Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 11 2017

What is going on?

Shhh....it's the trade deadline

This could be our ticket out of here

Why would you want to leave?

Aren't we in line for the first pick?

No, we're not!

Because that fool Billy King traded it to

Boston a few years ago!

What!?

I know! They're idiots--

Der coming! Der coming!

Back up, back up!

Everybody back up!

I'm sorry to announce...

we have made a trade

Oh yes oh yes

Please please please

Bojan

Yeah

You're going to Washingfell

Sorry

Oh my god!

They are like, uh...

They have like...wins

Yes

Thirty-four wins, they have

THIRTY-FOUR?!

Oh man, that's like so many wins!

I know you're disappointed, but...

pack your bags

They expect you there on the morrow

Right. Right. Oh yeah I'm very sad

This is so--I'm very sad but I'll go pack now

and fight all the tears

Um...love all you guys!

Thanks, uh, Lord Commander--ex-Lord Commander!

Oh this is so sad!

This is SO GOOD! OH I'M FREE!

I'M FREE FROM THIS PIECE OF SHIT TEAM!

THIS IS THE HAPPIEST DAY OF MY LIFE!

I DON'T HAVE TO BE IN STUPID BROOKLYN

THIS IS THE DUMBEST PLACE

WORST FRANCHISE EVER!

MAN THESE GUYS ARE F--

Any..uh...other trades to report? Or...

No

Dammit!

Now, come on, it's time to practice

Tomorrow we lose to the Nuggets!

Who goes there?

House Magic!

What are they doing here?

We don't play 'em for a fortnight

What do you want?

We want to propose a trade!

Well we don't need a trade.

We're contenders!

Oh come on now, you're fifth in the East!

You're worse than the...Hawks right now!

Don't you want to compete with the Cavs?

I mean, It's true

We could use, like, a power forward

Well then do it! Do it! Do it!

Well alright, whaddya got?

Serge Ibaka!

He shoots, dunks, and he's an elite rim protector.

He's everything you need

Isn't that right Serge?

I defend anyone

Except LeBron

Alright. Okay

Well what do you want for him?

DeMar DeRozan!

No! He's my friend!

Argh. Very well

Worth a shot

Then give us...

Norman Powell!

No!

He's...too young!

But I'm also your friend, right?

Shush Norman!

I'm trying to make a trade here!

I am also his friend!

Norman!

Alright. Well then what else do you have to offer?

We'll give you...

Can we trade Drake?

I don't think so. No

What about Terrence?

What about Terr--

You can have Terrence Ross

Well what does he do?

He's like...

an older Norman

No I'm not

Terrence! You'll like it in Orlando. It's warm

Let the man speak!

Terrence, what do you do?

Well, I'm a pretty good 3 and D player...

Um...

though some people might call me inconsistent...

So maybe I'm not a good 3 and D player--

No no no, you are!

I AM a good 3 and D player

OH! And a decorated dunker!

Well he's certainly inconsistent

Throw in a draft pick and it's a deal!

A draft pi--

Fine, but then you gotta give us somethin' else too!

Something else? Ugh

Alright we'll give you a choice

You can either have...Mario Hezonja...

Or...this horse

Well what does Mario do?

He scores three points a game

And what does the horse do?

It's a f-- it's a horse!

It walks around with people on it

I don't know...does horse things!

That kid was the fifth pick in the draft. He's probably got potential.

Yeah but it's a horse! It does horse things!

We'll take the horse!

For more infomation >> Game of Zones - S4:E4: 'Trade Winds' - Duration: 4:33.

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VÍDEO X • [RE-EDIT] - Duration: 7:25.

Hey, fuck, fuck, pussy.

For more infomation >> VÍDEO X • [RE-EDIT] - Duration: 7:25.

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Upload to YouTube - Duration: 0:57.

In this video, we'll show you how to upload videos to YouTube.

To get started, click the "Uploads" icon here.

Before you start uploading the video you can choose its video privacy settings.

Now choose the video you'd like to upload from your computer.

As the video is uploading you can edit both the basic and advanced settings of the video, and decide if you want to notify subscribers.

Click "Publish" to finish uploading a public video to YouTube.

If you set the video privacy setting to Private or Unlisted, just click "Done" to finish the upload.

