Threadsmiths’ Hydrophobic Nanotechnology T-Shirts Will Repel Water And Stains

Nanotechnology has a lot of uses and one of its uses involves keeping your clothes and devices dry through the use of hydrophobic nanotechnology. Nokia has demonstrated this technology a couple of years ago, and earlier this year we saw some swimwear that used similar technology that allowed it to keep itself dry.

Well if you’re interested in such technology to potentially keep your clothes free from water and stains, you might be pleased to learn that Australian company Threadsmiths has launched their line of t-shirts that feature the hydrophobic nanotechnology. Thanks to the technology, instead of water and stains soaking into your shirt and leaving ugly marks, they will simply roll right off you.

We have to admit that it is pretty awesome and considering that Threadsmiths is selling them only in white, we reckon the anti-water/dirt/stain feature will be very welcome. Of course they do not come cheap because for a simply white t-shirt, they are priced at A$65 each. They will come in men and women’s designs with a kid’s option coming soon.

If you’d like to learn more or perhaps place an order of your own, head on over to their website for the details. In the meantime you can check out the demonstration of the technology in the video above.

Threadsmiths’ Hydrophobic Nanotechnology T-Shirts Will Repel Water And Stains

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First Nighter: Capote's 'Christmas Memory' Set to Sweet Music

Come Christmas every year, new offerings are presented with the hope they’ll become holiday perennials. In 2010 TheatreWorks Silicon Valley launched a musical adaptation of Truman Capote’s autobiographical short story, A Christmas Memory, adapted by Duane Poole with songs by lyricist Carol Hall and music by composer Larry Grossman.

Predicting that this one will inevitably reach the ranks of properties people want to see again and again is a chancy undertaking, but it’s less chancy to say it deserves the exalted status — certainly if a prognosticator goes by the DR2 incarnation, helmed by Irish Repertory Theatre artistic director Charlotte Moore during the company’s year away from their under-renovation home a few blocks north.

Remembering his youth growing up with distant Alabama cousins — and most particularly, his 60-ish cousin Sook Faulk (Alice Ripley) — Capote focuses on the Christmas season of 1933. For Sook and him, the holiday would always begin when she’d wake up one day to declare it was fruitcake-preparing time.

That’s when they’d run up 30 or so fruitcakes to send to whomever they considered their friends. Among those near and far was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who’d responded with a thank-you note they cherish. Sook even wonders if Eleanor will serve it to guests at Christmas dinner.

The devoted pair do their happy chores in a household presided over by relatives less devoted to Capote, whom Sook calls Buddy in memory of a childhood friend who’d died young. (Young Buddy is played by Silvano Spagnuolo, adult Buddy by Ashley Robinson.) To Join them, librettist Poole introduces cousins Seabon Faulk (Samuel Cohen) and Jennie Faulk (Nancy Hess) as well as family retainer Anna Stabler (Virginia Anne Woodruff) and Queenie the dog (no program credit for Queenie). He also brings on several other characters who are less well covered in Capote’s original, the most prominent being young friend Nelle Harper (Taylor Richardson).

Capote writes of those times in a sentimentally-bittersweet mode. Since this is a memoir, he doesn’t demand conventional suspense. Midway through the gabby action, Jennie, who’s worried that Buddy isn’t getting the upbringing a boy needs, raises the necessity of sending her young cousin to a military academy. Whether Seabon and she will follow through on what Buddy perceives as a threat is the only tension provided in the plot, but even that is smoothed over before curtain.

Tunesmiths Grossman and Hall aren’t concerned with those aspects, either. Their aim is to write a group of tuneful songs, and they achieve the goal admirably. Perhaps the best in a strong score is “Mighty Sweet Music,” in which the entire cast, choreographed by Bruce McNabb, gets to show ukulele abilities. In “Cotton and Paper,” Hall and Grossman offer a new Christmas song about tree decorations deserving of a long future. That one and all the others feature veteran Hall’s way with an evocatively folksy lyric and Grossman’s way with a catchy melody. On all the numbers, Micah Young at the piano, John DiPinto at the synthesizer and Ed Shea on percussion keep things bright and breezy.

