Friday, July 27, 2007

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I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer british airways flights is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

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Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince click spring myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized denon s1000 at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police geometry for beginners forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

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I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions web site hosting about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course plant protector were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

Okay, so my title is a bit of a misnomer...I know that "Limey" is really just slang for a British person (as in "Clive Owen has got to be the hottest tamale of all limeys that ever lived"...ahem). This is actually just a diagram of the last 24 hours of my life. I had big plans (the 3rd P.O. trip in 3 days, making 2 new dolls that I've sketched up) but then I went to bed & woke up with a bit of a gross cold. Which has rendered me relatively useless. Instead of dolls, all I seemed to be able to handle sewing last night was: Exhibit 1, new potholders stitched out of 2 of the lovely fabrics from yesterday's post, stitched up with a hefty layer baby shower thank you of thick towel sandwiched inside. Apparently my braini could only handle cutting out rectangles. and today I am wearing Exhibit 2 , with jeans, which is something that almost never happens (tee + jeans + sneakers). I embellished it a long time ago with the giant vintage button and strip of linen, recently added the little birdie patch (a freebie from a recent Etsy purchase!) and voila...now I want to wear it all the time. Exhibit 3 is the only really "limey" or "lime-ish" part of this post, it is Nigella's key lime pie from "How to be a Domestic Goddess". It's the easy version. It is damn good, too! I could only find a chocolate graham cracker crust in our ridiculously bad grocery store, but it was a nice combination, really...the chocolate and lime.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. charlotte view But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth washingtonmutual bank a detour to explore this area.

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DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" what is a good credit score finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

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A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, audiovox cell phones I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy bmi baby flights call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, business management software then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

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Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell denon s1000 me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get geometry homework help all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my uml introduction breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last free web space hosting weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's plant protector The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend baby shower thank you it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Okay, so my title is a bit of a misnomer...I know that "Limey" is really just slang for a British person (as in "Clive Owen has got to be the hottest tamale of all limeys that ever lived"...ahem). This is actually just a diagram of the last 24 hours of my life. I had big plans (the 3rd P.O. trip in 3 days, making 2 new dolls that I've sketched up) but then I went to bed & woke up with a bit of a gross cold. Which has rendered me relatively useless. Instead of dolls, all I seemed to be able to handle sewing last night was: Exhibit 1, new potholders stitched out of 2 of the lovely fabrics from yesterday's post, stitched up with a hefty layer of thick towel sandwiched inside. Apparently my braini could only handle cutting out rectangles. and today I am wearing Exhibit 2 , with jeans, which is something that almost never happens (tee + jeans + sneakers). I embellished it a long time ago with the giant vintage charlotte view button and strip of linen, recently added the little birdie patch (a freebie from a recent Etsy purchase!) and voila...now I want to wear it all the time. Exhibit 3 is the only really "limey" or "lime-ish" part of this post, it is Nigella's key lime pie from "How to be a Domestic Goddess". It's the easy version. It is damn good, too! I could only find a chocolate graham cracker crust in our ridiculously bad grocery store, but it was a nice combination, really...the chocolate and lime.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No washington mutual bank BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record share printer an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction what is a good credit report score to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps hydrogen generator this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the audiovox 8615 ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

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I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller small business management software as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

Click Here

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" denon cd player and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Okay, so my title is a bit of a misnomer...I know that "Limey" is really just slang for a British person (as in "Clive Owen has got to be the hottest tamale of all limeys that ever lived"...ahem). This is actually just a diagram of the last 24 hours of my life. I had big plans (the 3rd P.O. trip in 3 days, making 2 new dolls that I've sketched up) but then I went to bed & woke up with a bit of a gross cold. Which has rendered me relatively useless. Instead of dolls, all I seemed to be able to handle sewing last night was: Exhibit 1, new potholders stitched out of 2 of the lovely fabrics from yesterday's post, stitched up with a hefty layer of thick towel sandwiched inside. Apparently my braini could only handle cutting out rectangles. and today I am wearing Exhibit 2 , with jeans, which is something that almost never happens (tee + jeans + sneakers). I embellished it a long geometry for dummies time ago with the giant vintage button and strip of linen, recently added the little birdie patch (a freebie from a recent Etsy purchase!) and voila...now I want to wear it all the time. Exhibit 3 is the only really "limey" or "lime-ish" part of this post, it is Nigella's key lime pie from "How to be a Domestic Goddess". It's the easy version. It is damn good, too! I could only find a chocolate graham cracker crust in our ridiculously bad grocery store, but it was a nice combination, really...the chocolate and lime.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of uml introduction the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from mobile website hosting a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will plant protector be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

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A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get washington mutual bank all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank share printer network Costellos" »

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television what is a good credit score schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). hydrogen generator If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means audiovox 8615 "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and bmi baby flights the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

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DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of click spring the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour to explore this area.

