Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Why Appropriate Dallas Foundation Inspection is Essential for Homes











Foundations are highly critical towards the overall integrity of homes and buildings. Cracked foundation is definitely a signal of impending collapse, especially, in case of causing disrupts on grounds due to earthquake. Hence, appropriate Dallas Foundation Inspection after every few years is highly essential for homeowners. The reason for this is that re-leveled and repaired foundations before putting any property on market may result in causing significant increase in the overall value of properties. Home inspectors also work for assessment of properties before they go for some potential purchases.

However, home inspectors may also perform some routine inspections, on regular basis, so that they can ensure that your homes do not cause any major damages. Foundation is actually one of the critical components of our home. However, there are things, about which homeowners should have to look with respect to their foundations. These include cracks in slabs, cracks in foundation, damages in floors, bulging and potentiality towards water damage due to lack of water spouts, gutters and lawns.

After this, inspectors should also seek some missing elements, which may weaken structural integrity of any of the foundations. These incorporate missing piers and missing posts. In the next step, you should be well-aware of landscape, which surrounds your property or home. Here, you should have to go for finding out whether your property sits over the slope or not. Now, you should have to identity that is your home is located across any rocky area. Other than this, you should have to ensure that your property should never locate over or across any faulty line.

Lastly, you should have to ensure that your dream home never located near any river, which incorporates potential towards flood. After assessment of each of the risk factors associated with location of property, inspector has to determine about the type of foundation of homes. This implies that inspector has to determine that whether the foundation requires some repairing process or it is sound. Thus, in this way, Dallas foundation inspection can help homeowners in appropriate inspection of foundation in homes. For further details, you may refer several websites related with foundation inspection companies in Dallas.

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Jennifer Lawrence to announce Oscar nominations (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Jennifer Lawrence will help announce this year's Academy Awards nominees.

The 21-year-old actress will join Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences President Tom Sherak at the nominations announcement on Jan. 24.

Lawrence earned her first Oscar nomination last year for "Winter's Bone." She stars in the anticipated adaptation of "The Hunger Games," set for release in March.

Sherak and Lawrence will announce 10 of Oscar's 24 categories at the early-morning press conference.

The 84th annual Academy Awards will be presented on Feb. 26.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120109/ap_en_ot/us_oscar_nominations_jennifer_lawrence

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M. Basketball. Clemson vs. Florida State Postgame Coaches' Quotes

Jan. 7, 2012

Recap?|? Box Score?|? Photo Gallery?

Clemson Head Coach Brad Brownell

Overall thoughts:
"It was a great win for our guys. I thought we were really ready to play. I was quietly optimistic. I thought we had a great week of practice. Our players were locked in and really focused, and we competed hard. I thought the second half of East Tennessee State put our guys in good spirits. We made a lot of tough plays today. We made 11 straight stops in the first half and we were able to score off of a bunch of those. Then we did a really good job of just keeping them at bay. It's really hard, when you have a lead like that, to keep it at a point where you can relax a little bit. Our guys did a good job of hanging in there, finishing plays, and making free throws. We got contributions from a lot of guys."

On how his team's early run affected the game:
"Games change, and games are different. Certainly, when we jumped out, it changed a little bit of the way Florida State had to play. They had to come out and try to get into us, and it opened the court for us to be able to drive the ball more. That's one of the reasons why we had so many free throws. We were in a situation where we could attack. I'm certainly unbelievably proud of how hard our guys competed and the way they defended at a very high level today. Florida State is the kind of team that crashes the board so much that you know if you can get a defensive rebound, you have a chance to go attack them. They are hard to keep off the glass. They got a bunch of offensive rebounds, but we also got a few layups."

On Andre Young's ability to get to the free throw line:
"Part of it is the way the game was played and the way they defended. It shows his improvement as a player, though, to be able to put the ball on the floor and create more. That's not something that he's done as much throughout his career. We worked really hard with him this spring, and he did a great job this spring and summer working on his skills. That has helped him attack the basket."

On the play of Catalin Baciu, particularly in the first half:
"He's a big kid. When he's comfortable and when he's locked in, he can be a problem for people, especially when we've got them spread out a little bit. I thought our guys did a phenomenal job of leading him to baskets. He's holding the guy off, but our guys are passing it to him where all he has to do is turn and hook it in quickly. We had a couple of guys make feeds to him where that was all he really had to do. I thought they did a good job of really finding him."

