Everyone knows that putting a Led Zeppelin or Ramones t-shirt on your toddler is obnoxious; we get it, you’re still cool even though you have a child. Conversely, helping your little one create the perfect Johnny Cash Halloween costume is just good parenting. The sooner they know and appreciate the man in black, the more likely they are to make good musical choices for the rest of their lives. If this kid comes to your front door, just give him all the candy and turn your front porch light off. Halloween is DONE. Via Reddit var src_url=”http://pshared.5min.com/Scripts/PlayerSeed.js?sid=577&width=575&height=344&colorPallet=%239FC5E8&companionPos=bottom&hasCompanion=false&relatedMode=1&videoControlDisplayColor=%23000000&autoStart=false&playList=517184705&aol_level=HuffPost:Comedy”; if (typeof(commercial_video) == “object”) { src_url += “&siteSection=”+commercial_video.site_and_category; if (commercial_video.package) { src_url += “&sponsorship=”+commercial_video.package; } } document.write(”);
Continue reading …Everyone knows that putting a Led Zeppelin or Ramones t-shirt on your toddler is obnoxious; we get it, you’re still cool even though you have a child. Conversely, helping your little one create the perfect Johnny Cash Halloween costume is just good parenting. The sooner they know and appreciate the man in black, the more likely they are to make good musical choices for the rest of their lives. If this kid comes to your front door, just give him all the candy and turn your front porch light off. Halloween is DONE. Via Reddit var src_url=”http://pshared.5min.com/Scripts/PlayerSeed.js?sid=577&width=575&height=344&colorPallet=%239FC5E8&companionPos=bottom&hasCompanion=false&relatedMode=1&videoControlDisplayColor=%23000000&autoStart=false&playList=517184705&aol_level=HuffPost:Comedy”; if (typeof(commercial_video) == “object”) { src_url += “&siteSection=”+commercial_video.site_and_category; if (commercial_video.package) { src_url += “&sponsorship=”+commercial_video.package; } } document.write(”);
Continue reading …LEWISTON, Maine — The remains of a body that were found inside a storage unit by relatives of a man who had rented it and died earlier this month may be those of a woman who was reported missing in 1983, Maine State Police said Saturday. The relatives were cleaning out the Lewiston storage unit on Friday afternoon when they found the body inside an unplugged freezer, state police spokesman Steve McCausland said. The remains haven’t been positively identified, but McCausland said they may be those of Kitty Wardwell, who was reported missing 28 years ago at age 29. The storage unit had been rented since 1992 by Francis “Frank” Julian, who was Wardwell’s on-again, off-again boyfriend and was the last person known to see her alive. Julian died on Oct. 1 at age 80. Julian told Salem, N.H., police that he dropped Wardwell off at a motel there after a fight on June 6, 1983, and traveled back to Maine without her, according to the Maine State Police missing persons website. A close friend of Wardwell officially reported her as missing the following month, and a subsequent police investigation indicated she was likely a victim of foul play, the website said. Officials with the Maine medical examiner’s office have removed the freezer, with the body still inside, and taken it to their offices in Augusta, McCausland said. An autopsy to determine the identity and cause of death is expected to be performed Monday.
Continue reading …LEWISTON, Maine — The remains of a body that were found inside a storage unit by relatives of a man who had rented it and died earlier this month may be those of a woman who was reported missing in 1983, Maine State Police said Saturday. The relatives were cleaning out the Lewiston storage unit on Friday afternoon when they found the body inside an unplugged freezer, state police spokesman Steve McCausland said. The remains haven’t been positively identified, but McCausland said they may be those of Kitty Wardwell, who was reported missing 28 years ago at age 29. The storage unit had been rented since 1992 by Francis “Frank” Julian, who was Wardwell’s on-again, off-again boyfriend and was the last person known to see her alive. Julian died on Oct. 1 at age 80. Julian told Salem, N.H., police that he dropped Wardwell off at a motel there after a fight on June 6, 1983, and traveled back to Maine without her, according to the Maine State Police missing persons website. A close friend of Wardwell officially reported her as missing the following month, and a subsequent police investigation indicated she was likely a victim of foul play, the website said. Officials with the Maine medical examiner’s office have removed the freezer, with the body still inside, and taken it to their offices in Augusta, McCausland said. An autopsy to determine the identity and cause of death is expected to be performed Monday.
Continue reading …“Libya’s top leader declared the country officially 'liberated' Sunday from the four-decade rule of Moammar Gaddafi, pledging to replace his dictatorship with a more democratic but also a more strictly Islamic system,” Washington Post staff writer Mary Beth Sheridan noted in the lead paragraph of her October 24 front-page article, “Libya declares liberation days after Gaddafi death.” “Interim leader's speech hints at greater role for Islam in public life,” the article's subheadline added. An online headline took a rosy view of the Islamic state, noting that “Libya declares liberation with an Islamic tone.” Sheridan noted two possible significant policy changes that transitional leaders are examining: banning interest on housing loans and loosening the existing restrictions on Libyan men taking more than one wife. “A lot of young ladies lost their husbands in the battle,” lamented Farage Sayeh, the outgoing “minister of capacity-building.” “Under current Libyan law, a man seeking a second wife must receive his first wife's permission and appear before a judge,” Sheridan noted. Ugh! Such liberty-strangling bureaucracy! “We are an Islamic state,” Sheridan quoted Abdel Jalil, later insisting he is “considered religious but not an extremist” and whose rhetoric may be amped up slightly to “win support from Islamists within the military command.” Even so, Sheridan failed to explore what protections, if any, Abdel Jalil foresees being extended to religious minorities such as Catholics or Coptic Christians.