Click Here

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with geometry for dummies Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, uml use cases which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Click Here

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the plant protector Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold baby shower thank you ideas War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed charlotte view to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

Okay, so my title is a bit of a misnomer...I know that "Limey" is really just slang for a British person (as in "Clive Owen has got to be the hottest tamale of all limeys that ever lived"...ahem). This is actually just a diagram of the last 24 hours of my life. I had big plans (the 3rd P.O. trip in 3 days, making 2 new dolls that I've sketched up) but then I went to bed & woke up with a bit of a gross cold. Which has rendered me relatively useless. Instead of dolls, all I seemed to be able to handle sewing last night was: Exhibit 1, new potholders stitched out of 2 of the lovely fabrics from yesterday's post, stitched up with a hefty layer of thick towel sandwiched inside. Apparently my braini could only handle cutting out rectangles. and today I am wearing Exhibit 2 , with jeans, which is something that almost never happens (tee + jeans + sneakers). I embellished it a long time ago with the giant vintage button and strip of linen, recently added the little birdie patch (a freebie from a recent Etsy purchase!) and voila...now I want to wear it all the time. Exhibit 3 is the only really "limey" or "lime-ish" part of this post, it is Nigella's key lime pie from "How to be a Domestic Goddess". It's the easy version. It is damn good, too! washington mutual bank I could only find a chocolate graham cracker crust in our ridiculously bad grocery store, but it was a nice combination, really...the chocolate and lime.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how share printer much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

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I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. hydrogen generator This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've audiovox 8615 been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Click Here

DNF: In cycling and some other racing and endurance sports, it stands for "did not finish." You can read a lot into that phrase: Injury, accident, exhaustion, a broken bike . It's a verb, too, as in "I DNF'd," or, "Yesterday on the Terrible Two, I DNF'd." I didn't suffer any of the problems listed above, really. I was going slower than I expected, and the two big climbs on the first half of the course were as tough as advertised. I was tired, but not at the end of my rope. But I abandoned the ride anyway ("abandonée" is the French term for DNF; or maybe it just means "quit"). The big factor: I realized at the top of the second climb, called The Geysers, that 86 miles into the ride I had fallen behind time-wise. The Terrible Two rules require you to finish in 16:30 to record an "official" finish (the prize you get for being an official finisher is a T-shirt that says "I did it;" really). If there'd been no clock involved, or the time limit had allowed a little more cushion, I might have continued. But there was a clock and what for me had become a pretty tight limit. So I decided I'd pack it in from that point and spare myself not only the honor of finishing but the suffering of the big climbs on the second half of the ride. A word about The Geysers country: If you out-of-towners ever find yourself in Sonoma County, it's worth a detour business management software to explore this area.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last spring bb guns week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She denon s1000 is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

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A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television uml introduction schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Okay, so my title is a bit of a misnomer...I know that "Limey" is really just slang for a British person (as in "Clive Owen has got to be the hottest tamale of all limeys that ever lived"...ahem). This is actually just a diagram of the last 24 hours of my life. I had big plans (the 3rd P.O. trip in 3 days, making 2 new dolls that I've sketched up) but then I went to bed & woke up with a bit of a gross cold. Which has rendered me relatively useless. Instead of dolls, all I seemed to be able to handle sewing last night was: Exhibit 1, new potholders stitched out of 2 of the lovely fabrics from yesterday's post, stitched up with a hefty layer of thick towel sandwiched inside. Apparently my braini could only handle cutting out rectangles. and today I am wearing Exhibit 2 , with jeans, which is something that almost never happens (tee + jeans + sneakers). I embellished it a long time ago with the giant vintage button and strip of linen, recently added the little birdie patch (a freebie from a recent Etsy purchase!) and voila...now I want to wear it all the time. Exhibit 3 is the only really "limey" or "lime-ish" part of this post, it is Nigella's key lime pie from "How to be a Domestic Goddess". It's the easy version. It is damn good, too! I could only find a chocolate graham cracker crust in our ridiculously bad grocery store, but it was mobile website hosting a nice combination, really...the chocolate and lime.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that plant protectors the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement baby shower thank you . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner charlotte view last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