On how this team compares to last year's group:
"We're not where we were last year. We played a very good game today, but we're not where we were last year right now. We've got a lot more things that we have to do better. But I do think our team is improving. I thought Hawaii was good for us to get some freshmen some time to play. They didn't all play very well at times, and I reminded them that we didn't win very much in Hawaii. So they didn't play very much against East Tennessee. That was part of a teaching moment for me with those guys. But I also told them that we can't survive the ACC playing six guys, so they're going to have to play and earn their time in practice. This week, they practiced much better. We got their focus back, and they were much more competitive in practice. That's what they have to do. They have to help us. I've been talking all year about how we don't have a home run hitter. We don't have a guy that we can pencil in 18 points for. But we have a lot of guys that, if they play well, we can do good things. But we've had a hard time having multiple players play well, especially offensively, on a given night. Today, we did."


Florida State Head Coach Leonard Hamilton

Overall Thoughts:
"That was one of our worst games. It just wasn't a well-played game. I didn't see that coming because we had had a good week of practice. We played with an extreme amount of energy the other night against Auburn, and we didn't bring that type of energy tonight. We had about seven open looks that we only made one of. That was disappointing. They went on that run in the first half and we just couldn't dig ourselves out of that hole. This was uncharacteristic focus for our team. We're usually able to bounce back and go on a run and get back in it, but we just didn't give that kind energy tonight."

On scoreless drought in the first half:
"That's been the norm for this team. We've been on a lot of runs this year where we haven't been able to score, even though we've gotten good shots up. We evaluate all the film and the guys work hard in practice and are focused, but sometimes we can't translate that effort onto the court in a game. We need to fix that, fast."

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Source: http://onlyfans.cstv.com/schools/clem/sports/m-baskbl/recaps/010712aad.html

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Community rallies to keep author at bay

A book signing scheduled for Monday at Leath Memorial Library in Rockingham, featuring a book of poetry written by author Joanna Catherine Scott, in collaboration with a convicted murderer, stirred up an emotional outcry from the community this week.

Her co-author had killed two Richmond County men 20 years ago.

Complaints from the community to the library, which had agreed to host Scott, letters to the editor of the Daily Journal and outraged reader comments on the newspaper?s website seemed to unite many in the county with the same thought ? Scott is not welcome to promote her book here.

In the end, the library postponed the author?s visit.

She was set to promote her new book ?An Innocent in the House of the Dead,? a collaboration with former death row inmate John Lee Conaway.

Conaway was charged with the 1991 offenses of murder in the first degree, kidnapping in the first degree, robbery with a dangerous weapon and larceny.

In the case of the State of North Carolina v. John Lee Conaway, the jury returned verdicts finding Conaway guilty of two counts of first-degree murder for the shooting deaths of Paul DeWitt Callahan and Thomas Amos Weatherford, on the theory of premeditation and deliberation, according to court records.

?My son was just 21 years old, and left behind a baby when his life was taken,? said Gabriel Helms, Weatherford?s mother. ?All (Scott) is trying to do is sell a book, and she has no right to do that here.?

According to court records, on the evening of Aug. 22, 1991, Thomas Amos Weatherford and Paul DeWitt Callahan were in the Pantry store located on Highway 177 South in Hamlet, North Carolina. Weatherford was working as the night-shift clerk. Callahan, his roommate, had driven Weatherford to work at 11 p.m. and stayed at the store with him for several hours that night.

Records show that Conaway was in Richmond County in violation of his Maryland parole, and that he was in possession of a handgun stolen from his grandmother?s purse.

It was reported that sometime between 1:30 a.m. and 1:45 a.m. on Aug. 23, 1991, Conaway entered the Pantry, stole $78 from the cash register and kidnapped Weatherford and Callahan at gunpoint.

After Conaway passed the former Coca-Cola plant on Highway 74, east of Hamlet, he stopped the car on the side of the road in an isolated area and ordered the pair to get out of the car.

The state?s evidence tended to show that after getting out of the car, Conaway walked the victims 87 feet into the woods. He ordered the victims to get on their knees, and he shot each of them one time at point-blank range in the back of the head, records show.

