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FuglyStick
Re :   GNR to release

 You can hear the album on the GNR mySpace page--


It's not bad--but it's not 15 years in the making good either.


11/20/2008 18:57:47


FuglyStick
Topic :   Mexican scientists turn tequila into diamonds

The tequila diamonds could be used to "detect radiation, coat cutting tools or, above all, as a substitute for silicon in the computer chips of the future," Miguel Apatiga, one of three researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico who made the discovery said.

The scientists found that the heated vapour from tequila blanco, when deposited on a stainless steel base, can form diamond films.

They began experimenting some 13 years ago with synthetic diamonds – made by a technological process, as opposed to natural diamonds, produced by geological process – from gases like methane.

Later they produced diamonds from liquids, and then noticed that the ideal compound of 40 per cent ethanol and 60 per cent water was similar to the proportion used in tequila.

"One day I went to the campus shop and bought a bottle of cheap tequila. I used it under the same experiment conditions as for a test with ethanol and water and obtained positive results," Mr Apatiga said.

The diamonds formed were small crystals, too tiny to be used in jewellery.

"It would be very difficult to obtain diamonds for a ring," he added.

But the scientists are now investigating other applications for tequila diamonds.

"It's true that the fact it's tequila has a certain charm. It's a Mexican product and Mexican researchers developed the project ... but a businessman can say to me: 'Great, how pretty! But how can I use it?'" Mr Apatiga said.  link



11/12/2008 16:22:38


FuglyStick
Topic :   Does it come with the hot chick with the whip fetish?

Well I doubt it, but you have to admit if this tuned up Smart would be the nextBatmobile everyone’s jaws would hit the floor. I’m not holding my breath for this ever happening, but a guy can dream. The Batsmart concept was presented atSEMA 2008 auto-show.

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link



11/12/2008 16:12:25


FuglyStick
Topic :   World's largest Irish coffee

It's not every day the bartenders at San Francisco's Buena Vista Cafe pour 10 liters of Irish whiskey into a single cocktail. But Monday they did just that.

In an effort to set a Guinness record for the world's largest Irish coffee, the cafe mixed nearly 10 liters of whiskey with 10 gallons of coffee, a gallon of heavy cream and more than 4 pounds of sugar, Buena Vista Cafe general manager Michael Carden said.

The drink was served in a 12-gallon, 3-foot-tall, custom-made glass.

"We took the same ration that we'd put in a 6-ounce glass and converted it to a 12-gallon glass," Carden said.

The drink was initially going to be 15 gallons, but the cafe chose a 12-gallon glass to help keep the proportions and shape of the glass in line with the traditional Irish coffee they serve.

"It looks like a giant replica," said cafe manager Larry Silva.

The unveiling of the Irish coffee happened around 1 p.m. Monday and it took about 20 minutes for four bartenders to pour the ingredients in the glass.

"Everybody went wild," Carden said of the crowd when the drink was revealed.

Attendees of the cafe's 56th Irish coffee anniversary celebration were given drinks from the huge glass, which had a tap at the bottom.

Bartenders added cream to the top of each individual glass served.

The cafe is attempting to take all the necessary steps to ensure they set a world record.

Carden said a public health official was there to certify the gigantic cocktail was drinkable. Additionally, witnesses signed an affidavit and video footage was taken of the drink.

There is a six to eight week turnaround after the cafe files all materials before finding out whether the record has been set, Carden said.

There is no current Guinness record for Irish coffee, according to Carden.

The idea to go for the Guinness world record came from Buena Vista server Andrew Smith, who brought it up during a conversation on how to celebrate the anniversary of the creation of Irish coffee at the Buena Vista Cafe, Carden said.

Monday's event was part of a three-day celebration that started Saturday, featuring Irish music and Celtic dancers to mark the anniversary.


11/11/2008 19:47:26


FuglyStick
Topic :   Bob Dylan tours Neil Young's childhood home

When you live in the house where a world-famous musician grew up, it's expected to be a bit of a draw.

But John Kiernan, who occupies Neil Young’s former Winnipeg home on Grosvenor Avenue, never imagined another famous musician would show up at his door.

Kiernan told CBC News on Monday that he was looking out the window a week ago Sunday and saw his wife talking with two strangers on the front lawn.

