JustinsAuntPatr...'s profileWelcome to the Insanity!PhotosBlogLists Tools Help

Blog


    September 30

    What an afternoon I had today

     
    Hello everyone!
     
     
     
    I wanted to share something that happened to me this afternoon that has me amazed and glad that I am blessed.
     
    recycling_cans_sm.jpg
     
     
    I decided that I wanted to try something a little bit different on my day off. Since I already pick up cans and bottles to recycle when I walk Pound Puppy twice daily, I went to one of our large parks with a large trash bag and latex gloves. I walked the entire park which is one mile around and found enough to nearly half fill the 33 gallon trash bag. I then went to a road that a lot of people use to go home from one of the biggest employers in our town. I parked at a church parking lot and walked down the dirt road (facing traffic for safety) with my Gopher pick up tool and started looking. I found more than I thought I would find and ended up walking nearly a mile down this road. When I got to the corner where there was a traffic signal, something caught my eye. As I reached for a nearly hidden beer bottle, there it was. A crisp bill that turned out to be a twenty dollar bill! As I waited for the traffic signal to give me the protected walk sign, I said a prayer and thanked God for guiding me to the money. When I got to the other side of the street, it had a small home development with a fairly nice retaining wall. I looked there for any bottles and cans and actually found another twenty dollar bill! I stopped and thanked God again for guiding me to the money that I really need which is why I decided to go look for cans and bottles to recycle. I actually found more cans and bottles when I left the small housing development. In fact, I ended up finding so many bottles and cans that I could barely walk the mile back to my car.
     
    recycling_cans.jpg
     
    I plan on going to the recycling place tomorrow before I go to work to see how much I was able to collect. My shoes and pants were really dirty and I was tired but it was so worth it and the $40 was the icing on the cake. Pound Puppy will be getting a slightly shorter walk tonight after I rest for a bit.
     
    Has anything so wonderful ever happened to you? Feel free to share.
     
     

    It's about time

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was very glad to see that the rules are finally changing about our food. Case in point - when I was with one of "my adults" at Wally World, a customer stopped us to ask if we could see where the instant milk was made. Since "my adult" wasn't able to do that, I looked very carefully at the box. It only stated where it was distributed not where it was made. Ever since the scandal that broke out that milk from China has made so many people (mostly babies) had gotten sick by the addition of melamine. The customer decided not to buy any instant milk if they didn't know where it came from and I so agree with that statement. Beloved and I try to always only eat food from the USA and have always stayed away from food from foreign countries since the rules are more relaxed.
     

    At long last, food labeling law set to take effect

    Still, some expect confusion over what must be labeled

    By Allison Linn
    Senior writer MSNBC
    updated 5:08 a.m. PT, Tues., Sept. 30, 2008
     
    Growing Safe Food in Mexico

    Walk into a grocery store after Sept. 30, and you’ll be more likely to find out whether that head of lettuce you are buying was grown in Mexico or the United States. If you pick up a bag of lettuce, however, don’t necessarily expect the same information.

    After years of wrangling, so-called “country of origin labeling” is expected to take effect at the end of the month, requiring most food retailers to disclose where many types of meat, produce and other food products come from. The new rules aim to make it easier for regular consumers to know whether their food was imported or not, much like they can find out whether the toys they buy for their children were made domestically or overseas.

    But while the regulations will provide customers with more information about where their food comes from, there also is likely to be some confusion, as consumers — and experts — work to understand exactly what is covered under the regulations, and what isn’t.

    That’s because the regulations exclude a variety of foods that fall under the labeling requirement but are considered to be processed, including roasted peanuts, breaded chicken and bacon. The exemption for processed food also means that certain foods that are mixed together don’t have to be labeled, such as a bag of lettuce that includes both Romaine and iceberg, or a package of frozen peas and carrots.

    Consumer and food safety advocates say they are generally happy with the rules, and relieved that the regulations are finally going into effect at all after so many delays. Still, they expect the guidelines will be puzzling to some consumers.

     

    Adding to confusion?
    “It does create confusion in the marketplace, and it’s not what consumers expect,” said Chris Waldrop, director of the Food Policy Institute at the Consumer Federation of America. “It’s not the intent of the law.”

    Patty Lovera, assistant director of Food & Water Watch, a nonprofit focused on clean water and food safety, believes the definitions are too broad because they exclude such widely eaten forms of covered foods, such as roasted peanuts.

    Billy Cox, a spokesman for the USDA, said the government is following Congress’ mandate in what foods are covered, including the decision to exclude processed foods. He declined to comment further on how they decided what constitutes a processed food.

    Deborah White, chief legal officer for the Food Marketing Institute, a retail trade group, said her group has long raised concerns about what the rules cover  — chicken but not turkey, for example, and supermarkets but not butcher shops.

    “We were concerned about this law from the outset because it doesn’t make a lot of sense in certain ways,” she said.

    Still, White said that after years of arguing that disclosures like these should be voluntary rather than mandatory, retailers are now focused on implementing it.

    The country of origin labeling requirement has been years in the making. It was established when Congress passed the 2002 Farm Bill, but implementation was delayed repeatedly. It was then amended again with the 2008 Farm Bill to include more foods.

    The nearly final rules are now scheduled to go into effect on Sept. 30, and retailers will then have six months to make sure they understand the regulations correctly and come into compliance. The next step will be for the government to come out with a final set of rules, incorporating separate seafood and shellfish regulations, but there is no date set yet for that to happen.

    Over those years, the Food Marketing Institute argued that mandatory labeling would be costly and that voluntary disclosures would suffice. The USDA estimates that record-keeping and maintenance will cost retailers about $247 million per year.

    “Government-mandated labeling can’t help but increase the cost of a product,” White said. “We, as an industry, oppose anything that’s going to raise the cost of food for consumers.”

    Consumer and environmental groups have countered that consumers should be able to find out where their food comes from, especially in light of recent food safety scares and environmental concerns about shipping food from afar.

    'Right to know' issue
    “For us, the bottom line is it’s a ‘right to know’ issue,” said Lovera, of Food & Water Watch.

    As some retailers rush to implement the rules, others, like upscale grocer Whole Foods, are already voluntarily disclosing where much of the food covered under the mandate comes from. In some cases, Whole Foods has used the information as a selling point both for people who want to eat locally grown food and those who want exotic foods from far-off locales.Still, spokeswoman Libba Letton said the company also is sorting through some of the nuances of the law, such as a decision to include macadamia nuts but not walnuts. She said that even for the retailer, such distinctions aren’t always easily understood.

    The company also has seen some of the downside to labeling, such as when it faced criticism after voluntarily disclosing that a tiny proportion of its frozen organic produce was coming from China. But Letton said the mandatory labeling rules have not caused Whole Foods to change where they get any food products.

    Now, with the rules set to go into effect, some wonder whether they will prompt consumers to change their shopping habits.

    Waldrop, of the Consumer Federation of America, thinks consumers may be surprised to find how much of their produce is imported, especially during the off season.

    “My guess is that you will see changes in some of the purchasing habits because consumers are becoming more and more aware, and want to know where their food is coming from,” he said.

    But White, of the retailers’ trade group, isn’t so sure.

    “I think, for the most part, the consumer is pretty sophisticated and understands, in this day and age, (that) food comes from all over the world,” she said.

     

    Slideshow of what made it on the list and what didn't  ~

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26929689

     
     

    Is this a good idea?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I found this story from the east coast that I'm not 100% sure is a good idea. What do you think?
     
     
    Taxes could get sky-high with aerial technology
     
     
    Published: Monday, September 29, 2008
     
     
     
    A new high-tech aerial photography system that can spot an illegal porch from 5,000 feet is being marketed to tax assessors as a way to grow revenue.

    Pictometry International Corp. says it offers tax assessors 12 different views of every square foot of building or land in a jurisdiction that buys their system. They call it "sophisticated visual intelligence."

