An Alternative Thanksgiving Playlist To Get You Through Cooking A Whole Meal

Imagine this: It’s Thanksgiving morning and you’ve probably just embarked on what will be a marathon day of chopping, slicing, stuffing and basking until the sweet smells of roasted turkey (or tofurkey) float through your abode. It can be a daunting project, often taking three to five hours to create the perfect spread of mashed potatoes, green beans, yams and every other delicious side dish you can imagine.

What’s the perfect accompaniment to this day of food prep? A playlist.

Enter “The Thanksgiving Playlist That Will Get You Through Hours of Cooking.” That’s right, we’ve put together a hefty list of songs that is guaranteed to last all the way through your turkey-cooking experience (as long as said turkey is roughly 12 pounds or less). It’s hours of pure holiday entertainment — Thanksgiving themed, of course — that we hope will make waiting on that golden bird (or tofu and side dishes) that much more enjoyable.

1. “Cold Turkey” – John Lennon

2. “Mashed Potato Love” – Chubby Checkers

3. “The Gravy” – Japanther

4. “Thanksgiving Song” – The National

5. “Dinner for Two” – St. Vincent and David Byrne

6. “Tasty Pudding” – Miles Davis

7. “Momma’s Gravy” – Calypso King and the Soul Investigators

8. “Hey Good Lookin'” – Hank Williams

9. “Mash Potato” – Dee Dee Sharp

10. “I Heard The Voice of a Pork Chop” – Jim Jackson

11. “Dinner Bells” – Wolf Parade

12. “Family Tree” – Black Lips

13. “Pumpkin Seeds” – Devendra Banhart

14. “Taste – Animal Collective”

15. “Rice Pudding” – Sufjan Stevens

16. “Bread” – Yellow Ostrich

17. “Do The Bird” – Dee Dee Sharp

18. “Sweet Potato Shuffle” – The Polish Ambassador

19. “Sweet Thang” – Turbo Fruits

20. “Flightless Bird American Mouth” – Iron & Wine

In honor of Thanksgiving, we’re featuring an article originally published last year.

Tourism Opportunities To Protect The Sea Turtles

The Tour de Turtles race is over this year with Panama Jack and Calypso Blue III taking first and second. Amazing that Panama Jack actually traveled 2,828 miles during the 90 day race. That is a lot of swimming. 🙂

Started in 2008, the Tour de Turtles is a fun, educational journey through the science, research and geography of sea turtle migration using satellite telemetry. Created by Sea Turtle Conservancy, with help from sponsors and partners, this event follows the marathon migration of sea turtles, representing different species, from their nesting beaches to their foraging grounds. 2014 is the seventh year of the Tour de Turtles and which followed the migration of eleven sea turtles, representing four or five different species.

I have had the good fortune of participating in the past two years in the Tour de Turtles.

This year we woke up to a beautiful sunrise we watched outside our room at Disney’s Vero Beach as we drank our morning coffee.

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We then walked down to the beach while people were gathering in excitement for the start of the race and took a look at the turtles who would soon be released. The turtles were captured during the night before the race and then have a tracking device mounted on their shell.

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The turtles are then released to the cheers of the crowd and make their way to the ocean.

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That evening we attended the Barrier Island Center where a dinner auction takes place to further sea turtle conservation efforts. The event features fun, food, and music as well as the opportunity to meet locals and tourists who share a concern for protecting the endangered sea turtles. It is also the site where we attended the release of two more turtles the following morning.

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The Tour de Turtles event is not only a fun way to spend a weekend. I have found, it also provides a strong platform to educate the public on various turtle issues including:

Lexie Beach, Communications Coordinator for Tour de Turtles, provides a good overview of the Tour de Turtles program and suggestions on how the public can get involved in the video below.

While the Tour de Turtle race is over for this year, the issues of protecting endangered sea turtles is a year round concern and one that individuals and the tourism industry can do much to assist with.

While at the Tour de Turtles event this year, I had the opportunity to talk with a number of the experts on actions that might be taken and/or supported by the tourism industry to help further protect endangered sea turtles.

One of the people I spoke with was Dan Fisher, CEO of the Tampa Bay Green Consortium. Dan spoke to me about the work the consortium is doing to clean up marine debris. Marine debris kills over 100 million marine animals each year primarily due to plastic. Many sea turtles are killed each year by consuming debris including plastic, fishing line, and other trash. In addition marine debris can pollute the habitat and thus increase the risks for sea turtles.

Listen to Dan Fisher address this issue.

Another person I spoke with was Holly Prievo, a graduate student at the USF Patel College of Global Sustainability who has been researching the possibility of sea turtle certification programs for hotels and resorts.

Many tourism resorts already are being certified by a variety of different certification programs. Most of these certification programs seem to neglect the critical criteria for sea turtles, such as the use of plastics, turtle friendly lighting, and construction practices.

