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  • Sanctions for Iran’s nuclear program set for January

    Don’t hold your breath, United Nations

    The United States can hope all it wants to win over China to agree on sanctions over Iran, but I believe there is no chance of this happening [“AP sources: US eyes January for new Iran sanctions,” Seattletimes.com, Politics & Government, Dec. 4].

    Iran is becoming more of a threat, and the U.S. believes sanctions are the answer to preventing Iran from enriching uranium. It is easy for the United States to propose sanctions since the only items we import from Iran are rugs and textiles — hardly an economic loss for either nation.

    China, however, imports hundreds of thousands of barrels per day from Iran as reported by the Energy Information Administration. China being a fast growing nation, cutting Iran as its second largest source would be fatal to their progress.

    Sanctions may not only be impossible, but also dangerous for our nation’s security. When Japan invaded Manchuria during World War II, the U.S. was shocked at their aggression and imposed sanctions on oil exports to Japan. Out of anger, Japan attacked the U.S., thus involving the U.S. in WWII.

    Today, Iran is the aggressive nation and if we were to disrupt their interests, it could provoke another attack on U.S. soil.

    — Mark Korvas, Bellevue

  • Investors Push Junk Bond ETF To Highs Of The Year

    Boy, you could have done pretty well for yourself if, at the beginning of the year, you ignored all those pundits who said to only buy the debt of the safest, AAA-rated companies.

    Junk — surprise, suprise — has had a killer year, and as Bespoke notes, speculators investors have pushed the junk ETF to the highs of the year.

    junk

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  • Don’t Miss the UT Bookstore Holiday Sale

    The UT Bookstore is holding its Holiday Sale through Thursday, Dec. 24, at all bookstore locations except the Technology Center, with 20 percent off UT apparel, prints, jewelry and sale merchandise. Non-textbooks will be included in the sale with some exceptions. All UT Bookstore proceeds benefit the university. For more info call 974-1040.

    ut_bookstore_holiday_sale_2009

  • Breakfast Casseroles and 21 Homemade Candy Recipes This Time Last Year

    2009_12_15-Lookback.jpgAll of our candy recipes collected in one place, plus ideas for pretty packaging, affordable wines for gift-giving, beer-braised short ribs, two recipes for party nuts, and 15 really useful items for cooks.

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  • Fun & Unique Garden Gifts

    If you’re looking for a totally unique garden gift this year for a fellow gardener, I’d check out Uncommon Goods. They have some traditional garden goods, but also some clever items you may not have seen such as…






    The Gnome-Be-Gone is one of my favorite garden structures – it’s amusing, unique and sure to be a garden eye catcher. The set comes with one gnome and two Gnome-Be-Gones.

    Vibrant ceramic Shroomies are handmade and each is brilliantly colored and one-of-a-kind. These are not frost-proof though so you’ll have to use them in indoor plants during the winter.

    Apple Bird Feeder – A sweet minimalist sustainable bamboo birdfeeder with three perches, a loop for hanging and a skewer to secure an apple.

    In the right garden setting this wrecking ball garden sculpture is the perfect cure for boring lawn sculptures.

    Recycled Milk Glass Hummingbird Feeder – I love this pretty recycled milk glass feeder which is handmade and good for high-traffic areas as the feeder holds 20 oz. A decanter-style top allows you to refill and clean it easily. Includes instructions and hanging hook.

    The one of a kind Reclaimed Army Helmet Planter is an interesting way to reuse an item that has little use plus it’ll last and last. The base is also reclaimed, made with transmission gears.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Fun & Unique Garden Gifts

  • Should I (and How Can I) Self-Cater a Big Holiday Party? Good Questions

    Q:  I’m planning a holiday party for my husband’s visual effects company. We just moved into a really cool office space, and I want to utilize it for the party. We’re fortunate to have a fully outfitted kitchen, but I don’t want to take on all the food myself. We’re planning to buy most of the beverages ourselves and hire a licensed bartender to serve. I’m going to need a rental company for a bar, glasses, plates and silverware.