    State Sen. Jeff Van Drew has another name for it.

    "It's Big Brother," said Van Drew, D-Cape May, Cumberland, Atlantic.

    "We're not supposed to be spying on people. When it gets to the point where we're doing aerial spying on people's lives, I've had enough," Van Drew said.

    At stake is an untold amount of tax revenue. Cape May County appears to be ground zero on the issue as it was one of the first in the nation to buy into the system, purchasing its first pictures in 2003. 

    While Van Drew ponders writing a law to limit the uses of Pictometry, Cape May County Tax Administrator George R. Brown III is already using it to adjust assessments on farms. He doesn't consider it a Big Brother tactic. He calls it "a great assessment tool," one of many to make sure people pay their fair share of taxes.

    "What's on the books should be enforced, and we have new technology to do that. You compare the photos and find physical changes," Brown said.

    Farmers who are not farming enough of their land could end up with higher taxes. Brown said the next step is to use pictures of residential areas to catch illegal additions and other violations.

    Some southern New Jersey tax administrators support the technology while others are wary. Cumberland County Tax Administrator Patricia Belmont, for example, is in no hurry to get Pictometry.

    "We like our farmers. We want to keep our farmers here. ... They're just looking to find a dollar where they can," Belmont said.

    Atlantic County Tax Administrator Lois Finifter doesn't have Pictometry yet, but she said she wants to look into it. She supports Brown's argument: "It's a benefit to all taxpayers. If people don't take out permits, they're not paying their fair share. Others take out permits, and they're paying," Finifter said.

    Finifter's only problem with Brown's use of Pictometry is he may have relied on it too much. She said if there are questions, a physical inspection of a farm can clear up mistakes.

    Brown challenged the assessments of West Cape May farmers Les and Diane Rea, even though the local assessor, Art Amonette, supported the Reas' farmland-assessment application. Finifter said it should be up to the local assessor and not the county tax board to judge the applications.

    "We don't do that now, and don't anticipate we'll be doing that. We'll advise assessors but that's the assessor's call," Finifter said.

    In Ocean County, Tax Administrator Ozzie Vituscka said the county might use Pictometry but not on farmland. Vituscka said local assessors make that call.

    "I don't know if that's my responsibility, and I wouldn't rely solely on one tool. I'm old school. I'd probably go in the field to look. I enjoy visiting farms," Vituscka said.

    Burlington County is just getting Pictometry, and Tax Administrator Marge Nuzzo said she is anxious to use it although she's unsure if it will be applied to farms.

    "I'm really excited about it. I'm just not set up for it yet. It's a great assessment tool and we're anxious to get started on it," Nuzzo said.

    Peter Furey, who heads the New Jersey Farm Bureau, said he has no problem with Pictometry just the way Brown interpreted New Jersey's Farmland Assessment Act and aerial pictures of the Reas' land. He said the Reas do not have to farm all their land as some can be in permanent pasture, woodland or other related uses.

    "It's less about technology than the apparent introduction of personal interpretation and personal opinion. With old-fashioned or new methods, compliance is compliance. They're legislating through enforcement practices," Furey said.

    Diane Rea does not know much about Pictometry. She calls it, "a computer thing," but she said Brown disputed the number of acres of pumpkins growing when the pictures were taken in March.

    "We don't grow pumpkins in March," Rea said.

    She also claimed the Cape May County trespassed on their land to take ground-level pictures to complement their aerial shots.

    Bill Crowther, Brown's field investigator, said he took the ground-level pictures from public roads.

    Since the county got Pictometry, it has found a wide range of uses with police, firefighters, zoning and emergency management. The county says tax assessment is one of 15 applications, and its use by Brown to review all 400 or so farms in the county is new.

    "I think what we did was fair," Brown said. "The kind of review we gave to the Reas we'll give to every farmland application in the county," Brown said.

    Brown said the Reas are legitimate farmers and taxpayers. One problem, he said, is area farm values are increasing. A farm nearby on Stevens Street recently sold for about $100,000 an acre, he said. Brown is also aware of farms in northern New Jersey being turned into "McMansion estates" that may not deserve lower assessments.

    Brown may want assessments to be tied to such market values, but Furey argues the Farmland Assessment Act doesn't work that way. It was designed to keep New Jersey farmers farming by lowering their tax burden despite what the real estate market was doing, he said, noting how much of the Rea farm is deed restricted against development.

    "The tax administrators are bound by existing law and court precedent. There's been 40 years of precedent. The state tax court is where this belongs," Furey said.

    That's where the Rea case is heading, to test the legality of Pictometry's use for tax assessment for the first time.

     
     
     

    I wonder how much it is?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net and found this unusual story from AZ. I wonder how much the house cost and would it be worth it.
     
     
    Tempe resident gets creative in mortgage crisis
     
     
     

    Tempe resident Char Aramdee has taken a new approach to the mortgage crisis. He's placed five-foot-tall handwritten signs in his yard that read "free house just take over mortgage," and "need help just take over payment."

    Cars slow down as they pass the house on Ellis Drive just east of Mill Avenue. Aramdee said he has had people stopping by and calling nearly every day, but no one has taken his offer yet.

    While signs like these may cause a stir in some neighborhoods, Aramdee's neighbors don't seem to mind.

    "I was just amused by his inventiveness," next-door neighbor Dorothy Wells said. "A lot of people have homes they can't sell right now."

    Across the street, neighbor Jeffery Miller said the signs don't bother him either.

    "It's a sign that they need some help," said Miller. "I know it's hard right now."

    Aramdee used to own Char's Thai Restaurant on University Drive and Rural Road, but said he had to sell it in February because the lease got too high. Now he and his wife are hoping to get rid of their mortgage so they can move into an apartment with their two children, ages 6 and 8.

     

     

    Excuse me? Did I read that right?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net and found one of the weirdest stories ever. That's what I said to myself, "Excuse me? Did I read that right?" JoAnn, did you hear about this?
     
     
    Trial Begins for Man who Cooked Girlfriend on Grill
     
     
     
    The challenge for Shepherd's defense was to find jurors who could "compartmentalize" the facts of Stewart's slaying as separate from the bizarre story of what happened to her body.
     
    Monday, September 29, 2008
     
     
    Jury selection was under way Monday in the trial of Texas man accused of slaying a woman and cooking her dismembered body on barbecue grills, prosecutors said.

    Timothy Wayne Shepherd, 28, of Houston, has been charged with choking his former girlfriend, Texas A&M engineering student Tynesha Stewart, to death, cutting up her body and burning it in grills on his apartment patio, The Houston Chronicle reported.

    The challenge for Shepherd's defense attorneys was to find jurors who could "compartmentalize" the facts of Stewart's slaying as separate from the bizarre story of what happened to her body, the newspaper said.

    "The details are the details, we can't change them, but the details are irrelevant as to whether Tim Shepherd is guilty of murder," said Chip Lewis, Shepherd's defense attorney. "Nothing that happened after Ms. Stewart's death changed the facts about how she died."

    Authorities say Shepherd has confessed to many aspects of the slaying. Court records show police recovered 30 pieces of charred bone and hair from Shepherd's apartment, but Lewis contends there's no DNA evidence proving they belonged to Stewart, making it a case without a body, the Chronicle reported.

     

    Here's the background story ~

    March 31, 2008

    tyesha_stewart tim_shepherd(2007-med-wide).JPG

     

    For at least two days, neighbours at a city apartment complex noticed an acrid aroma, black smoke and leaping flames coming from two barbecue grills on the balcony of a second-floor apartment.

    What, neighbours at the Red Oak Place apartments wondered, was going on in the unit where 27-year-old Timothy Wayne Shepherd lived? What was he burning at all hours, for days at a time?

    The answer turned their stomachs.

    According to law enforcement officials, Shepherd dismembered, and then burned the body of his former girlfriend, Tynesha Stewart, a 19-year-old Texas A&M University student. Nothing remains of Stewart’s body, Harris County Sheriff Tommy Thomas said at a press conference Saturday.

