Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Cardinals homer twice to beat Dodgers 4-2 in NLCS

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Thanks to two big swings and some excellent defense, the St. Louis Cardinals are one win from the World Series.


Just like last year.


Matt Holliday and pinch-hitter Shane Robinson connected for the first home runs of the NL championship series, sending St. Louis past the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-2 Tuesday night for a 3-1 lead in their best-of-seven playoff.


"We can't get ahead of ourselves," Holliday said.


In a series starved for offense, the Cardinals scored as many runs as they did in the first three games combined, when the teams totaled nine.


Game 5 is Wednesday afternoon at Dodger Stadium, with the Cardinals looking to clinch their 19th pennant. Zack Greinke is set to start for Los Angeles against Joe Kelly.


Of course, St. Louis had a 3-1 lead in last year's NLCS before dropping three straight to San Francisco, the eventual World Series champion.


"We don't feel this is over by any means," infielder Daniel Descalso said. "You don't want to have that feeling again, losing three games in a row when you're so close to getting there. Just because you're up 3-1, it doesn't mean anything. Nobody's going to roll over for you. We've got to keep pushing and keep grinding."


It was a painful defeat for the Dodgers — in more ways than one. Star shortstop Hanley Ramirez, playing with a broken left rib, left in the middle of the sixth after striking out three times.


"It felt worse than yesterday," Ramirez said. "It makes me angry."


Hitless in his previous 22 at-bats at Dodger Stadium, Holliday drove a two-run shot off Ricky Nolasco an estimated 426 feet to left field, capping a three-run third inning that gave the Cardinals a 3-0 lead.


"That's about as good as I can hit one," said Holliday, who was 0 for 13 in the series before connecting.


"I wasn't really doubting my swing at all. I felt actually really good with my at-bats. Sometimes in this game you don't always get the results that you want even if you feel like you're having good at-bats, so I just wanted to stay with it," he said.


Seeking a second World Series title in three years, St. Louis turned three important double plays and picked off a runner at second base in the seventh. Defensive standout Pete Kozma, inserted at shortstop in the sixth, started a difficult double play and darted in to complete the pickoff.


"A great heads-up play by him," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "Then it has to be natural instincts and athleticism by (reliever) Carlos Martinez, and I don't know many guys pull that off. He has such athletic moves. He's quick in everything he does. Then to have the guts to wheel and let it fly like that in a game like we have right now, it's off the charts."


Second baseman Matt Carpenter also keyed St. Louis' sharp work with the gloves, one night after some sloppy play was costly in a 3-0 defeat.


Carpenter had an RBI double in the third that scored Descalso, who hit a leadoff single. Carpenter came around on Holliday's homer after there were none in the first three games for the first time in NLCS history.


Martinez pitched two scoreless innings to help nail down the win for starter Lance Lynn. Trevor Rosenthal got three outs for his second save in the series.


After a leadoff single by Andre Ethier in the ninth, Yasiel Puig grounded into a double play. Juan Uribe struck out to end it, leaving the Dodgers on the brink of elimination.


Now, they'll count on Greinke and ace Clayton Kershaw to pitch them back into the series.


"Kind of the best thought I have is, I've got one of the best pitchers in baseball pitching tomorrow," Mattingly said. "If we come out here and play well tomorrow and get a win, I've probably got the best pitcher in baseball pitching the next day."


Robinson's home run bounced off the top of the wall in left field on a 1-0 pitch from J.P. Howell with one out in the seventh, extending the Cardinals' lead to 4-2.


"For a little guy, he's got surprising power," Holliday said. "I mean, honestly, he's got some thump."


Lynn allowed two runs and six hits in 5 1-3 innings. He struck out five and walked three.


The right-hander lost his only other start this postseason, giving up five runs over 4 1-3 innings in Game 2 of the division series against Pittsburgh.


The Dodgers were down 4-2 in the seventh when Nick Punto doubled with one out. Martinez, however, picked off Punto before throwing another pitch and then retired Carl Crawford on an inning-ending groundout.


"It was a lonely place to be," Punto said.


Trailing 3-2, the Dodgers put the potential tying run on base in the sixth when Puig singled to chase Lynn. Uribe grounded into a double play against Seth Maness to end the inning.


The Dodgers stuck with Nolasco as their starter even though he hadn't pitched since Sept. 29. He struggled in his last three starts in September, giving up at least five earned runs in each.


Nolasco was passed over for his scheduled assignment in Game 4 of the division series, when the Dodgers used Kershaw on three days' rest for the first time in his career. Kershaw pitched well and took a no-decision in a 4-3 victory over Atlanta that clinched the series.


Before this one, Mattingly had said Nolasco was being put in a difficult position after not pitching for so long. Mattingly said Kershaw and Greinke both offered to start on short rest at Dodger Stadium.


Nolasco allowed three runs and three hits in four innings. He struck out four and walked one.


"I felt my stuff was good for the most part," he said. "Just that one pitch was the difference in the game."


Los Angeles scored twice in the fourth to cut it to 3-2. Adrian Gonzalez hit a leadoff double and scored on Puig's single. A.J. Ellis singled to drive in Andre Ethier, who walked.


But just when it appeared the Dodgers had grabbed the momentum, pinch-hitter Skip Schumaker bounced into an inning-ending double play.


NOTES: Cardinals 3B David Freese came out after six innings for defense. He left Monday's game with a cramp in his right calf, but Matheny said Freese was fine. ... St. Louis won a Game 4 on the road for the first time in NLCS play. ... The Cardinals also squandered a 3-1 lead in the 1996 NLCS against Atlanta. ... Nolasco, who is from nearby Corona and grew up a Dodgers fan, made the first postseason start of his career. ... Schumaker was 3 for 21 with no RBIs as a pinch-hitter during the regular season, and struck out in his only other at-bat as a pinch-hitter in the postseason. ... There was a pregame moment of silence for MLB umpire Wally Bell, who died Monday at 48. ... Tuesday marked the 25th anniversary of Kirk Gibson's famous pinch-hit home run in the bottom of the ninth at Dodger Stadium, giving Los Angeles a 5-4 win over Oakland in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series. ... Hall of Fame manager Tom Lasorda, who at 86 is special adviser to the team chairman, tossed out a first pitch from midway between the mound and home plate that missed the target. Mattingly, who was catching, gave him a mulligan. Lasorda managed that 1988 team, the Dodgers' last appearance in the World Series. ... With the government partially shut down, there was a pregame flyover of vintage aircraft by a nonprofit organization founded by a group of World War II fighter pilots. ... Among the famous faces in the crowd were Tom Cruise and Bryan Cranston of "Breaking Bad."