Some of the issues identified as possibilities to consider for sea turtle certification include:

  • Pre-Construction environmental impact assessments to turtle habitat. This would include an assessment of compliance with existing laws to protect sea turtles and eggs, the impact that access roads, vegetation removal/burning, excavation, erosion, lights, activity from work crews, and time of construction might have.
  • Construction setbacks to preserve sandy beaches, surrounding vegetation, and create a buffer zone
  • Commitment to reducing light pollution with turtle friendly lighting.
  • Commitment to using blackout curtains or shade screens during nesting season in hotel rooms and hotel facilities.
  • Removal of furniture, recreational equipment, off beach at night.
  • Keep beaches clean
  • Seek alternatives to sea walls.
  • Prohibit all but authorized vehicles on the beach
  • Plant native vegetation
  • Prohibit actions that damage seagrass or corals
  • Reduce harm from boats by enforcement of no wake zones offshore nesting areas, and educate guests on sea turtle protection practices when boating.
  • Regularly train/evaluate staff in environmental management systems and sea turtle protocols.
  • Develop fun was to educate guests on sea turtle issues and what they can do to help protect them.

Watch the video below of my conversation with Holly Prievo to learn more.

Certification alternatives are a voluntary and friendly way to encourage sea turtle protection. In some cases laws and public policy might be needed to assist where stronger compliance may be needed.

In this area I had the opportunity to speak with Gary Appelson, Policy Coordinator for the Sea Turtle Conservancy in Florida.

Gary highlighted the need for laws for such issues as:

  • The requirements for set backs of a beach for construction.
  • The requirements for turtle friendly lighting.
  • The need to prohibit the building of sea walls
  • The need to remove beach chairs, equipment, etc, at night
  • The need to not allow pets to run free on the beach at night in sea turtle nesting season

Watch the video of my discussion with Gary Appelson.

Finally, I had an opportunity to speak with David Godfrey, Executive Director for the Sea Turtle Conservancy. David explained that this year they tracked several different turtle species from places such as Panama, Costa Rica, Bermuda, Nevis, as well as, Florida.

We discussed the roles that several sectors in the tourism industry can play including tour operators, resorts, cruise lines, and destinations.

For Tour Operators – David suggested that they have the opportunity educate the public and create awareness of what we can all do to help.

For Resorts and Lodging – David suggested that they can have signage for education, but the most important thing is to have turtle friendly lighting. He also noted that in the process of lodging and resorts switching over to turtle friendly lighting that their energy bills dropped as much as 60%.

Some resorts have made the extra effort to be certified by the State of Florida to actually mark the nesting areas of Turtles on the beaches near their properties. David noted that it is more common that NGO’s take on the task of marking the nests with the help of volunteers, some of which are employees of the lodges or resorts.

For Cruise Ships – David noted that the cruise line industry has made remarkable progress in changing their practices to help keep the environment clean. They also have the opportunity to educate the public to increase the awareness of sea turtle issues.

Cruise lines have the choice to choose the tour operators that they refer their guests to. He noted that many cruises go to beautiful locations where sea turtles may be present so there is an opportunity to teach good practices. David also gave the example of the Cayman Islands as a cruise destination that is not as helpful. They have a turtle farm where they are encouraging the eating of sea turtles as local cuisine, and giving the false impression to tourists that eating an endangered species is okay. The Sea Turtle Conservancy is working with this group to improve their conservation practices.

For Destinations – David suggested that coastal municipalities can develop, and more strongly enforce the turtle lighting ordinances. In the state of Florida for example the state law leaves it up to each local municipality how the codes and laws defined for turtle lighting and how they will be enforced.

David identified the Disney’s Vero Beach Resort as one that provides many examples of best practices for sea turtles.

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Some of these best practices of Disney’s Vero Beach Resort include:

  • Installing turtle friendly lighting throughout the resort
  • Locking their gates to the beach at night during nesting season so guests do not disturb the turtles
  • Raising funds for conservation purpose to protect sea turtles
  • Educating their guests about how to protect sea turtles through information provide in the rooms, sea turtle outings and sea turtle troops for kids.
  • They have set back their resort far enough so as not to have to build sea walls
  • There sea turtle monitoring and sea turtle rehabilitation programs http://disney.go.com/disneyhand/environmentality/animals/dapcast_sea_turtle_conservation.pdf that their cast members, veterinarians, and scientists take part in.
  • Educating people on sea turtle issue through their Annual sponsorship of the Tour de Turtle program
  • Turtle Talk with Crush at EPCOT Seas Pavilion to educate guest about turtle issues.

View my discussion with David Godfery

Each year thousands of hatching turtles emerge from nests on the Atlantic shores of the Southeastern U.S. Only one in thousands will survive to adult hood. Turtles face a variety of of both natural threats, human caused threats that have resulted in all sea turtles being placed on the threatened or endangered lists.