Also bright and breezy are each of the cast members, led by Ripley, who doesn’t play Sook quite as child-like as Capote describes her but who nevertheless dispenses Sook’s abundant homilies with winning sincerity. Spagnuolo is a charming young Buddy, and Robinson an appealingly nostalgic adult Buddy, returning to the Faulk home in 1955. Woodruff gets mileage from her hot “Detour” turn, and the others are all way up to snuff.

The liveliest Christmas Memory scene occurs when, in a celebratory mood, Sook offers Buddy some whiskey, and they both take several small sips. The incipient inebriation renders them giddy enough to bring Seabon and Jennie into the kitchen. They’re horrified at what they find, and to Buddy’s chagrin, military school comes up again as an likely option.

As played, Sook and Buddy’s cutting loose is meant to be cute. And it is, as long as anyone knowing the toll alcoholism took on the adult Capote doesn’t fix on it. Those who do might decide that Sook’s innocent-enough notion of fun is actually as worrying as Seabon and Jennie declare it. What might have changed for Capote if he’d never had those first tastes? Just a thought.

There’s another foreshadowing Christmas Memory development that’s much less disturbing. Notice the name Nelle Harper. As a Christmas gift, Buddy gives her a notebook and a pencil. When he does, she proclaims him the writer and not her, but she does ponder the possibilities. Anything ring a bell?

Of course, what Poole has in mind is Capote’s well-known childhood friendship with Harper Lee. Nelle Harper? Harper Lee? Get it? Here’s a dramatic sequence wherein Truman Capote sets Harper Lee on the way toward that classic for all seasons, To Kill a Mockingbird. Lee has always acknowledged Capote’s encouragement, but did he ever really give her a notebook-and-pencil gift? Wouldn’t that be nice to know?

Whether he did or didn’t, the touching scene is simply another reason why kids from 5 to 95 should consider lining up for A Christmas Memory.

First Texas City to Ban Fracking Cites 'Public Nuisance' in Lawsuit Response

Cross-Posted from DeSmogBlog

Attorneys representing Denton, Texas, the first city to ban hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) in state history, have issued rebuttals to the two lawsuits filed against Denton the day after the fracking ban was endorsed by voters on election day. 

Responding to lawsuits brought by attorneys with intimate Bush family connections — with complaints coming from both the Texas General Land Office and the Texas Oil and Gas Association — the Denton attorneys have signaled the battle has only just begun in the city situated in the heart and soul of the Barnett Shale, the birthplace of fracking. 

In its response to the Texas Oil and Gas Association, Denton’s attorneys argued the Association did not provide sufficient legal evidence that the Texas constitution demarcates the Texas Railroad Commission or the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality as the only governmental bodies that can regulate or permit fracking.

“Nowhere in … the Petition as a whole, does Plaintiff identify what regulations have been passed by the Texas Railroad Commission or the Texas Commission or Environmental Quality that allegedly occupy the ‘entire field’ rendering the [ban] preempted and unconstitutional,” wrote the attorneys. “City requests the Court to order Plaintiff to replead that claim with greater specificity to meet those fair notice requirements.”

Industry-friendly Railroad Commission (RRC) chairman Christi Craddick is on the record stating that the RRC will continue to issue permits despite the fact Denton citizens voted for a ban.

The Denton attorneys also argued that fracking is a “public nuisance” and “subversive of public order” in defense of the fracking ban.

Denton Response to Texas Oil and Gas Association Lawsuit
Image Credit: Denton County, Texas

General Land Office Response

In response to a lawsuit by the Texas General Land Office — an organization soon to be headed by George P. Bush, nephew of George W. Bush and son of likely 2016 Republican Party presidential candidate Jeb Bush — Denton’s legal team has argued for a venue change.

Currently in Travis County, Denton’s attorneys believe the case should be moved to Denton County because the legal questions at hand center around fracking in Denton and not Travis.

“Plaintiff’s suit concerns mineral interests in public lands located in Denton, Texas. Plaintiff is the manager of those interests,” wrote the Denton team.

