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  • Ten things learned at the 25th Cubs Convention

    The 25th annual Cubs Convention winds down Sunday at the Chicago Hilton & Towers after a wild weekend of ranting, raving and Ricketts-watching.

    Here are 10 things we discovered at the kickoff event of the 2010 season:

    Clubhouse changes in store

    The Wrigley Field clubhouses are tiny compared to most teams because the layout of Wrigley Field makes it difficult to renovate. Owner Laura Ricketts said the “state of the clubhouse was shocking to me.”

    Some changes will be made immediately. Todd Ricketts announced the team would renovate the clubhouse kitchen and bring in a nutritionist to “help plan some meals for the players so they’re getting the right nutrition that they need.”

    As reported recently, the team’s weight room will become a player lounge, the old umpires’ room will become the new weight room, and the new umpires’ room will be on the visitors’ side. “Right now it’s a bit of a shell game,” Todd said. “But we’re trying to make things better, and I think over the long haul we’ll see some real improvements.”

    Ghosts of DeRosa/Bradley remain

    Jim Hendry has apologized so many times now for trading Mark DeRosa and signing Milton Bradley he’s threatening to have his name placed in the Guinness Book of World records for most mea culpas in one lifetime.

    “I certainly was the one that did the majority of the work and the background and the offensive numbers before we signed Milton,” he said. “Obviously it was a shoot for the moon (decision)…Obviously it didn’t work out. It was totally my responsibility. It was a mistake in hindsight. I think we’ve rectified the mistake.”

    At one point, WGN radio host Bob Sirott implored fans to stop harping on the failed Bradley experiment. “Milton Bradley is gone,” he said. “Let it go.”

    As for why the Cubs didn’t re-sign DeRosa as a free agent, Hendry said they felt his days as a second baseman were over, pointing out that his new team, San Francisco, is using him in left field.

    Cubs are all ears

    The addition of a “Chief Hospitality Officer” by the Ricketts was an indication the organization will listen most intently to fan complaints and advice. Perhaps the most promising quote was delivered by team president Crane Kenney, who told fans: “We take our cues from you all.”

    If that’s really the case, then Cubs fans should have a big say in the future of Wrigley Field. Kenney polled fans on a few issues Saturday, and by a raising of hands, a vast majority sided with continuing the tradition of flying the “L” flag after losses and adding Friday night home games. The idea of adding a Jumbotron while keeping the hand-operated centerfield scoreboard intact was basically split down the middle.

    Perhaps the team could have a non-binding referendum on hot-button issues like “L” flags, Friday night games and Jumbotrons, passing out ballots before games- like All-Star ballots- for a specified period of time. At least we’d have an idea of where Cubs fans stand on the future of Wrigley Field.

    Squirrels bite

    Carl Rice, the team’s senior director of facility management and information technology, explained why fans with iPhones couldn’t get a signal last summer at Wrigley Field.

    “Believe it or not, the answer is squirrels,” said Rice, who explained that three squirrels ate through the wires providing AT&T wireless access. The issue has since been addressed, Rice said. No word if any of the squirrels was the same one that invaded the Cubs dugout last September 11, when manager Lou Piniella ordered Ryan Dempster to “do his job” and chase it out. Dempster chased the squirrel with a towel, and it went into the Reds dugout. Piniella said that day that “thing have been squirrelly a few times” in the 2009 season. Little did he know.

    Ernie Banks to be landmarked

    Mr. Cub will officially be made a “living landmark” by Landmarks Illinois at a ceremony on March 6th at the Palmer House Hilton, along with Harold Ramis and Lee Flaherty. The honor doesn’t mean Banks will have to seek permission from the city to change his hairstyle or to sell naming rights.

    Zambrano has a future in TV

    Carlos Zambrano probably won’t need the money after he retires, but he had the personality to become a color analyst on Cubs broadcasts, assuming Bob Brenly will be tired of the job by then. Zambrano spent the offseason in Chicago, and said he will finish his career here. Several reports out of New York last month said the Yankees spoke to the Cubs about Zambrano, who has a no-trade clause he will not waive.

    “I’m not from New York,” he said. “I’m from Chicago.”  Actually, he’s from Puerto Cabello, Venezuela. Zambrano has said in the past the only two teams he’d play for besides the Cubs were the White Sox or Boston.

    “I don’t care about rumors,” he said. “I love Chicago and I will stay here.”

    Piniella takes the fifth

    Piniella said Marlon Byrd would “hopefully” bat fifth, after saying a couple minutes earlier that Alfonso Soriano “hopefully” would bat fifth.” According to sources, Piniella has been known to change his mind on occasion. Bet seldom does he change it in the span of two minutes.

    Where does Byrd prefer to bat?

    “In the lineup,” he said. “I’ve hit one all the way through nine. I don’t think I’ll ever hit nine unless I’m struggling and Big Z’s pitching.”

    Marmol really is the closer

    Carlos Marmol said he doesn’t feel any more pressure heading into the season knowing he’s the closer. Marmol thought he was going to be the closer last year at this time, but lost out to Kevin Gregg in spring. That didn’t work, and Marmol assumed the job in August, going 13-for-13 in save opportunities with the Cubs out of contention.

    The Cubs flirted with signing former Pirates closer Matt Capps, but have added no one with closing experience. To be successful, Marmol must cut down on his wild streaks, having issued 65 walks while hitting 12 batters in 74 innings last year. “I’ve got a lot of possibilities,” Marmol said. “If I put pressure on myself, I’m going to be messed up. Just calm down, and whatever happens happens.”

    Piniella said Marmol will be his man no matter what happens this spring. “”There won’t be any closer controversy, no closer decisions,” he said.

    Mini-Geo looks positively svelte

    Piniella told fans Geovany Soto was so small after losing 40 pounds that he looked like a “jockey.” He meant it as a compliment. Will Mini-Geo revert to form and put up the kind of numbers (23 homers, 86 RBI) that made him an integral part of the lineup in 2008?  Only Mini-Mr. Bigglesworth knows for sure.

    Piniella has management backing

    While more Cubs fans groused about Piniella than at past Cubs Conventions, Kenney said the Cubs are satisfied with the job he’s done. Kenney also pointed out they have the second best record among National League teams (behind Philly) in the three years since Piniella was hired.

    “We think we have the best manager in baseball,” he said, adding: “We like it when he gets a little hot.”

    Chances are good Piniella will return to the Cubs dugout in 2011 if he wants, though Piniella says he won’t decide until after the season.

    By Paul Sullivan

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Art Shanties at Medicine Lake

    Minnesota, US | Watery Wonders

    Every time winter rolls around in Minnesota, hundreds of thousands of people are left with only two options: hibernate for the season, or get on with living. The Art Shanty Project was borne out of the latter mentality as a new take on the local sport of ice fishing, in which dedicated outdoorsmen and women trudge out into the cold, go sit on frozen lake in a little shack, drink beer, and stare at a hole in the ice… for hours.

    The shanties built by individuals and teams of artists maintain the requisite hole in the ice and positioning on a frozen lake, but that’s where the normalcy comes to an end. Located just a short drive west of the Twin Cities, the Art Shanties at Medicine Lake have playfully skewered ice fishing for over seven years every year from late January to early February.