“And I'm looking around, and I realize, this guy having a tuque on has really great boots on, these sort of cowboy, motorcycle boots. And he was wearing really nice leather pants. And I realize I'm staring face-to-face with Bob Dylan.”

After the music legend and his manager were invited into the house, Dylan asked a lot of thoughtful questions, including about Neil Young's old bedroom.

“OK, so this was his view, and this was where he listened to his music. It suddenly dawned on me, when you're looking at Bob Dylan standing in a hallway, that he had a very parallel experience 200 miles to the south, sitting in his room, listening to his music, looking out his window.”

Dylan grew up in Hibbing, Minn., about 500 km southeast of Winnipeg, while Neil Young spent his formative high school years playing in Winnipeg rock band The Squires.

Kiernan said Dylan and his manager visited for a while before heading off to tour other areas of the city.

Dylan then played a concert at Winnipeg's MTS Centre later that night, Nov. 2. link



11/11/2008 12:30:23


FuglyStick
Topic :   Beer gets better for you all the time!

NEW YORK: American students have designed a genetically modified yeast that can ferment beer and produces the chemical resveratrol, known to offer some protection against developing cancer.

Resveratrol is a chemical found in high concentrations in grapes, berries, peanuts and pistachio nuts. It has received increasing attention since 1992, when researchers suggested that red wine containing large amounts of resveratrol might have cardiovascular health benefits.

Antioxidant effects

Mouse studies have shown that resveratrol has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects, and that it may stop several different stages of cancer cell development. While the benefits of resveratrol in humans remain unclear, it has become a popular health supplement.

The yeast which has been genetically modified to produce the chemical, currently contains unpalatable chemical markers, however, and is yet to be brewed into beer.

It is being developed for a student genetic engineering competition to be judged in Massachusetts, next week. Previous entries in the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition have included both bananas and bacterial cultures engineered to smell of mint.

The idea for the healthier beer, dubbed 'Biobeer', started out as a joke. "You could say that the inspiration for the project came from a student who really enjoys his beer," said Thomas Segall-Shapiro, a member of the team behind the project.

The team are mostly undergraduate students, based at Rice University in Houston, Texas, some of whom aren't yet old enough to legally drink alcohol in the U.S., where the limit is set at 21.

Segall-Shapiro, said that one problem with health supplements containing resveratrol is that many contain an oxidised form of the molecule, which is unlikely to be fully activated, and therefore effective, when consumed.

Active form

Once brewed, Biobeer will have active resveratrol contained in yeast, which has a much higher chance of remaining active.

However it may be some time before the beer is ready for consumption. The team are only part-way through their experiment, and though they have added one set of genes to the yeast in order to make resveratrol, another set of genes is needed to complete the operation.

Following that, the taste will need to be adjusted, and the final product would have to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration before it could hit the market.

Karen Collins, Nutrition Advisor to the American Institute for Cancer Research, commented that the project "raises interesting questions." But she questioned whether the beer would contain enough of the molecule to be an effective cancer preventative, and cautioned that excess alcohol consumption in itself increases the risk of some cancers.  link



11/08/2008 19:44:50


FuglyStick
Topic :   Should kids be allowed to graduate at 16?

Should Kids Be Able to Graduate After 10th Grade?

High school sophomores should be ready for college by age 16. That's the message from New Hampshire education officials, who announced plans Oct. 30 for a new rigorous state board of exams to be given to 10th graders. Students who pass will be prepared to move on to the state's community or technical colleges, skipping the last two years of high school. (See pictures of teens and how they would vote.)

Once implemented, the new battery of tests is expected to guarantee higher competency in core school subjects, lower dropout rates and free up millions of education dollars. Students may take the exams - which are modeled on existing AP or International Baccalaureate tests - as many times as they need to pass. Or those who want to go to a prestigious university may stay and finish the final two years, taking a second, more difficult set of exams senior year. "We want students who are ready to be able to move on to their higher education," says Lyonel Tracy, New Hampshire's Commissioner for Education. "And then we can focus even more attention on those kids who need more help to get there."

