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Saturday, September 29, 2012

102-Year-Old Gets A Full-Ride Scholarship To The University Of Michigan


By Matthew Boesler | Business Insider

102-year-old Margaret Dunning is going back to finish her degree at the University of Michigan after 80 years in the real world, and she's getting a full scholarship to do it.

During the Great Depression, Dunning had to drop out of U of M to work for her mother – and she never ended up going back.

After Dunning was featured in a TODAY.com article for her passion about cars, auto products manufacturer The FRAM Group decided to honor her with a scholarship and send her back to get her degree.

NBC's Today Show has the story:

Still, the idea of returning to school after all these decades has filled Dunning with a rush of excitement. She said she figures she has about a year to go before completing her degree, and she’s already plotting out her commute to the university campus in Ann Arbor.

“I’ll have to figure out just what I’ll study, but it will be in business, though — I know that,” she said. “I’m still running a business right now. ... It’s a trust fund.”

“I’m very, very pleased about it,” she said. “I feel that I’ve been granted a few years that other people do not have, and I am really very happy that I have this beautiful old world to live in.”

Monday, September 24, 2012

Could You Live in a 120-Square-Foot House?



By Susan Johnston | U.S.News & World Report LP

When Kerri Fivecoat-Campbell and her husband moved from Kansas City to a 480-square-foot lake house in Northwest, Ark., they'd planned to build a larger house on the same property and use the existing house as an office and guesthouse.

Yet the recession convinced the couple to stick with the house they had and build another small space as an office and guesthouse. Fivecoat-Campbell says they're happy with a smaller footprint. "We live in an area where recreation is a big thing," she adds. "We like to be outdoors and spend time with the dogs and not have to maintain a big house. It's easier to take care of."

The constant upkeep and high expense of McMansions have made smaller homes appealing to many Americans. "People realize now if they live in a tiny house, they have more money left over to pay for other things," says Derek Diedricksen, a maker of small houses in Stoughton, Mass., and author of Humble Homes, Simple Shacks, Cozy Cottages, Ramshackle Retreats, Funky Forts: And Whatever the Heck Else We Could Squeeze in Here.

Costs for tiny homes can vary depending on factors like the materials and complexity of the design. "There are people who've gone out and built a modest house for $5,000 to $10,000 using Craigslist or free materials, but there are some that are more high-end, like rustic cabins," says Diedricksen.

Margaret Webster, who moved into a 12 x 16 foot house on Echo Valley Farm outside Ontario, Wisc., a few years ago, says she paid close to $40,000 for the house, which includes solar panels, a wood stove, a wind turbine, and a water tank. "It costs more now," adds the retiree.

Some tiny house-dwellers who DIY their homes wind up paying much less. Sage Radachowsky, who lives in Boston in a 120-square foot house he built atop a car trailer, says the materials for his house cost around $3,000. (He rents a driveway to park it, but says the driveway costs less than a typical small room in Boston.)

Here's a look at why these tiny home-dwellers chose to downsize and how they made the transition:

Low (or no) mortgage. Webster and Radachowsky have no mortgage on their homes, which can be freeing both financially and personally. "My life is less expensive, which gives me more time to enjoy it," says Radachowsky, who goes hiking, writes songs, build guitars, and grows food in a small garden.

Fivecoat-Campbell took out a mortgage, but she says it might be preferable to go mortgage-free on a smaller home. Back when she and her husband owned two homes, they were on a balloon payment for the lake house and worried that an interest rate hike might price them out of the house. They spent eight months searching for a bank that would allow them to refinance. "[Companies] couldn't find anything comparable to the house," she says. "There are small houses and trailers but nothing like our house. That's where we ran into trouble refinancing, but we did find a local bank that would refinance us."

Lower utility costs. Tiny house-dwellers have several options for utilities. If building codes allow it, Diedrickson says they can install electricity and plumbing as they would in a regular house, but that's generally more expensive than going off the grid. "The majority of the world still uses outhouses," he points out. "There are different toilets on the market, like composting toilets, that in essence turn your waste into ash or usable compost, so you can bypass having to have a septic system at all."

Tiny house-dwellers who are eco-conscious appreciate not just the lower utility costs but the smaller environmental impact. Radachowsky harvests electricity from a solar panel and says he pays around $20 a month for propane to heat the house during the coldest months. Webster, meanwhile, has no connections to public utilities except for a telephone (so she can stay in touch with family). She uses a composting toilet and washes in a bucket. "I grew up washing in a bucket," she explains, "but sometimes I wash my hair next door because it's easier."

Still, utilities for tiny houses can create complications. Fivecoat-Campbell opted to dig a well, which "went deeper than we'd ever imagined," running up the cost since the company charged by the foot. However, she's happy with the lower cooling costs in the summer.