You can help by becoming more aware of the threats to sea turtles and contributing time, or money to groups, like the Sea Turtle Conservancy.

This year, the Sea Turtle Conservancy invites you to donate to help make improvements to their research station in Tortuguero, Costa Rica, the most important nesting location for green turtles in the Western Hemisphere. Their team has been conducting research and conservation programs there for more than 55 years.

This building is the only original building remaining onsite and has been facing the humid, salty climate of Tortuguero for 20 years. Immediate repairs to the station are needed to keep our researchers and volunteers safe and dry while they monitor and protect this critical nesting beach. For every dollar raised on December 2nd, 2014, STC’s Board of Directors has generously offered to match up to $10,000. That means we could raise $20,000 for sea turtles in just one day!

Both tourists and the tourism industry can do much to help protect the sea turtles. Together, we can make a difference.

Dr David W. Randle – Director USF Patel College of Global Sustainability Sustainable Tourism, Managing Director International Ocean Institute Waves of Change Blue Community Initiative, and President & CEO WHALE Center.

Follow David Randle on Twitter

Dozens Arrested During Ferguson Protests In California

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police in Oakland and Los Angeles arrested scores of demonstrators during a third night of unrest linked to the shooting protest in Ferguson, Missouri.

At least 130 demonstrators who refused to disperse during a Los Angeles protest were arrested Wednesday night, while 35 people were detained in Oakland following a march that deteriorated into unrest and vandalism, according to police officials.

About 200 or 300 largely peaceful demonstrators crisscrossed the streets of downtown Los Angeles for several hours in the afternoon and evening over a decision not to bring criminal charges against a Ferguson policeman for killing a black man.

Later some of the protesters were stopped by a phalanx of riot-clad police near the Central Library.

Lt. Andy Neiman said an unlawful assembly was declared after some marchers began walking in the street and disrupting traffic. They were ordered to disperse but instead reformed, with police trying to corral them.

Neiman said 130 protesters were arrested.

Meanwhile, Oakland police spokeswoman Johnna Watson said the 33 arrests there came after a march by about 100 people through Oakland streets.

She said that later small groups began moving through the streets with some vandalizing property, mainly breaking windows.

Most of the protesters had dispersed but shortly before midnight Watson said that there was still a very small group that police were monitoring.

On Monday and Tuesday, some demonstrators in Oakland vandalized businesses and blocked freeways to protest the decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson in the Aug. 9 fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown.

During the demonstration Wednesday in Los Angeles, demonstrators had marched to a federal building and police headquarters but they were turned away by lines of police after heading toward the county jail and then the Staples Center arena, where the Los Angeles Lakers were playing.

“The system is wrong,” demonstrator Jovan Brown told KCAL-TV. “We’re trying to let everybody know if we come together as a people and unite, we can change it.”

There was a brief, tense confrontation where a handful of demonstrators screamed at officers, who held raised batons. One officer struck a woman who had moved forward, and another shoved a protester.

Finally, squads of police boxed in and began arresting around 60 remaining protesters for failure to disperse, Neiman said.

Most of those arrested were expected to be released after posting $500 bail for the misdemeanor. However, those unable to pay the bail could remain jailed through the Thanksgiving weekend pending scheduled Monday court hearings, authorities said.

Earlier Wednesday, nine people were arrested after they sat down in a bus lane on U.S. 101 near downtown during one of the busiest driving days of the year.

There were smaller, peaceful protests in other communities, including San Diego and Riverside.

More than 300 protesters have been arrested over the past three days by Los Angeles police and California Highway Patrol officers.

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Kristin J. Bender in San Francisco and Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed to this story.

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Tami Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/latams.

More On Ferguson From HuffPost:

Photographic Evidence Revealed | ‘First Year Law Student Could Have Done Better Job’ | Ferguson Smolders After Night Of Fires | Protest Locations | Americans Deeply Divided | What You Can Do | Darren Wilson Interview | Darren Wilson Could Still Face Consequences | Timeline | Students Protest | Shooting Witness Admitted Racism In Journal | Peaceful Responses Show The U.S. At Its Best | Reactions To Ferguson Decision | Prosecutor Gives Bizarre Press Conference | Jury Witness: ‘By The Time I Saw His Hands In The Air, He Got Shot’ | Thousands Protest Nationwide | Ferguson Unrest Takes Over Newspaper Front Pages Across The Country | Grand Jury ‘Should Be Indicted,’ Brown Lawyer Says | Grand Jury Documents Reveal Mistakes, Questionable Testimony | Parents Bring Young Kids To Bear Witness To Ferguson Protests | 12 Sobering Numbers That Define The Fight To Get Justice For Michael Brown | Saints Player’s Moving Reflection On Ferguson Goes Viral | Amid Ferguson Cleanup, Locals Look For Their Community To Rise Above The Damage | ‘They’re Murdering Our Kids And Getting Away With It’ |

Ferguson Grand Jury Testimony Full Of Inconsistencies

FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Some witnesses said Michael Brown had been shot in the back. Another said he was face-down on the ground when Officer Darren Wilson “finished him off.” Still others acknowledged changing their stories to fit published details about the autopsy or admitted that they did not see the shooting at all.

