Monday, October 31, 2011

How To Examine Low cost Car Insurance coverage Quotes ...

The best recommendation for getting an affordable automotive insurance quote is to buy round, and the best advice for procuring around is to check the car insurance quotes of every company.

There are a number of methods to compare low cost car insurance coverage quotes from several automotive insurance coverage companies:

Make a list. Ask your family members, mates, and even co-staff with whom you are shut in regards to the automobile insurance corporations they use. Likelihood is they?re not all doing business with the same automotive insurance coverage firm, so you?ll get truthful reviews of several different automobile insurance coverage companies. Pay attention to those who curiosity you, and overlook about those who don?t.

Ask about discounts. Once you have your record of doable automotive insurance firms, call each one and ask about discounts. Many automobile insurance firms supply reductions for classes taken, good driving data, automobile security options, and multi-automobile policies. Some insurance firms sell more than just car insurance coverage, and can offer discounts should you purchase or already produce other insurance policies from them. Evaluate the discounts offered by each as those reductions will help determine your low-cost car insurance coverage quote. Be aware of the automobile insurance corporations that provide reductions relevant to you.

Pay attention. Ideally, you?re searching for an automotive insurance coverage firm with which you can do enterprise for a protracted time. So, the customer service should be stellar, proper? As you talk to an agent from each automobile insurance firm you name, really listen to the rapport. Are they pleasant? Do they have instant answers to your questions? Do they sound as if they?re in a rush to end the dialog?

Price vs. Options. While you compare low-cost automotive insurance quotes, you shouldn?t only be interested within the value ? you want to get a car insurance coverage that provides choices you need. What?s the point in paying a cheap car insurance coverage fee in the event you?re sacrificing crucial car insurance coverage and protection?

In case you thirst for more info about compare car insurance pay a visit to Jerri Termonitz?s web site this minute.


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Of Flash Mobs and Four Loko

Image: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

On an ordinary afternoon at Copenhagen Central Station, a performer sets up a drum in the center of a large hall. A cellist joins him. A woman approaches with her flute. They strike up a melody that seems familiar. A clarinet and bassoon and other instruments start playing. People pull out their cell phones and record video. Within minutes an entire symphony orchestra has assembled in the middle of the station, and suddenly it?s clear that this isn?t just your typical street performance; it?s the Copenhagen Philharmonic, and the tune is Ravel?s Bol?ro. This musical flash mob is a very different experience from watching an orchestra perform in a music hall, perhaps because of the novelty of the surroundings.

The same sort of disconnect may explain the peculiar potency of Four Loko, a fruit flavored, caffeinated, alcoholic drink that was invented by three Ohio State University students in 2005. Following a series of reported hospitalizations, in 2010 the Food and Drug Administration declared that it was illegal to add caffeine to alcoholic beverages, and the makers of Four Loko complied.

Case closed? That caffeinated alcoholic drinks are dangerous is clear, but is caffeine the culprit? Shepard Siegel, a psychologist at McMaster University in Ontario writing in a recent issue of Perspectives on Psychological Science, doesn?t think so.

For one thing, caffeine doesn?t seem to affect the way that alcohol gets absorbed by the body. Moreover, many drugs, including alcohol, are known to be more potent if they are taken in an unusual context. In a 1976 paper in Science, Siegel termed this the ?situational specificity of tolerance.? Environmental variables ranging from the room where a drug is administered to flavor cues can influence an individual?s drug-related tolerance. What this comes down to is classical Pavlovian conditioning. The body of a social drinker learns to prepare for the alcohol in response to the environment, before the alcohol is even ingested. Siegel?s argument is that people became especially drunk after drinking Four Loko because of the unexpected way in which it was presented: it doesn?t actually taste like alcohol.

If Siegel is right, the decaf approach that the manufacturer of Four Loko has now taken could be troubling. It has announced a new beverage that comes with ?a brand new flavor profile every four months.? This doesn?t fix the problem. Once someone becomes tolerant to the effects of the alcohol in one flavor, his or her tolerance would be eliminated when the next one is released. Intentional or not, Four Loko takes advantage of the situational specificity of tolerance. It has more in common with the
Copenhagen Philharmonic flash mob than with your morning cuppa joe.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0452bd4b414225af43cd09efb7f703c3

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Georgia hands Florida fourth consecutive loss

JACKSONVILLE ? Florida QB John Brantley had a hot and cold day, and the Gators followed suit Saturday, falling to Georgia, 24-20.

It's Florida's fourth straight loss, their first such skid since 1988. It also gives them a winless October, the first time that has happened since 1979. And it was the Gators first loss to Georgia since 2007.

Richard Samuel IV ran in a 4-yard touchdown early in the fourth to give Georgia the go-ahead score. It came after Brad Phillips' 40-yard field goal had broken the first tie score of the day and put Florida ahead 20-17.

Down 17-10, Georgia got the ball at the Florida 18-yard line after WR Frankie Hammond Jr. lost a fumble. Four plays later, Aaron Murray threw a fourth-down touchdown pass to Tavarres King. It was the third offensive touchdown of the day between the two teams, all of which came on fourth down until Samuel's.

Andre Debose returned the ensuing kickoff 63 yards, setting up Phillips' go-ahead field goal.

Brantley led the Gators' offense, throwing 226 yards and a touchdown in the first half, a career-high for Brantley in any half in two years as a starter. His career-high for a game is 248 yards. It was the quarterback's first game back since suffering an ankle injury on Oct. 1. But he struggled mightily late in the game.

He had a 31-yard touchdown pass on 4th-and-19 on the second drive of the game to put Florida ahead first, marking the first time this season that the Bulldogs did not score first in their games.

After Georgia's Blair Walsh hit a 32-yard field goal to cut into the lead, Jeff Demps took the kickoff back 99 yards untouched for a touchdown. It was the longest kickoff return of his career, with his previous high at 54. He became the sixth Florida player to have a kickoff return touchdown for 99 yards or more.

Kicker Brad Phillips, playing in place of injured starter Caleb Sturgis, made his first career field goal from 43 yards out to extend the lead with 10:06 left in the second quarter.