    “I just don’t know what to think about it,” said Louis Evans, whose balcony faces Shepherd’s in the quiet tree-lined enclave in northern Houston. “I thought he was a nice normal person. I guess you never know what your neighbours are doing.”

    Authorities said Shepherd has confessed to strangling and dismembering Stewart, a college freshman who was home on spring break, because he was angry that she had started a new relationship.

    Officials first thought Shepherd had disposed of her remains in a large commercial trash bin that had since been emptied, launching an intense debate in the area about whether the Sheriff’s Department should conduct a massive and expensive search of area landfills for Stewart’s remains.

    Stewart was last seen March 15 and was reported missing March 19. The next day the Harris County Sheriff’s Office homicide division launched its investigation.

    On March 16, neighbours said they first noticed the unusual activity — and the unpleasant odour — on Shepherd’s balcony.

    “The smell was awful,” said Evans, who also became alarmed after seeing a blaze shoot out from the grills. “I was wondering: What is he burning? Not cooking, but burning. There is a difference.”

    At times, Evans said, the flames from the grills leapt dangerously close to the roof of the balcony. Evans says he called 911, but when firefighters arrived, the flames had calmed and Shepherd assured them everything was under control.

    A leasing agent at the apartment complex also noticed the thick dark smoke and the intense flames and asked Shepherd what he was doing, Evans said. Another neighbour, 18-year-old James Hebert, told The Houston Chronicle that he often cooked out with Shepherd, and even left his grill at Shepherd’s apartment. When he wasn’t invited over, he asked his neighbour what was going on. Shepherd replied that he was cooking for a wedding, the newspaper said.

    Dionne Whitaker, 31, who lives in the complex, said she saw Shepherd carry the grill and smoker to a garbage bin a day or so later, the newspaper said.

    Human remains generally require extremely high temperatures to destroy, and authorities have not said how it is possible that Stewart’s remains could be completely burned on a patio grill.

    “This certainly turned out to be one of the most heinous crimes I’ve ever seen in my 38 years (in law enforcement),” Thomas, the sheriff, said Saturday.

    Shepherd, who is charged with murder, is being held on US$250,000 bond in the Harris County Jail. Telephone message left with his lawyer were not immediately returned. On Sunday, the door to Shepherd’s apartment was covered with plywood boards.

     
    September 28

    This is sad but not really a surprise

     
     
    Hello everyone!
     
     
    I just got home from work a bit ago and of course had to surf the 'net. I'm not 100% with this since she's been through so much in the last year or so.
     
     
    Heather Locklear
     
    © AP
    Heather Locklear
    ET: Heather Locklear arrested in Calif. on DUI count
    Sept. 28, 2008, 6:31 PM EST

    Entertainment Tonight and The Associated Press

    MONTECITO, Calif. -- Heather Locklear was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of a controlled substance in the upscale Santa Barbara area, authorities said Sunday.

    Locklear, 47, was pulled over by a California Highway Patrol officer Saturday afternoon after a resident reported seeing the actress leaving a parking lot and "driving erratically," patrol spokesman Tom Marshall said.

    The officer noticed Locklear's car parked on a state highway and blocking a lane in Montecito, a wealthy community about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles. She was believed to be alone in the car, Marshall said.

    "In talking with her, (the officer) determines that she seems to be under the influence of something," Marshall said.

    Locklear was taken to the police station, where she was tested for alcohol and drugs. She was booked at 7 p.m. on suspicion of driving under the influence of prescription medication. She was later released from custody.

    Calls to Locklear's publicists were not immediately returned.

    Locklear's TV credits include "T.J. Hooker," "Dynasty," "Melrose Place" and "Spin City," and her film roles include "The Perfect Man" and "Uptown Girls."

    Locklear checked into a medical clinic in June to seek treatment for anxiety and depression.

    Last year, she got a divorce from Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora after 11 years of marriage. They have a daughter, Ava Elizabeth.

     
     
     
     
     

    Remembering Paul Newman

     
    Hello everyone!
     
     
    I am still in shock that one of my favorite actors of all time has died at the tender age of only 83. I found yet another story to share with you guys. I sure hope that everyone who enjoyed one of his movies or food products will give to his charity, "The Hole in the Wall Gang" in his honor. Here's where you can do that like we did.
     
    www.holeinthewallcamps.org is where children who have physical/mental disabilities are able to go to camp like everyone else.
     

    Paul Newman

    He used his fame to give away his fortune.

     

    By Dahlia Lithwick
    Posted Saturday, Sept. 27, 2008
     
     
     
    Illustration by Charlie Powell. Click image to expand.
     

    The Hole in the Wall Gang Camp opened in Connecticut in 1988 to provide a summer camping experience—fishing, tie-dye, ghost stories, s'mores—for seriously ill children. By 1989, when I started working there as a counselor, virtually everyone on staff would tell some version of the same story: Paul Newman, who had founded the camp when it became clear his little salad-dressing lark was accidentally going to earn him millions, stops by for one of his not-infrequent visits. He plops down at a table in the dining hall next to some kid with leukemia, or HIV, or sickle cell anemia, and starts to eat lunch. One version of the story has the kid look from the picture of Newman on the Newman's Own lemonade carton to Newman himself, then back to the carton and back to Newman again before asking, "Are you lost?" Another version: The kid looks steadily at him and demands, "Are you really Paul Human?"

    Newman loved those stories. He loved to talk about the little kids who had no clue who he was, this friendly old guy who kept showing up at camp to take them fishing. While their counselors stammered, star-struck, the campers indulged Newman the way they'd have indulged a particularly friendly hospital blood technician. It took me years to understand why Newman loved being at the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp. It was for precisely the same reason these kids did. When the campers showed up, they became regular kids, despite the catheters and wheelchairs and prosthetic legs. And when Newman showed up, he was a regular guy with blue eyes, despite the Oscar and the racecars and the burgeoning marinara empire. The most striking thing about Paul Newman was that a man who could have blasted through his life demanding "Have you any idea who I am?" invariably wanted to hang out with folks—often little ones—who neither knew nor cared.

    For his part, Newman put it all down to luck. In his 1992 introduction to our book about the camp, he tried to explain what impelled him to create the Hole in the Wall: "I wanted, I think, to acknowledge Luck: the chance of it, the benevolence of it in my life, and the brutality of it in the lives of others; made especially savage for children because they may not be allowed the good fortune of a lifetime to correct it." Married to Joanne Woodward, his second wife, for 50 years this winter, Newman always looked at her like something he'd pulled out of a Christmas stocking. He looked at his daughters that way, too. It was like, all these years later, he couldn't quite believe he got to keep them.

    Of course, it wasn't all luck. He lost his son, Scott, to a drug overdose in 1978, so in 1980, he founded the Scott Newman Center, which works to prevent substance abuse. When he first began to donate 100 percent of the proceeds from his food company, Newman's Own, to charity, critics accused him of grandiosity. Grandiose? Tell that to the recipients of the quarter-billion dollars he's given away since the company's creation in 1982. First Paul Newman made fresh, healthy food cool, then he and his daughter Nell made organic food cool. Then he went and made corporate giving cool by establishing the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy. And all this was back in the '90s, before Lance Armstrong bracelets and organic juice boxes.

    But Newman never stopped believing he was a regular guy who'd simply been blessed, and well beyond what was fair. So he just kept on paying it forward. He appreciated great ideas for doing good in the world—he collected them the way other people collect their own press clippings—and he didn't care where they came from. Whether you were a college kid, a pediatric oncologist, or a Hollywood tycoon, if you had a nutty plan to make life better for someone, he'd write the check himself or hook you up with somebody who would.