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cardinals-homer-twice-beat-dodgers-4-2-nlcs-033232054--spt.html
Similar Articles: jennifer lawrence   Robin Quivers   Manny Diaz   NFL.com   Arsenal  

UK Prosecutor: Armed man wanted to see the queen

A British police officer guards the grounds of Buckingham Palace in central London, Monday, Oct. 14, 2013. British police arrested a man with a knife after he tried to dart through a gate at Buckingham Palace in London on Monday. The palace said Queen Elizabeth II was not in residence. Breaches of royal security are rare, but just a month ago police arrested two men over a suspected break-in at the palace. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)







A British police officer guards the grounds of Buckingham Palace in central London, Monday, Oct. 14, 2013. British police arrested a man with a knife after he tried to dart through a gate at Buckingham Palace in London on Monday. The palace said Queen Elizabeth II was not in residence. Breaches of royal security are rare, but just a month ago police arrested two men over a suspected break-in at the palace. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)







(AP) — A man with a history of mental illness was hoping to see Queen Elizabeth II when he tried to rush through a Buckingham Palace gate carrying a six-inch (15-cm) knife, a prosecutor said Tuesday.

David Belmar, 44, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to trespassing and possession of a bladed article for the incident a day earlier, when he was tackled after jumping over a vehicle barrier outside Buckingham Palace.

The queen was not at Buckingham Palace at the time.

Prosecutor Edward Aydin told Westminster Magistrates' Court that Belmar told police that he wanted to see the queen and was "not happy" about his welfare benefits.

Aydin said that Belmar is taking medication for mental health issues and has a fixation on the queen. In 1989, he said, Bellmar received a police warning for lighting fireworks and throwing them onto the palace grounds.

"He is a danger to the public, carrying a knife in central London, and he is a danger to the queen," Aydin said.

Belmar's lawyer Robert Katz denied that Belmar has a fixation with the queen and said that Belmar did not brandish the knife. Officers found it wrapped in a plastic bag in Belmar's jacket.

Chief Magistrate Howard Riddle ordered Belmar kept in custody until he is sentenced.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-15-Britain-Palace%20Arrest/id-d0b9de81d33e43738d01debe4655711c
Tags: Cnn.com   Pope Francis   National Cheeseburger Day   Gareth Bale   2 Guns  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

MIT's "Kinect of the Future" Can Track You Through Walls

The ability to passively track people within a given space is every retailer's dream (and every conspiracy theorist's nightmare). Those dreams recently took a step closer to reality with the debut of a new people-tracking system from MIT.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/mits-kinect-of-the-future-can-track-you-through-wall-1443947631
Category: pippa middleton   Premios Juventud 2013  

Support Unclear For GOP's Plan To End Shutdown




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



House Republicans were expected to announce their own plan Tuesday to end the partial government shutdown and avert a default on the national debt. But House Speaker John Boehner came to the microphones and kept things very vague.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


DAVID GREENE, HOST:


NPR's business news begins with the latest on the deadlock here in Washington.


(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


GREENE: We've been following the story all this hour: House Republicans have been expected to announce their own plan to end the partial government shutdown and avert a default on the national debt. But House Speaker John Boehner came to the microphones a short while ago and kept things very vague.


(SOUNDBITE OF SPEECH)


REPRESENTATIVE JOHN BOEHNER: There are a lot of opinions about what direction to go. There have been no decisions about what exactly we will do. But we're going to continue to work with our members on both sides of the aisle.


GREENE: Let's bring our congressional correspondent Tamara Keith in. Tam, when we spoke earlier this hour, you had said that there might not be enough Republican support for a plan that Boehner was coming up with. Is that what might have happened here?


TAMARA KEITH, BYLINE: That's exactly what it looks like happened. He went in with a plan. He came out with: We've got a lot of ideas, here. And that was basically the vibe I got from California Republican Darrell Issa. When he was exiting the meeting, I asked him what the support level was among House Republicans, and whether it was unanimous.


REPRESENTATIVE DARRELL ISSA: Unanimous would be Democratic Party. We're the Republican Party, so we're nearly unanimous, at best.


KEITH: At best. And there have been just a - House Republicans are really struggling with how to move forward, here.


GREENE: House Speaker John Boehner in a position that is becoming all too familiar. But let's just step back, if we can, Tamara. We had a Senate plan. There was talk of a bipartisan deal to avert the default on the debt and the government shutdown, or this Republican plan, maybe not enough support for it. Are we any closer to a compromise on these two issues today?


KEITH: The Senate is still moving forward, and there's this idea that sometimes it's darkest before the light. Sometimes when there's total chaos here in the capital and you don't know which way is up, ultimately, that leads to something emerging that will actually work. And this could be part of Boehner telling his members that they just have to go with Democratic support or go with the Senate plan.


GREENE: All right. We'll be following that story all day long on NPR News. That's our congressional correspondent, Tamara Keith. Thanks, Tamara.


KEITH: You're welcome.


Copyright © 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/15/234752361/support-unclear-for-gops-plan-to-end-shutdown?ft=1&f=3
Category: Gta 5 Online Not Working   breast cancer awareness   House of Cards   The Butler   H&m  

The Rage of Dante




  • Reputation:
    Words written:
    Words per post:
    Joined:
    Last visit:
    Location:
    Website:






The Rage of Dante


The anger of nature are caused by beasts. What would you do with them? Kill them or tame them?



Owner:



Game Masters:








This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, “The Rage of Dante”. Anything posted here will also show up there.







Topic Tags:





Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.





First post:

4 posts
• Page 1 of 1








This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "The Rage of Dante"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.


Soki: but what did my face do to you before?
ICry: Lol what? "but whats on my face? Whore?"
Soki: No, that''s not what I said -Lhfao-

-ICryForAFamily & Soki 11/12/10




User avatar
ICryForAFamily

Member for 4 years















May i reserve the Sanctuary Rider?




User avatar
AvalonKnight

Member for 0 years















Hey i'll be The Oblivion Sloth, lazy characters are my speaciality :3
oh long time no see avalon!




User avatar
The5thHorseman

Member for 0 years














First post:

4 posts
• Page 1 of 1






Post a reply







RolePlayGateway is a site built by a couple roleplayers who wanted to give a little something back to the roleplay community. The site has no intention of earning any profit, and is paid for out of their own pockets.


If you appreciate what they do, feel free to donate your spare change to help feed them on the weekends. After selecting the amount you want to donate from the menu, you can continue by clicking on PayPal logo.










Our Sponsors









RolePlayGateway is proudly powered by obscene amounts of caffeine, duct tape, and support from people like you. It operates under a "don't like it, suggest an improvement" platform, and we gladly take suggestions for improvements or changes.