Here's a tip - if you don't click "Publish", your video won't be viewable by other people, even though you set the privacy setting to public.

You can always publish your video at a later time in your Video Manager.

If you'd like to learn more about uploading to YouTube, just click the card in this video.

And that's it!

Subscribe to our channel for more tips and tricks.

For more infomation >> Upload to YouTube - Duration: 0:57.

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MEDITAR QUÉ ES Y CÓMO SE HACE por Sol Ahimsa - Duration: 1:50:41.

For more infomation >> MEDITAR QUÉ ES Y CÓMO SE HACE por Sol Ahimsa - Duration: 1:50:41.

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Keto Snack Box - Duration: 1:40.

Hello and welcome back to my channel I

have a really quick video for you today.

I'm about to head out with my kids and I

made this snack box, lunch box, whatever

you want to call it and I thought I'd

share what I'm taking because it might

help you if you need some meals for

out-and-about, lunch box and snack boxes

and all that, so we've got a bit of

spinach leaves there and half an avocado

I'm going to top it with some salt and

some avocado oil as well for some extra

fat and flavor, I've got a whole heap of

salami

I just chopped up pieces of salami, I

love salami and it's just such an easy

awesome low carb high fat snack or part

of a meal box and then we have grated

cheese, so I just really popped a

portion on. This took literally a minute,

two minutes to put together and it means

while I'm out and about I won't be hungry,

it means that I don't have to worry

about going for foods or trying to find

something that's low carb keto friendly

and I've just got awesome food on me

that tastes delicious and it sticks on

plan and I'm using one of my favorite

lunch boxes it's an easy lunchbox and

I've got a whole stack of these, so I'll

make this for myself and make some boxes

for my kids they're not on Keto, so they will have

sandwiches and all kinds of things, so

that's the quick and easy video for

today make sure that you leave a like

and subscribe for more inspiration and

leave a comment and let me know what it

your go to, when you want a quick go

to snack box, something that's on the go

low-carb keto friendly, I look forward

to reading your comments and thanks so

much for watching this super short video

and we'll see you again soon bye.

For more infomation >> Keto Snack Box - Duration: 1:40.

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How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos" - Duration: 2:44.

How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos"

Hello everyone

This time, we will explain how to use the "filter" function of the "Google Photos"

Of function can change the appearance of photos that are stored in the "Google Photos" "filter" it is equipped with

By using this feature, for example, to brighten the indoor photos you've taken in a dark feeling,

Or a photograph of the cooking more vivid, like or increase the depth to the sea of ​​landscape photography, will be able to edit various

"Filter" function of the "Google Photos" becomes the editing mode by clicking on the edit icon to display the photo for editing in the "Google Photos"

It will be able to use immediately

"Filter" is only to select from among the "filter" that is basically originally prepared

To reflect the effect of the "original" as soon as you select anything other than "filter", photos of appearance will be changed

Also by "filter" will also be displayed slide bar where you can change the white balance

And the slide bar of the switch to the slide bar tab "brightness" "color" "pop" in the other edit mode,

For "Brightness" and "color" is displayed more slide bar by clicking the arrow of the slide bar lateral,

You will be able to quite finely customize

Being edited by holding down and clicking the mouse when the mouse arrow in the photo, it is also possible to make a comparison with the original photo

Edit that it is to click on the "Finish" When you are finished, but "filter" will be overwritten as a photograph that has been reflected,

You can revert to the original photo at any time by clicking the also "undo Edit" after storage

Also if you want to save it as a separate file by clicking the menu icon and then click the "Save a Copy"

These features can be used in exactly the same way in the smartphone version of "Google Photos" app

You can also expect the diffusion effect changing the "filter" impression of the photos by using the function of the "Google Photos" in the case of especially post photos to SNS

Also, when detailed settings when using the "filter" function is cumbersome by selecting the "Auto", I recommend optimal effect is applied to the photo

Please try by all means take advantage

For more infomation >> How to use "filter" function of the "Google Photos" - Duration: 2:44.

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Fleadome ACT NonToxic FleaKilling System - Duration: 11:49.

For more infomation >> Fleadome ACT NonToxic FleaKilling System - Duration: 11:49.

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The Language of Film: Crash Course Film History #5 - Duration: 9:29.

The earliest days of film are full of self-taught artists, doing lots of experimentation, and

stumbling across many a happy accident. And some sad accidents, probably.

