Tinker:
I am tired of politicians lying to us, playing us for suckers, so now I will spend my time reading the story's of "Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head" instead.
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http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/ story/23101374/2013/08/10/ loophole-people-being-told-to- use-key-words-to-cross-border
Loophole: 'Key Words' Allow Immigrants to Enter US...
FLOOD OF ASYLUM REQUESTS AT BORDER
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Lets start with a 1950s Song and Movie
http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=1VkFnjf7p9w
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http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=UDMmy8lyDGM
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http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=7w7ZcEi-CiU&list= PL9D5621B5AD1D361D
"Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head"
Mankind has been teaching each other the bad along with the good living with the unhealthy as well as the healthy. People raising people older people teaching younger people, trying to build a civilization with civilized people.
Children without older parents or family are lives
that never get much of a chance to grow older, to become who they would
want to be.I am tired of politicians lying to us, playing us for suckers, so now I will spend my time reading the story's of "Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head" instead.
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http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/
Loophole: 'Key Words' Allow Immigrants to Enter US...
FLOOD OF ASYLUM REQUESTS AT BORDER
Lets start with a 1950s Song and Movie
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
NAT KING COLE EGITO HAJJI BABA
Uploaded on Jan 13, 2012
This is the song Hajji Baba from
singer Nat "King" Cole's 1955 album "Unforgettable: Song By Nat 'King'
Cole". It's an original 1955 Capitol green label mono version. It's a
three part EP series of Nat "King" Cole's best songs, this being part 3.
It's being played on a 1960 Garrard 210 turntable. Please comment for
any song requests! Enjoy! :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Amanda Blake 3 The Adventures of Hajji Baba
Uploaded on Jun 25, 2008
Amanda Blake in "Die Abenteuer des Hadji Baba" , 1954.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Amanda Blake The Adventures Hajji Baba 1
--------------"Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head"
Mankind has been teaching each other the bad along with the good living with the unhealthy as well as the healthy. People raising people older people teaching younger people, trying to build a civilization with civilized people.
Read about your human history...Like Levi (in the Bible) A Hebrew patriarch, third son of Jacob and Leah. In the Bible, a son of Jacob and Leah and the forebear of one of the tribes of Israel.
and the writer Primo Levi:
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http://www.economist.com/node/ 1077337/print?Story_ID=1077337
PRIMO LEVI (1919-87) was an industrial chemist, a writer and an Auschwitz survivor. His first book, “If This Is a Man”, which came out in the United States as “Survival in Auschwitz”, and his last, “The Drowned and the Saved”, are among the best books of witness. Aside from the year in the camps—his first experience of foreign travel—another adventurous year returning to Italy by way of Russia (described in his book “The Truce”) and a year he was forced by Italy's fascist government to find work in Milan, he spent his entire life in his birthplace, Turin; his study was the room he was born in. He had one employer for 30 years, one wife, two children. It is—always excepting Auschwitz—one of the calmest, least rackety lives of a 20th-century writer. It gave the appearance of being completely, almost bizarrely, well-adjusted: Levi visited post-war German factories for his work, took courses at the Turin Goethe Institute and translated Franz Kafka and Gottfried Benn. And then, on a Saturday morning, his wife out of the house shopping, his infirm mother with her nurse, the (apparently harmless) post just delivered, he threw himself over the third floor banister into the stairwell and was instantly dead. Read more...http://www.economist. com/node/1077337/print?Story_ ID=1077337
and the writer Primo Levi:
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http://www.economist.com/node/
20th-century writers
The riddle of Turin
He worked in the room where he was born and led an uneventful life, even for a writer - if you ignore the concentration camp
Apr 11th 2002 |From the print edition
PRIMO LEVI (1919-87) was an industrial chemist, a writer and an Auschwitz survivor. His first book, “If This Is a Man”, which came out in the United States as “Survival in Auschwitz”, and his last, “The Drowned and the Saved”, are among the best books of witness. Aside from the year in the camps—his first experience of foreign travel—another adventurous year returning to Italy by way of Russia (described in his book “The Truce”) and a year he was forced by Italy's fascist government to find work in Milan, he spent his entire life in his birthplace, Turin; his study was the room he was born in. He had one employer for 30 years, one wife, two children. It is—always excepting Auschwitz—one of the calmest, least rackety lives of a 20th-century writer. It gave the appearance of being completely, almost bizarrely, well-adjusted: Levi visited post-war German factories for his work, took courses at the Turin Goethe Institute and translated Franz Kafka and Gottfried Benn. And then, on a Saturday morning, his wife out of the house shopping, his infirm mother with her nurse, the (apparently harmless) post just delivered, he threw himself over the third floor banister into the stairwell and was instantly dead. Read more...http://www.economist.