    Today there are 11 camps modeled on the Hole in the Wall all around the world, and seven more in the works, including a camp in Hungary and one opening next year in the Middle East. Each summer of the four I spent at Newman's flagship Connecticut camp was a living lesson in how one man can change everything. Terrified parents would deliver their wan, weary kid at the start of the session with warnings and cautions and lists of things not to be attempted. They'd return 10 days later to find the same kid, tanned and bruisey, halfway up a tree or canon-balling into the deep end of the pool. Their wigs or prosthetic arms—props of years spent trying to fit in—were forgotten in the duffel under the bed. Shame, stigma, fear, worry, all vaporized by a few days of being ordinary. In an era in which nearly everyone feels entitled to celebrity and fortune, Newman was always suspicious of both. He used his fame to give away his fortune, and he did that from some unspoken Zen-like conviction that neither had ever really belonged to him in the first place.

    Hollywood legend holds that Paul Newman is and will always be larger-than-life, and it's true. Nominated for 10 Oscars, he won one. He was Fast Eddie, Cool Hand Luke, Butch Cassidy. And then there were Those Eyes. But anyone who ever met Paul Newman will probably tell you that he was, in life, a pretty regular-sized guy: A guy with five beautiful daughters and a wonder of a wife, and a rambling country house in Connecticut where he screened movies out in the barn. He was a guy who went out of his way to ensure that everyone else—the thousands of campers, counselors, and volunteers at his camps, the friends he involved in his charities, and the millions of Americans who bought his popcorn—could feel like they were the real star.

    September 27

    JoAnn, wasn't that was clever?

     
     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net for a few minutes before I need to leave for work and found one more story from San Antonio, Texas to share. This is a really weird but interesting, sort of, way to steal. I thought of you, JoAnn when I read this.
     
    Thieves Landscape Lawn, Then Come Back To Steal
     
     
     
     
    Members of a North Side family say some thieves planned a strange, but clever way to carry out their heist.

    The family woke up Thursday morning to find thousands of dollars worth of items stolen right out of their driveway, but their brand new truck still sitting there.

    Robert Cisneros bought his truck about a month ago. Since then, some very odd things have happened.

    It all started about 2 weeks ago with some landscaping bricks.

    "It wasn't like they stacked them up and said here's your bricks," Cisneros said. "They actually put some time. They made it look really nice around the tree."

    The problem is, Cisneros didn't order any landscaping.

    No one in the neighborhood could figure out how the bricks got around the tree.The landscaping kept the Cisneros, his family, and his neighbors guessing. That is, until Thursday morning when they all found out exactly what the bricks were doing there and the 4 reasons the thieves needed them.

    Most of the lug nuts were on the lawn, but wheel wells on Cisneros' truck were empty and his wheels and tires were gone. It was a screwy set of circumstances that taught the Cisneros family and their neighbors a lesson.

    "Be careful if you see these rocks lying around your neighborhood," said Cisneros. "It's given them a tool to jack your vehicle and take your tires away."

    The theft ended up a rock solid reason to be leery of landscaping bricks that randomly end up in your lawn.

    Robert believes his truck was targeted because the wheels and tires are so expensive. They're worth $5,000 a set.


     

    A tribute to one of the best

     

    Hello everyone!
     
    I found a tribute to one of the best actors on the earth.

     

     

    Paul Newman, 1925-2008

    Posted by Shawn Levy September 27, 2008 06:09AM

    Making "Exodus," circa 1960

    Fast Eddie Felson. Hud Bannon. Cool Hand Luke. Butch Cassidy. The guy in the race car. The guy on the salad dressing bottle. The blue-eyed dreamboat. The committed public citizen. The husband of a half-century. The father of six.

    According to press releases from his his charitable organizations, Newman's Own Foundation and the Hole in the Wall Gang Camps, Paul Newman died Friday at age 83 at his long-time home in Westport, Connecticut, and with his passing, more has been lost than just a good and fine man.

    For a half-century, on screen and off, the actor Paul Newman embodied certain tendencies in the American male character: active and roguish and earnest and sly and determined and vulnerable and brave and humble and reliable and compassionate and fair. He was a man of his time, a part of his time, and that time ranged from World War II to the contemporary era of digitally animated feature films.

    At the race track, circa 2006

    In such movies as "The Long Hot Summer," "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," "The Hustler," "Hud," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," "The Sting," "Slap Shot," "The Verdict," and "The Color of Money" -- to name only the most famous of them -- Newman combined heartthrob looks, a dedicated and evolving Method Acting style, good taste in material and collaborators, and a real sense of the cultural climate. His career spanned eras, and he always seemed to be in step and in style.

    Although Newman was a World War II veteran who didn't become a bona fide star until he was in his 30s, his choices in movie roles could make him seem like a younger man; the iconoclastic individuality of his anti-hero characters resonated with the social upstarts of the '60s, who were the same age as his children. At the same time, he bore a cast of honor and manliness with him on screen that was so unquestionably real that he simultaneously retained the respect of older audiences. In a sense, he combined the rebelliousness associated with the likes of Marlon Brando and James Dean with the rock-solid decency exuded by such stars as Henry Fonda and James Stewart. Fittingly, he entered movies as one of the last Hollywood contract players and then became one of the first independent superstars, commanding more than $1 million per film as early as the mid-1960s.

    Newman made nearly 60 films, originated three classic roles on Broadway, delivered memorable performances in some of live television's finest dramas, served as president of the Actors Studio, won championships as a race car driver and racing team owner, started a food business on a whim and used it to raise nearly $400 million for assorted charities, founded an international chain of camps to offer free vacations and medical care to sick and deprived children, and participated in politics as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention, as a delegate to a United Nations conference on nuclear proliferation and as part-owner of (and occasional guest columnist for) "The Nation" magazine.

    "The Hustler," with Jackie Gleason, 1961

    He was nominated for 10 Oscars (winning one, plus two honorary awards), had a closet full of other prizes, included Golden Globes, Emmys, and Screen Actors Guild Awards, was granted a Kennedy Center Honor (accepted in 1992 alongside his wife, Joanne Woodward, who was also honored) and a lifetime award from the Film Society of Lincoln Center (also shared with Woodward), and, even a best director prize from the New York Film Critics Circle for 1968's "Rachel, Rachel," which starred his wife.

    He was a giant-sized star who shunned celebrity, living in Connecticut, avoiding awards shows, refusing for many years to give autographs, and sometimes resentful that so much of his fame rested on the unearned blessings of a handsome face, a lean body and, most notably, those stunning cobalt-blue eyes. As he got older, he flatly refused honors. When he won a SAG award, an Emmy and a Golden Globe for his role as a town rascal in the 2005 cable TV movie "Empire Falls," he showed up for none of them, explaining that he had set fire to his tuxedo when he turned 70. And his proudest achievement, he often bragged, was being named number 19 on President Richard Nixon's infamous enemies list.

    Unlikely Roots

    Paul Leonard Newman was born in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, on January 26, 1925, the second son of Arthur S. Newman, a Cleveland sporting goods retailer, and Theresa Fetzer, his Slovakian-born wife. When Newman was a toddler, his family moved to the upscale suburb of Shaker Heights, and he attended public schools there, graduating from Shaker Heights High School in January, 1943.

    After a single term at Ohio University, he enlisted in the Navy, hoping to qualify for pilot training. He was declared unfit due to color-blindness, and was then trained as a tailgunner and radio operator on torpedo bombers. He spent the remainder of World War II in the Pacific, serving principally on resupply and training crews and undertaking sporadic and, by his recollection, largely incident-free missions.

    Upon his 1946 discharge, he enrolled at Kenyon College, a small, highly respected men's school in rural Ohio. There, after being kicked off the reserve football team for his role in a barroom brawl, he turned to acting, a pursuit that he had previously pursued casually but which soon became a real focus. Graduating in 1949, he went into summer stock in Wisconsin and then a winter-season repertory company in suburban Chicago. In December, 1949, he married Jacqueline Witte, a young actress from his stock troupe. The would have three children together -- Scott (born 1950), Susan (1953) and Stephanie (1955) -- before divorcing in 1958.