Nobody really knew what they were doing.

They were making it up as they went, and audiences went along for the ride.

At first, people was impressed by the sheer technical marvel of moving pictures.

But thanks to Georges Méliès' passion for to dazzling illusions and tricky editing,

film began to emerge as a new medium for stories.

As filmmakers started to experiment with narrative film, they began to establish a language through

different editing techniques and camera movements.

And with any language comes rules – things like grammar, syntax, and punctuation – which

can help artists and storytellers communicate their ideas in clear and interesting ways.

But before rules can be followed, or broken, or mastered, they have to be discovered by someone.

And for film, that someone was Edwin S. Porter. And for Eagle Punching, that's me.

[Opening Titles Play]

Georges Méliès was a stage magician whose whole approach to entertainment

was to wow an audience with illusion, extravagance, and surprise.

So it makes sense that his films, as impressive and influential as they were, operated as

performative spectacles.

This type of filmmaking is more interested in presentation than representation.

We're supposed to sit back in slack-jawed amazement at the mysterious feats occurring

before us, instead of empathizing with characters or "finding ourselves" on screen.

The film scholar Tim Gunning calls this the "Cinema of Attractions," and offers it

as a way to think about the entire first decade of film – where the novelty itself of film

is enough to keep people buying tickets.

You've probably experienced this concept at some point: a new technology comes out,

and at first we're all just marveling at what it can do.

Like, posting shaky vertical videos of your cat online for everybody to see.

Or wandering around outside throwing virtual Pokéballs at virtual Pokémon. Speaking of... GOT 'EM!

But eventually, the newness wears off, and people want something more.

I havn't played Angry Birds in many months.

That's what was happening in 1903, as mainstream

films started to focus more on narratives designed to engage the viewer, rather than

simply astonish them.

And that's exactly when Edwin S. Porter entered the filmmaking scene.

Born in 1870, Porter worked as a sign painter, telegraph operator, and minor inventor, before

becoming a touring projectionist.

He travelled from South America to Canada exhibiting films for a device called the Projectorscope

– one of Edison's competitors.

Part of Porter's job was to assemble the various actualités and short films into longer

feature programs.

He picked the order, created transitions between the films, and arranged for any musical or

spoken accompaniment.

Now, this feels like a good place to make a point about silent films.

Because there was no such thing!

WHAT!?!?!

I mean, even in the Golden Age of Silent Film, movies were almost never shown in actual silence.

We call them "silent films" because the technology to record synchronous sound hadn't

really been invented yet.

But that doesn't mean that folks gathered in theaters, church basements, or barns and

watched films in pin-drop silence.

Larger venues employed full orchestras, bands, or organists to accompany their films.

Smaller spaces might have had a piano player or a phonograph.

Or a guy who went, "la la laaaa"... probably not that though.

Some films were even released with scripts to be performed by actors, or voice-over narration

to be read along with the images.

So in 1899, after his stint as a travelling exhibitor of not-so-silent films, Porter returned

to New York.

He eventually became the head of production at one of Edison's film studios, responsible

for setting the stories, operating the camera, directing the actors, and assembling the final films.

Wore a lot of hats, that guy.

This is where his time as a touring projectionist came in handy.

Not only did he have a good idea what kinds of stories and techniques played well in front

of an audience, but he'd also spent a lot of time cutting together different pieces of film.

In doing this rough kind of "editing," he stumbled upon a bunch of techniques and

effects he would put to use in his own multi-shot films.The most influential of these is called

parallel action or cross-cutting.

It's an editing technique so powerful, and which occurs in so many films and TV shows

today, that you probably don't even think about it.

Basically, parallel action is the idea that a film can cut back and forth between two

or more events that are happening simultaneously within the world of a film.

Even though you're seeing these scenes in sequential order, your brain understands that

they're actually happening at the same time.

Like, imagine two parallel lines.

Each one represents the timeline of an event, and both events are occurring at the exact same time.

Now, imagine slicing those two lines up, and stitching a few alternating pieces together

into a single new line.

If I were to show you that final assembly of film, your brain would intuitively understand

that these events were happening at the same time.

Cool, right?

The first film that we know utilized parallel action successfully was Edwin S. Porter's

Life of an American Fireman, made in 1902 and inspired by Méliès' A Trip to the Moon.

