Archive for October 30th, 2011

Oct
30

A Capuchin Crypt Full Of WellPreserved Old Friars

by , under NEWS
A Capuchin Crypt Full Of WellPreserved Old Friars

Established in the 16th century by friars as an outgrowth of their original cemetery, the Capuchin crypts were originally dug in 1599 to hold the mummified body of fellow monk, Silvestro of Gubbio. Originally intended for other dead friars, a strange tradition emerged over the ensuing centuries as affluent Sicilians were entombed in the crypts as a symbol of social status. These well-to-do would request to spend the rest of time adorned in their favorite outfits, some even insisting that their wardrobe be changed at regular intervals…
8,000 Mummies
1 of 10
FIRST SLIDE
PREVIOUS SLIDE
NEXT SLIDESHOW
READ WHOLE POST
Poshbrood: 7 Haunted Hotels Where You Can Get Your Paranormal On
Where To Go In 2012, According To Lonely Planet (PHOTOS)
Reflections On My Walk Across America (PHOTOS)
The Grace Of Mexico’s Lovely Punta Mita
Going With The Pyroclastic Flow: Volcano Vacations (PHOTOS)
The 10 Scariest Real Places In America (PHOTOS)
PLAY
FULLSCREEN
ZOOM

SHARE THIS SLIDE
Lining long, dimly lit corridors, seated on benches and chairs, and tucked into open coffins are the 8,000 quasi-mummified corpses of the Capuchin Monastery and Catacombs.
Read More about the Sleeping Beauty and Sicily’s Well Dressed Dead on Atlas Obscura.
photo by Seth Teicher
31 Days of Halloween: On Atlas Obscura this month, every day is Halloween. Stop by the Atlas Obscura blog every day this month for true tales of the unquiet

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

A Minor Diversion Nervously Pondering A Year Traveling With Family

by , under NEWS
A Minor Diversion Nervously Pondering A Year Traveling With Family

“Are you excited?” is the most common question when people hear about my travel plans.
Yes. But there is a caveat.
On Halloween night my husband and I will board a 16-hour direct flight to Hong Kong with two sugared-up toddlers. Our checklist between then and August 2012 looks something like this: Thailand, Malaysia, India, Myanmar, Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan, South Africa, Namibia, Botswana and

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Norwegian Ship Rescues Sailboat Passengers In Major Storm

by , under NEWS
Norwegian Ship Rescues Sailboat Passengers In Major Storm

If you saw the movie Perfect Storm, you can imagine how tough it was to pull this off.
Norwegian Cruise Line’s Norwegian Gem responded to a call from the US Coast Guard who had received a distress notification from Sanctuary, a 39-foot sailboat, stating that they had large breaking waves over the bow, had lost power and a life raft and were taking on water. Sanctuary was located approximately 350 nautical miles from New York in the North Atlantic Ocean, two hours away from the Norwegian Gem, the closest vessel in the area. The Norwegian Gem’s Captain Hakan Svedung immediately diverted course to rescue the four men and one woman aboard.
Upon reaching the Sanctuary, Norwegian Gem encountered extreme weather conditions with wind force up to 40 knots and large swells, making it challenging to launch the ship’s rescue

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

5 Diet Myths Keeping You From A Healthy Weight

by , under NEWS
5 Diet Myths Keeping You From A Healthy Weight

By Nicci Micco, Editor-at-Large for EatingWell Magazine
It’s one thing to feel disappointed that you’re lugging around a few extra pounds when you know you’ve been a little lax with your eating or exercise. But religiously following diet rules and not making progress (or, worse yet, gaining weight) is infuriating and depressing. If you’re watching your weight and not getting any closer to your goal, look closely at the weight-loss principles you’re following. It could be that diet myths are causing you to pack on

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Contemplation Finding Ourselves Finding God

by , under NEWS
Contemplation Finding Ourselves Finding God

When ‘happiness’ eludes us — as, eventually, it always will — we have the invitation to examine our programmed responses and to exercise our power to choose again. Through exaggeration, confusion, and distortion, we have allowed our politics, our church and our families to fall out of emotional balance. We can learn to heal our reactive responses by seeking “emotional sobriety,” which is really the task that we call contemplation.
Bill Wilson, one of the founders of the 12 Step Program of Alcoholics Anonymous, said that recovery was not complete until addicts achieved “emotional sobriety.” In many ways he was saying the same thing that mystical religion recognized — authentic spirituality should lead to a total “rewiring” of both our conscious lives and our unconscious