Less clutter. A smaller living space pushes the homeowners to cut down on their possessions, but that means they have fewer belongings to maintain and spend less time searching for lost items. "It's amazing, we just don't need all that room or that much stuff," says Webster, who's previously lived on a sailboat and says her next project is converting a car to electric.

Initially, Radachowsky stored some of his belongings in a basement. "I'm still winnowing my belongings down, but that is a liberating process," he says.

Unlike a McMansion with endless rooms to fill, a small house acts as a deterrent for buying more stuff. "In a small house, everything has to be functional," says Fivecoat-Campbell, who videotaped some of her belongings, such as her mother's dining room set and an antique spinning wheel, before cleaning house. "I'll always have the memories, I just won't have to store the stuff," she says.

Diedricksen points out that tiny houses aren't new, but they make a lot of sense financially: "Growing up, most of my friends' parents were never around to enjoy their big houses because they were working to pay for them."

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Four Generations Skydive for Washington Man's 87th Birthday





By CHRISTINA NG | Good Morning America

Monty Montgomery had one wish for his 87th birthday. He wanted to go skydiving, and he wanted it to be a four-generation family event.

His family granted his wish. Montgomery's 60-year-old daughter, Donna Haskins, took the leap with him, along with a 38-year-old grandson and a 19-year-old granddaughter in Tacoma, Wash.

It took several years for Montgomery to convince Haskins to take the jump, but he said it was important to him to do it now because he is going blind.

"He has macular degeneration, so he's losing his eyesight, and my son is deploying to Afghanistan in the near future, and he wanted to do it while he could still see and while he grandson was still here," Haskins told ABCNews.com.

Montgomery is blind in his left eye, but still has some vision his right eye.

The group jumped out of a plane at 13,000 feet and fell for 8,000 feet before deploying parachutes.

"It was awesome," Haskins said. "When you're doing the free fall, it's like the world was at my feet and the horizon was beautiful, and it just felt very freeing."

Montgomery told ABC News' Seattle affiliate KOMO-TV that he was thrilled to feel the fall, hear the wind, smell and taste the air, but, most of all, that he could see the view.

"He loved it," Haskins said. "He wants to skydive once more."

The adventure was especially meaningful for Montgomery and Haskins, who were reunited seven years ago after a divorce separated them when Haskins was a child.

"I took me a while to just work through all the emotions of the whole thing and I finally contacted him. I called him on the phone and said, 'This is your daughter,'" she said. "We met and we've had many adventures, skydiving being the best."

When Montgomery saw Haskins seven years ago, he told KOMO he "cried like a baby."

"One day I don't have a family and the next day I have beaucoups of them," Montgomery said with a laugh. He is expecting his first great-great-grandchild next spring.

He and his family are relishing all of their time together.

"He's got a very quick wit," Haskins said. "He's very funny and he's a typical man from that generation. He does not like to show emotion, but now as he's around his family and great-grandchildren, he can be very tender and emotional."

The 87-year-old Montgomery is already planning his next big adventure.

"He said that he would like to try bungee jumping," Haskins said. "He walks every day and he lives alone, and he still cooks and takes care of his house. He's just amazing for his age."

Thursday, September 13, 2012

'Miracle' tree removed in tsunami-ravaged city






By Akiko Fujita | ABC News

 The tsunami-ravaged city of Rikuzentakata, Japan, cut down the lone pine tree that survived the disaster 18 months ago and came to symbolize hope, but there are plans to keep the preserved tree on display.

Crews began the delicate process of cutting the 270-year-old tree into nine different sections Wednesday morning, removing large branches by crane as residents looked on.

Some 70,000 pine trees dotted Rikuzentakata's waterfront before the tsunami hit in March last year, but only one survived the destructive waves. Residents called the 89-foot tree a "miracle," but the saltwater that seeped into the roots proved to be too much.

Crews plan to hollow out the tree trunk now, and insert a carbon spine inside after treating the wood. They will replace the original branches with plastic replicas, before returning the pine to its original place next February, just shy of the second anniversary of the disaster.

"This tree has had such a big role," Mayor Futoshi Toba told reporters. "Reconstruction is just beginning, and the process is a long one. This is just a temporary move."

The entire process is estimated to cost 150 million yen ($27 million), a hefty price tag considering the larger reconstruction projects the city is already tasked with. A Facebook page was launched in July, to raise money for the preservation project, and city officials said they have collected more than $330,000 so far.