The story follows – spoiler alert – an American fireman, who rescues his wife from

a burning building.

The film begins with a napping fireman dreaming about his wife and child going to bed at home.

I love napping.

After a fire alarm is pulled, and the firemen race to the house on fire, we cut inside the

building to see the wife and child carried out of their smoke-filled bedroom.

Then, the film cuts back outside the building, and we watch the same firemen enter the same

building and emerge once again with the wife and the child.

Even though this innovation seems small, it contributed to film grammar in ways we still

see to this day, and affected what filmmakers thought was possible as they constructed their

stories for the screen.

Now, in 1903, Porter released his most successful film: The Great Train Robbery.

Some scholars argue that The Great Train Robbery doesn't use parallel action in the same

way that The Life of an American Fireman did.

But I think a close reading of the film shows a sophisticated understanding of how a filmmaker

can manipulate time by cutting between simultaneous scenes.

In the film, a railroad engineer is knocked out and tied up by a group of bandits bent

on hijacking a train.

The heist plays out in a traditional, linear fashion: Each scene is one uninterrupted shot

after another, including a really long shot of the thieves lining up the passengers and

stealing their stuff.

Then, a remarkable thing happens... and I'm gonna remark on it.

Once the heist is complete, the film cuts back to the railroad office, as a young girl

discovers the unconscious engineer, revives him, and sets him free.

We then cut to a group of law enforcement officers at a dance, where the engineer busts

in and alerts them to the heist.

And finally, we cut to the criminals riding horses through the woods, being chased by

the law enforcement officers.

At this moment, the two time streams that were happening simultaneously – the railroad

engineer's and the criminals' – suddenly merge.

And the rest of the film plays out in another linear scene in which the offers gun down

the criminals, dispensing the kind of frontier justice that would make Clint Eastwood proud.

Contemporary films use cross-cutting all the time.

Take the final sequence from The Godfather, for example.

70s but, contemporary.

In it, director Francis Ford Coppola cuts

back and forth between the baptism of Michael Corleone's godson and the slaughter of his

enemies – church to bloodbath and back again. Fun.

This kind of parallel action not only shows us events that are happening simultaneously,

but also connects them thematically and symbolically.

Michael is consolidating his power as head of a major crime family through both violent

and peaceful means, in ceremonies both sacred and profane, juxtaposing life and death.

Not every use of parallel action is as profound as that, though.

Comic book blockbusters like The Dark Knight or Captain America: The Winter Soldier cross-cut

during action sequences to heighten tension, while thrillers like The Fugitive and The

Silence of the Lambs juxtapose the pursuer and the pursued.

And every romantic comedy that ends with a race to the airport cuts back and forth between

the would-be sweethearts, daring us to consider the possibility that they won't live happily

ever after.

All of that starts with Edwin S. Porter and his experiments with parallel action.

Porter was responsible for a few other innovations in The Great Train Robbery that made it one

of the most influential movies of the early silent era.

Before The Great Train Robbery, most films consisted of static shots.

The camera was set up, someone turned the crank, and the scene played out before the lens.

Porter was among the first filmmakers to begin moving the camera during the shot.

And that's how we got the pan and the tilt.

A pan occurs when the camera is turned left or right on a horizontal axis from a fixed

point, like the top of a tripod.

And a tilt happens when the camera is moved up or down on a vertical axis from a fixed point.

Porter used both in The Great Train Robbery, including one remarkable pan as the escaping

criminals hop over a stream and scurry through the trees.

The camera pans left with them to discover… horses: their means of escape!

The film and the filmmaker are playing a trick on us.

They know more than we do, and Porter is revealing narrative information in a camera move, instead

of just showing us everything!

He's using the camera to tell the story. Amazing!

Here's another chance to put yourself in the shoes of an audience member: one who's

only seen films where the camera never moved, and all the story information was right there

in the shot.

Then imagine seeing a film where that information was withheld and given to you piece by piece,

keeping you on your toes.

You're suddenly watching an exponentially more sophisticated film.

Lucky you.

Not to mention, the last shot of The Great Train Robbery was unique in its own right.

It's a medium close-up of one of the bandits, much closer than any shot we've seen so

far – from about navel up – and he's looking directly at us.