A reader recently sent me an email nothing that I don't often write about television . She is correct; my addiction to "my shows" (as my Nona and investment bank washington Gammy call "The Young and the Restless" and "The Price is Right", respectively) is as sporadic as my devotion to various other things, and especially things that come with hype . Lately, I've been enjoying season one of "Prison Break" non-stop...last weekend it was a marathon of "America's Next Top DesignStar." I guess I'm just more of a late adopter with television, which means I end up renting the dvds and ravenously watching them until 3:30 a.m. While out to dinner last week, someone mentioned that her roommate had spent all of a Sunday recovering from a hangover…and making an Excel spreadsheet of their fall television schedule for each night of the week. I have to admit that I was impressed — I could never get all the channel/time info into that shitbox of an application and produce something understandable. I'd probably end up watching "Everyone Loves Raymond" re-runs for the next three months.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking share printer is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently become something of an optimist in my old age.

Urban Richmond provided some recent commentary on the new Richmond Center Stage website and groundbreaking announcement . And while I continue to try to convince myself to think positive thoughts about this massively subsidized project, the irony of the groundbreaking is pretty rich: Groundbreaking is set for June 1- with Wilder, Jim Ukrop, Anne Holton, Bio Ritmo, and No BS Brass Band “celebrating” the groundbreaking, then leading a procession to the “First Friday’s District.” The irony is unbelievable. Let’s celebrate this taxpayer boondoggle by visiting the unsubsidized, yet highly successful, grassroots arts community! While the project has done superb work of ignoring the grassroots community during the past few years, perhaps this is an indication that the next chapter in Richmond's performing arts history will be more inclusive. Don Harrison will tell me not to hold my breath, but I've apparently what is a good credit score become something of an optimist in my old age.

I finally got around to watching Martin Scorsese's The Departed the other day, an excellent film that raises some interesting questions about the role of informers in modern policing. In some ways The Departed resembles a Cold War spy thriller as much as a gangster flick. It points up the fact that every hydrogen fuel generator informer is potentially a double agent, capable of manipulating those he is supposed to be giving information to as much as those he is informing on. This is the reality that underlies the BBC's recent attempts to find out how much British police forces are paying to informers, amid mounting concern that the system is open to abuse . The PSNI was one of the seven forces which refused the BBC's request, and the recent history of Northern Ireland provides perhaps the best illustration of the range of issues that can arise from the use of informers. Continue reading "Informers: Britain's Frank Costellos" »

Thursday, July 26, 2007

There are two ways to catch a plane. The first, which happens to be the most common, is to leave on time, do your best to park nearby, repeatedly glance at your watch, and then start moving faster and faster. By the time you get to security, you realize that you're quite late, so you cut the line ("My plane leaves in 10 minutes!" you shout). You walk fast. As you get closer to your gate, you realize that walking fast isn't going to work, so you start to jog. Three gates away, you break into a run, and if you're lucky, you barely make the flight. The second way is to leave for the airport 10 minutes early. The easiest way to deal with change and with all the anxieties that go with it is not to deal with it at all. The easiest thing to do is to allow the urgency of the situation to force us to make the decisions cash loan las vegas (or take the actions) that we'd rather not take. Why? Because then we don't have to take responsibility for what happens. The situation is at fault, not us. The beauty of the asymptotic curve is that at every step along the way, running ever faster for the plane is totally justified. The closer we get, the more we've invested ourselves. The more we invest in making our flight, the easier it is to justify running like a lunatic to make it. Years ago, I published a directory of law firms. No fewer than 70% of the firms sent their payment the night before it was due, by FedEx.

