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The Captain of Heck's Log

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6 word story hemmingway bla, bla, bla [20 Aug 2008|09:48pm]
Desirous flames slowly numbed her soul.

ak, that is all I got...
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Officialy looking to buy... [20 Aug 2008|08:43pm]
OK, so I have been putting off buying a property because prices were too high. But now there is a strong possibility that rates will start to increase. This means that although I do think prices will probably go down another 10 or so percent, it is time to buy before rates start to really rise.

There is the possibility that rates will stay the same, but I am not going to risk it. FYI.
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This pisses me off... [20 Aug 2008|09:00am]
I mean, I know Obama has been on vacation, Edwards has brought in lots of bad democrat PR, and Russia has helped McCain's new cold war talk, but come on! I still think Obama is tough enough to come out swinging, and he is smart enough to come back. I have a feeling that this Russia stuff will cool down and I hope that the news picks up on these horrible economy stories once again. But it still pisses me off, do I just have no idea what kind of people live in this nation???

McCain takes lead over Obama: poll
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080820/ts_nm/usa_poll_politics_dc;_ylt=AhpibQPk6l0hfQZtVBUsp2MDW7oF
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent 1 hour, 33 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a sharp turnaround, Republican John McCain has opened a 5-point lead on Democrat Barack Obama in the U.S. presidential race and is seen as a stronger manager of the economy, according to a Reuters/Zogby poll released on Wednesday.


McCain leads Obama among likely U.S. voters by 46 percent to 41 percent, wiping out Obama's solid 7-point advantage in July and taking his first lead in the monthly Reuters/Zogby poll.

The reversal follows a month of attacks by McCain, who has questioned Obama's experience, criticized his opposition to most new offshore oil drilling and mocked his overseas trip.

The poll was taken Thursday through Saturday as Obama wrapped up a weeklong vacation in Hawaii that ceded the political spotlight to McCain, who seized on Russia's invasion of Georgia to emphasize his foreign policy views.
Read more... )
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super quick review of the science museum of Minnesota's star wars exhibit and IMAX movie [19 Aug 2008|04:54pm]
rip off

In my humble opinion they didn't have much star wars stuff for the price. I admit that also the people annoyed the crap out of me. Sure, I will repeatedly stand here time after time as you try to take a photo and wonder why it never turns out with the flash on.

The IMAX movie that is connected to this theme has very, very little to do with star wars. In fact, its a movie from 1996! I swear I have seen better cable channel shows on special effects, and a movie on the topic that is over a dozen years is quite a sad site to see. I mean, most of the movie is about "independence day" rather than star wars. Kids were openly crying, I miagine out of boredom and confusion because all movies mentioned were very old.
http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D01E7DC173AF934A25752C1A960958260
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yes, we are old... [19 Aug 2008|01:55pm]
To college freshmen, GPS has always been there
By DINESH RAMDE, Associated Press Writer
Tue Aug 19, 7:51 AM ET
MILWAUKEE - Students entering college this fall have lived their whole lives in a digital world — where GPS has always been available, phones have always had caller ID and tax returns could always be filed online.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080819/ap_on_re_us/mindset_list;_ylt=AtSciuWRzy_bUkrOJQBAPHADW7oF

The incoming freshmen, born mostly in 1990, also grew up knowing only Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show."

Those are some of the 60 cultural landmarks on the Beloit College Mindset List, an annual compilation that offers a glimpse of the world as seen through the eyes of each incoming class. This year's list is being released Tuesday by the private school of 1,300 near the Wisconsin-Illinois state line.

The school started producing the list in 1998 to remind professors that references familiar to them might draw blank stares from their students.

"Watergate used to be a common reference," said Ron Nief, the school's director of public affairs, who assembles the list. "But a few years ago I asked some students if they knew what Watergate was and they said that was where Monica Lewinsky lived."

Some entries on this year's list are products that have been around for the lifetimes of the Class of 2012, including karaoke machines, plastic soft drink bottles, Windows 3.0 and higher and the Nintendo Game Boy.

Other cultural markers are all but unknown to them — IBM typewriters, Roseanne Barr's tortured version of the National Anthem, Pee-wee Herman's "Playhouse" and gas-station attendants who fix flat tires or offer to check under the hood.
Read more... )
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oh man, I don't want to get old... [19 Aug 2008|12:07am]

and forget there is a time and a place for somethings.
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[17 Aug 2008|12:59pm]
Will I Live to see 80?

Here's something to think about.
I recently picked a new primary care doctor. After two visits and
exhaustive lab tests, he said I was doing 'fairly well' for my age.
A little concerned about that comment, I couldn't resist asking him, 'Do
you think I'll live to be 80?'