    A rotating cadre of artists and their creations unite friends and families in outdoor whimsy during winter’s doldrums, with reappearing favorites like The Snapshot Shanty (a photobooth installation made of bubble wrap) and the ArtPost Shanty (the world’s only post office on ice) appear year after year. Daily BIcicle Races [sic] held at noon each day on, yes, an ice track encircling the shanties.

    In yet another grand challenge to the weather, an outdoor barbecue can often be found providing sustenance to visitors in the form of traditional summer fare.

    Notes for visitors: You never know what you’ll encounter in the Art Shanties, so come prepared. Wear shoes and clothing appropriate for walking across a frozen (therefore icy), windswept environment for hours at a time, but don’t forget a bathing suit should the Sauna Shanty make another appearance!

  • Hole in the ground

    Oregon, US | Geological Oddities

    The exact origin of the mile-wide crater in the Fort Rock Basin of Lake County, central Oregon is a mystery. Thought to be of volcanic origin, rather than the result of an ancient meteor impact, it is somewhere between 13,000 and 100,000 years old.

    The ancient blast left a raised rim that reaches heights of 110-210 feet above the ground level, and an interior basin nearly 500 feet below it.

    It is thought that the crater is a maar, a depression that occurs after water reacts explosively with volcanic magma, often forming crater lakes seen elsewhere, particularly in Alaska. In this case, the ancient lake bed dried up, leaving only the hole.

    The area around Fort Rock Basin has a legacy of volcanic activity, leaving caches of obsidian and cinder cones along with old lave flows and caves.

    The desolate landscape is so alien that astronauts were brought to the crater for training in the 1960s.

    The Hole in the Ground is near another larger and more eroded maar crater known as the Big Hole.

  • The Silent Movie Theater

    Los Angeles, California | Commercial Curiosities

    One of the most beloved theaters in the country, the Silent Movie Theater is also the last of its kind. It was opened in 1942 by John and Dorothy Hampton, an Oklahoma couple, at a time when silent films had all but ceased to exist. During the next few decades, John Hampton was responsible for the restoration of countless silent films, protecting these treasures of cinema history.

    Sadly, the Hamptons closed the theater in the 1970s, but it was reopened by a family friend, Laurence Austin, in 1991. However, in an odd turn seemingly pulled straight from a movie, Austin’s tenure with the theater came to a dramatic end soon after. In 1997 Austin was gunned down in the theater lobby by a hitman hired by Austin’s business partner in a bid for his inheritance.

    The theater was once again rescued two years later, and opened to a screening of Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times, Hollywood’s last silent feature film.

    Located in the heart of Hollywood, the theater currently holds screenings every week. It continues the tradition of silent films, with live organ accompaniment, on the first Wednesday and one floating Sunday afternoon of every month. In addition, the theater has been fully restored to its original, vintage 1940s art deco design; and also updated for the modern age with a larger screen, state-of-the-art sound, and nicer seating (including some very comfy sofas).

    The theater now hosts numerous premieres, indie films, special events and private parties, making it one of the most historically significant and culturally vibrant theaters in the country.

  • Campo Grande/MS: Cidade do Natal 2009

    Bom, o Natal já passou e a Cidade já foi desmontada, mas resolvi fazer esse thread, com fotos garimpadas, da Cidade do Natal 2009, montada no estacionamento do Parque das Nações Indígenas, aqui em Campo Grande.

    Ela não ficou lá muito grande, mas achei ela bem bonitinha, e resolvi mostrar a vcs.

    Vamos as fotos:

    Chegando nela pela Av Afonso Pena

    Gerson Luiz Martins – Flickr


    Gerson Luiz Martins – Flickr

    A árvore vista de perto

    Eduardo Duccigne – Flickr

    A casa do Papai Noel

    Gerson Luiz Martins – Flickr

    Casinhas comerciais e praça de alimentação

    Gerson Luiz Martins – Flickr

    Dia da inauguração

    Prefeitura Municipal de Campo Grande

    Vídeo do show de luzes da Árvore de Natal:

    É só isso, espero que tenham gostado :okay:

  • FiOS Mobile app comes to Android

    FiOS Mobile app for Driod

    Every decent DVR today supports remote scheduling via the web — well except Windows 7 Media Center — and Verizon’s FiOS TV DVR is no different. But of course web apps don’t compare to real apps like this new one for Android users. The new FiOS Mobile app features a guide for remote scheduling as well as VOD browsing so you can mark what you want to watch later, as well as parental controls and a free space indicator — something TiVo doesn’t even offer on the DVR itself. Of course there’s no way to actually watch content from your DVR, and we’re not surprised. Now before you get too jealous of Android users with Verizon’s FiOS TV DVR, we’d like to remind you that the FiOS DVR has a measly 160GB hard drive and no external disk support, and as you can see from the screen shot, FiOS users don’t have any free space left for new recordings anyways.

    FiOS Mobile app comes to Android originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 Jan 2010 12:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • "Legend of Booty" trademarked by Age of Booty developer

    Age of Booty developer Certain Affinity seems to have a certain affinity for booty, so much that the situation calls for yet more booty. Legendary booty no less. According to the latest trademark spotting, the developer has

  • XCM PS3 Motion Control Light Gun Addresses Console’s Wii Complex [Accessories]

    We’ve featured a few XCM branded gaming accessories here before, but this is the first one in a while that’s not a PS3-to-Xbox 360 adapter or arcade stick. This here is a PS3 light gun, with motion controls.

    The video is a demo from XCM using hardware that’s only about 70% complete. Unfortunately that 70% doesn’t include pricing or a release date. Even so, you get a good idea of what this accessory is capable of in the two videos (one here, the other in the source link). [Maxconsole]







  • Lima de Antaño – Lima Ahora

    La idea de este thread es colgar las fotos de diversas zonas de Lima, sea el cambio para bien o para mal. y comentar sobre eso.

    Mirar la ciudad de Lima es dar una mirada al pasado pensando en el futuro. Los lugares que conocieron nuestros abuelos son los mismos que nosotros vemos a diario.

    Sin embargo, Lima se ha convertido en un crisol cultural. Lima hoy sí representa al Perú pues, si bien no estamos integrados, están todas las sangres juntas.

    Campo de Marte

    Parque Reducto

    Calle de las Pizzas

    Calle Diagonal

    Av Pardo

    Puente Ricardo Palma

    Av Paseo La República

    Cruce en San isidro

    Camino Real

    Palacio de Gobierno

    Palacio de Gobierno – Plaza de Armas

    Barrio Chino

    Mercado Central

    Mercadillo de Surquillo

    Jirón de la Unión

    Playa la Herradura

    http://blogs.elcomercio.pe/mirate/20…de-antano.html

  • 5 Myths That Can Kill a Startup

    Enroll in an academic program, make friends with some of the other really smart students, drop out of school with them to create a company, work 80 hours a week and one day, ka-ching! This is the startup formula to success that the media would have us believe — the new American dream, as it were. Granted there are some notable entrepreneurial dropouts who have made it big, among them Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs and more recently, Mark Zuckerberg. But while many of us are familiar with the paths they’ve taken, such paths are simply not the ones most entrepreneurs walk down to ultimately find success.