“Plaintiff brought this suit in Travis County, Texas but does not cite to any specific statutory provision upon which it relies to establish venue for this case in Travis County…The City further asserts that venue of this dispute is mandatory in Denton County, Texas and the case should be transferred to that county.”

Denton Response to Texas General Land Office Lawsuit
Image Credit: Travis County, Texas

Like the Texas Oil and Gas Association response, the Denton attorneys argued that fracking is a “public nuisance” and “subversive of public order” in the affirmative defense portion of their legal response.

“Watershed Moment”

Denton has set aside a $4 million fund to assist its legal response.

“The Denton fracking ban is a watershed moment for Texas,” Cathy McMullen of Frack Free Denton said in a press release. “If state officials truly support local control and the rule of law, they must defend our community’s fracking ban from political attempts to overturn it. And let the courts decide whether it’s legal, as we are sure it is.”

Communist Comeback Fears Hang Over German State Vote

By Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN, Dec 5 (Reuters) – The Cold War has flared up again in Germany ahead of a tight and unpredictable state assembly vote on Friday in the eastern state of Thuringia, where the reform communist Left party is yearning to take control of a regional government for the first time.

The prospect of a Left politician leading a state coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD) and Greens has unsettled Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats and put strains on her grand coalition with the SPD over fears it could be a blueprint for a future left-wing alliance at the national level.

The SPD and Greens have been accused of betraying victims of East Germany’s communist dictatorship by cooperating with the Left, which is popular in the east and traces its roots to the Socialist Unity Party of Germany that built the Berlin Wall.

Thousands have protested in the state capital Erfurt against the prospect of the pro-Russian, anti-NATO Left taking power.

“The Cold War paranoia breaking out in Thuringia is bizarre – you get a feeling it’s a state bordering Russia rather than Hesse and that Soviet tanks are ready to roll in,” said Gero Neugebauer, political scientist at Berlin’s Free University.

“The reality is that the Left taking control of a state is a big step towards more German unity,” he added.

Merkel’s opposition to the Left-SPD-Greens alliance is because her CDU has lost control of six states since 2009 and now leads just five of the 16, Neugebauer said.

By abandoning their ostracism of the Left and helping Bodo Ramelow become the first Left state premier, the SPD would be dislodging the CDU after 24 years in power in Thuringia..

“We’ve got a chance to open a new chapter of German history with the SPD and Greens,” said Ramelow, a trade unionist and West German native who moved to the east soon after the Berlin Wall fell.

But his left-wing coalition enjoys just a one-seat majority in the 91-seat assembly over the CDU and anti-euro Alternative for Germany (AfD). That means that if one or more SPD or Greens deputies defect in the secret ballot, Ramelow’s hopes of running the state could yet be dashed.

“It would be a good thing if Ramelow isn’t elected, Merkel’s education minister, an easterner named Johanna Wanka, told a talk show this week. “I can’t stomach the thought.” (Editing by Noah Barkin and Gareth Jones)

Obama Lights The National Christmas Tree

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama kicked off the holiday season in Washington on Thursday with the lighting of the national Christmas tree.

Obama joined hundreds of people for the annual event held just steps from the White House. First lady Michelle Obama, daughters Malia and Sasha, and Mrs. Obama’s mother, Marian Robinson, also attended the event on a chilly night in the nation’s capital. Obama said the national tree is a “symbol of hope and holiday spirit.” He urged Americans to remember members of the U.S. military serving overseas, as well as their families.

“As we hold our loved ones tight, let’s remember the military families whose loved ones are far from home,” Obama said. “They are our heroes.”

This year’s ceremony marks the 92nd annual lighting of the Christmas tree near the White House. The National Park Service says the tradition was started by President Calvin Coolidge in 1923.

'Green News Report' – December 4, 2014

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IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Germany’s biggest utility spins off its fossil fuel assets; Are fossil fuel companies running scared? Florida punishes homeowners for not polluting; PLUS: MSNBC’s big infomercial for Big Coal… All that and more in today’s Green News Report!