But Georgia capitalized late in the quarter, recovering a Chris Rainey fumble in UF territory. QB Aaron Murray found Michael Bennett on fourth down for a 20-yard touchdown pass to cut into the Florida lead.

Brantley's first pass as a swing to Demps, who took it 72 yards on the first play of the game. Florida could do nothing from the Georgia 21-yard line, and kicker Brad Phillips missed a 38-yard field goal attempt.

Sturgis was dressed on the sideline. A Lou Groza Award semifinalist, Sturgis injured his leg in the Gators' last game, a loss to Auburn on Oct. 15. Muschamp said Monday that he expected all injured players except for CB Jeremy Brown to return.

Brantley, meanwhile, took the field as one of the team's captains after not warming up befoore kickoff of its game vs. Georgia at EverBank field.

The Gators' senior did throw passes on the sideline during the stretching period but was not on the field as the position groups warmed up. His right ankle was heavily taped when he was on the field earlier Saturday afternoon.

Florida appeared to be dealing with other injuries as well. Tackle Chaz Green did not dress for the game and linebacker Lerentee McCray came out before halftime. He was in street clothes on the sideline with ice on his shoulder.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/orlandosentinel/~3/VVtF4anpAXM/os-game-story-florida-georgia-1030-20111029,0,126399.story

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THG Week in Review: October 22-28, 2011


Welcome to THG's Week in Review! Below, our staff takes a look back at the stories, stars and scandals that made these past seven days so memorable.

If you don't already, you can FOLLOW THG on Twitter and Facebook for 24/7/365 news. Day in and day out, let us be your entertainment news source!

Now, a rundown of the week that was at The Hollywood Gossip:

Kris vs. Kim Cover StoryKim and Kris on KameraEnough!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/thg-week-in-review-october-22-28-2011/

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Behind-the-Scenes at the National Hurricane Center

Image: Brett Israel

MIAMI ? There's only one building in Florida that can withstand the biggest and baddest of all hurricanes ? the Category 5, with winds of at least 165 mph (266 kph) ? and it's a concrete bunker along an unglamorous stretch of road in South Florida called the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

The NHC never closes. Here, weather forecasters work around the clock, 365 days a year, tracking threatening storms in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. They watch radars, issue storm warnings, and command their airplane? named Miss Piggy ? on airborne hurricane hunter missions.

OurAmazingPlanet recently toured the NHC just as forecasters here were becoming concerned about the storm that would become Hurricane Rina (which has since weakened into a tropical storm). In the center's main forecast room, seen on TV during press briefings, one forecaster was just about to issue the latest tropical warning as reporters walked in.

"Done!" he shouted, as if on cue.

Forecasters sit in front of banks of computer monitors, poring over the latest storm data, doing their best to predict where the storm will go, and how strong it will be when it gets there. But as seen with Rina, which was predicted to become a major hurricane (Category 3 or higher) only to quickly fizzle, forecasters are constantly struggling to make accurate forecasts.

"It's not unusual for our intensity and wind speed forecast to be off," said Chris Landsea, science and operations officer for the NHC's Tropical Analysis and Forecast Branch. "Sometimes we're too high, sometimes we're too low."

Into the heart of the storm
One way that the forecasters get information to plug into the forecast models is from ocean buoys ? as long as the hurricanes don't destroy them.

"The storms have been buoy hunting this year, which doesn't happen very often," said Daniel Brown, the NHC's warning coordination meteorologist.

The 2011 hurricane season has seen six hurricanes and 17 named storms. (Storm names are given when a system becomes a tropical storm.)

Another way to observe hurricanes is by flying airplanes and drones over, in front of and into the storms. This brand of hurricane hunting began decades ago with a few brave military pilots. [In the Eye of the Storm: NASA's Hurricane Hunters]

"A couple of Army pilots decided to see if they could go fly that thing," said John Papone, who flew missions in the Pacific years ago, and has been working in the "war room" since it opened in 1968.

Today's pilots fly out of MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla., where they patrol the tropics, except for a rectangular "no fly zone" extending from Venezuela into the Caribbean.

They fly an airplane affectionately named Miss Piggy, or P3, (they also have planes named Kermit and Gonzo) at about 10,000 feet (3,000 meters) in a full-blown storm. Once over a storm, the planes deploy instruments called dropsondes, which are biodegradable slender tubes that float into the storm while hanging from a tiny parachute. The dropsondes, at $700 each, collect reconnaissance on the storm, including wind speed, temperature and precipitation. The information is sent back to the NHC in real-time.

"It's on Google within minutes of the time we get it," Papone said.

The P3 flies in a figure-four pattern over a storm and the pilots "pepper the storm" with dropsondes, said Shirley Murillo, the hurricane field program director for the 2011 season. Missions can be up to 8 hours long. [Hurricanes from Above: See Nature's Biggest Storms]

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=a76e1a16786c4388c5b8e131f09af80a

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Gild Hits Half A Million Members, Now Lets Developers ?Face-Off? To See Who?s Got The Most Skillz

116438v4-max-250x250Gild, a TechCrunch Disrupt startup and a game-ified jobs platform for developers, raised $2.4 million in seed funding from Globespan Partners back in August. Since launching at Disrupt a year ago, Gild has grown quickly, and today announced that it has attracted 500,000 members across 174 countries.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/x1dFQl8bhEo/

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Mealor's music may be royal, but mum takes the cake (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? Welsh composer Paul Mealor had the thrill of a lifetime when one of his choral works was played at the April wedding of Britain's Prince William to Catherine Middleton, but he gave his piece of royal wedding cake, which came in a special box, to his mum.

How could he not? She'd even bought a new hat to watch the royal wedding, including her son's choral piece "Ubi Caritas" played for a worldwide television and online audience estimated at 2.4 billion people, at the family home.

"I quite fancied eating it, but I gave it to my mum," Mealor, 35, told Reuters in an interview to mark the release this week of the first commercial CD of his choral music, "A Tender Light" (Decca 2781149), performed by the Tenebrae Choir under Nigel Short.