    Do you have any tips on how to make the most of our kitchen to do some of the catering ourselves, and have a professional do the rest of it? Or would I be better off just having food delivered and hiring my own servers?

    Sent by Jennie

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  • Is It Possible to Salvage Overcooked Caramels? Good Questions

    Q: I’m wondering if you can help me salvage a batch of caramels. I made two batches yesterday — the first was plain fleur de sel caramels and turned out perfectly. In the second batch I infused the cream with thyme but otherwise it was the same recipe. It hardened like a brick.

    Could I put it back in the pan, melt it down, and add more cream? And if I did this, would it still keep at room temperature like they originally would?

    Sent by Brittany

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  • What Are Some Great Salty Snacks for Gift-Giving? Good Questions

    Q:  I love all the wonderful goodies that people make this year. However my sweet tooth has been satisfied. I am curious what are some favorite salty snacks that people make this time of year.

    Sent by Jamie

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  • Why is my BG down after eating candy?

    I tested two hours after lunch today and my BG was 132.
    About an hour later, I was really having a chocolate attack, so I ate two of the Reeses cups, regular size. I was only going to eat one, but it kept calling my name! One hour later and my BG is 115! HOW in the heck is that? Wouldn’t it be higher?
  • What Are Good Cookie Recipes for Diabetics? Good Questions

    2009_12_15-Cookie.jpgQ: My soon to be father-in-law just got diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. I was going to send him cookies for Christmas but now I’m not quite sure. As a type 1 diabetic, I remember a chocolate chip cookie recipe my mother used to make — they had oats in them, almost no sugar besides the chocolate chips — but when I asked her, she informed me that she’d long ago given away the cookbook she got the recipe from.

    Do you have any idea where to find the recipe I’m looking for? Or any other suggestions?

    Sent by Sarah

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  • Volvo prices 2011 C30 T5 from $24,600, C30 T5 R-Design at $26,950*

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    2011 Volvo C30 T5 R-Design – click for high-res gallery

    Possibly the biggest news to come out of Volvo’s announcement of pricing for the 2011 C30 is that there is going to BE a 2011 C30. We ogled the nipped and tucked C30 T5 in Frankfurt and came away even more smitten than before with Volvo’s neo-brake. The revised fascia and nipped and tucked bumpers bring the C30 into line with the future of Volvo design, however shaky that may be.

    It’s hard to deny the allure of the stylish little dumpling, and it won’t even break the bank. Available in the United States exclusively in T5 trim for 2011, $24,600 (plus *$850 for destination and delivery charges) will get you into the Swedish hatch with a 227 horsepower inline-five hooked to a six-speed manual. If the swoopy Swede isn’t enough for you in stock trim, the C30 T5 R-Design brings lowered ride height and a monochromatic bodykit that makes the car look like it’s hunkered way down over its new 18-inch wheels.

    The best part of the R-Design package are the suspension tweaks. Volvo says the stiffer bushings make the steering more direct and the rack’s ratio is faster, too. Spring rates are up, and both the dampers and the swaybars have been stiffened, as well. Sounds expensive, doesn’t it? Not so much – $26,950 (plus $850 D&D) strikes us as a small bargain for the nattily styled Volvo hatch with sharpened teeth. Of course, that’s before a visit to Ye Olde Options List, where the bottom line can get pretty daunting pretty quickly. Press release posted after the jump.

    [Source: Volvo]

    Continue reading Volvo prices 2011 C30 T5 from $24,600, C30 T5 R-Design at $26,950*

    Volvo prices 2011 C30 T5 from $24,600, C30 T5 R-Design at $26,950* originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Watch: First Etrian Odyssey III trailer from Atlus

    Atlus Japan has released the first trailer for Etrian Odyssey III, the next entry in their hardcore dungeon crawling series. Most of it’s just images and CG scenes, but there’s a very brief glimpse of actual gameplay

  • The Act Of Subscribing To A Publication Feels Limiting

    Gina Chen has written up a fascinating column on her reaction to Nielsen’s decision to give up on Editor & Publisher, where she makes a point that I think many people may agree with implicitly, without even realizing it. And, it’s a point that any publication that is thinking about putting up a paywall needs to consider. It’s that, these days, with the wealth of information available online, subscribing to one publications almost feels like you’re limiting yourself. Obviously, that’s not directly true. You still have access to those others, but the act of making such a commitment to a single source does have a mental notation suggesting that you need to spend time with that source, at the expense of others:


    The truth is, for me, not subscribing — either in print or online — has little to do with money. It’s about commitment. And I think that’s the problem many news organizations are facing as they try to bring their products online.