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IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Scientists predict green energy revolution after incredible new graphene discoveries; See what your city will look like with rising sea levels; NASA: rate of Antarctic ice melt triples in a decade; CO2 emissions produce maximum warming in 10 years; India considers emissions peak 2035-50; Russia’s proposed pipeline falls victim to low prices; MIT: no health impacts from wind turbine noise … PLUS: The Way We Weren’t: Inhofe Singles out Streisand as Global Warming Hoaxer in Chief… and much, MUCH more! …

‘Green News Report’ is heard on many fine radio stations around the country. For additional info on stories we covered today, plus today’s ‘Green News Extra’, please click right here to listen!…

<i>Ashes Rain Down</i>: A Book Review

We are in Southern California, in years not very far hence. We are not post, but rather, let’s say, mid-apocalypse. Not the cataclysmic event of “science fiction,” it is in process, happening, very slowly, all around us. “Over there” is perpetual warfare, of the kind that seems already to have started in the Middle East, in certain African countries, and elsewhere around the world. Young men are sent there, without apparent hope of any eventual return. At home, “the trouble.” Social norms, social mores no longer apply…

Sound familiar? This is the world of William Luvaas’s Ashes Rain Down, a collection of 10 interconnected stories that was published in 2013 and should, by rights, have been received with far greater acclaim. I suspect it might be in danger of slipping below the literary horizon line, which would be a shame and an injustice. It should be read. Unhappily, it is a totally believable world. Happily, for us, as readers, it is part tragedy — but also part tell-all reality show and part sheer, exuberant, uninhibited farce.

Luvaas peoples his world with a ragtag bunch of survivors, some hold-overs from the hippie days of the 1960s, some Jesus freaks and biker gangs, some redneck hillbillies, along with a handful of wandering tribes of ne’er-do-wells and marauders. Psycho- and sociopaths, bipolar paranoids and schizophrenics all, they squabble over the meager living to be scratched out amid the intolerable heat and drought that alternate with the disastrous wind-, dust- and rainstorms that result from a rapidly deteriorating natural environment. Lacking much in the way of drugs or alcohol — let alone food — their chief distraction is, well, fornication. And they do a lot of that, in sweating desperation.

Reading these stories, we begin to sort out individuals who pop in and out of the events in no particular sequence. Luvaas proves a master of colloquial voices, each one of them different and distinguishable, and we enjoy the constantly shifting tone of the narrative as much as the frequently outlandish events. In a world gone so very much awry, what remains is the oddly surviving nobility of which our species is capable, even in desperate times. This is a world in which humanity is in extremis, clinging on to survival by its ragged fingernails.

We are left with a remnant of hope — but with the knowledge that we are already too far along this path to a bleak, perhaps inevitable future. We are surrounded by constant and ubiquitous evidence of a changing global climate. We are entangled in seemingly endless wars abroad, and at home our social fabric shows increasing signs of wear and tear. Our infrastructure is on the verge of collapse. We dispense with common civility in favor of a crass me-firstism that threatens to destroy all sense of mutual responsibility and care for the well-being of our fellow humans.

And we are too easily distracted by popular culture, sensationalism, and the melee of social media from powerfully thoughtful voices like William Luvaas’, whose wildly creative cautionary tale is so relevant, so urgent, and so timely, and whose literary spunk and sparkle should assure it a place on everyone’s bestseller list.

White House Turns To Aggressive Defense Of Immigration Actions

WASHINGTON — The White House is moving into a new phase for its policy on deportation relief for up to 5 million undocumented immigrants: Not just selling it, but going on the offense to protect it.

The House voted on Thursday to block President Barack Obama’s executive actions on immigration. The vote was met with a swift veto threat from the administration. Not long after, White House policy adviser Cecilia Muñoz hosted Dreamers, young undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children, at the White House, then sent them outside to share their stories with reporters. Administration officials held a call with reporters to decry the House vote — a telling move for legislation unlikely to reach the president’s desk — and Obama will travel to Nashville, Tennessee, next week to make his third public speech about his actions.

For advocates, the aggressive posture has been reassuring. The Obama administration has been faulted in the past for failing to sell new policies. The president still struggles to convince the public that the health care reform law was a good idea. Early steps taken to protect the immigration executive action suggest that the White House has learned a lesson from legislative battles past.