Nearly 20,000 people died when the tsunami hit the Tohoku region in northeast Japan 18 months ago. Hundreds of thousands of people remain displaced by the disaster

Sunday, September 9, 2012

2 tornadoes strike in NYC

Associated Press/Joey Mure - This photo provided by Joey Mure, shows a storm cloud over the Breezy Point area of Queens section of New York, on Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. A Fire Department spokesman said there were power lines down and possibly other damage in the Point Breeze section of the Rockaway peninsula in Queens. The general manager of the Breezy Point Surf Club tells the Associated Press the storm ripped up cabanas and even picked up industrial-sized metal trash bins. The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning for Queens and Brooklyn as a line of strong thunderstorms moved through the city. The service said radar detected a "strong rotation" in the storm, but there was no immediate confirmation that a twister actually formed. (AP Photo/Joey Mure)  


By KAREN MATTHEWS | Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Two tornadoes struck New York City on Saturday, one swept out of the sea and hit a beachfront neighborhood and the second, stronger twister hit moments later, hurling debris in the air, knocking out power and startling residents who once thought of twisters as a Midwestern phenomenon.

Videos taken by bystanders showed a funnel cloud sucking up water, then sand, and then small pieces of buildings, as the first moved through the Breezy Point section of the Rockaway peninsula in Queens.

The second hit west, in the Canarsie section of Brooklyn also near the water, about seven minutes later. The National Weather Service said winds were up to 110 miles per hour, and several homes and trees were damaged.

No serious injuries were reported.

Residents had advance notice. The weather service had issued a tornado warning for Queens and Brooklyn at around 10:40 a.m. The storm took people by surprise anyway when it struck about 20 minutes later.

"I was showing videos of tornadoes to my 4-year-old on my phone, and two minutes later, it hit," said Breezy Point neighborhood resident Peter Maloney. "Just like they always say, it sounded like a train."

In the storm's wake, the community of seaside bungalows was littered with broken flower pots, knocked-down fences and smashed windows.

At the Breezy Point Surf Club, the tornado ripped the roofs off rows of cabanas, scattered deck chairs and left a heavy metal barbecue and propane tank sitting in the middle of a softball field, at least 100 yards from any nearby home.

"It picked up picnic benches. It picked up Dumpsters," said the club's general manager, Thomas Sullivan.

Half an hour later the weather was beautiful, but he had to close the club to clean up the damage.

The roof of Bob O'Hara's cabana was torn off, leaving tubes of sunscreen, broken beer bottles and an old TV set exposed to the elements.

"We got a new sunroof," said O'Hara, who has spent summer weekends at the Breezy Point club for his entire 52 years. "The TV was getting thrown out anyway," he added.

The second tornado tore through parts of Brooklyn with strong winds, causing structural damage to several homes and felling trees.

The tornado struck as part of a line of storms that were expected to bring damaging winds, hail, heavy rain and possibly more tornadoes throughout the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Saturday. Across New York state, in Buffalo, strong winds from a broad front of thunderstorms blew roofing off of some buildings and sent bricks falling into the street.

The city of Albany canceled the evening portion of an outdoor jazz festival because of the threat of storms, and hundreds of upstate New York homes lost power as the weather system moved through.

The storm system killed four people, including a child, in Oklahoma on Friday.

Radar data, video and witness reports confirmed that the cyclone that hit New York City was a tornado, National Weather Service meteorologist Dan Hofmann said. He said an inspection team would assess the damage and before estimating the strength of the storm. Hofmann said some witnesses were reporting that the wind had been strong enough to lift cars off the pavement.

Lizann Maher, a worker at Kennedy's Restaurant at the edge of Jamaica Bay, said she saw a "swirling cone kind of thing with something flying in it" come down and then head back out into the water toward Brooklyn.

"It was scary. We have all glass so we kept saying, 'Get away from the glass!' just in case it did come back around," she said.

Tornadoes were once exceedingly rare in New York, but they have occurred with regularity in recent years. A small tornado uprooted trees on Long Island last month. In 2010, a September storm spawned two tornadoes that knocked down thousands of trees and blew off a few rooftops in Brooklyn and Queens. A small tornado struck the same year in the Bronx. In 2007, a more powerful tornado damaged homes in Brooklyn and Staten Island.

The storm delayed play at the U.S. Open tennis tournament a few miles away. The women's final, scheduled for Saturday night, was postponed until Sunday because of a forecast of additional rain. The second of two men's semifinals was suspended Saturday with David Ferrer leading Novak Djokovic 5-2 in the first set.

Associated Press writers David B. Caruso and Colleen Long in New York and Ed Donahue in Washington contributed to this report.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

England's Largest Nude Land Sculpture Unveiled

    ABC News - England's Largest Nude Land Sculpture Unveiled (ABC News)




By Alexandra Ludka | ABC News

Northumberlandia, which is being called the world's largest human landform, will officially open today. Also know as "The Lady of the North," the land sculpture of a reclining lady will be unveiled by Princess Anne.

