Archive | March, 2008

Mary Ann Accused of Liking Mary Jane

14 Mar

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For crying out loud, couldn’t someone have given Dawn Wells a ride home from her surprise 69th birthday? The media has accused the beloved sitcom actress of more than she was convicted of. All charges against her, except reckless driving, were dropped.

She looks great for 69, obviously has good friends and enough cash for a good lawyer, so I think Ms Wells is still a role model, even tho the Girl Scouts asked her not to lecture at a recent event where she was scheduled to appear.

Miss Wells is best known as Mary Ann, the sweet country girl in hot pants on Gilligan’s Island. I always thought Miss Wells aged and lived gracefully in the shadow of the typecast spot light. Since Bob Denver also had  dealings with the law about marijuana, its not a big leap to imagine the Castaways passing more than the time on the sandy shores of the back lot.

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Gilligan’s Island star Dawn Wells caught with drugs
March 13, 2008 12:00am | www.news.com.au/heraldsun/

DAWN Wells, who played Mary Ann on Gilligan’s Island, has been caught with marijuana in her car, after being stopped on the way home from her surprise birthday party.

The giggling castaway of the 1960s TV comedy was picked up swerving and repeatedly speeding up and slowing down as she drove home from her surprise 69th birthday party in Idaho.

When the officer who pulled her over asked about a marijuana smell, Wells said she’d just given a ride to three hitchhikers and had dropped them off when they began smoking something.

The officer found half-smoked joints and two small cases used to store marijuana.

Her lawyer said a friend testified he’d left a small amount of marijuana in the car and Wells was unaware of it.

He said Wells was swerving on the road because she was trying to find the heater in her new car.

Under a plea agreement, she pleaded guilty to reckless driving.

Charges of driving under the influence, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance were dropped.

Wells served five days in jail, was fined about $400 and put on probation for six months.

Mega Awesome Mighty Hair

11 Mar

Some of the bestest hair I’ve seen on the interweb, also great people watching. No names, no ads, no comments, no banners, no popups, just great hair, pages and pages of great hair. I love the little frozen moments in time, the energy, the earnestness. You are so beautiful to me.

http://forums.livingwithstyle.com/showthread.php?t=282269

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Creature From Black Lagoon Actor Dies

10 Mar

It sounds like Ben Chapman, the actor who played the Creature from the Black Lagoon (at least on land) had a long, full happy life. Farewell Ben. Read a longer obit here at fangoria.com.

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Services, canoe procession for horror-film icon Ben Chapman

By Wayne Harada | Sunday, March 9, 2008 | http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com

Ben Chapman, the Honolulu resident who played the title character in the 1954 sci-fi horror film “Creature From the Black Lagoon,” will be remembered in a pair of memorial services, one in Honolulu, the other in Hollywood.

The Honolulu service will be at 9 a.m. March 29 at St. Augustine-By-The-Sea Church in Waikiki, with the scattering of his ashes following at 10:30 a.m., according to Merrilee Kazarian, Chapman’s longtime companion. Those eager to participate in the outrigger procession should meet at 10:30 a.m. and bring loose flowers.

A second remembrance will be “a very small private scattering ceremony with the remaining ashes in April, at Universal Studios’ back-lot ‘lagoon’ where ‘CFTBL’ was filmed,” said Kazarian. She will attend along with Chapman’s son.

Chapman appeared widely at sci-fi and collectibles shows to talk about his role as the Gill Man, a quintessential horror-film monster in the black-and-white and 3-D feature.

He died Feb. 21 at Tripler Medical Center.

Dead Animals Found-SC Lizardman Suspected

10 Mar

The big green angry Lizardman, that may recently have returned to South Carolina is a possible suspect in cases of missing and dead cows, coyotes and cats. Animals that oddly, all begin with the letter C. Hide your dogs, ducks, donkey and deer!

Dead cow, coyote found near site of “Lizard Man” mystery
Posted: March 6, 2008 07:37 PM

LEE COUNTY, SC (WIS) – We have been following a renewed investigation into the “Lizard Man.”