as some you know, we had to put back into kaneohe after trying to head north. in a nutshell, it was just too tough! instead of the 10 knot easterlies which were forecast ,we had building winds from the ne 18-23. we toughed it out for 3 days, covering 450 miles in 3 days, all with the #4 jib and a double reefed main. the swell was slightly different angel from the wind waves, so we were slamming free credit reports online constatnly. water sluicing over the boat at all times, lots of little leaks below. the third night, the newer and ostensibly more robust of the two tillerpilots crapped out, leaving us with only the old one for the remaining 1900 miles to seattle. the next morning the wind built to 24 knots. the barometer was only at 1017 si we knew it was a LONG way to more moderate winds. so we put about, and after another 3 ugly ugly days we are safe and sound back in Kaneohe, which is truly as close to heaven as you can imagine. will head into honolulu tomorrow to make arrangements for shipping the boat back. not wild about the money aspect, but i really think it would have been stupid and dangerous to conintue on. hope you are all well....tiz

I attended this extremely lively CAA session on art and appropriation yesterday at the NYC Bar Association and would like to re-cap: Reexamining Appropriation: The Copy, the Law, and Beyond Friday, February 16, 10:00 am - 12:30 pm New York City Bar Association Inappropriate? Copying in the Renaissance Lisa Pon , Meadows School of the Arts, Southern accelerate dial up Methodist University The Reign of the Quotation–Appropriation and Its Audience Johanna Burton , Princeton University From Appropriation to Postproduction Jaimey Hamilton , University of Hawai'i, Manoa Appropriation v. Piracy, Round Two? The Hon. Pierre N. Leva l , United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit William Patry , Senior Copyright Counsel, Google Chairs : Martha Buskirk , Montserrat College of Art; Virginia Rutledge , Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP *** I will try to parse the speakers' presentations briefly below: Lisa Pon 's discussed the fact that "imitation" and copying was central to artistic practice during the Renaissance. She pointed to Vasari's "Lives" and his exhortation to one and all to imitate Michelangelo . She also talked about an interesting and apparently famous intellectual property dispute between Albrecht Durer and the Italian engraver Marcantonio Raimondi . (I'm sorry I haven't got more to say about this paper -- the speaker was thorough and the slides were really interesting. I was just getting into taking notes...

I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all email supervision our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

I attended this extremely lively CAA session on art and appropriation yesterday at the NYC Bar Association and would like to re-cap: Reexamining Appropriation: The Copy, the Law, and Beyond Friday, February 16, 10:00 am - 12:30 pm New York City Bar Association Inappropriate? Copying in the Renaissance Lisa Pon , Meadows shopping center online mall School of the Arts, Southern Methodist University The Reign of the Quotation–Appropriation and Its Audience Johanna Burton , Princeton University From Appropriation to Postproduction Jaimey Hamilton , University of Hawai'i, Manoa Appropriation v. Piracy, Round Two? The Hon. Pierre N. Leva l , United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit William Patry , Senior Copyright Counsel, Google Chairs : Martha Buskirk , Montserrat College of Art; Virginia Rutledge , Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP *** I will try to parse the speakers' presentations briefly below: Lisa Pon 's discussed the fact that "imitation" and copying was central to artistic practice during the Renaissance. She pointed to Vasari's "Lives" and his exhortation to one and all to imitate Michelangelo . She also talked about an interesting and apparently famous intellectual property dispute between Albrecht Durer and the Italian engraver Marcantonio Raimondi . (I'm sorry I haven't got more to say about this paper -- the speaker was thorough and the slides were really interesting. I was just getting into taking notes...

as some you know, we had to put back into kaneohe after trying to head north. in a nutshell, it was just too tough! instead of the 10 knot easterlies which were forecast ,we had building winds from the ne 18-23. we toughed it out for 3 days, covering 450 miles in 3 days, all with the #4 jib and a double reefed main. the swell was slightly different angel from the wind waves, so we were slamming constatnly. water sluicing over the boat at all times, lots of little leaks below. the third night, the newer and ostensibly more robust of the two tillerpilots crapped out, leaving us with only the old one for the remaining 1900 miles to seattle. the next morning the wind built monopoly tycoon to 24 knots. the barometer was only at 1017 si we knew it was a LONG way to more moderate winds. so we put about, and after another 3 ugly ugly days we are safe and sound back in Kaneohe, which is truly as close to heaven as you can imagine. will head into honolulu tomorrow to make arrangements for shipping the boat back. not wild about the money aspect, but i really think it would have been stupid and dangerous to conintue on. hope you are all well....tiz

I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me schick protector razor that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center online executive mba programs in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

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I have been unusually quiet here recently thank you sign language because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

