Thu 2 Aug 2007
If this article hits the front page, I’ll change my middle name to “DIGG”
Title says it all. Digg up - if you dare me to
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Thu 2 Aug 2007
Title says it all. Digg up - if you dare me to
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Thu 2 Aug 2007
Doug Meacham tagged me the other day, so it’s my turn to weigh in on the “Eight Random Things About Me” meme. First, the rules:
Here goes:
To keep the chain going, and hoping I don’t get someone who has been tagged already, I hereby tag:
Chuck, Chip, Cathryn, Critt, Duncan, Ed, Brian, Priyah
Technorati Tags: Boy+Scouts, Eagle+Scout, Blog+tag, Pixies, Car+Talk, WERS, WBUR, Only+A+Game, Bacon’s+Rebellion, Annie+Haslam, River+Phoenix, Hank+Aaron, A-Rod, Fenway, jazz,
Thu 2 Aug 2007
As a lifelong movie fan, part-time art-film snob, and dad, I had a great time reading Boston Globe film critic Ty Burr’s new book”The Best Old Movies for Families: A Guide to Watching Together.”
First, I should disclose that I know Ty– we live in the same school district, and my son is slightly younger than the younger daughter he references so frequently in this book.
I think it is a wonderful idea to watch old movies with your kids– to open up enjoyment that is not solely dependent on dull kids’ TV and video games.
Ty is exhaustive in explaining why you should–or should not– sow different movies to your kids, what might need explaining, and what companion movies you should seek out for further viewing.
When my son was a bit younger, I showed him Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin films– which he ate up, and still likes, and this may give me the excuse to explore a bit more with him, starting with my own library and perhaps rambling over the nearby Brattle Theater in Harvard Square, Cambridge, or the Coolidge Corner Theater in Brookline, Massachusetts for a revival show.
Now that I have praised the book, it’s time to get snarky. I need a list of films not to watch with your kids– or Old Movies Guaranteed to Mess with Your Youngster’s Mind:
Just a few helpful suggestions for the next edition of the book.
Technorati Tags: movies, film, books, Ty+Burr, Boston+Globe, keaton, chaplin, Catherine+Deneuve, Godzilla, Cocteau, Ingmar+Bergman, Dali, Bunuel,
Mon 30 Jul 2007
Angie’s not the only one with daytime responsibilities while the Jolie-Pitts are in Prague — Little Maddox is diligently attending school every day. It looks like he was pretty tuckered out by the end of the day when Angelina and her brother, James Haven, came to pick him up. How ca-yute (but really, so much more adorable if Brad would lose the fedora. please).
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Sun 29 Jul 2007
admin June 15th, 2007
Let’s face it: Maxim doesn’t cater to lesbians. In fact, you could say it flies in the face of all that we hold dear, especially when it declares Lindsay Lohan the hottest of them all, as it did when it published The Maxim Hot 100 List last month. So we asked you, our readers, to create your own list of hotties, and you came out in droves to nominate the women you think deserve to be on the AfterEllen.com Hot 100 List. Thousands of votes later, we have the results.
How is our list different from Maxim’s? Eight of the top 10 women on our list aren’t mentioned anywhere on the Maxim list (Angelina Jolie and Lena Headey are the exceptions), and only four of the women who made Maxim’s top 10 (Jessica Alba, Scarlett Johansson, Jessica Biel and Lindsay Lohan) appear somewhere on the AfterEllen.com list.
Clearly, what straight men and lesbians find sexy in a woman is a little bit different.
“Hot” for lesbians and bisexual women comes in all ages, sizes, colors and styles, as the diversity of women on our list demonstrates — from Tina Fey (No. 7) and Helen Mirren (No. 31), to Ellen DeGeneres (No. 50), America Ferrera (No. 30) and Queen Latifah (No. 55). There’s even a conservative Republican in the mix (Angie Harmon, No. 82), proving we can still find a women sexy even if we don’t agree with her alternative lifestyle choice.
The list also shows that we like women who like us — slightly over half the women on the AfterEllen.com Hot 100 List have played queer characters at one time or another. Eight of the women (nine, if you count Drew Barrymore) are openly lesbian or bisexual; they’re noted with an asterisk (*) next to their name.
But there is one thing all the women on the list have in common: They’re more than just pretty faces. Many of these women aren’t just women we like, they’re women we want to be like — women we admire as well as desire.
On our list, heat has depth. And Leisha (No. 1) beats Lindsay (No. 79) by a mile.
Now, on to the AfterEllen.com Hot 100 List! The women are listed in ascending order according to your votes. We’ve provided photos and descriptions for the first 20 women, and after that, just names and photos. At the end, you can add your comments telling us what you think about the women who ended up on the list. Enjoy!
1. Leisha Hailey*
As Alice on The L Word, Leisha gets more beautiful every season, and her acting skills have flourished too. Nobody has better comic timing, but she can also make us cry. And before she became our Sunday-night crush, she Murmur-ed in our ears as a pink-haired rocker who dated k.d. lang. Leisha makes it official: You’re even hotter when you’re out. (Editor’s Note: see Leisha’s response to being number one on our list here.)