    In the old days, I paid for E&P because if I didn’t, I’d have no idea what was going on in the industry. I wasn’t paying for news; I was paying for the chance to be in the know in my field.

    Things changed with the web. Now, if I choose one magazine to subscribe to out of myriad sources, it feels like I’m limiting my options in a way. I don’t want to commit to one publication, one source, one newspaper, one magazine. Why? Because the publication has become less important than the news itself. I want to be free to surf, reading dozens of different newspapers, blogs or magazines that I may visit just once or twice. I enjoy the synchronicity of happening upon a publication I have never heard of and will probably never visit again.

    This is, in many ways, related to the concept that rather than finding news, for more and more people, the news finds them. Committing to a single publication, or a small group of publications does feel limiting. Now, some people will obviously disagree, but the more familiar you become with reading multiple sources on the web, the less and less it feels sensible to pay for a limited subset of them. And, even if you don’t find that to be true for yourself, the fact is that more and more people do feel that way — and for anyone trying to build a business model based on getting subscribers, they may find that to be quite difficult for this very reason. It’s asking for commitment to a single source in an age where sources are abundant. That commitment is costly not just in money (which might not be very costly) but in the mental commitment needed. For a very large number of people, that commitment is way too costly, no matter what the monetary price.

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  • Jim and Marie Murphy Endowed Scholarship Established

    Jim and Marie MurphyThe University of Tennessee Institute for Public Service has announced the establishment of the Jim and Marie Murphy Endowed Scholarship for Graduate Studies. The scholarship was recently funded at the minimum required amount—$25,000—through the generous support of the Murphys, the County Officials Association of Tennessee (COAT), other county associations and many other individual donors.

    Having served for several years as the executive director of COAT, Marie Murphy felt the need to create an opportunity to help relatives of that organization and the UT County Technical Advisory Service (CTAS) achieve their educational dreams.

    “Jim and I both received our doctorate of jurisprudence degrees from UT, and knowing that there is not enough done for graduate students financially, we want to help others who are seeking to better themselves with an advanced degree,” she said. “We are glad we could establish this scholarship to help our COAT and CTAS family.”

    Jim Murphy serves as the vice chair for The University of Tennessee Board of Trustees. He is an attorney with the law firm of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, LLP.

    The scholarship will assist students seeking graduate degrees from UT for many years to come.

    “We are very grateful for the Murphys’ interest in helping others achieve their educational goals,” said Dr. Mary Jinks, vice president of public service. “I am confident that future recipients of their scholarship will be grateful as well.”

    For more information on how you can contribute to the scholarship or to create a similar opportunity to assist others, contact IPS Development Director Paul Bowman at (865) 974-6587 or [email protected].

  • Christmas Wreaths Made From Marshmallows and Mints Delicious links for 12.18.09

    2009_12_18-Slinks.jpgOh wow, we love these stylish wreaths made from plain old candy, over at Food Network. There are some with marshmallows, chocolate mints, and peppermint candies.

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  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Awards $681,000 in ARRA Funding for South Texas Bridge Construction Project

    For Immediate Release: December 14, 2009
    Contact: Clay Harris; (505) 248-6428
    FFS #R2MD

    Los Fresnos, TX – The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) has awarded $681,000 through The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to JCF Bridge and Concrete, Inc of Driftwood, Texas to build two 80 to 85 foot bridges, and reinforce a channel wall at Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in South Texas.

