Barry and Stuart Suicide ic C Sharp 24.07.08
Barry and Stuart do a very gory magic trick. This is from a TV show called Dirty Tricks.
You can see more of Barry and Stuart on: http://www.myspace.com/barryandstuart
Barry and Stuart do a very gory magic trick. This is from a TV show called Dirty Tricks.
You can see more of Barry and Stuart on: http://www.myspace.com/barryandstuart
If you are plan to go to marathon race, do not forget to bring water…

Watch your step, because crazy photographers are all around us… Just a second, and your picture is famous on the Internet.. Just like few of these…


What is Dekochari?
The Dekochari or decoration charinko is a form of art bike indigenous to Japan dating back to the mid 1970s. ‘Deko’ in Japanese is short for decoration and ‘Chari’ is slang for bike. The Dekochari was a response by children to the Dekotora (’Tora’ is short for Truck) craze which swept Japan after a series of movies called Truck Yaro was released. These movies featured giant trucks decked out in chrome and flashy lights.
Unable to drive the giant chrome-plated flashing trucks they coveted, children instead built plywood boxes around their bikes and attached chrome plating and lights. Almost all current Dekochari’s have elaborate light displays and many include hi-fi audio systems and cup-holders.
There are currently several Dekochari bike gangs in Japan, including the All Japan Hishyomaru fleet, the All Japan DC Club Ryumaki and the All Japan Kyokugenmaru Gang.
Here are few examples…

Which is easier to remember: 4432879960 or 443-297-9960? The latter, of course. Adults seem to know automatically, in fact, that long strings of numbers are more easily recalled when divided into smaller “bite-sized chunks,” which is why we break up our telephone and Social Security numbers in this way.
Now researchers at The Johns Hopkins University have discovered that children as young as 14 months old can – and do — use the same technique to increase their working memories, indicating that “chunking” information in this way is not a learned strategy, but is, instead, a fundamental aspect of the human mind.
“Our work offers evidence of memory expansion based on conceptual knowledge in untrained, preverbal subjects,” said Lisa Feigenson, assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences in the university’s Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, who worked on the study with colleague Justin Halberda. “What we have basically done is show that very young children, who can usually only keep track of about three objects at once, can keep track of more if they use the kind of conceptual, linguistic, perceptual and spatial cues adults also use.”
An article on this research appears in the July 14 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
In the team’s experiment, the 14-month-olds were shown four toys which were then hidden in a box. The children then were allowed to search for the missing toys. Sometimes, two of the four toys were secretly withheld in another place. The researchers observed how long the youngsters continued to search the box, the idea being that they would search longer if they remembered there were more toys yet to be found.
The researchers found the children would search longer when the four toys consisted of two groups of two familiar objects, cats and cars, and one of each type had been withheld. That indicated that the youngsters were using mental chunking as a way to recall more items at a time.
The team also found that 14-month-olds can use spatial grouping cues (the researchers grouped six identical orange balls in three groups of two before hiding them) to expand memory, in the same way that adults group digits when remembering phone numbers. When provided with such cues, the little ones could remember up to six objects.
These results suggest that memory is not merely a passive storage system that makes a “carbon copy” of our experiences. Instead, Feigenson says, the results show that from at least early toddlerhood onward, memory is constantly being restructured and reorganized to maximize its efficiency. The researchers’ results may have implications for educational strategies or for helping those who suffer short-term memory problems. But more directly, they show that the memory systems of young infants are surprisingly similar to those of adults.
Source: Johns Hopkins University/PhysOrg.com