When Conaway returned to the car, he told the other three passengers that he had made the two men get on their knees and shot them both in the back of the head. He also told the other men that after he shot the first man, the second victim begged for his life before he killed him, records show.

The three passengers, Kelly Harrington, Michael McKinnon and Kevin ?Keith? Scott, testified to those events during trial, according to court records.

?It was such a heartless thing, he could have just taken the car,? said Helms. ?He wasn?t satisfied with that, he had to kill them for just a few dollars.?

On Aug. 25, 1991, Conaway was arrested in Cambridge, Maryland, in possession of a .25 caliber handgun, which he later admitted was stolen from his grandmother.

Four days later, Army Sergeant Daniel Poe was flying his ultralight plane near Hamlet looking for his lost dog. He noticed something white on the ground, took a closer look and saw the victims? bodies. He landed the ultralight and called the police.

Conaway spent 16 years on death row, before a federal court granted him a writ of habeas corpus, and he is currently seeking a new lawyer who will help him ?prove his innocence,? according to Scott, who lives in Chapel Hill.

?John was granted a writ of habeas corpus by the federal court on grounds of jury bias ? the double first cousin of one of his accusers was on the jury ? and is waiting for the resolution of his case,? Scott states on her website.

Scott claims to have befriended, and legally adopted the inmate, after visiting him in prison. On her website, she states that ?(Conaway?s) story has opened my eyes to the plight of the poor black man entangled on our so-called justice system.?

In a previous interview with the Daily Journal, Scott described Conaway as ?lovely,? and stated that ?John was brought up as a sad, beaten and abandoned child.?

?I don?t care about (Conaway?s) life story,? said Helms. ?(Scott) can go to prison to visit him, but the closest I can get to my son is getting on my knees at the cemetery.?

Upon learning of the author?s intentions to promote her book in Rockingham, family, friends and community members joined together in an effort to halt the event.

Cries went out on the Daily Journal?s website and Facebook to unite, and stop the book signing. Some claimed to be seeking permits to demonstrate, while others made calls to the Daily Journal and Leath Memorial Library voicing their concerns.

The library issued a statement on Thursday that the book signing had been postponed because, ?While the author did disclose the topic of her poetry was a man on death row, the author did not say that the victims of the subject of her poetry were from Richmond County. We want to be respectful of the interest of all Richmond County citizens.?

?I appreciate our family?s friends and other people in the community going online and calling the library to get this thing called off,? said Robert Callahan, brother of Paul Callahan. ?That really means a lot that people cared so much.?

Lisa England, of Rockingham, was one such concerned community member.

?I stopped by the library to personally voice a complaint,? said England. ?I called the Daily Journal, I called Central Prison and I faxed a letter to Gov. Bev Perdue. I made copies of the articles and sent them to her office. What about the victims? Central Prison might be fine with all this going on with one of its inmates, but I am not OK with any of this.?

England said that as a community member, she felt terrible for the families of the victims dealing with the author?s potential visit, and the content of her work. She went on to say that, as a former correctional officer, she was outraged that Conaway was even allowed to participate in writing a book.

?I found out in the Daily Journal that the event has been postponed, and I?m so glad,? said England. ?I don?t know why she was even thinking of coming here.?

Scott could not be reached for immediate comment, but posted this statement on her website regarding the event, all in red capital letters:

?THIS READING WAS CANCELLED. RICHMOND COUNTY SHUT ME DOWN. THE LOCAL PAPER PRINTED HATE MAIL AND I GOT THE FIRST HATE MAIL I HAVE EVER HAD. THE BLACK COMMUNITY IS UPSET TO SAY THE LEAST. I?VE NEVER CAUSED A RIOT BEFORE, ESPECIALLY ABOUT POETRY. SO MUCH FOR FREE SPEECH IN DOWN HOME USA.?

? Staff Writer Kelli Easterling can be reached at 910-997-3111, ext. 18, or by email at keasterling@heartlandpublications.com.

Source: http://yourdailyjournal.com/bookmark/17014126

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

First Sprint LTE Smartphone is Samsung Galaxy Nexus with 1.5-GHz, According to Leaked Ad

In addition to announcing its first five LTE markets and pegging new devices with the new 4G standard for arrival in the second half of the year, Sprint also made news with plans to release the Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphone with LTE as well.?