The custom-built "roleplay" system was designed and implemented by Eric Martindale as of July 2009. All attempts to replicate or otherwise emulate this system and its method of organizing roleplay are strictly prohibited without his express written and contractual permission; violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

© RolePlayGateway, LLC | with the support of LocalSense



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/ihRj9OVS5c8/viewtopic.php
Related Topics: charlie hunnam   seattle seahawks   powerball winning numbers   big brother spoilers   Rae Dawn Chong  

We have found a witch, may we burn him? (Unqualified Offerings)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.
Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334059225?client_source=feed&format=rss
Category: Cristy Nicole Deweese   CJ Spiller   Kenichi Ebina   savannah brinson   Michael Ansara  

Google Glass: Yes, it's that bad


Google Glass: Yes, it's that bad

Credit: Reuters/Stephen Lam



I've wanted a Google Glass since Commander Sisko had one on "Star Trek Deep Space 9." I ignored the warning that only the Vorta could wear them without getting a terrible headache. I thought: It's like having your own private wearable big-screen TV! But hey, I was like 14 or 15 when that show started. (I mention this only to make my editor feel old.)


At an illustrious event entitled "Glass Durham," which took place at Bay 7 in the historic American Tobacco campus, I was cured of this childhood fantasy. Or at least, this incarnation of it.


[ Also on InfoWorld: Robert X. Cringely presents as evidence yet another reason to hate Google Glass. | Stay up on the latest developer news with InfoWorld's Developer World newsletter. ]


Terminally hip
Google is trying to market something that makes you look like a dork as fashionable. Of course, I am no fashion diva. My wife once said that clothes make a statement about you. When I asked what my clothes say, she replied, "That you like zombies and the beach."


Anyway, I stood in line with a bunch of people who looked like the fools who stand in line for the latest iPhone. The Glass logo suggested an electronic indie rock hipster fair flash mob could break out at any moment. Each youth waited faithfully for a chance to look like a model in some futuristic Aryan dystopia.


Google flew in a few Californians and temp-hired a bunch of recent UNC grads to pretend to have worn Glass for months. A good portion of the demo was "well, this is pre-recorded because we're having Internet problems," which pointed to a major problem with the device: It requires your phone to provide the Internet or reliable Wi-Fi.


When can I actually get one?
I asked a few basic questions about Glass: When will it be available to developers outside of San Francisco, where they hold the Google.io event? The marketoid told me that it isn't just San Francisco, it's also New York and Los Angeles as well! No idea when it would be available to other developers.


This presents a potential problem for Google. Google.io is a marketing event. You need to distribute more units to more developers than will come to your conference in order to launch with enough applications to prevent the thing from flopping. (Ask HP how WebOS went.)


For consumers, the device will be available "sometime in 2014." So these Glass events are mainly about building demand.


I also asked about battery life. The marketoid said about a day of normal use.


Source: http://akamai.infoworld.com/d/application-development/google-glass-yes-its-bad-228478?source=rss_mobile_technology
Tags: tom hanks   bob newhart   kate middleton  

Anthony Hopkins writes 'Breaking Bad' love letter

TV











6 hours ago

Image: Anthony Hopkins, Bryan Cranston

Getty Images, AMC

British actor Anthony Hopkins, left, has heaped high praise on Bryan Cranston for his work as Walter White on "Breaking Bad."

Oscar winner Anthony Hopkins is no slouch in the acting department, but after binge-watching all six seasons of "Breaking Bad" recently, he couldn't resist writing a letter to star Bryan Cranston to tell him it was the best acting he had seen — ever.

The letter showed up Sunday on the Facebook page of actor Steven Michael Quezada, who played DEA agent Steve Gomez on the AMC hit. It was quickly picked up across the web, but on Monday the post, along with a tweet about it from Quezada, disappeared.

Arnold Robinson, a publicist for Hopkins, confirmed to TODAY on Monday that the letter was indeed real. And a source at United Talent Agency, which represents both Hopkins and Cranston, told TODAY that Hopkins wanted to write Cranston because he admired his work so much. Hopkins was complimentary of the entire cast, and the UTA source said Cranston shared it, not expecting the letter to go viral.

Hopkins writes that he was compelled to reach out after what he refers to as two weeks of "addictive" viewing.

I have never watched anything like it. Brilliant!

Your performance as Walter White was the best acting I have seen — ever.

I know there is so much smoke blowing and sickening bull---- in this business, and I've sort of lost belief in anything really.

But this work of yours is spectacular — absolutely stunning. What is extraordinary, is the sheer power of everyone in the entire production. What was it? Five or six years in the making? How the producers (yourself being one of them), the writers, directors, cinematographers.... every department — casting etc. managed to keep the discipline and control from beginning to the end is (that over used word) awesome.

Hopkins is no stranger to portraying crafty monsters — he won his Academy Award for the role of Hannibal Lecter in 1991's "The Silence of the Lambs."

"Thank you," the 75-year-old actor writes. "That kind of work/artistry is rare, and when, once in a while, it occurs, as in this epic work, it restores confidence. You and all the cast are the best actors I've ever seen."

Cranston, 57, won three Emmys for his work as the high-school-teacher-turned-meth-kingpin Walter White. Last month he lost out to Jeff Daniels of HBO's "The Newsroom," but "Breaking Bad" won the Emmy for best drama series.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/anthony-hopkins-binges-breaking-bad-writes-bryan-cranston-glowing-letter-8C11390530
Category: torrie wilson   Donatella Versace   Anna Gunn   nfl schedule   leah remini  

Sunday, October 13, 2013

The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships - Kotaku

One piece of trivia orbits modern board gaming like a dark, sexy star. Someone who doesn't really play them will always have heard from their friend, who heard it from another friend, that games like Game of Thrones or Battlestar Galactica are mean. They ruin friendships.


It's true that in recent years, board games have been discovering the joy of traitors and treachery. As anyone who's played a particularly tense round of poker will know, there's a strange, emotional core to table games. When you're next to somebody and sharing this experience, you really do connect with them. As I wrote for Kotaku a couple of months back, board games are emotional power adaptors.


But Game of Thrones? Battlestar Galactica? These are games where the backstabbing and twists of the knife are expected. If you really want to test your friendships, these are the games you should be playing.


The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships


Play Werewolf with friends who hold a grudge


Oh, god.


Werewolf is similar to Mafia or The Resistance, if you've played either of those. A room full of players (and candles, and spooky music if you're doing it right) take on the role of villagers, trying to find and lynch the werewolf players in their midst.


Every night all the villagers “go to sleep” by closing their eyes. The werewolves “awake” and silently decide which villager to murder. A moderator declares theatrically who's been found dead, you all decide who to lynch again, and play continues until all the werewolves are dead or there are as many werewolves as villagers. This is a game where simply announcing you trust someone can be the missing piece of the puzzle for other players.