Thursday we have learned that two dead animals were found in a field near the home of Dixie and Bob Rawson. The Lee County Sheriff’s Department says it could be linked to some pretty serious damage to the Rawson’s van.

Last week, the Rawsons showed us how the van’s front grill was chewed up, and how the wheel wells on both sides were bent. When some of the Rawson’s cats went missing too, neighbors said the “Lizard Man” might be responsible.

Lee County Sheriff E.J. Melvin is out to inspect the field near the Rawsons on his four-wheeler. “Just going to ride the field, see if there are anymore animals laying out dead.”

Already, they’ve found a cow and a coyote. It’s significant in that they were both found only yards away from the Rawsons’ car.

“This is out of a book,” says Dixie Rawson. And now, Rawson doesn’t know what’s fiction and what’s real.

WIS News 10 first showed you last week the bite marks and bends on her van. Neighbors told her it was the Lizard Man – a seven-foot green giant whose first reported sighting near Scape Ore Swamp 20 years ago entrenched him as a legend in these parts, a legend that’s never been confirmed.

So investigators told the Rawsons not to worry, all that must have been done by some other animal – likely, a coyote. Now Dixie Rawson asks, “If the coyote did this damage, what killed the coyote and the cow? Was it the Lizard Man? I don’t know.”

Sheriff E.J. Melvin says, “I don’t want to get anybody alarmed. But for some reason, I’m sticking with the coyote. But the coyote, that coyote is dead.”

What’s left now is more speculation. Authorities had hoped to extract some blood left on the van’s hood, but the Department of Natural Resources says the sample taken was somehow contaminated. For the record, DNR believes the holes were made by a dog – a dog trying to get at cats underneath the cars.

About a half-dozen of the Rawsons cats are still missing nearly a week after the attack on their car. The passing time is doing little to answer their questions.

Dixie Rawson says, “We’re here in this quiet little town and all of a sudden, this happens.”

How this happened, no one is quite sure yet – making clear only that the Lizard Man mystery isn’t ready to be solved.

Car Gnawed-Possible Return of SC Lizardman

8 Mar

Is he back? The McDonald’s craving Lizardman of the 80′s PUT Bishopville SC on the MAP. Sure hope the Rawson’s insurance covers the damage-because SOMETHING chewed up their car.

Never heard of the lizardman? Check out this archive of original stories and clippings from cryptomundo.com.

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“Lizard Man” returns?
Posted: Feb 29, 2008 06:02 PM| Updated: March 5, 2008 11:55 PM | www.wistv.com

BISHOPVILLE, SC (WIS) – After a nasty surprise Thursday morning for one Bishopville resident, she’s wondering if the “Lizard Man” is back.

Dixie Rawson of Bishopville sent WIS News 10 an e-mail about a big surprise she got at her home Thursday morning. “The whole front half of our van is chewed up. There are bite marks right through the front grill. Both sides of the van above the wheel wells were bitten and the metal is bent like a piece of paper.”

It reminded Dixie of the local legend of the “Lizard Man” that stretches back for decades. Now some are wondering if the Lizard Man is back.

The legend blows in with a brisk winter wind, sending chills through neighbors in Lee County.

“I couldn’t believe it, I just couldn’t believe it,” says Bob Rawson. He looks down at the blood and claw marks on his van. “He literally bit, you can feel where he bit straight through here.”

Who is “he”? It’s a point of renewed debate in the area. Some are sure they know the only creature capable of this kind of damage is the Lizard Man.

If it is the Lizard Man, he’s back nearly two decades after first being spotted near Scape Ore swamp.

No one’s ever been able to confirm the account of the seven-foot monster with green skin, three toes and a three clawed fingers.

In addition to the car damage, the Rawsons didn’t find their cats in the boxes where they usually sleep. They did find the towels inside shredded, and the same story with the morning paper. Whatever did this, the Rawsons aren’t taking any chances.