2. Angelina Jolie*
Ever since she caught our eye as the tattoo-bearing tomboy in Foxfire (1996), Angelina has been an undeniable lesbian favorite. It doesn’t hurt that she played gay in Gia and publicly admits to her attraction to women. So what if she’s shacked up with Brad Pitt? She’s still the hottest bisexual actress — and mom — around.
3. Kate Winslet
Kate Winslet is practically perfect. A brilliant actress who picks great roles. A beautiful woman who believes you should never skip dessert. A class act who still fancies a dirty joke. Funny. Smart. English. Just go ahead and swoon now and get it over with already.

4. Lena Headey
According to the MTV Movie Awards, she gave a “breakthrough performance” in 300, but we’ve known since Imagine Me & You that Lena is hot stuff. Is it that slow smile, the sexy walk or the hair that can handle any style? Yes — and let’s not forget the accent (there’s a reason two British charmers made our top five). Watching Lena take down the bad guys in Fox’s The Sarah Connor Chronicles next season will just be icing on the cake.

5. Sarah Shahi
With an Iranian father, a Spanish mother and a Texas childhood, The L Word’s Sarah Shahi is one of the finest examples (and we do mean finest) of multiculturalism we can think of. Shahi is not only a kick-ass hottie, she can kick your ass — she holds a brown belt in karate. Sarah’s mother discouraged body self-consciousness in her daughter early on, saying, “Your boob is the same as your hand.” Thanks, Mom.

Sun 29 Jul 2007

NBC5.com - Education - Police Raid Frat House That Inspired ‘Animal House’ — Yes, this is the frat house that inspired the moive Animal House. FInally got them bad boys good, eh? Golly they actually found some weed! Who would have ever suspected such a thing? Good work coppers!
Authorities arrested one student on drug possession charges but said that was not the focus of the search. Nineteen-year-old Kemper Pierce was charged with possession of a controlled substance, believed to be marijuana.
Fourteen officers searched the Alpha Delta fraternity house for more than five hours Thursday. Police removed 10 crates and two bags of evidence, along with two sledgehammers, a videotape and a computer, according to the Valley News of Lebanon.
found by Dennis Duffner
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Dvorak blog — read it daily
Sun 29 Jul 2007
July 11, 2007

As a child (pictured here at two) I was a woefully picky eater - hot dogs, chicken nuggets and cheese ravioli factored prominently into my diet, to the exclusion of most other foods. My aversion to new things left my family bewildered and frustrated. My uncle once forced me to eat tri-color pasta blindfolded. It was a traumatic episode in my early youth; at the time I preferred foods that were white. My mother, constantly at her whit’s end, instituted “try new food days” to no avail.
Protecting Ourselves
All human beings are born with the same basic taste preferences. We like sweet foods and avoid anything bitter or sour. These inclinations make evolutionary sense. Sweeter vegetables tend to be more nutritious and are less likely to be poisonous. Mother’s milk is sweet, as are ripe fruits - both are good sources of vitamins, minerals and calories.
As humans, we have hard-wired aversions to many types of food. Most of us recoil upon smelling rotten or decaying foods; toxic plants are often bitter. These reactions are present at birth and can be seen by examining the facial expressions of infants. Known as the gusto-facial reflex, sweet substances tend to elicit little smiles and sucking while sour tastes produce lip pursing and a wrinkling of the nose - the classic yucky face. Aversion is acted out through disgust, the human emotion like most closely linked with the rejection of food.
Not all aversion is hard-wired. Pavlov introduced the concept of associative or classical conditioning. For associative conditioning to occur, two or more objects must be paired. Once together, qualities of one element may be transferred to the other. In Pavlov’s classic experiment, a bell was paired with food, causing a dog to salivate. After repeated conditioning, the bell triggered salivation, even in the absence of food.
Social Cues

