Archive for January, 2012

30 JanInside Man, Dog Day Afternoon, Bank Robbery Gone Bad!

Hostage Crisis at Grand Northern Bank!

What is your role? Robber, cop, negotiator, hostage, third party with a hidden agenda? Your choice!

I do have a general idea of the plot. I would like it to be very similar to Inside Man, but with a more realistic feel. This will be a literate RP and multiple paragraph writing abilities are a must

There will be at least four bank robbers and several NPCish police type figures. The hostage negotiator team might be played by me, with help from someone else. As this is a very important role.

If I see this getting quite a bit of interest I will expand everything. I want to make sure there are others interested in this idea first before doing lots more work.

Leave a post here or PM me! :)

Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it. To become a spectator of one’s own life is to escape the suffering of life. <—- I totally do this. =D

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/dbIGSqY0rWQ/viewtopic.php

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30 JanThe Seven Best Auroras From the Biggest Solar Storm In Seven Years [Video]

On January 22, an M8.7 class flare helped cause the biggest solar storm since 2005. Airplanes had to change routes, and the power grid and satellites were affected. It also caused some of the best auroras ever seen. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/tCf45qWxavY/the-spectacular-auroras-caused-by-the-biggest-solar-storm-in-seven-years

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30 JanUS judge denies bid to block NV mustang roundups (AP)

RENO, Nev. ? A federal judge in Nevada who handed horse protection advocates a rare victory last fall has rejected their latest request to block government roundups of free-roaming mustangs in the West, saying they’ll have to go to Congress if they think the animals are being treated inhumanely and need more protection.

U.S. District Judge Howard McKibben granted a temporary restraining order on Aug. 30 that cut short by a day a roundup near the Nevada-Utah line after he determined a helicopter flew too close to a horse in violation of the law.

But he said during a hearing in Reno Thursday that he was denying a new injunction request from the Texas-based Wild Horse Freedom Federation partly because the Bureau of Land Management has made some positive changes since then. He also said he can’t issue injunctions based on speculation about future abuses.

“This court is really not in a position to be the overseer of the BLM,” McKibben said. “This court is not going to police all gathers in the U.S. or even all gathers in the district of northern Nevada.”

“This Court is not Congress, not an administrative agency. We are not the first branch of government. We are not the second branch. We’re here to consider grievances,” he said.

His ruling was a disappointment to horse protection advocates who were buoyed by his court order last fall when he took the BLM to task for its actions at the Triple B complex roundup near the Nevada-Utah line northwest of Ely, Nev.

“Your honor, you are the last vestige of hope here,” said Gordon Cowan, a lawyer for the group. “Basically, there is no other accountability.”

Erik Petersen, a Justice Department lawyer representing BLM, said the agency took McKibben’s earlier order seriously and responded with its own internal review of the Triple B roundup “in great part in response to this court’s ruling on the temporary restraining order.”

The law already dictates the horses be treated humanely but the agency now has “a half dozen specific instructions” or guidelines for roundup contractors to follow, including prohibiting helicopters from flying too close to animals, Petersen said.

The BLM said in a formal review made public in December that some mustangs in the Triple B complex were whipped in the face, kicked in the head, dragged by a rope around the neck, and repeatedly shocked with electrical prods, but the agency concluded none of the mistreatment rose to the level of being inhumane. BLM Director Bob Abbey did, however, determine additional training is needed for the workers and contractors involved.

The government’s wild horse program is intended to protect wild horse herds and the rangelands that support them. About 33,000 wild horses live in 10 Western states, of which about half are in Nevada. Under the program, thousands of horses are forced into holding pens, where many are vaccinated or neutered before being placed for adoption or sent to long-term corrals in the Midwest.

Animal rights advocates complain that the roundups are inhumane, but ranchers and other groups say they’re needed to protect fragile grazing lands that are used by cattle, Bighorn sheep and other wildlife.

Petersen said the Triple B roundup ended the day after McKibben’s previous order on Aug. 30. He said BLM has no plans to resume that roundup ? the only one specifically targeted in the group’s original lawsuit filed last year.

But Cowan said he said there’s no question BLM eventually will return to the area for another roundup.

“They finished it to avoid your temporary restraining order,” Cowan said. “They are coming back whether they say it or not. Triple B is not over,” he said.

If that happens, McKibben said the issue will be ripe again for legal challenge. He repeated several times that he couldn’t understand why the critics won’t acknowledge BLM is taking steps to treat the horses more humanely.

“Is your position that absolutely nothing constructive has happened … that everything done so far is basically meaningless?” he asked Cowan, who answered “yes” each time.

“I don’t happen to agree,” the judge said. “I think frankly that hurts your argument.”

