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: Electronic Smoke Really Good For Your Health.

Written By Anonymous on March 14, 2011 | 5:30 AM

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5:30 AM | 0 comments

Pi Day

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oPi Day

Happy Pi Day




SUNY?Fredonia algebraic administration celebrates circle
March 14, 2011 - By JENNA LOUGHLIN, OBSERVER Assistant News Editor
Happy Pi Day!

For algebraic geeks everywhere, March 14 represents the approximated amount of the algebraic symbol, pi, - arresting 'pie' - or 3.14. Pi is the ambit of any circle, disconnected by its diameter. The exact amount of pi charcoal alien because no amount how abounding places accomplished the decimal is calculated, a butt still exists.
The algebraic administration began adulatory the honorary anniversary 11 years ago with pie throwing contests and the accident has developed every year.
"It's a anniversary of mathematics, a anniversary of the advancing of bounce and a anniversary of authoritative it center through the additional semester," Dr. Keary Howard, assistant of mathematics apprenticeship at SUNY Fredonia, said.
It is the role of the mathematics alum acceptance to adapt beat and appropriately their job to appear up with a affair for Pi Day at Fredonia State. This year, the affair was Pi Academy Prom, a comedy on aerial academy prom.
Those accommodating in Pi Day activities were accustomed added credibility for cutting brawl attire, authoritative Pi Academy Brawl T-shirts, bringing in a photograph of their own aerial academy brawl account or bringing in a pre-1990s brawl account of their parents or grandparents.
Because March 14 avalanche during SUNY Fredonia's bounce breach this year, the anniversary took abode on Thursday, the aftermost day afore the campus bankrupt bottomward for the break. Starting at noon, participants spent the day on a scavenger hunt, attractive for all things pi accompanying - a barcode that has as abounding afterwards digits from pi, affidavit of a corpuscle buzz alarm or argument bulletin at 3:14 p.m., a being whose altogether is March 14, a cancellation that has afterwards digits from pi, one to three best brawl songs from 1970-1990 with "PI" consecutively in the appellation or band/artist's name, a authorization bowl with 314 or PI on it and more.
Then, starting at 6:15, the brawl began, complete with a airship arc and refreshments. However, the algebraic fun had alone aloof begun. The 11 teams aggressive for the Pi Cup, with names like Acceptance Against Drunk Deriving and E-MC Hammer, were cut to eight afterwards the PI-dometer challenge, four afterwards the Pi-tonic Solids challenge, two afterwards Face the Cookie and a champ was bent by the Airship Pop.
"We don't see mathematics as a distinct article that can be done in isolation," Howard said, acquainted that all the challenges were aggregation challenges area acceptance had to assignment together. "We accent accumulation assignment and teamwork."

Happy Pi Day!
an other article

Sasha Volokh • March 13, 2011 11:59 pm
For Pi day, let me bung David Blatner’s The Joy of Pi, a abbreviate album of fun facts about pi, whose capital advantage is that it cites me, adage article forth the curve of “Sure, abstraction digits of pi isn’t useful, but adage that algebraic has to be advantageous is like adage that the English accent is alone acceptable for acclimation pizza.”
What was that all about? Back in 1996, I and some accompany fabricated up a little catchword branch to bethink the amount of pi to 167 digits. (There may be a slight absurdity in there; I no best remember.) That account was best up in a cardinal of places, including The Scientist and Ivars Peterson’s MathTrek column.
Otherwise, I’ve never profited from this invention, so I allotment it with you now for chargeless lest it be absent forever. Of course, there are a abundant abounding pi mnemonics out there, some abundant best than 167 digits; see, e.g., Poe, E.: Near a Raven (740 digits), which isn’t alike the longest.
In added news, if you blazon in “pi” in the iTunes store, you acquisition a cardinal of absorbing songs alleged “Pi”, some of which complete interesting. Downloads of the day?

4:42 AM | 0 comments

Japan earthquake

Written By Anonymous on March 12, 2011 | 1:44 AM

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Japan earthquake

Japan tsunami




TOKYO - rescuers struggled to reach victims on Saturday morning as Japan reeled after the earthquake and tsunami struck together deadly. An earthquake measuring 8.9 triggers massive tsunami that sent walls of water washing over coastal cities in the north. Concerns mounted over radiation leaks that may arise from two nuclear power plant near the quake zone.

The death toll from the tsunami and earthquakes, the strongest ever recorded in Japan, was in the hundreds, but the Japanese news media quoted officials saying that it could increase to more than 1,300, most of them drowned. About 200 to 300 bodies were found along the surface of the water in Sendai, a port city in northeastern Japan and major city closest to the epicenter.

Thousands of homes were destroyed, many roads are impassable, trains and buses are not running, and power and phones still down. On Saturday morning, the railway company JR says that there are three trains lost in the two northern prefectures.

