DailyHouse.com » Shani Davis is Back On Top; Double 1000m Gold World Cup Speedskating

 DailyHouse.com » Shani Davis is Back On Top; Double 1000m Gold World Cup Speedskating

(Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

How you like ‘dem apples, world?  In one weekend, after winning both 1000m races, Shani Davis catapulted himself up the ISU 1000m rankings, all the way into second place overall.

Davis has had a season that most athletes would envy, but has been well below his very own high standard.  For the last five years Davis has unquestionably been the best 1000m skater in the world, winning two Olympic gold medals and countless world cups; but this year he has struggled.  Before yesterday, Davis had not won a 1000m medal all season. this weekend he changed streak that in a big way.

Davis won both yesterday’s and today’s 1000m races, crossing the line today in a time of 1:07.69. Second place was current 1000m world cup leader Stefan Groothuis (NED), who finished the two-and-a-half lap race in 1:07.94.  Third was Pekka Koskela (FIN) who skated 1:08.17.

Full Results, Men’s A 1000m

In the women’s 1000m, undefeated current world cup leader, Canada’s Christine Nesbitt, withdrew from the race to prepare for next week’s World Championships.  This paved the way for the Netherlands’ Laurine Van Riessen to take the win and her first podium finish of the year, skating a 1:14.21.  Marrit Leenstra (NED) was second in a time of 1:14.41.  Monique Angermuller (GER) finished in 3rd in 1:14.83, which is also her first time on the podium this year.

America’s Heather Richardson had a solid placement despite a race that was considerably slower than yesterday’s silver medal performance.  Richardson skated 1:15.48, which was nearly 1.5 seconds slower than the 1:13.99 she skated yesterday.  While I’m sure Richardson is disappointed with her performance, she still finished 5th, which doesn’t hurt her too badly in the overall rankings.

So what happened?  In my opinion, Richardson just looked like she tried too hard.  Yesterday she was relaxed and deep in the straightaways; whereas today she looked tight and really missed the power part of her pushes.  There is a bright side to today’s races, whatever it was that happened with Heather today – knowing how to relax on day two of a meet is a tough skill to learn.  Hopefully she can take some of these lessons with her into next weekend’s World Sprint Championships.

America’s other top 1000m skater, Brittany Bowe, had a fall a few steps into the start of the race.

Full Results Women’s A 1000m

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DailyHouse.com » Shani Davis is Back On Top; Double 1000m Gold World Cup Speedskating

Seth Stein: The quake killer

 Seth Stein: The quake killerSeth Stein argues that money is being wasted preparing the American Midwest for a major earthquake that may never come.Jean-Marc Giboux/GA by Getty Images

The lethal fault cuts through the middle of a Tennessee bean field and then ducks beneath the Mississippi River, making a beeline for New Madrid, Missouri. Named the Reelfoot fault, this geological crack combined with neighbouring faults two centuries ago to unleash a series of devastating earthquakes that have been called the biggest to strike the contiguous United States in recorded history. on government hazard maps, the New Madrid region stands out as a red bull’s eye. this spot in the middle of the continent — far from the plate boundaries that produce Earth’s greatest quakes — would seem to be every bit as dangerous as San Francisco or Los Angeles.

Seth Stein poses for a picture on top of the Reelfoot fault, but the geology just doesn’t cooperate. For something supposedly so dangerous, the quake-maker is hardly noticeable: the only sign is a 3-metre-high bump. “You don’t see much of a fault,” snorts Stein, a geophysicist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, who has studied the region for the past 20 years.

To Stein, the lack of anything substantial to photograph is one of several pieces of evidence suggesting that the US government and many scientists are wrong about the hazard here. If the Reelfoot fault had been popping off giant earthquakes repeatedly, for a long geological time, it would have built up a noticeable scarp, like the impressive topography of a mountain range. but there’s nothing like that here. And when Stein and his team surveyed the region with Global Positioning System (GPS) instruments, they found no evidence that the ground was warping in preparation for a repeat of the New Madrid quakes.

The seismic-hazard maps that show the New Madrid region to be so dangerous, he says, are sort of “an emperor’s-new-clothes business. Our role was to point out the emperor has no clothes.” the consequence, says Stein, is that the government and businesses in cities such as Memphis, Tennessee, are misspending vast sums — potentially billions of dollars — to construct buildings strong enough to withstand a giant quake that will never show up. “Building the Midwest to California construction codes is a colossal waste of money,” he says.