An Associated Press review of thousands of pages of grand jury documents reveals numerous examples of statements made during the shooting investigation that were inconsistent, fabricated or provably wrong. For one, the autopsies ultimately showed Brown was not struck by any bullets in his back. Prosecutors exposed these inconsistencies before the jurors, which likely influenced their decision not to indict Wilson in Brown’s death.

Bob McCulloch, the St. Louis County prosecutor, said the grand jury had to weigh testimony that conflicted with physical evidence and conflicting statements by witnesses as it decided whether Wilson should face charges.

“Many witnesses to the shooting of Michael Brown made statements inconsistent with other statements they made and also conflicting with the physical evidence. Some were completely refuted by the physical evidence,” McCulloch said.

The decision Monday not to charge Wilson with any crime set off more violent protests in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson and around the country, fueled by claims that the unarmed black 18-year-old was shot while surrendering to the white officer in the mostly African-American city.

What people thought were facts about the Aug. 9 shooting have become intertwined with what many see as abuses of power and racial inequality in America.

And media coverage of the shooting’s aftermath made it into the grand jury proceedings. Before some witnesses testified, prosecutors showed jurors clips of the same people making statements on TV.

Their inconsistencies began almost immediately after the shooting, from people in the neighborhood, the friend walking with Brown during the encounter and even one woman who authorities suggested probably wasn’t even at the scene at the time.

Jurors also were presented with dueling versions from Wilson and Dorian Johnson, who was walking with Brown during the Aug. 9 confrontation. Johnson painted Wilson as provoking the violence, while Wilson said Brown was the aggressor.

But Johnson also declared on TV, in a clip played for the grand jury, that Wilson fired at least one shot at his friend while Brown was running away: “It struck my friend in the back.”

Johnson held to a variation of this description in his grand jury testimony, saying the shot caused Brown’s body to “do like a jerking movement, not to where it looked like he got hit in his back, but I knew, it maybe could have grazed him, but he definitely made a jerking movement.”

Other eyewitness accounts also were clearly wrong.

One woman, who said she was smoking a cigarette with a friend nearby, claimed she saw a second police officer in the passenger seat of Wilson’s vehicle. When quizzed by a prosecutor, she elaborated: The officer was white, “middle age or young” and in uniform. She said she was positive there was a second officer — even though there was not.

Another woman testified that she saw Brown leaning through the officer’s window “from his navel up,” with his hand moving up and down, as if he were punching the officer. But when the same witness returned to testify again on another day, she said she suffers from mental disorder, has racist views and that she has trouble distinguishing the truth from things she had read online.

Prosecutors suggested the woman had fabricated the entire incident and was not even at the scene the day of the shooting.

Another witness had told the FBI that Wilson shot Brown in the back and then “stood over him and finished him off.” But in his grand jury testimony, this witness acknowledged that he had not seen that part of the shooting, and that what he told the FBI was “based on me being where I’m from, and that can be the only assumption that I have.”

The witness, who lives in the predominantly black neighborhood where Brown was killed, also acknowledged that he changed his story to fit details of the autopsy that he had learned about on TV.

“So it was after you learned that the things you said you saw couldn’t have happened that way, then you changed your story about what you seen?” a prosecutor asserted.

“Yeah, to coincide with what really happened,” the witness replied.

Another man, describing himself as a friend of Brown’s, told a federal investigator that he heard the first gunshot, looked out his window and saw an officer with a gun drawn and Brown “on his knees with his hands in the air.” He added: “I seen him shoot him in the head.”

But when later pressed by the investigator, the friend said he had not seen the actual shooting because he was walking down the stairs at the time and instead had heard details from someone in the apartment complex.

“What you are saying you saw isn’t forensically possible based on the evidence,” the investigator told the friend.

Shortly after that, the friend asked if he could leave.

“I ain’t feeling comfortable,” he said.

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Associated Press writers Michael Kunzelman, Catherine Lucey, Nomaan Merchant, Garance Burke, Jeff Donn, David B. Caruso and Paul Weber contributed to this report.

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An updated interactive about the Ferguson grand jury is available here: http://hosted.ap.org/interactives/2014/ferguson-shooting/

Pet Massage Is Sweeping The Nation

PHOENIX (AP) — Spa treatments don’t stop with people. You won’t see any aromatherapy candles around, but animals get massages, too, and it’s become a regular service that many pet owners value as more than just glorified petting.