It is all a bit of a breathless rush to fame -- at least in classical music terms -- for a relatively unknown composer who by his own admission is a big fan of the royals, especially the younger generation, and a bit of a "young fogey" to boot.

"I get some stick for it," said Mealor, affable, bespectacled and a bit bemused by the lunches, news conferences and chauffeured limousines attendant on an album launch.

Everyday life for him, he says, consists of living alone in a house on the northern Welsh Anglesey coast, without electricity -- but with running water, he hastens to add -- and eating his meals off a grand piano that doubles as a table.

"I feel at home by the sea, with the sound of it," said the son of a fisherman, whose aforesaid mom used to play Mahler symphonies on the phonograph to calm down her hyperactive child.

"The movement kind of finds its way into my music," he added.

Here's what else he had to say about his musical influences, how his work links up with that of others in what he sees as a new choral tradition of singable music, and the magic of having his piece included in the royal wedding.

Q: How did you wind up with a career in music, given your love of the sea and your father being a fisherman would suggest an alternate occupation?

A: "My grandmother was musical and also my uncles played in brass bands, I played in one myself and sang in church choirs. But it was at the age of nine, I suddenly realised I was going to die, that my life wasn't infinite, it wasn't going to go on forever. I was in a field in Anglesey and I had a huge grip of fear and that's when I started my lifelong journey to discover what happens afterwards. I turned to faith -- Anglican -- I started attending church and singing in the choir. And that's also when I started composing."

Q: You studied with the noted fellow Welsh composer William Mathias, from an early age, but who else are your musical influences and how would you describe your style?

A: "It's almost become a cliche to mention (16th century Tudor composers) like Thomas Tallis, Thomas Tomkins and Orlando Gibbons but all that music which is what I liked as a child finds its way into my own music and I try to do my own settings. As a young student I experimented with (avant garde) music like Stockhausen, I got into all those composers, but then I went right back to my early music, Tallis, Gibbons, and I try to create music that is very much of our time but could have been sung anytime."

Q: This type of clear, airy but modern choral sound, you're not alone doing it.

A: "I've come across any number of other composers doing this, Gabriel Jackson, Tarik O'Regan, Sir John Tavener, in the U.S. Morten Lauridsen. And perhaps this is a bit of a big statement to make, but just like the Tudor period there is a zeitgeist of (musical) language, they are individual but they are part of a school and it seems to me to be what is happening now in choral music -- all of these composers engaged in this one type of school but with individual voices."

Q: So what's it like to be a young composer whose piece is plucked almost out of the air by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge as a new work they would like performed at their wedding in Westminster Abbey, for a world audience of billions?

A: "Magic."

(Writing by Michael Roddy, Editing by Paul Casciato)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111027/music_nm/us_music_mealor

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Russia says nuclear missile test a success (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) ? Russia successfully test-fired a large long-range missile Friday whose future as a mainstay of its nuclear arsenal has been clouded by past failures.

The military said the 12-meter (40-foot) long, multiple-warhead Bulava missile -- Russian for 'Mace' -- was fired from the atomic-powered submarine Yuri Dolgoruky in the White Sea in northwestern Russia.

Its warheads hit the target area on the Kamchatka peninsula some 6,000 km (3,700 miles) to the east, Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said.

"The flight went according to plan and the warheads reached the testing ground at the appropriate time," he said on state-run Rossiya 24 television.

It was the third successful test launch this year of the Bulava, which failed in seven of its previous 14 tests, raising doubts about plans to use it as the cornerstone of Russia's nuclear deterrent for the next three decades.

One Bulava can hold six to 10 nuclear warheads, enough to deliver an impact up to 100 times the power of the atomic blast that devastated Hiroshima in 1945. Russia hopes to put the missile into service by next year.

Russia agreed to new limits on long-range nuclear arms in the 2009 New START treaty with the United States, but has emphasized they will remain a crucial element of its defenses and signaled further cuts will be tough to achieve.

(Writing by Steve Gutterman; Edited by Richard Meares)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/wl_nm/us_russia_missile

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Chris Brown Reveals Fortune Singles

Album is singer's follow-up to F.A.M.E., released earlier this year.
By Jocelyn Vena


Chris Brown
Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

Chris Brown has already dropped F.A.M.E. this year, and now he's prepping for the release of his follow-up album, Fortune. The singer tweeted some of the titles of the singles on the album, which is expected to drop before year's end.

"Continue requesting WET THE BED [off F.A.M.E.] at ur radio stations. Also, the new singles from FORTUNE are being mixed!" he wrote on Twitter. "STRIP [off his Boy in Detention mixtape] is one of the singles off of FORTUNE so request at RADIO!"

In addition to "Strip," Breezy shared a few more song titles from the album. "I'm also really excited about the release of my single titled 'BIGGEST FAN' produced by the RUNNERS!" he said, before retweeting a message from his production team. "@chrisbrown 'Biggest Fan' is gonna be epic!! And wait till they hear what else we have in the vault together! Ha!"

In other Brown-related news, if Team Breezy can't wait to hear what he's cooking up for Fortune, that's just fine. The singer even tweeted a link to a song he penned for his pal Justin Bieber's Christmas album, Under The Mistletoe. It dropped as more songs off the November 1 release are hitting the Internet, including tracks featuring Mariah Carey and Busta Rhymes.

The track is a melodic R&B jam about making Christmas special for someone you love. "Be my babe this Christmas eve/ Be my holiday/ My dream/ Lay your head on me, I got you babe," he sings on the chorus. "Kissing underneath the tree/ I don't need no presents, girl/ You're everything I need/ Let me give you all of me/ Together on this Christmas Eve."

If it feels like Brown is everywhere these days, that's because he certainly is busy. He's wrapping up his tour next week before he begins work on his next film, "Planet B-Boy," alongside "Lost" star Josh Holloway. As the titles suggest, it's a look inside the world of b-boys and breakdancers.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673344/chris-brown-fortune-singles.jhtml

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FOR KIDS: Mummies share their secrets

Technology helps scientists understand how the dead once lived

Web edition : Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

One afternoon, Ron Beckett, a professor at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn., left his lab, taking some research home with him. The university labs were being remodeled, and security was a question. Carefully assisting his elderly passenger into the back seat, Beckett buckled her in for safety. As the two traveled to Beckett?s home, the passenger sat very still and didn?t make conversation ? because she?s a 1,000-year-old Peruvian mummy!

