Archived Pages
2008-06
2008-05
2008-04
2008-03
2008-02
2008-01


LAST NEWS

Supermarkets and Grocery

Explore Local Supermarkets and Grocery Stores. Find One Today.


http://200.123.9.123/search.php?d=Bw0Q6BU4D6in2Xpin9QW9zzF4wqZyvP2&q=sacramento%2Bkings
Draft stunners

Admittedly, I know very little about Jason Thompson from Rider, the Sacramento Kings 1st Round pick.


Draft stunners Fri, 27 Jun 2008 08:49:23 GMT,BMac's Blog
sacramento kings Listings

Your Source for Grocers. Find and Compare Grocer Listings Here.


http://200.123.9.123/search.php?d=367JmNUp5B70yhAQR4Vc1ThGu0I39UcK&q=sacramento%2Bkings
Locals happy with draft situations

By Zach Berman Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, June 27, 2008; Page E09 Entering yesterday's NBA draft, mock drafts and analysts pegged Mount Airy native and former West Virginia forward Joe Alexander as ...


Locals happy with draft situations Fri, 27 Jun 2008 08:19:30 GMT,The Washington Post
Find a Grocery Store

Phone Numbers and Directions to Your Local Supermarkets & Grocers.


http://200.123.9.123/search.php?d=seS8wW90k2eA1d2Ak440XnzNRcj0Y76d&q=sacramento%2Bkings
Kings pick lenape grad 12th

Step by step, forward Jason Thompson has moved steadily along in his basketball career, always aiming for this moment.


Kings pick lenape grad 12th Fri, 27 Jun 2008 08:07:22 GMT,CourierPostOnline
Find sacramento kings in Yellow Pages FREE

Search for sacramento kings in Yellow Page Results. Click for current phone, address, map, directions, website, coupons and more.


http://www.Addresses.com
Cavaliers pick up wheeler's hickson

The Hawks didn't have any picks in Thursday's draft, but former Wheeler standout J.J. Hickson gave the ceremony a little local flair.


Cavaliers pick up wheeler's hickson Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:45:03 GMT,Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Nba draft scorecard

The first pick went for Joe Johnson and the second rounder was part of the Mike Bibby deal.


Nba draft scorecard Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:43:27 GMT,Daytona Beach News-Journal Online
Freshmen go to head of draft class

Derrick Rose is going home, and a record crowd of freshmen is following him to the NBA.


Freshmen go to head of draft class Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:34:47 GMT,Contra Costa Times
Alexander keeps his cool, lands with milwaukee as expected

Entering yesterday's NBA draft, mock drafts and analysts pegged Mount Airy native and former West Virginia forward Joe Alexander as the likely pick for the Milwaukee Bucks.


Alexander keeps his cool, lands with milwaukee as expected Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:00:00 GMT,The Washington Post
2008 nba draft: kings opt for inside job

The Kings' draft night began with the hopes that their major problems would be solved for them, specifically the hope that a top-tier point guard would fall their way.


2008 nba draft: kings opt for inside job Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:00:00 GMT,Sacramento Bee Newspaper
Singletary to sacramento, washington to detroit

The months of speculation are over. Sean Singletary is in the NBA. The UVa. point guard was taken with the 42nd pick in Thursday's NBA Draft by the Sacramento Kings.


Singletary to sacramento, washington to detroit Fri, 27 Jun 2008 06:52:24 GMT,Augusta Free Press
Nets draft lopez, anderson after dealing jefferson to bucks

The transformation of the Nets picked up speed at the NBA draft in New York Thursday evening with the selections of Brook Lopez, Ryan Anderson and Chris Douglas-Roberts. Lopez, a center from Stanford, was the ...