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Because children
are human savages without the devotion of older people teaching them,
about how they need to grow and survive. Mankind has lived to evolve
like this through their long history of our savage human story. I need not go into how far we need to go. But you can bet our last gold piece that if we do not teach the innocent children better. That our human race extinction will be just like the other underdeveloped creature that has gone before you and me.
This earth doesn't need us to keep turning around our sun.
Read and study your humankind's
history enjoying every little bit of knowledge you can learn. Your
generation method of learning is under siege like no other from
technology that is advancing in the hand of the rich and powerful. Stay
close to yourself becoming your own best fried and advance in the
knowledge you learn.
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http://www.thesundaytimes.co.
Welcome to your preview of the Sunday Times
Laser test to tell us when we will die
Lois Rogers
Published: 11 August 2013
A painless laser pulse is applied to the surface of the skin through a wristwatch-style device. This measures how a person’s body will decline with age by analysing endothelial cells. These cells line the smallest blood vessels, capillaries, in our bodies and respond to complex activity elsewhere in the body.
By measuring the oscillations within the cells, the scientists say they can calculate the length of time before death and also test for diseases including cancer and dementia.
The result is graded from 0 for death to 100 for optimum functioning. The predictions become more accurate as more data is added.
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http://www.theblaze.com/
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Ted Cruz: Media Love Hillary So Much, Movies Should Be ‘Released on Valentine’s Day’
Media“I expect the central debate in those movies to be whether she is eligible for sainthood or if she can only be named a saint posthumously.”
Read More »
Tinker:
One of my most favorite people ever, Eydie Gorme, she entertained a lot of people who lighten up our atmosphere with her singing in her time, I like her talent and music. I am very sad that she lost her life this past week.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
August 11, 2013
Eydie Gorme Dead: Legendary Singer Dies At 84
By BOB THOMAS
08/10/13 10:31 PM ET EDT
Gorme, who also had a huge solo hit in 1963 with "Blame it on the Bossa Nova," died Saturday at Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas following a brief, undisclosed illness, said her publicist, Howard Bragman.
Gorme was a successful band singer and nightclub entertainer when she was invited to join the cast of Steve Allen's local New York television show in 1953.
She sang solos and also did duets and comedy skits with Lawrence, a rising young singer who had joined the show a year earlier. When the program became NBC's "Tonight Show" in 1954, the young couple went with it.
They married in Las Vegas in 1957 and later performed for audiences there. Lawrence, the couple's son David and other loved ones were by her side when she died, Bragman said.
"Eydie has been my partner on stage and in life for more than 55 years," Lawrence said in a statement. "I fell in love with her the moment I saw her and even more the first time I heard her sing. While my personal loss is unimaginable, the world has lost one of the greatest pop vocalists of all time."
Although usually recognized for her musical partnership with Lawrence, Gorme broke through on her own with the Grammy-nominated "Blame it on the Bossa Nova." The bouncy tune about a dance craze of the time was written by the Tin Pan Alley songwriting team of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
Her husband had had an equally huge solo hit in 1962 with "Go Away Little Girl," written by the songwriting team of Gerry Goffin and Carole King.