He asked, 'Do you smoke tobacco, or drink beer or wine?'
'Oh no,' I replied. 'I'm not doing drugs, either!'
Then he asked, 'Do you eat rib-eye steaks and barbecued ribs?
'I said, 'No, my former doctor said that all red meat is very unhealthy!'
Do you spend a lot of time in the sun, like playing golf, sailing, hiking,
or bicycling?' 'No, I don't,' I said.
He asked, 'Do you gamble, drive fast cars, or have a lot of sex?'
'No,' I said

He looked at me and said,....
'Then, why do you even give a shit?
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OK, not only is this funny as hell, but there are many truths here [15 Aug 2008|01:40pm]
If I won the lotter I would pay for commercials like this.
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Should this be my new diet? [13 Aug 2008|01:02pm]
PHELPS' PIG SECRET: HE'S BOY GORGE
By CLEMENTE LISI with Post Wire Services
http://www.nypost.com/seven/08132008/news/nationalnews/phelps_pig_secret__hes_boy_gorge_124248.htm

Swimming sensation Michael Phelps has an Olympic recipe for success - and it involves eating a staggering 12,000 calories a day.

"Eat, sleep and swim. That's all I can do," Phelps, who won two more gold medals today, told NBC when asked what he needs to win medals. "Get some calories into my system and try to recover the best I can."

By comparison, the average man of the same age needs to ingest about 2,000 calories a day.

Phelps, 23, will swim 17 times over nine days of competition at the Beijing Games - meaning that he will need all the calories he can shovel in his mouth in order to keep his energy levels high.

Phelps' diet - which involves ingesting 4,000 calories every time he sits down for a meal - resembles that of a reckless overeater rather than an Olympian.

Phelps lends a new spin to the phrase "Breakfast of Champions" by starting off his day by eating three fried-egg sandwiches loaded with cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, fried onions and mayonnaise.

He follows that up with two cups of coffee, a five-egg omelet, a bowl of grits, three slices of French toast topped with powdered sugar and three chocolate-chip pancakes.

At lunch, Phelps gobbles up a pound of enriched pasta and two large ham and cheese sandwiches slathered with mayo on white bread - capping off the meal by chugging about 1,000 calories worth of energy drinks.

For dinner, Phelps really loads up on the carbs - what he needs to give him plenty of energy for his five-hours-a-day, six-days-a-week regimen - with a pound of pasta and an entire pizza.

He washes all that down with another 1,000 calories worth of energy drinks.

Phelps remains on course to at least equal Mark Spitz's record of seven gold medals won at the 1972 Munich Games.

At these Summer Games, a typical day for Phelps starts with a 5 a.m. wake-up call. Most of his races have taken place between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. ET when in China - 12 hours ahead of East Coast time.
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Given the absolute lies McCains people have been putting out... [12 Aug 2008|04:59pm]
Obama or Democrats or moveon should start putting stuff like this out:


Creepy...
1 comment|post comment

[11 Aug 2008|06:27pm]
"I am a riddle, surrounded by a conundrum, wrapped in a tortilla, then grilled to perfection."
3 comments|post comment

Want to see some more of the cast for the new star trek movie? [10 Aug 2008|10:29pm]
http://trekmovie.com/2008/08/09/vegascon-08-new-star-trek-movie-posters-with-four-new-cast-images/

I know what these guys usually look like, but this is strange...
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Chef? Crazy... [10 Aug 2008|09:40pm]
Isaac Hayes dead at 65.
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Russian invasion random thought [10 Aug 2008|09:47am]
The U.S. has officially said that the Russians are going too far with their military.

The U.S. will now be ignored by the world for their opinions regarding anything of this nature.

Thanks again Bushie, heck of a job.

Why don't you give some advice about eating pretzels as well?
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Should I color my hair? If so, dark or light? [09 Aug 2008|08:55pm]
I have let my gray hair grow out and now I wonder if I used to look better, more youthful. What is your two cents, should I color my hair, and if so, light or dark?


I will stare at your from these photos until you help me decide!
6 comments|post comment

Did I already ask this hypothetical question? [09 Aug 2008|07:39pm]
If it's illegal to discriminate on the basis of genetics, what if I am genetically lazy? Should it be ok that I am always late?

Is There a Laziness Gene?
Wednesday, Jul. 30, 2008 By DEIRDRE VAN DYK
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1827106,00.html?xid=rss-topstories

Have you ever wondered why you can't get off the couch and exercise — despite paying for an expensive gym membership, despite your New Year's resolutions, even despite the doctor's scolding at your last checkup? Turns out that your inertia may be coded right into your genes.

Based on some intriguing preliminary studies in animals, J. Timothy Lightfoot, a kinesiologist, and his team at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, suggest that genetics may indeed predispose some of us to sloth. Using mice specially bred and selected according to their activity levels, Lightfoot identified 20 different genomic locations that work in tandem to influence their activity levels — specifically, how far the animals will run. Lightfoot's team is the first to identify these genetic areas and the first to figure out that they function in concert. The researchers say the areas they found on the mouse genome may have analogs in humans, and the UNC team is now gearing up to conduct a similar study in men and women. "We have put forward a fairly complete genomic map of the areas that are associated with regulation of physical activity," says Lightfoot, whose study is published in the current issue of the Journal of Heredity.
Read more... )
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Oh John Edwards... [08 Aug 2008|02:13pm]
Thanks for making everyone think democrats just can't keep it in your pants.