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

The Spiritual Benefits of Running

by , under NEWS
The Spiritual Benefits of Running

Autumn for me is a delightful time of colorful leaves, pumpkin-flavored deliciousness and Notre Dame football, and for the past four years, my fall schedule has also included running in a marathon.
When I take a step back and look at the idea of running a marathon — training for hundreds of hours and paying a fair amount of money in order to go through a bunch of pain and even risk one’s life — it is crazy, really. People have told me that we were not designed to do this and that I should have gotten a clue from the original marathon runner who dropped dead.
Looking at it from an insider’s perspective, however, it is one of the most exhilarating, valuable experiences I have had. Beyond just the health benefits or the millions of dollars charities have been able to raise through marathons, I am particularly interested in the spiritual benefits of distance running.
Even as a high school student, I noticed how a disproportionate number of cross country runners also attended faith-related

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

This is How We Do It

by , under NEWS
This is How We Do It

I’m a wife, mother of a toddler, full-time employee, runner and a CrossFitter. I’m also currently training for my first ultramarathon.
Let me state up front that I do recognize that I am privileged to a certain degree. I have a husband (AKA The Mister) who is supportive of my fitness goals and will assist me with childcare. I live fairly close to where I work so my commute, including dropping baby off at daycare, is short — for Atlanta

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Journey of a Young Dreamer

by , under NEWS
Journey of a Young Dreamer

Disney Dreamers Academy (DDA) didn’t just give me words of inspiration about how my dreams can come true; it showed me a picture of it. To many of us, dreams at their inceptions seem like mere figments of imagination. When we close our eyes and picture what we want to be, and what we want to do, we are transported to a land, an idea, that anything is possible. Then we open our eyes and view the desolation of our communities, the segregation in the media, and the various difficult roads ahead, we are quickly jolted back to a reality that makes it look like nothing is

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Who is Your God Mammon or the Almighty

by , under NEWS
Who is Your God Mammon or the Almighty

We live in a world of economic disparities, and in a time when these disparities are widening. The poor are getting poorer and the rich are getting richer, and many in the U.S.A. support economic plans which would further reward those currently referred to as “the 1 percent.”
Some might justify economic disparities as endorsed by the Lord Himself, as Jesus suggests that “[Y]e have the poor with you always” (Mark 14:7) — as though poverty were inevitable. Clearly, though, that scripture is not a suggestion that poverty should be casually

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Sunday Roundup

by , under NEWS
Sunday Roundup

Halloween is tomorrow, so this week people in the news were trying on costumes and masks, deciding who they want to be. In sports, the St. Louis Cardinals were the ultimate Cinderella, going from 10.5 games behind in late August to World Series champs. In the GOP race, Rick Perry couldn’t make up his

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Wisconsin Badgers vs Ohio State Buckeyes Recap October 29 2011 ESPN

by , under SPORT NEWS
Wisconsin Badgers vs Ohio State Buckeyes  Recap  October 29 2011  ESPN