To date, Obama’s favorite talking point when discussing his immigration executive action is that he was forced into it because House Republicans wouldn’t vote on immigration reform that passed the Senate. On Thursday, administration officials believe they were given stronger material. Nearly all of the House Republican conference backed the bill introduced by Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.) to end the president’s policy. The vote was meant to underscore opposition to a perceived presidential power grab. But the downside of it is that it provides Democrats and allies with a million-plus individual stories of people whose deportation relief the GOP wants taken away.

In a call with reporters just after the vote concluded, White House made just that point.

“The United States House of Representatives is voting to prioritize breaking up families,” a senior administration official said. “The United States House of Representatives has been sitting for over 500 days on a piece of legislation that had wide public support. … I don’t think that any time there’s a vote in the United States House of Representatives by the people’s elected officials, that it can be treated as symbolic. This has consequences.”

The Dreamers who visited the White House highlighted these consequences. Lorella Praeli, the director of advocacy and policy at the advocacy group United We Dream, talked about her mother, who will be helped by the new policy.

“When Republicans and other members of Congress make this personal, when they try to say this is about the president and executive overreach and the Constitution, but it is really an attack on our communities — on people like Chela Praeli, my mother — then it becomes a real fight for us,” Lorella Praeli said. “We have said to Republicans and to any other member of Congress who decides to vote or who has voted today on this bill to block the President’s executive action, bring it on. We are ready.”

Praeli said Dreamers would continue to confront politicians to ask whether they want to deport them and their parents, raising the specter of confrontations similar to one in August, when Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) saw their highly choreographed lunch disrupted by advocates.

An official with the DREAM Action Coalition, which spearheaded that King-Paul event, said similar actions would be coming in the future.

“We are conscious that we need to protect this win because there is going to be aggressive efforts to push back on it,” explained Cesar Vargas, director of the DREAM Action Coalition. “We are going to confront Republican efforts.”

Still, Vargas insisted his group wouldn’t be a proxy for the White House. Dreamers, he said, would continue pushing the administration, both to expend the executive action and keep up the pressure for comprehensive legislative reform.

“We are a little bit more amicable terms. We are talking with the White House again,” said Vargas. “They are sending us emails again. That’s good. But I made it clear that we are going to continue to push the president. Maybe not call him ‘Deporter in Chief,’ but to tell him that we need to continue the job.”

That could complicate the administration’s efforts to go on the offense. Certainly, Obama, Democrats and advocates have work to do convincing the American public that executive action was a good idea. The policy changes have widespread support from Latino voters, and Obama’s approval rating among them jumped after the announcement. But the population at large is divided. A Public Religion Research Institute poll released Thursday found that 50 percent of Americans think Obama was right to act, but 45 percent opposed the move.

And so, unlike the advocacy community and the administration, congressional Democrats have been forced to walk a finer line. At a press conference before the vote on Thursday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) and House Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.) spent as much time discussing the need for reform as they did on the opposition to executive action.

The House “is the legislative body that has the ability, if they don’t agree with the president of the United States, to pass a bill,” Hoyer said.

Colin Kaepernick May Have Just Given One Of The Shortest Interviews Ever

“I don’t remember.”

“Couldn’t tell you.”

“No.”

These are some of the more expressive answers San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick provided reporters on Wednesday during his weekly media meeting, which all NFL players are required to provide or face being fined.

Kaepernick, who played one of the worst games of his career on Thanksgiving against the Seattle Seahawks, clearly didn’t feel like it this week. He managed to answer 32 questions with a mere 87 words, according to official transcripts provided by the 49ers.

“Kaepernick can be a very thoughtful and interesting guy,” San Jose Mercury News sports columnist Tim Kawakami wrote following the so-called interview, “but he just totally refuses to do that in public most days and in fact goes to the extreme opposite, because it entertains him. He thinks it’s funny.

Here’s the full transcript, as posted by the San Francisco Chronicle:

How was practice out there? A little wet?
“Good.”

How’s the team coming back, bouncing back right now? Where’s the focus at?
“The Raiders.”

What about you personally?
“The Raiders.”

What do you see in the Raiders as far as what they bring to the table and what you’re seeing on film?
“They’re a good team.”

