UIS College of Business and Management maintains prestigious ...

The College of Business and Management at the University of Illinois Springfield has received word that it has been reaccredited by AACSB International ? The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.

?I am delighted that the UIS College of Business and Management has been reaccredited by AACSB, the world?s premier accrediting organization for collegiate schools of business,? said Chancellor Susan Koch. ?This recognition affirms the high-quality professional preparation and leadership opportunities that UIS Business students experience when they choose UIS.?

Continued accreditation places the UIS College of Business and Management among an elite group of business programs ? less than 5 percent of business programs worldwide and just over a quarter of U.S. business schools have earned this prestigious recognition.

?Being among AACSB accredited business schools is testimony that the UIS College of Business and Management is a leader in preparing our students to work in all types of business and business related organizations,? said Ron McNeil, dean of the UIS College of Business and Management.

The accreditation assures student and employers that the UIS College of Business and Management delivers relevant and high quality classes and programs; employs first rate teachers, and faculty who are engaged in their discipline and relevant research.

The AACSB accreditation shows UIS offers high quality programs that are current, relevant, and reflect the complexities of today?s business environment. AACSB is the gold standard for business colleges. Employers are increasingly seeking graduates from AACSB accredited business schools knowing that students? education has developed competencies that will support a competitive edge in today?s complex global markets.

?It takes a great deal of commitment and determination to earn and maintain AACSB Accreditation,? said Robert Reid, executive vice president and chief accreditation officer of AACSB International. ?Business schools must not only meet specific standards of excellence, but their deans, faculty and professional staff must make a commitment to ongoing continuous improvement to ensure that the institution will continue to deliver the highest quality of education to students.?

The UIS College of Business and Management offers undergraduate programs in Accountancy, Business Administration, Economics, Management, Management Information Systems, and Marketing. Graduate degrees offered include Accountancy and Management Information Systems and the MBA. Fully online undergraduate degree completion programs are offered in Business, Management and Management Information Systems. The graduate Management Information Systems program is also offered fully online.

To learn more about University of Illinois Springfield, visit www.uis.edu. For more on the AACSB International accreditation, visit the accreditation section of the AACSB International website at www.aacsb.edu/accreditation/.

Labels: Awards, College of Business and Management, Faculty, University

Source: http://news.uis.edu/2012/12/uis-college-of-business-and-management.html

keri russell drew barrymore jesse ventura bill o brien portland trailblazers will kopelman dakota fanning

Five Essentials for Small Business in 2013 - Media - Alabama.gov

Small businesses must prepare for what appears to be an extremely difficult economic environment. Since the bursting of the 2008 credit bubble, U.S. consumers and financial institutions were dramatically hurt by bad debt and over levering themselves. These two vital components of the U.S. economy, that drive individual consumption which is approximately two thirds U.S. GDP, have been a drag on the economy over the last four business years. Although consumers and financial institutions have partially repaired their balance sheets, most of the debt burden was shifted to federal, state, and local governments. The size of government has never weighed so heavily on our economy and potentially runs the risk of crowding out the private sector. The Small Business Authority, on a daily basis will report on the five essential things independent business owners will need to consider to position themselves and have successful enterprises. We will report on these items on a daily basis beginning this Monday, December 10th.

  1. Managing Obamacare. Under the PPAHCA, small businesses with 50 or more employees are mandated to buy health insurance for their employees or pay a fine, or tax according to Justice Roberts. In addition, many small businesses will be eligible for tax credits under the PPAHCA, as well as taking under consideration managing full-time and part-time staff to meet or beat the 50 employee threshold. Will small business owners hire advisers and consultants to get them through this knothole? Will they try to read and understand the 2000+ page piece of legislation themselves? Healthcare expenditures are approaching 20% of GDP, thus spiraling healthcare costs is a significant concern for small business owners.
  2. Small businesses will need to consider how to get business loans for growth or refinance. This struggle moves into its fifth year, post the 2008 credit bubble bursting. Not only is new credit unavailable to support growth for small businesses, many small businesses are having a difficult time getting their local community or major money center banks to roll over existing financing.? Why is this so? Well, with the election over we don?t see the banking regulators stepping up the pace of bank seizures and tightening the capital and compliance on existing under capitalized banks. The continuous process of de-levering and shrinking the balance sheets of the banking industry has made rolling over or refinancing existing debt a big struggle for small businesses. Small businesses must do what they can in this loan starved environment by working with existing banking relationships, pay down debt and continue the global process of de-levering themselves as well as the banking industry.
  3. eCommerce solutions for most small businesses are becoming essential for small- to medium-sized businesses. eCommerce payment processing sales during the last few months grew at 15-20 % year over year, while bricks and mortar sales were down. An eCommerce site is essential, not only to take payments but also to allow a business to be found online. Those without a website are at a significant disadvantage. This includes not just big box retailers or major service providers, but also local small businesses and their competitors. The ability to be found and highlighted through? a local internet search is a necessity these days
  4. Cyber Security for Small Business. Small businesses are going to need to make the leap into the cloud and accept the fact that their businesses are at risk each and every day. They are no longer able to ignore the risks inherent in keeping sensitive data in a tower on their hard drive under their desk. Lawyers and medical professionals cannot ignore the risks of keeping their client?s health and financial data sitting on a server in the closet of their office or unbounded local IT provider. For the following reasons businesses must embrace the cloud:
  • It is more cost effective than their current IT configuration.
  • It is more secure. Not perfect, but generally more secure than their current IT configuration.
  • It is more efficient regarding access to data 24/7 off of a tablet or smartphone and remotely.
  • Constant surveillance and security offered by cloud hosts of business applications are better and security guaranties are available and can be offered. In a nut shell and lastly, small businesses need to embrace the cloud in 2013 and should talk to The Small Business Authority to learn how to enhance their business in this fashion.