Source:Associated Press
__________________________________________________________________________
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Wisconsin had its heart broken again.Braxton Miller threw a 40-yard touchdown pass to Devin Smith with 20 seconds left to give Ohio State a 33-29 victory over the No. 12 Badgers on Saturday night.It was almost exactly seven days earlier that the Badgers were beaten 37-31 at Michigan State on a miracle pass on the final play of the game. The latest heartbreak, just like that one, wasn’t confirmed until it passed a video review.The Buckeyes (5-3, 2-2 Big Ten) won their biggest game of a season shadowed by NCAA problems.The Badgers (7-2, 3-2) drove to the Ohio State 45 — and got an extra play after time elapsed due to a defensive facemask call — but linebacker Andrew Sweat hit quarterback Russell Wilson as he was throwing to end the game and touch off a wild celebration.It was an incredible finish, with four touchdowns scored in the final 4:39. But the Buckeyes were the last one standing after a series of knockout punches by both sides.Miller, a freshman, ran for 99 yards on 19 carries and scored twice, in addition to completing 7 of 12 passes for 89 yards and a score.Dan Herron, in his second game back from two separate suspensions for accepting improper benefits, rushed for 160 yards on 33 carries.Miller scored on runs of 1 and 44 yards — the latter putting Ohio State up 26-14 with 4:39 left. Herron rumbled 57 yards on the first play of the second half to set up Miller’s first TD.The Badgers came in averaging 47.4 points and 512 yards, but were stymied most of the night. They also said all week that they had put the painful loss in East Lansing, Mich., in the rearview mirror. But adding in this latest loss, they may have recurring nightmares.Wilson completed 20 of 32 passes for 253 yards and three touchdowns and Montee Ball gained 85 yards on 17 carries with one touchdown. Jared Abbrederis had six catches for 113 yards and two scores.Taking the kickoff to start the second half, Ohio State immediately got a big play.Herron burst through a hole at the line and past defenders pinching the line, racing 57 yards to the Wisconsin 18. He later went 18 yards to the 1, setting up further drama.The Buckeyes ran three plays and still had 18 inches to go on fourth down. Miller took the snap and wheeled to his right, directly into the path of end Brendan Kelly — but he missed the tackle. Miller scampered through a gaping hole for his first career collegiate touchdown and a 10-7 lead.After the kickoff, the Badgers had to punt. For the second week in a row, things didn’t go as planned.A week after having a blocked punt lead to points in a backbreaking 37-31, last-second loss at Michigan State, this time Ryan Shazier came in completely untouched to block Brad Nortman’s punt. The ball was downed at the Wisconsin 1 by Curtis Grant and the Buckeyes were right back near paydirt.On Jordan Hall’s third run from the 1, he stuck his nose in the back of blocking fullback Zach Boren and slid into the end zone, putting the Buckeyes up 17-7.The celebration was short-lived. The Buckeyes forced a punt but Hall promptly fumbled it, with Andrew Lukasko recovering at the Ohio State 27.Wilson hit Abbrederis on a 12-yard gain and later scrambled for 8 yards to the 1. Ball then notched his 21st touchdown of the season through a wide hole on the left side to cut the deficit to 17-14.An intentional grounding call cost Wisconsin on the second play of the fourth quarter, assuring a punt. From his own end zone, Nortman punted to Hall, with his return putting the Buckeyes in control at the Badgers 34.But the drive stalled when Herron netted 1 yard on two carries and then Miller’s pass was low and wide of tight end Jake Stoneburner in the end zone. Drew Basil converted the 22-yard field goal to push the lead to six points.Wisconsin came right back and drove to the Ohio State 38, but on fourth-and-2 Sweat knifed through to bring down Ball for a 1-yard gain with just over 8 minutes left to get the ball back.The Buckeyes turned that stop into points.Six plays later, Miller kept the ball on third-and-2 and raced through a big hole at left tackle, going 44 yards untouched for the score with 4:39 remaining.The Badgers answered with a quick score in just 44 seconds, with Wilson hitting Abbrederis on a 17-yard score to cut it to 26-21 with 3:48 left.Wisconsin kicked deep and then held the Buckeyes on three runs, forcing a punt.It took just four plays to cover the 68 yards, with Wilson finding Abbrederis all alone down the left sideline for a 49-yard score with 1:18 left. A 2-point conversion pass from Wilson to Ball made it 29-26.But the Buckeyes came right back, taking over at their own 48 after a 42-yard kickoff return by Hall.They picked up 12 yards on three plays before Miller took the snap on first down at the Wisconsin 40 with 30 seconds left. He floated right to avoid a rush, barely sidestepped a potential tackle and suddenly noticed Smith wide open in the end zone. Miller stopped and looped the ball to Smith who caught it just before two defenders closed on him.A crowd of 105,511 went wild.After Basil’s extra point, the Buckeyes kicked off — out of bounds. That gave Wisconsin the ball at its own 40 with 18 seconds left.Wilson threw three incompletions — twice off the hands of receivers who could easily have made huge plays.As a mob of fans waited to rush the field, it was announced there was a flag on the play. It was for a defensive facemask call against defensive back Christian Bryant.That gave the Badgers the ball at the Ohio State 45 and one final play.But the pocket closed on Wilson and Sweat hit him from behind just as he was releasing the pass, the ball fluttering to the ground while the field filled with running, jumping fans celebrating Ohio State’s 90th homecoming.
Links:Full news story
Source:espn.go.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Clemson Tigers vs Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets Recap October 29 2011 ESPN

by , under SPORT NEWS
Clemson Tigers vs Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets  Recap  October 29 2011  ESPN