Nets draft lopez, anderson after dealing jefferson to bucks Fri, 27 Jun 2008 06:50:55 GMT,NJ.com
Stonehenge as a royal family's burial site

mikesd81 sends in a report from Newsday about radiocarbon dating of cremated bones excavated from Britain's Stonehenge that, an archeologist said, has solved part of the ancient mystery surrounding the 5,000-year-old site: It was a burial ground for what may have been the country's first royal dynasty. No word on how this work relates to the "Neolithic Lourdes" theory we discussed earlier. "The new dates indicate burials began at least 500 years before the first massive stones were erected at the site and continued after it was completed... The pattern and relatively small number of the graves suggest all were members of a single family. The findings provide the first substantive evidence that a line of kings ruled at least a portion of southern England during this early period. They exerted enough power to mobilize manpower necessary to move the massive stones from as far as 150 miles away and [maintained] that power for at least five centuries, said archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson of the University of Sheffield, leader of current excavations at the site... His findings will also appear in the June issue of National Geographic and in the television special "Stonehenge Decoded," to be shown Sunday."


Stonehenge as a royal family's burial site ,
California lawmaker proposes music download tax

modemac writes "Sacramento, California Assemblyman Charles Calderon wants to expand a 75-year-old sales tax on 'tangible personal property' to include music downloads from iTunes and other music-download sites. The tax would specifically apply to music downloads, but the estimate used in this article for revenue generated by 'Net downloading also "includes pornography downloads." The measure, AB 1956, will be considered on Monday, April 14th."


California lawmaker proposes music download tax ,
Fbi's unknown eavesdropping network

An anonymous reader writes "Building off the design mandates of CALEA, the FBI has constructed a 'point-and-click surveillance system' that creates instant wiretaps on almost any communications device. A thousand pages of restricted documents released under the Freedom of Information Act were required to determine the veracity of this clandestine project, Wired News reports. Called the Digital Collection System Network, it connects FBI wiretapping rooms to switches controlled by traditional land-line operators, internet-telephony providers and cellular companies. It is intricately woven into the nation's telecom infrastructure. From the article: 'FBI wiretapping rooms in field offices and undercover locations around the country are connected through a private, encrypted backbone that is separated from the internet. Sprint runs it on the government's behalf. The network allows an FBI agent in New York, for example, to remotely set up a wiretap on a cell phone based in Sacramento, California, and immediately learn the phone's location, then begin receiving conversations, text messages and voicemail pass codes in New York. With a few keystrokes, the agent can route the recordings to language specialists for translation.'"


Fbi's unknown eavesdropping network ,
First royal mummy found since tut is identified

brian0918 writes "In what is being described as the most important find in the Valley of the Kings since the discovery of King Tut, a single tooth has clinched the identification of an ancient mummy as that of Queen Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt about 3,500 years ago. A molar inscribed with the queen's name, discovered in a wooden box in 1881 in a cache of royal mummies, was found to fit perfectly in the jaw of 'a fat woman in her 50s who had rotten teeth and died of bone cancer.' Reuters also reports on the DNA analysis: 'Preliminary results show similarities between its DNA and that of Ahmose Nefertari, the wife of the founder of the 18th dynasty and a probable ancestor of Hatsephsut's.'"


First royal mummy found since tut is identified ,
Gateway customer sues to get his pc fixed

prostoalex writes "The Sacramento Bee tells the story of an El Dorado resident who had to go to small claims court to get his Gateway PC fixed: 'Right out of the box, he says, the computer displayed scattered graphics and wouldn't work properly. He says he called a Gateway salesman five times and sent him an e-mail to get an authorization number to send the computer back, but his phone calls and message were never returned. Then, over the course of months, Sheehan said he called Gateway technical support dozens of times.' Gateway insists that by clicking 'Accept' on a customer service EULA when the computer was first booted, Mr. Sheehan has waived his rights to sue the computer manufacturer in United States courts. The Gateway EULA states that conflicts must be resolved via private arbitrage. Sheehan, though, argues that he never saw the EULA, because of the broken graphics. As such, he's not held to that agreement." Some connections between this and a discussion about a Second Life case we had yesterday.