While the loss of life and property may not be enough, many lives would be saved by the Japanese broad disaster preparedness and strict construction codes. Japan's economy was spared a more devastating punch because the earthquake struck away from the heart of the industry.

Japanese officials on Saturday issued broad evacuation orders for people living in the vicinity of two separate nuclear power plants that had experienced breakdowns in their cooling systems as a result of the earthquake, and they warned that small amounts of radiation could leak from both plants. Japanese television reported that officials said they had detected cesium near one of the reactors at one of the plants, and The Associated Press quoted a nuclear safety official as saying a meltdown was possible at that reactor.

On Friday, at 2:46 p.m. Tokyo time, the quake struck. First came the roar and rumble of the temblor, shaking skyscrapers, toppling furniture and buckling highways. Then waves as high as 30 feet rushed onto shore, whisking away cars and carrying blazing buildings toward factories, fields and highways.

By Saturday morning, Japan was filled with scenes of desperation, as stranded survivors called for help and rescuers searched for people buried in the rubble. Kazushige Itabashi, an official in Natori City, one of the areas hit hardest by the tsunami, said several districts in an area near Sendai’s airport were annihilated.

Rescuers found 870 people in one elementary school on Saturday morning and were trying to reach 1,200 people in the junior high school, closer to the water. There was no electricity and no water for people in shelters. According to a newspaper, the Mainichi Shimbun, about 600 people were on the roof of a public grade school, in Sendai City. By Saturday morning, Japan’s Self-Defense Forces and firefighters had evacuated about 150 of them.

On the rooftop of Chuo Hospital in the city of Iwanuma, doctors and nurses were waving white flags and pink umbrellas, according to TV Asahi. On the floor of the roof, they wrote “Help” in English, and “Food” in Japanese. The reporter, observing the scene from a helicopter, said, “If anyone in the City Hall office is watching, please help them.”

The station also showed scenes of people stranded on a bridge, cut off by water on both sides near the mouth of the Abukuma River in Miyagi Prefecture.

People were frantically searching for their relatives. Fumiaki Yamato, 70, was in his second home in a mountain village outside of Sendai when the earthquake struck. He spoke from his car as he was driving toward Sendai trying to find the rest of his family. While it usually takes about an hour to drive to the city, parts of the road were impassable. “I’m getting worried,” he said as he pulled over to take a reporter’s call. “I don’t know how many hours it’s going to take.”

Japanese, accustomed to frequent earthquakes, were stunned by this one’s magnitude and the more than 100 aftershocks, many equivalent to major quakes.

Japan earthquake: nuclear disaster feared after power plant 'explosion'
Japan is battling to Avoid a nuclear disaster after an Explosion at a power plant in the Aftermath of the country's Biggest earthquake and a devastating tsunami.

The AFP reported that the explosion was heard and seen white smoke billowing into the air in one of two plants where the Japanese government has placed under state of emergency. Some workers were reported injured.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan has warned that radiation leakage that may occur in one reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi facility, 150 kilometers north of Tokyo, after an earthquake measuring 8.9 on Friday.

Reports of aftershocks followed the explosion and came as a major humanitarian operation got under way.

On Saturday morning, at least 1,300 people feared dead and international rescue teams began arriving

Reactor coolant system failed after the earthquake occurred off the Pacific coast, triggered a tsunami 33ft. The pressure in the reactor continued to increase after repeated efforts to return power to the cooling system failed. Radiation in factories surged to 1,000 times the normal levels, officials said, triggering the evacuation orders for residents.

Before the explosion workers had vented off steam in a bid to relieve pressure on the worst-hit reactor.

A second atomic plant in the earthquake-hit area was also experiencing reactor cooling problems. Workers were battling to cool and stabilise the cores of three reactors at the nearby Daini facility.

It was unclear to what extent the reactors’ external structures had been damaged, adding to uncertainty over the scale of any possible leak, and officials and scientists offered conflicting verdicts on the severity to public health.

There was “no immediate health hazard”, public broadcaster NHK announced, citing nuclear officials.

But the government ordered the evacuation of 45,000 people.

“The events that occurred at these plants, which is the loss of both offsite power and onsite power, is one of the rarest events to happen in a nuclear power plant, and all indications are that the Japanese do not have the situation under control,” said Edwin Lyman, a nuclear expert at the Union of Concerned Scientists, a US-based organisation.

“It’s a dice roll whether or not the containment will retain its integrity and prevent a large radiological release.”

Mark Hibbs, a nuclear expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, predicted meltdown. “What we’re seeing, barring any information from the Japanese that they have it under control, is that we’re headed in that direction,” he said.