Source:Associated Press
__________________________________________________________________________
ATLANTA — Tevin Washington rushed for 176 yards and broke the two longest runs of his career, leading Georgia Tech to a 31-17 upset of No. 6 Clemson and likely snuffing out the Tigers’ national title hopes Saturday night.The Yellow Jackets (7-2, 4-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) raced to a 24-3 halftime lead and held off Clemson (8-1, 5-1) which was off to its best start since 2000, The Tigers had climbed to fifth in the BCS standings, but they figure to take a tumble and are unlikely to have enough game left to re-enter the national race.The Yellow Jackets snapped a two-game losing streak behind their junior quarterback, who had runs of 46 and 56 yards and touchdown among his 27 carries.He took a final knee and celebrated with Georgia Tech students who stormed the field.
ACC blog
ESPN.com’s Heather Dinich writes about all things ACC in the conference blog.
• Blog network: College Football Nation
Clemson, which had scored 115 points in its two previous games, turned it over four times. Tajh Boyd threw for 295 yards, and freshman Sammy Watkins had 10 catches for 159 yards and a touchdown. It wasn’t enough.Coming in, these were teams heading in opposite directions.Georgia Tech got off to a dynamic start, winning the first six games for its best start since 1966. But Washington slumped and the triple-option bogged down badly, leading to losses at Virginia and Miami.Clemson got off to a sluggish start with lackluster wins against Troy and Wofford. But a victory over defending national champion Auburn seemed to ignite the Tigers, who took command of the ACC race and arrived in Atlanta having put up a total of 115 points and 1,026 yards in wins over Maryland and North Carolina the two previous weeks.Clemson drove right down the field on its first possession before Georgia Tech stiffened at its own 16. Chandler Catanzaro came on to knock through a 34-yard field goal, and the high-flying Tigers appeared off to another big offensive performance.Not so fast. It was all Georgia Tech the rest of the first half.The tide swung toward the Yellow Jackets when D.J. Howard caught a pass out of the backfield, but lost the ball just before he hit the ground. The officials initially ruled him down, but changed the call after a video review. Rod Sweeting was credited with a recovery at the Clemson 19, and the Georgia Tech offense took it the rest of the way, Orwin Smith going in from the 1 on fourth down.After forcing a Clemson punt, Washington broke off the 46-yard run — the longest of his career, though that mark wouldn’t last long — and Georgia Tech stretched its lead to 10-3 on Justin Moore’s 23-yard field goal.The Yellow Jackets went 80 yards in 10 plays to make it 17-3 on Smith’s 3-yard TD run.Stephen Hill, who had earlier dropped a long pass that might’ve gone for a touchdown, made up for it — and then some. The 6-foot-5 receiver stretched out with both arms to make a diving catch, pulling the ball into his body with the left hand before slamming into the turf. He rolled over and did a little dance with his arms, celebrating the 44-yard completion.Two plays later, Washington ran it in from the 3 to push the lead to 24-3 with just 37 seconds left in the half.The Tigers have been a great second-half team, and they came out of the locker room looking to pull off their biggest comeback yet. They took the kickoff and needed only four plays to reach the end zone for the first time. Boyd hooked up with Watkins on a 48-yard touchdown pass to make it 24-10.But Georgia Tech quickly answered. Again, it was Washington with the big run. With Georgia Tech facing third-and-6 and the Clemson defense waving their arms to rev up a sizable contingent of orange-clad fans, the quarterback spotted a hole up the middle and took off for the 56-yard gain.David Sims finished the drive with an 11-yard touchdown run, restoring Georgia Tech’s 21-point lead.After Clemson’s second fumble of the game, this one by third-string running back Mike Bellamy, the Yellow Jackets were on the verge of putting the game away. They drove to a first down at the Tigers 1 and were back there on third down after a delay of game. Then, a break for the visiting team.Defensive tackle Rennie Moore shot through a gap ahead of the snap, appearing on the replay to be clearly offsides. But the officials didn’t catch it, and Moore snatched the ball away from Washington just as he was taking the snap. It was ruled a fumble, and Clemson took over at the 3.The Tiger took advantage of their good fortune, driving 97 yards in 10 plays. Boyd tried to sneak it over, fumbled in the pile of bodies and 300-pound Brandon Thomas fell on it for the first touchdown by a Clemson offensive lineman since 1966, cutting the deficit to 31-17.
Links:Full news story
Source:espn.go.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Stanford Cardinal vs USC Trojans Recap October 29 2011 ESPN

by , under SPORT NEWS
Stanford Cardinal vs USC Trojans  Recap  October 29 2011  ESPN