Stein and his group have published papers in Nature, Science and other journals presenting evidence to support that idea, and last year Stein took his case to the public with a book called Disaster Deferred, which accused the US Geological Survey (USGS) of inflating the quake risk in the region, known as the New Madrid Seismic Zone. That charge, coupled with Stein’s habit of ridiculing people and ideas he finds absurd, has irritated many geoscientists. but his work has forced them to confront the question of whether the United States is over-preparing for earthquakes in New Madrid, while under-preparing elsewhere. the magnitude-5.6 quake in Oklahoma this week and a 5.8 in Virginia in August point to the potential for strong shocks throughout central and eastern United States.

As he tours the New Madrid region with Nature, Stein lays out his case. the evidence emerging from New Madrid, he says, suggests that the faults involved in the quakes of 1811–12 are shutting down, shifting the hazard to other faults perhaps hundreds of kilometres away. Stein has hypothesized that the centres of other continents behave in a similar way, with patches of earthquake activity that harass one locale for thousands of years and then jump to other regions.

Some of his arguments are gaining ground, although few researchers go as far as Stein in playing down the dangers in the New Madrid area. “What he’s doing here is good; he’s raising issues and making hypotheses that could well be true,” says John Vidale, a seismologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, who this year led a federal panel that investigated the hazard in New Madrid. “The only thing that angers the community is when he argues that he’s right and everybody else is wrong.”

New Madrid is a quiet outpost on the banks of the Mississippi, where the mighty river meanders briefly north and then makes a complete U-turn back south. Throughout much of its history, the town fought — and lost — epic battles with the ever-shifting river, until levees were built in the early twentieth century.

The New Madrid Historical Museum sits next to the levee and honours the town’s seismic history with a detailed exhibition, currently being upgraded in advance of the quakes’ bicentennial next month. At the time of the shocks, New Madrid was a bustling port — one of the most important on the lower half of the Mississippi River.

The devastating seismic sequence started with a thunderous bang at around 2 a.m. on 16 December 1811. according to one resident: “We were awakened by a most tremendous noise, while the house danced about and seemed as if it would fall on our heads.” the quake and its immediate aftershocks scared many of the residents deeply, but few were killed. “Several men, I am informed, on the night of the first shock deserted their families, and have not been heard of since,” wrote the New Madrid resident.

Over the next few weeks, hundreds of aftershocks rattled the region, followed by two more major shocks on 23 January and 7 February 1812. the February quake caused the land southwest of the Reelfoot fault to jerk up, whereas New Madrid and the rest of the land northeast of the fault dropped by a combined total of about 3 metres or more. the quake destroyed the town and the Mississippi soon swallowed the land, forcing residents to rebuild farther from the river. the vibrations from the quakes were felt across an area of more than 2.6 million square kilometres — about one-third of the area of the contiguous United States (see ‘Earthquake central’).

Click for larger image

Because the quakes happened before the advent of modern seismometers — and in such a sparsely settled part of the young country — researchers have struggled over the years to determine just how big they were. In 1996, Arch Johnston, a geophysicist at the University of Memphis, used historical accounts of the quakes to estimate that the first shock, which he thought was the largest, had a magnitude somewhere between 7.8 and 8.4 — a truly monstrous earthquake, bigger than any in the history of the United States outside of Alaska1.

The events sound even worse in the museum, where a film calls the largest shock “the worst earthquake in recorded history”. Virtually the entire North American continent experienced some shaking, claims the film.

A museum pamphlet cites a study, sponsored by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, projecting that 3,500 people would die if a magnitude-7.7 earthquake were to strike the New Madrid region today. the economic losses, according to the pamphlet, could exceed US$300 billion. Stein grimaces at the film and scoffs at what he considers hazard-mongering. “The scary thing is how much of this is completely wrong,” he says. “The hazard here is wildly overestimated.”

It is that kind of pronouncement that wins Stein few points with his rivals. In debates, his attacks on positions he feels are unsupportable can be hyperbolic. And when his rants reach full steam, he seems like a hyper-intelligent version of George Costanza, the ever-complaining character from the television show Seinfeld, who, like Stein, also happens to be short and bald with glasses.