    We work with entrepreneurs everyday and as such, see the much less newsworthy but far more common success stories that dot the startup landscape. To that end, we wanted to share five myths that we’ve discovered lurking around the startup world and demystify them.

    Myth #1: Hire Smart People and Let Them Do Their Magic

    Truth: Hire Stars and Let Them Do Their Magic

    Intelligence is important, but only insofar as it helps with performance and execution. As Malcolm Gladwell points out in “Outliers,” while some minimum level of intelligence might be necessary for superior performance, in many jobs it’s not in and of itself enough to ensure it. You need people willing and able to work as part of a team, and sometimes superior individual contributors can negatively affect team performance by creating affective or role-based conflict (for more on those, see Myth #3 below). As Reed Hastings puts it, you should eliminate all brilliant jerks from your team.

    The fact that intelligence alone is not sufficient is especially true for leaders. Emotional and social intelligence, sometimes referred to collectively as EQ, are much more highly correlated to successful leadership and change than IQ. Consider reading Richard Boyatzis’ books “Primal Leadership” and “Resonant Leadership” to understand how critically important being “mindful” or socially and emotionally intelligent are. Interestingly, Thomas Stanley, a PhD who studies rich people, has identified the most highly correlated characteristic to wealth as integrity.

    Myth #2: It’s About Your Great Idea

    Truth: It’s About Your Customer

    Many aspiring entrepreneurs are waiting to come up with the killer idea that will rocket them into fame and fortune. The reality is that ideas are a dime a dozen and even the best ones must be launched at the right time. Too early and there is no demand for your product, too late and you’ve missed the market. It’s much easier to fulfill an existing need with your product than it is to convince people they need it in the first place.

    In other words, it’s about your customer. Start by A/B testing your products to get real user feedback on different features and designs. Adaptive experimentation, defined by the American Marketing Association as “continuous experimentation to establish empirically the market response functions,” has been shown (PDF) to be critical when it comes to successfully creating viral growth.

    Myth #3: Conflict Is Bad

    Truth: Affective Conflict Is Bad; Cognitive Conflict Is Good

    Research shows us that some conflict is good and some conflict is bad. Cognitive, or good conflict, helps companies eliminate groupthink and open up strategic possibilities. That’s because cognitive conflict is characterized by healthy debates about “what” to do and “why” to do it; it thus generates multiple strategic choices and allows us to weigh options. It also helps us think more clearly and broadly about our competition. And from a biological standpoint, it stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system, creating a positive emotional state which in turn supercharges our brains. Indeed, cognitive conflict has been shown to increase firm performance and shareholder wealth.

    Bad conflict is sometimes termed “affective conflict” and is usually role-based, as it consists of heated arguments about “how” to do something or “who” should be in control of doing it. Unlike good conflict, it’s been found to destroy morale and decrease firm performance. Not only does it stimulate your sympathetic nervous system, kicking off the “fight or flight” syndrome, the chemicals released by your body in the process limit your thought processes, so focus is put on the conflict rather than the opportunity.

    Myth #4: It’s About Hard Work; Don’t Expect to Have a Life

    Truth: It’s About Results and You Need a Life

    Some companies have an unfortunate culture that mandates relentlessly hard work. When things get tough, people work harder. When things are good, people work harder still to try to keep the “good times rolling.” But this cycle of doom will ultimately fail as people burn out, get sick or simply quit.

    As Reed Hastings outlines, and as we discussed in Myth #1 above, what’s more important is employee effectiveness. Certainly you want people who are intelligent enough to get the job done and who will work hard enough to accomplish the mission. But effectiveness, not hard work or intelligence, ultimately drives firm performance and shareholder value. This ability to start a company and have a life isn’t just for lifestyle businesses.

    Myth #5: It’s an Uphill Battle Until One Day, When It All Comes Together

    Truth: It’s a Rollercoaster Ride

    Many aspiring entrepreneurs have been led to believe that the trajectory of a startup involves working really hard until they land one big customer or release one perfect product and after that, it’s easy street. The reality is that it’s a rollercoaster ride, with ups and downs that rarely let up. On Monday your company is sure to be worth $1 billion but by Wednesday you think you’ll run out of cash next quarter even though by Friday you’re positive your company’s next product idea will do nothing short of revolutionizing the industry. As Paul Graham notes, “In a startup, things seem great one moment and hopeless the next. And by next, I mean a couple hours later.”

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  • Mauritius to Apple: Thanks for the iPhones, can we haz iTunes Store?

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    Recently, the people of the island republic of Mauritius have been able to purchase the iPhone 3G and 3GS through mobile phone provider Orange, but there’s one major problem — there’s no access to an iTunes Store. This brings back memories of the original iPhone, when there was no iTunes Store to tempt iPhone owners with its wares. Can you imagine? No apps, no songs, and no videos for purchase directly from your phone? It boggles the mind.

    Here at TUAW, we’re doing our part for the “Free the iTunes Store” movement in Mauritius. Reader Marc, who works for Mauritian Apple reseller Paoma, notes “Thousands of iPhones, no Apps! We are hoping to get Apple to take notice and include us. A Facebook page has been set up to document the movement and we have already been featured in many leading French-language Apple blogs.”

    Well, Marc, now you have a leading English-language Apple blog taking up the cause as well. If you’d like to help iPhone users in Mauritius get their own iTunes Store, consider visiting the Facebook page and joining their group.

    TUAWMauritius to Apple: Thanks for the iPhones, can we haz iTunes Store? originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 17 Jan 2010 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Five Best Photo-Printing Sites

    Digital cameras are fantastic for letting us experiment, take tons of photos, and search for the perfect shot. Digital picture frames and at-home prints are often poor substitutes for real photos. Get a great print at one of these five photo-printing sites.

    Photo by Shermeee.

    Once upon a time people took photos and dutifully carted their film down to the photo shop to get developed, waiting to see how the photos turned out. Now people immediately check whether or not the shot was good on the display of their digital camera, and more often than not stuff the photos onto their hard drives or upload them to their Flickr accounts, but never get around to actually printing them and preserving them in a physical form. If you’ve been meaning to get around to printing more photos and saving them from their fate of digital obscurity, the following five Lifehacker reader-selected sites can help you.

    For the sake of consistency among the pricing notes, each site’s price will be listed as the current price (as of 1/17/2010) for one 4×6 and one 8×10, two of the most common U.S. photographic print sizes and good indicators of the over all pricing scheme at the site. Pricing is only one element of photo printing, however, and we would strongly suggest reading our notes here and checking out the individual sites before selecting one over the other based on a few cent price difference.

    It’s also worth noting that reviewing photo-printing services is very similar to reviewing, say, netbook computers. The end products are so similar to each other that the real test of whether or not you like one photo service over another photo service is to upload a couple photos and see if the little things—like the bulk uploader, the built-in editing tools, and the ordering interface—are features you are comfortable with—just like something as small as the keyboard spacing can make or break a netbook purchase.