Source:Associated Press
__________________________________________________________________________
LOS ANGELES — Stepfan Taylor ran for the tying touchdown with 38 seconds left in regulation and the go-ahead score in the third overtime, and Stanford’s defense preserved its 16-game winning streak by forcing Curtis McNeal’s end-zone fumble to end the Cardinal’s 56-48 victory over No. 20 Southern California on Saturday night.Andrew Luck burnished his Heisman Trophy credentials by engineering four late scoring drives for Stanford (No. 6 BCS, No. 4 AP), which rallied after trailing for the first time all season.But four years after Stanford (8-0, 6-0 Pac-12) stunned USC (6-2, 3-2) with a one-point victory as a 41-point underdog, the schools played another classic on a cool Coliseum night — and once again, the Cardinal ruled.Both teams scored on the first two OT possessions. After Taylor’s run in the third OT, Coby Fleener caught the 2-point conversion pass.USC got near the goal line again, but McNeal fumbled into the end zone.
Links:Full news story
Source:espn.go.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Illinois Fighting Illini vs Penn State Nittany Lions Recap October 29 2011 ESPN

by , under SPORT NEWS
Illinois Fighting Illini vs Penn State Nittany Lions  Recap  October 29 2011  ESPN

Source:Associated Press
__________________________________________________________________________
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — In bright white letters against a blue background, the electronic sign boards around Beaver Stadium took note of another milestone for Joe Paterno long after the stands had cleared.”Congratulations Coach Paterno,” the signs read. “Winningest Coach In Division I College Football.”It took all 60 minutes on a snowy, sloppy Saturday in Happy Valley, but JoePa broke Eddie Robinson’s record with victory No. 409 as No. 21 Penn State defeated Illinois 10-7.The Nittany Lions (8-1, 5-0 Big Ten) overcame six fumbles — losing two — with Silas Redd’s 3-yard touchdown run with 1:08 to go. Penn State’s only touchdown came after Illinois corner Justin Green was whistled for pass interference while breaking up a fourth-down pass for Derek Moye in the end zone.
Illinois (6-3, 2-3) drove from its 17 to the Penn State 25 on the next drive, but Derek Dimke’s 42-yard field goal attempt bounced off the right upright as time expired.Even JoePa was nervous in the press box before Penn State’s last drive. Paterno coached upstairs since he’s still got a sore right leg, shoulder and pelvis following an accidental preseason hit.”Did I have any doubts,” he asked rhetorically with a chuckle. “Sure I had doubts … but it worked out anyway.”In a common occurrence over his remarkable 46-year career, Paterno was feted again with a postgame ceremony. School president Graham Spanier and athletic director Tim Curley presented JoePa with a plaque that read, “Joe Paterno. Educator of Men. Winningest Coaach. Division One Football.”Among all coaches, Paterno now only trails John Gagliardi, still active at Division III St. John’s, Minn., with 481 victories.”It really is something I’ve very proud of, to be associated with Eddie Robinson,” Paterno said in a brief postgame ceremony in the media room broadcast to fans still waiting in the stands 10 minutes later. “Something like this means a lot to me, an awful lot. But there’s a lot of other people I’ve got to thank.”
Start with Redd, the budding star who had a career-high 30 carries for 137 yards for Penn State, none bigger than his late TD run.An early-season snowstorm had fans bundled up in winter parkas and hoodies. The offenses seemed to be frozen stiff.
Big Ten Blog
ESPN.com’s Adam Rittenberg and Brian Bennett write about all things Big Ten in the conference blog.
• ESPN.com’s WolverineNation
• Blog network: College Football Nation
After struggling most of the afternoon, quarterback Matt McGloin drove Penn State from their own 20 to the Illini 32 on three long completions before the pass interference call gave the Nittany Lions a second chance.”I thought it was a good play myself,” frustrated Illini coach Ron Zook said. “But obviously (the referee) thought … I don’t know, I didn’t ask him.”Redd capitalized four plays later by barreling into the end zone, the crowd erupting in delight.Jason Ford rushed for 100 yards on 24 carries but Illinois couldn’t capitalize on a slew of Penn State mistakes in a defensive slugfest.Illlinois outgained Penn State 286-209. After a quiet start, Illinois’ pass rush turned up the heat in the second half, getting 2.5 sacks combined from standout ends Michael Buchanan and Whitney Mercilus.Still, the Illini’s offense wasn’t much better than Penn State, but they got just got enough in the third quarter from scrambling quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase to scratch out a 10-yard touchdown pass to Spencer Harris for a 7-0 lead.Illinois’ defense held firm from there until Penn State’s late TD drive.Moye, back after missing two games because of a left foot injury, dropped a third-down pass to groans from the crowd on the winning drive. McGloin went for Moye on fourth down with 1:31 left, and the ball bounced off the receiver’s hands in the end zone — but there was contact and the interference penalty gave Penn State another chance.Zook could only wince on the sideline as a once-quiet Penn State crowd burst back to life.”They were just able to find their receivers. They weren’t able to do that all game, we pretty much got them all game,” Buchanan said. “As a D-line, we weren’t able to get pressure on the quarterback that we wanted to. So it was pretty much on us.”Illinois’ struggling offense couldn’t get untracked again early, going scoreless in the first half for a third straight game. They wasted opportunities deep in Penn State territory following fumbles by Redd at his own 37 in the first half, and quarterback Rob Bolden at the 29 late in the second half.On that drive, Illinois receiver Ryan Lankford made a pretty tiptoe catch along the sideline from backup quarterback Riley O’Toole for a 12-yard gain to the 12. The play was upheld by replay — and fans in the student section showed their displeasure by tossing snowballs on the field.The snowballs missed the players — much like most of the passes Saturday. McGloin was 9 of 24 for 98 yards, while Bolden missed all four of his pass attempts, all in the second quarter.Scheelhaase finished 9 of 16 for 63 yards, and ran 14 times for 89 yards.After the game, Paterno had one last message to the frigid fans outside before they headed to the exits in relief.”For all the fans out there, thanks for sitting through that today,” Paterno said half-jokingly, “You’ve got to be nuts!”
Links:Full news story
Source:espn.go.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Oklahoma Sooners vs Kansas State Wildcats Recap October 29 2011 ESPN

