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Watch 90210 Season 3 Episode 3 – 2012 Vision

Watch 90210 S3E3: 2012 Vision Everyone gets to have different night happenings in this episode that they have to deal with, with their own different ways. Silver accepted an invitation from Mr. Cannon to join him in watching the film that he made in his apartment, and he plans to drug Silver’s drink. Naomi is having trouble sleeping because of the constant flashbacks of her rape and she is now trying to take sleeping pills to help her sleep. Teddy wakes up and discovers that she has just hooked up with somebody after his night of drinking, while Dixon got surprised to learn that Ivy is still a virgin. Adrianna regrets her decision to sing a stolen song at a memorial service because it suddenly became an instant hit on the web. The latest installment of our favorite Wilson Family of 90210, which is entitled “2012 Vision” is the hit drama TV series’ 3rd episode of the 3rd season that aired last 09/27/2010 Monday at 8:00 PM on CW. Watch 90210 3×3(0303) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link: HERE

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Watch 90210 Season 3 Episode 3 – 2012 Vision

Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus ‘Despondent’ Over Castle’s Defeat and O’Donnell’s ‘Scary’ Win

Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus raced to her keyboard on Tuesday night to express her upset with the result of the Republican Senate primary in Delaware. In “ Why Christine O’Donnell’s victory is scary ,” posted at 10:15 PM EDT on the paper’s “ PostPartisan” blog for its opinion writers, she seemed more scared by Mike Castle’s defeat than by Christine O’Donnell’s win. While Democrats may be “delighted” by the prospect of facing O’Donnell, Marcus declared: “I’m despondent.” But not, of course, because it means the Democratic candidate will beat O’Donnell. No, the Post’s deputy national editor from 1999 to 2002 ( bio ) is “despondent” because it ends her dream of “a more robust cadre of moderate Republicans” in the Senate and the “ripple effect” means incumbent Republicans “will be that much more watchful of protecting their right flank,” which will cause them to “be that much less likely to take a political risk in the direction of bipartisanship.” Horrors. Indeed, Marcus feared “a bolstered Jim DeMint caucus, following the disturbingly powerful junior senator from South Carolina : Sharron Angle (Nev.), Rand Paul (Ky.), Ken Buck (Colo.) — plus the two other incumbent-slayers of the primary season, Mike Lee in Utah and in Joe Miller in Alaska. Scary. ” An excerpt from her post: Partisan Democrats are delighted about Christine O’Donnell’s Republican primary victory over Rep. Mike Castle in the race for the open Delaware Senate seat. I’m despondent. From the Democratic point of view, the defeat of the moderate, well-known Castle turns what had looked to be a lost cause into a likely win….So the folks who focus on electing Democrats and keeping a Democratic majority can’t be blamed for breaking out the champagne over O’Donnell’s win. Not me, for two reasons. First, I had thought the silver lining of this election year might be to produce a Senate with a more robust cadre of moderate Republicans. That caucus has pretty much dwindled to the two senators from Maine, with very occasional company from colleagues such as Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown and departing Ohio Sen. George Voinovich. It’s awfully hard for a caucus of two to break with the party…. There is strength in numbers, and you could imagine a bolstered group of (at least relative) moderates made up of the likes of Castle, Carly Fiorina (Calif.), Mark Kirk (Ill.) or Dino Rossi (Wash.) Now, it’s as plausible to envision a bolstered Jim DeMint caucus, following the disturbingly powerful junior senator from South Carolina: Sharron Angle (Nev.), Rand Paul (Ky.), Ken Buck (Colo.) — plus the two other incumbent-slayers of the primary season, Mike Lee in Utah and in Joe Miller in Alaska. Scary. But not as scary as reason number two: the ripple effect of victories such as O’Donnell’s on other Republican lawmakers. Republican members of Congress look at races such as those in Utah, Alaska and now Delaware and think: There but for the grace of the Tea Party go I. They will be that much more watchful of protecting their right flank against a primary challenge. They will be that much less likely to take a political risk in the direction of bipartisanship….

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Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus ‘Despondent’ Over Castle’s Defeat and O’Donnell’s ‘Scary’ Win