The “superquake” 81 miles out to sea triggered a tsunami that sent a 30ft wall of water crashing into Japan’s Pacific coast on Friday.

Police said 200 to 300 bodies were found in Sendai, 150 miles north of Tokyo. Another 151 were confirmed killed elsewhere, with 547 missing. At least 800 people were injured.

Fires caused by the tremor were burning in towns and cities along a 1,300-mile stretch of coastline. An oil refinery was one of dozens of buildings ablaze, as emergency workers struggled to cope with the scale of the disaster.

The earthquake was 1,000 times more powerful than the tremor that devastated Christchurch in New Zealand last month, and the world’s seventh biggest since records began.

Four million people were left without electricity amid the destruction in Tokyo alone.

The Foreign Office warned against all but essential travel to Tokyo.

Tourists were feared to be among those unaccounted for after a ship with 100 people on board was reported to have been lost at sea and two trains, one of them a bullet train carrying hundreds of passengers in the Miyagi region, were listed as missing. The Foreign Office said it had been contacted by 400 British families concerned that they had been unable to get in touch with relatives in Japan, but had no information on any British casualties.

Initially, more than 3,000 people living within two miles of the plant were evacuated, with those within a seven-mile radius told to stay indoors. But with a third of the town underwater after a nearby dam burst and radiation levels continuing to rise, officials warned of a leak and tripled the safety cordon to six miles.

Mark Hibbs, a nuclear expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said if the cooling systems were not repaired within 24 hours, the plant risked a “definite danger of a core meltdown".

He said the “ultimate worst-case” was a “Chernobyl scenario” with explosions destroying the reactor and sending a “deadly plume” of radioactivity into the atmosphere.

At first, the government insisted there was no risk of a leak from the plant and that everything was “under control”, despite the failure of the cooling system. But a spokesman for Tokyo Electric Power, which owns the plant, admitted later that there was a problem.

“Pressure has risen in the container of the reactor and we are trying to deal with it,” he said.

His comments were followed by a statement from Japan’s nuclear safety agency saying radioactive vapour would be released to ease the pressure in the reactor, which had risen to one and a half times the norm.

Then came an admission from Japan’s trade minister that “a small radiation leak” could occur at the plant.

Millions of Japanese prepared to spend an uneasy night in fear of a further major tremor as more than 50 aftershocks were reported. The worst affected area appeared to be in and around the sprawling port of Sendai, where the tsunami swallowed everything in its path, churning up houses, cars, trees and boats before dumping them several miles inland.

Seismologists picked up the first signs of the tremor in time for broadcasters to put out an emergency warning one minute before it shook northern Japan, giving millions of people time to take cover.

Japan, which sits at the junction of three continental plates on the Pacific “ring of fire”, experiences up to 2,000 noticeable tremors every year. Newer buildings are designed to withstand even the biggest earthquakes. But nothing could prepare the country for the tsunami which followed minutes later. Television news helicopters captured footage of an unstoppable tide of sludge as it spread across the parched rice fields around Sendai like ink spilt on paper.

Houses, cars, trees and anything else that stood in the way were churned up and became part of the advancing morass, adding to its destructive power as it moved hundreds of yards inland.

Footage showed drivers jumping out of their cars on a bridge in the city and watching as the water of the harbour surged up the main bridge piles, dismasting several large fishing boats as they were driven forward by the tide and crushed beneath the concrete arches.

Some of those stranded in the upstairs rooms in their homes waved white sheets out of windows, desperate to attract the attention of helicopters hovering overhead.

The family of Hannah Craggs, a 27-year-old English teacher who works in Sendai, said they feared for her safety last night after failing to make any contact with her since the earthquake. Her father, Gary, 51, from Wolverhampton, said: “We haven’t given up hope, we just want to hear from Hannah. It’s just unbelievable – she is due to come home in two weeks.

“She posted on her travel blog just a couple of days ago that she had survived her first quake out there – she said a 7.3 hit offshore a couple of days ago.

“They say when one hits there is often another to follow and that’s been the case here.”

In the port town of Ofunato, more than 300 houses were reported to have been destroyed, and a large section of Kesennuma, a town of 70,000 people in the Miyagi district, burned furiously into the night after fuel leaking from damaged cars caught fire and spread unchecked, with the emergency services unable to reach the area. “We were shaken so strongly for a while that we needed to hold on to something in order not to fall,” said a local government official in Kurihara in Miyagi.

“We couldn’t escape the building immediately because the tremors continued.”

In the coastal town of Aomori, at least five ocean-going ships were upended by the wave, coming to rest with the red hulls exposed as the waters drove inland, bursting sea defences and flooding harbourside streets. In Miyagi prefecture a schoolboy was swept away. Five people were reported to have been crushed to death by falling buildings in the Tokyo area.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Ken Hoshi, a local government official in Ishinomaki, a port city in Miyagi prefecture.