    Snapfish ($0.09/$2.99)


    Snapfish is the most generous of the photo printing sites in the Hive Five. They offer 50 free 4×6 photos to first time customers—and have done so for years—so it’s a great place to start when trying out different photo sites. They also have some of the lowest pricing on basic prints, like glossy 4×6s, you’ll find anywhere. Snapfish also offers a happy medium between storing and ordering prints online and sometimes wanting or needing them immediately. Snapfish allows you to order your prints for delivery through the mail or for in-store pickup at stores like Walgreen’s, Walmart, or Meijer. Snapfish has an upload tool called PictureMover that will auto-detect when your camera or camera card is inserted into your computer and optionally upload the photos to a new album. Snapfish has—rather confusing—tiered pricing for every product they offer. Rather than even attempt to decode their shipping tables, you should always stop by RetailMeNot and grab a “free shipping” coupon code—Snapfish is almost perpetually running free shipping deals.

    Shutterfly ($0.15/$3.99)


    Shutterfly doesn’t offer rock bottom prices compared to other online outfits—although for small prints they are certainly reasonable—but it does shine with the most polished organizing and sharing system of the sites featured here today. It’s obvious a lot of time and thought was put into making it really easy to share photos and prints with friends and family. Although Shutterfly doesn’t offer a variety of pickup locations like Snapfish, you can order prints through Shutterfly for pickup at Target stores that have in-house photo processing. Shutterfly also has tiered-albeit less confusing—shipping rates which start at $1.79 for basic shipping and rise accordingly. You can view them here.

    Mpix ($0.29/$1.99)


    MPix offers a wide variety of print sizes (25+) and a diverse portfolio of additional services like mounting on standouts and canvas printing. They also, unlike some of the cheaper outfits, offer silver-based black and white printing to help digital photographers really show off their black and white prints in a more authentic way. MPix, unlike many other online photo services, also deals in film, but the price per exposure for development, scanning, and uploading to your MPix albums is $0.19 per exposure—we cringe to think what an 8GB SD card would cost to process at the film-rate. Shipping starts at $3.00 per order, additional rates are available here.

    AdoramaPix ($0.19/$1.28)


    AdoramaPix is the photo processing division of the enormous Adorama photography store—offering photo development services for photographers was a natural extension of their retail business. They offer the largest selection of photo paper of any contender in the Hive Five. You can select from seven different papers including those from the Kodak Endura line, Kodak Metallic, and True B&W for better black and white photos. Adorama offers 25 free 4×6 prints with every new account. Shipping is $2.95 for 50 prints of 5×7 size and under, $4.99 for any size prints of any quantity. Additional shipping rates detailed here.

    Costco Photocenter ($0.13/$1.49)

    Many people use Costco for printing because of the convenience of uploading their prints and then picking them up later that day at Costco while doing their shopping. The strong point of Costco’s printing services is definitely a combination of reasonable pricing and in-store pickup. The mail-order side of things isn’t a strong point with longer-than-average shipping times and lack-luster support. That said if you’re already a Costco customer and you’re looking for convenient pickup without a heavy emphasis on print or paper variety, it’s an easy sell. Shipping is free for 4×6 prints, variable pricing for larger prints.


    Now that you’ve had a chance to look over the contenders in today’s Hive Five it’s time to cast your vote.

    Which Photo Printing Service Is Best?(polls)

    Have an experience with one of the above vendors—or bummed your favorite didn’t make the list? Let’s hear about it in the comments.

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  • NSFW: Nobody suspects the Spanish politician

    ohfuckWhat do we know about Gaspar Llamazares? For a start, we know he’s a Spanish politician, a former Communist party member and leader of the leftist coalition Izquierda Unida. We know he has a Masters in Public Health from the University of Havana. We know he once attacked the Pope for his stance on contraception in the developing world.

    And now, thanks to the FBI, we also know that he bears more than a passing resemblance to a 53-year-old Osama Bin Laden.

    This most recent fact about Llamazares came to light his week when the bureau published a computer generated photograph of what Osama Bin Laden – 9/11 mastermind; cave-dweller; last remaining user of audio cassettes –  might look like today. The photograph, we were told, was produced using the FBI’s special digital aging software, the technical brilliance of which we could only dream about.

    One is led to imagine gigantic whirring super-computers, surrounded by federal agents in white coats, feeding in old Bin Laden family snapshots, screen-grabs from his video messages; perhaps even trimmings from his beard. Then, when the miracle machines have done their week – after weeks of computation, burning through enough energy to light the whole of Holland – a printer whirs into life, rendering a single wanted poster-sized image. The current face of evil.

    No wonder the bureau was proud of the photograph, posting it on their website and distributing it to the world’s media, from Minnesota to Madrid. And no wonder Izquierda Unida was shocked – no, terrified – when one of his friends pointed out that the resulting photo was his spitting image. What were the odds? A million to one? A billion?

    Well, not quite.

    In fact, as the FBI were later forced to admit, one of the things their super-computers aren’t very good at drawing is beards. Or hair. Or noses. Or faces, really. So the poor agent tasked with producing the image did what any of us would do when faced with an impending deadline and a multi-million dollar operating budget: he fired up his laptop, went to Google images, found a photo of someone who looked a bit Bin Laden-y, copied his features onto the photograph, added a few wrinkles and hit ‘print’. Unfortunately for all concerned, the face donor turned out to be a high profile Spanish politician – a politician who is now, quite rightly, worried that he’ll be lynched if he ever sets foot in the USA.

    It goes without saying that the incident raises a couple of pretty serious questions. For a start, what precisely did the FBI agent type into Google image search to find someone with similar features to an older Bin Laden? ‘Sinister middle-aged guy’? ‘Swarthy foreigner’? Presumably not, as the former brings up a photo of Liam Neeson while the latter returns Borat. More worryingly if the FBI’s cutting-edge photo aging technology is nothing more than a kid with a laptop, an Internet connection and a copy of Microsoft Paint, then what else are they lying to us about?

    It’s bad enough that we have the ‘CSI Effect‘ – the phenomenon, resulting from the popularity of TV shows like CSI, where the public and criminals have unrealistically high expectations of what crime-fighting technology is capable of. But TV shows are supposed to lie to us. Finding out that the government is playing the same game – massively exaggerating their technical abilities in order to give us comfort and to terrify our enemies – is just  weird. Particularly when they’re doing it using our tax money.

    And so, in the interests of investigative journalism, I contacted TechCrunch’s source in the intelligence community (the same guy who got us hooked on Spymaster). I asked him, simply, “how much of the technology that we’re told is keeping us safe from evil-doers is in fact total bullshit – and how can we avoid falling foul of it like Gaspar Llamazares?”. His answers, given on the condition of total anonymity, make fascinating reading…

    • Myth: New-style full body scanners at airports are capable of showing passengers naked

      Fact: Civil rights campaigners can relax. We’re told that the scanners’ operators are hidden away in a special room to protect our privacy – but according to our source, the reality behind the curtain – as with the Wizard of Oz – is far less exciting. There are no full-body scanners, just one very pervy dude watching CCTV and using his warped imagination to sketch the people he sees, sans clothes. Yes, it’s still freaky – but for an entirely different reason.