Mummies are alive with information, and scientists like Beckett are helping to unlock what these time travelers have to say. Cutting-edge technology such as CT, or CAT, scans and endoscopes are allowing scientists to see not just what?s underneath the wrappings but also what?s inside a mummy?s body.

Visit the new?Science News for Kids?website?to read the full story:?Mummies share their secrets


Found in: Science News For Kids

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/335572/title/FOR_KIDS_Mummies_share_their_secrets

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High-quality white light produced by four-color laser source

High-quality white light produced by four-color laser source [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: neal singer
nsinger@sandia.gov
505-845-7078
DOE/Sandia National Laboratories

diode lasers eventually could challenge LEDs for home and industrial lighting supremacy

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- The human eye is as comfortable with white light generated by diode lasers as with that produced by increasingly popular light-emitting diodes (LEDs), according to tests conceived at Sandia National Laboratories.

Both technologies pass electrical current through material to generate light, but the simpler LED emits lights only through spontaneous emission. Diode lasers bounce light back and forth internally before releasing it.

The finding is important because LEDs -- widely accepted as more efficient and hardier replacements for century-old tungsten incandescent bulb technology -- lose efficiency at electrical currents above 0.5 amps. However, the efficiency of a sister technology -- the diode laser -- improves at higher currents, providing even more light than LEDs at higher amperages.

"What we showed is that diode lasers are a worthy path to pursue for lighting," said Sandia researcher Jeff Tsao, who proposed the comparative experiment. "Before these tests, our research in this direction was stopped before it could get started. The typical response was, 'Are you kidding? The color rendering quality of white light produced by diode lasers would be terrible.' So finally it seemed like, in order to go further, one really had to answer this very basic question first."

Little research had been done on diode lasers for lighting because of a widespread assumption that human eyes would find laser-based white light unpleasant. It would comprise four extremely narrow-band wavelengths -- blue, red, green, and yellow -- and would be very different from sunlight, for example, which blends a wide spectrum of wavelengths with no gaps in between. Diode laser light is also ten times narrower than that emitted by LEDs.

The tests -- a kind of high-tech market research -- took place at the University of New Mexico's Center for High Technology Materials. Forty volunteers were seated, one by one, before two near-identical scenes of fruit in bowls, housed in adjacent chambers. Each bowl was randomly illuminated by warm, cool, or neutral white LEDs, by a tungsten-filament incandescent light bulb, or by a combination of four lasers (blue, red, green, yellow) tuned so their combination produced a white light.

The experiment proceeded like an optometrist's exam: the subjects were asked: Do you prefer the left picture, or the right? All right, how about now?

The viewers were not told which source provided the illumination. They were instructed merely to choose the lit scene with which they felt most comfortable. The pairs were presented in random order to ensure that neither sequence nor tester preconceptions played roles in subject choices, but only the lighting itself. The computer program was written, and the set created, by Alexander Neumann, a UNM doctoral student of CHTM director Steve Brueck.

Each participant, selected from a variety of age groups, was asked to choose 80 times between the two changing alternatives, a procedure that took ten to twenty minutes, said Sandia scientist Jonathan Wierer, who helped plan, calibrate and execute the experiments. Five results were excluded when the participants proved to be color-blind. The result was that there was a statistically significant preference for the diode-laser-based white light over the warm and cool LED-based white light, Wierer said, but no statistically significant preference between the diode-laser-based and either the neutral LED-based or incandescent white light.

The results probably won't start a California gold rush of lighting fabricators into diode lasers, said Tsao, but they may open a formerly ignored line of research. Diode lasers are slightly more expensive to fabricate than LEDs because their substrates must have fewer defects than those used for LEDs. Still, he said, such substrates are likely to become more available in the future because they improve LED performance as well.

Also, while blue diode lasers have good enough performance that the automaker BMW is planning their use in its vehicles' next-generation white headlights, performance of red diode lasers is not as good, and yellow and green have a ways to go before they are efficient enough for commercial lighting opportunities.

Still, says Tsao, a competition wouldn't have to be all or nothing. Instead, he said, a cooperative approach might use blue and red diode lasers with yellow and green LEDs. Or blue diode lasers could be used to illuminate phosphors -- the technique currently used by fluorescent lights and the current generation of LED-based white light -- to create desirable shades of light.

The result makes possible still further efficiencies for the multibillion dollar lighting industry. The so-called ''smart beams'' can be adjusted on site for personalized color renderings for health reasons and, because they are directional, also can provide illumination precisely where it's wanted.

###

Colorimetric and experimental guidance was provided by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

The research was published in the July 1, Optics Express.

This work was conducted as part of the Solid-State Lighting Science Energy Frontier Research Center, funded by the U.S. DOE Office of Science.

pic cutlines: Sandia researcher Jeff Tsao examines the set-up used to test diode lasers as an alternative to LED lighting. Skeptics felt laser light would be too harsh to be acceptable. Research by Tsao and colleagues suggests the skeptics were wrong. (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

In the test setup, similar bowls of fruit were placed in a lightbox with a divider in the middle. In this photo, the bowl on one side was illuminated by a diode laser light and the other was lit by a standard incandescent bulb. The aesthetic quality of diode laser lighting (left bowl) compares favorably with standard incandescent lighting (right). (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Four laser beams -- yellow, blue, green and red -- converge to produce a pleasantly warm white light. Results suggest that diode-based lighting could be an attractive alternative to increasingly popular LED lighting, themselves an alternative to compact-florescent lights and incandescent bulbs. (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Sandia National Laboratories is a multiprogram laboratory operated and managed by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness.