“The water came as far as to the train station, hundreds of metres away from the coast.”

The 41-year-old official said his city had turned into a flood zone. “I’m worried because I can’t contact my family. But because it’s my duty, I’m braced to spend the night here.”

After years of being drilled in earthquake survival procedures, television pictures showed many residents reacting with remarkable composure and calm. Some office workers remained on the telephone as the buildings shook around them and sent files and books tumbling to the floor.

Others were less assured. “I dashed out of my office. I sort of panicked and left behind my mobile phone and belongings,” said Aya Nakamura, an office worker in Tokyo.”

“You see the crane on top of that tall building under construction? I thought it might fall off the building because all the buildings around me were shaking badly,” she added. Asagi Machida, a 27-year-old web designer, was walking near a coffee shop when the earthquake hit Tokyo. “The images from the New Zealand earthquake are still fresh in my mind so I was really scared,” she said, “I couldn’t believe such a big earthquake was happening here.”

As the 500mph tidal wave spread out across the Pacific, tsunami warnings were issued as far away as Chile, but early fears of low-lying islands being swamped appeared to prove unfounded.

Hundreds of people living in parts of California were told to evacuate their beachside homes as a precaution, with the tidal waves expected to take 24 hours to subside.

In Crescent City, in northern California, five people were swept to sea by 6ft waves with one man still missing, feared dead.

The Japanese government said the earthquake, which was felt 1,500 miles away in Beijing, had caused “tremendous damage” and left seven million homes without power.

In Tokyo, several people were injured when the roof of a hall collapsed during a graduation ceremony.

The Queen sent a message to Emperor Akihito, saying: “I was saddened to hear of the tragic loss of life caused by the earthquake which has struck north-east Japan today.”

David Cameron said the earthquake was a “terrible reminder of the destructive power of nature” and sent his sympathies to the people of Japan, while William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, said Britain was ready to send humanitarian aid and search and rescue teams.

The last time a major earthquake hit Tokyo was in 1923, when the Great Kanto Earthquake claimed more than 140,000 lives, many of them in fires. In 1995 the Kobe earthquake killed more than 6,400 people.

The Foreign Office set up a helpline — 020 70080000 — for the families of British nationals living in Japan who are unable to contact loved ones.


Tags : cnn, japan earthquake today, japan tsunami, tokyo, tokio

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Japanese earthquake and tsunami in video
1:44 AM | 0 comments

Fox news

Written By Anonymous on March 11, 2011 | 7:58 AM

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When "Babes Fox News' Met al-Jazeera
As a business major, I always have a problem with the American Fox News network cable. On the one hand, it was a master stroke of marketing in selling into the Middle American demographic; ". Fox News Babes" an odd mixture of conservative truth combined with arousal through everywhere Always strange to see a complete gentlemen dressed in suits next to the ever-FNBs short skirt (may anchor men should dress like a DJ at strip connections at this level), sleeveless blouses and tight sweaters. But hey, I think Roger Ailes does not mess with a formula that works. On the other hand, Fox News the securities in its primary purpose as a news outlet. Although I do not agree with Hillary Clinton on most things, one thing we can agree on is that Fox News is a manifestation of the lowest common denominator of modern America - a kind of endless WWE broadcasts (America has big guns all the conservative American woman leggy! )


Anyway, I bring this issue behind Hillary Clinton testified before Congress. Fortunately, he admitted the weakness of American television to say he said, in his own words not mine, "we are in the information war and we lose the war." While I do not like references to the war, he really made a good point that al-Jazeera is more like the real news is not Fox News - in particular relating to the departure in the MENA. Something very important though is the lack of carrying al-Jazeera broadcaster in the United States. While some local stations carried, the cable giants like Comcast does not carry it, not like one displays the favorite tea party and all the rest. What is the reason for this omission? This is an open question, although I will (perhaps surprisingly) a discount that reflects poorly on the U.S. government:

(1) The US government actively discourages cable providers from carrying al-Jazeera for ideological reasons. Today, I had the opportunity to meet an honest-to-goodness State Department official prior to Alec Ross speaking about his digital statecraft efforts at the LSE. When I asked whether the US government actively discouraged cable providers from carrying the pan-Arabian channel, he said "no." While it's true that the Bush administration did not view al-Jazeera favourably, and perhaps did not apply direct pressure to the likes of Comcast, it may nonetheless be true that government regulators could have made life difficult for those that did carry the channel. I will give the benefit of the doubt here. At best with Hillary Clinton now lauding al-Jazeera, perhaps it's the Fox News crowd more than the US government that Comcast et al. fear offending during the Obama administration.