Gorme would score another solo hit in 1964, but this time for a Spanish-language recording.
Gorme, who was born in New York City to Sephardic Jewish parents, grew up speaking both English and Spanish. When she and her husband were at the height of their career as a team in 1964, Columbia Records President Goddard Lieberson suggested she put that Spanish to use in the recording studio.
The result was "Amor," recorded with the Mexican combo Trio Los Panchos.
The song became a hit throughout Latin America, which resulted in more recordings for the Latino market, and Lawrence and Gorme performed as a duo throughout Latin America.
"Our Spanish stuff outsells our English recordings," Lawrence said in 2004. "She's like a diva to the Spanish world."
Read more...http://www.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Gershwin / Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé: Song Medley - 1976 L
----------------------http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
WATCH: This Magician Can Do Crazy Things to Your Brain
Photo credit: Discovery Channel.
This series explored the relationship between the brain and how it can be deceived and manipulated into doing what I want it to do. I delved into the most secretive of areas, such as, is it possible to program someone else's mind to do something against their morals or their beliefs and without their permission. In one of the episodes, "Black Ops Hypnosis," I reprogrammed a man's mind to become a covert operative and tasked him to do something he would never have done otherwise. The result was extraordinary -- even when shown the tape of himself doing the covert operation he could not believe that he had done what he was looking at, he was 100 percent sure that it was only a dream. His brain was still in denial given his strong morals and beliefs and it still read the reality as a dream.
See video and read more...http://www.
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http://espn.go.com/college-
Follow The Money
If Florida State hopes to level the playing field with the SEC, it will have to try and match not just the league's talent, but its financial muscle. David Hale »Ching: Anatomy of UGA's recruiting budget »AP Photo/Phil Sears
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- USC star Lee day to day with bone bruise
- Clowney sits out South Carolina scrimmage
- Funeral held for A&M lineman killed in crash
- Arkansas clears receiver McKay to transfer
- Cincinnati's rugby player-turned-LB out for year
- 2 former Vandy players taken into custody
- Driskel, LB Morrison return to Gators practice
- Hurricanes add former Wisconsin DL Gilbert
- Beckmann, voice of Michigan football, to retire
- Wake's Harris cleared by NCAA for senior year
- Ex-coach Fulmer wants on playoff committee
- NCAA sending enforcement staff back to school
- Haney: Top 50 breakout players for 2013
http://espn.go.com/blog/sec/
Coach: Les Miles (113-42 overall, 85-21 at LSU)
2012 record: 10-3, 6-2 SEC
Key losses: DE Barkevious Mingo, DE Sam Montgomery, DT Bennie Logan, LB Kevin Minter, CB Tharold Simon, S Eric Reid
Newcomers to watch: LB Kendell Beckwith, TE Logan Stokes, WR Travin Dural, WR Quantavius Leslie, DE Lewis Neal
Biggest games in 2013: TCU (in Arlington, Texas), Aug. 31; at Georgia, Sept. 28; Florida, Oct. 12; at Alabama, Nov. 9; Texas A&M, Nov. 23
Biggest question mark: The amount of talent LSU lost on defense last season to the NFL was staggering, but few teams in the SEC have reloaded on that side of the ball the way the Tigers have under fifth-year coordinator John Chavis. That’s the challenge this season, particularly when it comes to finding guys who can rush the passer and make big plays off the edge. LSU should be fine on the interior with the tandem of Anthony Johnson and Ego Ferguson, but there’s not a proven finisher at end. Junior Jermauria Rasco and sophomore Danielle Hunter are both primed to move into that role and have breakout seasons, while freshmen Lewis Neal and Tashawn Bower will also be worth watching.