The details were revealed through an advertisement posted at Cnet.com yesterday, according to Engadget. The promo touted the Galaxy Nexus as ?the first 4G LTE phone for Sprint?. It also mentioned that the phone will have a 1.5-GHz processor. That?s a faster CPU than the version of the device currently sold exclusively by Verizon Wireless.

Source: http://blog.laptopmag.com/first-sprint-lte-smartphone-is-samsung-galaxy-nexus-with-1-5-ghz-according-to-leaked-ad

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Friday, January 6, 2012

US envoy visits China after Kim Jong Il's death (AP)

BEIJING ? China and the United States will maintain "very close contact" concerning developments in North Korea following the death of leader Kim Jong Il, a top U.S. diplomat said Wednesday.

Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell is the highest level U.S. official to visit the region since Kim's death last month raised new concerns about poor, nuclear-equipped North Korea's stability and U.S.-North Korean talks that were disrupted just as they were making headway.

His comments followed four hours of talks with Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai and other senior Chinese officials and scholars on issues including a possible resumption of talks on North Korea's nuclear disarmament and deliveries of U.S. food aid to the hunger-stricken nation.

"I think the United States and China share a strong determination to maintain peace and stability," Campbell told reporters at Beijing's airport ahead of a flight to South Korea.

"I think we both underscored how important it will be over the course of the coming months to maintain very close contact between Washington and Beijing, and I indicated that we would be closely monitoring the situation there and that we urged all parties to cautiously deal with the situation and to refrain from any provocations," he said.

China is North Korea's most important diplomatic ally and provides important economic assistance to the country. It has frequently been called on by the U.S. and others to use its influence to moderate North Korean behavior.

Following Kim's death, and with a leadership transition to his son Kim Jong Un under way, senior Chinese officials have urged Washington not to take any actions that might provoke or destabilize Pyongyang.

In the past two years, tensions spiraled in the region as North Korea conducted a nuclear test and shelled a South Korean island, among other provocations. With tensions easing slightly, Washington and Pyongyang have held quiet negotiations and were nearing an agreement to resume U.S. food aid when Kim died on Dec. 17.

That agreement was seen as a first step toward restarting the stalled six-nation disarmament talks, which also include China, Japan, South Korea and Russia. But Pyongyang has cast doubt over whether those negotiations will be quickly restored. Its powerful National Defense Commission released a hardline statement last week saying North Korea would never deal with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak.

Campbell, who said his visit to China had been planned before Kim's death, also discussed the Obama administration's warming relations with Myanmar, which has relied heavily on Chinese trade, investment and diplomatic support.

He said they also discussed Chinese allies Pakistan and Iran, as well as Taiwan's upcoming presidential election and a visit to the U.S. this year by Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping at a "time of mutual convenience."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120104/ap_on_re_as/as_china_us

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Video: GOP: Iowa & Gauging the Granite State

Chuck Todd, NBC News has the latest details on the Iowa shake-up of the GOP field, and discussing the differences between the candidates, with Jen Psaki, fmr. White House deputy comm. dir.; Phil Musser, fmr. Romney 2008 campaign advisor; and Sara Fagen...

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45878201/

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Iran Oil Tension Boosts Prices: The New Libya?

Oil prices surged nearly $4 per barrel on Tuesday morning on concerns about supply disruption ensuing from a possible confrontation between the U.S. and Iran. Front month WTI crude prices reached a intraday high of nearly $103 a barrel. Technically, February WTI crude futures need to breakout past the most recent high of $103.37 for a drive to $104 and higher.?

Brent crude oil prices remain in an upswing as well, hitting a session high of $111.58 per barrel, and a close above $109.59 signals an emerging bull run advance, according to technicians. For Brent crude, the next key level to watch is $112.70, the 200-day moving average.

Traders say Iran is the new Libya. Just as civil war in Libya caused crude oil prices to spike to near $115 a barrel in 2011, escalating tensions between the Iran and the West could cause oil prices to reach those levels again early this year. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil producer, with production at 4.245 million barrels daily in 2010, according to the 2011 BP Statistical Review.

Earlier on Tuesday, Iran's army chief warned the U.S. Navy not to return an aircraft carrier back to the Persian Gulf after it was removed due to Iran's naval exercises in the area. Iran's threat comes after it test fired missiles in the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend and the U.S. formalized extending sanctions on any entity dealing with the Iranian Central Bank. The euro-zone nations should decide by the end of the month whether to place an embargo on Iranian oil imports.