“People call me because their dogs are having problems,” said Shelah Barr, a San Francisco dog massage therapist. “The work I do is important for animals so they have a high quality of life.”

Practitioners say massage can be a preventive measure for younger animals and rehabilitative for older ones by boosting flexibility, circulation and immunity. As its popularity continues to grow, primarily among dog and horse owners, so does the debate about regulation. Some veterinarians argue that pet massage is a form of veterinary medicine that requires a license, but whether therapists need one varies by state. The issue has sparked a lawsuit in Arizona, where three practitioners are suing the state veterinarian licensing board.

Pet owners spent $4.4 billion last year on “other services,” a category that includes grooming, training and services such as massage, according to the American Pet Products Association, which tracks national spending trends in the pet industry. That is a 6.1 percent jump from 2012.

Massage sessions can last 30-40 minutes, and therapists travel to homes, hotels and even an owner’s workplace, said Barr, who has been practicing in San Francisco since 2006.

“There are a couple of tech companies I go to. They have a quiet office I can go into and work on the animal,” said Barr, who typically sees about 15 pets a week.

The treatments don’t necessarily mean incense burning around a massage table. Barr is guided by what the dog desires, which sometimes means the pet chews on a bone the whole time.

Grace Granatelli, an animal masseuse in the Phoenix suburb of Scottsdale, said she would play new-age music or “spa sounds,” which help relax dogs.

In her sessions, Granatelli would have the dog lie down on the floor or its bed and start by massaging its neck. She would then move to other areas, including legs and hips. But it’s not crucial that the dog lie down or sit still.

“There are times where the dog is either very distracted or anxious or isn’t quite receptive,” Granatelli said. “So I just do the best I can doing the strokes while they’re standing — whatever I can do to get the strokes in and get some relaxation in their muscles.”

That was until Granatelli became one of three animal massage practitioners who received cease-and-desist letters from the Arizona State Veterinary Medical Examining Board earlier this year. The trio has sued the board, arguing that the statute is overly broad in defining veterinary medicine. They are not practicing while the lawsuit moves through the courts.

The board says “I was doing more than just pampering dogs and that was breaking laws,” Granatelli said.

The American Veterinary Medical Association classifies animal massage as a form of veterinary care that should require a license. It is up to each state’s veterinary licensing board whether to categorize it that way.

“We do consider them veterinary procedures, and we feel the same standards should be used because a lot of harm can come from them,” association assistant director Adrian Hochstadt said.

Carol Forrest, a former client of Granatelli’s, said her Dachshunds, Maxie and Lucy, got regular massages for five years. The two, who have since passed away, were able to relax after a massage despite dealing with issues such as arthritis. Forrest said she truly believes massage benefits dogs as much as people.

“It’s like if you go to one regularly that you like, they get to know you and you get a better treatment out of it,” she said. “The same goes for the dogs … versus going to the vet — my dogs aren’t relaxed at the vet.”

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Protests In Ferguson Dwindle

ST. LOUIS (AP) — As demonstrations in California heated up overnight, the robust protests in Ferguson dwindled in size and severity as Thanksgiving approached, a change from the days immediately following the grand jury decision in the Michael Brown case.

People have begun cleaning up the battered suburban community of Ferguson and seeking something closer to normal. Meanwhile, a group gathered in downtown St. Louis on Thursday morning for what the organizer called a “pro-community” car cruise.

Organizer Paul Byrd said the cruise — which consisted of a few vehicles, mostly pickup trucks — was meant to be peaceful and to counteract the violence seen earlier this week in Ferguson after Officer Darren Wilson was not indicted in the fatal August shooting of 18-year-old Brown, who was black and unarmed.

Byrd, a 45-year-old construction worker from Imperial, Missouri, declined to say whether he supported Wilson but noted, “I totally support police officers.” The cruise, which started near Busch Stadium, was escorted by a city police vehicle. No protesters showed up.

There were no reports of major confrontations or damage to property in Ferguson overnight — where about a 100 people marched in a light snow — and St. Louis County police said there were only two arrests. Troops with rifles were posted at intersections and parking lots in an area where stores were looted and burned Monday into Tuesday.

Since the grand jury’s decision was announced, demonstrators have been active in other cities throughout the U.S. Most have been peaceful. But at least 130 demonstrators who refused to disperse during a Los Angeles protest were arrested Wednesday night, while 35 people were detained in Oakland following a march that deteriorated into unrest and vandalism, according to police officials.

Ferguson business owners and residents on Wednesday covered up broken windows, cleared away debris and hoped the relative calm would last into the Thanksgiving holiday.

The footage people see on the news “is such a small bit of what’s happening here,” said Kari Hobbs, 28. “There’s so much donation and charity going on with the businesses that have been affected and the people that have been affected.”