But can less schooling really lead to better-prepared students at an earlier age? Outside of the U.S., it's actually a far less radical notion than it sounds. Dozens ofindustrialized countries expect students to be college-ready by age 16, and those teenagers consistently outperform their American peers on internationalstandardized tests. (See pictures of the college dorm room's evolution.)

With its new assessment system, New Hampshire is adopting a key recommendation of a blue-ribbon panel called the New Commission on Skills of the American Workforce. In 2006, the group issued a report called Tough Choices or Tough Times , a blueprint for how it believes the U.S. must dramatically overhaul education policies in order to maintain a globally competitive economy. "Forty years ago, the United States had the best educated workforce in the world," says William Brock, one of the commission's chairs and a former U.S. Secretary of Labor. "Now we're No. 10 and falling."

As more and more jobs head overseas, Brock and others on the commission can't stress enough how dire the need is for educational reform. "The nation is running out of time," he says.

New Hampshire's announcement comes as Utah and Massachusetts declared that they, too, plan to enact some of the commission's other proposals, such as universal Pre-K and better teacher pay and training. Still more states are expected to sign on in December. And the largest teacher union in the U.S., the National Education Association, is encouraging its affiliates to support such efforts.

Some reform advocates would like to see the report's testing proposals replace current No Child Left Behind legislation. "It makes accountability much more meaningful by stressing critical thinking and true mastery," says Tracy.

No date has been set for when New Hampshire will start administering the new set of exams, which have yet to be developed. But to achieve the goal of sending kids to college at 16, Tracy and his colleagues recognize preparation will have to start early. Nearly four years ago, New Hampshire began an initiative called Follow the Child. Starting practically from birth, educators are expected to chart children's educational progress year to year. In the future, this effort will be bolstered by formalized curricula that specify exactly what kids should know by the end of each grade level.

That should help minimize the need for review year to year. It will also bring New Hampshire's education framework much closer to what occurs in many high-performing European and Asian nations. "It's about defining what lessons students should master and then teaching to those points," says Marc Tucker, co-chair of the commission and president of the National Center for Education and the Economy in Washington. "Kids at every level will be taking tough courses and working hard."

Right now, Tucker argues, most American teenagers slide through high school, viewing it as a mandatory pit stop to hang out and socialize. Of those who do go to college, half attend community college. So Tucker's thinking is why not let them get started earlier? If that happened nationwide, he estimates the cost savings would add up to $60 billion a year. "All money that can be spent either on early childhood education or elsewhere," he says.

Critics of cutting high school short, however, worry that proposals such as New Hampshire's could exacerbate existing socioeconomic gaps. One key concern is whether test results, at age 16, are really valid enough to indicate if a child should go to university or instead head to a technical school - with the latter almost certainly guaranteeing lower future earning potential. "You know that the kids sent in that direction are going to be from low-income, less-educated families while wealthy parents won't permit it," says Iris Rotberg, a George Washington University education policy professor, who notes similar results in Europe and Asia. She predicts, in turn, that disparity will mean "an even more polarized higher education structure - and ultimately society - than we already have."

It's a charge that Tracy denies. "We're simply telling students it's okay to go at their own pace," he says. Especially if that pace is a little quicker than the status quo.  link



11/07/2008 16:24:51


FuglyStick
Topic :   Deftones bassist in coma

Deftones bassist in coma after car crash

Wed Nov 5, 2008 5:57am EST

NEW YORK (Billboard) - The bass player with California rock band Deftones is in a coma after being involved in a car accident Monday in Santa Clara, Calif., according to the Sacramento Bee.

Chi Cheng, 38, is in a "very serious" state, the paper quoted frontman Chino Moreno as saying.

"I don't know everything that's going on -- I just know it's very serious," Moreno told the Bee.

"Chi is one of the strongest people I know, and I'm praying that his strength will get him through this," Moreno added in a note on the Deftones' blog. "Please say a prayer for him as well."

Cheng has been in the studio with Deftones working on the band's next studio album, "Eros," which is due in spring 2009 via Warner Bros. The Deftones' most recent live show was in mid-September in Peoria, Ariz.

Reuters/Billboard



11/05/2008 16:42:38


FuglyStick
Topic :   Michael Crichton dies

Family: Michael Crichton dies of cancer

NEW YORK (