    Undated studio glamour shot, late '50s

    Newman's acting career almost ended in stock. In the spring of 1950, he was called home to Cleveland with the news that his father was critically ill. Arthur Newman died that May, and his son stayed in town to take a place at the Newman-Stern Company, the family business that was said to be the largest sporting goods store between New York and Chicago.

    In the fall of that year, the Newman family sold their interest in the company, and Newman was free to return to acting. In the fall of 1951, he enrolled in the graduate program in drama at Yale University, hoping to get a master's degree that would allow him to teach, perhaps at Kenyon. Instead, some New York agents on a talent scouting trip took notice of him and encouraged him to come to the big city and seek work.


    Luck and Circumstance

    Throughout his life, Newman would always declare that he was a lucky fellow, and what happened to him in New York was one of the prime instances of what he called "Newman's Luck." Almost immediately upon his arrival in New York, he found roles in small but remunerative roles in television (including such series as "The Aldrich Family" and "You Are There") and then he won the role of a rich young man who loses his girl to a rakish old friend in the original production of William Inge's "Picnic." The play would run for more than 400 performances, and it gave Newman the financial security to stay in New York, do the occasional piece of television work, and, most importantly, continue his serious acting studies at the legendary Actors Studio, the Mecca of the revolutionary performance style known as the Method.

    Hollywood couldn't help but notice the handsome new face on Broadway, and in 1954 Newman signed a contract with Warner Bros., which assigned him to a debut film that very nearly scotched his screen career. "The Silver Chalice" was an overcooked and stodgy Biblical epic, and Newman was hopelessly miscast as a silversmith who carves the faces of Jesus and his disciples on a drinking goblet.

    Newman raced back to Broadway, where he got the plum role of Glenn Griffin, an escaped convict who holds a suburban family hostage in "The Desperate Hours," which won a Tony award for best play. Partly on the strength of that role, he was cast as boxer Rocky Graziano in the sort-of autobiographical movie "Somebody Up There Likes Me," and his performance -- physical, romantic, playful, explosive and sure-footed -- served as the real start of his Hollywood career.

    "The Left-Handed Gun," 1958

    Throughout these early years, he was engaged in a cautious and sometimes uncomfortable romance with Joanne Woodward, whom he had met when she was in the understudy cast of "Picnic." As Newman's marriage became untenable, his relationship with Woodward became increasingly public; the two acted opposite each other in the steamy potboiler "The Long Hot Summer" and shared a Malibu house with writer Gore Vidal and his long-time partner Howard Austen. In January, 1958, Newman obtained a Mexican divorce, and on the following day he and Woodward married in Las Vegas in front of witnesses Eydie Gorme and Steve Lawrence, who were next in line to be wed. The Newmans, as they were known, would have three daughters: Elinor (Nell) (born 1959), Melissa (1961) and Clea (1965).

    Early photo of the newlyweds, Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman,
     circa 1960 or so

    Top of the World

    In the ensuing decade, Newman became the top male star in Hollywood, a perennial Oscar-nominee (and, alas, loser) who worked with old-school directors, including Alfred Hitchcock, Otto Preminger, Leo McCarey, and Michael Curtiz, and a younger, more experimental crowd, including Richard Brooks, Arthur Penn, Stuart Rosenberg and, especially, Martin Ritt, with whom he made six films and operated a production company. Newman was that rare combination of sex symbol and man's man, and if he failed to convince as a screen comic or as French or Mexican characters (as in "Lady L" and "The Outrage," respectively), his range was wide enough to fit him into a number of quintessential screen types: a private eye ("Harper"), a cowboy ("Hud" and "Butch Cassidy"), and, especially, the flawed rakes that became his signature characters and an icons of the counterculture ("The Hustler," "Cool Hand Luke," and "Butch Cassidy").

    "Cool Hand Luke," 1967

    Newman became a director in 1968 with "Rachel, Rachel," for which he was lauded, as was Woodward, who starred as a spinster schoolteacher. That same year, he became active in the presidential campaign of Eugene McCarthy, and he would remain an outspoken advocate of liberal causes, especially the anti-nuclear and environmental movements, for the rest of his life. Also that year, he was introduced to professional auto racing for his part in the film "Winning"; he would ever after pursue that, too, as both a passion and a profession.

    The following year saw Newman enter into a partnership with actor Robert Redford that would be one of the most successful and memorable in movie history -- even though the two only made a pair of films together. "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" was a shaggy-dog history of the infamous Western bandits in which the pair raced across the West and as far as Bolivia to avoid a super-posse on their tails. The film sold more than $100 million in tickets -- a massive take for its time and one of the highest-ever grosses when adjusted for inflation. "The Sting," the 1973 film in which the actors reunited as con men in Depression-era Chicago, did even better: $156 million in receipts and an Oscar for Best Picture.

    with Joanne, circa 1968

    In the '70s, Newman continued to work with quality directors (John Huston, Robert Altman) and make engaging films, including "Sometimes a Great Notion," an adaptation of Ken Kesey's classic novel which Newman himself directed in Oregon in 1970. But he was increasingly devoting himself to auto racing, excelling in regional stock and sports car competitions in several different classes and winning national championships in various of them in the '70s and '80s. He cemented his credentials as a race driver in 1979 when he was part of a team that narrowly missed winning the 24-hour grand prix race at Le Mans; his team finished second; he was 54 years old. Sixteen years later, he was on the winning team at the 24 Hours of Daytona, making him the oldest driver ever to win a sanctioned auto race.

    "Slap Shot," 1977

    Transforming Tragedy into Philanthropy

    In 1978, Newman's oldest child and only son, Scott, died from an accidental overdose of alcohol and prescription pills. Scott had been flailing at a movie career but never seemed to be able to handle the burden of having an icon of the screen for a father. In response to his death, Newman founded the Scott Newman Center, which funds research into drug addiction and its treatment as well as educational outreach efforts.

    Newman's acting changed after his Scott's death. Whereas he had played outright rascals in the '70s -- Judge Roy Bean, Buffalo Bill, the over-the-hill hockey player-coach Reggie Dunlop -- he began to play grown men haunted by hurtful events in such films as "Fort Apache: The Bronx," "Absence of Malice," and "The Verdict." These were some of the very best performances in his career, and yet he still couldn't crack the Oscar ceiling. In 1986, he was finally accorded an honorary Academy Award for his life's work. Ironically, he accepted it via satellite from Chicago, where he was filming "The Color of Money," a sequel to 1961's "The Hustler"; the following year, he won an actual competitive Oscar for that performance.

    "The Color of Money," with Tom Cruise, 1986

    There was a third honor from the Motion Picture Academy: In 1994, Newman was given the Jean Herscholt Humanitarian Award for his charity work, which was yet another aspect of his life that seemed to stem from the loss of his son. In 1980, with his neighbor and fishing buddy, author A. E. Hotchner, Newman began to bottle his famous homemade salad dressing and sell it with the intent of making a few dollars for charity. The first dressing, marketed under the name Newman's Own, was a hit, so more flavors were added to the line, followed by spaghetti sauces, microwave popcorn, lemonade, limeade, breakfast cereal, salsa and even wine. All of the products featured Newman's face on the label, accompanied by comical text describing the product often written by Newman himself. A second business, Newman's Own Organics, was begun by his daughter Nell to promote healthy food and agricultural practices; it sells snacks, coffee, pet food and other products.

    All of the proceeds form Newman's Own, and a portion of the profits of Newman's Own Organics, is earmarked for charitable donations, which Newman and Hotchner themselves would mete out at the end of each year. As of the most recent tallies, it has been estimated the two have given away more than $240 million. And it was recently learned that Newman has donated another $120 million of the remaining assets of the companies to a charitable foundation for similar distribution.

