montauk — we dipped our back wheels in the Atlantic at Montauk Point on Sept. 23. Our goal was to dip our front wheels in the Pacific in San Diego. . . . The trip took 54 days — we rode for 53 of them, rain or shine, taking one day off, in Austin, Tex. The night before each day’s ride we’d plan our route — the Adventure Cycling organization puts out bike-specific maps for the U.S. We looked at those, and took those routes, for the most part, on country roads. We weren’t on the freeways. We angled down to what they call the southern tier [Jacksonville-San Diego] route through New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, and then Texas. There’s a saying in Texas, something like, ‘Happiness is seeing El Paso in the rearview mirror.’ It took us 14 days to get through Texas. The roads were horrible, really bumpy, but Austin was fun.”

“Then we went into New Mexico, Arizona, and California. We got to San Diego on Nov. 15. We were in Arizona on Veterans Day. We rode 111.1 miles that day.”

They had averaged 75 miles a day, said Berger, who “was sore in places I didn’t know I could be sore in.”
“We did a lot of long-distance rides in the last week and a half — we were so excited to get there.”
She’d not been to Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, Arizona, or New Mexico before, she said in answer to a question. “There were mountain passes in the Blue Ridge and Appalachian Mountains that were spectacular, but the most spectacular was the one we rode through between New Mexico and Arizona. When we started our descent, it was almost like riding down a canyon. It was beautiful; the rocks were very stark, reddish brown. It was all hairpin turns. . . .”

As for the weather, “We probably had rain every other day — there was a lot of rain the first 10 days. It was 96 degrees in Austin, but after that it was unseasonably cold — freezing. It was 38 when we woke up in New Mexico and Arizona. Then it would warm up to 50 or 60. But Jim Arnold, a friend of ours who drove with us in Kevin’s RV the whole way, was great. He had brought clothing and he bought us clothing. He can cook too! I’ve never eaten so much in my life! But you needed to.As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China, . . . I weighed 125 when I began, and when I finished, though I probably put on a few pounds of muscle in my legs.”

And the people? “For the most part, they were great. Most of them gave us a lot of room, but not everyone wished us well. Some told us to get off the road. I had a drink thrown at me — it was like they got points if they hit me, I guess. But you learn that the most important thing is not to react. I wanted to scream and defend myself, but if I did I might have fallen. It wasn’t worth it.”
She had “only one flat tire the whole way. Kevin had three. That was it, by and large. We slept in the RV, and we’d be up and out every morning at 7. People would see the ‘Wounded Warrior’ sign on the side of the RV and they’d approach us as we were riding along. A man and a woman pulled up and opened up their wallets as we were cycling. Kevin collected over $1,000 for Wounded Warrior just on the ride.” He collected $50,000 in all. She raised $11,000 for Mentor Connect.

“Veterans would come up and would give us $20. One gave us everything he had, which was $3. It was very nice to see that. It restores your faith in humanity.”

While the Wounded Warrior Project was now well known, Mentor Connect’s work was not, said Berger, who, through her ride, was trying to familiarize people with the fact that “up to 4 percent of Americans — mostly women — have an eating disorder of some kind. It’s the number-one psychiatric illness, yet most health insurance companies don’t cover it, which is where Mentor Connect comes in.”

“There’s a stigma attached as to how women should look,” she continued. “We’ve all gone through a period of time when we were concerned about how we looked. Eating disorders are very prevalent among teens. People can manipulate food just as they use alcohol or drugs. I want people to be healthy. You say you remember when Wounded Warrior was just starting out, when Chris Carney made that ride across the country. Raising awareness is everything.”

Don't Break Your Nails. Hire a Chef

Before the first cock crowed, she would be up and light the fire, throw on a black pot of tea and get down to peeling about three bunches of matooke.

Then if she thought she needed a hand, she would wake up one daughter to fetch the water,The EZ Breathe home Ventilation system is maintenance free, one son to split the wood, one grandchild to sweep the compound and another son to pick out the fattened rooster from the coop and slaughter it. By 5am,As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China, the saucepan of matooke was cooking on the fire and she was now dicing the meat as she struggled to see her work table with the aid of the paraffin lamp - tadooba.Dimensional Mailing magic cube for Promotional Advertising,

This was my grandmother putting together a Christmas meal for her children and grandchildren who had travelled from the big city to Maguluka village in Kalungu East, Masaka district. By the time she was done at 2pm, she had missed church and smelled like she had walked out of a burning game park. We had talked about how much we were going to eat, which part of the chicken was to be picked out, that when the food was finally put in front of us we could only eat as much as our stomachs could carry.

Most of the time, half of the food went to waste because grandma always cooked too much. Today she is too old to care. If the visitors do not come with someone to do the cooking, then the little cousins will throw together a regular meal. From where I am sitting people do more cooking, baking, gift giving, binge drinking and merrymaking than celebrating the life of the man who came to save them, Jesus Christ.

I am not saying that don't pull all the stops, but the idea of waking up at the crack of dawn to cook a single meal is just too much to bear. Shopping, baking, chopping, dicing, spicing, seasoning, grating, pounding, making the fire, fanning it - will somebody please get that baby out of the saucepan?