Werewolf couldn't be simpler, but there's nothing better for bringing out the worst in people. The entire game is just scum rising to the top of a simmering pot of tension. One hapless player will always be eaten by the wolf players before the first turn of the game. In the day, players will form terrifying pitchfork mobs powered by the noisiest player's half-formed logic. If you're playing with the Hunter, their shotgun will let them take a player of their choice down with them. The secret Lovers will be trying to keep their partner alive, no matter what team they're on. There are dozens of these modules to keep the game fresh, and best of all, when anyone dies, which side they're on isn't revealed until the game's over.


But Werewolf isn't just a game that gives that friend of yours who bears grudges a lot of reasons to be upset. It's a game where that player will have to sit in impotent silence after being unfairly lynched, until the entire game is finished.


But it gets worse, because in the next game, that friend's anger becomes a tool for the werewolves to use. When the person he's angry at shows up dead, said grudge-bearing player is going to be the target for an unfair lynching again.Oh, dear.


The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships


Play Twilight Imperium with friends who role-play


Ah, Twilight Imperium. The all-you-can-eat-buffet of strategic board gaming. Here's a game where just 20 minutes might see the orbital bombardment of the human home world, a meeting of the galactic council, new trade routes being formed, a hostage exchange, someone's flagship being destroyed in an illegal minefield and someone developing the tech required to build huge, plastic War Suns.


What makes Twilight Imperium an exciting game, as opposed to just an exciting board game, is that every one of these events will impact everyone's social standing with one another. Because everybody's physically so close to one another and ships are so precious, there's an awful lot of talking in TI before anyone does anything. Everything from alliances, to non-aggression treaties, to trade embargoes are decided without the need for rules, but at the clink of a beer.


There's a problem, though. Everybody gets an alien race to play at the start of Twilight Imperium. Perhaps you'll be the grand, pompous Winnu, or maybe the Sardakk N'orr, a species of horrifying, murderous beetles.


This brings us to a problem. Some players are going to play Twilight Imperium like the po-faced strategy game it is. But the game's just so colourful and tells such a bold, bright story that players are often drawn towards “acting their race.”


Guess what happens when you sit a very serious strategy gamer between someone pretending to be a computer virus, and another pretending to be a beetle. You'll be able to see the steam coming out of their ears by the second or third council.


The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships


Play Space Alert with an incompetent


Space Alert is one of the best games I've ever played. In a mission spanning 10 real-life minutes, you and a team of three or four friends have to keep your spaceship safe against threats ranging from hostile fighter craft, to a space octopus, to asteroids, to a nuclear device in your engine room. Or possibly all of these at once.


Without a shadow of a doubt, Space Alert is the most stressful board game in my collection. Imagine trying to calculate the optimal moment to fire the starboard laser at an incoming planetoid. Now, imagine all of your friends shouting at one another (and you) while you do it. Now, imagine that if you fail, everybody dies. Now, imagine you've noticed that there's no energy in the port-side reactor, and you'll need somebody to get down there are siphon energy into it immediately. Now stop imagining because this is REALLY HAPPENING and you have TWENTY SECONDS, GO, GO, GO


Losing a game of Space Alert after trying your hardest can be pretty crushing (perhaps literally figuratively, should you encounter a black hole). Losing five games in a row is even worse. But losing ship after ship because that one friend of yours isn't paying attention, and laughs contentedly every time something goes wrong? You'll start wanting to drag him into a real-life airlock.


The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships


Play Merchants & Marauders with sore winners


Z-Man Games' Merchants & Marauders is THE pirate board game. Some people will tell you that that's Libertalia, but those people will be boring and smell of beef. Merchants & Marauders offers piracy that feels all the more illicit because players don't have to do it. You can trade goods, hunt rumours, take on missions, collect bounties on pirates or even other players. It's the table game of Sid Meier's Pirates!, except with the most aggressive local multiplayer you've ever seen.


Here's the thing about Merchants & Marauders. If two players are brave or dumb enough to fight, the winning player will receive:


  • Everything in the loser's cargo hold
  • Their ship
  • Their crew
  • All the money onboard

Sounds pretty humiliating, right? But we're not finished! They also get...


  • Any rumours the loser was holding
  • Their hand of special, one-shot action cards
  • In a very real sense, their dignity

It's the ludic equivalent of having your legs waxed. Losing all this can set you back by hours, to say nothing of watching your friend idly throwing your cargo overboard because he can't carry it all.


In the right conditions, this can be kind of character-building. Losing everything and starting from nothing again with a smile on your face? That demands spirit.


But I would never, ever play Merchants & Marauders with sore winners. To lose everything to a friend who's going to make fun of you? For hours? You're looking at the start of a suitably thematic drunken brawl.


The Top 5 Board Games That Really Will Ruin Friendships


Play Diplomacy at all


The Game of Thrones board game gets all the hype. All the talk of how its players will be performing traitorous plays that make the Red Wedding look like a Super Sweet 16.


But if you really want to put you and your friends to the test, you go to Amazon and you buy a copy of Diplomacy. Originally released in 1954, this is the original game for treacherous motherf*****s.


Each turn of Diplomacy is made up of three phases. First, everybody leaves the table to engage in private discussions with the rest of the European powers. Second, everybody writes the moves for all of their pieces. Third, everything moves at once, with very nuanced rules for “supporting” that make alliances crucial. Fourth, you do it again, having seen that bastard Russia friend was playing you the whole time, and he and Turkey are going to be carving you up like a battery hen for the next two hours.


In other words, it's Game of Thrones, but players have to look one another in the eye for 15 minutes before dicking each other over. A game so cold that it turns players abandoning the game into a feature, with their country falling into “civil disorder.”


Oh god. Am I making this sound fun? I'm trying not to. I'm serious.


Buy Diplomacy at your own risk. I will absolutely not be held accountable.


Quintin Smith is a games columnist able to identify different board game manufacturers by their scent. He is not proud of this. He's part of a team working to make a home for play in Shut Up & Sit Down, and @quinns108 on Twitter.

