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Recipe Search & Sharing Service Foodily Arrives On iPhone

iphoneapp_screenshots_feedRecipe search engine Foodily is arriving on mobile today, with an all-new iPhone application that will allow users to search recipes while on the go, see what recipes their friends have liked and share their own recommendations via photos snapped with the iPhone’s camera. In addition to the social features, the app provides mobile access to Foodily’s recipe search engine, so you can find the ingredients you need for a dish while you’re out and about.

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Coaching icon Paterno sacked in ignominy (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? In a country mad for college football, Joe Paterno — known simply as “JoePa” — represented almost a deity of the sport.

But the sterling reputation he built during almost five decades as head coach at Penn State University has been sullied by allegations that a long-time assistant coach sexually abused boys and school officials tried to cover it up.

Paterno, 84, a member of the College Football Hall of Fame, was ignominiously sacked late on Wednesday just hours after he said he would retire at the end of this season.

The end to the storied coaching career of Paterno, whose fans would have liked to have seen lead the team out for one last home game at Beaver Stadium, came amid a scandal so sordid it has been compared to the cases of pedophile priests in the Roman Catholic Church.

A titan as a coach, Paterno was unrivaled by his peers for the longevity of his success. Known for his thick glasses and navy windbreaker, he promoted the lofty notion that football players could excel on the field and in the classroom.

“Joe and (his wife) Sue are as close to deities as you can get in this town,” said Nick Savereno, who attended Penn State and owns a sandwich shop near the campus at State College, the Pennsylvania town where he grew up.

The campus was in shock on Wednesday afternoon after the coach said he would resign. Students cried, some were angry and some called for the university president to resign. Supporters left flowers at Paterno’s simple split-level home.

Then late Wednesday evening, students massed on campus after Paterno’s sudden dismissal, fired after a meeting of the university’s board of trustees who also fired Graham Spanier, president of Penn State for 16 years.

“Graham Spanier is no longer president of the university … Joe Paterno is no longer the head football coach, effective immediately,” John Surma, vice chairman of trustees, told a press conference, announcing the end of Paterno’s reign.

Surma added, “We don’t yet know all the facts and there are many details that are yet to be worked out.”

Earlier in the day, Paterno’s football team prepared for the final home game of the season on Saturday as they closed in on a place in the first-ever Big Ten Championship game.

Underlining what a big presence Paterno was in U.S. college football, the winner of the inaugural Big Ten final will get the Stagg-Paterno Championship Trophy named after Paterno and pioneering coach Amos Alonzo Stagg.

Fans of the Nittany Lions, named after mountain lions that once roamed near State College and the landmark Mount Nittany, would have wanted Paterno’s final game to be a celebration like none in memory at Beaver Stadium.

Instead, Paterno was replaced after 46 years seasons by Tom Bradley, currently defensive coordinator, who will take over as interim head coach.

Such is the hoopla surrounding the team and its coach that students camp out at Beaver Stadium before home games in what locals call “Paternoville.”

“I think that he really, really, really loves the school and he would do anything for the kids and for the team,” said Gabby Laura, 18, after Paterno’s announced his resignation. “I support him completely. I’m really sad to see him go.”

As one of America’s premier state colleges, Penn State has long used Paterno’s image to help attract the best students and his likeness on its literature to convince alumni and donors to support their programs.

With 409 victories at Penn State, Paterno has won more games in big-time college football than any other coach in the history of a sport dating back to the late 19th century. Only a handful of other coaches, such as the late Paul “Bear” Bryant of the University of Alabama, are held in such reverence.

Paterno was head coach at Penn State since 1966 — an incredible 46 seasons. But he had become very frail and had coached recently from the press box rather than the sidelines.

A beloved institution in Pennsylvania, he won national championships in 1982 and 1986 and survived calls that he leave the post because of his advanced age.

“Success with Honor” is the motto of Paterno’s football program, which boasts high graduation rates among players.

SANDUSKY SCANDAL

Paterno’s former long-time assistant coach Jerry Sandusky is accused of sexually abusing at least eight boys over a period of more than a decade. Two other university officials are charged with not reporting an incident in 2002 when Sandusky allegedly was seen sexually assaulting a child.

Lawyers for the men have said they maintain their innocence.

Paterno, who does not face any charges and was not a target of the criminal investigation, said he was informed of an incident involving Sandusky in 2002 and passed the information up the chain of command to the university’s athletic director.