(2) Cable service providers are reluctant to pay al-Jazeera's licensing fees when it's cheaper to provide their own content. The State Department official then suggested that the real reason is cable providers prefer providing a vehicle for channels they produce since they don't have to pay for license fees alike those they would have to pay for carrying al-Jazeera. This is a plausible argument. However, it is also possible for cable providers to create a separate, additional package for those who want to watch al-Jazeera and other MENA content and charge viewers accordingly.

(3) By and large, Americans prefer a rose-tinted view of how they are such a positive influence on the world. In its own way, Fox News is a highly advanced manifestation of the white man''s burden. What's more, there are many parts of the Amerocentric blogosphere where you can get this sort of reasoning on a daily basis, so I needn't rehash it here. In this manufactured approach, while US has problems, they are inconsequential compared to those of the rest of the world. Strictly speaking, (1), (2) and (3) are not mutually exclusive. However, my own view is that this explanation is best.

While certain (obviously more on the left than Fox News) Huffington Post readers are now clamouring for al-Jazeera to be carried by US cable service providers, I would be very surprised if Middle America will switch over in droves. For the same reason that the more straightforward CNN is literally walloped by Fox News, I doubt whether the Qatari's erstwhile gift to world media will gain much traction. Fox News redefines mendaciousness by calling its coverage fair and balanced. While you can of course say I am equally slanted, the main difference is I disclose that I am offering my own opinion instead of parading what I say as fair and balanced.

So there you are. To paraphrase Jack Nicholson, the majority of the American public cannot handle the truth. I may be proven wrong, but I simply don't think anyone will dethrone the news T&A crowd anytime soon. Ironically, another place where a media revolution is long overdue is the United States of America.
 
Fox Rules Tuesday, CBS dense, Repeating Elsewhere

March 11, 2011

THAT IN PROGRAMMING

Friday, March 11, 2011


Prime-Time Metered Market Thursday Ratings:

Rules Fox, CBS Solid, Everyone Else in Repeats


Ratings Box:

What's Hot / What's Not


On the Air this Weekend:
Prime-Time Programming Options


TV tidbits:

Note Interest


TV Trivia Time:
Protecting Mayberry
_____________________________________________________________________________


Prime-Time Metered Market Thursday Ratings:

Rules Fox, CBS Solid, Everyone Else in Repeats


Thursday 3/10/11
Note: Data last night now include DVR playback until 3 am local time. One year before the data was based on Live only. All times are ET / PT.


 
              HH
          Rtg/Shr
Fox   10.9/17
CBS    8.6/14
ABC   3.2/ 5
NBC   2.0/ 3
CW     0.9/ 1
 
----------
 
-Percent Change From the Year-Ago Evening (Thursday, March 11, 2010):
Fox: +21, CBS: - 8, CW: -18, ABC: -46, NBC: -56
 
----------
-Yesterday’s Winners:
American Idol (Fox), The Big Bang Theory (CBS), CSI (CBS), The Mentalist (CBS)
 
 -Yesterday’s Losers (excluding repeats):
Nothing….62 percent of last night’s line-up was in repeats.  
 
----------
 
-Ratings Breakdown:
One hour of American Idol was more than enough to lead Fox to Thursday victory, with a 2.3 metered market rating point advantage over second-place CBS. In the distant No. 3 spot was ABC, followed by NBC and The CW. ABC, NBC and The CW aired all repeats last night (hence the below-average results). 
 
The live American Idol Results Show on Fox scored a hefty 14.7 rating/23 share from 8-9 p.m., building over the comparable year-ago telecast (13.0/20 on March 11, 2010) by 13 percent. Never in the history of television has a decade-old series dominated to this degree. How do you like that, Simon Cowell? As for the first departure, Ashthon Jones was no surprise. 
 
American Idol led into relocated Bones, which finished second behind CBS’ CSI in the overnights with a 7.1/11 at 9 p.m. But minus Grey’s Anatomy on ABC (which aired in an encore telecast as 10 p.m.), Bones has a lock for adult 18-49 time period dominance. Regardless, overnight retention for Bones out of the 8:30 p.m. portion of American Idol (15.4/24) keeps it off the listing of “winners.”
 
CBS was on the map with its combination of The Big Bang Theory (#2: 8.7/14), which holds up well opposite American Idol, relocated Rules of Engagement (#2: 6.5/10), veteran CSI (#1: 8.9/14) and standout The Mentalist (#1: 9.5/16). Retention for Rules of Engagement out of The Big Bang Theory was 75 percent, which is slightly above former occupant $#*! My Dad Says (which is not expected to return in 2011-12).
 