But Stein has a fertile imagination and has made several important advances in geophysics. As a young faculty member at Northwestern in the 1980s, he and his colleagues developed a widely used model quantifying how Earth’s plates have moved over the past 3 million years. the model assumes that each plate is a rigid patch of Earth’s outer shell, with not much movement in its interior. the vast majority of earthquakes, after all, happen at the edges of plates, where they crunch together and warp into mountain ranges. but Stein wondered how much the plates were deforming in their centres.

The US system of GPS satellites gave him a means of finding out. In 1991, he began a study of the New Madrid area to track the warping of the crust in the centre of the North American plate.

“how on Earth did the survey make this the most dangerous place in North America?”

Stein was certain that the crust was deforming to some degree there because geologists had been finding evidence of a series of large quakes hundreds of years before the cluster in 1811–12. the energy for those quakes must have come from forces straining the crust, perhaps transmitted all the way from the edges of the North American plate. but before Stein could get results from his GPS study, a rival group beat him to the finish by taking a shortcut. the team compared one set of GPS measurements with land-surveying data from the 1950s and found that the New Madrid area was deforming at a rapid rate, about one-third as fast as the San Andreas fault in California2.

Because they were relying on GPS data alone to catch any movement, Stein and his team had to wait several years and then resurvey the suite of sites around New Madrid, which they did in 1993 and 1997. when Andrew Newman, a graduate student working with Stein, finally crunched the numbers, he found something odd. there was little — or possibly no — warping of the crust3. “I was utterly flabbergasted that we did not see anything,” says Stein.

For several years, research teams battled in the scientific literature about whether the crust was deforming around New Madrid. but as more data piled up, they corroborated Stein’s original finding. “As we get better and better at measuring, we’re finding this motion is slower and slower,” admits Robert Smalley Jr, a geophysicist at the University of Memphis, who reported in 2005 that the region was straining at a rapid rate4.

When Stein saw Newman’s GPS analysis, he knew something was wrong with the whole New Madrid story. If the crust was not warping in any noticeable way, he couldn’t see how it could store up enough energy to fuel earthquakes as strong as magnitude 8 every 500 years or so — the accepted wisdom among geoscientists at the time. So Stein and his team proposed that the quakes of 1811–12 were much smaller than previously estimated, perhaps no larger than magnitude 7, which, because the scale is logarithmic, would produce just one twenty-fifth the shaking of a magnitude-8.4 quake.

As with the GPS results, other research has since backed up Stein’s estimate. when Susan Hough, a seismologist at the USGS in Pasadena, and her colleagues went back to witnesses’ reports of the 1811–12 quakes, they estimated that the biggest shock was between magnitude 7.4 and 7.5 (ref. 5). this year, she downgraded the size even further6, suggesting that somewhere between 6.8 and 7.0 would fit the data best, which is around what Stein had suggested more than a decade earlier.

Yet even before all the confirming evidence emerged, Stein had pushed his GPS data to a controversial conclusion. the New Madrid zone might well be turning off, after a geologically brief spell of activity, he claimed — and large quakes like the 1811–12 sequence might never happen there again.

Like most faults across the stable part of North America, the ones in the New Madrid area are hundreds of millions of years old and have remained quiet for most of their lives. but something must have activated them in the recent geological past — within the past 20,000 years — and geoscientists have been struggling to understand what that was.

A potential answer can be found in the tawny bluffs along Pawpaw Creek in northwest Tennessee. on a visit there, Stein and geologist Roy Van Arsdale of the University of Memphis examine a 25-metre cliff that provides a superb view of the sedimentary strata that are normally hidden beneath the surface. Farther west of this site, in the Mississippi River Valley, parts of this layer-cake sequence are missing. the river stripped away 12 metres of sediment at the end of the last ice age, between 16,000 and 10,000 years ago.

In a study of the sedimentary sequence throughout the area, Van Arsdale and his colleagues found that the erosion of those sediments happened right above the faults that have been implicated in the New Madrid earthquakes. they proposed that the removal of all that weight altered the stresses in the subsurface rocks enough to reactivate the New Madrid faults7.