Paterno has been criticized for not following up or doing more to address the allegations, such as calling the police.

“This is a tragedy,” he said in his retirement statement. “It is one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more.”

“I am absolutely devastated by the developments in this case. I grieve for the children and their families and I pray for their comfort and relief,” he said.

The New York Times wrote that if Penn State were the Catholic Church, Paterno would be the Pope, surely aware of what was happening and enabling the cover-up.

“With his effective silence, Paterno was protecting not only himself but also 50 years of mythology that had been building up around him since he arrived at Penn State as an assistant during the Truman administration,” The Times wrote.

Born in Brooklyn, Paterno played football at Brown University from 1946-49 before joining Penn State as an assistant coach in 1950. Sixteen years later he began building his prodigious resume as head coach.

Paterno steered the Nittany Lions to seven undefeated regular seasons and Penn State claimed three Big Ten Conference titles — one solo in 1994 and as co-winners in 2005 and 2008.

He is also the all-time leader among college coaches with 24 post-season wins in 37 bowl game appearances and is the only coach to win the Rose, Sugar, Cotton and Orange bowls.

His team struggled in 2003. When he said he would consider retirement if his 2005 team did not improve, the Nittany Lions responded with an 11-1 record.

Paterno’s program was known for churning out stars who went on to play in the National Football League. On his watch, Penn State produced 78 first-team All-Americans — among them 10 linebackers coached by Sandusky at the school that became known as “Linebacker U.”

More than 350 of Paterno’s players have signed NFL contracts, with 32 of them drafted in the first round.

Paterno was also known for his philanthropy, giving more than $4 million to Penn State for scholarships, faculty endowments and construction.

He was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2006 but his induction ceremony was delayed a year so he could recover from injuries suffered in a sideline collision.

(With reporting from State College by Ian Simpson and Edith Honan; Editing by Will Dunham and John O’Callaghan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111110/us_nm/us_usa_crime_coach_profile

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Matthew Fox wants jury trial in bus driver suit

(AP) ? Matthew Fox wants a jury trial in a Cleveland civil lawsuit claiming the former star of TV’s “Lost” punched the driver of a chartered party bus.

Online court records show Fox made the demand in a counterclaim filed Thursday.

In her lawsuit, driver Heather Bormann of Cleveland alleges that Fox punched her in the breast, groin, arm and legs after she blocked him from boarding the bus on Aug. 28. Fox was in Cleveland for a movie shoot.

Bormann’s suit says she needed medical treatment for injuries that led to a loss of income. She’s seeking at least $75,000 in damages.

Cleveland prosecutors reviewed the case and declined to file charges against the actor.

Messages for comment were left early Tuesday for the attorneys for both Fox and Bormann.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-08-Bus%20Dispute-Matthew%20Fox/id-f668e1776cc341adb17906b39918aadb

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Russia Launching Probe to Sample Mars’ Moon Phobos Today

News | Space

Lift-off from Kazakhstan’s Baikonur cosmodrome is set for 3:16 p.m. EST. The main goal is to grab some dirt from Phobos’ surface and return the samples to Earth in 2014


An artist’s concept of the Phobos-Grunt spacecraft nearing the Martian moon Phobos. Image: Roscosmos

Russia is set to launch a robotic spacecraft to the Mars moon Phobos today (Nov. 8), marking the nation’s first attempt at an interplanetary mission in 15 years.

The Phobos-Grunt mission is slated to blast off from Kazakhstan’s Baikonur cosmodrome at 3:16 p.m. EST today (2016 GMT; 12:16 a.m. local time on Nov. 9). The main goal is to grab some dirt from Phobos’ surface and return the samples to Earth in 2014 (“grunt” means “soil” in Russian).

If successful, Phobos-Grunt could shed a great deal of light on the early days of Mars and the solar system, experts say. It would also be a big morale boost for the Russian space program, which has suffered through the failure of three other Mars missions since the late 1980s.