"Some of the rhetoric can at times be part of a PR show but it can quickly spin out of control," said Petromatrix energy analyst Olivier Jakob. "Iran asking a departing U.S. aircraft carrier not to return is almost forcing the US Navy to send it back to the Persian Gulf."

Iran has said it could shut the Strait of Hormuz, a major waterway that the EIA calls "the world's most important oil chokepoint due to its daily oil flow of almost 17 million barrels in 2011."

Iran's currency is already feeling the pinch of a possible oil ban ? with the rial falling 40 percent vs. the dollar in the past month.

"In this environment of increasing tensions and rhetoric, global asset managers are unlikely to give up their long exposure to oil ... at least until we can have a clearer idea as to what the Eurozone decides on an Iranian import ban and the Iranian reaction to the Eurozone decision," Jakob said.

He recommended buying the very back of the curve in Brent crude oil, buying December 2016 Brent at $90 in the current Iranian geopolitical environment.

Some traders said they're hedging Iranian risk to oil prices by buying "out of the money" calls. Call options [cnbc explains] from $110 to $130 have been trading, said Paramount Options president Ray Carbone, on concerns about Iran as well as possible strikes in Nigeria.

Disclaimer

? 2012 CNBC.com

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/45857310

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What's the secret formula for silly science?

Improbable.com

The Ig Nobel Prizes sometimes knock scientific decorum off its pedestal.

By Alan Boyle

Updated 10:25 p.m. ET

If there's a formula for silly science, Ig Nobel founder Marc Abrahams surely has it figured out. For 21 years, he and his?friends at the Annals of Improbable Research have made international headlines by honoring breakthroughs like the first?study of homosexual necrophiliac ducks, and the invention of the bra that?turns into a gas mask.

But here's a clue or two for?future laureates: Make sure there's a dash of seriousness to go with the silliness. One sure way not to win an Ig Nobel?is to try too hard to be funny.


"If you were to set out and try to win an Ig Nobel Prize, you would almost certainly fail," Abrahams told me. "To win a prize, you've got to do something that makes pretty much everyone laugh when they first hear about it, and then it gets into their mind enough that they just want to keep thinking about it and finding out more. It's not that hard to make something funny, and it's not that hard to come up with something that will make people scratch their head and wonder about it. But it's very hard to come up with things that will do both of those."

Abrahams talked about the ingredients of Ig-worthy science tonight during "Virtually Speaking Science,"?our monthly talk show on the Web and in the Second Life virtual world. If you missed the live show, you can still catch up with the podcast?on?BlogTalkRadio?as well as on iTunes.

The subject of tonight's show was particularly apt because?today we announced the winners of this year's Weird Science Awards. The Weirdies celebrate the silliest science of the past year, from A (for Aflockalypse) to Z (for zombie ants).

The Ig Nobels, which take their inspiration from the Nobel Prize, are a much bigger production. They're announced each September (or sometimes early October) during a Harvard ceremony that features real Nobel laureates, musical interludes and occasional barrages of paper airplanes. For the past two decades, it's been a formula for success for Abrahams and his fellow AIR-heads.?After the Ig Nobel?festivities, Abrahams takes the show on the road, to Britain, the Netherlands and other locations around the globe. Abrahams has also written several books that recount the tales behind the Ig Nobel winners.

I discussed the Ig phenomenon?with Abrahams during a phone interview on Tuesday. Here's an edited transcript of the Q&A:

Cosmic Log: Are there particularly better or worse years for the Ig Nobels? Where does this past year rate?

Marc Abrahams: One of the main qualities that everything has to have if we're doing a good job is that it's surprising. If each of the winners is not surprising, we have not been doing a good job. So I think the idea of surprise is like the idea of infinity. It's hard to compare infinities. It's hard to compare surprises. As long as everything is surprising, we're happy. And for all the winners we had, we saw plenty of people who were very, very surprised.

Q: So whether it's infinity, or infinity times two, it's hard to compare. It almost sounds like you're saying "I can't decide which of my children I like best."

A: Well, you probably can. But if you were to be asked on consecutive days, the answers would not be very consistent, probably.