His Glock loaded, Mr. Rawson is ready to shoot what he feels is most likely a bear. Lee County Sheriff E.J. Melvin says it could be a coyote, but then again, “All the scratch marks, people are saying, ‘Sheriff, it’s Lizard Man.’ Don’t know. It’s hard to say.”

Several of the Rawsons’ 20 plus cats have also disappeared. They’re hoping they were just scared away.

Update:
Alert WIS News 10 viewers asked about the blood found on the Rawson’s van. Authorities tell us they’ve extracted a sample – sending it off for DNA analysis. It could be a month before those results come back.

Bar Owner Makes Crime Fighting BUM-BOT

7 Mar

What fun! It makes me want to go to Atlanta to get drunk at his bar and then cheer as the BUM-BOT does it’s thing. Click here to watch a clip of BUM-BOT in action. The You tube vid is the BUM-BOT being used in in a wacky radio bit. Any way you spell it, bum bot,  bumbot or bum-bot, it’s a neat thing.

After I finally get that motorized bar stool I want a BUM-BOT. Hmm, I know some biker dudes who made a red handled ingloo cooler into a mini bike, so maybe I should talk to them….

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Who needs security when you have a robot?
Atlanta bar owner says his creation protects neighborhood and keeps crime in check

By PAUL DONSKY | The Atlanta Journal-Constitution | Published on: 02/21/08

Rufus Terrill has had it with the drug dealers, petty thieves and vandals he says roam the streets outside his downtown Atlanta bar, O’Terrills.

But instead of calling the police or hiring private security guards, Terrill reached for his toolbox.

He mounted an old meat smoker atop a three-wheel scooter and attached a spotlight, an infrared camera, water cannon and a loudspeaker. He covered the contraption with impact-resistant rubber and painted the whole thing jet black.

And so was born what surely must be Atlanta’s first remote-controlled, robotic vigilante.

Late at night several times a week, Terrill powers up the 4-foot-tall, 300 pound device and reaches for a remote control packed with two joysticks and various knobs and switches. Standing on a nearby corner, he maneuvers the machine down the block, often to a daycare center where it accosts what Terrill says are drug dealers, vagrants and others who shouldn’t be there.

He flashes the robot’s spotlight and grabs a walkie-talkie, which he uses to boom his disembodied voice over the robot’s sound system.

“I tell them they are trespassing, it’s private property, and they have to leave,” he said. “They throw bottles and cans at it. That’s when I shoot the water cannon. They just scatter like roaches.”

Terrill hasn’t named his creation. The day care center operator, Lydia Meredith, lovingly calls it “robo-cop,” a nod to the popular movie series about a half man, half machine police officer.

O’Terrill’s regulars, who cheer on the robot from the safety of the bar’s porch, have coined a much less politically correct moniker: the bum-bot.

Whatever you call it, it’s not an elegant looking machine. Terrill is on the money when he describes it as a cross between the “Star Wars” robot R2-D2 and a tank.

Terrill is far from your average hobbyist. An engineer by training, he also ran for lieutenant governor in 2006, finishing last among the five Democrats on the ballot.

Terrill says deploying the robot has helped keep crime in check, preventing car break-ins and drug deals and stopping vandals from trashing the day care center. The water cannon is on a low setting and is merely a nuisance, he said.

Terrill insists he’s not a kook, that he’s serious about using his robot to fight crime.

“The city lacks the ability to control crime in the area,” he said. “I think I’m doing what I have to do.”

Atlanta police officials said they haven’t received any complaints about the robot. But police spokeswoman Lisa Keyes said Terrill would be committing an assault if he intentionally sprays water on someone when in control of the robot.

Terrill said he is not restricting anyone’s rights and noted that he has written permission from the day care owner to use the robot on her property.

Much of the crime in the area, Terrill claims, is related to a nearby shelter run by the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless at the corner of Peachtree and Pine streets. As many as 1,000 people crowd into the facility on winter nights.