“If Phobos-Grunt fully carries out its mission, then this will be a world-class achievement,” Igor Lisov, editor-in-chief of the journal Novosti Kosmonavtiki (Space News), told Agence France-Presse. “The problem with Russian space exploration has been that people have forgotten the taste of victory. The task of this mission is to restore confidence in our abilities and the importance of the task.” [Photos: Russia's Phobos-Grunt Mission to Martian Moon]

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=8c89a4bf448590297b553ac2c24950e1

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Gadget Allows You to Keep Bees In Your Apartment

Bees actually do learn when there is food available and when there isn’t. There are times in the San Joaquin Valley when it is a virtual desert for the bees. There’s simply no forage for them at all. During this dearth the bees don’t bother to send out foragers for food at all, just for water. They can tell the temperature outside and they won’t fly outside to forage, just only quick enough to relieve themselves on a warm day. Having them indoors would help them get through the winter as long as you don’t take their honey during that period. They wouldn’t have to spend so much energy to keep warm and they’ll still cluster. There’s a lot of signals that tell the hive what to do. One of them is the length of the day. Shortening days tell the queen to slow down on egg laying and tell the workers to start getting the hive ready for the coming winter.

While the design is cool, I see a lot of potential for problems. Bees like their privacy. While there are observation hives, they have covers to block the light from entering the hive when it’s not being observed. Bees don’t like light entering the hive, period, and will most likely try to cover the glass with propolis in an attempt to block out the light. If they can’t do that then there’s a great potential for them to abscond. It needs a cover for when they’re not being observed. Simply filtering light to the orange spectrum is not going to help them.

The article states that the hive will use some sort of foundation to guide the bees where to draw out comb. If the foundations are made out of plastic, and are not covered in a thin layer of wax, good luck in getting the bees to accept it. They’d rather draw out wonky comb where they want rather than use plastic foundation and that could mean that the glass gets covered with comb. To someone who really doesn’t have any experience with bees, this means opening the hive to get that comb off the glass.

I could go on and on, but in so many ways this is so wrong and it shouldn’t be done. I am a Beekeeper in California by the way. Bees should only be kept where they can be put a safe distance from people. Bees can become extremely defensive of their hives and the potential for getting stung rises with how close you are to the hive. If you’re within 10 feet of the entrance, you’re considered a participant and fair game for a sting.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/5GY5OLU2gzo/gadget-allows-you-to-keep-bees-in-your-apartment

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16. Former world champion loses brave fight with cancer

PHILADELPHIA (Pennsylvania): Joe Frazier, the former undisputed heavyweight champ famed for his epic fights against Muhammad Ali, died on Monday after a brief but brave battle with liver cancer. He was 67.

The family issued a news release confirming Frazier?s death late yesterday night.

The boxing icon won an Olympic gold medal in a brilliant career that spanned almost 20 years but he was best known for fighting Ali in a famed 1970s trilogy of bouts, including the epic ?Thrilla in Manila.?

He had been under home care after being diagnosed a couple of weeks ago with the advanced liver cancer that took his life, a family friend said.

?I will always remember Joe with respect and admiration,? Ali said in a statement. ?My sympathy goes out to his family and loved ones.?

Frazier, nicknamed ?Smokin? Joe,? captured two major heavyweight titles while taking on all comers, including Ali, George Foreman, Jerry Quarry, Joe Bugner, Oscar Bonavena and George Chuvalo.

Frazier was a huge part of the heyday of boxing?s heavyweight division in the 1970s. He finished his storied career with 32 wins (27 knockouts), four losses and one draw.

His four losses came at the hands of just two other legendary fighters from that era: Ali and Foreman.

Manny Pacquiao heard the news after arriving on Monday night in Las Vegas for his title fight against Juan Manuel Marquez on Saturday.

?Boxing lost a great champion, and the sport lost a great ambassador,? Pacquiao said. ?My prayers go out to his family.?

Frazier was the first man to defeat Ali, with a unanimous 15-round decision in 1971 at Madison Square Garden, in what was dubbed the ?Fight of the Century?.

An estimated 300 million people around the world watched the fight on television.

Frazier?s business manager Leslie Wolff said that fight has passed down through three generations and caused Frazier?s fan base to skyrocket.

?If you look into the history of what took place, there is a lot of emotion,? said Wolff. ?When you have a legend, people respond to a legend.?

Frazier and Ali went on to fight twice more.

Ali won a unanimous 12-round decision in a 1974 rematch at the Garden and famously completed the trilogy, winning the ?Thrilla in Manila? in 1975 by stopping Frazier after 14 rounds in their epic fight in the Philippines.