      How to avoid being unfairly caught: Be one of the Osmonds. No one wants to imagine the Osmonds naked.

    • Myth: Electronic passports contain a tiny microchip which aids the detection of terrorists

      Fact: We’ve all stood at immigration while the TSA agent takes our passport and swipes it through their special scanner. But, with the monitor facing away from us, we’ve all wondered precisely what information is being displayed about us. Our police records? Details of where we’ve travelled? Perhaps our name is being checked against some kind of terrorist watch list (see below). Wrong on all counts. In fact the scanners simply are simply accessing our Facebook profile to check whether we’re friends with Osama Bin Laden. If no, welcome to America. If yes, next stop Cuba.

      How to avoid being unfairly caught: Don’t accept a friend request from Gaspar Llamazares.

    • Myth: ‘No-fly’ lists ensure that known terrorists aren’t allowed to board planes to the US

      Fact: The FBI, NSA and CIA have all tried to build relationships with their foreign intelligence counterparts to build up an accurate list of international terrorists. Unfortunately, America’s aggressive foreign policy has driven much of the middle east into a sort of diplomatic sulk, with many Arab countries either refusing to pass on data or even occasionally creating fake names for their own amusement (the latter resulting in the arrest last month of Messrs ‘Pat Downe’ and ‘Ben Dover’ at Chicago O’Hare airport). In  fact the government’s current no-fly list was compiled simply by buying the subscription lists of ‘Jihad Monthly’, ‘Death To America! Digest’ and the Guardian.

      How to avoid being unfaily caught: Only buy your copy of Jihad Monthly at the newsstand.

    • Myth: Specially trained dogs are capable of sniffing out explosives

      Fact: Bombs just happen to smell like Snausages.

      How to avoid being unfairly caught: Avoid smelling of Snausages. (Also a good tip for life generally)

    osamanow

    Stay safe, America!


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  • Just how accurate are those posted fast-food calorie amounts?

    Better than Florida vote counts, perhaps, but far from exact

    As more and more restaurants volunteer, or are required, to post the calorie counts of their various offerings, it is only natural and prudent to wonder just how accurate these postings are. Not that your friendly local drive-through would con you on the numbers, but mass marketing strategies often involve bending the truth a wee bit.

    Some nutritionists at Tufts University decided to look into this, and conducted a caloric analysis of menu items from 10 chain restaurants in the Boston area. As a kind of control study, they conducted the same tests on a sample of “diet friendly” frozen supermarket meals from the likes of Weight Watchers and Lean Cuisine.

    The general findings: 29 of the fast food menu items tested contained more calories than they claimed, by an average of 18 percent, while the frozen supermarket meals had an average of 8 percent more calories than their labels stated. Individually, the discrepancies ranged from P.F. Chang’s large Sichuan-style asparagus, which had more than twice the 200 calories claimed, to the Domino’s large thin-crust cheese pizza, which actually had one-third fewer calories than the stated 180 per serving.

    It may not be deliberate, but that’s not much help if you’re a strict calorie counter

    All in all, the results did not particularly trouble the researchers, who ascribed most of the calorie-gaps to normal variations in portion sizes and ingredients, often coming down to a teenage food preparer being a bit heavy handed with the mayo or cheese sauce or gravy.

    Fast-food outlets that prepare items to order are especially vulnerable to caloric inconsistency, as are those that use local vendors for bread and dairy and other food items.

    As for the frozen supermarket meals, their 8 percent overage is well within the 20 percent range allowed them by the Food and Drug Administration, a fact to bear in mind when comparing such “low-cal” products.

    The conclusion of the experts seems to be that all calorie statements, whether on fast-food menus or supermarket packaging, should be regarded merely as approximations. A wise move may simply be to automatically add 10 to 20 percent to any calorie number in question. But if you really want to follow a calorie-certain diet, you’re going to have to prepare the food yourself.

    (By Robert S. Wieder for CalorieLab Calorie Counter News)

    From the RSS feed of CalorieLab News (REF3076322B7)

    Just how accurate are those posted fast-food calorie amounts?

  • BUCHAREST SUBWAY (METROUL BUCURESTEAN)

    Because I didn’t saw a topic for Bucharest Subway, I decided to start one.
    The Lines cover all big town parts except of one, The Drumul Taberei (Camp’s Rd.)

    The Bucharest Metro (Metroul Bucureşti in Romanian) is an underground urban railway network that serves the capital of Romania, Bucharest. The network is run by Metrorex. It is one of the most accessed systems of the Bucharest public transport network with an average ridership of 750,000 passengers per day.In total, the network is 67.3 km long and has 48 stations.
    The first line, M1, opened on November 16, 1979, running from Timpuri Noi to Semănătoarea (now Petrache Poenaru). It was 6.2 km long with 6 stations. Following this, more lines were opened:
    December 1981: M1/M3 Timpuri Noi – Republica; 10.1 km, 6 stations
    August 1983: M3 Branch line Eroilor – Industriilor (now Preciziei) ; 8.63 km, 5 stations, Gorjului station added in 1991
    December 1984: M1 Semănătoarea (Petrache Poenaru) – Crângaşi; 0.97 km, 1 station
    January 1986: M2 Piaţa Unirii – Depoul IMGB (now Berceni) ; 9.96 km, 8 stations
    October 1987: M2 Piaţa Unirii – Pipera; 8.72 km, 6 stations
    December 1987: M1 Crângaşi – Gara de Nord 1; 2.83 km, 2 stations (Basarab added 1990)
    August 1989: M1 Gara de Nord 1 – Dristor 2; 7.8 km, 6 stations
    January 1990: M1/M3 Republica – Pantelimon; 1.43 km, 1 station (single track, operational on a special schedule)
    March 2000: M4 Gara de Nord 2 – 1 Mai; 3.6 km, 4 stations
    November 2008: M3 branch Nicolae Grigorescu 2 – Linia de centura (now Anghel Saligny), 4 stations

