Oct 31, 2009

This Weeks Sound Off

At first glance I couldn’t recognize who this was until I read the article. And to my amazement, Adam Lambert? Hmm! As for me, this is a bit TOOOO much. Nonetheless, to each their own, though it does cause me to wonder if he’s a man or woman … LOL Anyway, Adam’s a great artist and I hope he does well, but my personal feeling is that if Adam wants to be successful he’ll have to appeal to a much wider audience cause for some, perhaps many, this album cover will be a turn off. I’m just saying.

Vampires: Is It Real?

Piano Stairs

I'm Not Drunk-1

Beetlejuice - Shake Shake Shake Senora

This Is Halloween

Oct 18, 2009


Halloween Stripper

Fungi-Infected Violins Best Stradivarius

Schwarze and his colleagues, famous violin makers, built five violins. Two violins were created using wood from the same tree but not treated with fungus. Three violins were made from wood treated with fungus for six, nine and 12 months. Only the violins treated for six and nine months were used in the testing for quality. The violin treated for twelve months developed cracks during production and was discarded.

Using the four violins---two treated and two untreated, plus a Stradivarius valued at $2 million, British violinist, Matthew Trusler, played for an audience of more than 180 people at a forestry conference. The audience was asked to determine which of the five violins was the Stradivarius.

More than 90 people ranked the bio-violin treated for nine months as "the Stradivarius". Matthew Trusler's real Stradivarius came in second, followed by the violin treated for six months. The two untreated violins came in fourth and fifth.

Treating quarter cuts with fungi is not likely to become standard practice for violin makers, said David Wiebe, a violin maker from Woodstock, New York, but the idea is "worth following up on."

Whether the violin is an original Stradivarius or made from fungus-treated wood, it takes a master violinist to bring out a violin's complete promise.

A great violin "cannot be accomplished with one or another secret chemical or biological application," said Wiebe. "It has to do with a deep lifetime dedication."

Eric Bland, Discovery News

From The 50s

Many use lockers secured with combination padlocks at the gym, locker rooms at various clubs, storage buildings in backyards, etc.! If you think using a combination lock is safe today? Think again and watch the attached video clip!

This is just what we need: one criminally-minded kid telling many other kids how to open combination padlocks without tools, skills or much intelligence!

So, if you find cut up soda cans with pieces left over lying around, you'd better be asking some questions, and check your belongings that you thought you had safely padlocked for safe keeping. They just might not be where you left them!

Cleaning Dad's Car After A Date