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9 year old boy’s cardboard arcade: The Power Of A Child's Imagination



Caine Monroy is a 9-year old boy who spent his summer vacation building an elaborate DIY cardboard arcade in his dad’s used auto parts store.
Caine dreamed of the day he would have lots of customers visit his arcade, and he spent months preparing everything, perfecting the game design, making displays for the prizes, designing elaborate security systems, and hand labeling paper-lunch-gift-bags. However, his dad’s autoparts store (located in an industrial part of East LA) gets almost zero foot traffic, so Caine’s chances of getting a customer were very small, and the few walk in customers that came through were always in too much of a hurry to get their auto part to play Caine’s Arcade. But Caine never gave up.

One day, by chance, I walked into Smart Parts Auto looking for a used door handle for my ’96 Corolla. What I found was an elaborate handmade cardboard arcade manned by a young boy who asked if I would like to play. I asked Caine how it worked and he told me that for $1 I could get two turns, or for $2 I could get a Fun Pass with 500 turns. I got the Fun Pass.

A roughcut of the film premiered at DIY Days, where Caine set up his arcade for people to play. Caine was commissioned by an attendee to build a custom cardboard claw machine, which he did for $80.

This film is a collaboration between all of my friends who chipped in, as well as all of the folks online who got behind the idea of helping to make Caine’s day. Big THANKS to everyone who helped! See FILM CREDITS

After the flashmob, at the end of the day as Caine and his dad drove home, Caine turned to his dad and said, “Dad, this was the best day of my whole life.”

If you like the film, please share it with a friend, and leave Caine a message on his Facebook page. If you are in the LA area, come on down and play Caine’s Arcade hours/directions) – Caine loves customers!

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Okla. Drug Agents Arrest 73-Year-Old Woman

Oklahoma drug agents have arrested a 73-year-old woman for allegedly running a major marijuana operation.
 Click Like For Thrcenter News Updates: 
They say Darlene Mayes ran the drug trade from her Craig County home. Agents raided the home Monday and say they found six pounds of marijuana, guns and $277,000 in cash.
"We kept finding more cash and it was so surprising," said Vinta police chief Bobby Floyd. "It was surprising that it was just laying around. I mean it was in closets, underneath the bed. But it wasn't really hidden."
The task force says they had been investigating a drug ring for five months. Mayes had no prior criminal history.

Read more: http://www.koco.com/news/30872503/detail.html#ixzz1rxhUW7eV

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"Lean finely textured beef," aka "pink slime,"



"Lean finely textured beef," aka "pink slime," sparked an uproar when the USDA bought 7 million pounds of the stuff for school lunches. The agency maintains it's safe and healthy; critics say it's not fit to eat. But the burger filler isn't new, nor is it the only way that meat packers maximize production. Here's how it stacks up against two other mechanical processes.
Lean Finely Textured BeefMechanically Separated MeatAdvanced Meat Recovery
WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE?pink slime
mechanically separated chicken
advanced meat recovery
WHAT ELSE IS IT CALLED?
"Pink slime," coined by formerUSDA microbiologist Gerald Zirnstein in 2002.
"White slime," in the popular press.
WHAT IS IT?
Processed beef trimmings and recovered materials from meat carcasses, like fat and connective tissue.
"paste-like and batter-like meat product" made from mechanically removing meat from animal bones.
Pieces of meat that have been scraped, shaved, or pressed off the bone by special machinery.
HOW IS IT MADE?
Trimmings are heated to 100°F and spun inside a centrifuge to separate the meat from the fat. After the fat is removed, the remaining beef bits are treated with ammonia hydroxide to kill bacteria such as E. coli or salmonella. They are then ground up, frozen into blocks and added to other beef products.
Carcasses are forced through "a sieve or similar device under high pressure to separate bone from the edible tissue." The remaining fragments (the USDA limits how many bits of bone are acceptable) are ground up into a paste and added to other processed meats.
Without grinding, crushing or pulverizing the bone itself, a machine removes edible tissue from beef and pork bones. If the resulting bits have more than 150 mg of calcium per 100 grams (indicating the presence of bones) they must be labeled "mechanically separated" meat.
WHERE IS IT FOUND?burgermeatloafburgersmeatloafbolognapink slimebolognahot dogstaco fillingmeatballstaco fillingmeatballs
HOW IS IT LABELED?
Some companies may soon include "lean finely textured beef" on their product labels, and Congress recently introduced a bill to require labeling. Right now the USDA does not require any disclosure, because the product is considered the same as beef.
Manufacturers must always label "mechanically separated" pork, chicken or turkey on the ingredients list. According to the American Meat Institute, the product is no longer typically used in chicken nuggets (McDonald's has repeatedly claimed that its chicken nuggets only contain chicken breast meat).
Is labeled the same way as any other meat – such as "beef" or "ground pork."
HEALTH CONCERNS?
Trimmings are typically collected from more bacteria-prone parts of the cow, but treatment with ammonia is supposed to kill pathogens. In 2009 some beef products tested positive for E. coli and salmonella, but the USDA says it has modified inspection processes since then to address safety concerns. The USDA continues to "affirm the safety of Lean Finely Textured Beef product for all consumers."

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World's First Robot Prison Guard



"Robo-guard" on patrol in South Korean prison (2:05)

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Pakistan to deport bin Laden family next week




ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will deport the widows and children of former al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden to Saudi Arabia next week after their jail sentence for illegal residency ends, their lawyer said on Friday.

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Earlier this month a Pakistani court sentenced the women to 45 days in prison for illegally staying in the country. It ordered their deportation after the prison term which began on March 3 when they were formally arrested.
"They are likely to be deported to Saudi Arabia on April 18, as their sentence ends on April 17," the family's lawyer, Aamir Khalil, told Reuters.
The three widows and the children were among the 16 people detained after the US raid. Two of the wives are Saudi nationals, and one is from Yemen. (Reuters)

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Relatively calm hours after Syrian ceasefire (1:00)

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Uprooted by the Lord’s Resistance Army


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Uprooted by the Lord’s Resistance Army

Uprooted by the Lord’s Resistance Army

Many of the Congolese villagers displaced by LRA attacks find shelter with host families in Dungu. They...
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Uploaded on Apr 12, 2012  |  
Uprooted by the Lord’s Resistance Army

Uprooted by the Lord’s Resistance Army

Children play at a water outlet in the Bangapili settlement for internally displaced people. They fled...
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Uploaded on Apr 12, 2012  |  

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