Cowan said that’s the group’s position because group Vice President Laura Leigh continues to observe abuse of horses at other gathers.

McKibben said the new BLM guidelines were an improvement.

“While they have not resulted in the embodiment of new rules or regulations, I see some positive things that happened between the time we were in court before and today,” he said.

“I would strongly urge the Bureau of Land Management to proceed in that direction. But that’s a decision that must be made by the first branch (Congress).”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120127/ap_on_re_us/us_wild_horses_lawsuit

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29 JanKuhn Rikon Improves Their Spice Grinder With Grade School Science [Cooking]

Remember when you first learned about the power of levers? And how (in theory) you could even use one to move a mountain? Well Kuhn Rikon has applied the same principles to a spice grinder, but on a smaller scale. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/d6qF8wxweC8/kuhn-rikon-improves-their-spice-grinder-with-grade-school-science

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29 JanObama to spell out plan to target universities that don’t control rising tuition costs (Star Tribune)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/192202278?client_source=feed&format=rss

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29 JanIf Round 1 is the war of words, Phil Davis leads 10-8 over Rashad Evans

CHICAGO — In most interviews Phil Davis comes off as a reserved young man. He’s not out to ruffle any feathers, but those of us who’ve had a chance to speak to him repeatedly always knew there was a potential media darling behind that conservative facade.

In the lead-up to Saturday’s UFC on Fox 2 card, Rashad Evans has brought out the beast in Davis and the former UFC light heavyweight hasn’t reacted too well.

It started last week when Evans flipped out on Davis calling him a “boy.” Yesterday during the UFC on Fox 2 prefight press conference, Evans shook his head, appeared annoyed and even looked flustered on several occasions.

As the banter began, Evans tried to play it cool.

“For the most part, I’ve got nothing against Phil, but you we’ve got a fight so I’ve got a lot against him right now. It’s personal, but not really PERSONAL personal,” said Evans, who had heated prefight words with previous opponents like Tito Ortiz and Quinton Jackson.

Evans got irked when the issue of college wrestling came up. Phil Davis, a more accomplished NCAA star at Penn State than Evans was at Michigan State, laughed when someone asked if his opponent could beat him in a straight wrestling match. Evans kept saying “your technique is trash.”

Then Davis was asked about missing the opportunity to face Evans back in August in Philadelphia. Davis quickly pointed out that he didn’t get to fight in front of his friends and family from nearby Harrisburg, Pa. Evans took issue with the fact that Davis didn’t say he was sad to lose out on the opportunity to fight him. Davis fired back, “Nobody heard me say that!”

Evans snapped again when Davis explained his understanding of what the result of a win could be, a possible title shot against Jon Jones.

“The winner of this fight will fight for the title, but in the event that I hit him too hard and break my hand … it might lead to somebody else getting the title shot first,” said Davis.

“You don’t punch nobody hard. Phil can’t hit. Phil punches with his hands open and everything,” Evans said. “He couldn’t bust a grape. You look like Arsenio Hall.”

Davis laughed.

“Give him a hand y’all. Give him a hand,” said Davis.

That opened the door for a female fan to ask Davis whether he looked more like Hall or NBA star Dwight Howard? Davis handled it gracefully as he done throughout the lead-up to Saturday’s tilt. We’ll see if his poise remains intact in the fight. Either way, this week showed he’ll be a valuable asset on main cards for years to come in the UFC.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/round-1-war-words-phil-davis-10-8-154948395.html

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29 JanFormer Boston Mayor Kevin White dies at 82 (reuters)

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28 JanNo blood?! ‘Hugo’ was new world for Scorsese

By Randee Dawn

Martin Scorsese is not known for making comedic movies. But in person, he’s a complete crack-up. Just ask TODAY’s Al Roker, who sat down with the veteran director behind such iconic films as “Raging Bull” and “Goodfellas” — and talked (and laughed) with him about something very different: His first for-children and first 3-D film, “Hugo” (which leads all Academy Award nominees with 11),?and the joys of being an older dad.

“The material — Brian Selznick’s book ‘The Invention of Hugo Cabret’ — had all the elements of a story that could be enhanced by 3-D,” said the filmmaker, who Roker reminded had expressed doubts a few years ago about being able to do a 3-D film. “I’m not talking about a 3-D that jumps out at you and throws spears and arrows and ping-pong balls. … But I thought a 3-D that would enhance the story and immerse the audience into a special world … (and the book) has that world.”

A world that was surprisingly (for Scorsese) blood-free. “They kept looking at me, the crew,” said Scorsese, “‘What’s happening?’” He told them, “Keep going men, we’ll have like a train crash … we’ll do something.”

He also revealed his inspiration for the film: His wife, Helen Morris, telling him to “make a film the kid could see for once” — a line he used while accepting a Golden Globe earlier this month.