Justin Bieber, Gaga, Sparkles And Lace Rule VMA Fashion

Selena Gomez, Florence Welch bring goddess glam to the white carpet. By Jocelyn Vena Justin Bieber at the 2010 VMAs Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage There weren’t many guys on the MTV Video Music Awards white carpet who deviated from the night’s standard issue of leather jackets and skinny jeans, but the ladies certainly turned it out for MTV’s biggest night. Hey when you know Lady Gaga is going to be at the show, you have to step up your fashion game. Florence Welch of Florence and the Machine channeled a golden goddess in her lace and sequined gown, which added that touch of edge thanks to some corset detailing around her waist. Katy Perry also decided to go with flowery, lace detailing on her nude-colored dress with a white skirt. Selena Gomez just turned 18, and it showed when she stepped on the carpet. Like Welch, she went goddess in her silver strapless gown with blue sequined detailing. The ‘Hills’ girls represented, with Audrina Patridge opting for silver sparkles (lots of them) and Lo Bostworth in a gold-brocade one-sleeve mini dress. Ciara also wore lace and, like Perry, left little to imagination in her barely-there charcoal-colored dress. Ke$ha, meanwhile, flaunted her sky-high legs in her “garbage bag” dress (word is she made it herself), a long braid and super-high heels. Gaga didn’t disappoint, but she also didn’t look as strange as she’s been known to do (like at last year’s VMAs). Her warrior princess, a tribute to late pal Alexander McQueen, involved a feather Mohawk, blue-highlighted hair and a green-, gold- and rust-colored gown with taffeta detailing and printed with a Renaissance painting. If Selena was a Greek goddess, Gaga went to Italy and hung out with DaVinci. Of course, there were the male standouts, namely thanks to America’s favorite Canadian’s Drake and teen sensation Justin Bieber . Bieber hit the carpet in a vest, black T-shirt and skinny jeans and his usual swagger, while Drake ruled in a fitted black suit. The

Discovery Channel hostage situation

The Discovery Channel building, site of a hostage situation, is seen in Silver Spring, Md, Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. Police shot and killed a man upset with the Discovery Channel network#39;s programming who took two employees and a security officer hostage at the company#39;s headquarters officials said. A hostage situation that began around 1 p.m. in the Maryland offices of the Discovery Channel ended with gunfire late today when police shot and killed eco-crusader James Lee, age 43, freei

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Discovery Channel hostage situation

Discovery Channel hostage 2010

An armored police vehicle drives through the area near the Discovery Channel headquarters building during a hostage situation in Silver Spring, Maryland September 1, 2010. Police shot a gunman who had taken three people hostage at Discovery Channel#39;s headquarters on Wednesday, ending a tense four-hour standoff near Washington. A gunman fired several shots and took at least one person hostage Wednesday at the Discovery Channel headquarters near Washington, media reports said, quoting police w

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Discovery Channel hostage 2010

James J. Lee (gunman hostage) picture

In this image released by the Montgomery County Police, James J. Lee is seen is a booking mugshot from 2008 on disorderly conduct. Lee, 43, a gunman with what police described as #39;concerns#39; with the Discovery Channel networks took at least one person hostage in the company#39;s Silver Spring, Md., headquarters Wednesday, Spet. 1, 2010. A law enforcement official speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing said authorities have identified Lee as the likely suspec

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James J. Lee (gunman hostage) picture

James Jay Lee, Discovery Channel Hostage Taker Dead (PHOTOS)

A radical environmentalist, James Jay Lee, who was armed with a handgun and wearing what seemed to be metallic canister devices, walked into the Discovery Channel’s headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland earlier on Wednesday MORE http://bumpshack.com/2010/09/01/james-jay-lee-discovery-channel-hostage-taker-de… added by: c7girl

PANIC! HACKERS? E-mail outage could cost MILLIONS?

I awoke to find my hotmail account under maintenance. I has been more than four hours. This could get expensive. How much of your life could be disrupted by a lost or late e-mail? http://www.theinternetpatrol.com/hotmail-outage-as-server-goes-down-users-unable… added by: thelastwheeler

