Saturday, June 25, 2011

Billiards can play the sport who

Billiards!

It is a sport everyone can play?

Once you big enough to have seen a billiard table, you are old enough to play. People can enjoy playing billiards in their 70, 80 and older.

The goal of the game is pretty simple, which makes the game easier to learn for children. Children love to play billiards. You are playing with their parents on pool tables at home in their basements and family rooms. Almost every child will be fascinated by the spinning and rollingBalls. Once they see that they use a stick to hit a ball pool and go to another ball into a pocket, they are addictive! It is great fun for children, to teach how to play billiards.

People of all ages can learn to be patient and offered a good hand-eye coordination. If you do not get easily frustrated, before you know it, you're doing well and have fun. Then when you go to someone's house for a meeting and someone says: "Let's play a game of pool," you can join in the fun timesand have to laugh at the pool table.

His past, a great time for families to enjoy a lot of time playing together. But be careful, because the guys the competition aspect of the game have hooked, then you need to teach them to be a good sport!

Watching snooker on television can be a good educational experience in itself. If you have a table at home and you or your kids love the game, I suggest your DVR or VCRto record the billiard games, that very often shown on ESPN. These games usually consist of professional players. Who could better observe and learn from one of the best players in the world.

Source: http://sports-billiards.chailit.com/billiards-can-play-the-sport-who.html

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Va. man charged in 2010 DC-area military shootings (AP)

LEESBURG, Va. ? A Marine Corps reservist arrested in a security scare near the Pentagon last week was charged Thursday in a series of pre-dawn shootings at the Pentagon and other military buildings in the Washington area last year.

Yonathan Melaku, 22, of Alexandria, has been in custody since early Friday, when he was caught after fleeing from police while trespassing inside Arlington National Cemetery after dark. His behavior and possessions prompted immediate suspicion from authorities, who closed the highways leading to the Pentagon during the Friday rush hour and launched an intensive investigation.

Federal prosecutors said in court documents Thursday that they found bomb-making materials in Melaku's backpack and later found a typewritten list of potential bomb components inside his home. Investigators also found a video he took of himself firing shots outside the National Museum of the Marine Corps last fall and repeatedly saying the Arabic words "Allahu Akbar," which means "God is Great."

"That's what they get. That's my target. That's the military building. It's going to be attacked," he said in the video, which shows him firing shots out the passenger-side window at the museum, according to court papers.

Melaku lists his religion as Muslim in military papers, according to a Marine Corps spokesman.

He has been a Marine reservist since September 2007 but has never deployed overseas. The Marine Corps has initiated procedures to kick him out of the Corps, and Melaku is not objecting, said spokesman Lt. Col. Francis Piccoli.

Military records for Melaku do not show any violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Piccoli said. But Melaku did miss mandatory training exercises from Oct. 14 through Oct. 17. The first shooting, at the Marine Corps museum, occurred on Oct. 17. Melaku made up some of the drills he missed and continued to report for monthly assignments after October, Piccoli said.

Investigators said Melaku was carrying a backpack last Friday with a quantity of ammonium nitrate, which is widely used in explosives and is available commercially as fertilizer; a spiral notebook containing references to al-Qaida, the Taliban and Osama bin Laden; spent 9 mm shell casings; work gloves; a head lamp; and cans of spray paint.

The ammonium nitrate was contained in plastic bags marked "AN," though authorities said the substance was inert.

Ballistics evidence shows that a 9mm handgun was used in last year's shootings, and the spent shell casings in Melaku's backpack were the same brand as those used in last year's shootings, according to an affidavit.

Inside his bedroom, authorities found a numbered list of items ? including an alkaline battery, battery connector for 9 volt, LED light, and epoxy or super glue ? consistent with producing a bomb.

At a news conference Thursday, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Neil MacBride said it was possible Melaku could face further charges.

Investigators say forensic evidence links Melaku to five shootings last October and November, including at a U.S. Coast Guard recruiting office and a Marine Corps recruiting sub-station. He was charged in two of the shootings, outside the Pentagon and the National Museum of the Marine Corps.

The FBI said at the time that the shooter was likely someone with a gripe against the military.

If convicted of all the charges already filed, Melaku would face a mandatory minimum sentence of 35 years in prison and a maximum of life.

Melaku was "not on our radar prior to Friday's events," said James McJunkin, the assistant director in charge of the FBI Washington field office. It appears Melaku had intended to carry out some sort of vandalism in the cemetery, McJunkin said. Authorities believe he was acting alone.

The federal charges, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, allege two counts each of damaging federal property with a gun and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence. He did not make an initial court appearance on those charges Thursday, and a hearing that had been scheduled in state court on unrelated larceny charges was canceled.

The charges were announced as federal authorities in Seattle arrested two men in a plot to use machine guns and grenades in an attack on a military recruiting station that also houses a daycare.

Homeland Security officials do not think it is likely there will be coordinated terrorist attacks against military recruiting and National Guard facilities, according to a May 31 assessment by the department, the National Guard Bureau of Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Division, the U.S. Army Recruiting Command and other organizations.

The agencies did agree, however, that lone offenders or groups will continue to try to launch attacks against these facilities, according to the assessment, marked "for official use only" and obtained by The Associated Press.

An official has said Melaku has no known ties to al-Qaida or any other terrorist organization.

___

Associated Press writers Eileen Sullivan and Jessica Gresko contributed to this report from Washington.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110623/ap_on_re_us/us_military_buildings_shootings

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Ruling goes against former US Rep. Renzi (Providence Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/105177054?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Gore: Obama lacks `bold action' on global warming (The Arizona Republic)

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Wanting To Add A Circuit Breaker Subpanel To Fuse Panel ...






While 120/240 volt sub panel are certainly the norm, I do not believe there is a specific prohibition against a 120 volt sub. If you proceed, I would plan on the ultimate use of this sub, and provide a panel and cabling (4 wire feeders with enough slack to move to new main panel) based on the ultimate use. Also insure the neutrals and grounds are kept separate in the sub.

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Source: http://www.diychatroom.com/f18/wanting-add-circuit-breaker-subpanel-fuse-panel-108656/

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Nepal's rhinos bounce back

The number of rhinos in Nepal was declining rapidly just a couple years ago, but increased security and the help of locals have reversed that trend.

Nepalganj, Nepal

? A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

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From a distance, two napping rhinos look like boulders in the riverbed?s shallow pool. On a hot day in western Nepal?s Bardia National Park, they barely move.

Despite its formidable size and dinosaurlike armor, the animal is vulnerable: Nepal?s rhino population was devastated by poachers during the country?s decade-long civil war, which ended in 2006. In 2000, there were 612 rhinos in Nepal. Five years later that number had dropped to 372, as demand from China for their horns grew.

But there?s some good news for the one-horned rhino, which lives predominantly in India and Nepal. Its numbers grew more than 20 percent between 2008 and 2011, according to Nepal?s National Rhino Census. That?s a big increase for a mammal that breeds only every four years. ?If the trend continues, we could be back at the same level of rhinos recorded just prior to the insurgency within two years,? says Eric Dinerstein, chief scientist at World Wildlife Fund.

The main reasons for the rise are heightened security around Nepal?s national parks and locals who tip off authorities about suspicious activities. Yet rhinos are still a rare sight here. The pair in Bardia finally roused themselves from their afternoon nap to lumber across the riverbed and disappear into the tall elephant grass.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/PTJlPjDXWO0/Nepal-s-rhinos-bounce-back

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