    "The Road to Perdition," with Tom Hanks, 2002

    Among the charities benefiting from all of this largesse is the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp, actually a chain of camps, started by Newman in Connecticut in 1988. The camps provide free vacations to children suffering from serious illness. With on-site medical staff and frequent visits from Newman and his show biz friends, the camps are now set up in four U. S. states as well as Ireland, France, Israel and Africa. In two decades, more than 17,000 children have been guests at the various camps.

    After "The Color of Money," Newman still had a dozen films in him, including two, "Nobody's Fool" and "Road to Perdition," which earned him Oscar nominations. But his signature role in the decline of his career was probably that of the Stage Manager in a 2002 production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" that originated at the Westport Country Playhouse and went on to Broadway. Nearly 50 years earlier, Newman had filled the role of George Gibbs, the rambunctious high schooler whose courtship, marriage and widowerhood are chronicled in the play, in a musical version on live television. Having portrayed impetuous youth and sage old age in the same vehicle, a pure piece of Americana, he had come full circle in his career and his life.

    with Joanne, circa 2005

    Family Man

    Most of that life, of course, was spent as the partner of Joanne Woodward in one of the most storied and longest-lasting marriages in the history of Hollywood. Woodward won an Oscar at the very start of their marriage, in 1959, for her performance in "The Three Faces of Eve," but she seemed to maintain a lesser acting career and be supportive of her husband, taking interests in ecological issues and ballet as her children grew up. He returned the favor of her support by directing her in four films after "Rachel, Rachel," including a 1987 production of "The Glass Menagerie," and they acted together in 11 films that spanned almost the length of their marriage. Age 78, Woodward survives him along with his five daughters and two grandchildren.

    ALSO: A BAKER'S DOZEN OF NEWMAN'S BEST FILMS

    Shawn Levy's biography of Paul Newman will be published by Harmony Books in fall, 2009.

     
     
     

    One of the best died

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was listening to the radio a few minutes ago and they said that Paul Newman died yesterday from cancer. I am so sad; I have been "in love" with him my entire life. The lesson learned here is if you smoke, stop and if you are thinking about starting, don't. It will shorten your life and you will suffer more at the end of your life.
     
    Paul Newman prepares to die at home
     

    paul-newman-cancer.jpg

    It was reported Friday that Newman, 83, had only weeks to live and had returned home to his wife, Joanne Woodward.

    The Oscar-winning actor was pictured being pushed from a New York cancer hospital in a wheelchair.

    “Paul didn’t want to die in the hospital,” a source said. “Joanne and his daughters are beside themselves with grief.”

     
     
     

    paulnewmanbw.jpg

    The source, described as a close family friend, said that the star had spent the past few weeks getting his affairs in order.

    It was claimed that some of Newman’s actions had caused tension among of his children.

    “He gave a prized car — a Ferrari with his racing number, 82, on it — to a long-time pal,” the friend said. “The sudden move angered his children. It’s especially hard for them to come to grips with what’s going on.

    Newman married Woodward in 1958 and the couple have three daughters. He also has two daughters from his first marriage to Jackie Witte.

    It was reported last month that he had been readying their oldest child, Nell, to take over his Newman’s Own salad dressings company, the profits of which are given to a charitable foundation.

     
    Here is the official report as I found it ~
     
     Sep 27, 2008 6:57 am US/Pacific
     

    Legendary Actor Paul Newman Dies At 83

     

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) ― A spokeswoman for screen legend Paul Newman says the actor has died at age 83.

    Spokeswoman Marni Tomljanovic says Newman died Friday of cancer. No other details were immediately available.

    Newman was nominated for Academy Awards 10 times, winning a regular Oscar in 1987 for "The Color of Money" and two honorary ones. He was equally at home in comedies such as "The Sting" and dramas such as "Hud."
     


    He sometimes teamed with his wife, Joanne Woodward, also an Oscar winner for the 1957 film "Three Faces of Eve."
     
    My favorite movie with Paul Newman ~
     
    In in this 1969 file photo, actors Robert Redford, left, as the Sundance Kid and Paul Newman as Butch Cassidy appear in this scene from the film ''Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.'' (AP / 20th Century Fox)

    Robert Redford, left, as the Sundance Kid and Paul Newman as Butch Cassidy

    appear in this scene from the film ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’ in 1969. (AP / 20th Century Fox)

     
     

    September 26

    Would you buy this?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net and found this story from Japan. Would this work I wonder and would you buy one?
     
     
     
    Self Airbags For the Elderly

    The gas-filled units rapidly inflate after a loud pop, cushioning the wearer ahead of striking the ground.
     
    Video from the company
     

    Airbags, once found mainly behind the wheel, are now cushioning Japan's growing elderly population in case of off-road spills at home.

    Designed by Japanese company Prop, the airbags for seniors are placed behind the head and hips, inflating in fractions of a second when a backwards fall is detected.

    The 1.1 kg, gas-filled units rapidly inflate after a loud pop, cushioning the wearer ahead of striking the ground.

    Priced at around $1,400, the airbags do not protect when falling forward, but President Mitsuya Uchida says use may cut the number of elderly breaking hip bones or assist those afflicted with epileptic seizures.

    "We have elderly and disabled customers in mind with the airbag, as well as epileptics, but the product could potentially be used by those who clean stairs and need some kind of protection."

    The airbags, unveiled at an industry show for the elderly, are the latest product in the world's No.2 economy aimed at a population where 40 percent of the nation will be 65 or older by mid-century.

     

     

    Did you see this?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was was surfing the 'net and found this story from NM. Have you seen it?
     
     
    Palin's face turned into corn maze

    Posted: Sep 25, 2008 07:12 AM PDT

     

     

     

     

    WHITEHOUSE, Ohio (WUPW) - From the air you can see it clearly- Republican vice presidential candidate and Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin's face.

    Duke Wheeler of Whitehouse, who owns the Butterfly House and surrounding farm, said he did it to bring people to the farm this fall.

    "She created a lot of excitement and we would like to see a lot of excitement out here at the maze," Wheeler said.

    It wasn't an easy process.

    "We contracted with an artist in Idaho who drew the picture and entered it into a GPS system, flew in and cut it with a John Deere tractor," Wheeler said. "It took him about 8-10 hours to cut it. We saw it from the helicopter it's just a great image of her. I think she'd be proud."

    Wheeler expects thousands to come out and check out the corn maze, Butterfly House, and other activities he has planned for the season.

     

     

    From the air you can see it clearly- Republican vice presidential candidate and Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin's face.
    From the air you can see it clearly- Republican vice presidential candidate and Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin's face.

     

    September 24

    Kat, what do you think?

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net and found this sort of interesting story from Wyoming. It made me think of you, Kat. What do you think his chances are of the goverment bailing him out? LOL Surprised
     
    Lots of People
    Could Use a Cash Infusion
     
    SEPTEMBER 24, 2008
     
    By Tom Brokaw
     
     

    Barney "Big Un" Baumgartner of Windblown, Wyo., invited the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury Department to take over his business, The Big Un 24 Hour Tow Service and Trophy Taxidermy.

    In a handwritten press release, Mr. Baumgartner explained that with winter and hunting season coming on, the good citizens of Windblown would be without his vital services unless he found a way to deal with his escalating debts, fast.

    "This is not just about me or my neighbors in Windblown. Heck, we get three or four tourists and out-of-state hunters here every 10 days or so. What if they need a tow or a trophy mount? The consequences are too great to contemplate," Mr. Baumgartner explained.

    He'd be willing to let the government have 80% of his business for a quick cash infusion. He thought something in the neighborhood of $1.8 million should do the trick. That would be enough to gas up his two tow trucks, get some new taxidermy stuffing and clean up that overdue account at the Number 10 Saloon and Casino over in Deadwood, S.D.

    Treasury Department officials had no comment on Mr. Baumgartner's request, but a source familiar with the response to the bailout of American International Group said Treasury has been inundated with similar requests.