He raises his pistol, aims at the camera – at us! – and fires.

The size, scale, and direct gaze of this shot was startling at the time, and influential

enough that Martin Scorsese stole it for a key moment in Goodfellas.

And if it's good enough for Marty, it must be pretty good. Marty, if you're watching? Can I call you Marty?

Let me know in the comments.

No single filmmaker did as much to shape narrative film grammar in the first decade of motion

pictures as Edwin S. Porter.

He uncovered a series of tools and techniques – the first rules of narrative film language

– that subsequent directors would use, modify, and expand upon for decades to come.

Prior to The Life of an American Fireman and The Great Train Robbery, films were almost

all constructed in a strictly linear fashion – complete scene followed by complete scene. BORING!

But after Porter, filmmakers became more adept at telling stories, using shots and cuts to

engage the audience and keep them coming back for more.

And in many ways, film has never looked back.

Today we learned about Edwin S. Porter, whose experiments with editing helped establish

the language of narrative film, and expanded the horizons of what filmmakers thought was possible.

We introduced the idea of cross-cutting, and how our brains can understand when a film

cuts between simultaneous events.

Then, we discussed how Porter innovated even more storytelling tools, like moving the camera

in pans and tilts.

And now that the foundation has been laid, next time, we'll talk about even more developments

in film language and the emergence of the feature film.

Crash Course Film History is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

You can head over to their channel to check out a playlist of their latest amazing shows,

like PBS Space Time, The Good Stuff, and Blank on Blank.

This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

with the help of these nice train robbers and our amazing graphics team, is Thought Cafe.

For more infomation >> The Language of Film: Crash Course Film History #5 - Duration: 9:29.

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NCBI Minute: How to Locate and Use Human Genomes and Annotations from the NCBI - Duration: 9:09.

Good afternoon, everyone.

This is Ben Busby and I'm the genomics outreach coordinator and bioinformatics training lead

for NCBI.

I am joined by Peter Cooper who is the strategic communications coordinator for NCBI.

We will be talking about downloading human genome sequence, variants and annotation from

NCBI.

Today I will do most of this as a live demonstration but I prepared a set of slides covering most

of what I talk about as a backup.

The slides are available at this link, go.usa.gov/x58jN, as well as slideshare.net/benbusby.

On both of those resources there are other slides and presentations so feel free to check

them out or you can always Google for NCBI webinars.

If most of you are like me, you probably start your search with Google.

This is what we find most users do and one thing I might Google for is NCBI human genome

resources.

I can open up an Incognito tab just so I don't get autocomplete.

What I might Google for is NCBI human genome resources.

I don't know why my auto completes are still showing up, but that is not an issue for today.

The first link I see is human genome resources at NCBI.

We modified this page about one year ago.

We put a whole bunch of new bells and whistles in, and what we have done recently is moved

up the download section of the page and made it easier to use.

One thing you could do on this page is search for human genes and it will send you to the

NCBI Gene page and you can click on the ideogram to access the genome data viewer in that region.

What I want to talk about today is downloading various sequences as well as other NCBI resources

through this simple to use table.

If you want the latest reference genome sequence in either GRCh38, the new version of the human

genome, about 30% of you are using that at this point and 70% are still using the old

one, GRCh37.

If you are interested in the differences between GRCh38 and37, I would encourage you to check

out the genome reference consortium webpage.

You can do that by googling genome reference consortium and you can check that out and

it will tell you all kinds of things about GRCh37 and GRCh38.

Anyway, nn this page this gives you quick, direct links to download the reference genome

sequence, so this is going to be the FASTA file, gzipped, but that should be accessible

to most of you, as well as the gff3 file.

Here you can get all of the annotations that NCBI has for that file.

Some of you may just want RefSeq transcripts.

These are just the mRNA sequences that are transcribed from the GRC38 human genome, the

ones that we are fairly certain are transcribed.

You can get all protein sequences; this is a protein FASTA.

And you can also get a vcf for ClinVar.

This is a quick way to get it, as well as the vcf for dbSNP.

I'll make one word of caution, the dbSNP is rather large as you might expect, especially

since in dbSNP release 150 we doubled the number of RS numbers.

Finally, dbVar, which I think is really increasing in significance.

Those structural variants really have big consequences both in other technical work

with the human genome as well as well as clinical reporting consequences.