5.????? Cloud Computing for SMART results. Cloud computing allows all of a small business?s critical transactions, as well as economic, ecommerce and web site traffic data to be accessible at anytime, anywhere ? with the proper application. Something like the Newtek Advantage is extremely beneficial to small business owners, allowing them to see their real-time business information from any smartphone or tablet. Cloud computing is SMART, because it allows for:

S: Sales Increases ? less time dealing with administrative matters means more time selling and servicing customers.

M: More Control, Less Surprises ? key business stats and metrics are available in real time; small businesses can make more informed decisions faster and never be out of touch with the most important business data.

A: Accelerated Profits ? real-time information means better and more profitable decisions.

R: Real-time information means key business management data is only seconds away, whenever and wherever the business operator is.

T: Technology Enhancements ? leads to decreased cost and expense of an IT department ? everything is in the Cloud.

Source: http://media.alabama.gov/AgencyTemplates/ado/template_redirect.aspx?ID=7443&t=3

eli manning kelly clarkson national anthem halftime show super bowl halftime show 2012 ahmad bradshaw halftime super bowl 2012 super bowl score

Fine hands, fists of fury

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Men whacked punching bags for a University of Utah study that suggests human hands evolved not only for the manual dexterity needed to use tools, play a violin or paint a work of art, but so men could make fists and fight.

Compared with apes, humans have shorter palms and fingers and longer, stronger, flexible thumbs ? features that have been long thought to have evolved so our ancestors had the manual dexterity to make and use tools.

"The role aggression has played in our evolution has not been adequately appreciated," says University of Utah biology Professor David Carrier, senior author of the study, scheduled for publication Dec. 19 by the Journal of Experimental Biology.

"There are people who do not like this idea, but it is clear that compared with other mammals, great apes are a relatively aggressive group, with lots of fighting and violence, and that includes us," Carrier says. "We're the poster children for violence."

Humans have debated for centuries "about whether we are, by nature, aggressive animals," he adds. "Our anatomy holds clues to that question. If we can understand what our anatomy has evolved to do, we'll have a clearer picture of who we were in the beginning, and whether aggression is part of who we are."

Carrier agrees that human hands evolved for improved manual dexterity, but adds that "the proportions of our hands also allow us to make a fist," protecting delicate hand bones, muscles and ligaments during hand-to-hand combat.

As our ancestors evolved, "an individual who could strike with a clenched fist could hit harder without injuring themselves, so they were better able to fight for mates and thus more likely to reproduce," he says. Fights also were for food, water, land and shelter to support a family, and "over pride, reputation and for revenge," he adds.

"If a fist posture does provide a performance advantage for punching, the proportions of our hands also may have evolved in response to selection for fighting ability, in addition to selection for dexterity," Carrier says.

So Carrier and study co-author Michael H. Morgan ? a University of Utah medical student ? conducted their study to identify any performance advantages a human fist may provide during fighting.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.

Three Experiments and the Findings

The first experiment tested the hypothesis that humans can hit harder with a fist. So, Carrier and Morgan had 10 male students and nonstudents ? ages 22 to 50 and all of them with boxing or martial arts experience ? hit a punching bag as hard as they could.

Each subject delivered 18 hits, or three of each for six kinds of hits: overhead hammer fists and slaps, side punches and slaps, and forward punches and palm shoves. The bag was instrumented to allow calculation of the force of the punches and slaps.

To the researchers' surprise, the peak force was the same, whether the bag was punched with a fist or slapped with an open hand. However, a fist delivers the same force with one-third of the surface area as the palm and fingers, and 60 percent of the surface area of the palm alone. So the peak stress delivered to the punching bag ? the force per area ? was 1.7 to three times greater with a fist strike compared with a slap.