What if he was running for prez now? Dead democrats, if you are popular and are messing around on your wife, please tell us and let some time pass before running for president, huh?
5 comments|post comment

What do you think about this article? [08 Aug 2008|11:10am]
On the one hand I realize that words do change through time in meaning and sometimes in spelling, but I also think that in our time of spell checking, there is no real reason to suddenly accept these mistakes when they can be more easily corrected than ever before. Also, when I am reading and I come across a misspelling like this, it completely slows down my absorption of the prose and makes me wonder if this was in fact their true meaning. The interruption of comprehension and communication should be stopped, not encouraged.

Am I crazy???

Spelling "truely atrosious," says academic
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080807/od_nm/britain_spelling_odd_dc;_ylt=AvnfgkQO46tcwe2uS4ai7W0DW7oF
By Luke Baker Thu Aug 7, 11:29 AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - Embaressed by yor spelling? Never you mind.

Fed up with his students' complete inability to spell common English correctly, a British academic has suggested it may be time to accept "variant spellings" as legitimate.

Rather than grammarians getting in a huff about "argument" being spelled "arguement" or "opportunity" as "opertunity," why not accept anything that's phonetically (fonetickly anyone?) correct as long as it can be understood?

"Instead of complaining about the state of the education system as we correct the same mistakes year after year, I've got a better idea," Ken Smith, a criminology lecturer at Bucks New University, wrote in the Times Higher Education Supplement.

"University teachers should simply accept as variant spelling those words our students most commonly misspell."

To kickstart his proposal, Smith suggested 10 common misspellings that should immediately be accepted into the pantheon of variants, including "ignor," "occured," "thier," "truely," "speach" and "twelth" (it should be "twelfth").
Read more... )
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Oh, my god, why was this funny as hell clip cut from terminator? [07 Aug 2008|11:58am]

This is so friggen funny... Cut from terminator 3
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Oh god, even more reason that I need to work out... [07 Aug 2008|11:17am]
How Your Inner Athlete Makes You Smarter

Robin Nixon
Special to LiveScience
LiveScience.com Wed Aug 6, 9:40 AM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20080806/sc_livescience/howyourinnerathletemakesyousmarter;_ylt=AnmS9F7oNgmHpodQm2PSesoDW7oF
Athletes and people who exercise not only have better bods - they have better brains too, a host of studies have now firmly established.

A review of studies published earlier this month, in fact, found that a balanced diet and regular exercise can protect the brain and ward off mental disorders.

Other research has focused just on the effects of exercise. The bottom line: Exercisers learn faster, remember more, think clearer and bounce back more easily from brain injuries such as a stroke. They are also less prone to depression and age-related cognitive decline.

But why should a mindless half-hour on a treadmill affect your brain?

Exercise, like hunger, is a stress on your body. "And sometimes," said Fernando Gomez-Pinilla of UCLA, "stress can be good."

Protecting the brain

Because it burns calories so quickly, aerobic exercise is a threat to the body's energy reserves. Heeding this danger, the body acts to protect one of its most precious, and energy-demanding, organs: the brain.

Unlike cells in less critical organs, neurons are extremely vulnerable to disruptions in energy supply. "If deprived of energy for more than one minute," said Gomez-Pinilla, "the neuron dies." For that reason, he continued, "all the physiology of the body is designed to protect the brain."

By acting as a mild stressor, exercise is an alternative way to spur many of the protective benefits associated with calorie restriction and the release of brain-building growth factors, said Carl Cotman, director of the Institute for Brain Aging and Dementia at the University of California in Irvine.

And exercise not only protects the brain; it actually improves brain function. This may be one more way, theorizes Cotman, that nature helped ensure the survival of those who were particularly good at prehistoric Jazzersize - which in those days meant hunting and defending grub.

Why it works

How does the treadmill get inside your head?

Even when we are sitting or lying down, our bodies send our brains regular updates about how our limbs are positioned. When we, say, stand and begin walking, these electric messages need to be sent more often. (Knee is bent, straight, bent, straight ...) Move fast enough and the electrical activity doesn't have time to dissipate between each message. It begins building up in the brain and eventually triggers a release of chemicals called growth factors.

Growth factors are like manna for neurons. "They make neurons stronger, healthier and improve their ability to learn," Cotman said. In the presence of growth factors, new neurons are born and old ones sprout, grow and form better connections with each other. Blood vessels blossom along side the neurons, giving them quick access to glucose and other nutrients. All this, in turn, improves our ability to think, learn and remember. As Cotman said, exercise "builds the pipes" for improved cognition.

You might also be wondering how much exercise you need to keep your smarty-pants fitting, so to speak.

While we do need to get off the couch regularly to reap the brain-benefits of exercise, we don't have to be Jane Fonda. Exercising every other day is just as good as daily exercise, as long as we sustain it for at least a half-hour, Cotman said.

And we don't have to pump iron to remain an intellectual powerhouse; anaerobic exercise such as weight-lifting and resistance work, says Gomez-Pinilla, "is not that relevant to the brain."
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