There were no seats inside Cathy’s Kitchen — a restaurant near the Ferguson Police Department that had windows smashed during the violence — and a line had formed at the back of the building. Jerome Jenkins, who runs the restaurant with his wife, Cathy, said he never considered closing his doors.

“It really wasn’t about wondering if the building would get torched or not,” Jenkins said. “Me and my wife, we expected it to get damaged … we decided to go home, and we would live with whatever fate would give us.”

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Link to grand jury documents: http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ferguson-shooting/.

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Associated Press writers Andale Gross, Tom Foreman Jr., Jim Salter, Alex Sanz and Alan Scher Zagier also contributed to this report.

More On Ferguson From HuffPost:

Photographic Evidence Revealed | ‘First Year Law Student Could Have Done Better Job’ | Ferguson Smolders After Night Of Fires | Protest Locations | Americans Deeply Divided | What You Can Do | Darren Wilson Interview | Darren Wilson Could Still Face Consequences | Timeline | Students Protest | Shooting Witness Admitted Racism In Journal | Peaceful Responses Show The U.S. At Its Best | Reactions To Ferguson Decision | Prosecutor Gives Bizarre Press Conference | Jury Witness: ‘By The Time I Saw His Hands In The Air, He Got Shot’ | Thousands Protest Nationwide | Ferguson Unrest Takes Over Newspaper Front Pages Across The Country | Grand Jury ‘Should Be Indicted,’ Brown Lawyer Says | Grand Jury Documents Reveal Mistakes, Questionable Testimony | Parents Bring Young Kids To Bear Witness To Ferguson Protests | 12 Sobering Numbers That Define The Fight To Get Justice For Michael Brown | Saints Player’s Moving Reflection On Ferguson Goes Viral | Amid Ferguson Cleanup, Locals Look For Their Community To Rise Above The Damage | ‘They’re Murdering Our Kids And Getting Away With It’ |

Scots To Get New Powers After Failed Independence Referendum

LONDON (AP) — Britain’s main political parties agreed Thursday to grant Scotland new tax and spending powers to fulfill a promise of greater autonomy made as politicians scrambled to persuade Scots to reject independence in a recent referendum.

The plans are unlikely to satisfy hard-core Scottish nationalists, but could have far-reaching consequences, taking Britain toward a looser, more federated state. In a Sept. 18 referendum, 55 percent of Scottish voters opted to remain in the United Kingdom, while 45 percent voted to leave.

Since then a commission of politicians from Scotland and the rest of Britain has been thrashing out proposals to fulfill the promise made by anti-independence forces in the final weeks of the campaign, as polls showed rising support for separation.

A plan published Thursday would give the Edinburgh-based Scottish parliament, established in 1999, the power to set income tax rates and keep the revenue in Scottish coffers. Scotland would also gain new control over welfare spending.

Prime Minister David Cameron said the proposals kept a promise he’d made during the referendum campaign, “that a No vote did not mean no change.”

But John Swinney, deputy leader of Scotland’s pro-independence administration, said the powers fell short of what Scottish people wanted.

“Under these proposals, less than 30 percent of our taxes will be set in Scotland and less than 20 percent of welfare spending will be devolved to Scotland,” he said.

The proposals will be introduced as legislation in Parliament in January.

They could open a constitutional can of worms, boosting calls for other British regions, and even major cities, also to be given tax-raising powers.

Cameron also promised to introduce a contentious proposal for “English votes for English laws.” It is intended to address a quirk of Britain’s political system that means Scottish lawmakers in the House of Commons can vote on policies that only affect England.

Government Data Sharpens Focus On Crude-Oil Train Routes

This story originally appeared on ProPublica.

The oil boom underway in North Dakota has delivered jobs to local economies and helped bring the United States to the brink of being a net energy exporter for the first time in generations.

But moving that oil to the few refineries with the capacity to process it is presenting a new danger to towns and cities nationwide 2014 a danger many appear only dimly aware of and are ill-equipped to handle.

Much of North Dakota’s oil is being transported by rail, rather than through pipelines, which are the safest way to move crude. Tank carloads of crude are up 50 percent this year from last. Using rail networks has saved the oil and gas industry the time and capital it takes to build new pipelines, but the trade-off is greater risk: Researchers estimates that trains are three and a half times as likely as pipelines to suffer safety lapses.

Indeed, since 2012, when petroleum crude oil first began moving by rail in large quantities, there have been eight major accidents involving trains carrying crude in North America. In the worst of these incidents, in July, 2013, a train derailed at Lac-Mégantic, Quebec and exploded, killing 47 and burning down a quarter of the town. Six months later, another crude-bearing train derailed and exploded in Casselton, North Dakota, prompting the evacuation of most of the town’s 2,300 residents.

See our interactive map of the crude-oil train data.