by , under SPORT NEWS
Oklahoma Sooners vs Kansas State Wildcats  Recap  October 29 2011  ESPN

Source:Associated Press
__________________________________________________________________________
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Landry Jones and Ryan Broyles helped No. 11 Oklahoma get back on track and spoil 10th-ranked Kansas State’s dream season.
Big 12 blog
ESPN.com’s David Ubben writes about all things involving the Big 12 in the conference blog.
More:
• ESPN.com’s SoonerNation
• ESPN.com’s HornsNation
• Blog network: College Football Nation
Jones threw for a school-record 505 yards and five touchdowns, his All-American wide receiver caught 14 passes for 171 yards and a score, and the Sooners bounced back from a stunning defeat to beat the previously unbeaten Wildcats 58-17 Saturday.Kenny Stills added four catches for 101 yards, Roy Finch finished with 73 yards rushing and another 69 through the air, and the Sooners’ potent, fast-paced attack managed 690 yards of total offense against the league’s top-ranked defense.Jones’ passing total shattered the previous record of 468 yards he shared with Sam Bradford, while Broyles moved into first place on the Big 12′s career list with 4,499 yards receiving.
Links:Full news story
Source:espn.go.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Unmasking Halloween and the Power of Anonymity

by , under NEWS
Unmasking Halloween and the Power of Anonymity

For anyone with school-aged kids, one of the biggest days of the year is upon us. And as with so many of life’s daily experiences, Halloween has interesting lessons to teach regarding human nature.
At my house, the schedule for this Monday includes morning Halloween school parade, afternoon trick-or-treating at local businesses, and, finally, the evening main event in the neighborhood. But even before the calendar turns to 10/31, Halloween has been a dominant topic of discussion at our place for months now.
First atop this list of talking points has been the rule at our daughters’ school that prohibits students from wearing masks as part of their costume. Through informal channels, I’ve heard various explanations for the restriction: It allows teachers to keep an eye on where their students

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

I Found it at the Movies

by , under NEWS
I Found it at the Movies

Pauline Kael, who reviewed movies for the The New Yorker for many years, was considered by many to be the goddess of film critics. Her comments on movies were both insightful and controversial. Once again, a compendium of her reviews is coming out in a newly published book.
Her writings were distinguished by her sharp opinions. When she was negative about the quality of a film, she was downright

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Social Media 4 Trends To Watch in 2012

by , under NEWS
Social Media  4 Trends To Watch in 2012

I am on a mission to help Fortune 500 companies answer the question, “What is a social media and how can it help our company?”
Senior executives and managers can not make decisions or allocate budget to something they know very little about. You are at a competitive disadvantage if you do not embrace the power of social media and understand how it applies to the enterprise. Your competitors are already there. Your incoming digital native workforce is