    Large stations which connect with other lines (such as Victoriei) have two terminals, and each terminal goes by a different name (Victoriei 1 and Victoriei 2). On the official network map, they are shown as two stations with a connection in between, even though, in practice (and in trip planners), they are really only one station with platforms at different levels. There is one exception: Gara de Nord 1 and Gara de Nord 2 are separate stations (although linked through a subterranean passage, the traveller is required to exit the station proper and pay for a new fare at the other station, thus leaving the system), passengers being required to change trains at Basarab.
    Generally, the underground stations feature large interiors. The largest one, Piata Unirii, is cathedral-like, with vast interior spaces, hosting retail outlets and fast-food restaurants and has an intricate network of underground corridors and passage ways.
    History:
    The earliest plans for a Bucharest Metro were drafted in the late 1930s, alongside the general plans for urban modernization of the city.[citation needed] In 1938, the local authorities assigned the task of planning and constructing the subway system to S.A. Metropolitanul, with work scheduled to start in March 1941.[citation needed] The outbreak of World War II, followed by periods of political tensions culminating with the installation of communism, put an end to the plans.
    By 1970, the public transport system (ITB) was no longer adequate due to the fast pace of urban development, although the system was the fourth-largest in Europe. A commission was set up, and its conclusion pointed to the necessity of an underground transit system that would become the Bucharest Metro.
    The network was not built in the same style as other Eastern European systems. Firstly, the design of the stations on the initial lines was simple, clean cut modern designs, without excessive additions such as mosaics, awkward lighting sources or excessive decoration. The main function of the stations was speed of transit and modernity. Secondly, the trainsets themselves were all constructed in Romania and did not follow the Eastern European style of construction. Each station usually followed a colour theme (generally white – in Unirii 2, Universitate, Victoriei 1, Politehnica, Lujerului; but also light blue – in Obor and Gara de Nord; orange – in Tineretului), and an open plan. No station was made to look exactly like any other. Despite this, many stations are rather dark, due to the policies of energy economy in the late 1980s; later modernisations doing little to fix this problem. Bucharest being one of the largest cities in the region, it has quite a large network (larger than Prague, Amsterdam or Budapest). When the planned new line-extensions is finished, it will increase to more than 100 km (with about 80 stations).

    As of 2008, the entire network runs underground, except for a short stretch between Dimitrie Leonida and Berceni on the southern end of M2 line. The network is served by four depots, 2 being located above ground (IMGB and Industriilor) and two underground (Ciurel and Pantelimon) and by additional smaller works at Gara de Nord and Eroilor stations.
    There are two connections between the Metro network and the Romanian Railways network, one at IMGB (connecting to the Bucharest Belt Ring), the other at Ciurel (connecting via an underground passage to the Cotroceni-Militari industrial railway). The latter connection however is unused and mothballed. The metro network and the national rail network share the same gauge (1435 mm) and loading gauge but not the same electrification system (the metro uses 750 V DC whereas the Romanian Railways use 25000 V 50 Hz AC) making it possible for new metro cars to be transported cross country as unpowered railway cars.
    The network is powered by a bottom-contact third rail system except in works, depots and some tunnels where a catenary system is employed.
    There are 4 metro lines in operations, 1 more being auctioned off and 2 being planned:
    In operation:
    M1 Line: between Dristor and Pantelimon – the first line to open (in 1979), is circular with a North Eastern spur; Part of its tracks are shared with M3 (7 stations).
    M2 Line: between Pipera and Berceni opened in 1986, completed 1988; Runs in a North-South direction, crossing the center.
    M3 Line: between Preciziei and Anghel Saligny opened in 1989, completed 2008; Runs in an East-West direction, south of the center. Shares part of its tracks with M1 (7 stations). Traffic on the shared lines was suspended for M3 trains until summer 2009 for completion of structural work at the newly opened 1 Decembrie station. M3 line is to be extended to Carrefour Militari, most probably before 2013.
    M4 Line: between 1 Mai and Gara de Nord opened in 2000; Extension to Laminorului under construction, to be opened in 2010. Then between Gara de Nord and Gara Progresul. The M4 line will connect the two most important railway stations in Bucharest along with Giurgiului and Bucurestii Noi neighborhoods;
    Planned:
    M5 Line: between Ghencea and Pantelimon to be opened in 2014;
    M6 Line: between Rahova and Colentina
    M7 Line: between M4 Line and Otopeni
    Two more stations are planned and may be constructed on existing lines, both on M1. However, given the complexity of work required, and the limited benefits these stations have it is unlikely that construction will begin in the near future:
    Dorobanţi between Stefan cel Mare and Piaţa Victoriei;
    Giuleşti between Crângaşi and Basarab.