The sculpture is part of a 46-acre park with four miles of footpaths open to the public. Northumberlandia is a unique sculpture that was made from the land in the park.

"Far from being a rigid manicured art form Northumberlandia is a living part of the countryside that will mature over time and change with the seasons," the website says. "What you see when you visit is only the start of something that will evolve through generations."

Made of 1.5 million tons of rock, clay and soil, The Lady of the North is 100 ft. high and a quarter of a mile long. She is the masterpiece of Charles Jenks, an American-born architect who has come to fame in England.

The concept was born in 2004 and building began in 2010 by The Banks Group as part of the restoration of the nearby Shotton surface coal mine. The land was donated by Blagdon Estate.

The project is in line with the "restoration first" concept, which involves "taking an extra piece of land donated by the landowner, the Blagdon Estate, adjacent to the mine and providing a new landscape for the community to enjoy while the mine is still operational."

Work on Northumberlandia began two years ago when soil and clay from the surrounding areas were formed into the shape of a reclining lady. Next, grass seed was strategically placed to create the outlines of the woman.

The project cost 3 million euro and will be maintained by independent charity The Land Trust.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

DTotD: Fan does a faceplant while trying to catch ball at Morelia-Pumas match


By Brooks Peck | Dirty Tackle – 18 hours ago

Trying to catch a ball and maintain balance in the stands proved too difficult for one fan at a Liga MX (the new name for the Mexican primera division) match between Morelia and Pumas. As he leaned forward to try and make the grab, he lost his footing and faceplanted into the seat in front of him. He also failed to catch the ball. And the two people in front of him thought it was hilarious. As did the commentators.

Luckily there were some good samaritans nearby to help him back up and on the bright side, at least there wasn't a back on those seats.

This has been the Dirty Tackle of the Day: a chronicling of unfortunate events.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Coke (Unofficially) Crosses Into North Korea


                                                   

By Chris Nichols | The Exchange

Coca-Cola (KO) doesn't quite have the whole world covered (yet), but one of the most recognizable corporate brands in existence appears to have gotten a bit closer now that it's been spotted in arguably the most secretive nation on earth.

Britain's Telegraph ran a piece Friday that included a video featuring Coke being served in what is said to be a pizza restaurant in Pyongyang, North Korea. According to the article, the restaurant is owned by an Italian and North Korean joint venture company.

Coke told The Telegraph that any of its goods that have shown up above the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) "have been purchased by unauthorized third parties and imported into the country from other markets where they were sold," and that if sales of its products are happening there, it isn't being done with the company's clearance. In this case, the report says that restaurant-goers learn that what they are drinking is "Italian" Coke, not the American stuff. The video, which according to the time stamp was posted to YouTube last October, is below.



Even though Coke doesn't sell into North Korea officially, it does show the extraordinary power and reach that the cola has. Finding Coke in the DPRK essentially means that you've got as American of a product as there is in a place where the U.S. has no formal diplomatic ties and that is regularly and openly hostile toward Washington. Coke is Coke, whether it's from Italy or the States or anywhere else. Formulations and product tastes might vary slightly by geography, but Coke is undeniably part of the fabric of the red, white and blue.

This shouldn't be mistaken for what might be called soda-pop diplomacy, but if in fact the Atlanta-based soft drink maker has infiltrated the Communist state, even through unofficial and unapproved channels, it would leave Cuba as one of the few places on the planet you'll struggle to find Coke, The Telegraph reports.

Coke simply has a way of making it across reluctant borders, whether officials "want" it there or not. It's astonishingly popular for an obvious reason -- people really like to drink it. In some other nations where the U.S. has severe trade restrictions or even no governmental relationship -- say, for example, Iran -- you've still been able to find Coke in the past. How? Distributors in foreign locations are shipping the product in, whether, as noted above, they're supposed to or not (though Tehran did say in 2010 it was going to ban Coke because of Western sanctions).

Earlier this year, Coke set plans to get back to Myanmar, formerly Burma, a place where it hadn't done business for more than half a century, when the U.S. eased restrictions on corporate dealings with the country. So now it's up to Havana. And you have to wonder how much longer they can hold out. The rest of the world already knows "Coke is it."

The Mike Bloombergs out there might not like to hear this, but Coca-Cola officially sells in more than 200 countries, and its product count tops 3,500, including its flagship drink. Revenue in 2011 was $46.5 billion. According to the company's Web site, 1.8 billion servings of Coke products are consumed globally each day.

Do the math, and that means on average, about one-quarter of the world's population has a Coke beverage of some kind today, tomorrow and every day
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