There are two ways to catch a plane. The first, which happens to be the most common, is to leave on time, do your best to park nearby, repeatedly glance at your watch, and then start moving faster and faster. By the time you get to security, you realize that you're quite late, muscle and fitness so you cut the line ("My plane leaves in 10 minutes!" you shout). You walk fast. As you get closer to your gate, you realize that walking fast isn't going to work, so you start to jog. Three gates away, you break into a run, and if you're lucky, you barely make the flight. The second way is to leave for the airport 10 minutes early. The easiest way to deal with change and with all the anxieties that go with it is not to deal with it at all. The easiest thing to do is to allow the urgency of the situation to force us to make the decisions (or take the actions) that we'd rather not take. Why? Because then we don't have to take responsibility for what happens. The situation is at fault, not us. The beauty of the asymptotic curve is that at every step along the way, running ever faster for the plane is totally justified. The closer we get, the more we've invested ourselves. The more we invest in making our flight, the easier it is to justify running like a lunatic to make it. Years ago, I published a directory of law firms. No fewer than 70% of the firms sent their payment the night before it was due, by FedEx.

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I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and accelerate dial up power.

There are two ways to catch a plane. The first, which happens to be the most common, is to leave on time, do your best to park nearby, repeatedly glance at your watch, and then start moving faster and faster. By the time you get to security, you realize that you're quite late, email people search so you cut the line ("My plane leaves in 10 minutes!" you shout). You walk fast. As you get closer to your gate, you realize that walking fast isn't going to work, so you start to jog. Three gates away, you break into a run, and if you're lucky, you barely make the flight. The second way is to leave for the airport 10 minutes early. The easiest way to deal with change and with all the anxieties that go with it is not to deal with it at all. The easiest thing to do is to allow the urgency of the situation to force us to make the decisions (or take the actions) that we'd rather not take. Why? Because then we don't have to take responsibility for what happens. The situation is at fault, not us. The beauty of the asymptotic curve is that at every step along the way, running ever faster for the plane is totally justified. The closer we get, the more we've invested ourselves. The more we invest in making our flight, the easier it is to justify running like a lunatic to make it. Years ago, I published a directory of law firms. No fewer than 70% of the firms sent their payment the night before it was due, by FedEx.

as some you know, we had to put back into kaneohe after trying to head north. in a nutshell, it was just too tough! instead of the 10 knot easterlies which were forecast ,we had building winds from the ne 18-23. we toughed it out for 3 days, covering 450 miles in 3 days, all with the #4 jib and a double reefed main. the swell was slightly different angel from the shopping center online mall wind waves, so we were slamming constatnly. water sluicing over the boat at all times, lots of little leaks below. the third night, the newer and ostensibly more robust of the two tillerpilots crapped out, leaving us with only the old one for the remaining 1900 miles to seattle. the next morning the wind built to 24 knots. the barometer was only at 1017 si we knew it was a LONG way to more moderate winds. so we put about, and after another 3 ugly ugly days we are safe and sound back in Kaneohe, which is truly as close to heaven as you can imagine. will head into honolulu tomorrow to make arrangements for shipping the boat back. not wild about the money aspect, but i really think it would have been stupid and dangerous to conintue on. hope you are all well....tiz

I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the monopoly tycoon cheats presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

There are two ways to catch a plane. The first, which happens to be the most common, is to leave on time, do your best to park nearby, repeatedly glance at your watch, and then start moving faster and faster. By the time you get to security, you realize that you're quite late, so you cut the line ("My plane leaves in 10 minutes!" you shout). You walk fast. As you get closer to your gate, you realize that walking fast isn't going to work, so you start to jog. Three gates away, you break into a run, and if you're lucky, you barely make the flight. The second way is to leave for the airport 10 minutes early. The easiest way to deal with change and with all the anxieties that go with it is not to deal with it at all. The easiest thing to do is to allow the urgency of the schick protector situation to force us to make the decisions (or take the actions) that we'd rather not take. Why? Because then we don't have to take responsibility for what happens. The situation is at fault, not us. The beauty of the asymptotic curve is that at every step along the way, running ever faster for the plane is totally justified. The closer we get, the more we've invested ourselves. The more we invest in making our flight, the easier it is to justify running like a lunatic to make it. Years ago, I published a directory of law firms. No fewer than 70% of the firms sent their payment the night before it was due, by FedEx.

