A Sodomite compliant JESUIT Appointed To Oversee Freedom of Religion! – Video


A Sodomite compliant JESUIT Appointed To Oversee Freedom of Religion!
Obama has now appointed a Jesuit to oversee religious freedom and ultimately target and pinpoint bible believers. This video may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always...

By: Medica Call

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A Sodomite compliant JESUIT Appointed To Oversee Freedom of Religion! - Video

Huskers, Badgers to play for Freedom Trophy

It's official. The Big Ten now hands out more trophies than your local Little League.

Wisconsin and Nebraska announced Monday that their annual game will now be a trophy game, as the two teams will play for the Freedom Trophy.

"The Freedom Trophy pays tribute to the brave men and women who have fought in our nation's wars," reads an inscription on the trophy. "The University of Wisconsin's Camp Randall Stadium, built on what was once a Civil War training ground, and the University of Nebraska's Memorial Stadium, dedicated in honor of our nation's veterans, stand as proud monuments to those who have sacrificed so much in the name of freedom."

The addition of the Freedom Trophy means there are now 14 trophy games in the Big Ten, though I suppose it's possible there are more, but it's getting really hard to keep track if I'm being honest.

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Huskers, Badgers to play for Freedom Trophy

Nebraska, Wisconsin to play for Freedom Trophy

Wisconsin and Nebraska always have plenty to play for when the two Big Ten rivals meet on the football field. Now, the Freedom Trophy can be added to that list.

The trophy will be on the line for the first time Saturday, when the Badgers host the Cornhuskers at Camp Randall Stadium.

"Trophy games are part of the tradition of college football, and I'm thrilled that we're going to be introducing one into our rivalry with Nebraska," said Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin Director of Athletics. "The Freedom Trophy brings recognition to two historic football venues and it honors our nation's veterans. It is something I know the coaches, student-athletes and fans of both programs will embrace for years to come."

"We are honored to partner with Wisconsin in an annual Freedom Trophy game, as both of our football programs and stadiums have rich histories and traditions," Nebraska Director of Athletics Shawn Eichorst said. "The Freedom Trophy provides a unique opportunity for us to pay special tribute to the brave men and women who have and will continue to defend our nation's freedom."

The Freedom Trophy, designed and sculpted by Harry Weber of Wright City, Mo., features a bronze football stadium with an American flag extending from the center.

One half of the outside of the stadium depicts the North section of Wisconsin's Camp Randall Stadium (built in 1917) and the other half the East side of Nebraska's Memorial Stadium (stadium built in 1923, East side expansion in 2012).

The stadium and flag sculpture sits on top of a wooden base that has dedicated space for future Wisconsin-Nebraska game scores. With the Big Ten establishing East and West divisions for football prior to this season, the Huskers and Badgers will now play each other every year as members of the West Division.

The base also contains an identical inscription on two sides that reads: "The Freedom Trophy pays tribute to the brave men and women who have fought in our nation's wars. The University of Wisconsin's Camp Randall Stadium, built on what was once a Civil War training ground, and the University of Nebraska's Memorial Stadium, dedicated in honor of our nation's veterans, stand as proud monuments to those who have sacrificed so much in the name of freedom."

Since 1901, Wisconsin and Nebraska have met a total of eight times on the football field with each school winning four games apiece.

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Nebraska, Wisconsin to play for Freedom Trophy

Eco-friendly fair teaches community about recycling

By Jacqueline Devine

jadevine@alamogordonews.com

@DearestDevine on Twitter

Holloman Air Force Base Staff Sgt. Noe Gutierrez, of 49th Security Forces Squadron, and his children talked to Sierra Elementary 4th graders Sydney Thomas and Caitlyn Bowman about their display on the importance of recycling while their teacher Rebecca Harris and Nakul Bhakta listen to the conversation. (Jacqueline DevineDaily News )

Alamogordo Public Schools presented an eco-friendly lifestyles and healthy living Education Fair at the Alamogordo High School Saturday.