Sandia news media contact: Neal Singer, nsinger@sandia.gov 505-845-7078



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


High-quality white light produced by four-color laser source [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: neal singer
nsinger@sandia.gov
505-845-7078
DOE/Sandia National Laboratories

diode lasers eventually could challenge LEDs for home and industrial lighting supremacy

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- The human eye is as comfortable with white light generated by diode lasers as with that produced by increasingly popular light-emitting diodes (LEDs), according to tests conceived at Sandia National Laboratories.

Both technologies pass electrical current through material to generate light, but the simpler LED emits lights only through spontaneous emission. Diode lasers bounce light back and forth internally before releasing it.

The finding is important because LEDs -- widely accepted as more efficient and hardier replacements for century-old tungsten incandescent bulb technology -- lose efficiency at electrical currents above 0.5 amps. However, the efficiency of a sister technology -- the diode laser -- improves at higher currents, providing even more light than LEDs at higher amperages.

"What we showed is that diode lasers are a worthy path to pursue for lighting," said Sandia researcher Jeff Tsao, who proposed the comparative experiment. "Before these tests, our research in this direction was stopped before it could get started. The typical response was, 'Are you kidding? The color rendering quality of white light produced by diode lasers would be terrible.' So finally it seemed like, in order to go further, one really had to answer this very basic question first."

Little research had been done on diode lasers for lighting because of a widespread assumption that human eyes would find laser-based white light unpleasant. It would comprise four extremely narrow-band wavelengths -- blue, red, green, and yellow -- and would be very different from sunlight, for example, which blends a wide spectrum of wavelengths with no gaps in between. Diode laser light is also ten times narrower than that emitted by LEDs.

The tests -- a kind of high-tech market research -- took place at the University of New Mexico's Center for High Technology Materials. Forty volunteers were seated, one by one, before two near-identical scenes of fruit in bowls, housed in adjacent chambers. Each bowl was randomly illuminated by warm, cool, or neutral white LEDs, by a tungsten-filament incandescent light bulb, or by a combination of four lasers (blue, red, green, yellow) tuned so their combination produced a white light.

The experiment proceeded like an optometrist's exam: the subjects were asked: Do you prefer the left picture, or the right? All right, how about now?

The viewers were not told which source provided the illumination. They were instructed merely to choose the lit scene with which they felt most comfortable. The pairs were presented in random order to ensure that neither sequence nor tester preconceptions played roles in subject choices, but only the lighting itself. The computer program was written, and the set created, by Alexander Neumann, a UNM doctoral student of CHTM director Steve Brueck.

Each participant, selected from a variety of age groups, was asked to choose 80 times between the two changing alternatives, a procedure that took ten to twenty minutes, said Sandia scientist Jonathan Wierer, who helped plan, calibrate and execute the experiments. Five results were excluded when the participants proved to be color-blind. The result was that there was a statistically significant preference for the diode-laser-based white light over the warm and cool LED-based white light, Wierer said, but no statistically significant preference between the diode-laser-based and either the neutral LED-based or incandescent white light.

The results probably won't start a California gold rush of lighting fabricators into diode lasers, said Tsao, but they may open a formerly ignored line of research. Diode lasers are slightly more expensive to fabricate than LEDs because their substrates must have fewer defects than those used for LEDs. Still, he said, such substrates are likely to become more available in the future because they improve LED performance as well.

Also, while blue diode lasers have good enough performance that the automaker BMW is planning their use in its vehicles' next-generation white headlights, performance of red diode lasers is not as good, and yellow and green have a ways to go before they are efficient enough for commercial lighting opportunities.

Still, says Tsao, a competition wouldn't have to be all or nothing. Instead, he said, a cooperative approach might use blue and red diode lasers with yellow and green LEDs. Or blue diode lasers could be used to illuminate phosphors -- the technique currently used by fluorescent lights and the current generation of LED-based white light -- to create desirable shades of light.

The result makes possible still further efficiencies for the multibillion dollar lighting industry. The so-called ''smart beams'' can be adjusted on site for personalized color renderings for health reasons and, because they are directional, also can provide illumination precisely where it's wanted.

###

Colorimetric and experimental guidance was provided by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

The research was published in the July 1, Optics Express.

This work was conducted as part of the Solid-State Lighting Science Energy Frontier Research Center, funded by the U.S. DOE Office of Science.

pic cutlines: Sandia researcher Jeff Tsao examines the set-up used to test diode lasers as an alternative to LED lighting. Skeptics felt laser light would be too harsh to be acceptable. Research by Tsao and colleagues suggests the skeptics were wrong. (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

In the test setup, similar bowls of fruit were placed in a lightbox with a divider in the middle. In this photo, the bowl on one side was illuminated by a diode laser light and the other was lit by a standard incandescent bulb. The aesthetic quality of diode laser lighting (left bowl) compares favorably with standard incandescent lighting (right). (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Four laser beams -- yellow, blue, green and red -- converge to produce a pleasantly warm white light. Results suggest that diode-based lighting could be an attractive alternative to increasingly popular LED lighting, themselves an alternative to compact-florescent lights and incandescent bulbs. (Photo by Randy Montoya). Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Sandia National Laboratories is a multiprogram laboratory operated and managed by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness.

Sandia news media contact: Neal Singer, nsinger@sandia.gov 505-845-7078



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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/dnl-hwl102611.php

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Charges filed after automotive mayhem - KansasCity.com

By CHRISTINE VENDEL

The Kansas City Star

The Kansas City Star

Updated: 2011-10-25T03:52:26Z

Ronald E. Richardson may have thought his driving Saturday night while he fled police was ?pretty impressive,? but Jackson County prosecutors weren?t dazzled.

Instead, prosecutors filed three felonies and a misdemeanor against Richardson, 43, of St. Joseph, including resisting arrest, driving while intoxicated and two counts of vehicular assault ? for allegedly trying to run officers over.

The incident began about 8:05 p.m. near 17th and Ewing streets, where a sergeant had stopped Richardson. Richardson allegedly sped his vehicle backward toward the sergeant?s car and then sped away. The car also swerved toward an officer standing on a sidewalk who was preparing to throw a tire-flattening device into the roadway, according to court records.

The car crashed through a locked fence gate and ran several stop signs and red lights before getting on the highway. The car barreled into a closed construction zone at Interstate 70 and Interstate 435 and continued driving into Blue Springs, where officers arrested Richardson behind the wheel.