Source: http://kotaku.com/the-top-5-board-games-that-really-will-ruin-friendships-1443867215
Category: 49ers   michigan football   Clemson University   PS4 release date   lollapalooza  

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Avatar will have three sequels, next movie is due in December 2016

When Avatar hit theaters in 2009 it was notable not only for its incredible computer rendered special effects and record breaking box office returns, but also as a touchstone for a resurgence of 3D movies. Now 20th Century Fox and director James Cameron have announced plans to build out a quadrilogy of Avatar movies. Screenwriters Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Shane Salerno and Josh Friedman are all on board to collaborate on the screenplays for movies 2, 3 and 4, which will be produced by Cameron and Jon Landau's Lightstorm Entertainment. Avatar 2 is scheduled to hit theaters in December 2016, with the other movies following in 2017 and 2018. WETA remains on hand to produce the special effects, we'll see what advancements in technology (Jim's in love with high framerates but The Hobbit didn't garner a universally positive response) allow them to create this time around and if audiences come out in similar numbers -- hopefully the 3D Blu-ray (or whatever format is around) doesn't take so long to arrive at retail this time.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/01/avatar-sequels-start-in-2016/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

bastille day adam sandler tim lincecum Tyson Gay Riots Zimmerman angela corey e news

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Molecular diagnostics company GeneCentric collects $2.5 million for cancer tests

dna stock image

Using the genetic properties of tumors to classify them more specifically and determine whether they may respond to anti-angiogenic drugs has netted a two-year-old diagnostics firm a $2.5 million round.

GeneCentric Diagnostics Inc. is now a commercial-stage company, said former LabCorp exec Dr. Myla Lai-Goldman, who is now CEO of GeneCentric and a venture partner with Hatteras Venture Partners. ?We plan to use the equity raise to continue our mission of translating important cancer discoveries into clinically adopted diagnostics for pathologists, clinicians, and most importantly, patients,? she said.

Its first product is the Lung Subtype Platform, a diagnostic that stratifies lung cancer patients into subtypes based on genes extracted from a tumor sample. It?s intended to help doctors determine the best therapeutic approaches for patients, which may include newer targeted therapies. LabCorp licensed and developed the first application of LSP, which it now offers through its specialty testing business.

A second platform, a 13-gene hypoxia signature, is under development to identify cancer patients who may respond to anti-angiogenesis inhibitors.

The advent of whole genome sequencing has driven many diagnostics companies to use gene signatures to detect disease. Now molecular diagnostics companies like GeneCentric and Biodesix are going a step further, using gene profiles to give doctors clues about what treatments would be best suited for specific patients.

Lung cancer is the second most common cancer in men and women and the deadliest among both.

Based in Durham, North Carolina, GeneCentric was established in 2011 with funding from Hatteras and intellectual property from Drs. Neil Hayes? and Chuck Perou?s laboratories at the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center at the UNC School of Medicine.

[Image from FreeDigitalPhotos user Victor Habbick]

Copyright 2013 MedCity News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reserve your seat now for MedCity CONVERGE, to be held July 9-10 in Philadelphia. Discover strategies, solutions and startups in healthcare innovation. Be a part of this gathering where the entire healthcare ecosystem converges.



By Deanna Pogorelc MedCity News

Deanna Pogorelc is a Cleveland-based reporter who writes obsessively about life science startups across the country, looking to technology transfer offices, startup incubators and investment funds to see what?s next in healthcare. She has a bachelor?s degree in journalism from Ball State University and previously covered business and education for a northeast Indiana newspaper.
More posts by Author

Source: http://medcitynews.com/2013/07/molecular-diagnostics-company-genecentric-collects-2-5-million-for-cancer-tests/

john carlson greg smith catamount mike dantoni bulls heat goldman sachs brandon carr

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Health insurers fear young people will opt out

MIAMI (AP) ? Dan Lopez rarely gets sick and hasn't been to a doctor in 10 years, so buying health insurance feels like a waste of money.

Even after the federal health overhaul takes full effect next year, the 24-year-old said he will probably decide to pay the $100 penalty for those who skirt the law's requirement that all Americans purchase coverage.

"I don't feel I should pay for something I don't use," said the Milwaukee resident, who makes about $48,000 a year working two part-time jobs.

Because he makes too much to qualify for government subsidies, Lopez would pay a premium of about $3,000 a year if he chose to buy health insurance.

"I shouldn't be penalized for having good health," he said.

Persuading young, healthy adults such as Lopez to buy insurance under the Affordable Care Act is becoming a major concern for insurance companies as they scramble to comply with the law, which prohibits them from denying coverage because of pre-existing conditions and limits what they can charge to older policy holders.

Experts warn a lot of these so-called "young invincibles" could opt to pay the fine instead of spending hundreds or thousands of dollars each year on insurance premiums. If enough young adults avoid the new insurance marketplace, it could throw off the entire equilibrium of the Affordable Care Act. Insurers are betting on the business of that group to offset the higher costs they will incur for older, sicker beneficiaries.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that about six million people of various ages will pay the tax penalty for not having insurance in 2014, the first year the law championed by President Barack Obama will be fully implemented.

It's hard to estimate how many of those will be the young and healthy adults insurers are trying to reach, but that subgroup makes up a very small portion of the overall market. Even though it's small, experts say it could be enough to throw the system's financing off-kilter.

About 3 million 18-24 year-olds in the U.S. currently purchase their own insurance. Many pay high prices for scant benefits, with high deductibles and co-pays because they make too much to qualify for Medicaid and have no coverage options from their employers or parents. The Urban Institute estimates that the majority of adults in their 20s will qualify for government subsidies under the Affordable Care Act.

Premium hikes could be a disincentive for young people weighing their options. Premiums for people aged 21 to 29 with single coverage who are not eligible for government subsidies would increase by 42 percent under the law, according to an analysis by actuaries at the consulting firm Oliver Wyman. By comparison, an adult in his or her early 60s who would see about a 1 percent average increase in premiums under new federal health rules.

Insurers including America's Health Insurance Plans and The Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association recently wrote to federal health officials warning that they feared low enrollment by young adults and proposed beefed up penalties for opting out. Insurers worry the $100 penalty might not be a strong enough deterrent. The penalties jump to $695 or 2.5 percent of taxable income ? whichever is more ? by 2016.

"The key to keeping health care affordable is you really want to balance the pool, where you have enough young and healthy people to balance off the care of the older, sicker people who are likely to utilize much more health care services," said Justine Handelman, the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association's vice president for legislative and regulatory policy.

She said younger people use about a fifth of the services that older beneficiaries do.

Jonathan Gruber, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who helped craft that state's law, said he thinks the first-year federal penalty should be higher.

The penalty under the Massachusetts law, which served as the model for Obama's overhaul, was $218 the first year in 2007. Gruber said that amount proved effective.

"People hate paying money and getting nothing for it," he said.

Roughly 40,000 of about 6 million Massachusetts residents paid the penalty the first year, he said.

Many young adults have chosen relatively bare-bones health plans before the Affordable Care Act, but the new law requires all plans to offer a minimum set of benefits, thus raising the price for coverage.