Everything else airing last night, once again, was an encore telecast. ABC populated the evening with two repeat hours of Wipeout (#3: 3.3/ 5 from 8-10 p.m.), followed by the aforementioned Grey’s Anatomy second-run at a second-place 2.8/ 5 at 10 p.m. NBC barely resonated with encore telecasts of Community (#4: 1.9/ 3), doomed Perfect Couples (#4: 1.7/ 3), The Office (#4: 2.5/ 4), Parks and Recreation (#4: 2.1/ 3), 30 Rock (#3: 2.0/ 3) and on-the-fence Outsourced (#3: 1.7/ 3), which has not benefited by moving to 10:30 p.m. NBC may want to rethink airing three hours of comedies next season.
 
Last, and very least, were repeats of The Vampire Diaries (0.9/ 1) and Nikita (0.8/ 1) on The CW.
 
Source: Nielsen Media Research data (R = repeat)
 
 
Ratings Box:
What’s Hot/What’s Not
 
-Growing This Week on ABC:
Based on the live plus same day ratings for Sunday, March 6, ABC’s This Week with Christiane Amanpour rose to 2.42 million viewers and 730,000 adults 25-54. Comparably, This Week has now improved on it’s year-ago performance in total viewers (+2 percent) and the demo (+ 7 percent) for the third straight week, with growth for the fifth consecutive Sunday.
 
-Top 20 Rated Programs in Syndication – Week of February 21, 2011:
What follows are the top 20 rated programs in syndication (first-run and off-network) for the week of February 21, based on AA households:
 
Wheel of Fortune (CBS Television Distribution): 7.8 rating, Jeopardy (CBS): 6.4, Two and a Half Men (Warner Bros.): 5.9, Oprah (CBS): 5.7, Judge Judy (CBS): 4.6, Family Guy (Twentieth): 4.1, Entertainment Tonight (CBS): 4.0, Wheel of Fortune – Weekend (CBS): 3.5, Inside Edition (CBS) and Two and a Half Men – Weekend B (Warner Bros.): 3.3 each, Criminal Minds (CBS): 3.2, Dr. Phil (CBS) and Two and a Half Men – Weekend A (Warner Bros.): 3.1 each, Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS): 2.7, Live with Regis & Kelly (Disney-ABC) and Law & Order: Criminal Intent (NBC Universal): 2.6 each, How I Met Your Mother (Twentieth), My Wife and Kids (Disney-ABC), Seinfeld (Sony Pictures Television) and Seinfeld – Weekend (SPT): 2,5 each
 
Source: Nielsen Media Research data (R = repeat)
 
 
On the Air This Weekend:
Prime-Time Programming Options
 
Friday 3/11/11
 
ABC:
 8:00 p.m. Supernanny
 9:00 p.m. Primetime: What Would You Do?
10:00 p.m. 20/20
 
CBS:
 8:00 p.m. The Defenders (season or series finale)
 9:00 p.m. CSI: NY
10:00 p.m. Blue Bloods
 
NBC:
 8:00 p.m. Who Do You Think You Are?
 9:00 p.m.  Dateline (two hours)
  
Fox:
 8:00 p.m. Kitchen Nightmares
 9:00 p.m. Fringe
 
CW
 8:00 p.m. Smallville (R)
 9:00 p.m. Supernatural (R)
 
----------
 
Saturday 3/12/11
 
ABC:
 8:00 p.m. Wipeout (R)
 9:00 p.m. Rascal Flatts: Nothing Like This Presented by J.C. Penney
10:00 p.m. Secret Millionaire (R)
 
CBS:
 8:00 p.m. NCIS (R)
 9:00 p.m. NCIS: Los Angeles (R)
10:00 p.m. 48 Hours Mystery
 
NBC:
 8:00 p.m. Harry’s Law (R)
 9:00 p.m. Law & Order: Los Angeles (R)
10:00 p.m. Law & Order: SVU (R)
  
Fox:
 8:00 p.m. Cops
 8:30 p.m. Cops (R)
 9:00 p.m. America’s Most Wanted
 
----------
 
Sunday 3/13/11
 
ABC:
 7:00 p.m. America’s Funniest Home Videos
 8:00 p.m. Secret Millionaire
 9:00 p.m. Desperate Housewives (R)
10:00 p.m. Brothers & Sisters (R)
 
CBS:
 7:00 p.m. 60 Minutes
 8:00 p.m. The Amazing Race: Unfinished Business  
 9:00 p.m. Undercover Boss
10:00 p.m. CSI: Miami  
 
NBC:
 7:00 p.m. Dateline  
 8:00 p.m. America’s Next Great Restaurant
 9:00 p.m. Celebrity Apprentice
  
Fox:
 7:00 p.m. The Simpsons (R)
 7:30 p.m. American Dad (R)
 8:00 p.m. The Simpsons
 8:30 p.m. Bob’s Burgers
 9:00 p.m. Family Guy (R)
 9:30 p.m. The Cleveland Show
 
______________________________________________________________________
 
TV Tidbits:
Notes of Interest
 
-America’s Next Great Restaurant to Repeat on Tuesday:
NBC will air a repeat of this Sunday’s installment of America’s Next Great Restaurant in the Tuesday 10 p.m. hour on March 15 (out of The Biggest Loser) in place of the planned encore telecast of Parenthood. America’s Next Great Restaurant opened to anemic results, with just 4.49 million viewers and a 1.6 rating/4 share among adults 18-49 in the Sunday 8 p.m. hour on March 6.
 