Gateway customer sues to get his pc fixed ,
Woman wins right to criticize surgeon on website

Scoopy writes "The website of a cosmetic surgery patient critical of her Sacramento surgeon's work is protected free speech, an appeals court said in an opinion that could have statewide implications. The website contains before and after photographs of 33-year-old Georgette Gilbert, who said the surgery left her with one eyebrow higher than the other and a surprised look permanently affixed to her face. The website was challenged in a defamation suit filed by surgeon Jonathan Sykes, a prominent professor and television commentator on the subject of cosmetic surgery. Although the Sacramento-based 3rd District Court of Appeal only mentions Sykes, the opinion suggests that others who use 'hot topics' of public interest in their advertisements and promotions may shed protections against defamation afforded to ordinary citizens."


Woman wins right to criticize surgeon on website ,
Woman killed in wii-related competition

snuffin writes to tell us that a local radio competition to "hold your wee for a Wii" has ended with a Sacramento woman dead from water poisoning. From the article: "An Associated Press interview with another contestant, named James Ybarra, claimed that contestants were initially given eight ounce bottles of water to drink every fifteen minutes, with larger bottles being used once contestants began to drop out. According to Ybarra, 'They told us if you don't feel like you can do this, don't put your health at risk.' He described the victim as 'a nice lady' and that 'she was telling me about her family and her three kids and how she was doing it for her kids.'"


Woman killed in wii-related competition ,
College freshmen struggle with tech literacy

snow_man writes to mention an article on the E-Commerce News site about techno-literacy problems with incoming college freshmen. Some schools, like CSU, are planning on including a technology comprehension test alongside their English and Math evaluations for new students. From the article: "Not all of Generation M can synthesize the loads of information they're accessing, educators say. 'They're geeky, but they don't know what to do with their geekdom,' said Barbara O'Connor, a Sacramento State communications studies professor involved in a nationwide effort to hone students' computer-research skills. On a recent nationwide test to measure their technological 'literacy' -- their ability to use the Internet to complete class assignments -- only 49 percent of the test-takers correctly evaluated a set of Web sites for objectivity, authority and timeliness. Only 35 percent could correctly narrow an overly broad Internet search."


College freshmen struggle with tech literacy ,
Two weeks with the wii

In the 80s, kids of my generation cut their teeth on Super Mario Bros.. They went through high school with Mario Kart, and bonded with college friends playing Super Smash Bros. By 1999, though, the N64 had long since proven that Nintendo's dominance in American videogaming was over. The GameCube that followed was largely a disappointment. Nintendo failed to interest third party developers, and frustrated fans with long-delayed chapters of the Mario, Zelda, and Metroid franchises. Coming into this no-longer-next generation of consoles, Nintendo announced they were aiming for a Revolution, and then confused everyone by renaming it Wii. Their actions left a lot of people wondering if the company still had what it took to compete with committed powerhouses like Microsoft and Sony. The launch lineup is kind of tepid, and the controls really do take some getting used to. We've already established that they're not aiming to compete in the graphics race. So what is the console really like? Why is it selling so quickly? What does it have to offer? I've had two weeks to find out. Read on, so that you can get a feel for the system you'll definitely be playing (if not owning) at some point in the future.


Two weeks with the wii ,
Another new tomb in the valley of the kings?

Praxiteles writes "A radar survey in 2000 found KV63, the tomb excavated near King Tutankhamen's tomb earlier this year. (KV stands for Valley of the Kings). Just announced is that this same radar survey shows an image of what appears to be a shaft to another tomb just 15 meters north of KV63. Will radar stratigraphy change the multi-millennial tradition of destructive excavation and open new opportunities in the search for buried treasure?"


Another new tomb in the valley of the kings? ,

< >miami heat  kyle weaver  minnesota timberwolves  john hopkins hospital  tadija dragicevic  joey dorsey  patrick ewing jr  bill walker  portland trailblazers  

Copyright © 2007 umax project,
Reproduction in any form is forbidden.