To test that idea, Van Arsdale and Stein worked with Eric Calais and Andrew Freed at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, to model the effects of removing so much weight from above the faults. they calculated that the erosion unclamped the faults enough for the ones on the verge of an earthquake to fail, releasing energy that had accumulated over the past — perhaps millions of years earlier during events such as the growth of mountains in western North America8. but once a particular fault has broken, the scientists suggested, there would not be enough stress in the region to trigger another big quake there. So the large prehistoric quakes in that region must have happened on different fault segments from the ones that broke two centuries ago.

Rather than seeing the faults around New Madrid in isolation, Stein suggests that they are part of a broad system of interacting faults, and that seismic activity shifts from one set of faults to others over hundreds or thousands of years. He sees a similar pattern in Europe, Australia and China, where earthquakes often do not recur in the same spots.

“If you spend that money on schools or health care, you’re almost guaranteed to save lives.”

If the New Madrid area were to shut down, the seismic activity would eventually transfer somewhere else, says Stein, probably to the southwest or to the Wabash Valley fault system in Indiana and Illinois, which had a major earthquake 6,000 years ago. Van Arsdale is concerned about the possibility of quakes shifting south towards Memphis, along the edge of the Reelfoot rift, where the North American continent began, briefly, to pull apart some 500 million years ago.

Stein, Van Arsdale and others would now like to get GPS measurements and construct a detailed earthquake history of a much broader region around New Madrid, to determine how seismic patterns have moved among the different faults in the central United States. “Compared with ten years ago, we’ve made a hell of a lot of progress,” says Stein. “I think we’re now poised to make significant advances.”

The evidence already available, however, is enough to undermine the government’s assessment of the earthquake danger in the New Madrid area, Stein says. “How on Earth did the survey make this the most dangerous place in North America?” he asks. “It’s a relatively small hazard.”

This year, the National Earthquake Prediction Evaluation Council, which advises the USGS, convened a panel of independent scientists and engineers to examine the issue. Vidale, who led the panel, said they were motivated in part by Stein’s persistent criticism as well as by the impending bicentennial of the quakes. the panel in general supported the survey’s most recent assessment from 2008, which showed that the hazard in parts of the New Madrid region surpasses that in Los Angeles or San Francisco, although it said “it is likely that the estimated New Madrid Seismic Zone hazard may decline moderately in the next hazard assessment due to improved knowledge of past earthquakes and current deformation” (see ‘Do maps magnify the earthquake hazard?’).

According to Vidale, the main problem is that the region remains poorly understood. “We basically found that there’s a lot of uncertainty. because we don’t know exactly what’s going on, we need to be prepared for large earthquakes.” but he also acknowledges the possibility that a large earthquake might never come.

About Stein, Vidale says: “None of his ideas are bad. It’s just that he presents them in an extreme way and doesn’t allow for the possibility that he might not be right.”

Pictures taken a century after the 1811–12 quakes show their lasting effects. the shaking liquefied buried sand layers, causing them to erupt through fissures (left) and cover the ground in thick deposits that smothered trees (right).USGS

Stein’s overall argument gets little backing even from Hough, who has argued strongly that the earthquakes 200 years ago were much smaller than once thought. “Seth argues that the zone is dead because you don’t see strain. And I don’t think that’s a valid conclusion,” she says. “There’s enough strain around that could produce a magnitude 7.”

Stein, though, denies that he has been so dogmatic. He says that, in his book and in papers, he presents the idea of New Madrid turning off as a possibility — not a certainty.

These issues all come to a head in downtown Memphis, which is full of office buildings, apartments and hotels constructed during the first third of the twentieth century. many of them are unreinforced masonry — made of concrete blocks or bricks without any metal skeleton. Engineers consider this class of structure to be one of the most vulnerable during an earthquake. If a quake near magnitude 8 were to strike within the next few decades, it could topple many of these buildings. but if no large quake comes for 50 years or more, most of these buildings will probably be long gone, replaced by newer structures.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has been pushing municipalities in the Memphis area to adopt a standard International Building Code (IBC) that would require new buildings to withstand 3 to 4 times stronger shaking than was required by earlier codes, says Joseph Tomasello, an engineer with the Reaves Firm in Memphis who has collaborated with Stein. but many people in the area have baulked at such stringent requirements, and the city is allowing owners to build to a less restrictive code until it adopts the 2009 version of the IBC, which is expected to happen around the end of this year.

