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The period of one complete cycle of the dance is 60 seconds. The length of the longest pendulum has been adjusted so that it executes 51 oscillations in this 60 second period. The length of each successive shorter pendulum is carefully adjusted so that it executes one additional oscillation in this period. Thus, the 15th pendulum (shortest) undergoes 65 oscillations. When all 15 pendulums are started together, they quickly fall out of sync—their relative phases continuously change because of their different periods of oscillation. However, after 60 seconds they will all have executed an integral number of oscillations and be back in sync again at that instant, ready to repeat the dance.
Wollt ihr das Bett in Flammen sehen
wollt ihr in Haut und Haaren untergehen
ihr wollt doch auch den Dolch ins Laken stecken
ihr wollt doch auch das Blut vom Degen lecken
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The CIA’s Secret Sites in Somalia. Jeremy Scahill at The Nation reports on a CIA facility at Mogadishu’s international airport used for a “counterterrorism training program for Somali intelligence agents and operatives,” as well as a secret prison “buried in the basement of Somalia’s National Security Agency” where “some of the prisoners have been snatched off the streets of Kenya and rendered by plane to Mogadishu.”
Amy Goodman interviewed Scahill on Democracy Now. In the next segment, he also gave the location of the prison to a Red Cross spokesman, urging an investigation. The CIA has sort of responded.More on the Obama administration and extraordinary rendition: 1, 2, 3
The US has recently extended drone strikes to Somalia. The Pentagon has also allocated $45 million in military assistance (including four surveillance drones) to Uganda and Burundi, whose troops make up the African Union peacekeeping force propping up the Somali government.
Somalia is suffering from its most severe drought in 60 years, what the UN has called currently “the world’s worst humanitarian disaster.”

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Miller Time in Minnesota is over — until lawmakers reach a budget deal.
The state’s government shutdown, now in its 13th day, will soon force MillerCoors to pull its beer from Minnesota liquor stores, bars and restaurants. A state official says the law requires the company to stop selling products like Coors Light, Miller Lite and Blue Moon imminently because their brand licenses expired.
"I would suspect within days to see that product leave the shelves," said Doug Neville, a spokesman for the Department of Public Safety.
I didn’t know Miller actually qualified as “Beer”.
Headlines of the future:
STATE OF MINNESOTA SOBERS UP, MICHELLE BACHMANN RECALLED IN LANDSLIDE
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When Eric Cantor shut down debt ceiling negotiations last week, it did more than just rekindle fears that the U.S. government might soon default on its debt obligations — it also brought him closer to reaping a small financial windfall from his investment in a mutual fund whose performance is directly affected by debt ceiling brinkmanship.
Last year the Wall Street Journal reported that Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House, had between $1,000 and $15,000 invested in ProShares Trust Ultrashort 20+ Year Treasury EFT. The fund aggressively "shorts" long-term U.S. Treasury bonds, meaning that it performs well when U.S. debt is undesirable. (A short is when the trader hopes to profit from the decline in the value of an asset.)
According to his latest financial disclosure statement, which covers the year 2010 and has been publicly available since this spring, Cantor still has up to $15,000 in the same fund. Contacted by Salon this week, Cantor’s office gave no indication that the Virginia Republican, who has played a leading role in the debt ceiling negotiations, has divested himself of these holdings since his last filing. Unless an agreement can be reached, the U.S. could begin defaulting on its debt payments on Aug. 2. If that happens and Cantor is still invested in the fund, the value of his holdings would skyrocket.
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Sound, like light, can be tricky to manipulate on small scales. Try to focus it to a point much smaller than one wavelength and the waves bend uncontrollably — a phenomenon known as the diffraction limit. But now, a group of physicists in France has shown how to beat the acoustic diffraction limit — and all it needs is a bunch of soft-drink cans.
That is awesome.