Of the millions of inventions, what are the ten greatest? According to MSN's Tamin Ansary, the following ten are the greatest(in no particular order):
1. The Mechanical Clock 2. The Toliet 3. The Printing Press 4. Immunization and Antibiotics 5. The Telephone 6. The Elecrical Grid 7. The Automobile 8. The Television 9. The Computer 10. Something new(The Internet, Birth Control, Genetic Engineering, Virtual Reality)
Michelle Dessler is back and in charge at CTU. If you don't watch "24" than you could care less. But Michelle (played by Reiko Aylesworth) is great in this role and it is good to have her back. Now if she and Tony could just get back together???
The baseball field at RFK Stadium in Washington DC is starting to look like a real baseball field. The new sod has finally been laid and rennovations are near completion. Play ball!!!
Actually it's a picture of RFK Stadium in Washington DC. They are currently installing sod for the baseball field, where the Washington Nationals will play baseball this year. The big hole is where the pitching mound will be. The "mound" will be lowered into the ground for soccer games during the baseball season. Washington's soccer team, DC United will play home games here.
OK, its March Madness and everybody has an opinion on the final four. Mine are Oklahoma State, Wake Forest, North Carolina and Duke. Yes, three ACC teams and no Illinois.
Seems I have exceeded my bandwith on Photobucket for this month, so no pictures until a "new" month(which is March 16th for me) - ohh!!! just in time for a St. Patrick's Day picture!!!
Although Harvard University confirms that TV/music/movie star Hilary Duff, 17, is taking online classes, she's actually enrolled in the the university's Extension School, which doesn't require students to complete the rigorous admission process necessary for enrollment at Harvard College or the university's graduate programs.
PITTSBURGH, Pa. - A gigantic lobster that may have survived two world wars and Prohibition before being plucked from the ocean will live on — but only as a shell of its former self. The Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium plans to keep the shell of the 22-pound lobster, named Bubba, and use its remains to educate school children, said Rachel Capp, a zoo spokeswoman. Some of Bubba’s meat will be sent to labs for testing as officials try to determine why Bubba died, Capp said Thursday.
Bubba spent a week at Wholey’s fish market after he was pulled from the waters off Nantucket, Mass. He died Wednesday, after he was moved from the fish market to a quarantine area at the zoo’s aquarium. He was being checked to see if he was healthy enough to make a trip to an aquarium at a Ripley’s Believe It or Not museum. Randy Goodlett, a marine biologist and former curator and director of the zoo’s Aqua Zoo, said the lobster likely died because something was slightly off in the salt water mixture it was living in. Capp guessed it might have been the stress of being moved so many times.
Based on how long it typically takes a lobster to reach eating size — about five to seven years to grow to a pound — some estimated Bubba was about 100 years old. Marine biologists said 30 to 50 years was more likely. See Bubba and read more here