    The Bucharest Metro uses two types of trainsets:
    Astra IVA modular cars, built in Arad between 1976 and 1992
    Bombardier Movia 346 trainsets, built in 2002-2008
    The Astra trains used on the system are made up of various trainsets (rame) connected together. Each trainset is made up of two permanently-connected train-cars (B’B’-B’B’ formation) that can only be run together. On lines M1 and M3, three trainsets (totalling six cars) are connected together, with a length of up to 120 metres, while in line M4, two trainsets run together (totalling four cars). M2 only uses Bombardier Trains. The ASTRA Arad rolling stock was built between 1976 and 1992, and is approaching the end of its service life, so it is currently being either refurbished or phased out.
    The Bombardier trains are made up of six permanently connected cars, forming an open corridor for the entire length of the train (2’2’+Bo’Bo’+Bo’Bo’+Bo’Bo’+Bo’Bo’+2’2′ formation).
    The subway livery for Bucharest is either white with two yellow or red horizontal stripes below the window for ASTRA trains, or stainless steel with black and white for the Bombardier trains. All trains run on 750 V DC a third rail, or an overhead wire in maintenance areas where a third rail would not be safe. Maximum speed on the system is 80 km/h (50 mph), although plans are to increase it to 100 km/h (60 mph) on M5, a new line currently in planning stage.
    The signaling system used is similar to the PZB version used by the Căile Ferate Române (Romanian Railways), with the inductor placed on the inside of the rails rather than the outside. The color light signals have the following meaning[3]:
    red: stop
    blinking red: automated signaling disabled, proceed with reduced speed (5–10 km/h) ready to stop at obstacles
    yellow: proceed, next signal is red
    blinking yellow: proceed with reduced speed (30 km/h, unless noted otherwise) on diverging track
    green: proceed, next signal is not red
    blinking green: proceed with allowed speed on diverging track
    The minimum distance between two trains is 90 seconds. On the M2, the signaling system is now replaced by the ATP-System. The signals between the stations remain completely dark, while the exit signals of the station are showing a red light and the letters ATP. In the next years, this system shall replace the classic signaling system also on the other lines.
    Although the Bucharest Metro is, on the whole, an efficient transportation system, there are several common criticisms of the network. One of these is the relatively poor signage and the lack of network maps on the system. Most stations do not have maps that cover the entire network, instead having only panels showing the names of stations on the current line or, in some cases, only showing a selected number of stations from the respective line. Additionally, many stations have poor signage showing correspondence passages and exits. For this reason, it is possible to get lost on the system or take the train in the opposite direction. This problem is currently being addressed, with a new system of information booths and network maps being introduced in various stations, starting with Dristor, Piaţa Unirii, Eroilor and Piaţa Victoriei.
    Another possible source of confusion for infrequent travellers is the audio announcements in stations and trains. In trains, the name of the station is never announced when entering the station. Rather, as the doors close, the next station is announced, as well as the location of the platform on the next station. The standard form for the in-train announcements is "Attention! Doors are closing! Next station is … with the platform on the right/left side" (Atenţie, se închid uşile! Urmează staţia … cu peronul pe partea dreaptă/stângă). However, with the introduction of newer Bombardier trainsets, this issue has been somewhat addressed: most of these trains are fitted with red or orange dot-matrix displays, constantly announcing the next station and the name of the station upon entering.
    Other issues are low coverage (sizeable areas of the city don’t have any subway access at all and the distance between stations is very large) and at times large intervals between trains.
    The following extensions are in the process of being built:
    An extension of Line M4 (opened in 2000 and currently running from Gara de Nord-1 Mai) to be opened from 1 Mai to Laminorului via Pajura (2.67 km, 2 stations), in the city’s north. The extension is to be completed by 2011.[4] Also, the feasibility study for another extension of the line to Gara Progresul is in progress;
    By 2012 Metrorex plans to open 5 new metro stations on M2 and M3 (new locations include Spitalul Colentina on M3, Mărăşeşti on M2, Giuleşti on M1).
    These extensions will raise the network size to 55 stations with 70 km length, making it rather extensive.
    Metrorex is also planning the following new lines and routes:
    A new line, M5, which will run from Ghencea/Drumul Taberei district via Eroilor and Universitate to Pantelimon, the current terminus of M1. The line will have 19 stations, and will be around 18–19 km in length. It will intersect with all existing lines except M4. Line M5 is currently in its planning stage, with construction expected to begin by 2008 and conclude before 2020. The line is expected to cost €740 million;[5]
    A new M4 branch serving the two main airports of Bucharest: Henri Coandă International Airport and Aurel Vlaicu International Airport. Henri Coandă, the country’s largest airport, is currently served only by busses and CFR trains[6], while Aurel Vlaicu is served by RATB busses and trams. The metro extension will be very convenient because both airports are located north of the city and hence a single metro extension could serve both of them, making transfer between the two airports very easy. This line would also serve the Piaţa Presei Libere, Pajura, Băneasa areas, as well as some northern Bucharest suburbs. Works were scheduled to start in 2007 and be complete in seven years. The cost of the line, which will have a length of 13.9 km and 14 stations, would be around €1 billion.[7]
    Public transport in Bucharest is heavily subsidized, and the subsidies will increase, as the City Council wants to reduce traffic jams, pollution and parking problems and promote public transport. Like the RATB, the metro can get crowded during morning and afternoon rush hours. The network uses a dual system, employing both magnetic stripe cards, that are not valid for use on trams, buses or trolleys and a newer system with RFID contactless cards that are also valid on the RATB ground network.
    [edit]RFID cards
    From July 2006, the public transport in Bucharest was to be coordinated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority – however, this was postponed indefinitely. The ticketing systems for ground and subway transportation are currently being unified, with a new RFID card system being deployed across the network, with the old cards slated to be discontinued.
    The newer RFID card system is managed by RATB and RFID cards can only be obtained from RATB kiosks. The system is called Card ACTIV. RFID cards are given away free of charge, but only if one agrees to have one’s personal data (name and personal numeric code) imprinted on the card. Along with the personal data, as one uses the transport system, cost and usage data is collected in a centralised database. RATB claims this data is used only for improving the transport system. Only the person with the name imprinted on the card may use that card if used in combination with a monthly pass. If the card is lost, the lost card can be canceled and the traveller, for a small fee, can obtain a new card with the remaining credit on it. Anonymous RFID cards can also be obtained for a small fee and they can be used by multiple travelers.
    One must purchase a pass or credit to actually use the Card ACTIV on the underground or ground network. Also, these newer cards currently support for the metro network only monthly passes and a form of payment by trip, where travelers can buy credit (but only at RATB kiosks). The full cost of a trip – 1.25 RON (€ 0.29) is then deducted from the card whenever entering the metro network, regardless of the number of times a traveller enters the metro network in a given time interval. Because of this limitation, the 10 trip older-style metro card (see below) remains the most cost-effective solution for the casual traveler.
    Older style metro cards cand be purchased at any metro station. Prices (as of April 2009)[8]:
    2 trip card – 2.5 RON (€ 0.58)
    10 trip card – 8 RON (€ 1.89)
    Monthly pass (full price) – 25 RON (€ 5.8)
    Student monthly pass (only for Romanians) – 12.5 RON (€ 2.9)
    1 day card – 5 RON (€ 1.16)
    Free for senior citizens over 70 years of age
    Older-style metro cards are not linked with personal data or usage data in a central database and thus they guarantee anonymity of the travel. Because of that, however, if a metro card is lost or damaged, the traveller cannot be reimbursed for the unused trips.
    Trains generally run from 5 AM to 11 PM except on Fridays and Saturdays, when the last trains leave at 12 AM from the terminus stations. The last trains on M1, M2 and M3 wait for the transfer of the passengers between lines to complete, before leaving Piata Unirii station [9]. At rush hour, trains run at 3-5 minute intervals on lines 1, 3 and 4, and at 3-4 minute intervals on line 2. During the rest of the day, they run at max.6 minute intervals on lines 1 and 3, 5 minute intervals on line 2 and 8 minute intervals on line 4[10].

  • Artist survives quake, friend dies

    Two artists with Chicago ties were sitting together in the Peace of Mind Hotel in coastal Jacmel, Haiti, when the earthquake hit. Sue Frame, sprinted outside at the first tremor and survived.

    “It was just instinct,” said her mother, Doris Frame, of Batavia.

    But Frame’s close friend and collaborating artist, Flo McGarrell, who got a master’s degree in 2004 from the School of the Art Institute in Chicago, wasn’t so lucky. He paused too long and couldn’t escape before the building collapsed, killing him instantly, Doris Frame said.

    The message of survival and death didn’t reach Frame’s parents until Wednesday night, when a Haitian friend with e-mail access relayed a hand-scrawled note from their daughter.

    “I am fine,” the note read. “Tell my parents. Flo is not. I am spending every day getting Flo out. I will find a way to tell his parents. No airports and no roads. But I am safe and healthy.”

    “It was jubilation and total sorrow,” Doris Frame said of hearing about the situation.

    In response, a group of Chicago artists is raising money and trying to raise consciousness about the destruction in Jacmel, about 20 miles from the capital of Port-au-Prince. As relief has poured into the capital, it’s been slower to get to Jacmel, according to Alex Polotsky, a Chicagoan and close friend of both artists.

    “The rate of aid is much slower than needs to be to save lives currently in danger,” he said. “The road from Port-au-Prince has been rendered impassable, so the only aid entering is through one or two planes landing at the airport.”

    In Sue Frame’s only phone conversation with her parents since the quake, she told her mother she was OK and that her mother is lucky to have a daughter. But she also made a plea.

    “We need to stay on the government to get American citizens out of Jacmel and heavy equipment in to rescue people,” she told her mother.

    Polotsky, who has been to Haiti with Frame and McGarrell, started a Web site, haitiaidraffle.wordpress.com, to collect donations. Artists can donate artwork that will be raffled off, he said, while others can buy raffle tickets, with their donations going toward relief groups already established in Jacmel such as Doctors Without Borders.

    Frame, 35, a sculptor and woodworker, was in Jacmel for a few weeks teaching Haitian women woodworking skills to help them get jobs, her mother said. She’s assistant director of the Sharp Instructional Shops at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and had collected discarded tools and materials from the Chicago area to donate to needy Haitian artisans, Polotsky said.