Some engineers suggest that the code’s enhanced seismic provisions would increase building costs only marginally, but Tomasello contends that they could add an extra 10–15%. If all new construction were required to meet the newer code, building costs in the Memphis metropolitan area would be increased by $200 million a year, he estimates. “When you look at the hazard, it just doesn’t make any sense,” says Tomasello.

To Stein, building to a lower level of protection makes sense. the faults that produced the 1811–12 quakes are still crackling with aftershocks, and there is a chance that one of them could be as large as magnitude 6.7. but building to the new IBC in Memphis would be a waste of money, he says. “There’s a good chance that all the money you would spend would save no lives at all. but if you spend that money on schools or health care, you’re almost guaranteed to save lives.” the most important thing, Stein says, is for the government to do a rigorous analysis of the costs and benefits of seismic building codes, before forcing people to foot the bill for expensive protections.

The next day, as Stein walks through Memphis airport on his way back home, he brings up the issue again. It is 13 September, just two days after the tenth anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. In the intervening decade, the country has spent $1.3 trillion waging two wars and has instituted time-consuming security provisions at airports, such as herding travellers through scanning machines capable of peering through clothes.

To Stein, these are all examples of misunderstood risks and squandered resources. “I can’t do anything about the thousand things the government does that I’m unhappy about,” he says in a quiet moment. but with New Madrid, “I can do something about that”. 

Richard Monastersky is a features editor for Nature in Washington DC.

Listen to the Nature Podcast for more on the quake hazard.

Seth Stein: The quake killer

Newt Gingrich’s Secret Weapon: Two Debate Coaches

If Newt Gingrich’s presidential campaign has come back from the dead, it is due in no small measure to the performance that the former House speaker has been putting in at the debates.

 Newt Gingrich’s Secret Weapon: Two Debate CoachesNewt Gingrich answers a question during a debate hosted by CNBC and the Michigan Republican Party at Oakland University on November 9, 2011 in Rochester, Michigan. (Scott Olson – GETTY IMAGES) it turns out Gingrich has had some help from two debate coaches.

Their names: Maggie and Robert Cushman (his grandchildren). She’s 12, and an aspiring ballerina; he’s 10, and can already beat his grandfather at chess.

When he goes out on stage, Gingrich told me Friday, he carries but one piece of paper. On it, he writes two reminders for himself–both of which come from his grandchildren.

At the top of the page, Gingrich said, he doodles a happy face, because Maggie has told him she will be counting the number of times he smiles. At the bottom are Roberts words of advice: “Shorter and clearer.”

These two may have a future in political consulting.

Newt’s war on debate moderators

Gingrich’s rise in the polls, at Cain’s expense

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHiKlYVu_2c&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0]

Newt Gingrich’s Secret Weapon: Two Debate Coaches

Oscar-Nominated Actress Susannah York Dies

 Oscar Nominated Actress Susannah York Dies

Susannah York (Photo by MJ Kim/Getty Images)

LONDON, ENGLAND (CBS/AP) - British actress Susannah York, one of the leading stars of British and Hollywood films in the late 1960s and early 1970s and an Academy Award nominee, has died at the age of 72.

York died of cancer Saturday at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London.

Her son, the actor Orlando Wells, said York was an incredibly brave woman who did not complain about her illness and was a “truly wonderful mother.” he said she went into the hospital on Jan. 6 after experiencing shoulder pain.

York had a long, distinguished career on film, television and on stage, making a strong impact in the 1963 romp “Tom Jones” opposite Albert Finney.

With its tongue-in-cheek sensuality and gentle send-up of the British aristocracy, the film is remembered as an early landmark in ’60s cinema, and York’s unmistakable presence added to its appeal. her long blond hair, stunning blue eyes and quick-witted repartee brought her a string of excellent roles.

“Tom Jones” won the Oscar for best Picture, as did another of York’s ’60s classics, “A Man for All Seasons.”

But she is perhaps best remembered by younger audiences as the mother of Kal-el, the baby who grew up to be “Superman,” in the 1978 film and two of its sequels.

She was nominated for a best Supporting Actress Oscar for the 1969 classic “they Shoot Horses, Don’t they?” Other early films credits include “Tunes of Glory” (with Alec Guinness), “Freud” (with Montgomery Clift), “oh! what a Lovely War,” “Kaleidoscope” and “Battle of Britain.”