It's part of their "Go Green" theme to teach students about recycling and Earth Day.

Oregon Elementary School Principal Brenda Dorsey said every year different schools from the district do a booth for the fair. Alamogordo's education system wants to stress the importance of recycling because it conserves raw materials and making products out of recycled materials reduces the need to consume more precious resources. It also protects natural habitats for the future.

"The schools in our community are very involved with Earth Day which is in April," said Dorsey. "One of the things I've noticed is that we have so many things we can recycle from the classrooms. We decided to recycle cardboard one year and it was unbelievable how much we recycled when all the schools joined together."

Dorsey said this year students are recycling plastic bottles as part of their project.

She said They are also building furniture out of wood palettes.

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Eco-friendly fair teaches community about recycling

Mad Catz Cyborg V7 Review – Gamingtastatur | [Full-HD] Deutsch/German – Video


Mad Catz Cyborg V7 Review - Gamingtastatur | [Full-HD] Deutsch/German
Wir stellen heute die Cyborg V7 von Mad Catz vor. Wenn euch das Review gefllt dann lasst uns einen Daumen hoch da 🙂 PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/1wkvjVe TWITTER: https://twitter.com/WASDcompanys.

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Mad Catz Cyborg V7 Review - Gamingtastatur | [Full-HD] Deutsch/German - Video

Cyborg Cockroaches Could Save Your Life

A group of NC State University scientists developed biobots that pick up and seek out sounds via a mini microphone.

If you're trapped under the rubble of a collapsed building, the last thing you want to see is a swarm of cockroaches headed your way. But thanks to a group of North Carolina State University researchers, those creepy crawlies could just save your life.

The scientists have developed a technology allowing cyborg cockroaches, or biobots, to pick up and seek out sounds with a miniscule microphone, meant to help emergency personnel in the aftermath of a disaster.

Led by Dr. Alper Bozkurt, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at NC State, the project equips biobots with one of two electronic backpacks about the size of a quarter, which control the roach's movements.

"The goal is to use the biobots with high-resolution microphones to differentiate between sounds that matterlike people calling for helpfrom sounds that don't matterlike a leaking pipe," Bozkurt said. "Once we've identified sounds that matter, we can use the biobots equipped with microphone arrays to zero in on where those sounds are coming from."

One type carries a single microphone to capture relatively high-resolution sound for any direction, which is then wirelessly transmitted to first responders. The other comes with three directional mics, detecting the direction of the sound.

The research team is then able to analyze the sounds, localize the source, and steer the biobots into that direction.

"In a collapsed building, sound is the best way to find survivors," Dr. Alper Bozkurt, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at NC State, said in a statement.

With the help of fellow NC State assistant professor Dr. Edgar Lobaton and Dr. Mihail Sichitiu, Bozkurt's team also developed a sort of invisible fence to keep biobots within range of each other at a disaster site. It also allows users to steer the roaches toward light sources to recharge the solar panels on their backpacks.

Watch the biobots in action in the video below.

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Cyborg Cockroaches Could Save Your Life

Storm closes beaches after day of drama

A teenager is rescued from the surf yesterday. Picture: Sharon Smith/The West Australian

Lightning forced the closure of several beaches this morning, a day after the city recorded its hottest November day in four years.

A 17-year-old was one of 23 rescues yesterday as big crowds hit the beach to escape the heat.

But this morning the drama was in the skies, with lightning, thunder and heavy rain.

Surf Life Saving WA closed Mullaloo, Sorrento, City Beach, Cottesloe and North Cottesloe beaches this morning because of lightning.

The beaches were reopened after the storm passed.

CLICK ON THE PICTURE BELOW FOR A PICTURE GALLERY

The temperature is expected to dip back down to 25C today and 24C tomorrow and stay around the mid-20s for the rest of the week.

Lightning is believed to be responsible for delays to Perths train network this morning.

Just before 7am, Transperth said services on the Joondalup and Mandurah lines were delayed because of a technical issue.