However, some of you may want API access to this kind of information for the human genome

or other genomes.

As many of you are probably aware, we have an API known to most people as E-Utils and

we've made a command line wrapper for that API called EDirect.

Still, it can sometimes be a little tricky to use, to make scripts for the commandline

wrapper so one thing we have done is we made a cookbook on github for scripts using that

command line interface.

The amazing thing to me is that we've made this interactive.

If you have a github account, you can put in issues for things that you might want to

do with our metadata API or you can just scroll down, copy some of these scripts and modify

them.

For example, if you want not just human but any taxonomic designation you can grab this

script and simply modify the query sequence and that would give you whatever taxonomic

designation you wanted.

It does say here for larger sets of data it may fail with a large number of arguments

and we find empirically that caps out at about 50,000 so searches for more than 50,000 items

probably won't work so well.

You can do a lot of similar things and if there is something you want to do with API

metadata crossing NCBI databases, try it and if you can't figure it out, once again put

in an issue in the cookbook.

The last thing I want to show you today is how to actually look at the human genome at

NCBI.

And for that what I would do is scroll down to the view portion of the page and I'm going

to load a resource we have called the genome data viewer.

And this really shows a lot of NCBI resources at the same time.

Here I can show a lot of RefSeq transcripts for particular gene loci.

I can show snps in ClinVar, dbSNP and I can also see RNA-seq coverage and that is pretty

neat.

If I want to I can use the tracks menu to split that out into various tracks.

One thing I really like about this browser is I can search for a disease or a gene name

and it will go ahead and load that.

I searched for ApoE and I can see the RefSeq isoforms for ApoE right here and I can see

related genes here.

You can also upload your own data or add tracks as you wish.

If you want to learn more, we have featured webinars and there are fact sheets.

Many people find these helpful and once again you can Google for NCBI webinars.

You can directly download the latest version of the human genome sequences Fasta as well

as annotation and associated files right here at the NCBI human genome resources page.

And with that I'm happy to stop and take any questions that you may have.

Somebody asked where you can find the common list of variants reported in all NCBI resources.

I would say if you are looking for short variants, under 50 nucleotides, you will want to look

in dbSNP.

And in fact for the dbSNP GRCh38 release, that's going to be a vcf of all of those variants.

Similarly if you are interested in structural variants, you will want the latest dbVar release.

Both of those resources are available right here on the human genome resources page.

There are some specific questions.

I will take a look at them and we may answer some of them off-line; yes, we will put them

in the documentation for the webinar.

All right.

We are going to go ahead and wrap this up.

Thank you very much for your time and I hope you have an excellent rest of the day.

For more infomation >> NCBI Minute: How to Locate and Use Human Genomes and Annotations from the NCBI - Duration: 9:09.

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Weather At Your School: Vassalboro Community School - Duration: 1:23.

WE ARE HERE AT THE VASSAL

BERRY COMMUNITY SCHOOL FOR THE

WEATHER AT YOUR SCHOOL.

A NICE WELCOME THIS MORNING WITH

THIS BEAUTIFUL SIGN AND A CLOUD.

"WMTW NEWS 8" ON IT.

HAD SUCH A GREAT MEETING.

COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS GREETED US.

FOURTH-GRADERS, PARENTS AND

TEACHERS -- IT IS TEACHER

APPRECIATION WEEK SO SHOUT OUT

THERE.

WE TALKED ABOUT SOME WEATHER.

THE BIGGEST TOOL WE USE IS THE

RADAR.

WE HAVE HAD HEAVY RAIN COMING

OUR WAY.

THEY TOLD ME ALL ABOUT HOW THEY

HAVE HAD S MANY SNOW DAYS.

THAT SCHOOL WILL GO INTO MID

JUNE.

IT IS HARD TO BELIEVE THAT NEXT

WEEK IS THE LAST WEEK OF SCHOO

48 SCHOOLS THIS YEAR -- THAT IS

A LOT TERRITORY THAT WE HAVE

COVERED.

THEY HAVE BEEN REALLY INTO SIGNS

For more infomation >> Weather At Your School: Vassalboro Community School - Duration: 1:23.

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ошибки установки фундамента под крыльцо дачного домика - Duration: 1:53.