Festive cooking is just too much a burden; better to hire a chef. With a chef,Buy oil paintings for sale online. you sit down and share ideas on the menu. You present your ideas and the chef presents professional advice. While sometimes your cooking may taste the same, the chef knows how to cook different dishes of chicken, three servings of meat. Going with the chef to the market helps you pick out the best spices for every dish.

And these chefs know prices of every corner of the market. On D-day, all you do is pick up the chef, hand her the knives, saucepans and sigiri and she gets busy as you hit the showers. Then you and your whole family can dress up and go to church and actually sink into that sermon.This page contains information about molds,

When you are doing the cooking, you promise to go for the 8am service but by 8am the meat is not even diced. So, you push it to 10am but by then you are only peeling the Irish potatoes. At 11am you excuse yourself and run to church before the service ends at 12:30pm.

While there, all you can think about is that the pilao is possibly burning. You are tempted to call and ask if the turkey is tender, but instead force yourself to listen to the preacher talk about baby Jesus in a manger. But with a chef, your soul can follow the three wise men and picture the peace and sweetness of that holy night.

No hustle, no broken finger nails and no spices stinking in your weave-on. Some chefs are so good they even wait for you to finish eating and they do the dishes. All you need is your wallet.

A friend of mine has hired a chef to cook at her house for Shs 50,000. But watch out for the chefs who come with big bags. They will make off with a kilo of meat, two kilos of rice, half a kilo of sugar, plates, spoons and saucepans. Now go out and find that chef.

Army Piles on Evidence in Final Arguments in WikiLeaks Hearing

The government finished making its case against accused WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning Thursday morning with a 60-minute closing statement that piled on new details and exhibits, including snippets of 15 pages of chats allegedly between the Army intelligence analyst and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.The EZ Breathe home Ventilation system is maintenance free,

The prosecution flashed three chat logs onscreen that purportedly show correspondence between Manning and Assange discussing uploading so-called JTF-GITMO documents — classified assessment reports about Guantanamo Bay detainees. The chats also refer to two U.S. State Department cables about Reykjavik, Iceland, as well as a request from Manning to help him crack a password so that he could log onto his work SIPRnet computer anonymously.

Manning’s attorney David E. Coombs opened the morning stating that the Army was overcharging his disturbed but idealistic client and exaggerating the impact of the leaks in order to strong-arm Manning.As a professional manufacturer of China ceramic tile in China,

Coombs said the government wants to force his client into making a plea deal and turning evidence against Assange, whom the Justice Department is investigating in a criminal case stemming from the leaks allegedly provided by Manning.This page contains information about molds, Coombs asked the court’s Investigating Officer to drop the charge accusing Manning of aiding the enemy and to consolidate some of the charges, saying that many were redundant and that Manning shouldn’t be facing 100 to 150 years in prison.

“Thirty years is more than sufficient punishment,” Coombs said, expressing outrage that the military also included a count of “aiding the enemy,” which carries a possible death sentence — though the military has said it is not seeking the death penalty.

“The government’s overreaction to the leaks and its claims that the sky is falling strips them of credibility in this case,” Coombs said. “The sky has not fallen and the sky will not fall.”

But government attorney Capt. Ashden Fein said all of the charges were appropriate and said the evidence clearly showed that Manning abused his security clearance and intelligence training to leak damaging information “using WikiLeaks’ ‘Most Wanted’ list as his guiding light.” Prior to Manning’s leaks to the organization, WikiLeaks had published a wishlist of documents and data it hoped leakers would send it.

“[Manning] continued to harvest this information knowing it would be used by our enemies,” Fein said.

The Article 32 hearing will determine which, if any, of the 22 charges of violating military law can be brought against the 24-year-old Manning in a court-martial. Manning is accused of searching out and uploading hundreds of thousands of sensitive government documents that were published by WikiLeaks in 2010 and 2011 — including a controversial video of an Apache helicopter attack that killed two Reuters employees, hundreds of thousands of State Department cables, and action reports from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Fein said that the State Department server logs showed Manning’s classified work computer accessed the State Department server 794,000 times in order to steal more than 250,Dimensional Mailing magic cube for Promotional Advertising,000 cables that WikiLeaks subsequently published. Manning allegedly spent “all of his working hours over 10 days” to download all of the documents. The government, Fein added, had minute-to-minute records of Manning’s searches of the Pentagon’s classified intranet SIPRNet, and had direct evidence he uploaded documents to WikiLeaks.

In another chat, dated March 8, 2010, Manning asked “Nathaniel Frank,” believed to be Assange, about help in cracking the main password on his classified SIPRnet computer so that he could log on to it anonymously. He asked “Frank” if he had experience cracking IM NT hashes (presumably it’s a mistype and he meant NTLM for the Microsoft NT LAN Manager). “Frank” replied yes, that they had “rainbow tables” for doing that. Manning then sent him what looked like a hash.Buy oil paintings for sale online.

The WikiLeaks twitter feed noted the new allegation on Thursday, without confirming or denying the password-cracking charge.