Richardson refused a chemical test of his breath to determine his blood-alcohol level, according to court records. He allegedly told detectives he had ingested heroin, the records said.

When detectives asked why he had tried to ram the sergeant?s car, Richardson said he didn?t know. But when detectives asked about driving through a closed construction zone, Richardson said, ?That was pretty impressive,? according to court records.

To reach Christine Vendel, call 816-234-4438 or send email to cvendel@kcstar.com.

Source: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/10/24/3227357/charges-filed-after-automotive.html

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Coroner: Winehouse died from alcohol

A coroner says Amy Winehouse died as the unintended consequence of drinking too much alcohol.

Coroner Suzanne Greenaway gave a verdict of "death by misadventure," saying the singer had voluntarily consumed alcohol and risked the consequences.

Story: Amy Winehouse's father is writing book

The singer, who had fought drug and alcohol problems for years, was found dead in bed at her London home on July 23 at age 27.

Slideshow: Amy Winehouse: 1983-2011 (on this page)

Pathologist Suhail Baithun told the singer's inquest Wednesday that Winehouse had consumed a "very large quantity of alcohol" and was more than five times over the legal drunk-driving limit when she died.

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The singer, who had fought drug and alcohol problems for years, was found dead in bed at her London home on July 23 at age 27.

An initial autopsy proved inconclusive, although it found no traces of illegal drugs in her system.

Story: Tony Bennett: Winehouse knew alcohol would kill her

Winehouse's doctor, Dr. Christina Romete, said the singer had resumed drinking in the days before her death after a period of abstinence.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45045102/ns/today-entertainment/

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Ben Stiller Admits He Loves Jen and Justin!

clip_image001.jpg
Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux have some celebrity fans. The couple?s famous pals Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor dished to In Touch about what it?s like being besties with the biggest couple in Hollywood right now.

?They seem to be really happy together!? Ben said of Jen and Justin at the premiere of Tower Heist in NYC. ?They?re great people. I love them both!?

Christine, Ben?s wife of 11 years, added, ?They?re both just very cool, terrific people.?

Ben and Jen starred together in the 2004 comedy Along Came Polly, while Ben starred in the 2008 hit Tropic Thunder, which Justin wrote.

In August, Jennifer and Justin took their relationship very public while on a romantic trip to Hawaii to visit their mutual pals. Sounds like they made quite an impression because the foursome have since been on a double date. Jen and Justin even celebrated with Ben and Christine after the comedian recently hosted SNL.

Sounds like Jen has some new ?friends? to keep her company these days!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/InTouchWeekly/~3/aqTTVgPNWQw/ben_stiller_admits_he_loves_jen_and_justin.php

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Create a Wi-Fi Challenge Question, Scare Off Leeches, and Other Clever SSIDs That Send a Message [Evil Week]

Create a Wi-Fi Challenge Question, Scare Off Leeches, and Other Clever SSIDs That Send a MessageYour Wi-Fi network's name (called your SSID) identifies your router so you know which network to connect to, but considering how often smartphones pop up connection notifications, your network's name can also act as a medium for delivering messages to fellow Wi-Fi users?or even scare passersby off an open network.

I've covered the topic of using your wireless router's SSID name to just plain harass your neighbors, and we've even suggested using it to discourage neighbors from leeching your Wi-Fi, but what if you don't want to be a jerk for no reason?

In addition to changing your Wi-Fi to something scary such as "IllegalActivity" or "ISeeWhatYouAreDoing" in order to scare off people from leeching onto your network, you can also use it to send a message. "Apt112IHaveYourMail" can tell people to come to you to get their mis-delivered mail (though why you wouldn't just put it into their mailbox is beyond me). "TurnDownYourMusicPlease" is useful for considerate neighbors that don't know their sound is bleeding into your space?but not useful for those who don't care.

You could also turn your Wi-Fi network name into a challenge question that your friends would know the answer to, the answer to which would act as your password. For example, "NameOfMyFirstPet", "AdamsHighSchoolMascot", and so on, and save yourself the trouble of having to deliver your password to everyone on the planet. (They clearly wouldn't be the most secure passwords on the planet.)

Other messages like "PartyNextFriday303PleaseAttend" is cooler (though maybe less effective) than going door to door and slipping a printout in the crack, and "LostDogCall2125551234" is pretty self-explanatory.

If you're really intent on causing problems for jerky neighbors, options like "DogAbuseIn411" can deliver your messages of harassment with very little effort.

Probably the most evil thing you could try: Change your SSID to the name of your neighbor's Wi-Fi. If you could manage to program your DD-WRT router to log incorrect login attempts (this script and this page on brute force attacks are the closest we could find), you could in theory capture your neighbor's Wi-Fi password, then subsequently leech off their internet.

Of course, we trust you wouldn't do that anyway. Got a clever SSID usage of your own? Let's hear it in the comments.

Lifehacker's Evil Week is all about topics such as password cracking, social hacking and other questionable tricks to make sure you're in the know. Knowledge is power, and whether you use that power for good or evil is in your hands.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/79Kx8n42UWE/create-a-wi+fi-challenge-question-scare-off-leeches-and-other-clever-ssids-that-send-a-message

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Michael Jackson's ex-GM sentenced on tax violation

(AP) ? A judge has spared Michael Jackson's former general manager prison time after she tearfully blamed a failure to file her U.S. tax returns on being overwhelmed with handling the affairs of the pop superstar and her ailing mother.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Alan Kay sentenced Raymone Bain on Tuesday to five years' probation and payment of $202,422 in federal and local back taxes for the 2006-2008 tax years.

Prosecutors say Bain was earning $30,000 a month as president and general manger of the Michael Jackson Co. during that time. They asked Kay to lock her up for a year and half to show that tax scofflaws will be punished.

Bain apologized for breaking the law but said her responsibilities to Jackson and her mother, dying of Alzheimer's, made her neglect her own duties.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-25-Michael%20Jackson%20Manager/id-ace3b24f37e24013b8a416b0bc904986

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Is she a heroic mom or a shrewd killer?