    The two bridges will span two-of-the-three Refuge channels created in the last four years that have helped restore more than 10,000 acres of wetlands. Before construction of the new channels, upland terrain became covered in silt affecting adjacent communities by causing public health and safety concerns and killing native vegetation. The bridges will allow refuge staff to manage the project by providing improved heavy equipment access and greater mobility on this large tract. In addition, the reinforcement of one of the channel walls will prevent the channel from narrowing thus improving the flow of fresh water in and out of the basin.

    “Thanks to Recovery Act funding, this project will create work, support the economy and continue a restoration process that provides long-lasting benefits to the area’s ecosystem,” said Benjamin Tuggle, PhD, regional director for the Service’s Southwest Region, which includes Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona.

    Laguna Atascosa NWR is one of the last strongholds in the United States for the ocelot, a small cat that once roamed from South Texas into Arkansas and Louisiana. This species has been reduced to approximately 50 animals in the United States primarily to loss of habitat.

    The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed earlier this year gave $3 billion to the Department of the Interior. The ARRA funds represent an important component of the President’s plan to jumpstart the economy and put a down payment on addressing long-neglected challenges so the country can thrive in the 21st century. Under the ARRA, Interior is making an investment in conserving America’s timeless treasures – our stunning natural landscapes, our monuments to liberty, the icons of our culture and heritage – while helping American families and their communities prosper again. Interior is also focusing on renewable energy projects, the needs of American Indians, employing youth and promoting community service.

    “With its investments of Recovery Act funds, the Department of the Interior and its bureaus are putting people to work today to make improvements that will benefit the environment and the region for many years to come,” Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar said. Secretary Salazar has pledged unprecedented levels of transparency and accountability in the implementation of the Department’s economic recovery projects. The public will be able to follow the progress of each project on www.recovery.gov and on www.interior.gov/recovery.

    Secretary Salazar has appointed a Senior Advisor for Economic Recovery, Chris Henderson, and an Interior Economic Recovery Task Force to work closely with Interior’s Inspector General and ensure the recovery program is meeting the high standards for accountability, responsibility, and transparency set by President Obama.

    The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect to enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader and trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our scientific excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated professionals and commitment to public service. For questions, comments or concerns email us at [email protected]. For more information on our work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov.

  • VIDEO: 2011 Audi A1 teased ahead of Geneva unveiling

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    2011 Audi A1 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Two years ago, the Audi Metroproject Quattro concept bowed at the Tokyo Motor Show. A year later, the Audi A1 Sportback study was unveiled in Paris. And in less than two months, the production 2011 Audi A1 will finally be revealed online ahead of its public debut at the Geneva Motor Show… but not before the hype machine is put into full effect.

    After the jump, you can check out three teaser videos of the A1, beginning with a graffiti homage to Audi’s new compact hatch, followed by a brief statement from Chairman Rupert Stadler and a design discussion with a few of the A1’s creators.

    Predictably, all three spots are mum on details, but from previous reports, we know that the A1 is likely to be powered by a 1.4-liter TFSI four-cylinder channeling around 150 hp to a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. All-wheel drive may be exclusive to the 180-hp S1 — due to arrive sometime in 2011 — with the standard model dolling out power to the front wheels alone, and a cabrio variant arriving in 2012. Expect all the details to come down from on high in February — including an announcement about Audi’s intent to sell the A1 Stateside — but until then… jump.

    Continue reading VIDEO: 2011 Audi A1 teased ahead of Geneva unveiling

    VIDEO: 2011 Audi A1 teased ahead of Geneva unveiling originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 15:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Should the FCC Reclaim Broadcast Spectrum ?

    The premise is very simple.  Over the air broadcasters, the people who bring you TV that you can get with rabbit ears, pay nothing to the government for the allocated digital spectrum over which tv is delivered. Not only do they pay nothing to the government for that spectrum, they are no longer only using it exclusively to deliver a tv signal. They have about 19.2mbs of digital bandwidth available to them and rather than using it all for the delivery of the highest quality tv signal, they are now trying to slice and dice that bandwidth and monetize it in any way they possibly can. They create new tv channels, they lease it to companies who use it for other applications.  They basically auction it off to where ever they can find the most profitable revenue stream.  So why should the broadcaster be allowed to keep the bandwidth they are not using for their TV channel ? Rather than their auctioning it off , lets let the government reclaim it and auction it off.  Offered on a national basis, the sum value is greater than its parts and should be able to put a pretty penny in the federal coffers at a time it is sorely needed .