For more infomation >> ошибки установки фундамента под крыльцо дачного домика - Duration: 1:53.

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Rick kaj Morty mortigas la Simpsonojn (ESPERANTO) - Duration: 2:24.

For more infomation >> Rick kaj Morty mortigas la Simpsonojn (ESPERANTO) - Duration: 2:24.

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Legislative committee votes to preserve tip credit - Duration: 1:47.

VOTE

-- 11- VOTE YESTERDAY.

WMTW NEWS 8 POLITICAL REPORTER

SERVES UP THIS STORY ABOUT THE

EFFORT TO CHANGE THE LAW VOTERS

APPROVED IN NOVEMBER.

>> WE'RE NOT JUST SELLING YOU

FOOD.

WE'RE SELLING YOU AN EXPERIENCE,

AND THAT EXPERIENCE INCLUDES

SERVICE.

REPORTER: CARA STADLER OWNS TWO

RESTAURANTS, TAO YUAN IN

BRUNSWICK AND BAO BAO IN

PORTLAND.

LATE LAST YEAR, SHE ELIMINATED

TIPPING AT BOTH LOCATIONS.

SHE GAVE HER SERVERS RAISES AND

HAD PLANNED TO SHARE HER PROFITS

WITH THE BACK OF THE-HOUSE

WORKERS.

>> IT'S JUST NOT RIGHT TO HAVE

THAT HUGE GAP WHERE ONE SERVICE

PROVIDED IS NOT ANY GREATER OR

NEEDS MORE KNOWLEDGE THAN THE

OTHER.

REPORTER: MAINE LAW PROHIBITS A

FLAT SERVICE CHARGE, SO STADLER

RAISED HER MENU PRICES, AND

NOTICED AN IMMEDIATE CHANGE.

>> PEOPLE JUST STARTED BUYING

LESS.

REPORTER: AND HALF THE SERVERS

QUIT.

SO THIS MONTH THINGS WENT BACK

, TO NORMAL.

MANY STATE LAWMAKERS WANT TO

PRESERVE THE CULTURE OF TIPPING

, EVEN THOUGH VOTERS APPROVED A

GRADUAL EVENING OUT OF WAGES

BETWEEN TIPPED AND NON-TIPPED

WORKERS.

>> LOTS OF TIMES THERE ARE

DETAILS THAT AREN'T VETTED OUT

IN THE REFERENDUM PROCESS THAT

WOULD BE VETTED OUT IF THEY CAME

BEFORE A COMMITTEE OF THE

LEGISLATURE.

REPORTER: DEMOCRAT SHENNA

BELLOWS THINKS LAWMAKERS SHOULD

LEAVE THE REFERENDUM ALONE.

WE ASKED HER ABOUT STADLER'S

FAILED EXPERIMENT.

BELLOWS SAID THE CHANGE NEEDS BE

MORE GRADUAL.

>> I CERTAINLY THINK THAT IF YOU

TRY TO INCORPORATE TIPS INTO A

RESTAURANT BILL, YOU'RE GOING TO

GIVE CUSTOMERS STICKER SHOCK.

REPORTER: STADLER SAYS THE

CULTURE NEEDS TO CHANGE FOR HER

TO DO WHAT SHE FEELS IS FAIR.

>> I CANNOT HAVE A MORALLY RIGHT

DECISION THAT PUTS MY BUSINESS

OUT OF BUSINESS.

REPORTER: NEXT, THE BILL GOES TO

THE SENATE AND THEN THE HOUSE.

BECAUSE IT IS CONSIDERED

EMERGENCY LEGISLATION, IT NEEDS

THE SUPPORT OF TWO-THIRDS OF THE

MEMBERS TO PASS.

BILL BACKERS ARE OPTIMISTIC THEY

WILL GET THAT SUPPORT AND HAVE

THIS BILL SIGNED BY THE

GOVERNOR, HOPEFULLY, IN TIME FOR

THE TOURIST SEASON TO BEGIN IN

For more infomation >> Legislative committee votes to preserve tip credit - Duration: 1:47.

-------------------------------------------

Is it legal to free a child or pet locked in a hot car? - Duration: 1:21.

ST BECAUSE IT'S TRENDING,

IS IT TRUE?

HERE IS SOCIAL MEDIA EXPERT

MEGAN FRANK.