as some you know, we had to put back into kaneohe after trying to head north. in a nutshell, it was just too tough! instead of the 10 knot easterlies which were forecast ,we had building winds from the ne 18-23. we toughed it out for 3 days, covering 450 miles in 3 days, all with the #4 jib and a double reefed main. the swell was slightly different angel from the wind waves, so we were slamming constatnly. water sluicing over the boat at all times, lots of little leaks below. the third night, the newer and ostensibly more robust of the two tillerpilots crapped out, leaving us with only the old one for the remaining 1900 miles to seattle. the next morning the wind built to 24 knots. the barometer was only at 1017 si we knew it was a LONG way to online executive mba programs more moderate winds. so we put about, and after another 3 ugly ugly days we are safe and sound back in Kaneohe, which is truly as close to heaven as you can imagine. will head into honolulu tomorrow to make arrangements for shipping the boat back. not wild about the money aspect, but i really think it would have been stupid and dangerous to conintue on. hope you are all well....tiz

I have been unusually quiet here recently because I have been going through a major transition. About six weeks ago, I joined Deloitte & Touche USA LLP with a mandate to establish a major new research center in Silicon Valley. The Center will explore key business issues created by the intersection of business strategy and information technology. I will be serving as Co-Chairman of the new research center along with John Seely Brown and we have already enlisted the support of Lang Davison as Chief Content Officer. Until co-founding the center with us, Lang had been the Editor of The McKinsey Quarterly. Lang and I go way back in terms of our collaboration – in fact, he was a key collaborator in the development and writing of both Net Gain and Net Worth and has edited all our subsequent Quarterly articles. Last week, Kevin Werbach asked me to address his Supernova conference and offer a preview of some of the questions that will form the foundation of the research agenda for the new center. We are still at a very early stage in defining the research agenda, but it was a great opportunity to get some feedback and input from very smart folks. It occurred to me that I could throw the net even broader through my blog and seek out further input to help shape our research pc charge pro agenda. So, here’s an abbreviated version of the presentation I gave at Supernova – please let me know your thoughts and ideas on how to increase this research agenda's relevance and power.

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as some you know, we had to put back into kaneohe after trying to head north. in a nutshell, it was just too tough! instead of the 10 knot easterlies which were forecast ,we had building winds from the ne 18-23. we toughed it out for 3 days, covering 450 miles in 3 days, all with the #4 jib and a double reefed main. the swell was slightly different angel from the wind waves, so we were slamming constatnly. water sluicing over the boat at all times, lots of little leaks below. the third night, the newer and ostensibly more robust of the two tillerpilots crapped out, leaving us with only the old one for the remaining 1900 miles to seattle. the next morning the wind built to 24 knots. the barometer was only at 1017 si we knew it was a LONG way to more moderate muscle and fitness winds. so we put about, and after another 3 ugly ugly days we are safe and sound back in Kaneohe, which is truly as close to heaven as you can imagine. will head into honolulu tomorrow to make arrangements for shipping the boat back. not wild about the money aspect, but i really think it would have been stupid and dangerous to conintue on. hope you are all well....tiz

I attended this extremely lively CAA session on art and appropriation yesterday at the NYC Bar Association and would like to re-cap: Reexamining Appropriation: The Copy, the Law, and Beyond Friday, February 16, 10:00 am - 12:30 pm New York City Bar Association Inappropriate? Copying in the Renaissance Lisa Pon , Meadows School of the Arts, Southern Methodist University The Reign of the Quotation–Appropriation and Its Audience Johanna Burton , Princeton University From Appropriation to Postproduction Jaimey Hamilton , University of Hawai'i, Manoa Appropriation v. Piracy, Round Two? The Hon. Pierre N. Leva l , United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit William Patry , Senior Copyright Counsel, Google Chairs : Martha Buskirk , Montserrat College of Art; Virginia Rutledge , Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP *** I will try to parse the speakers' presentations briefly below: Lisa Pon 's discussed the fact that "imitation" and copying was central to artistic practice during the Renaissance. She pointed to Vasari's "Lives" and his exhortation to one and all to imitate Michelangelo . She also talked about an interesting and apparently famous intellectual property dispute between Albrecht Durer and the Italian engraver Marcantonio Raimondi . (I'm sorry I haven't got more to say about this paper -- the speaker was thorough and the slides were really interesting. I was just getting federal government student loan consolidation into taking notes...