In those and other cases, local emergency responders were overwhelmed by the conflagrations resulting from these accidents. Residents often had no idea that such a dangerous cargo, and in such volume, was being transported through their towns.

Out of the disasters came a scramble for information. News outlets around the country began reporting the history of problems associated with the DOT-111 railroad tank cars carrying virtually all of the crude.

Local officials, environmental groups, and concerned citizens began to ask what routes these trains were taking and whether the towns in their paths were ready should an accident occur.

In July, the U.S. Dept. of Transportation ordered railroads to disclose route information to state emergency management officials. Railroads had fought hard to keep this information private, citing security concerns. Even after federal regulators required more disclosure, railroads pressured many state governments to withhold their reports from the public. Some have come out, often as a result of public records requests by news organizations: The Associated Press has obtained disclosures in several states initially unwilling to release them.

Still, those disclosures offer scant detail, often consisting of little more than a list of counties through which crude oil is passing, without further specifics.

There have been attempts to fill in the blanks. KQED in Northern California, for example, combined the information disclosed in federal route reports with maps of the major railroads to show where trains carrying crude passed through California. The environmental group Oil Change International superimposed major refineries and other facilities that handle crude oil onto a national railroad map.

A ProPublica analysis of data from the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration adds new details by plotting out where trains carrying crude have experienced safety incidents, most of them minor. The data shows such incidents in more than 250 municipalities over the last four years. We’ve used the data to create an interactive map showing where safety incidents on trains were reported, where each train began its journey, and where it was ultimately headed.

The data also shows that factors that contributed to major, or even catastrophic, accidents have also been present in hundreds of minor ones: outdated tank car models; component failures; and missing, damaged and loose parts.

Bit by bit, a more realistic notion of where the dangers of crude-bearing trains are most substantial is emerging.

“Frankly, the [previous] disclosures weren’t of that much use,” says Kelly Huston, a spokesman for the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, one of the first state agencies to make those disclosures available for anyone on its website. When it comes to a detailed picture of where crude is moving, Huston says, “The expectation of the public is very far from the reality of what we’re actually getting.”

The hazardous materials data reviewed by ProPublica adds to that picture.

Only a handful of places around the country have the refinery capacity and infrastructure necessary to handle the massive amounts of oil being extracted from North Dakota’s Bakken Shale: Bakersfield, Carson, and Long Beach in California; St. James, Lake Charles, Lacassine in coastal Louisiana; Philadelphia, Paulsboro, New Jersey. Delaware City, Delaware in the Mid-Atlantic.

These cities have become the terminuses for “unit trains” carrying up to 100 tank cars, each containing as much as 30,000 gallons of crude oil. These endpoints also have shaped the paths along which crude-bearing trains now cross hundreds of communities, many of which have never seen such traffic. Tracks all but abandoned for years have sprung back to life on account of the oil boom.

The vulnerabilities of the DOT-111 tank cars in which much of the oil is moved are well known by now. For decades, federal officials have cited concerns over their relatively thin shells, which are prone to puncturing or rupturing in an accident and releasing the hazardous material inside. They also have other components prone to damage, including protruding fittings often left unprotected, and hinged lids held on by bolts that have a history of coming loose, especially if not properly tightened by the original shipper.

When a tank car full of oil ruptures, the consequences can be dire. At a panel held by the National Transportation Safety Board in April, one technical expert with the agency described a “fireball release,” in which “the entire content of the tank car, up to 30,000 gallons, is instantly released, along with the potential for rocketing car parts.” When one tank car ignites, the heat can set off a chain reaction, causing other cars to explode as well.

In most cases, the tanks cars used to transport crude are supplied by railroad shipping companies, not railroads themselves. Railroads have typically pushed for more stringent safety requirements since they have to move the cars. Shipping companies and oil producers have pushed back against stricter proposals.

In 2011, as the crude-by-rail industry was ramping up and federal regulators were preparing to introduce new rules, industry groups adopted voluntary safety modifications to add thicker shells and other protections to new tank cars. But roughly 85 percent of the fleet currently carrying flammable liquids still consists of the older models. And while PHMSA is expected to issue rules requiring safer tank cars, railroads will have years to phase in the upgrades and it’s not yet clear to what extent they will be required to retrofit existing cars.

For most local fire departments, a blaze involving even a single tank car, let alone many, would be too much to handle, emergency response officials acknowledge.

“[Most] fire departments don’t have the capacity to deal with more than a standard gasoline tank [fire], which is about 9,000 or 10,000 gallons of fuel,” said Richard Edinger, vice chairman of the International Association of Fire Chief’s hazardous materials committee. “Well, one DOT-111 car holds about 30,000 gallons 2014 that pretty much exceeds our capacity.”

Complicating matters, many towns don’t even know that trains carrying crude oil are passing through.