The cost of health coverage is difficult to estimate because it includes so many factors, but a 27-year-old making $30,000 a year in 2014 will have a $3,400 premium and will be eligible for subsidies that cover about 26 percent of the bill. That person would end up paying $2,509, or about $209 a month. That does not include deductibles, co-pays and other variables which can vary widely.

The estimates come from the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation's online Health Reform Subsidy Calculator.

Francois Louis, a 20-year-old college student in South Florida who works part-time, can't remember the last time he went to the doctor and gets by on over-the-counter medication whenever he's sick. He'd love to get a check-up, but says it's too expensive on his income of less than $15,000 a year.

"I probably would do the $100 fine because it's just cheaper and you don't have to worry about paying off monthly costs," said Louis, a student at Broward Community College near Fort Lauderdale.

Louis would get a $2,718 tax credit and have to pay $300 toward his premium, according to the calculator.

Health advocates note that many people who have difficulty affording health insurance now will qualify for federal subsidies. The financial assistance will go to those making less than $48,000 a year who cannot get affordable coverage through their job.

That includes 27-year-old Emily Nicoll of Dallas, who makes $20,000 a year working in customer service for a sports team.

She said she pays a lot of money for basic health benefits, including $80 a month for two prescriptions and a $100 co-pay for each doctor's visit. But the memory of being in a car accident in high school lingers, so she will continue to pay for health insurance once the new law takes effect.

"That's the fear that makes me pay out that $151 a month," said Nicoll, who says most of her friends do not have insurance.

She would receive a $2,100 tax credit under the Affordable Care Act and pay about $83 a month for her premium.

While Nicoll stands to save money on health insurance under the new law, many young people who make more money would not.

The potential for skyrocketing prices caught the attention of a Democratic state lawmaker in New Jersey, Assemblywoman Celeste Riley. She is so worried about the cost for young people that she helped pass legislation to remove a requirement that students at two-year colleges have health insurance to attend class. But Gov. Chris Christie vetoed the bill last week.

Riley said the low-cost, limited plans currently offered to students cost about $600 a year, but prices could rise up to $2,000. The Affordable Care Act allows people to stay on their parents' plans until age 26, but many parents also lack insurance in the current economy.

"In this one small situation, I have students that really are going to be hit so hard financially," she said. "I think that really some of them will decide not to go to school."

___

Associated Press writer Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

___

Follow Kelli Kennedy on Twitter: http://twitter.com/kkennedyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/health-insurers-fear-young-people-opt-153557338.html

the lion king suzanne collins cherry blossom festival nc state erika van pelt pat robertson hunger games trailer

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Yellow Venetian Glass For Your Marriage Ceremony Champagne ...

How Can You Contain Cranberries Into Your Food plan?
Clean, frozen or dried, cranberries can be eaten whenever of the yr. prezent dla dziadka Go soon after Responses. No question why lots of individuals contend that an personal would have superior probabilities of obtaining another person to day because of online relationship companies than he or she would in singles bar or in any destination for that subject. bcmath Hold this in intellect when getting ready what to bring and preparing what to invest in. At one time land expenditure was just for the wealthy. prezent dla dziadka If proven ambitions are also high or affordable, not suitable with one an additional and your lifestyle, that juggling act doesnt stand substantially opportunity. prezent dla dziadka The look for engines can toss out any rule, regulation or policy and there will constantly be a way all over the method. Doesnt it make feeling to have household warranty defense that matches? That last matter you want to do is offer with the complications that manifest when home programs split down and you have to repair or switch them. As an alternative of redirects, you could contemplate simplifying your web page map and earning the URLs shorter. Attempt not to hold out for many others to praise you mainly because you may well mature resentful if the praise would not appear. prezent dla dziadka Application like Flash and 3D Max will support you develop Second and 3D animations, adding everyday living and lively shades to the graphics. prezent dla dziadka These internet sites ought to be carefully picked, considering that many straightforward to get incoming hyperlinks are just ineffective when it will come to making your site\'s lookup motor position. Plan to have three or 4 helpings regular, if your general practitioner approves and you have no contraindications with your well-being. Please don\'t anticipate a person else to do all the troublesome do the job for you. Shopper generally would like to share their activities with other consumers.

About the Author:
?oth?ng to t?ll about myself ?eally.

Fin?lly a m?mber ?f a?ticlesnatch.com.
I ?ust ho?e ? am useful in some way here.

?ere is mo?e inf? about bcmath ch?c? out http://p?nix.free.fr/tests/cama?che.php?a[]=%3??+href=http://prezent-dla-dziadk?.
blogspot.c?m%3E?rezent+?la+dziadka%3C/a%3E

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Yellow-Venetian-Glass-For-Your-Marriage-Ceremony-Champagne-Flutes/4981298

huffington post What is ricin Boston Marathon Explosion Boston Marathon bombing irs new york times Friends Reunion

Monday, June 10, 2013

Anti-Hezbollah Protester Killed In Lebanon

BEIRUT ? Men wielding batons and wearing yellow arm bands evoking Lebanon's Hezbollah attacked protesters outside the Iranian Embassy in Beirut Sunday during a rally against the militant group's participation in the Syrian civil war. One protester was killed, a senior Lebanese military official and witnesses said.

A military statement said the protesters had just arrived at the embassy area when clashes broke out and a civilian opened fire. The embassy is in a predominantly pro-Hezbollah area.

Witnesses saw men wearing yellow armbands ? the color of Hezbollah's flag ? attacking the protesters with batons. It was unclear if they were affiliated with the militant Shiite group, and the identity of the gunman was unknown, a senior security official said.

The official identified the man killed as a 28-year-old member of the small Lebanese Option Party, which had called for the anti-Hezbollah protest. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

The Syria conflict is increasingly spilling over into Lebanon, home to a fragile mosaic of more than a dozen religious and ethnic groups. Hezbollah's overt participation in the conflict, backing forces of Syria's President Bashar Assad in a successful campaign to drive rebels out of Qusair near the Lebanese border, heightened tensions.

The Obama administration could decide this week to approve lethal aid for the Syrian rebels, officials said Sunday. Secretary of State John Kerry postponed a planned trip Monday to Israel and three other Mideast countries to participate in White House discussions, said officials who weren't authorized to speak publicly on the matter and demanded anonymity.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement Sunday that it backed the Lebanese Red Cross in evacuating since Friday 87 Syrians seriously wounded in the fighting in Qusair to hospitals in Lebanon.

The leader of Hezbollah, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, said during the battle for Qusair that he would side with Assad until the rebels are defeated. Assad's Syria is Hezbollah's main ally and supplier of weapons.

Gunmen from rival religious sects have gone to Syria to fight on the rebel side. Rebels have threatened to target Hezbollah's bases in Lebanon.

Clashes in northern Lebanon between rival Lebanese groups since last month claimed more than 28 lives, and rockets have targeted Hezbollah strongholds.