“The kid” is his 12-year-old daughter Francesca. Scorsese is 69, which makes for a big gap in their generations, but he says being an older father is all right. “It’s a totally different experience (than being a younger father; Scorsese has two other daughters from his 20s and 30s),” he said. “Maybe it’s more grandfatherly in a way. I became very, very immersed in her world … how (children) perceive things, their imagination, her and her friends, so it became very natural to make a transition to a picture like this.”

So, has she seen it? Several times, he reported. “She likes it. … She says, ‘Do I have to see it again?’” said Scorsese. “I said, ‘Yes!’ … She’s only seen it four, five times? What is this? Go, come on, sell it, you have to be there!”

“Hugo” is currently in theaters.

More in TODAY entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/27/10250204-no-blood-hugo-was-new-territory-for-martin-scorsese

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28 JanTibet protester tells China cops: Come get me

A young man posts his photo with a leaflet demanding freedom for Tibet and telling Chinese police, come and get me. Protesters rise up to defend him, and demonstrations break out in two other Tibetan areas of western China to support the same cause.

Each time, police respond with bullets.

The three clashes, all in the past week, killed several Tibetans and injured dozens. They mark an escalation of a protest movement that for months expressed itself mainly through scattered individual self-immolations.

It’s the result of growing desperation among Tibetans and a harsh crackdown by security forces that scholars and pro-Tibet activists contend only breeds more rage and despair.

That leaves authorities with the stark choice of either cracking down even harder or meeting Tibetan demands for greater freedom and a return of their Buddhist spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama ? something Beijing has shown zero willingness to do.

“By not responding constructively when it was faced with peaceful one-person protests, the (Communist) party has created the conditions for violent, large-scale protests,” Robbie Barnett, head of modern Tibetan studies at New York’s Columbia University, said.

China to again close Tibet during sensitive period

This is the region’s most violent period since 2008, when deadly rioting in Tibet’s capital Lhasa spread to Tibetan areas in adjoining provinces.

Flooded with troops
China responded by flooding the area with troops and closing Tibetan regions entirely to foreigners for about a year. Special permission is still required for non-Chinese visitors to Tibet, and the Himalayan region remains closed off entirely for the weeks surrounding the March 14 anniversary of the riots that left 22 people dead.

Video smuggled out by activists shows paramilitary troops equipped with assault rifles and armored cars making pre-dawn arrests.

Video: Dalai Lama to US: ?Keep your spirit? (on this page)

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Huge convoys of heavily armored troops are seen driving along mountain roads and monks accused of sedition being frog-marched to waiting trucks.

For the past year, self-immolations have become a striking form of protest in the region. At least 16 monks, nuns and former clergy set themselves on fire after chanting for Tibetan freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama, who fled to India amid an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

Report: Body paraded afer China self-immolation

China, fiercely critical of the Dalai Lama, says Tibet has been under its rule for centuries, but many Tibetans say the region was functionally independent for most of that time.

In a change from the individual protests, several thousand Tibetans marched to government offices Monday in Ganzi prefecture in Sichuan province.

Police opened fire into the crowd, killing up to three people, witnesses and activist groups said.

On Tuesday, security forces opened fire on a crowd of protesters in another area of Ganzi, killing two Tibetans and wounding several more, according to the group Free Tibet.

Slideshow: The Dalai Lama (on this page)

On Thursday in southwestern Sichuan province’s Aba prefecture, a youth named Tarpa posted a leaflet saying that self-immolations wouldn’t stop until Tibet is free, the London-based International Campaign for Tibet said.

He wrote his name on the leaflet and included a photo of himself, saying that Chinese authorities could come and arrest him if they wished, group spokeswoman Kate Saunders said in an email.

Too sensitive to discuss
Security forces did so about two hours later. Area residents blocked their way, shouting slogans and warning of bigger protests if Tarpa wasn’t released, Saunders said. Police then fired into the crowd, killing a a 20-year-old friend of Tarpa’s, a student named Urgen, and wounding several others.

The incident, as with most reported clashes in Tibetan areas, could not be independently verified and exact numbers of casualties were unclear because of the heavy security presence and lack of access. The topic is so sensitive that even government-backed scholars claim ignorance of it and refuse to comment.

The government, however, acknowledged Tuesday’s unrest, saying that a “mob” charged a police station and injured 14 officers, forcing police to open fire on them. The official Xinhua News Agency said police killed one rioter and injured another.

Q&A: The Dalai Lama, China and Tibet

“The Chinese government will, as always, fight all crimes and be resolute in maintaining social order,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in comments on the incident.