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Storm closes beaches after day of drama

UPDATED: Fears guideline bathing water standards could scare tourists off

SEVEN Dorset beaches fail guideline standards for bathing water quality, new research from DEFRA shows.

The Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs released a report entitled 2014 Compliance Report For Bathing Waters In England.

Although the beaches pass basic mandatory standards, it reveals a number of Dorset beaches have failed guideline standards on bathing water quality.

These are: Castle Cove beach and Sandsfoot Castle beach in Portland Harbour, Seatown beach near Bridport, Church Cliff Beach and Front Beach in Lyme Regis, and Highcliffe Castle beach and Avon Beach in Christchurch.

Cllr Ian Bruce, Weymouth and Portland Borough Councils briefholder for community facilities, said that he would be interested to know how the beaches were monitored as things like currents and flooding can have a significant bearing on results.

He said he would not like to see stricter standards putting off people from the boroughs beaches if the water was still safe to swim in.

Cllr Bruce said: Its a strange situation if people have been perfectly safe and we have not had any problems then somebody comes and says we are going to keep tightening the standard.

Clearly we do want to make sure everything is safe but we dont want to scare people off going to a particular beach.

The results also show that Lyme Regiss Church Cliff Beach has failed current mandatory standards for bathing water, which comes after a previous pass result in 2013.

Bathing waters are defined as beaches, lakes or ponds that are used by a large number of bathers and have been designated under the bathing waters directive.

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UPDATED: Fears guideline bathing water standards could scare tourists off

How human existence doesn't have to cost the Earth

Book information The Last Beach by Orrin H. Pilkey and J. Andrew G. Cooper Published by: Duke University Press Price: $19.95

Tibet's rivers feed its people, but also those of lowland Asia (Image: Maria Stenzel/NGS)

From Tibet's endangered ecosystems to the crazy cost of saving beaches to New York's green example, three books probe the price tag of development

ENVIRONMENTAL problems can seem overwhelming if met head on, so sometimes the greatest benefit just comes from a change in attitude. Three new books, with wildly different subject matter, illustrate this deceptively simple proposition.

Beaches, whether sandy or stony, are very much part of summer, but if Orrin Pilkey and Andrew Cooper's The Last Beach is right, the traditional seaside may soon be a thing of the past.

These two geomorphologists argue that the problem is that beaches are dynamic systems, and change position, size and composition as a result of wave action and tidal flow. Up-coast migrations, rapid transitions from sand to gravel, even their total disappearance, are responses to time, tide and the undertow. None of which suits people, who want holiday homes with views and reliable places to site profit-making infrastructure.

The result is a Canute-like protectionism that, instead of accepting the capricious nature of beaches, tries to nail them in place. The resulting groins, breakwaters, sea walls and artificial sand stretches tend to be expensive and can destroy the very beaches they are meant to preserve. They are at best short-term fixes and at worst, long-term cash cows for the consultancy and engineering companies attempting to solve the self-created problems, argue Pilkey and Cooper.

Their book neatly combines geography with climate studies and conservation, making it an accessible guide to the threats facing a natural resource we mostly take for granted.

The Last Beach shows that Westerners should not get smug about their future because development and house prices frequently trump environmental good sense. But Meltdown in Tibet by Michael Buckley has a far more terrifying vision: development at any ecological price. If Stephen King quit horror-writing for environmental journalism, this would be the result, leaving you uneasy, with occasional horror flashbacks. Buckley's horror, however, is real.

If you've travelled in South-East Asia, you may have come across Buckley as a veteran author of guides for the Lonely Planet series. Widely travelled, with deep knowledge of terrain and peoples, he is well-placed to document recent developments. The completion of China's Golmud-Lhasa railway about a decade ago is linked to many such changes. It has facilitated an influx of heavy equipment, mass migration of workers, and exploitation of the Tibetan plateau's mineral wealth.

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How human existence doesn't have to cost the Earth