Continue reading …“In time for the holidays” has now been clarified to mean November 2nd. Nearly a month after T-Mobile initially unveiled the US version of the Windows Phone 7.5 -containing HTC Radar , its Facebook page trumpeted the date along with its accompanying $100 cost attached to a two-year contract and after $50 mail-in rebate. So if this little 3.8-inch darling with 1GHz Snapdragon CPU, 5MP rear camera and 4G network compatibility is on your wish list, you don’t have to wait much longer. HTC Radar 4G gets November 2nd launch date on T-Mobile with $100 price tag originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …TSA FAIL: Missed Loaded Gun in Carry-On Bag . . . Passenger Boards Plane! rosegardencondo says: PSP: TSA misses loaded gun in luggage – http://t.co/6yRTarcd
Continue reading …Arab Spring… Libyan rebels beat him bloody and sodomized him with a stick before shooting the tyrant in the head and chest. (Obvious Warning on Content) It’s not clear how this fits in with the Shariah Law they are wanting … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 22/10/2011 12:28 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …Arab Spring… Libyan rebels beat him bloody and sodomized him with a stick before shooting the tyrant in the head and chest. (Obvious Warning on Content) It’s not clear how this fits in with the Shariah Law they are wanting … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 22/10/2011 12:28 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …Chef accuses ministers of jeopardising progress made in school dinner halls Jamie Oliver fears the school meals revolution he kickstarted is in danger of unravelling because ministers are ignoring research showing that nutritious lunches improve learning. In an interview with the Guardian, the celebrity chef has accused the education secretary, Michael Gove, and the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, of putting at risk the changes that happened after his 2005 Channel 4 series, Jamie’s School Dinners . Some of Gove’s decisions on school meals have led to unease among health and education campaigners. Gove has ended the school lunch grant as a separate source of funding and exempted academies from the nutritional standards for all other state schools that Labour introduced after Oliver’s programmes highlighted the poor quality of much school food. Oliver said: “Honestly, I’m very worried. I’ve had a couple of very cordial, interesting meetings with the secretary of state for education and although I would love to believe that Mr Gove has school food high on his agenda, I’ve not heard anything so far worth celebrating. “I’m sure he realises that there are clear benefits to having good food in school: it improves a child’s behaviour, willingness to learn and concentration at school, and that in turn helps children to achieve more and perform better. “You would have to be an idiot to ignore all of the academic research that’s been published to support these things, but still I don’t see him or his ministerial colleagues in health actually doing anything to ensure that the improvements we have made over the last six years remain in place and are built upon – instead the progress we’ve made seems to be at risk.” Oliver added: “I used to have similar rants about the previous government so I’m absolutely not siding with one political party. In my experience forward-thinking politicians are a rare breed.” Asked if the government’s decisions were due to the spending squeeze or ideology, Oliver replied: “I think it’s a bit of both but as anyone in this area knows, we have to invest now so that we don’t cripple the NHS or destroy the health of our kids later on.” Given obesity already costs the NHS an estimated £4bn a year, Oliver added, “we simply can’t afford to cut costs in prevention work now because we will have an even bigger bill in the future. It’s like any business: you have to invest in the short term to see a longer-term benefit.” In a new eight-point action plan for extending schools’ influence over children’s eating habits and knowledge of food, Oliver asks ministers to apply the nutritional standards to all schools and says “it would be incredibly disappointing and counterproductive not to make them mandatory for new academies too”. Academies currently teach almost 1.2 million pupils. The manifesto says: “If the government wants all schools to become academies in the long term, the reality is we risk losing the legislation that has made a difference as well as the benefits gained from raising nutritional standards.” Oliver also suggests introducing a new school food premium, which would give schools direct payments for increasing the number of pupils having school lunches. About 3 million of England’s 7 million primary and secondary pupils eat them. Charlie Powell of the Children’s Food Campaign said: “We are unhappy that the school lunch grant has been amalgamated into the overall education budget because it means schools can spend it on anything they like, rather than increasing uptake of school meals.” But Judy Hargadon, chief executive of the School Food Trust (SFT), which helps schools improve take-up of meals, said she feared Oliver’s idea could demotivate schools that faced the toughest task in persuading pupils to use the canteen regularly. The Department for Education (DfE) released a letter Gove wrote to Oliver in August after they met, in which he said “I very much share your views about the importance of providing children and young people with healthy school food and about the benefits this brings”, and promised “the government will continue to support and encourage schools to this end and support the improvements that have been achieved in recent years in schools food provision and food education”. He noted “with interest” the school food premium idea and has asked DfE officials “to discuss with the SFT how such an initiative could work in reality and how it would fit in alongside its ongoing work”. School meals Schools Children Health Jamie Oliver Food & drink Chefs Health policy Denis Campbell guardian.co.uk
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