MEGAN: IS IT LEGAL TO BREAK INTO

A CAR?

YOU CAN USE THE TEMPERATURE

FEATURE TO AVOID

REPERCUSSIONS.

BUT IT IS NOT TRUE.

IT'S AS YOU CAN TAKE A PICTURE,

SCREEN SHOT THE TEMPERATURE, AND

LEGALLY BREAK IN.

OTHERS SAY YOU CAN USE THE

SNAPCHAT TEMPERATURE FILTER TO

PROVE YOUR CASE.

POLICE SAY THE PERSON HAS A

RIGHT TO FILE CHARGES AGAINST

ANYONE WHO BREAKS INTO THEIR

CAR.

THE SCREEN SHOT MAY BE USEFUL IN

COURT, BUT POLICE SAY THERE IS

NO GUARANTEE IT WILL PREVENT YOU

FROM BEING SUED.

LEGALLY, YOU CAN CALL 911, RIGHT

DOWN T COLOR, MODEL, AND

LICENSE PLATE.

YOU CAN ASK STORES NEARBY TO

PAGE THE OWNER.

ON AN 80 DEGREE DAY, THE INSIDE

OF A CAR CAN EASILY REACH OVER

100 DEGREES IN JUST AN HOUR.

>> SEVERAL STATES DO ALLOW GOOD

SAMARITANS TO LEGALLY ENTER A

PARKED CAR BUT PENNSYLVANIA IS

NOT ONE OF THEM.

THERE IS CURRENTLY DEFICIENT OUT

THAT AIMS TO GRANT IMMUNITY IN

HOT CAR SITUATIONS.

UNDER PENNSYLVANIA'S CURRENT

For more infomation >> Is it legal to free a child or pet locked in a hot car? - Duration: 1:21.

-------------------------------------------

New Roblox Logo video - Duration: 1:20.

Now im on the outside.

Oh that Robot has cool costume, a d.i.y cardboard box lol, that mountain is yellow i like yellow,

and also that radio is cool.

That robot on the middle is a great dancer, they dance at the same time its cool.

Shout outs to the producer of this video, your cool man.

that girls face is so funny, she looks like a clown that don't have enough money to bought

her make up set to make her face scary lol.

Haha poor pizza man he just have to hit the grass with the rock, and all his surrounding

doesn't have one lol, but that pizza man is op though even if his bike trip, I hope he

doesn't die though.

Lol those noobs hanging around doing something, and then suddenly pizzas raining over them

and hit there face hahaha lol this video is so awesome.

Damn nice catch pirate guy with a hat or, a girl, good job.

Nice car, and poor noob, and people pushing it.

Lol one mistake, and lead him/her to burn himself/herself.

Poor people: this our revenge for the pirates that abuse us, and make us work here lets

go guys lets leave them, with a robot that is really angry, Ohh that is me who hit the

robot yes this so amazing.

Press the red button or die, yes its me who press the button, who has black sweater,white

pants, with a black zigzag, and also with a hat with a logo that say "Roblox".

Its my fault guys, its my fault that the new logo of roblox's o is kinda going on the right

side, nah im just kidding.Thank you for watching, and if you like this video smash that like

button, and also click that subscribe button for support, and i will see you on the next

video 'Good Bye".

For more infomation >> New Roblox Logo video - Duration: 1:20.

-------------------------------------------

Introduction to Russian Christianity - Duration: 2:01.

Hello ladies and gentlemen. In this

playlist called, Russia and Christianity,

I will go over Christianity in the

context of Russia. In this playlist I

will be talking about Protestantism in a

predominantly Orthodox country. Now allow

me to read part of this article in

Wikipedia. So I'll highlight this one

it reads: "According to the Slavic center

for law and justice,

Protestants make up the second or third

largest group of Christians in Russia

with approximately 3,500 organizations

and more than 1 million followers. A

large number of missionaries operating

in the country are from Protestant

denominations". Ok, so like I said I will

go over Protestantism in Russia. So

please make sure to stay tuned for more

videos. This video in particular will is

a kickoff to my playlist series, Russia

and Christianity. So be prepared for more

videos to come. I probably won't make

very many videos on on Russia, there

won't be very many videos. Anyways that's

all I have for now. Thank you for

watching and have a nice day, morning,

afternoon, wherever you are.

Goodbye!

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