    - A pawn shop in Reno, Nev., has an excess supply of eight-track cassette players, flower print shirts, broad white belts and Wayne Newton tapes, having gambled that the '70s would come roaring back. The owner pleaded for a Treasury take-over, arguing, "How can the government stand by and let such a rich part of our American culture simply fade away?"

    - The owner of an NFL poster shop in Green Bay, Wis., reports that he has given up on divine intervention and is now asking for Treasury to take over his business in a last-ditch effort to preserve the notion that whatever our differences, we're all Americans.

    Asked how his business got into trouble, Karl Andursen of Muledeer, Minn., said he met a man who specialized in printing Minnesota Viking and Chicago Bears posters. Mr. Andursen said the man was willing to bundle his posters and sell them at a discounted rate to anyone who would take over the Green Bay territory.

    Mr. Andurson said in the back of his mind he knew that could be risky since Green Bay is sacred ground for Packer fans who wouldn't cheer for the Vikes or the Bears if they were promised a fleet of new snowmobiles and lifetime hunting rights on Brett Favre's farm.

    But, as he said, everyone was in the NFL merchandise game and he figured he'd take the territory and after 30 days flip the franchise for a big profit. A year later and he's not made a sale, not one, but who knew?

    He's offered his complete inventory of Go Bears! and Vikings Rock! posters for 20 cents on the dollar or $500,000 in 30-year Treasury bonds.

    - Darlene Dalrymple owner of the Shear Joy Hairstyling and Tattoo Salon in Rockhard, Vt., wrote Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, inviting him and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to her shop for a free trim and tat if they'd also help with her balance sheet.

    Ms. Dalrymple said she's very busy, but her expenses somehow always exceed her income. She suspects her boyfriend, who likes to use a lot of Wall Street lingo he picks up watching business channels on TV, is shorting her cash register.

    Ms. Dalrymple said her boyfriend also called her a moral hazard, and she'd like Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke to explain exactly what that means.

     

    eBay is wrong

     

    Hello everyone!
     
    I was surfing the 'net and found this stupid story about eBay. We haven't purchased many things from eBay but now, we never will again. I did purchase something using PayPal (before eBay bought the company) and had problems with the purchase and subsequent needed refund. Sure hope enough people complain about this new rule and they realize that this is wrong. Any comments out there?
     
     
     
     
    Published: September 23, 2008

     

    Somewhere along the way, eBay seems to have fallen under the impression that gasoline is a great flame retardant. As if a slew of negative policy changes and a failed acquisition weren't causing the company enough problems, eBay has announced that, come next month, PayPal will not only be the preferred method of payment in the US, it will be virtually the only method, period.

    Announced in a seemingly innocuous FAQ update (hat tip: The Inquirer), eBay will no longer allow checks and money orders as payment methods across its site beginning in "late October 2008." Except for a few specific items like cars, real estate, industrial equipment, and "mature audience" goods, eBay will only allow PayPal, ProPay, and payment upon pickup as compensation methods.

    "We're making this change to better meet buyer expectations for a consistent, more secure checkout experience on eBay," another portion of the FAQ update says. "This should increase buyer confidence in shopping on eBay, which should result in more buyers and increased sales for sellers. The change will directly benefit sellers by making payments faster and more reliable, enabling sellers to ship more quickly and increase buyer satisfaction."

    eBay is also wearing its new "What, me compete?" policy on its sleeve, as alternative payment methods like Google Checkout and Checkout by Amazon are deemed to "compete with eBay on a number of levels, so we are not going to allow them on eBay." The company also states that more alternative electronic payment providers will be added in coming months, with ProPay cited as a good faith example. Direct credit card payments to vendors with a merchant account are still allowed, as well.

    The site's aggressively self-interested payment policy change isn't the first sign of trouble at eBay. The stumbling giant has been tripping over itself since at least since 2006, and its moneybag has a Skype-sized rip in the bottom. Clubbing Craigslist—a company eBay heavily invested in—this spring over secretive meetings and ulterior motives didn't help anything, and gagging sellers from leaving feedback of any kind on buyers sparked a revolt.

    Then there are eBay's phishing fraud and software piracy problems, plus its clear move away from the auction format to an online flea market. But let's also not forget that eBay tried—and failed—to pull a PayPal-only stunt in Australia earlier this year. eBay used the same "transactions will be safer, more secure" spiel down under, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said the move was unfair.

    Dropping checks and money orders in the US could put a dent in eBay's payment fraud headaches. But denying outright the use of competing payment platforms in favor of its own will likely do nothing but fuel the fires that already engulf the company's struggling auction service.

     
     
    September 16

    Now this is weird

     
     
     
    Hello everyone!
     
     
     
    I found this weird story that I cannot imagine many people will take the guy up on; would you?
     
     

    Free Obama Tattoo

     

    If you’re an Obama supporter, you can now put your skin where your mouth is: an Oklahoma tattoo artist is giving away free tattoos of the presidential hopeful!

    Talk about a stinging endorsement! A tattoo shop in Moore, Oklahoma is giving Barack Obama tattoos for free.

    "I don’t have any extra money to donate to the cause," said Phillip Calfy, tattoo shop owner. "I’m a tattoo artist and a lot of people that are into the tattoo thing like free tattoos."

     
    And then I found a few more idiots who have tattoos that make no sense.
     
     
     

    Awsome Tattoo, Man!

    It’s probably not a good idea to get a Japanese or Chinese character tattoo if you don’t speak the language, but something in English is safe, right? Well, perhaps not if you can’t spell: The L Magazine has a round up of the 10 greatest misspelled tattoos. My lack of spelling ability has always prevented me from getting a tattoo. That and general fear of pain.

     

     

    Father and Son Forehead Tattoo Enthusiasts

    Meet Floyd and Justin Bebee, a father and son team and obviously forehead tattoo enthusiasts. The Smoking Gun has the story:

    In a TSG interview, Floyd Bebee, a father of eight, said that he has a tattoo on the back of his head reading "Got-R-Did." The ink on his forehead cost $125 and took about 45 minutes to complete, Bebee said, adding that he was the family trendsetter when it it came to such head art. Bebee, who does odd jobs like home remodeling and demolition, said that his wife had a succinct response to his forehead ink: "You crazy," she said. Bebee noted that since his son’s eyes are open in his mug shot, the photo does not reveal a hidden surprise: Justin has the words "Fuck" and "You" tattooed on his eyelids.

    This is pretty cool

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I just got home from work a few minutes ago and decided to surf the 'net while I eat dinner since beloved is still out on the road. I found a cool story from the UK to share.
     
    UK gets upside down rainbow
     
     
     
     
    Upside-down Rainbow
     

    FREAK atmospheric conditions form a rare UPSIDE DOWN rainbow over Britain.

    The phenomenon, rarely seen outside polar regions, was spotted by astronomer Dr Jacqueline Mitton, 60, near her home in Cambridge.

    Rainbows are caused by light penetrating raindrops.

    But the inverted type, called a circumzenithal arc, happens when sunlight bounces off ice crystals high in the atmosphere sending the rays back up.

    Dr Mitton said: “It was amazing.”

    September 15

    Sad, weird story from Florida


     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I found this weird, strange story from Florida that still has me shaking my head.
     
     
     
    Largo couple's unusual romance takes tragic turn
     
     
    Rita “Lisa” Keeler and Joseph Keeler, who married in 1988, were photographed at their Largo mobile home about 15 years ago. When she was slain at age 76, he was 40.
    Rita “Lisa” Keeler and Joseph Keeler, who married in 1988, were photographed at their Largo mobile home about 15 years ago. When she was slain at age 76, he was 40.

     

    [Special to the Times]
     
     

    LARGO — It was the classic boy meets girl story.

    Except he was 20. And she was 56.

    They married and for nearly two decades they seemed happy.

    But in recent years, Joseph and Rita "Lisa" Keeler's relationship became strained, friends and relatives say.