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Mic Check Can You Hear Us America

by , under NEWS
Mic Check Can You Hear Us America

We find these views to be mutually relevant…
that all people, by virtue of their basic humanity, deserve the opportunity to live, work, and associate according to the dictates of their own consciences and capacities;
that the exercise of such freedoms is only tenable in conjunction with the ability of all people to do so, in the recognition that no one is free unless everyone is free;
that people situated in place know best how to manage the conditions of their lives, and that the political autonomy and economic self-sufficiency of local communities are the primary means of ensuring the freedom of the individuals in their midst;
that individuals and communities do not exist in isolation, but are interlinked through a global network of communications and cultural exchange that enables the realization of a shared future and a common interest in effectively preserving the continued existence of humankind;
that the integrity of the whole is based on the vitality of its parts, and that the stability and productivity of social relationships is contingent upon and reflective of our collective human interactions with the balance of life around us, upon which we depend for survival;
that the fruits of the earth belong to humankind collectively, and especially to the future generations from whom we merely borrow their blessings;
that no one ought to be bound into the indentured servitude of indebtedness, which coerces people to become complicit with an alienating economy and structures of their own oppression;
that education must be free, open to all, and not merely confined to classrooms and institutions;
that intergenerational justice works in both directions, with young and old alike being equivalent teachers and learners, bringing together the lessons of the past, the challenges of the present, and opportunities for the future into an evolving tapestry of mutual engagement;
that none should be compelled to labor for another except by the inherent desires of conscience and the reciprocal benefits of being served by others through the experience of community;
that collective decisions shall only be taken with the direct participation and informed consent of all those potentially affected by them;
that people, left to their own devices, are capable of self-organizing, self-regulating, and developing mutually beneficial structures of governance and the distribution of resources;
that we live in a world of abundance rather than scarcity, with the problems of inequality being ones of maldistribution and disenfranchisement rather than of quantitative lack;
that the shared spaces of society, including the material bases of existence, cannot be owned or controlled by private interests but must remain the collective responsibility of humankind entire;
that we already possess all of the tools and technologies necessary to create a just world, and that we require only the will to reorient the purposes to which we deploy them in order to realize it;
that what we do matters, that there is meaning to our existence, that we honor ourselves and each other through service and compassion, and that our lives are bound together in a seamless web of destiny;
that our rights and freedoms are equally balanced by our responsibilities and mutual obligations;
that we seek both independence and interdependence as the necessary conditions of social existence;
that there can be no peace without justice, no future without the past, no individuality without community, no opportunity without education, no liberty without equality, and no politics without participation;
that we strive to always create more than we destroy, to produce more than we consume, to give more than we take, to laugh more than we cry, to uplift more than we denigrate, to construct more than we critique, to share more than we acquire, and to love more than we hate;
that we seek a better world not merely for ourselves, our communities, and our allies, but for all of humankind, including those who have exercised their power unjustly and unwisely;
that we acknowledge the urgency of the moment while affirming our willingness and desire to remain engaged in long-term, perhaps even unending, struggles for human dignity and environmental sustainability;
that this task cannot be passed on to others, that we are the ones it has fallen upon, that it is our generational calling, that we have the power to alter the arc of society, and that we are the ones we have been waiting for to bring peace and prosperity to the world;
that the pursuit of material wealth represents a moral and spiritual void, and that the use of manipulation and force to maintain wealth disparity is a self-defeating enterprise based on the failure to recognize the binding principle of interconnectedness in every aspect of existence;
that we can, must, and will succeed in working collaboratively to turn crises into opportunities and to move from the brink of annihilation toward a world of appreciation;
that life is meant to be lived, that we are the creators of culture and not merely its consumers, that our actions and processes are ends in themselves, and that what we do at every moment is the revolution;
that the future depends upon us to occupy place and liberate space on its behalf, and our own;
that we have nothing to lose but our chains, and literally everything to gain;
that the person standing next to you is part of you, an extension of you, a reflection of you, an ally, a colleague, a relative, and a friend;
that the earth beneath our feet creates and sustains us, and that we must do the same for it in return;
that there is one unified race, the human race, and that our inherent diversity provides the strength that will see us through the changes and challenges at hand;
that there are no nations or borders, only peoples and places;
that we need everyone’s open hearts, willing hands, strong backs, and keen minds to avert calamity and ensure posterity;
that the sound of a child’s laugh casts out the monotonous drone of commercialism, that the wonder in a child’s eyes invokes beauty against blight, and that the hope in a child’s heart is more powerful than the downward spiral of despair;
that you are important, that your dreams are real, that your needs will be met, that your burdens are shared, that your wellbeing is paramount, and that you are loved.
Affirmed by deeds, to be enacted voluntarily by the people individually and in concert as a living declaration.