Hezbollah's rivals have increased their criticism, deepening a political stalemate and postponing elections for 17 months.

The Lebanese Option Party is headed by a Shiite politician, Ahmad El Assaad, who has long been opposed to Hezbollah. Sunday's clash outside the Iranian Embassy marked rare fighting between two opposing Shiite groups.

The official Lebanese National News Agency said the army cordoned off the area of the clashes in southern Beirut. The private Al-Jadeed Lebanese TV said a girl who was protesting was also wounded.

The station said the protester who was killed was shot twice in the leg, once in the back, and was hit on the head with a baton.

The protest at the embassy coincided with another small rally in downtown Beirut also criticizing Hezbollah's military intervention in Syria's conflict.

Dozens of protesters, including many Syrians, converged on Beirut's central Martyrs Square where a large banner read: "Rejecting Hezbollah's fighting in Syria."

"Those fighting in Syria are not Lebanese. Their culture, their flag, money and weapons are Iranian," said Saleh el-Mashnouk, an ardent critic of Hezbollah. "We are here to erase the shame that struck Lebanon because of them."

Lebanese protester Samara el-Hariri, 31, said Syria's war is hurting Lebanon's economy and increasing sectarian tension. "My country is stricken," she said.

Shiite Iran, Hezbollah's patron, has strongly backed Assad, who belongs to a Shiite offshoot.

The fighting in Syria has claimed more than 80,000 lives and displaced several million people. Beside Lebanon, it has also threatened to spill into neighboring countries, like Israel and Turkey.

In Syria, fighting between government troops and rebels raged in different provinces, including near the capital, Damascus, and in the northern Aleppo province. Pro-regime media outlets said that after securing control of Qusair, government forces are preparing to move to recapture the contested city of Aleppo next. Activists said there were no signs of a new push on the city or its surrounding areas.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on a network of Syrians inside the country for information, said six regime fighters were killed in clashes in Aleppo. The city has been carved up into areas controlled by rebels and the regime, and families have been displaced by shelling.

The Observatory also documented a rare case of a public killing of a 15-year-old youth by Islamist rebel fighters in the city of Aleppo. The center said the gunmen detained Mohammed Kattaa late Saturday, accusing him of being an "infidel" for mentioning Islam's Prophet Muhammad in vain.

The witnesses told the center the gunmen overheard the teenager arguing with a colleague, telling him that he would not lend him money even if "Muhammad comes back to earth," a common phrase used to describe an impossible task.

The men then brought Kattan back to the coffee shop where he works, with his shirt over his face and his back covered in marks from whips, the witnesses told the Observatory.

The militants threatened the same punishment for anyone who commits blasphemy, the witnesses said. Then they shot the boy in front of his parents and a crowd before fleeing the scene.

It was not clear which rebel group the gunmen belonged to.

Rights groups have warned against rising abuses by rebel fighters, including killing of captured regime soldiers or allied fighters. Kattan's case was a rare example of rebels killing a civilian for blasphemy.

___

Associated Press writers Zeina Karam and Yasmine Saker, and Bradley Klapper in Washington, contributed to this report.

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/09/anti-hezbollah-protester-killed_n_3412483.html

the matrix oceans 11 ferris state hockey mary poppins john derbyshire kinkade thomas kinkade paintings

10 Things to Know for Monday

A sign stands outside the National Security Administration (NSA) campus in Fort Meade, Md., Thursday, June 6, 2013. The Obama administration on Thursday defended the National Security Agency's need to collect telephone records of U.S. citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A sign stands outside the National Security Administration (NSA) campus in Fort Meade, Md., Thursday, June 6, 2013. The Obama administration on Thursday defended the National Security Agency's need to collect telephone records of U.S. citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

President Barack Obama waves as he boards Air Force One at Palm Springs International Airport on Sunday, June 9, 2013, in Palm Springs, Calif., following a weekend summit. (AP Photo/The Desert Sun, Crystal Chatham)

In this Saturday, June 8, 2013 photo, Libyans are seen during fighting outside the office of the Libya Shield pro-government militia in Benghazi, Libya. The violence which left dozens of people dead broke out Saturday when protesters stormed a base belonging to Libya Shield, a grouping of pro-government militias tasked with maintaining security. The protesters were demanding militias leave their camp and submit to the full authority of Libya's security forces. (AP Photo)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Monday:

1. NSA WHISTLEBLOWER REVEALED

A defense contractor's employee, Edward Snowden, says his "sole motive is to inform the public."

2. WHAT A WALK IN THE DESERT MEANS FOR US-CHINA RELATIONS

The stroll gave President Obama and Chinese leader Xi some time to "deepen their personal relationship" as they addressed wide-ranging issues.

3. GETTING A GLIMPSE OF THE VICTIMS IN SANTA MONICA SHOOTINGS

A student, a groundskeeper and the gunman's father are among five killed before police killed the shooter.

4. US CLOSE TO ARMING SYRIAN REBELS

Moved by the Assad regime's rapid advance, Obama could decide this week to approve lethal aid for the Syrian rebels, sources tell the AP.

5. MANDELA'S FAMILY VISITS HIM AS HIS HOSPITAL BEDSIDE

South Africa's former president, anti-apartheid leader is in "serious but stable" condition with a recurring lung infection.

6. A RESIGNATION AFTER DEADLY LIBYA CLASHES

One of Libya's highest military officers steps down following clashes between protesters and a government-aligned militia that left 31 people dead.

7. WHY ZIMMERMAN SAYS HE FELT THREATENED BY TRAYVON MARTIN

Explaining that issue is key to his defense as jury selection begins Monday in Florida.

8. WHERE TO GET A PEEK AT GAMING'S FUTURE

At this week's Electronic Entertainment Expo in LA, some 46,000 attendees are expected to play, poke and prod new video games and gizmos from some 200 exhibitors.

9. HEAT REBOUNDS IN NBA FINALS

LeBron James overcame a terrible start to finish with 17 points as Miami beat San Antonio 103-84 to tie the series at 1-1.