The Task Force’s director, Anita Beatty, said the area’s crime can be traced to drug dealers who prey on the homeless, many of whom suffer from drug addiction.

“I’m not saying everybody who lives here is an angel,” said Beatty. “But it’s simply not true that this place attracts crime to the neighborhood.”

Beatty said she had heard about the robot but had yet to see it in action.

“”I just hope he keeps his little robot away from our place, because it sounds kind of angry,” she said.

But some are glad to see stepped-up security in the neighborhood.

Meredith, who manages the day care facility, Renaissance Learning Center, said the robot has helped protect her property.

“I’m happy to have the robo-cop,” she said, laughing. “I wish I had two or three more robo-cops. I wish I could afford to have a robo-cop myself.”

Terrill said his efforts have been criticized by some, who suggest he’s out to get the homeless. One person who’s been face-to-um, face with the robot told him it’s inhumane to use a machine against people. Terrill said the man threatened to shoot him, but so far he’s not been harmed.

Terrill is undeterred.

“It’s not a fight against the homeless, it’s a fight against crime,” he said. “I’m just trying to run a business in a peaceful manner.”

No Savings in Daylight Savings Time

7 Mar

There have been few constants in the life of Miss Fidget. Among those constants are an enduring love of the movie IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD, respect for Ben Franklin and a biannual repugnance to changing ones clocks. Turns out the latter two are contradictory as it’s dear Mr Franklin’s fault most of America randomly fiddles with time twice a year. Research proves it’s actually bunk and cost $$.

But the kids will stand in the dark waiting for the bus! But the farmers will have to work in the dark! But the dairy farmers cows will know the “real time.” And what about the spike in car accidents due to a drowsy and confused populace?

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Daylight saving time costs nation $1.7 billion
By William F. Shughart II | March 7, 2008 | themorningcall.com

Americans’ body clocks will suffer another jolt this weekend as daylight saving time returns and everyone (except Arizonans) goes back to the future by an hour. The annual ritual of springing forward and falling back has joined death and taxes as one of life’s certainties.

Since the passage of the Energy Security Act of 2005, which extended daylight saving time (DST) by four weeks — to eight months of the year — DST has become more standard than … standard time. According to the legislation’s co-sponsors, Reps. Edward Markey, D-Mass., and Fred Upton, R-Mich., the daylight saving time extension is supposed to significantly reduce energy usage, as evening sunlight replaces power-generated electricity an additional hour each day.

Unfortunately, this dramatic cut in energy use could very well be illusory, while the costs of daylight saving time are very real.

In making the case for expanding daylight saving time, Reps. Markey and Upton promised Americans it could reduce fossil-fuel consumption by the equivalent of 100,000 barrels of oil a day. It turns out, however, that the 100,000-barrel-a-day estimate was based on outdated data from 1974, when then-President Richard Nixon, in the midst of an energy crisis, ordered clocks moved ahead an hour in January. In fact, there is no reliable data supporting the premise that DST significantly reduces energy consumption. U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) officials admit ”the jury is still out on the potential national energy savings.”

As is so often the case, Washington adopted a political policy of shooting first and asking questions later, ordering DoE to submit a study to Congress, due on an unspecified future date, on whether DST actually saves energy. The study has not yet been done.

Although it is unclear what benefit Americans derive from adjusting their timepieces twice a year, the costs they bear are clear. As the Benjamin Franklin adage goes: Time is money, and time spent resetting clocks and watches is time that cannot be devoted to other, more valuable uses. Switching between daylight saving and standard time has what economists call an ”opportunity cost.”

Economists typically value the opportunity cost of a person’s time at his or her wage rate. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the average American’s hourly wage was $17.57 in September 2007. Assuming that it takes everyone 10 minutes to move all of their clocks and watches forward or backward by an hour, the opportunity cost of doing so works out to $2.93 per person. Multiplying that number by the total U.S. population (excluding Arizona) yields a one-time opportunity cost for the nation of just under $860 million — or, to be more precise, $858,274,802. Since clocks must be changed twice every year, this back-of-the-envelope calculation must be doubled, to approximately $1.7 billion annually.