She stirred controversy with her daring portrayal of a lesbian in the 1968 drama “the Killing of Sister George,” and earned an Emmy Award nomination for the 1970 television remake of “Jane Eyre” (featuring George C. Scott as Rochester).

She won the best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival for her startling portrayal of a schizophrenic in Robert Altman’s “Images” (1972). She also appeared in “appy Birthday, Wanda June”and Shout.”

She moved on to television and stage work, including several one-woman shows. Among her U.S. and British TV credits are “Ruth Rendell Mysteries,” “the love Boat,” “Holby City” and “We’ll Meet again.”

Wells said his mother was incredibly versatile throughout her working life.

“there was the glamorous Hollywood aspect – she has worked with everyone from John Huston to Sydney Pollack – as well as the big commercial films like ‘Superman,’” he said.

Wells said his mother also had a passion for writing.

“She wrote two children’s books, which is great for her grandchildren and something we will pass on to them,” said Wells.

York was born in London and studied at the storied Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, which has tutored many of Britain’s top actors throughout the years.

York had two children – son Orlando and daughter Sasha – with her husband, Michael Wells, before they divorced. She is survived by her children and several grandchildren.

(© 2011 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. this material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. the Associated Press contributed to this report)

Oscar-Nominated Actress Susannah York Dies

Michael Vick, Philadelphia Eagles (Matt) Dodge A New York Giant-Sized Bullet

1292800521 76 Michael Vick, Philadelphia Eagles (Matt) Dodge A New York Giant Sized Bullet Nick Laham/Getty Images

Eli Manning’s New York Giants hosted Michael Vick’s Philadelphia Eagles Week 15 in arguably the day’s biggest matchup.

The Giants had the game won. The NFC East division was in their sight. their playoff destiny was in their hands. with 8:17 to go in the game, Manning threw a touchdown to Kevin Boss to extend the Giants’ lead to 21 after gaining possession on a DeSean Jackson fumble.

Then Vick went to work.

Although he was contained for most of the game, Vick kept firing back at the Giants’ defense. Less than one minute after the Boss touchdown, Vick found his own tight end, Brent Celek, for a 65-yard touchdown.

The Eagles caught the Giants napping. They recovered an onside kick that New York never saw coming.

Exactly two minutes later, Vick ran in a four-yard touchdown.

On the Eagles’ next possession, Vick found Jeremy Maclin for his second touchdown to tie the game with 1:18 left to go in the game.

When Manning couldn’t lead his offense to a first down, the Giants were forced to punt with 13 seconds left on the clock.

Jackson set back to return the punt. he muffed the Matt Dodge punt but managed to recover it and run up the middle of the field before cutting to the right and up field for a touchdown. of course, the showboat he is, Jackson had to run to the opposite side of the goal line before finally entering to put the Giants out of the misery with no time left on the clock.

Justin Tuck could be seen sitting on the bench grinning at the unbelievable turn of events as he took his pads off.

Head coach Tom Coughlin threw down his papers and immediately went to Dodge, clearly irate. Coughlin could be seen lip-synching to Dodge that he was supposed to kick the ball out of bounds instead of kicking a line drive to Jackson, one of the deadliest return men in the NFL.

The Giants’ collapse will be felt for a long time; it’s an embarrassing loss. not only did they give up the 21-point lead, they gave up a bizarre walk-off punt return touchdown to their rival with the division on the line.

Vick, despite being disrupted all day, proved once again he is matching New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady for the 2010 MVP award.

Vick completed 21 of 35 passes (60.0 completion percentage) for 242 yards, three touchdowns and one interception. he added 130 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries.

After a road comeback like this, the Eagles have proven they are one of the most resilient teams in the league. Vick clearly has the Eagles ready to soar to the Super Bowl.

Michael Vick, Philadelphia Eagles (Matt) Dodge A New York Giant-Sized Bullet

College Football Lines: UCLA Getting Too Many Points Against Stanford

 College Football Lines: UCLA Getting Too Many Points Against Stanford Stephen Dunn/Getty Images

Two interstate rivals collide in Week 2 of the college football season when the 25th-ranked Stanford Cardinal meet the UCLA Bruins in Pac-10 play.