Forecast: Amid all the talk about Alabama going for its third straight national championship and the circus surrounding Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel, LSU has sort of been the forgotten team in the West race. Deep down, LSU coach Les Miles doesn’t mind being in the shadows entering the 2013 season because it’s been an excellent source of motivation for his team. Try mentioning to any of the players that this could be the year the Tigers fall off a bit. At LSU? The Tigers may have lost several great players, but they also breed great players, and that’s been their mantra on the Bayou.
One of the big questions of the offseason was recently resolved when star running back Jeremy Hill was reinstated to the team following his legal troubles. Miles has said only that Hill would be punished internally and hasn’t specified if he will miss any games. Getting Hill back was big for the Tigers, who were already deep at running back. But the 233-pound Hill has the size, power and speed that should fit perfectly into Cam Cameron’s offense. Having Hill in the backfield will make LSU’s play-action passing game that much more effective, and the plan is for senior quarterback Zach Mettenberger to throw the ball down the field more this season. The Tigers need to throw it better, period, after finishing 11th in the SEC last season in passing offense and tossing just 12 touchdown passes in 13 games.
As Miles has alluded to more than a few times, LSU is the only team in the West this season that has to face both Florida and Georgia from the East. The Tigers also have to play at Alabama, so the schedule may be LSU’s biggest hurdle in terms of making a run at the SEC
Comments
Thomas Williams · Im not telling u
I
hope that this LSU football team is as healthy as they look, because
looks can be so deceiving sometimes. Health on the other hand is like a
hidden treasure with a abundance of jewels and sparkling wealth.
This LSU football team looks very wealthy to me with a little extra touch of people with obvious durability underneath the LSU uniforms. Guys who look like that they have played the rough and tough game of football from grammar school to college, and are now taking on the look of grown men about to go pro.
That the LSU college football practice looks more like a pro football teams practice then college. These young men truly look like what they do, college football players developing into going to play pro football playing for money, with no more tolerance for kid stuff.
This LSU football team looks very wealthy to me with a little extra touch of people with obvious durability underneath the LSU uniforms. Guys who look like that they have played the rough and tough game of football from grammar school to college, and are now taking on the look of grown men about to go pro.
That the LSU college football practice looks more like a pro football teams practice then college. These young men truly look like what they do, college football players developing into going to play pro football playing for money, with no more tolerance for kid stuff.
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http://www.tigerrag.com/?p=
LSU Football Media Day: LIVE BLOG
August 11, 2013 - © 2013 Tiger Rag
Miles meeting with media
By CODY WORSHAM
Tiger Rag Editor
A year ago at this time, it was the calm before the storm.
Tyrann Mathieu was making his first media appearance of the summer, and, though we didn’t know it, also his last media appearance as an LSU Tiger.
Things appear much calmer again this year, as the preseason’s biggest storyline — the fate of running back Jeremy Hill — seems all but wrapped up.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t story lines galore to tackle today, of course.
We’ll get to talk to offensive coordinator Cam Cameron for the first time as a media whole since his hiring in February.
We’ll get to quiz John Chavis on the many defensive newcomers and how we plans to replace eight players gone to the NFL.
We’ll find out more from Les Miles on Hill’s status and how he feels about his team less than three weeks from the season opener against TCU in Arlington.
And, finally, we’ll get to talk to the many freshmen — perhaps for the only time this year — about their perspectives entering year one in Baton Rouge.
All that and more coming to you from a condensed Media Day this year, running on a tight schedule from 3:30 to 4:45.
I’ll have live updates here and on Twitter (@CodyWorsham), while Luke Johnson (@lukejohnson44), Hunt Palmer (@HuntPalmerBBI), and Derek Ponamsky (@DerekPonamsky) provide coverage, as well. You can also follow Tiger Rag on Twitter (@Tiger_Rag), where we’ll provide more updates. Hunt will also have a blog at BBI for those of you subscribing to our Tiger Rag/BBI bundle.
Stay tuned.
3:19 p.m. update
Going to try and use LSU’s feed to stream live from media day. Sometimes this doesn’t work, and it may require a log-in, but below you should see a Geaux Zone screen where video will stream live.