-John Edward on Dr. Oz:
Psychic medium extraordinaire John Edward, who needs to be back on the air with a regular series, will be featured on the Tuesday, March 15 installment of Sony Pictures Television talker Dr. Oz. Themed “Psychic Mediums: Are They the New Therapists?,” John will conduct readings and discuss how communicating with the deceased can help with the healing process of losing a loved one. Check local listings for airtimes.
 
-Jason Priestley Heads to Syfy’s Haven:
Former Beverly Hills, 90210 good guy Jason Priestly has been book for a four episode arc on Syfy drama Haven. Priestley’s character is described as an anti-social marine biologist. Haven will begin production on 13 episodes for season two in Nova Scotia on April 1, with a planned summer 2011 premiere.
 
-TNT This Summer:
TNT has unveiled its summer 2011 schedule, which will include two new series (science fiction themed Falling Skies and light-hearted legal series Franklin & Bash), plus the returns of dramas The Closer, Rizzoli & Isles, Men of a Certain Age, Leverage, HawthoRNe and Memphis Beat. Franklin & Bash, with Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Breckin Meyer and two fly-by-the-seat-of-their-pants lawyers, launches on Wednesday, June 1 at 9 p.m. ET/PT into the second season-premiere of Men of a Certain Age at 10 p.m. ET/PT. Next are the season-premieres of Memphis Beat and HawthoRNe on Tuesday, June 14 from 9-11 p.m. ET/PT.
 
Falling Skies, Steven Spielberg’s epic tale of the aftermath of an alien invasion, opens with a two-hour installment on Sunday, June 19 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. One week later, it moves to Sundays at 10 p.m. ET/PT out of the new season of Leverage. Capping off TNT’s original summer line-up are the new seasons of crime solvers The Closer (season seven) and Rizzoli & Isles (season two) from 9-11 p.m. ET/PT beginning on Monday, July 11. 
_______________________________________________________________
 
TV Trivia Time:
Protecting Mayberry
 
Where does Barney Fife keep the bullet for his gun on The Andy Griffith Show?
 
a)      in his gun
b)      in his left sock
c)      in his right back pants pocket
d)      in his shirt pocket
e)      under his hat
 
The answer to yesterday’s question…
 
Who played Grace’s older sister Janet on long-running NBC sitcom Will & Grace?
 
a)      Geena Davis
b)      Minnie Driver
c)      Edie Falco
d)      Parker Posey
e)      Mira Sorvino

Is: a) Geena Davis, who appeared in an sixth season episode called “The Accidental Tsuris” (which was a take on Davis’ Academy Award winning role in The Accidental Tourist).

-Current kudos goes to:
Gerry Bixenspan, Barbara Bloomfield, Maram Canawati, Cory Chapman, Jim Colucci, Tom Condosta, John Ferlazzo, Maureen Goldman, Geoffrey Gordon (2x), Michelle Harrington, Bob Ingersoll, Stefanie King, Jim Kittelberger, Synda Kollman, Carol Kruger, Steven Kurtzer, Danny Leclair, Rick Locke, Mark Misiano, Jim Moore, Michael Murphy, David Primuth, Gordon Purcell, Jay Rossi, Neal Sabin, Maxine Shulman, Michelle Stanton, Joe Swaney, Tammy Wiard, Jessica Wolfe, Abbott Wool


Tags: cnn, msnbc, bbc news, cnn news, abc news 


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Big 12 tournament

Written By Anonymous on March 10, 2011 | 10:36 PM

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Big 12 tournament

Big 12 tournament notes: Texas' Jai Lucas shows he can still impact games




The best players are eligible to ride kiddie size
Oklahoma State guard Keiton Page, all 5 feet 9 inches of him, is a burden to Kansas, as he was to Nebraska on Wednesday. His 23 points led all scorers and, as a 90-percent free throw shooter, he's normal damage from the line, making all nine attempts. Page, a 16 point lead the Cowboys past Huskers, making the case for all tournament team selection.

Best bracketology

Oklahoma State coach Travis Ford isn'ta member of the NCAA selection committee, but he was the Cowboys in the 68-team field with a victory over Kansas.