There are other costs associated with adjusting to DST and standard time as well. For example, the time changes interrupt our circadian rhythms — that is, our daily biological patterns — and productivity inevitably falls in the days following the switch, as people report groggily to work.

Perhaps daylight saving time promotes sales of charcoal briquettes and gas grills, but that would hardly justify the $1.7 billion or more in opportunity costs we bear, particularly if there are no significant offsetting energy savings.

So why is it, exactly, that we allow the government to tell us what time it is?

William F. Shughart II, a senior fellow of the Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif., is F.A.P. Barnard Distinguished Professor of Economics at the University of Mississippi. Economics graduate student Brandon Ramsey contributed to this article.

Vikings of Yore Were Dapper Dressers til Jesus Killed The Fun

4 Mar

If you want to dress as a Viking, you’ll need more than a double horned helmet. Historical research has proven they were dapper dressers and the ladies were downright sexy, til Christianity got popular and fashion went to hell.

Vikings did not dress the way we thought
www.physorg.com | February 25, 2008

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Swedish viking men’s fashions were modeled on styles in Russia to the east. Archeological finds from the 900s uncovered in Lake Malaren Valley accord with contemporary depictions of clothing the Vikings wore on their travels along eastern trade routes to the Silk Road. The outfit in the picture is on display at Museum Gustavianum, Uppsala University. Photo: Annika Larsson

Vivid colors, flowing silk ribbons, and glittering bits of mirrors – the Vikings dressed with considerably more panache than we previously thought. The men were especially vain, and the women dressed provocatively, but with the advent of Christianity, fashions changed, according to Swedish archeologist Annika Larsson.

“They combined oriental features with Nordic styles. Their clothing was designed to be shown off indoors around the fire,” says textile researcher Annika Larsson, whose research at Uppsala University presents a new picture of the Viking Age.

She has studied textile finds from the Lake Malaren Valley, the area that includes Stockholm and Uppsala and was one of the central regions in Scandinavia during the Viking Age. The findings, some of which were presented in her dissertation last year, show that what we call the Viking Age, the years from 750-1050 A.D., was not a uniform period.

Through changes in the style of clothing we can see that medieval Christian fashions hit Sweden as early as the late 900s and that new trade routes came into use then as well. The oriental features in clothing disappeared when Christianity came and they started to trade with the Christian Byzantine and Western Europe.

“Textile research can tell us more about the state of society than research into traditions. Old rituals can live on long after society has changed, but when trade routes are cut off, there’s an immediate impact on clothing fashions,” says Annika Larsson.

She maintains that Swedish Viking women in the pre-Christian period probably dressed much more provocatively than we previously believed. She bases her theory on a new find uncovered in Russian Pskov, close to Novgorod and the eastward trade routes then plied from Sweden. The find consists of extensive remnants of a woman’s attire, which Annika Larsson claims does not square with the traditional picture of how Viking women dressed.

Previously it was thought that Viking women wore a long suspender (brace) skirt, with both the front and back pieces consisting of square sections, held together by a belt. Clasps, often regarded as typical of the Viking Age, were attached to the suspenders roughly at the collar bone. Under this dress they wore a linen shift, and on top of it a woolen shawl or sweater.

“The grave plans from excavations at Birka outside Stockholm in the 19th century show that this is incorrect. The clasps were probably worn in the middle of each breast. Traditionally this has been explained by the clasps having fallen down as the corpse rotted. That sounds like a prudish interpretation,” says Annika Larsson.

She maintains instead that the Birka women’s skirts consisted of a single piece of fabric and were open in front. The suspenders held up the train and functioned as a harness that was fastened to the breasts with the clasps. Annika Larsson’s theory is strengthened by that fact that a number of female figures have been preserved whose outfits both have trains and are open in front. But if we are to believe the archeological finds, this style of clothing disappeared with the advent of Christianity.