See video...http://www.tigerrag.
3:35 p.m. update
Miles arrives only five minutes late. Not bad.
“Our football team is developing,” he said.
Miles broke down week one of practice, working the first team in the a.m. and the second team in the p.m.
“We got maximum reps on our offense, defense, and special teams,” Miles said. “I like where we’re at.”
3:40 update
Miles dodges a question about Williford’s injury, saying it’s wise to not talk about injuries.
Miles says Hawkins has had as quality a camp as anyone at this point. He says the left side of the line with Vadal Alexander at guard and La’el Collins at tackle.
On newcomers, Miles mentioned Duke Riley, Melvin Jones, Kendell Beckwith, Rickey Jefferson as impact newcomers.
Lamin Barrow, Miles said, is ‘a guy who leads by example. When he talks, everybody listens. He’s been a leader many times, not overtly vocal, but in the back of the scenes.’
3:47 update
Miles on Rickey Jefferson: He can really cover. He’s a physical player. He’ll have to get comfortable in the secondary in scheme.
On the offense: There’s an opportunity to be more balanced.
On Anthony Jennings as backup: He’s really improving. I like how he’s coming. Stephen Rivers is also really improving. I think Jennings has a leg up on that second spot.
On the kickers: I think Colby Delahoussaye is certainly in front as our field goal guy. He’s had a nice camp. James Hairston and Trent Domingue are providing competition. Miles mentioned Domingue as a backup punter, and Hairston as a kick off guy and long field goal guy.
Miles said the veterans are standing out at end after camp week one. Jordan Allen and Danielle Hunter were entioned. “We’re going to have real quality end play. There’s some real fast, athletic big men at the ends for us.”
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http://lsufootball.net/
LSU Football - Geaux Tigers!!!
The Advocate John Chavis fine with fresh faces on LSU defense
The Advocate LSU has reinforcements on defensive line
The Advocate Cam Cameron: LSU's new mediator
The Advocate Colby Delahoussaye, Anthony Jennings get a leg up
Associated Press LSU sees potential for "spectacular" passing game
The Advocate A few minutes with Christian LaCouture
Tiger Bait Jeremy Hill grateful for teammates’ support
Tiger Bait New realization for Jeremy Hill
USA Today Guilbeau: Jeremy Hill takes questions head on at Media Day
Chronicle Telegram, OH Mingo impresses teammates, coaches with motor, speed and pass rush
San Jose Mercury News 49ers' Glenn Dorsey glad to get fresh start
USA Today Andrew Whitworth: Joint practices key to shorter preseason
Yahoo! Sports 25 most intriguing quarterbacks of the 2013 season, No. 7 Zach Mettenberger
USA Today Fox Sports 1 not the usual new kid on ESPN's block
USA Today Despite NCAA strife, Charlotte goes all-in on football
The Advocate John Chavis fine with fresh faces on LSU defense
The Advocate LSU has reinforcements on defensive line
The Advocate Cam Cameron: LSU's new mediator
The Advocate Colby Delahoussaye, Anthony Jennings get a leg up
Associated Press LSU sees potential for "spectacular" passing game
The Advocate A few minutes with Christian LaCouture
Tiger Bait Jeremy Hill grateful for teammates’ support
Tiger Bait New realization for Jeremy Hill
USA Today Guilbeau: Jeremy Hill takes questions head on at Media Day
Chronicle Telegram, OH Mingo impresses teammates, coaches with motor, speed and pass rush
San Jose Mercury News 49ers' Glenn Dorsey glad to get fresh start
USA Today Andrew Whitworth: Joint practices key to shorter preseason
Yahoo! Sports 25 most intriguing quarterbacks of the 2013 season, No. 7 Zach Mettenberger
USA Today Fox Sports 1 not the usual new kid on ESPN's block
USA Today Despite NCAA strife, Charlotte goes all-in on football
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?

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