UCLA has owned the matchup overall, winning 12 of the past 17 games.  The Cardinal did snap a five-game losing streak last year, earning a 24-16 win.  A key number to keep in mind is UCLA has won six straight at home versus Stanford by an average of 12 points per game.

The latest college football lines show that Stanford is listed as a six-point favorite.

UCLA had a disappointing start to their 2010 season, suffering a 31-22 loss to the Kansas State Wildcats.  The Bruins have a chance to quickly rebound with a ranked opponent coming to the Rose Bowl.

Kevin Prince was the first returning starter at quarterback for Rick Neuheisel in his three-year tenure.  The opener did not go according to plan for Prince, as he threw for 120 yards and one touchdown with two interceptions.  His completion percentage was a measly 34.6 percent, but the coaching staff has decided that he will get the start against Stanford.

Prince added a touchdown on the ground.

RB Jonathan Franklin carried the ball 13 times for 60 yards in the opener.  Expect UCLA to rely heavy on the run this weekend to keep a potent Cardinal offense on the sideline.  Colorado transfer Josh Smith was used twice in end around situations and gained 52 yards on two attempts.

The Bruins have a talented receiving core that was shut down against K State.

Nelson Rosario led the way with three receptions for 29 yards.  Ricky Marvray caught the only touchdown pass for UCLA.  The defense needs to shore up their run stopping ability after giving up 313 yards on the ground last weekend.  They will get hit with the aerial assault of Andrew Luck and company on Saturday, however.

Jim Harbaugh enters his fourth season at Stanford with one of the best quarterbacks in the nation, and has played a major role in restoring the proud tradition in Palo Alto.

Andrew Luck’s arsenal of skills were on full display against Sacramento State.  He threw for 316 yards and four touchdowns completing 17 of 23 attempts.

Pro scouts are drooling over the skill set Luck possesses, and he could be Stanford’s fourth quarterback chosen first overall in a couple of years.

The Cardinal had to replace record-setting running back Toby Gerhart in the backfield.  Usua Amanam and Tyler Gaffney split carries.  Amanam gained 50 yards on eight carries, while Gaffney had 33 yards and a touchdown.

Senior wide receiver Doug Baldwin caught four passes for 111 yards and two scores.  Baldwin caught only four passes all of last season and did not reach the end zone once.  Ryan Whalen is the top returning receiver from a year ago, and was on the receiving end of four passes for 64 yards.

The offense gained over 500 total yards against an inferior opponent, but showed balance.  Stanford returns seven starters on defense and was impressive in the opener.

This is an interesting matchup that has an interesting line attached to it.  Stanford opened as a 6.5-point favorite, and it has moved down a half point.  UCLA owns the Cardinal at home and should have added motivation after starting the season with a loss.  The strength of the Bruins defense is their secondary so they should be able to hold Stanford’s passing in check to some extent.

I believe UCLA has a very good chance at winning this game straight up, so take the six points.

Play: UCLA plus-6

Get your football picks from the expert handicappers at Locksmith Sports.  No site provides more winners than Jimmy Boyd and company!

College Football Lines: UCLA Getting Too Many Points Against Stanford

World’s smallest seahorse faces extinction after BP oil spill

1283966113 25 Worlds smallest seahorse faces extinction after BP oil spill A dwarf seahorse, found only in waters off the Gulf Coast. the species is at risk because of habitat loss, say conservationists. Photograph: Robert F. Sisson/NG/Getty Images

One of the world’s smallest seahorses faces extinction because of the BP oil spill, conservationists have warned.

The minute creatures, barely 2cm tall, were elusive even before the spill, found only among the seagrass in the shallow waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Now conservationists from the Zoological Society of London’s Project Seahorse team are warning populations could fall precipitously because so much of their habitat could have been lost to the spill.

“We have very high levels of concern for this particular species because they have a narrower range,” said Heather Masonjones, a seahorse biologist at the University of Tampa.

Although most seahorses are believed to live in shallow water, some also cling to the seagrass mats that float in the open water. During the three months that oil was gushing from BP’s well, these mats become collection points for crude. some of these were set alight in burn fields as BP tried to stop the oil washing on shore. Furthermore, thick clouds of oil in water typically starve seagrass of the light they need to survive, while toxic components of the oil as well as the millions of gallons of chemical dispersants used to break down the spill could also be shrinking suitable habitat for seahorses.