    It makes perfect sense to me. Except that no one has really taken a contrary view on how that spectrum could be used in the future. No one has asked the question of whether or not we will regret having reclaimed that bandwidth in the future.  Of course the cynic in me always looks to see how the government might be wrong. What would cause us to regret reclaiming and reselling the spectrum ?

    At least a couple things I can think of.

    1. The simplest  revolves around a  question: Will there be higher bandwidth applications in the future that consumers will expect to be delivered for free to our TVs ? On the bottom of the importance scale could be 3D TV.  Of course whether or not TV is delivered in 3D is not very important.  No more important than needing to have color delivered over the air as black and white disappeared. But if 3D does become important to consumers and an expectation of the TV viewing experience (there are technologies that dont require glasses, and they will improve in quality and decrease in price), if over the air broadcasters are not required to offer it, consumers will be at the mercy of cable/telco/satellite tv distributors to charge whatever they want and the value and most likely sustainability of over the air broadcasters will decline considerably.

    As I said, 3D TV is an example, but not necessarily a good one.  Ask yourself a simple question. What type of high bandwidth applications could you imagine being delivered to our future digital TVs in 5, 10, 20 years ? Now that TV is delivered digitally over the air, and all new TVs are digital, basically computers behind a screen, is there any reason not to believe that an entirely new generation of applications will be developed that benefit from being delivered over the air ? That what we call TV today, could look very antiquated in 1o years if we only had the bandwidth to enable it ?

    Of course this is where people chime in and say “the internet can support all of that”. Not so fast.  The beauty of broadcast TV is that it has 2 very unique features that differentiate it from delivery of content over the internet. The first of which is economic. The marginal cost per viewer is zero. In other words, it costs the same amount to deliver the 19.2mbs of applications and content to the first viewer as it does to every possible viewer. That is not the case with the internet. If that were the case there would be no need for companies like Akamai to even exist.  Every additional internet viewer or user costs the broadcaster of the content money. Each incremental viewer requires a variety of additional resources, from CPU cycles to bandwidth.  Broadcasting over the air is always cheaper than on the net.

    The 2nd feature that differentiates it significantly from the internet is the fact that it is a true broadcast medium.  There is no contention for the bandwidth that is being delivered. On the internet if someone in your neighborhood is using a lot of bandwidth, your performance could slow down. With a broadcast medium, you can run into distance limitations, and like the internet delivered over cable, there could be interference issues, but unlike the internet, the performance and quality of broadcast tv is never impacted by the number of people receiving the signal or the other things they may be using the shared bandwidth for. Thats important.

    Why is it important ? For national security reasons ?

    Right now the spectrum is officially owned by the government and broadcasters have an obligation to act in the interests of the people, as defined by the FCC.  If we auction off the spectrum to private interests, its gone. It is  owned privately. The government cant get it back no matter how badly it needs it without taking steps that are damning in their very nature.

    What could the government need the spectrum for ?

    2.  National Security. Thats what the government could  need it for. I don’t know of a single person with a technology background that doesn’t believe there will be a cyber attack of some consequence in the next 10 years that will essentially shut down a city, region of the country or worse.  I was in NY during the blackout 6 years ago. That was bad. We relied on backup generators to power our TVs and battery powered radios.  But things have changed considerably in just 6 years.  We have become far more digitally dependent.  Much of our lives is transported through the internet, and that dependence is increasing. It is going to happen. Hopefully it will be on a small scale and we will immediately get smart enough to prevent it from happening again.  But what happens while an entire city’s internet and digital infrastructure is down ? How do we communicate or receive communications ?

    We get our communications through broadcast. Im not talking about being able to get your CBS evening news over the air to your TV. Im not talking about whether or not you have access to a crank powered radio to hear the latest.  Im talking about the value of having 19.2mbs of bandwidth that is able to reach most of the population in the continental US and deliver whatever type of information /data that we may need.