Something shocking happened one cold night a decade ago in this quiet country town of 500 people, but even now, just one fact about it all is undisputed:

Tracey Roberts, at home with her three children, fired 9 shots from two guns into her 20-year-old neighbor, leaving him dead on the floor of her bedroom.

Tall and thin with curly brown hair and blue eyes, she was 35 at the time. It wasn't long before her image appeared in newspaper coverage of the shooting and even on a national TV talk show, where she was celebrated as a heroic mother who acted in self-defense to protect herself and her young children from men who broke into her home and assaulted her.

But today, folks in Early are weighing a contradictory view and a slew of questions: Could she be a master manipulator who planned the killing and concocted an elaborate hoax that let her get away with murder? What exactly is written in the pink journal that police found, and does it show she was justified, or that she's guilty?

This is the story of a case that baffled investigators and stalled for years. Of an agent whose work resurrected the case and a rookie prosecutor who became obsessed with it. Of the quiet young man whose death ripped apart his family. Of townspeople who panicked after the shooting but soon suspected the official account did not add up.

Above all, it is the story of a woman who left a trail of deceit from Chicago to Nebraska and has a history of making sensational allegations that are never proven.

She insists she is telling the truth.

In a trial starting Tuesday, jurors will decide whom to believe.

___

It was a Thursday evening, Dec. 13, 2001, and Kenlee Schomaker and his wife Jane, emergency medical technicians for the volunteer fire department, were sitting in their Early home when the pager went off.

Shots had been fired a few doors down in their neighborhood. At least one person was injured and one or more suspects were on the loose. The EMT couple rushed to the blue, two-story colonial on South Avenue where Tracey and Michael Roberts lived. It was one of the nicest houses in town.

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Kenlee Schomaker remembered what they had been taught about scene safety: Do not enter a home until it is secure. Three sheriff's deputies arrived, scoured the house, found no suspects inside and waved them in.

Climbing stairs to the bedroom, the EMTs spotted a man slumped at the bottom of the bed in a pool of blood. Shell casings scattered the room. One bullet had gone into the back of his head and out through his eye socket. His eye was gone.

He had no pulse, and Schomaker told a deputy that rescue attempts would be futile.

As the EMTs left, they heard Tracey Roberts, in the kitchen with her three kids and deputies, screaming.

Her report that two other intruders escaped sent deputies canvassing everywhere. Fear quickly spread in a town where folks usually leave their doors unlocked. One of the Schomakers' neighbors would spend that night at their house. Another borrowed shells to load his shotgun.

The dead man was Dustin Wehde. He mowed the grass at property Schomaker owned; nice if you knew him, quiet if you didn't. He had few friends; folks remembered him as a kid who played golf and liked video games. Was he the type to break into anyone's home?

Besides, he was close to the Robertses, who took him to church and to play paintball. His mother, Mona Wehde, was a real estate agent who was among the first to welcome them to town.

Had Dustin been trying to protect Tracey from the other man and been killed in a mixup? Or was it something else entirely?

Whatever happened, Schomaker told a reporter two days after the shooting, Tracey Roberts had to go through hell to be scared like that, to have fired so many times.

___

Just three days after the shooting, Roberts showed up alone at the back door of Mary Cullen's home 15 miles away in Storm Lake. Cullen gave piano lessons to Roberts' 11-year-old son Bert, but the visit wasn't about that.

Cullen's husband John was publisher of the Storm Lake Times, and Roberts wanted to get her story out. John's brother Art, the paper's editor, conducted the interview.

Her retelling of the ordeal crackled with drama: With her husband on a business trip, she was home with her three children ? Bert, 3-year-old Noah and 1-year-old Mason ? when Wehde and another man barged through her unlocked door. One of the men choked her with panty hose that had been hanging from the staircase. She lost her glasses and blacked out. She woke to the sound of Bert screaming; he was holding a baseball bat to protect his younger siblings.

Roberts continued: She ran to the bedroom and reached for the gun safe. Wehde tugged at her hair and yanked on her feet. When the safe opened, she grabbed a 9 mm handgun and pulled the trigger. Nothing. The safety was on. She groped, unlocked it, then fired. Most of the shots hit.

Next, she said, she grabbed a revolver from the safe. She spotted Wehde trying to get up and fired that gun at him. His movement stopped. The second man fled the house (She would later explain she was mistaken when she initially told a deputy two men had gotten away).

Bert dialed 911.

"TRACEY ROBERTS TELLS HER STORY," was the Dec. 19 headline. Subheads added: "Strangled with panty hose, she warded off attackers to protect her children," and "'You're next,' intruder tells boy." The Times published a picture of her apparently bruised neck, which was checked out at a hospital.

TV personality Montel Williams invited Roberts to tell the story to a national audience.

Before the cameras, she and husband Michael held hands as she calmly spoke: "I did what I had to do to protect my family."

Applauding, Williams called her actions justifiable homicide.

___

An investigation by the Sac County Sheriff's Department and the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation remained open but no second intruder was ever found and no charges were filed as of late 2002.

On Thanksgiving Day, Dustin's father, Brett Wehde, took a walk through the cemetery where his son was buried alongside relatives, his marble headstone emblazoned with engravings of his interests ? a snowmobile, a golf cart, a computer ? and inscribed, "Brett and Mona's beloved son."

After Dustin was killed, Brett and Mona broke up and filed for divorce. Brett was distraught over the crumbling of his family. At the graveside, he put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger.

The suicide of the well-known Brett hit Early hard.

Mona wanted answers. She filed a wrongful death lawsuit attempting to hold Tracey Roberts accountable for Dustin's death and to learn what happened that night. Why had Roberts really killed Dustin?

Her attorney picked up on inconsistencies in Roberts' story as she told and retold it. In one account, she knew it was Dustin pulling at her legs; in another, she did not find out the victim's identity until later. In different accounts, she fired from different positions.

In the end, Mona Wehde dropped the lawsuit just days before trial. State lawyers argued the planned testimony of a DCI agent could hamper the investigation.