This Blogger’s Books from
Lost in Space: The Criminalization, Globalization, and Urban Ecology of Homelessness
by Randall Amster
Building Cultures of Peace: Transdisciplinary Voices of Hope and Action
by Elavie Ndura-Ouedraogo

Follow Randall Amster on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/randallamster
.
read full news from www.huffingtonpost.com

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Hijab is Not a Halloween Costume

by , under NEWS
Hijab is Not a Halloween Costume

What’s common between the following Halloween costumes? A guy who painted his neck red, pretending to be a redneck, his friend wearing a white T-shirt which has “wife beater” written on it, and his friend dressed like a Hasidic Jew keeping a tight grip (literally) over a pack of fake dollar bills.
All three of them represent ethnic or religious stereotyping.
Keeping that in mind, what should you say to someone using hijab, a Muslim woman’s head cover, while going to “trick or treat” or a Halloween party? Bad idea.
Why?
For starters, hijab, a religious symbol of modesty for more than a billion Muslims, has already faced constitutional tricks. House bills in Oklahoma and Minnesota have attempted to pass legislation that would prohibit women from wearing a hijab for driver’s license

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

The Murder of Kelly Thomas and the Effort to Bring his Murderers to Justice

by , under NEWS
The Murder of Kelly Thomas and the Effort to Bring his Murderers to Justice

The facts are horrific. Video capture the brutal attack on the side of a busy street. Onlookers and passerby don’t come to the victims aid. Eventually, the bruised, bleeding, half-dead body is attended to by medical personal, but it is too

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Newt Gingrich to the Rescue The GOPs Improbable Dark Horse

by , under NEWS
Newt Gingrich to the Rescue  The GOPs Improbable Dark Horse

Former Republican House speaker Newt Gingrich is coming off his best GOP presidential debate performance yet, and as I reported three weeks ago, he’s experiencing a significant surge in the polls, inching past Texas Gov. Rick Perry for sole possession of third place nationally, and occupying second place in a growing number of states, including West Virginia, North Carolina, and Nebraska.
But horse-race polls tell only part of the story. Thanks largely to his debate performances, Gingrich’s image as a political has-been and one-time party firebrand-turned-gadfly is giving way to a new-found respect among GOP voters, and his “favorability” ratings — a net negative for most of the campaign — have correspondingly soared. While Gingrich is unlikely to surge past either Mitt Romney or Herman Cain, who are increasingly locked in a moderate-conservative stand-off at the top of the GOP heap, he could eventually turn out to be everyone’s favorite second choice for the nomination, the one man who can weld the GOP establishment and the insurgent Tea party together, and keep the party focused on beating President Obama rather than tearing itself apart.
Preposterous you say? A month ago, most everyone would have

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Sex Ed in New York City Schools The Facts

by , under NEWS
Sex Ed in New York City Schools The Facts

Sex sells. That’s why for the past week newspapers and blogs have plastered their front pages with articles dissecting and lambasting New York City’s new sex education mandate and recommended curriculum.
But The New York Post in particular did a gross disservice to parents and observers across the city by printing flagrantly false information about our recommended sex education curriculum.
So let’s get to the truth.
As part of New York City’s new sex education mandate (effective in the second semester of the 2011- 2012 school year), schools will be required to include sexual health education topics as part of comprehensive health education. New York State already requires that students have a semester course of comprehensive health education in middle and high school.
What will be different in City public schools is that middle and high school students will be required to receive sex education lessons during the semester of health education already planned.
New York City took this step because we believe we have a responsibility to ensure that both middle school and high school students are exposed to valuable and medically accurate information so they can learn to keep themselves safe before, and when, they decide to have sex.
Contrary to what some have claimed, the Department of Education has not mandated a specific curriculum for schools — but we do have a recommended curriculum that has been used in many of our schools since it was selected in 2007 after careful review by an advisory panel of health and education experts, as well as community organizations and parents.
For middle school students, we recommend the NYC version of the Middle School HealthSmart Curriculum, and for high schools we recommend using High School HealthSmart with Reducing the

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
Oct
30

Occupy Wall Street Brother Can You Spare a Dime

by , under NEWS
Occupy Wall Street Brother Can You Spare a Dime

When MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow recently asked the journalist and commentator Frank Rich on her show if he believed the “physical manifestation of discontent” was imperative to the Occupy Wall Street movement’s cause, Rich replied that it was “not always that important” since the movement was polling well among Americans.
I disagree. The ideas that inform the direction of the movement arise from the actions of the movement itself, (not from pundits or armchair commentators no matter how sympathetic). It is the activism in the streets that is the most important thing. Bringing together people, occupying public space, holding General Assembly meetings, conversing with, and learning from each other, those are the true sources of the sea change in attitudes we’re

Go straight to Post

Comments Offread more
© Copyright All Global News on One Page 2011. All rights reserved.