"If we win this game we are in the NCAA Tournament," said Ford.

We will never know. But the guess here is that Oklahoma State will be required to reach the Big 12 title game score an invitation.

Best deal

If Colorado reached the NCAA Tournament, the Buffalo, like every other Big 12 team, will get a financial unit for the appearance and every victory. These units worth around 235,000 USD and go into the coffers of the conference will be distributed among members.

The Buffalo moves into Pac-10, but every NCAA Tournament appearance was getting as a member of the top 12 will stay in the Big 12.

Best matchup vs Yakub Pullen

Tidak ada yang memiliki banyak keberuntungan melawan Yakub Pullen, semua konferensi-penjaga Kansas Negara yang telah panas seperti timnya selama beberapa minggu terakhir musim. Tapi Colorado Cory Higgins memenangkan pertempuran hari Kamis. Dia memiliki 28 poin untuk Pullen's 18 dan membantu terus Pullen enam-of-19 shooting.

"Tujuan saya dalam permainan ini adalah untuk membuat dia tidak nyaman yang aku bisa," kata Higgins. "Dia pemain hebat, dan Anda tidak bisa membiarkan dia masuk ke zone."

Best penghargaan

Dengan 3:22 tersisa dalam kemenangan Texas 'atas Oklahoma, Sooners radio play-by-play pria Bob Barry Sr adalah publik memberi hormat untuk berkarir penyiaran yang membentang 50 tahun. Barry, 80, mengumumkan pengunduran diri awal tahun ini, dan Kamis menandai pertandingan terakhir di belakang mikrofon.

Barry disebut game Oklahoma 1961-1972, dan dari tahun 1991 melalui musim ini. Di antara, ia memanggil basket Tulsa dan seorang pria bermain-by-play lama untuk Oklahoma Negara.

Setelah permainan, Big 12 asosiasi komisaris John Underwood menyerahkan Barry bola permainan.

"Saya tidak tahu apakah aku pernah melihat orang itu mengalami hari yang buruk," kata pelatih Jeff Capel Oklahoma. "Dia selalu positif."

Big 12 tournament notes: Texas' Jai Lucas shows he can still impact games

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Three years ago, Jai Lucas was one of the best 3-point shooters in the Southeastern Conference as a Florida freshman.

Now, as a Texas senior, Lucas showed he can still impact games as he comes down the stretch of his college career.

The 5-10 guard and son of former NBA player John Lucas came off the bench with eight first-half points in a 74-54 semifinal win Thursday over Oklahoma in the Phillips 66 Big 12 Tournament.

The eight points were more than Lucas’ total in the past five games. He and J’Covan Brown helped Texas to a 23-10 edge in bench scoring.

“I thought Jai was terrific,” Oklahoma coach Jeff Capel said. “Jai Lucas is a good player, maybe hadn't played as well as he's capable of throughout his career. But if they can get that production out of him and J'Covan, I think they have a chance to make a deep run.”



One more time: Texas A&M has unfinished business with Texas going into tonight’s semifinals.

The Longhorns won the previous two meetings by 41 points.

“It seemed a lot worse than that, trust me,” coach Mark Turgeon said.

The Aggies, reeling then, went on to claim the third seed in the Big 12 and looked dominant in an 86-71 quarterfinal win over Missouri.

“We’re a little more different team,” senior forward Nathan Walkup said. “We’re playing more physical. We just got to step up to the challenge.”



Capel not fretting: Despite consecutive losing seasons at Oklahoma, Capel said he doesn’t have any worries about his job status. “No, none at all,” he told reporters after the loss to Texas.



Knight likes Gillispie: Fired Texas Tech coach Pat Knight had no problem endorsing Billy Gillispie as a possible successor.

 “I think Billy would be great,” Knight said after an 88-84 loss over Missouri on Wednesday. “Billy and I are friends. Bill can recruit Texas. He’s got a personality, as everyone knows.”

Knight also saw a personal positive to Gillispie stepping into the job.

“Plus, you know he’s not going to hammer you when he gets the job,” Knight said. “That’s what I hate, when guys take over the job and hammer the ex-coach. Hopefully, it’s a guy I know who is one of my buddies.”

Colorado took another step: The Big 12 can see a half-dozen teams in the NCAA Tournament after a 87-75 win over Kansas State Colorado in the quarterfinals.

   "We have some great victory," said Colorado coach Tad Boyle, recording victories over teams in the RPI top 50. "Six. I do not know how many, quote / quotes, bubble teams have six wins."

Kansas, Texas, Texas A & M, Kansas State and Missouri are considered key to being a part of the 68-team NCAA field Sunday.

Tags: big 12 tournament bracket, big 12, big 12 basketball tournament, big 12 basketball, ncaa basketball scores

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