    McGarrell, 36, a sculptor and multimedia artist, had been director of a nonprofit art center in Jacmel since October. McGarrell, who was born female but identified as a male in recent years, was remembered by friends and fellow artists for his bold style and humanitarian focus.

    “He was a filmmaker, a good-natured troublemaker and an inspiration to all around him to live life to the fullest,” Polotsky said.

    Frame and McGarrell met while undergraduate students at a Baltimore art school, Doris Frame said. They have remained sometime roommates and close friends ever since, and McGarrell helped arrange Frame’s current trip to Haiti, she said.

    Sue Frame talked with McGarrell’s parents, James and Ann McGarrell of Newbury, Vt., Doris Frame said, and vowed not to come home without her friend.

    “She said she’d remain in Jacmel until she could bring Flo’s ashes home for a memorial,” her mother said.

    [email protected]

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Chicago Bears’ Gaines Adams dies

    Bears defensive end Gaines Adams has died, the Greenville (S.C.) News has reported.

    The 26-year-old was reportedly taken to the emergency room at Self Regional Healthcare in Greenwood County where he died, County Coroner James T. Coursey told the Greenville News.

    ProFootballTalk.com and other outlets are reporting that the cause of death is believed to have been a heart attack.

    “It’s crazy,” Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher said. “I didn’t know him that well because he came in during  the middle of the season. But I did know him. I still saw him every day when I went into work. It’s just weird.

    “I had a teammate die when I was in college. You just don’t know how to handle it. It’s just sad, man. It’s a bad deal.”

    Adams, a star at Clemson, was the fourth pick in the 2007 draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bears traded a second-round draft pick for him in October, intent on rebuilding their pass rush around him.

    An autopsy will be performed later today by a forensic pathologist in Anderson County, Coursey told the Greenville News.

    By Brad Biggs and Vaughn McClure

    PHOTO: Gaines Adams (99) chases Cincinnati quarterback J.T. O’Sullivan (4) in an October game. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Ex-Hammond mayor owes nearly $120K on taxes

    CROWN POINT, Ind. — A former northwest Indiana mayor with one of the most expensive homes in Crown Point also owes a huge tax debt.

    Former Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott Sr. is behind by nearly $120,000. His $1.6 million home in one of Crown Point’s most affluent neighborhoods narrowly escaped the Lake County treasurer’s tax sale in July.

    McDermott says he is appealing the 2006 assessment of his house. He says his property tax bills are too high because the home was improperly assessed.

    McDermott has been behind on his bill almost since he bought the home in 2002 for $1.3 million. He has paid smaller and smaller property tax amounts each year since. He has paid less than $10,000 in the last two years.

    His son, Thomas McDermott Jr., is now mayor of Hammond.

    – Associated Press

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Report: Village trustee threatens cops with firing

    The SouthtownStar reports: A Matteson trustee, angry that a village police officer confronted her husband for parking illegally, threatened to have the officer and his supervisor fired, according to a department memo obtained by the SouthtownStar.

    Police Sgt. Dave Gryczewski wrote the memo to Police Chief George Pfotenhauer after the incident, which occurred only three days after 22 village employees were laid off.

    According to the memo, the argument started after Bridget Dancy’s husband, Johnny Dancy, parked in a fire lane about 7:30 p.m. Jan. 8 outside Subway, 196 Town Center Road.

    The officer, Richard Marquis, pulled up behind the car and put on his emergency lights, the memo said. Johnny Dancy came outside of the eatery and asked the officer if he knew who Dancy and his wife were, the memo said.

    When Marquis told him he was wrong for parking in a fire lane, Johnny Dancy asked him why he was talking in a loud voice, according to the memo. When Marquis said he was talking in a normal voice, Johnny Dancy said that “things are going to change.”

    Marquis gave Johnny Dancy his name, badge number and called his supervisor, Gryczewski, to the scene, according to the memo. Johnny Dancy never was given a ticket.

    Gryczewski later met Johnny and Bridget Dancy inside the Matteson campaign office for Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown, according to the memo. Brown is running for Cook County Board president, and her campaign office is in the same strip mall as the Subway.

    When Gryczewski met with the trustee and her husband, Johnny Dancy said he should not have parked in the fire lane and said he was concerned with how the officer spoke to him, the memo said.

    Despite never witnessing the argument, Bridget Dancy said the way the officer spoke to her husband offended her, according to the memo. Gryczewski apologized, and Bridget Dancy suggested Marquis go to to sensitivity training.

    Later in the conversation, Gryczewski asked if there was anything else he could do, according to the memo. At this point, Bridget Dancy said, “that if we have to get rid of people, we will. If we have to get rid of supervisors, we will.”

    The remarks came after a turbulent week in Matteson. Twenty-two village workers were laid off Jan. 5 in an attempt to plug a $2.3 million budget gap.

    Last week, Bridget Dancy said everything in the memo was false, denied she had any kind of confrontation with Gryczewski and claimed “everything was fine” between her and the police department.

    “I hope you know I wouldn’t be that insensitive” to threaten someone’s job days after the layoffs, she said. “Our police department does a stellar job, and it’s one of the reasons I moved out to Matteson.”

    Gryczewski and Mayor Andre Ashmore did not return calls seeking comment.

    Pfotenhauer refused to discuss the matter, other than to say he would conduct an internal investigation to determine who leaked the memo to the SouthtownStar.

    In her day job, Bridget Dancy, who was sworn in as trustee in May, works as chief information officer for the circuit court clerk. She is campaigning for Brown.

    BRIDGET DANCY

    According to a police memo, Matteson Trustee Bridget Dancy claimed she could fire police officers and their supervisors.

    Dancy is a relative newcomer to the village board and was sworn in as a trustee in May. In her day job, she works as chief information officer for Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Dorothy Brown.

    She is campaigning for Brown to be the Cook County Board president.

    Read the orginal article from Tribune News Services.


  • Resident charged in fatal apartment building fire

    MahadAHASSANText.jpgA resident of a Rogers Park apartment building where a man died in a suspicious fire last week had been charged with murder and arson in connection with the blaze, police said.

    Mahad Ali Hassan, 26, of 6720 N. Sheridan Road, was charged late Saturday night with first-degree murder, aggravated arson and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, said Chicago Police News Affairs Officer John Mirabelli.

    Hassan was arrested Friday at a North Side location other than the apartment building, following Belmont Area and Bomb and Arson detectives’ interviews with witnesses and other leads, Mirabelli said. He was in possession of a loaded handgun at the time of his arrest.

    The fire, which began just before 12:15 p.m. Thursday, killed one man and injured five other people, including two firefighters and a man who jumped from his apartment on the fifth floor of the building, where the fire started in a hallway.

    The fire was determined to be an arson, and the person who died of inhalation of smoke and soot was determined to have died in a homicide, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

    The person who died has not yet been identified, pending notification of family.

    The Red Cross also helped set up a shelter for many of the 25 people diplaced by the fire, which spread from the fifth floor to the fourth and caused heavy smoke damage, although the fire itself spread only into the apartment from which the man jumped, officials said.

    Hassan was expected to appear in Cook County Central Bond Court today, Mirabelli said.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.