Q: Have you seen any areas that are really ripe for being recognized with an Ig Nobel? Any subject that is just crying out for the Ig Nobel treatment?

A: There are so many ... I can't think of a particular subject that stands out over the others as having not been recognized. It's more that there are certain things that people do that seem to keep on producing this quality of work. We've seen no signs that anything is slowing down. Humanity seems to be getting better and better at producing this stuff. Or maybe just at making it apparent to the rest of the world so that we can find it.

Anything that's so complicated that people will probably never really understand it is going to produce some good Ig Nobel prizes, because people are going to try their hardest to understand it, or pretend to understand it. I'll mention medicine, because medicine is far too complicated, and most doctors who know what they're doing seem to spend most of their time realizing that they barely know anything at all. But there are other doctors who don't seem to feel that way. Those are the ones who tend to win more Ig Nobel Prizes.

Q: Are there some researchers who go out and deliberately try to win a prize?

A: Oh, yeah. From the beginning we've had far more people than we would have ever expected who seem to devote their lives to trying to get an Ig Nobel Prize. There are some who are constantly sending in all sorts of things. They're welcome to nominate themselves. Anybody can. But we get thousands and thousands of nominations every year. Ten to 20 percent of those are people nominating themselves. They almost never win. And of the very few people who have nominated themselves and won, in almost every case, they did not set out to win an Ig Nobel Prize. They may have set out to win a Nobel Prize, but the way it came out was just a side effect. They had something they were trying to get done, and somewhere along the way, or after it was all finished, it became apparent that, wow, this is Ig Nobel-class work.

Q: Have some researchers' lives been changed because they won an Ig Nobel? For example, the woman who invented the bra that converts into a pair of gas masks?

A: Yeah, that's a good example. Especially in the last five or 10 years, there seem to be a fair number of people who have had pretty good things happen to them. They've started businesses, or their businesses have taken off. They've gotten book contracts or have become better known. Elena Bodnar is a good example. Kees Moeliker, the homosexual-necrophiliac-duck guy. Even Andre Geim, who used magnets to levitate a frog and win an Ig, and then 10 years later got a Nobel Prize ... the Ig Nobel had nothing to do with him getting a Nobel Prize, but Andre being Andre, the same kinds of forces were at work in him that led to both those things.

I've seen Andre say several times in interviews that it took a lot more courage for him and his colleague Michael Berry to accept their Ig Nobel Prize than the Nobel Prize. They've both been well-known and respected scientists for a long time, and sometimes there's been a little bit of a stigma against scientists getting up in public and appearing to be fully human and enjoying life. If you look back at the last century or so, it's hard to come up quickly with more than two or three names of scientists who enjoyed being funny in public. Richard Feynman is about the only one.

Q: During September's Ig Nobel ceremony, the mathematics prize went to preacher Harold Camping and other doomsayers who predicted the end of the world, erroneously. Is there room for a prize to recognize the 2012 Maya apocalypse this year?

A: It's certainly possible. We have a policy of not discussing candidates for future prizes in public. But I'm comfortable in saying that pretty much anything you can think of could be a candidate, if someone were to make a nomination. With those predictions, the problem is, who do you nominate? We're hesitant to give a prize in a case where it's not at all clear who we're giving it to. We don't award the prize to a concept. We award it to a specific person or a specific group of people.

Q: I'm greatly tempted to ask you to list some of your favorite prizes from the past...

A: I don't have any one that is the absolute favorite. There's the levitating frog with magnets, there's the homosexual necrophiliac duck, Elena Bodner's emergency bra ... boy, where to stop? Jacques Benveniste won two Ig Nobel Prizes: one for explaining that water molecules are able to remember things, and the second for extending that research and starting a company that was going to let the public send credit card information over the Internet or a phone line, in return for which this company would send you drugs over the Internet or the phone line. You would somehow take a glass of water and hook it up to your telephone, and they would deliver your medicine to you.

Q: If you're talking about multiple winners, there's the Japanese slime-mold research group.

A: Yup. And who knows? It's conceivable that any of the winners could win again in the future for things they haven't yet done.

There's also the case of the prize that went to two teams of researchers who independently came up with studies saying that herring, those little fish, communicate by farting. One of the groups has an especially good story. It was research done in Sweden, in Stockholm harbor, at the request of the Swedish government. This was back when the Soviet Union still existed, and the Swedish government was convinced that the Soviets were sending submarines into the harbor, but they needed proof before they could get up in public and accuse them.