10. AT TONY AWARDS, VANCE AND LIGHT WIN EARLY

Courtney B. Vance and Judith Light have won the first Tony Awards of Sunday's night telecast, after host Neil Patrick Harris performed a high-octane opening number.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-09-10-Things-to-Know-Monday/id-76826daa8324424c856975ca93785aec

Solomon Islands Mary Leakey Side Effects bob marley weather the walking dead the walking dead

Autopsy set for body believed to be Iowa girl

FILE - This file photo provided by The Iowa Department of Public Safety shows Kathlynn Shepard, 15. Authorities announced early Saturday, June 8, 2013 that they have recovered a body believed to be Shepard, who was kidnapped by a registered sex offender while walking home from school. (AP Photo/Iowa Department of Public Safety, File)

FILE - This file photo provided by The Iowa Department of Public Safety shows Kathlynn Shepard, 15. Authorities announced early Saturday, June 8, 2013 that they have recovered a body believed to be Shepard, who was kidnapped by a registered sex offender while walking home from school. (AP Photo/Iowa Department of Public Safety, File)

BOONE, Iowa (AP) ? Authorities plan to conduct an autopsy on a body believed to be that of a 15-year-old Iowa girl who has been missing since she and another girl were abducted more than two weeks ago.

Authorities say they're confident that the body a fisherman found Friday night in the Des Moines River near Boone is Kathlynn Shepard's. They scheduled the autopsy for Saturday.

Investigators say clothes on the body matched what Kathlynn was wearing when she and a 12-year-old girl were abducted in Dayton, a town about 20 miles north of Boone. They also found zip ties that matched those used to restrain the younger girl, who managed to escape and call 911.

Authorities believe registered sex offender Michael Klunder abducted the girls and committed suicide after the younger girl's escape.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-08-US-Missing-Teen-Iowa/id-9ecfa8f8126c4a369da8f70120c80bbe

g8 summit netanyahu aipac vanessa minnillo super tuesday epidemiology total eclipse of the heart

Sunday, June 9, 2013

At Tonys, Diane Paulus wins for directing 'Pippin'

NEW YORK (AP) ? Diane Paulus won her first Tony Award for directing the crackling, high-energy revival of "Pippin." Courtney B. Vance, Gabriel Ebert and Judith Light won the first acting trophies.

Pam MacKinnon won for directing "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?," a year after earning her first nomination for helming "Clybourne Park."

The Tonys are being broadcast live by CBS from Radio City Music Hall. Neil Patrick Harris is back for his fourth turn as emcee and leads a show featuring talented children and pulse-pounding musical numbers.

The big, opening number started with Harris simply holding a guitar in a pub like "Once" but quickly morphed into a flashy razzle-dazzle number that showcased performers from almost a dozen musicals ? and even ex-boxer Mike Tyson dancing. Harris sang "It's bigger! Tonight it's bigger," jumped through a hoop, vanished from a box and promised a "truly legendary show" before glitter guns went off.

Paulus' last two revivals, "Hair" and "The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess," both won Tonys for best musical revival.

Paulus, artistic director of the American Repertory Theater at Harvard, teamed up with a Montreal-based acrobatic troupe to transform Stephen Schwartz '70s hit into an thrilling circus-musical hybrid that also retains the original Fosse choreography.

Vance won for best featured actor in a play for portraying a newspaper editor opposite Tom Hanks in "Lucky Guy." He dedicated his award to his mother.

Light won her second featured actress in a play Tony in two years, cementing the former TV star of "One Life to Live" and "Who's the Boss?" as a Broadway star.

She followed up her win last year as a wise-cracking alcoholic aunt in "Other Desert Cities" with the role of a wry mother in "The Assembled Parties," in which she goes from about 53 to 73 over the play's two acts.

"I want to thank every woman that I am in this category nominated with: you have made this a celebration, not a competition," she said.

Ebert of "Matilda the Musical" won as best featured actor in a musical. He thanked his four Matildas and his parents, stooping down to speak into the microphone.

"Kinky Boots" and "Matilda the Musical" are the front-runners for top musical, while those for best play are "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike" and "The Assembled Parties."

Pop singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein have given "Kinky Boots" ? originally a 2005 film about a failing shoe factory that turns to making drag queen boots ? a fun score and a touching book that celebrates diversity. It has generated two leading man nods in Billy Porter and Stark Sands.

The import "Matilda the Musical" is a witty, dark musical adaptation of the novel by Roald Dahl that is still running in London. Its leading woman is actually a man ? Bertie Carver, who plays the evil headmistress Miss Trunchbull.

Others musicals hoping for awards include the acrobatic "Bring It On: The Musical," the hit-heavy "Motown the Musical" and "A Christmas Story, the Musical," adapted from the beloved holiday movie. Top musical revivals include an updated "Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella" and a cracking revival of "Pippin" with a circus feel.

All the above shows will get lucrative screen time with a performance during the telecast, including "Annie" with "Glee" star Jane Lynch, last year's winner "Once," and a song from "The Phantom of the Opera," which is celebrating its 25th anniversary on Broadway this year.

Lauper will perform her song "True Colors" during the segment when dead members of the theater community are honored. Also, the original members of the '60s band The Rascals will play "Good Lovin,'" which they did this season on Broadway.

The best play award is largely a two-way race between Christopher Durang's comical "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike" and Richard Greenberg's moving "The Assembled Parties." On the telecast, filmed dramatic moments from the top play nominees will to shown to offer viewers a look at the shows.

The biggest star with a nomination is Broadway newcomer Tom Hanks, who could snap up a Tony for "Lucky Guy," Nora Ephron's last work and a best play finalist. He faces tough competition from Nathan Lane, who plays a closeted gay burlesque performer in "The Nance."

The nominators ignored some big-name talent who graced Broadway stages this season, including Bette Midler, Jessica Chastain, Al Pacino, Katie Holmes, Paul Rudd, Alec Baldwin, Alicia Silverstone, Sigourney Weaver, Cuba Gooding Jr. and Scarlett Johansson.

Presenters include some of the A-listers overlooked for nominations as well as Jesse Eisenberg, Jon Cryer, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anna Kendrick, Zachary Quinto, Sally Field, Audra McDonald, Alan Cumming and Jesse Tyler Ferguson.

The Tony winners were picked by 868 Tony voters, including members of The Broadway League, American Theatre Wing, Actors' Equity, the Dramatists Guild, Stage Directors and Choreographers Society as well as critics from the New York Drama Critics Circle.

The awards telecast faces competition for attention on Sunday night from an episode of "Mad Men" on AMC and Game 2 of the NBA finals between San Antonio and Miami on ABC. Last year's telecast was seen by 6 million viewers, down significantly from 2011's 6.9 million.

The awards cap a somewhat grim financial season on Broadway in which the total box office take was flat and the number of ticket buyers slipped 6 percent. Both numbers were blamed in part on Superstorm Sandy, but high ticket prices and the lack of long term audience growth has many worried.

A total of 46 new shows opened during the season, which began last May and ended May 26: 15 musicals, 26 plays and five special events or concerts.

___

AP Entertainment Writer Frazier Moore and AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tonys-diane-paulus-wins-directing-pippin-011405928.html

giuliana rancic giuliana rancic elie wiesel temptations work hard play hard tim ferriss wmt