    Her health declined. He struggled with mental health issues.

    "They did real good the first 18 years of their marriage," said Joseph Keeler's mother, Judy Mettes, 60. "It started going downhill when she had a heart attack."

    On Aug. 6, Lisa Keeler, 76, was found dead in the couple's Largo mobile home, her skull fractured, her head and throat cut multiple times. Two days later, Joseph Keeler, 40, was arrested.

    Keeler, who was indicted early this month on a first-degree murder charge, plans to plead not guilty, his public defender says.

    His mom thinks he did it.

    A few friends think he couldn't have done it.

    And one couple, Ken and Jane Balough, think, if he did do it, he wasn't in his right mind.

    • • •

    Joseph Keeler didn't have an ideal childhood.

    His parents split up when he was 5 or 6, and his mother moved out of the family home in Indiana. He didn't see his mother much until she remarried about five years later, Mettes said.

    He dropped out of school at 16. And about four years later, Keeler, who hates the cold, left Indiana for Florida, Mettes said.

    When he got here, he rented a room at a Pinellas hotel. Standing 6 feet tall with a lanky frame and a boyish face, Keeler soon met a green-eyed brunet named Lisa Versluys, who managed the hotel.

    Versluys, who was born in Finland, had been married twice before.

    "She was lonely. He was lonely. They would talk. They started visiting. Things just worked out," said friend Linda Coomes, 56.

    "He was the pursuer back 20 years ago," said Ken Balough, 55. "It was out of attraction, not that he was a gold digger or anything like that."

    Keeler's mother wasn't sure because Lisa Keeler had some money, she said.

    They dated just a few months and married in June 1988.

    They were both happy and in love, Mettes said. Lisa Keeler bought him cars and took him on trips.

    She called him "Joey." And for years, Lisa Keeler seemed to be the center of her husband's world, Mettes said.

    The couple bought a mobile home 16 years ago and moved into Blue Skies Mobile Home Park in Largo.

    He was an attentive husband, said Coomes, who has known Keeler for eight years. "If (Lisa) wanted a Coke, he'd run to the store to get it," she said.

    But Mettes and some friends did wonder about the 36 years that separated them.

    "It was like a strange relationship," Mettes said. "Like she's the mother and he's the son."

    Ken Balough, who's known Keeler for 12 years, said he "just thought it was a little different."

    Coomes didn't think it was odd at all. "If they didn't care about the age difference, nobody else should either," she said.

    • • •

    Keeler never was much of a talker. But his friends saw him as a kind, helpful guy.

    He'd fix their cars for free. And if they were sick, he'd take them to doctors' appointments.

    He took Coomes to the hospital when she had a heart attack six years ago. And he brought Jane Balough a hamburger and french fries when she waited at the hospital with a bad infection.

    He also could be a bit quirky.

    He'd show up at the Baloughs' home, hang out, go outside for a smoke and disappear. "He never did let us know he was leaving," said Jane Balough, 51.

    About four years ago, friends started seeing signs that Keeler's mental health was deteriorating. Keeler had some type of mental breakdown at work and was catatonic, they say. His boss took him to a hospital, where he stayed for a few days.

    After that, his behavior seemed to change. When he would visit the Baloughs, he would laugh and talk to himself.

    About three years ago, Keeler apparently started having other health problems. He passed out at Coomes' home. The same thing happened about a year later at the Baloughs' house.

    Around that time, Lisa Keeler had a heart attack, Mettes said. When she got home, she needed a cane or a scooter to get around.

    She seemed depressed, often crying when Mettes spoke with her, Mettes said.

    Joseph Keeler's eyes may have also started to wander. Two years ago, his wife told police Keeler made a false report that she was suicidal to get her out of the house because he had a girlfriend.

    About a year ago, Mettes called Largo police and said Lisa Keeler was afraid of her son and that he left her without food or electricity.

    Lisa Keeler later told Mettes that her husband chased her around the home with a knife.

    Joseph Keeler told Mettes he had started taking his wife's pain medication.

    Lisa Keeler told Jane Balough her husband would get mad when she ran out of pills.

    When Mettes came to Largo in July, her son told her he was hearing voices.

    She told him he needed to get treatment, but he refused.

    She asked Lisa Keeler to come live with her. But Lisa Keeler told her: "I can't leave Joey."

    Two weeks after Mettes left, Lisa Keeler was found dead.

    Coomes said there's no way Joseph Keeler could have done it.

    "I've never even seen the guy get mad," Coomes said. "I've never seen him yell."

    Ken Balough isn't sure. But, if Keeler did do it, he said, "I don't think he was in his right mind."

    Mettes acknowledged her son's problems, but thinks "he had to know what he was doing."

    She's angry and confused.

    "I don't know if I'm supposed to love Joe," she said. "I don't know if I'm supposed to hate Joe."

    Dumb business move if you ask me

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I just found this story about United raising prices when people are having trouble paying bills. Was this really a smart move?
     
    United Airlines doubles second-bag fee to $50
     
     

    Mon Sep 15, 9:22 AM ET

    A United Airlines passenger walks with her bag at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport June 23, 2008. (John Gress/Reuters)

     

    UAL Corp's United Airlines said on Monday it is doubling the fee to check a second bag on a domestic flight from $25 to $50 one-way.

    United estimated the fee will apply to only one out of seven customers.

    The fee will not apply to customers in the United First or United Business programs, those with Premier status with United or Star Alliance, or active duty military personnel traveling on orders.

    United said the potential revenue from its merchandising efforts, including checked bag fees, will be $700 million in 2009.

    On June 12, United introduced a $15 fee to check a single bag. Amid high fuel prices and a slowing U.S. economy, airlines have been introducing fees, raising fares, and cutting routes, capacity and jobs in order to survive.

     
     
     

    Pretty expensive game

     
    Hello everyone!
     
     
    Boy, talk about inflation! Check out the price at Circuit City for this game ~
     

    Rock Band 2 Bundle (XBOX 360)

    Model #: ELA   014633191561

    rock band2.jpg

    Price was:
    $9999.99
    You save:
    -$9810.00
     

    You pay:

    $189.99

     
    preorder
    - or -
    Notify me when available
    Release date: 10/19/2008
    add to wish list
    adding to wishlist
    added to wishlist
    ERROR ADDING TO WISHLIST - TRY AGAIN?
    add to wish list

     

    Here is the link to see the website
     
    http://www.circuitcity.com/ssm/Rock-Band-2-Bundle-XBOX-360-014633191561/sem/rpsm/oid/217421/catOid/-12841/rpem/ccd/productDetail.do

     

    Finally, justice

     
    Hello everyone!
     
    I found this interesting story. Finally someone who tried to hurt/kill a cop gets hurt instead due to her stupidity. I don't care that she's a little older; that means she should have been smarter right?
     
    Woman Tries to Hit Deputy with Mini-Van, Runs Over Self Instead
     
     

    SANDERSON, FL -- A woman trying to flee Baker County Sheriff's deputies accidentally ran over herself Sunday afternoon. Police say she first tried to hit a deputy and then lost control and hit a lawn mower.

    Deputies were called to the home on Mallie Davis Road around 2 p.m., because of a fight between a husband and wife.

    When officers arrested the husband, they had planned on taking the wife, 63-year-old Mary Davis, into custody as well.

    She had different plans.

    Deputies say that she jumped into her mini-van and left the drivers door open, when she tried to back out of her driveway she hit a parked lawn mower.

    But, that was after deputies say she tried to strike one of them with her car.

    The deputy reacted and jumped out of the way.

    After the collision, Davis fell out and the mini-van spun out of control.

    As the van made a circle, Davis was run over.

    She was flown to Shands with critical injuries.

    Ironically, the mini-van went in circles until it hit the deputy's patrol car that she had tried to run over earlier.

    When Davis recovers, the BCSO says that charges will be filed.