So they put some microphones underwater, figuring that they would get recordings of the sounds of the submarines. They heard some mechanical clanking, very rhythmic. It sounded like metal banging, and they thought, "This is it! These are the submarines. But we're going to do this right, and we're going to get some good biologists to analyze this and tell us for sure what this is."

So they got these guys, who pretty quickly realized that these were not Soviet submarines. These were herrings, farting. We occasionally do shows in Scandinavia, and if one of them comes to the show, they'll usually go to the market beforehand, buy a freshly cut herring, bring it to the show and demonstrate. "This is a herring, and I'm going to show you the sound it makes."

I recently ran across a big report about the Swedish effort to detect submarines, and it was a wonderful report to read ...?only it was missing this vital information. It didn't say anything at all about this, which in a way was one of the key elements in the whole history of the relationship between these two countries.

That got me thinking about all the history that's taught in schools, and how it's always so dignified. You never get these things that are sometimes really right in the heart of what happened. Nobody talks about them because they're not dignified.

Tonight's "Virtually Speaking Science" conversation took place in Second Life?and will be?archived on?BlogTalkRadio and iTunes. Check out these other podcasts from the "VSScience" show:


Many thanks to the Meta Institute for Computational Astrophysics for co-sponsoring Wednesday's Second Life talk at the MICA Small Auditorium at Stella Nova.

Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding me to your Google+ circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/04/9950637-the-secret-formula-for-silly-science

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Chuck Williams: Baseball comes easy to Columbus High's Kyle Carter

It?s a safe bet no high school athlete in the history of Columbus has made more front-page headlines than Columbus High?s Kyle Carter.

?He has been kind of like a rock star in Columbus since he was 12,? says his high school baseball coach, Bobby Howard.

That?s when Carter was the centerpiece of a team that won the Little League World Series. Before he was 14 he had already played more than a half dozen games on ESPN.

Last week, Carter was at it again. He won a home run derby at Chase Field, the Phoenix home of the Arizona Dimondbacks. The high school senior hit 14 home runs out of a big-league park. In the finals, he hit seven. The other four finalists -- all prep All-Americans in their own right -- hit a total of four. One of his homers was 487 feet.

That is impressive, even if you don?t follow baseball.

Last summer, Carter was the Most Valuable Player for East Cobb Baseball, one of the nation?s premier youth leagues that has produced major leaguers like Jason Heyward, Brian McCann and many others.

In East Cobb?s biggest tournament, Carter was the MVP.

As a high school freshman, Carter hit three home runs in his first state championship series game.

Turn the lights on, and he turns it on.

?He?s been on a lot of big stages, and he is not afraid of the moment,? Howard says. ?He is just a different animal when the bat is in his hands.?

And he doesn?t turn 18 until Thursday.

Carter?s father Richard saw the ability and desire to perform at early age.

When he was about 5, little Kyle would spend hours swinging at pitches from a machine that would toss pitch after pitch.

?He burned out two motors,? Richard remembers.

By the time Kyle was 8, he was setting the machine on 10 -- the highest speed it would go -- and pounding the ball.

Howard has coached a lot of players, including future Baseball Hall of Fame player Frank Thomas, and is careful when he compares players.

?I don?t like to do it,? the coach says. ?But Frank was never exposed at this age in the way that Kyle has been. ... Kyle has this knack when he crosses the line, the game of baseball just comes easy for him.?

The exposure is only going to intensify this year in that fish bowl Carter has lived in since he was a little kid.

Carter has signed to play at Georgia but will likely be a high pick in the pro draft in June. If that happens, Carter and his parents have a decision to make.

It is no secret that some big league scouts love Carter, and others question if his 6-foot, 193-pound frame is big enough.

Richard tells this story from East Cobb this summer. Two scouts were talking and didn?t know Kyle?s dad was near them.

?One was telling the other he didn?t think Kyle was big enough,? Richard remembers.

Then, Carter hit a bomb off a house past the outfield wall.

It didn?t take the second scout long to dryly respond, Richard says.

?He looked at the other scout and said, ?Imagine how far it would have gone if he was two inches taller.??

Source: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/2012/01/03/1878379/baseball-comes-easy-to-carter.html

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