Smart cities (un)paving the way for urban farmers and locavores

Evan Fraser, co-author of the new book Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations, declared on NPR's All Things Considered recently that our entire future is imperiled by a global food system “built on some very, very rickety pillars.” Fraser warns that the U.S. is making the same agricultural missteps that brought down the Roman and Mayan Empires: degrading our topsoil; banking blindly on ever-higher yields at a time when unstable weather patterns and depleted resources will more likely bring reduced harvests; cultivating a monoculture that's economically efficient but ecologically ruinous. And talk about a vicious cycle — our fossil fuel-intensive, forest-and-ocean-destroying farming methods worsen climate change, which makes it ever harder to grow food all over the world. A relocalized food system, or “foodshed” (i.e., the path that our food travels to get from farm to plate) offers city dwellers a sustainable alternative to Agribizness-as-usual. Shorten your supply chain and you stand to reap a long list of benefits: increased food security; green space provided by urban farms and gardens; more fresh, wholesome foods and job opportunities where they're needed most; less pollution and waste; and reinvigorated local economies. A seismic shift toward greater self-sufficiency is rippling through every region. We've seen a dramatic rise in farmers markets and CSAs (community supported agriculture programs), and tremendous enthusiasm for community and school gardens and urban farms. Food policy councils are cropping up all over the country. From Sonoma to Chicago to Sheboygan, these coalitions have brought together policy makers, for-profit and non-profit enterprises, farmers, gardeners, and advocates to figure out how to go about relocalizing our food systems. The first link in this brave new food chain? Land tenure, zoning issues, and other regulatory hurdles that city folks have to contend with in order to grow food to feed themselves or sell to others. They’re also working on how to collect and compost food waste instead of shipping it to the landfill; how to increase the percentage of locally sourced ingredients in schools, hospitals, prisons, and other publicly run institutions; how to facilitate local food production and ease distribution bottlenecks; and how to support all kinds of urban agriculture, from school and community gardens to rooftop farms, aquaculture, chicken keeping, and bee keeping. Zoning in on vegging out There's no shortage of places to grow food in even the most densely built communities. What's in short supply, in some cities, is better access to these spaces, and more secure tenure. With all the sweat equity that it takes to turn a barren lot or a rooftop into an edible oasis, our community gardeners and city farmers deserve to have their cherished plots protected from being plowed under to make way for more condos. Here in New York, hundreds of community gardeners and urban ag advocates turned out at a recent hearing to voice their concerns about proposed regulations that would sow uncertainty like a pernicious perennial weed in their carefully cultivated beds. Even now, despite a development-dampening recession and the resurgence of urban farming, community gardeners can't afford to let down their guard. Detroit has become an international poster child for urban agriculture, with an estimated 40 square miles or so of open land and a mayor, Dave Bing, who's eager to convert those vacant lots into productive farms. But Detroit's current zoning laws “neither define nor set standards for community gardening or commercial agriculture,” according to the city planning commission's urban agriculture draft policy. So, Detroit's thriving farms are off the radar, officially speaking. Mayor Bing is being encouraged to move “quickly to change the city and state legal structure to accommodate them,” as the Detroit News reports; Grist's Tom Philpott has more on the history and future of Detroit's urban-ag scene. Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn has declared 2010 the “year of urban agriculture”, as Tyler Falk reported for Grist, and he means it: the city government this month approved new legislation that allows any would-be urban farmer to grow and sell food, increases the number of backyard poultry allowed from three to eight, and other urban-ag-friendly moves. In Los Angeles, Jason Kim, the young chef behind a hot new Silver Lake eatery named Forage, had the novel idea of letting home gardeners trade their surplus produce for meals at his restaurant. As the word spread, Kim's “Home Growers Circle” grew to include more than a dozen backyard farmers. But four months after he launched the program, Kim was obliged to suspend it after the health department informed him that produce from unlicensed growers would be a liability risk should a customer become ill. After doing a little homework, the folks at Forage and the backyard farmers discovered that the Home Growers Circle could receive the same certification that lets professional farmers sell their produce at farmers markets, just by paying a $63 fee and undergoing an inspection. So, as of July, the Home Growers Circle is back in action, equipped with Certified Producer's Certificates from the county agricultural commission that permit them to sell their backyard surplus to restaurants and markets. Front-yard farmers in Sacramento, meanwhile, are just grateful they're allowed to grow any food at all. It took food activists three years to overturn a ban on front yard food gardens that dated back to 1941. Now, they just have to get to work on Sacramento's mayor, who left food out of the equation when he recently announced a “Green Initiative” to make his city more sustainable. It's an all-too-common oversight. Mayor Bloomberg — famous for championing a soda tax, salt reduction, and calorie counts — mysteriously ignored food when he announced New York City's sustainability blueprint, PlaNYC. So, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer stepped up to the plate and collaborated with local good-food folks (disclosure: myself among them) to create FoodNYC, a comprehensive plan to relocalize New York City's foodshed through such initiatives as an Urban Agriculture Program and an Office of Food and Markets. The FoodNYC team has met with the mayor to discuss incorporating their proposals into PlaNYC, but Bloomberg has yet to sign on. San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom needs no such prodding to put food policy front and center. In July, Newsom issued an executive directive which has the potential to “dramatically accelerate urban food production,” according to New School professor Nevin Cohen, an urban food policy expert who lauds Newsom's specific mandates as a meaningful step up from the non-binding agreements and resolutions that typify so many food policy initiatives. added by: JanforGore

Hostage Situation at the Discovery Channel HQ (BREAKING NEWS)

(CNN) — A man believed to be armed took at least one hostage Wednesday at the headquarters of the Discovery Channel in Silver Spring, Maryland, police said. Montgomery County police received a call at about 1 p.m. of a man with a gun and possible explosives, said police spokeswoman Angela Cruz. The call came from One Discovery Place, the channel's headquarters. The area has been evacuated, Cruz said. A SWAT team and additional resources are responding, said Montgomery County police Cpl. Dan Friz. He is in the lobby area, Friz said. Authorities were trying to get in touch with him. It appears the man has some kind of explosive device, Friz said. Fire marshals with explosives experience were assisting. http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/09/01/maryland.discovery.channel/index.html?eref=m… added by: existentialist