Bicycle rack, that is. Competition to design the coolest bike rack.
Mind The Flame, Not The Centurion
17 hours ago
From Wired.
Below on the left is the gun on Feb 1, and on the right is the gun today, with 720 rounds through it.
I blogged about this three weeks ago, with only 100 rds through the gun."I'll give [Sean] Penn this: He admits to having known, admired and liked Mickey Rourke for more than 25 years. "He's an excellent bridge-burner at times," Penn says of Rourke without a bit of self-reverential humor."
This is an old clock that I bought about twenty years ago because I needed a clock that had a face through which I could "fly" a camera lens, directly into the gears and such.
It's very pretty on the inside; notice the circular glass tube in the upper right corner; it contains mercury. Once a minute it "flips" and drives a circuit which advances the minute hands of the "slave" clocks.
Notice the rotating switches for the electric Westminster chimes, and the little black arm which halts the mechanism after each quarter-hour sounding.
The knife switches allow the minister to silence the clock's chimes during sermons.
That's what a Ferrari V-12 sounds like.
Today is Enzo Ferrari's 111th birthday. He is shown here at the 1967 Italian Grand Prix at Monza.
Congratulations to Ted, who traveled to the Indy Blogmeet from exotic Atlanta, Georgia. Ted is the latest winner of the coveted Cup of Turonistan, given each meeting (when we remember) to the person who travels farthest (when we can figure it out) to the Blogmeet (when we hold them). This month's prize was a nifty pocket-tool from Harbor Freight. Thanks to Roberta of Roseholme, who provided the prize, and thanks also to James of Hell In A Handbasket for initiating The Cup last year.
The campus yesterday was a dismal place so far as men were concerned. Vainly they tried to show resignation, or smile or treat the whole affair as an accident. It was hard to realize and acknowledge that girls had beaten them.
In her 20 years of drying clothes in her Van Nuys backyard, Kathy Arnos is happy to report she has yet to receive a death threat. "Nobody has ever complained, because it's completely private," said Arnos, who is line-less, preferring to hang her clothes from patio chairs and umbrellas. "And even if they could see my clothes, I seriously doubt it would lower my property value."
For the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of families of people who have vanished amid Baja California's drug wars, the search for justice has been lonely and fruitless. But their hopes have been buoyed recently by the Jan. 22 arrest of a man Mexican authorities believe is behind the gruesome disposal of bodies in vats of industrial chemicals.Santiago Meza Lopez, a stocky 45-year-old taken into custody after a raid near Ensenada, was identified as the pozolero who liquefied the bodies of victims for lieutenants of the Arellano Felix drug cartel. Authorities say he laid claim to stuffing 300 bodies into barrels of lye, then dumping some of the liquefied remains in a pit in a hillside compound in eastern Tijuana.
Photo #1: From above
Photo #2: Edge-on
Photo #3: the interior crack is barely visible here, although it is quite easy to see in the metal itself. That prominent line perpendicular to the ejection port is a casting mark.
To my eye, the crack appears to go right through from the exterior of the slide to the interior. The external crack is highly visible in these photos, but the internal crack was very hard to photograph.
Wanda Sykes used to joke, "Sometimes when I'm walking home alone at night I try to avoid taking a short-cut past the Goldman-Sachs building, and I'll cut through the projects. 'Cause if you get mugged in the projects, all they'll get is what you have on you that night."He says the dung represented seven years' worth of field work, and its loss ''left me reeling.''
The university said Friday it had apologized.
Bennett says he rejected the university's compensation offer of 500 pounds ($750) and will ''see them in court.''