Frazier?s trainer Eddie Futch stepped in to halt the brutal slugfest after the 14th round. Futch had to hold back Frazier who could barely stand but wanted to continue the fight into the 15th round.

?Closest thing to dying that I know of,? said Ali after the fight.

For many years after they finished fighting each other in the ring, Frazier remained bitter towards Ali because of Ali?s repeated taunts and verbal jabs.

Ali would often use the words Uncle Tom and gorilla to describe Frazier.

Frazier always tried to take the high road and more recently said he had forgiven Ali.

Frazier won the World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association heavyweight titles in 1970 by stopping Jimmy Ellis in the fifth round of their fight at Madison Square Garden.

He defended the title four times before running into the bigger and stronger Foreman in 1973. ? AFP

Source: http://thestar.com.my.feedsportal.com/c/33048/f/534601/s/19eef201/l/0Lthestar0N0Bmy0Csports0Cstory0Basp0Dfile0F0C20A110C110C90Csports0C98631310Gsec0Fsports/story01.htm

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Montana torches oil-fouled debris from Exxon spill (AP)

LAUREL, Mont. ? State workers set fire to an oil-tainted logjam on an island along the Yellowstone River on Tuesday, the last of dozens of debris piles smeared with crude from an Exxon Mobil pipeline break that dumped 42,000 gallons of oil into the waterway.

Two employees of the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, Derek Yeager and Matt Wolcott, used drip torches to ignite the woody debris as Exxon Mobil contractors looked on.

With a blast of heat and a spiral of smoke, the fire spread quickly through the oil-soaked logs. Just a few hours later, the last of the flames were extinguished with a water hose that had been brought in to keep the blaze from spreading beyond the island.

“Whatever was there is gone now,” Wolcott said of the oil in the logjam.

Elsewhere along Yellowstone, black stains from the July 1 spill near Laurel still can be found on trees and rocks near the shoreline and on numerous islands. Environmental regulators have warned that more damaging crude could re-appear next spring, when high waters stir up any oil trapped in river bottom sediments.

But after more than four months of cleanup work ? an operation that involved more than 1,000 people at its peak ? Exxon Mobil representatives and state officials said Tuesday that the emergency response to the July 1 spill is largely over.

“At this point we’re just dotting the `i’s', making sure it’s all right,” said Rick Lavold, an Exxon Mobil contract cleanup supervisor.

As he spoke, Lavold was working with another contractor to pull charred pieces of wood from Tuesday’s burn out of the river. Stuffing the black material into trash bags in case any oil remained, Lavold added that remediation and reclamation work by the company will continue, including for agricultural areas marred with oil where farmers have worried about long-term damage to their land.

The Environmental Protection Agency has been gone since September, when most areas of moderate or heavy oiling had been addressed. That left the state Department of Environmental Quality as the chief oversight agency for the spill.

DEQ officials said in recent days that they appreciated Exxon Mobil’s cooperation but that some of the damage could not be undone.

“The difficulty is you can’t get everything, and you can’t put it back to the condition it was before the spill,” said DEQ deputy director Tom Livers.

The company plans additional soil and water monitoring, said Exxon Mobil spokeswoman Claire Hassett. She said the company has made a “start to finish” commitment to see the cleanup through.

Federal officials are investigating the cause of the spill. No fines or penalties for Exxon Mobil have been announced to date, although state officials have said those will be coming and that state pollution laws were broken.

Exxon Mobil disclosed last week that it expects costs of the cleanup and pipeline repairs to reach $135 million. That figure could be driven higher by a lawsuit filed by landowners who said they were dissatisfied with the cleanup.

The landowners’ attorney, Cliff Edwards of Billings, said he will seek tens of millions of dollars in damages. Edwards said a dozen landowners are now involved in the lawsuit, four more than signed onto the original complaint.