The dwarf seahorses, or Hippocampus zosterae, are particularly ill-suited to escape. They are poor swimmers, making the species extremely vulnerable to a sudden environmental impact such as the BP spill, said Heather Koldewey, the associate director of Project Seahorse. They also mate for life, and produce relatively few offspring, making it more difficult for them to recover from a cataclysmic event.

Masonjones said the experience of earlier oil spills suggested it could take five years for seagrass to make a complete recovery, which represents about three generations of seahorses. It is also unclear how dispersants, which can be hormone disrupters, will affect reproduction cycles, especially on seahorses where males carry the eggs.

Koldewey said it was crucial that BP take steps to help protect the seagrass in the oil spill clean-up in the months ahead to avoid further damage to seahorse populations: “We are urging BP to continue to use booms in the clean-up to isolate the oil slicks. These can be skimmed, left to evaporate, or treated with biological agents like fertilisers, which promote the growth of micro-organisms that biodegrade oil.”

World’s smallest seahorse faces extinction after BP oil spill

Kellie Pickler Enjoys Creature Comforts With Pets

 Kellie Pickler Enjoys Creature Comforts With Pets

Who knows what will happen when Kellie Pickler marries Kyle Jacobs and they want to start a family? Apparently, she already has one. There’s Boots, Tucker, Maddie, Moo Moo, Pixie and a baby raccoon. I don’t know if all these animals still call Pickler’s bus home, but you can tell from this photo gallery on PeoplePets.com that she adores being surrounded with animals. (Especially the snake, which she literally has wrapped around her wrist while she’s typing.) “Ever since I got the snake, everybody’s scared to come on the [tour] bus,” she said. And thank God for Twitter so Pickler can keep her followers updated on her latest love interests. her most recent one is Tucker, her sister’s 10-month-old Weimaraner puppy. “This is one big pup,” she said when she picked up the hunting dog in July.

Photo credit: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Kellie Pickler Enjoys Creature Comforts With Pets

Emmys Still Mad About Mad Men; Modern Family, Top Chef Pull Upsets – E! Online

1283206526 76 Emmys Still Mad About Mad Men; Modern Family, Top Chef Pull Upsets   E! Online Kevin Winter/Getty Images

The kings of Madison Avenue are still lords of the living room.

Mad Men was named Outstanding Drama Series for the third year in a row, showing the upset-craving upstarts, the vampires, the likable serial killers and drug dealers—and Lost—who was boss at the 62nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards.

Complete list of winners at the 62nd Primetime Emmys

But though Lost won a sole technical award in in its final season and AMC kicked some major butt across the board, ABC had plenty to celebrate tonight.

Modern Family, the network’s one true breakout hit last season, made a nice, fat splash tonight, winning Outstanding Comedy Series and establishing itself as a viable contender in multiple categories for years to come.

In addition to earning a half-dozen Emmys, the most for a broadcast-network series, the very award-worthy ensemble lent itself to one of the show’s funniest sketches, a play on a network’s idea of how to spice up a show’s plotline. (Hint: It involved George Clooney, lots of George Clooney.)

On his first try, Eric Stonestreet earned the win for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy, while Steven Levitan and Christopher Lloyd shared honors for comedy series writing to take Modern Familiy’s Emmy tally to six (including last week’s Creative Arts wins). It helped power the Alphabet net to 18 total wins, second only to perennial leader HBO’s 25.

Going from ABC back to AMC, the men of Breaking bad proved once again to be total badasses, with Bryan Cranston—once perenially overlooked  for his comedic skills in Malcolm in the Middle—winning his third straight Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama and Aaron Paul snagging his first for Supporting Actor as Cranston’s right-hand meth cooker.

Mad Men mastermind Matthew Weiner made it three straight wins for Writing for a Drama Series, this time sharing the honor with coscribe Erin Levy. They helped push mad Men’s total to four, and AMC’s overall tally to six.

Kyra Sedgwick finally made it happen in the Lead Actress in a Drama category, her fifth nomination the charm for her role as a sticky-sweet-sounding but tough-as-nails detective on The Closer. Plus, we’re always happy to see Kevin Bacon (and a Hollywood couple of 20-plus years).

1283206527 63 Emmys Still Mad About Mad Men; Modern Family, Top Chef Pull Upsets   E! Online