But what investigation? Though never closed, it seemed to go nowhere. And years passed.

___

In January 2011, Sac County had a new prosecutor.

Ben Smith had left his job as a young lawyer for the attorney general's office and moved home with his parents months earlier to run for county attorney. A former running back at nearby Buena Vista University, he won handily. Now, taking office, he was inexperienced and swamped with work.

On his second day, DCI Special Agent Trent Vileta stopped by to welcome him ? but added, "I want to tell you about this one case."

Vileta, a former Milwaukee police officer, had been assigned to take a fresh look at Wehde's death in 2008. He had gone through the evidence, re-interviewed those involved, re-read Tracey's statements, traded emails with her.

He'd helped bring in an expert on blood splatters who concluded the last three shots went through the back of Dustin's head while he was face down on the ground.

Smith remembered hearing reports about Wehde's death when he was in college, and thinking: "Stupid kids. That's what happens when you break into a home." He hadn't thought about the case since and told Vileta he needed time to settle into his new job before he could.

But the agent wouldn't let it go. He'd send Smith photos of the crime scene to pique his interest. After hours, they'd spend time playing "Call of Duty," the prosecutor's favorite video game. Finally, Smith promised he'd spend a weekend reviewing the case ? and he was immediately hooked.

Working late nights and weekends, he went through years of files, putting together what he would later call 10 years of motive for the shooting and 10 years of twists and turns since.

The effort was exhausting. Smith's mother told him attending church would be a stress reliever. But there, a reading from Jeremiah instead gave him goosebumps. "To you I have entrusted my cause," the biblical passage began ? but the reader said "case" instead. "For he has rescued the life of the poor from the power of the wicked."

Within months, Smith would file a first-degree murder charge against Tracey, who now goes by her maiden name of Richter.

____

The criminal complaint cited a key piece of evidence found by investigators in Dustin's car. After months of speculation in town, prosecutors revealed this month it was a pink spiral notebook that claimed to be his diary.

In Dustin's sloppy handwriting, it suggested he had been hired as a hitman by a "mysterious fellow" named John Pitman III, who was Tracey's first husband.

"J.P. wants me to get/force his ex T.R. to kill her son Burt and then commit suicide, and if that plan fails Plan B is to make it appear as though T.R. had committed the murder of her son & then committed suicide," he wrote.

While it was Dustin's writing, investigators never believed it was credible. Dustin, a special education student, did not like to write and he'd never met Pitman. They decided to keep the journal's existence and contents a secret. Anyone who had knowledge of it could be involved in setting up Dustin.

Prosecutors suspect Tracey had convinced Dustin to write the diary, perhaps on the day of his death. Mona Wehde says Tracey had asked the day before to have Dustin come over to do some "copy work" for their computer business.

An old acquaintance of Tracey Roberts later came forward and said Tracey told her about the notebook days after the shooting and that her ex-husband would soon be arrested in connection with the home invasion.

Tracey and Pitman, a plastic surgeon, had been married in Chicago in 1988 and split up four years later after having Bert. (He has not responded to AP requests for comment on his mother's case.) During a bitter divorce, child support and custody litigation, Tracey went to police claiming that Pitman had sexually abused the 3-year-old boy.

Pitman called the allegation false and spent years trying to clear his name. When the divorce was finalized in 1996, a judge ruled there was zero evidence to support the claim.

Later in 1996, Tracey married Australian businessman Michael Roberts and they would move to Iowa and have two kids together. But her feuding with Pitman continued.

In early 2001, she went to authorities with new allegations that Pitman had abused Bert, which were quickly dismissed. Pitman responded by filing legal actions claiming she was interfering with his visitation rights and alienating him from his son. Tracey worried about possibly losing custody of Bert and having to travel to Chicago for court.

A judge ordered that she be deposed days before Dustin was shot, but it was cancelled at the last minute.

At the time, another strange legal case involving Tracey was also wrapping up. She had filed a lawsuit in 1998 accusing a Chicago dentist of sexually assaulting her while she was sedated during a procedure. He called her claims bogus. In the end, she received a small settlement and dropped the suit ? again, just days before Dustin was killed.

___

In the decade since the shooting, Tracey's life has taken more bizarre turns.

After Roberts filed for divorce from her in 2004, she tried to pin involvement in the home invasion and Dustin's death on him. She told the county sheriff that he used to talk in his sleep and would mention something about a journal that would set him free.

She started a Web site calling him a deadbeat dad and alleging that he may have been the second intruder. He told police that she tried to kill him ? twice ? but these and other allegations were dismissed by law enforcement as bogus he-said, she-said claims.

After she moved to Omaha, she told police in 2009 her Lexus had been broken into and Michael Roberts was likely to blame. Investigators found no evidence of a break-in but learned she had carried out an elaborate scheme to assume a fake identity.

She'd altered her divorce decree to give herself a fabricated maiden name ? Sophie Edwards ? which she then used to obtain a driver's license, a new Social Security number and a passport. She pleaded no contest to welfare fraud in Nebraska and was convicted of vehicle licensing perjury in Iowa, but she avoided jail. Federal passport fraud charges are pending.

___

For all the complexity swirling around his client, defense attorney Scott Bandstra said her defense in the murder case will actually be simple for jurors to understand.

It's about self-defense, about a mother protecting her children from intruders, and an investigation that failed to find the truth. He said he looks forward to telling "Tracey's story ? and by story I mean her statement of what happened." He will present a theory about who the second intruder could be.

"Dec. 13, 2001 was a nightmare for Tracey. The nightmare is not over."

Now 45 and facing life in prison if convicted, she has been held on $1 million bail at the jail in Sac City. She's getting support from her fianc? in Omaha and her parents, who live up the road in Rembrandt. Her father, Bernard Richter declined comment, saying reporters write about defendants without thinking about "their poor family." He said he knows from experience: he's a retired Chicago homicide detective.

At the courtroom in Fort Dodge, Smith will be joined by an experienced prosecutor with the Iowa Attorney General's office. The county attorney said he hopes to get justice for Mona Wehde ? and then quickly put the case that has consumed his life behind him.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45007535/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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