As social animals, we pick up cues from those around us. You may have witnessed your father swooning over a chocolate chip cookie. While it may not be as clear as a bell, it does enforce the notion that chocolate chip cookies lead to positive feelings.
Many children get satisfaction from eating their boogers. Kids tend to act without thinking of the health or social consequences. Did your mother ever scold you for picking your nose? Did your playmates ridicule your behavior? When nose picking becomes associated with shame, boogers are forever been tainted.
As adults, many people are averse to wonderful foods like oysters or okra. Paul Rozin, a University of Pennsylvania psychologist, describes this as “secondary disgust: - disgust for something that looks or feels similar to something disgusting in its own right. In an experiment, Rozin presented subjects with two pieces of chocolate fudge, one was shaped to look like a muffin and the other was sculpted into a realistic replica of dog poo. Guess which one subjects found more palatable.
Endorphins

While helpful, relying solely on external cues offers far too simplistic an explanation of our food preferences. We are in tune with our bodies; this internal feedback plays a critical role in shaping our eating habits.
Endorphins, a group of hormones secreted within the brain have a number of psychological functions. Principally, they activate the body’s opiate receptors, which affect the brain’s pleasure or reward center (they also play a role pain relief).
Hard sustained exercise will spur endorphin production. This generates a feeling commonly referred to as runners high. In those so disposed, it creates exercise junkies. There are many other things you can do to get the body to produce endorphins; the most popular among all walks of life is eating.
Sugar is especially good at promoting endorphin production. When the tongue’s sweet receptors are activated they trigger a release of these hormones. Experiments show that sucrose affects infant rats much like morphine. It will make them stop crying (yes, rats can cry, but you’ll need ultrasonic listening equipment to detect it).
As a species, we are predisposed to sweet, calorie-dense foods. The endorphin release associated with these foods leads to good feelings, reinforcing our preference for treats, often to the exclusion of other novel nutrient sources.
Overcoming Aversion
Kids often suffer from neophobia - a fear of new things. As omnivores, we need variety in our diet, but evolutionarily we also need to stay alive and procreate, which may have required some conservatism in our eating habits to avoid being poisoned.
According to Leann Birch, a professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Illinois, it often takes up to ten exposures to a food before a child will get over their fear of something new. Recall, if you will, your first experience with Roquefort cheese.
For picky eaters, an endorphin cue may help. A tablespoon of sugar added to vegetables not only makes the food more palatable, it activates the body’s reward center and may create a positive association. Sweetness and blandness generally protect a food from the neophobic response. Few children are scared of a new dessert - even something as threatening as a Baked Alaska.
My peculiar habits are still somewhat of a mystery. Around the time I was eleven or twelve, I began to explore foods other than hotdogs and ravioli including vegetables and fruits. In high school I happily ate anything - even foods that I didn’t enjoy at first. Surviving and procreating are arguably much easier today than they have ever been, yet picky eaters still exist. With all our knowledge, there are still countless factors that shape a child’s eating habits - it’s an inexact science.
________________
Sun 29 Jul 2007
June 24th, 2007 by lsmith
Aaron has once again given the meeting essentials in agenda order, so I’m going to meander through my notes on the meeting nuggets.
After Chairs Coordinator Scott Muir distributed service recognition certificates, he reviewed the various resources available to committees for self-orientation and continuing support. Aaron posted the list in his entry.
If Committees find themselves in the position of needing to revise their Committee charge text or if they feel the Committee needs more members, it is most appropriate to consult the By-Laws and Organization Committee.
One attendee asked about how a Committee goes about removing portions of the web site and Committee pages, and Aaron Dobbs admitted to being responsible for all of that content editing.
Susan Logue filled in the Chairs regarding the recent merging of Regional Institutes and Education Committees. The merged committees will continue under the title of Education Committee. They will be considering LITA educational needs and the appropriate technologies to use for delivery of educational offerings.
Since everyone had arrived early, we finished the meeting early. People hardly knew what to do, so we did a little hanging out and talking. I was approached by our esteemed LITA Forum organizer regarding activities we might implement for Membership Development in the upcoming Forum in Denver. We have several ideas, including a new members/potential members session for discussing LITA, a less formal Interest dinner [my term] for new or potential members and other possible activities. If anyone is interested in supporting these ideas at the Forum, please let me know - my contact info will be in the LITA Roster.
Sun 29 Jul 2007
This news tidbit is so ridiculous that I felt compelled to immediately reply:
23 Apr 07: Sheryl Crow: Use only “one square” of toilet paper to fight Global Warming - Singer Sheryl Crow has said a ban on using too much toilet paper should be introduced to help the environment. Crow has suggested using “only one square per restroom visit, except, of course, on those pesky occasions where two to three could be required”. — I will agree to this on the following condition:

-The Robot
“Sors salutis”
Sun 29 Jul 2007
A new report reveals that teenagers who take part in “abstinence-only†sex education are just as likely to have sex as other teens:
It’s been a central plank of George Bush’s social policy: to stop teenagers having sex. More than $1bn of federal money has been spent on promoting abstinence since 1998 - posters printed, television adverts broadcast and entire education programmes devised for hundreds of thousands of girls and boys.
The trouble is, new research suggests that it hasn’t worked. At all.
A survey of more than 2,000 teenagers carried out by a research company on behalf of Congress found that the half of the sample given abstinence-only education displayed exactly the same predilection for sex as those who had received conventional sex education in which contraception was discussed.
I guess sexual beings will be sexual beings.
Interestingly, the liklihood of protected sex is the same for both groups. So is teaching kids how to have safe sex a waste of money as well?
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The rest of them were put on double-secret probation.
Comment by Xwing — 6/9/2006 @ 9:41 am
I want a cite that proves that that is really THE “Animal House.” Half the schools in the country have a Frat that claims that title.
Comment by Gig — 6/9/2006 @ 11:01 am
From a webpage on the film:
Comment by Uncle Dave — 6/9/2006 @ 12:03 pm
These cops intend to prove in court that smoking marijuana leads to using harder stuff…
that’s why they took the two sledgehammers.
Comment by JimR — 6/9/2006 @ 1:56 pm
This is your brain.
This is your brain on drugs.
This is your brain on Sledge.
Comment by JSFORBES — 6/9/2006 @ 4:36 pm
I’ve heard that “Animal House” was partly inspired by the University of Oregon fraternities. It was shot in Eugene. The local music scene was the inspiration for “The Blues Brothers,” too. John Belushi modeled his character on Oregon bluesman Curtis Salgado. Curtis is still performing, though he has severe health problems related to his previous lifestyle.
Comment by Podesta — 6/9/2006 @ 9:57 pm
I’ve heard that “Animal House†was partly inspired by the University of Oregon fraternities.
It wouldn’t surprise me that there were several influences, since several people were involved in making the movie.
With Chris Miller getting only “co-screenwriter” credit in Uncle Dave’s link, I would want to read his original “chunks” in NatLamp to see how much was changed on the way to the Director’s copy of the screenplay.
Comment by Mike Voice — 6/10/2006 @ 9:48 am
Sledgehammers?
They’re not drunks and drug addicts; they’re WWE addicts.
Comment by Shadowbird — 6/10/2006 @ 9:55 pm
Frats?
Drugs?
Is anybody in shock?
Comment by Neal Saferstein — 6/11/2006 @ 4:18 pm
the only thing that surprises me about this is that they didn’t find a whole basement full of marijuana.
Comment by joshua — 6/11/2006 @ 10:16 pm