“It’s easy to imagine that the Christian church had certain reservations about clothing that accentuated the breasts in this way and, what’s more, exposed the under shift in front. It’s also possible that this clothing was associated with pre-Christian rituals and was therefore forbidden,” she believes.

Source: Uppsala University. This news is brought to you by PhysOrg.com

Oscar Winner Shines in Gaultier Gown

3 Mar

Best actress Oscar winner, Marion Cotillard, wore a stunning gown by Jean Paul Gaultier to the awards. As noted in a prior post seen here, Gaultier’s latest collection has a “sea” theme that honors La Petite Sirene . Cotillard’s dress is a stunning, and flattering example of the mermaid theme seen in that collection.

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And you know-the harpies on Project Runway would have dismissed this gown and  collection as “costumey”.

Dufus Tries Robbery with Gun Shaped Cologne Bottle

2 Mar

What  a wonderful dork-pie-bone head this guy is. Judging from the mug shot, it looks like the guy from Primo Tanning beat up the would be robber pretty good once the smell revealed it wasn’t really a gun.

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Police: Gun shaped cologne bottle used in Akron robbery attempt
February 28, 2008  | www.wkyc.com

AKRON — Akron police say they’ve never quite seen anything like this before, after they say a man used a cologne bottle to try and pull a robbery.

Investigators say 41-year-old Michael Kaminski’s weapon of choice was a bottle of Stetson cologne, shaped like a gun.

Police say Kaminski approached an employee of the Highland Square Video store around 6:45 last night.

The worker was behind the store, talking with an employee of a next door business, Primo Tanning.

Kaminski allegedly told the workers, with his hand in his pocket, to get back into the store.

That’s when one of the men grabbed the suspect, and scuffled with him.

“The supposed gun had flopped out on the ground,” says the employee of Highland Square Video, who did not want to be identified. “I grabbed it and as soon as I picked it up you could feel how light it was and it was at least a toy and later on from the aroma you could tell it was bottle of cologne.”

Both employees held Kaminski down until police arrived.

They discovered that one of the suspect’s weapons was actually a bottle of cologne. The other was a knife.

“Very, very crazy,” says Chris Waters, who owns the video store. “A bottle of cologne, who would think that would be a weapon of choice? Not very smart.”

“This is the first time that I have come across where someone has used a bottle shaped as a gun as a weapon,” adds Lt. Rick Edwards of the Akron Police Department.

Kaminski is charged with Aggravated Robbery and Carrying a Concealed Weapon, for the knife.

He’s been booked into the Summit County Jail.

96 year old celebrates 24th birthday

1 Mar

Happy Leap Day! 

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Wisconsin Leap Year baby, 96, celebrates 24th birthday

StarTribune.com | February 29, 2008

CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis. – Tillie Iverson is observing her 24th birthday Friday — at the age of 96.

Family members from as far away as Florida, Ohio, Nevada and North Carolina are helping her celebrate her Leap Year birthday.

Iverson was born in 1912 on Feb. 29, a date that only comes around every four years. Like others born on that date, she has sometimes marked her birthday on Feb. 28 and sometimes on March 1.

“It depended on what day of the week it was and what fit the best,” Iverson said. “Someone might have been too busy one day, so we’d do it another day.”

But she still feels a little cheated as a Leap Day baby.

“I didn’t enjoy it at all,” she said. “The day before, that’s not my birthday. And the day after, that’s not my birthday either. I’ve been shorted on birthdays.”

Iverson, whose husband died in 1993, helped deliver 42 babies over the years as a midwife. She kept a scrapbook with information on the infants.

“We’d get up in the morning and she’d be boiling her instruments on the kitchen stove, and she’d tell us about the baby she had delivered,” said Evelyn Maloney, one of four surviving siblings. Two others have died.

Iverson lives in an apartment in Chippewa Falls where she still handles many of the daily chores of life, with help from Maloney, who visits often.

© 2008 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.