“These aren’t two-bit properties. These are large properties and large businesses and we have no satisfaction,” Edwards said. “We’ve got resolve and we’re going to take this through the court system.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111108/ap_on_re_us/us_oil_spill_burn

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Eurozone wants cross-party commitment in Greece

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, right, speaks with French Finance Minister Francois Baroin, left, and Belgium’s Finance Minister Didier Reynders, center, during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, right, speaks with French Finance Minister Francois Baroin, left, and Belgium’s Finance Minister Didier Reynders, center, during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos leaves after a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos leaves after a meeting at EU headquarters in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, right, speaks with French Finance Minister Francois Baroin, left, and Belgium’s Finance Minister Didier Reynders, center, during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, left, speaks with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble during a meeting of eurozone finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Greece’s two biggest parties resumed talks Monday to agree on who should be the country’s new prime minister, after reaching a historic power-sharing deal to accept a massive financial rescue package and prevent imminent bankruptcy. Fellow European governments will want concrete progress by the evening, when eurozone finance ministers meet to discuss the possibility of unfreezing bailout loans that had been kept on hold while the country sorted its political turmoil. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

(AP) ? Greece can get a crucial euro8 billion ($11 billion) slice of bailout money this month if the leaders of the two main parties both commit in writing to the terms of the country’s two massive bailouts and the austerity measures and economic reforms that they require, eurozone finance chiefs said Monday.

That payment, which has been delayed by two months, would head off a potentially disastrous default as early as December.

Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg prime minister who also chairs the eurozone finance ministers meetings, said that ministers at their get-together in Brussels asked for a letter co-signed by the two party leaders that they will implement that program.

Such cross-party commitment is important as Greece gears up for new elections early next year.

“It is essential that the entire political class is now restoring the confidence that had been lost into the Greek commitment to the EU/IMF program and to the agreement of the 27th of October,” said European Union Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn. He was referring to an agreement drawn up at a summit of European leaders last month in cooperation with the International Monetary Fund.

While finance ministers were meeting in Brussels, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou and opposition party leader Antonis Samaras were trying to form a unity government that would lead the country in the meantime.

“It should have been done months ago,” Juncker said of the cross-party government.

Italy, which has seen the interest rates on its bonds rise to a euro era record of 6.67 percent, also came in for scrutiny at the meeting Monday in Brussels. Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti assured his colleagues that his country would implement the financial reforms promised last month in a letter from Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, including balancing the budget by 2013 as well as reforming pensions and deregulating the labor market.

Rehn said it was crucial for Italy to implement the policies outlined in Berlusconi’s letter. He said he had sent a letter to Italian authorities asking specific questions about the implementation of the program and he expected a written reply by the end of this week. He did not say what the questions were.

Rehn said a technical mission would be sent to Rome on Tuesday or Wednesday to intensify surveillance of the country’s fiscal policies.

The finance ministers also spelled out technical details of their plan to give their bailout fund more leverage. The eurozone wants to increase the firepower of the euro440 billion European Financial Stability Facility to euro1 trillion by allowing it to insure bond issues from shaky countries like Italy and Spain and by seeking investors from outside the eurozone.

The CEO of the EFSF, Klaus Regling, said the eurozone would create one or more co-investment funds that could take on funding from private investors like big banks and pension funds, non-European countries, or from the International Monetary Fund.

Investors in those fund would also receive some insurance against potential losses. Regling did not provide a figure for how much of potential losses would be insured but said the percentage would depend on each specific country.

What will follow now will be difficult talks with potential investors and rating agencies to determine how the money can be raised.

The waning confidence in the eurozone was made obvious by much lower demand for bonds issued by the EFSF Monday to raise euro3 billion for the bailout of Ireland.

The EFSF said it received orders just a little over the euro3 billion offered, at an interest rate of 3.59 percent. At the EFSF’s first bond issuance for Ireland in January, the fund could have sold nine times as many bonds as it was offering.

Regling said that the 3.59 percent was the highest interest rate the EFSF has had to accept so far, a development he blamed on the worsened situation financial markets and lack of detail on how the fund will be given more leverage. He said he hoped Monday’s announcements would restore some confidence.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-07-EU-Europe-Financial-Crisis/id-d743df5eab6b454db240c48b9fba1346

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Shooting Challenge: Duotones [Shooting Challenge]

Have you ever wondered why some colorless shots (like sepia) are dull while others are absolutely striking? At least some of the time, it comes down to the duotone process. And for this week’s Shooting Challenge, you’ll create duotones. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/LMMROdojFXg/shooting-challenge-duotones

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Adele Undergoes Throat Surgery

Adele could use her fans’ get-well wishes. The 23-year-old singer underwent laser microsurgery in Boston to repair damaged, hemorrhaging vocal cords that caused her to cancel most of her concert dates this year.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/adele-undergoes-throat-surgery/1-a-400404?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aadele-undergoes-throat-surgery-400404

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