    This isnt something that could easily happen today. But if there was a huge emergency, it sure would be nice if the government could step in and reclaim as much bandwidth as they need and broadcast whatever they need to broadcast to us. (im sure they will use satellite as well, but far from enough people have receivers).   It may be video. It may be maps localized to show us trouble spots. It may be information about utilities. It may be instructions on how to solve a problem caused by the cyber attack. Who knows. But i would rather be in a position where the bandwidth, and enough of it, was available for broadcast rather than reading how “shortsighted we were to sell off the bandwidth to wireless providers rather than consider how we could have used this broadcast bandwidth in a national or regional emergency”

    I also know that once it happened twice (they would say the first time was a unique exception), then there would be a mandate to require that all new HDTVs and (possibly phones and future digital devices) to also be able to receive data from broadcast sources  and store it on internal and/or external storage  to be viewable on the tv , and potentially an executable file that provides support and help in the emergency.

    The bottom line is whether or not there are applications that would benefit national security. I dont know, but i think we have to at least consider the possibility.

    Of course this is all pie in the sky hypothetics. Maybe someone has already thought this side of it through. Maybe its ridiculous on its face. I dont know.

    But maybe not.  I think there is a greater than zero chance that in the next 10 years  broadcast bandwidth can be of value to the country in an emergency. We need to at least consider this before we sell off the spectrum

  • European Asparagus Museum

    Bavaria, Germany | Extraordinary Flora

    To see the asparagus museum as nothing more then a wacky collection about an arbitrary vegetable is to deeply misunderstand Germany’s deep connections to the slender green vegetable.

    For in Germany the asparagus is not simply the “vegetable that makes your pee smell funny” as it is known in the U.S., but is the “königliche Gemüse” or “royal vegetable.”

    In 150 B.C. the asparagus was first written about, and written about with great reverence by Roman writer Marcus Porcius Cato, and was later cited in a Roman book of recipes in 300 A.D. But then the asparagus disappeared. It would seem that after 300 A.D. the asparagus, or at least any reference to its cultivation, was “lost” for much of the middle ages, not showing up again in print until 1100 A.D. this time in the guise of an herb. In 1565 asparagus or ‘spargel’ appeared in a catalog of plants in the German Prince’s pleasure garden, referred to as “delightful fare for lovers of food.” Germany had officially begun its love affair with the asparagus.

    Available only to the nobility for many years, the asparagus became appropriately known as the “royal vegetable,” but by the mid 1800s it had become available to the average German, who adopted it with vigor.

    Today, the asparagus season or “Spargelzeit” is a massive event in Germany, focused largely around the towns of Schrobenhausen, Schwetzingen and Abensberg. Almost every restaurant changes its menu to include multiple asparagus dishes, there are asparagus seminars, asparagus tours, asparagus competitions, and in Schwetzingen an asparagus king or queen is crowned based on the ‘size of their asparagus stalk.’ They also have a statue of the much admired “Spargelfrauen” the women of the asparagus fields.

    The asparagus museum extends this asparagus celebration to an all year round event. Three floors of 15th century tower are dedicated to asparagus, and include exhibits on “agriculture, horticulture, conservation, gastronomy, history, medical and pharmaceutical science, table decoration, ceramics, silver, advertising, literature, art and curiosities” all focused around the asparagus. The museum even has an Andy Warhol painting of asparagus.

    While the museum can indeed be visited year around, one really must visit during Spargelzeit, when the locals eat asparagus at least once a day, and three times if they can afford it.

  • DEFLATION: Oil Now On Its Longest Losing Streak In Eight Years

    Crude Oil Barrels

    Crude-oil futures tanked for a ninth straight session Monday, a milestone in the commodity’s poor performance history.  Lack of demand, again, has investors looking to sell.

    MarketWatch.com: Crude for January delivery ended down 36 cents, or 0.5%, at $69.51 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The nine-day loss was the longest such streak since July 2001.

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