When you went back and looked at tape from the Seattle game, what struck you about the offense?
“We didn’t play well.”

Why?
“Didn’t execute.”

Any explanation why you didn’t execute?
“Didn’t play well.”

Was it mostly you guys or what Seattle was doing?
“It was us.”

Growing up here in this region, if you could share with us just growing up playing the game, this Raider-49er rivalry, just if you followed it or?
“I was a Packers fan.”

You almost became a Raider, though, back in the draft. How many times did you visit with the Raiders before the draft?
“Once.”

And did you meet with former Raiders owner and general manager Al Davis back then?
“(Former Raiders head coach) Hue (Jackson).”

And what kind of vibe did you get from Hue and knowing how much he would want you?
“A good one.”

Did you work out at the facility there?
“No.”

Did they work you out all?
“No.”

No work out? Just a meet-and-greet?
(Yes).

What’s the confidence like with the team right now? Did Thursday’s loss take its toll on you guys confidence-wise?
“No.”

And why is that?
“We know what we have to do. We played bad.”

When you have a game like that, is it one of those things where man you just can’t wait until the next one?
“Yep.”

How are you guys able to compartmentalize all the outside drama and rumors and stories about head coach Jim Harbaugh potentially not being here next year? And not only that, but whether it’s the Raiders, Michigan, different places like that. How are you able to keep that all out of your heads?
“I don’t pay attention.”

Is that hard, though? I mean you guys are human.
“No.”

What do you think about the rumors that are surrounding Harbaugh?
“Look at his resume. You’ll get your answer.”

Do you want him to be your head coach next year?
“Yes.”

What are you looking forward to on Sunday?
“Winning.”

Are you curious to see what the black hole is like in person, just being in the Raiders stadium?
“I’ve been there before.”

As a fan or just as exhibition? As a fan?
“Punt, pass and kick.”

How old were you then?
“I don’t remember.”

How did you fare?
“Second and third.”

In what categories?
“Two different years.”

Sorry if you’ve been asked this, I just got here, but TE Vernon Davis, as you probably know, he had 16 catches of over 20 yards last year. He just has one this year. He’s dealt with injuries. Is he physically OK or what’s going on with him and why hasn’t he been as big a part of the offense?
“He’s physically fine.”

Can you put your finger on why he hasn’t been…his numbers are pretty dramatically down?
“Couldn’t tell you.”

No idea?
“No.”

Were you about 11 when you did the punt, pass, kick?
“I don’t remember.”

Caroline Cartwright Defies Court Order Prohibiting Loud Sex

A woman who was ordered by a British court to be quiet during coitus is making her point loud and clear: She refuses to stop screaming during sex.

Caroline Cartwright, 53, of Sunderland, England is apparently so noisy with her husband of 38 years, that a British judge in 2010 ordered her to keep it down because neighbors complained.

The order, known as an Anti-Social Behavior Order (ASBO), banned Cartwright from shouting, screaming or vocalizing when getting down and dirty for a 4-year period.

Now she is speaking out about her carnal controversy. On Wednesday, she discussed her lusty legal problems on ASBO and Proud, a TV special on Channel 5, a British TV network.

“It’s not as if I’m having sex and think ‘Oh, I’m making too much noise. I better be quiet,’” she said in the special, according to the Sunderland Echo.

The ASBO was issued after police came to the Cartwright home more than 30 times to silence the passionate couple.

Cartwright also breached a noise abatement order five times, and was given suspended jail terms of eight weeks and 12 weeks for violating the ASBO, UPI.com reports.

The problem was exacerbated when the Cartwrights bought a bed with an iron headboard that banged against the wall, the paper reports.

“I did not understand why people asked me to be quiet because to me it is normal. I didn’t understand where they were coming from,” she told a judge during a court appearance, according to the Daily Mail. “I have tried to minimize the situation by being intimate in the morning — not at night — to avoid disturbing sleeping neighbors.

With the ASBO lifted, Cartwright will keep doing what comes naturally with her husband.

“As far as I’m concerned, that’s what you should be doing. Just relax. Go with the flow,” she said, according to the Mirror.

She’s made one concession to the neighbors: A less noisy wooden bed.

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