The harsh response points to a deep anxiety about the self-immolations, said Youdon Aukatsang, a New Delhi-based member of the Tibetan parliament-in-exile.

“They’re worried that there is an underground movement in Tibet that is coming to the surface,” she said.

Slideshow: The dance of two giants (on this page)

Tibetan desperation has been fed both by the harsh crackdown ? security agents reportedly outnumber monks in some monasteries ? along with a deep fear that the Dalai Lama, probably the most potent symbol of Tibet’s separate identity, will never return.

The 76-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate handed his political powers to an elected assembly last year.

That was intended to ensure the Tibetan cause would live on after him, but was met with considerable anxiety among many Tibetans who saw it as a sign he was giving up his role as leader of their struggle.

Dibyesh Anand, a Tibet expert at London’s University of Westminster, said resistance to Chinese rule is likely to grow more fierce.

“Protests will get more radicalized since the Tibetans in the region see no concession, no offer of compromise, no flexibility coming from the government,” he said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46172845/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

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28 JanMassive radiation storm produces spectacular northern lights (+video)

The northern lights show was sparked by an intense solar flare that erupted from the sun, unleashing a wave of charged particles and triggering the strongest solar radiation storm since 2005.

A dazzling display of auroras lit up the far northern skies Tuesday night (Jan. 24) in a supercharged light show captured on camera by skywatchers around the world.

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“I was screaming from excitement like a small kid at Christmas,” said skywatcher Jens Buchmann, who watched the northern lights dance across the sky from Kiruna, Sweden.

The northern lights show was sparked by an intense solar flare that erupted from the sun late Sunday (Jan. 22). The flare unleashed a wave of charged particles, triggering the?strongest solar radiation storm since 2005, NASA scientists said, adding that some minor satellite interference was possible.

Buchmann and a friend booked a last-minute flight from Stockholm to Kiruna after hearing about the solar storm. They braved freezing temperatures of about minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 30 degrees Celsius) in order to see the aurora display, moving inside only to thaw off before heading out again. Their photos show wispy green ribbons of energy rippling across the sky over a snow-covered landscape. [See video and photos of the solar storm's northern lights]

“After the main show was over I just continued lying in the snow for nearly two hours and watched the fainter, but fast-pulsating auroras that were everywhere,” Buchmann told SPACE.com in an email. “All faint stars just lost their meaning behind these auroras.”?

The auroras from the solar flare could potentially be seen at latitudes as low as Maine or Montana, they added.

“The trip was totally worth it!” Buchmann said.

Delta Airlines officials said the commercial airline rerouted some planes from polar routes as a precaution to avoid any interference from the solar storm, according to press reports.

Buchmann and his friend were not the only skywatchers to make a special trip to see the auroras.

In Muonio, Lapland in Finland, skywatcher and photographer Antii Pietk?nen made a special snowmobile ride with companion Thomas to try to catch the display. They posted one photo to the skywatching website Spaceweather.com, which received several others from different observers.

“The show started slowly and after 15 [minutes] the landscape was green!” Pietk?nen?told Spaceweather.com. “This was the first time for Thomas to see the northern lights, and he was very happy.”

Photographer Chad Blakely in Lapland, Sweden recorded an?eye-popping time-lapse video of the northern lights display, showing auroras swirling over a snowy meadow while observers alternate between snapping photos and staying warm at a campfire.

A streaming camera at the Aurora Sky Station in Sweden’s Abisko National Park, an observing post for aurora hunters, beamed real-time photos of the northern light show every few minutes. The images revealed stunning hues of red and green across the northern night sky.

Auroras are created when charged particles from the sun interact with Earth’s upper atmosphere, causing an energy release that can be seen as lights. Because the charged solar particles are typically funneled to Earth’s poles by the planet’s magnetic field, the most dazzling displays occur in the far north and south. The so-called northern lights are known as the aurora borealis, while their southern counterpart is dubbed the aurora australis.

Tuesday’s aurora display was sparked by a powerful solar flare on Sunday night that triggered an eruption of solar plasma, called a coronal mass ejection. The flare was?classified as an M9-class solar flare, a moderate ? but still powerful ? sun storm. This eruption flung charged particles out into space, which delivered a glancing blow to Earth.

The sun storm is only the latest solar weather to ignite dazzling auroras on Earth. A series of flares late last week made for a great weekend northern lights show for some observers, even as the sun was unleashing its latest solar tempest.

The sun is currently in an active phase of its 11-year solar cycle, which is called Solar Cycle 24. Solar activity is expected to peak in 2013.

You can follow Tariq Malik on Twitter?@tariqjmalik.?Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter?@Spacedotcom?and on?Facebook.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/n-yGV9viCwo/Massive-radiation-storm-produces-spectacular-northern-lights-video

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