Along the journey south from North Dakota, for example, many trains now make a stop in the tiny town of El Dorado, Arkansas, population 18,500, bound for a refinery that recently added capacity to accommodate Bakken crude. The PHMSA hazmat data includes more than a dozen leaks found on trains headed for the town.

Yet Union County Emergency Management Services deputy director Bobby Braswell, a former Chief Deputy for the El Dorado Fire Department, was unaware of the new crude traffic and its potential risks.

“We’ve got a little old railroad here, but if they transport crude, I don’t know,” said Braswell in an interview. If state emergency management officials have a plan to respond to oil train derailments, they haven’t shared it with El Dorado yet: “I don’t remember anybody calling about crude,” Braswell said.

Along the trains’ route to the Mid-Atlantic, according to PHMSA’s hazmat data, is Mineral City, Ohio, where Tuscarawas county emergency services director Patty Levengood said she didn’t know whether fire departments in her jurisdiction had been trained or otherwise advised on the new oil traffic. Such planning was “pretty much left to the individual chiefs,” she said.

Other responders said they are acutely aware of the new risks facing their towns, and some expressed alarm. Asked whether his fire department had the capacity to handle a single tank car fire, Duane Hart, fire chief for Juniata County, Pennsylvania, answered with an emphatic “I know we don’t!” Crude trains now pass through Port Royal, a town of 925 in Juniata County for which Hart’s department provides services.

In many circumstances, all local responders would be able to do in the event of a large tank car fire is simply let it burn, experts say. At the recent NTSB rail safety panel, Gregory Noll, a chairperson for the hazardous materials committee of the National Fire Protection Association, summarized the situation bluntly.

“There’s very little that we as a responder are going to do,” he said, “other than… to isolate the area, remove people from the problem, and allow the incident to go its natural course until it essentially burns down to a level where we can extinguish it.”

But that approach would still involve tremendous damage in the many densely populated areas through which crude is now moving by rail, officials acknowledge.

“The standard evacuation is typically a half-mile,” said Jeff Simpson, a 30-year firefighter who lives in North Virginia and teaches a course called “Training for Railroad Emergencies.”

“But if you’re in the middle of a big city, the footprint is going to be much bigger.”

The Pittsburgh-based nonprofit news organization PublicSource reported in August that up to 40 percent of that city’s roughly 300,000 residents live within the potential evacuation zone of trains carrying crude through the city.

Another Pennsylvania metropolis, Philadelphia, has become one of the biggest destinations in the U.S. for Bakken crude thanks to newly retrofitted refineries and a brand new rail unloading facility opened just two years ago.

The city appears frequently in hazmat reports: In at least 65 cases over the last two years, tank cars bound for or arriving in Philadelphia were found to have loose, leaking or missing safety components. These parts are meant to prevent flammable contents from escaping in the event of an accident.

There was a more serious incident last January, when a train full of oil derailed a few miles from the city’s downtown. Luckily, no one was injured. The train was soon righted and the railroad made repairs, assuring city officials that the danger had passed.

But even after the derailment, Philadelphia “has not issued new plans, directives, or protocols in response to the increase of crude oil shipments,” wrote city director of Emergency Management Samantha Phillips in an email to ProPublica.

The Philadelphia County Local Emergency Planning Committee “has not been active on the transportation of Bakken crude oil,” Phillips added.

The agency’s website contains no emergency information specific to a fire involving crude oil, or any other hazardous substance, other than a video featuring ” Wally Wise-Guy, the Shelter in Place Turtle.”

The video advises that “in the event of a hazardous materials emergency … do what Wally Wise Guy does 2014 go inside.”

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WaterColorBot 2.0: Robo-painter

Hey, even I can be Van Gogh with this crazy contraption and I have zero artistic talent. Basically, the WaterColorBot is a robotic painter that gets it’s input from vector artwork on a computer. It can also will copy real-time sketching, transferring the design to paper with its brush arm and a set of watercolor paints. At last I can be a real artist. Even if my art still tends to look like a 4-year-old’s with a twitchy caffeine brush-finger.

watercolorbotzoom in

Think of it as a CNC machine that holds a brush instead of a carving bit. The 2.0 version has an aluminum carriage with crossed linear roller bearings and arrives fully assembled so you can get going as soon as you unbox it. It uses standard watercolors on your choice of paper, so there are no special things to buy. It connects right to your computer.

watercolorbot1zoom in

It looks like a a lot of fun for kids and adults alike. It’s available from Evil Mad Scientist for $295(USD).

[via Gizmodo via Dude I Want That]

CuBoxTV entertainment cube offers XBMC

Set-top boxes are a common gadget at this point, with the most notable ones being devices like the Roku and Chromecast. Other lesser-known options are available, however, often requiring a few tech skills to get everything setup but offering more user freedom in return. The new CuBoxTV is one such item, offering users the XBMC platform alongside a tiny cube-shaped … Continue reading