"Because you have higher pressure when hitting with a fist, you are more likely to cause injury" to tissue, bones, teeth, eyes and the jaw, Carrier says.

The second and third experiments ? which each also involved 10 male subjects ? tested the hypothesis that a fist provides buttressing to protect the hand during punching.

To do that, the researchers measured the stiffness of the knuckle joint of the first finger, and how force is transferred from the fingers to the thumb. Both measurements were made with normal, buttressed fists or when partial fists were not buttressed.

Humans buttress ? strengthen and stabilize ? fists in two ways that apes cannot: The pads of the four fingertips touch the pads at the top of the palm closest to the fingers. And the thumb wraps in front of the index and middle fingers, and to some extent the ring finger, and those fingers are locked in place by the palm at the base of the thumb.

To measure stiffness of the second knuckle joint, the study's 10 male subjects slowly pushed a pressure transducer, with clenched fists or with fingers bent but the fist unclenched. Researchers measured the force and also how much the index finger flexed.

Force transfer from fingers to the thumb also was measured, but in this case the subjects got in a one-handed pushup position, with their knuckles pushing down on a block placed on a different force transducer.

The second and third experiments found that buttressing provided by the human fist increased the stiffness of the knuckle joint fourfold (or reduced flexing fourfold), and also doubled the ability of the fingers to transmit punching force, mainly due to the force transferred from the fingers to the thumb when the fist is clenched.

"Because the experiments show the proportions of the human hand provide a performance advantage when striking with a fist, we suggest that the proportions of our hands resulted, in part, from selection to improve fighting performance," Carrier says.

Carrier notes that besides dexterity and aggression, a third theory to explain the proportions of human hands also may be true: Natural selection for walking and running among human ancestors led to shorter toes and a longer big toe ? and the responsible genes also led to shorter fingers and longer thumbs.

How Selection Favored Fists and Aggression

Apes' elongated fingers and hands evolved so they could climb trees.

"The standard argument is that once our ancestors came out of the trees, the selection for climbing was gone, so selection for manipulation became dominant, and that's what changed the shape of our ancestors' hands," Carrier says. "Human-like hand proportions appear in the fossil record at the same time our ancestors started walking upright 4 million to 5 million years ago. An alternative possible explanation is that we stood up on two legs and evolved these hand proportions to beat each other."

Carrier says that if manual dexterity was the only driving force, humans could have evolved manual dexterity with longer thumbs without the fingers and palms getting shorter. But, he adds, "there is only one way you can have a buttressed, clenched fist: the palms and fingers got shorter at the same time the thumb got longer."

Morgan and Carrier cite other arguments that fighting helped shape human hands:

  • No ape hits with a clenched fist other than humans. Gorilla hands are closer in proportion to human hands than are other apes' hands ? a paradox since chimps are better known for tool-making and dexterity. So Morgan and Carrier also believe aggression was a factor in the evolution of gorillas' hands.
  • Humans use fists as threat displays. "If you are angry, the reflexive response is to form a fist," Carrier says. "If you want to intimidate somebody, you wave your fist."
  • Sexual dimorphism ? a difference in body size between males and females ? is greater if there is more male-male competition in a primate species. "Look at humans and gorillas. The difference between the sexes is mainly in the upper body and the arms, and especially the hands," Carrier says. "It's consistent with the hand being a weapon."

Carrier and Morgan write that the human hand is paradoxical.

"It is arguably our most important anatomical weapon, used to threaten, beat and sometimes kill to resolve conflict," they say. "Yet it is also the part of our musculoskeletal system that crafts and uses delicate tools, plays musical instruments, produces art, conveys complex intentions and emotions, and nurtures."

"More than any other part of our anatomy, the hand represents the identity of Homo sapiens. Ultimately, the evolutionary significance of the human hand may lie in its remarkable ability to serve two seemingly incompatible but intrinsically human functions."

###

University of Utah: http://www.unews.utah.edu/

Thanks to University of Utah for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 59 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126035/Fine_hands__fists_of_fury

cnn news Connecticut shooting Nancy Lanza school shootings cbs news Jenni Rivera chase

Scottish Salmon Producer to Farm Mulloway in Africa - Scotland ...

High-end Scottish salmon farming company Loch Duart is in the process of setting up a dusky kob farm in Mozambique, Loch Duart?s managing director and co-founder Nick Joy told Undercurrent News.

Date:

Fri, 21 Dec 2012

Source:

Undercurrent News

The company hopes that the farm would be producing significant tonnage of dusky kob, also known as mulloway, within two years.

?I certainly think the project should be producing a significant amount of tonnage within two years from now, depending on what you call significant,? said Joy. ?I think a few hundred tons within the next couple of years would be pretty good going.?

Joy described the project as extraordinarily exciting, and in particular cited the chance to further the company?s work with people and the environment as motivating factors.

?Dusky kob are on the red list in South Africa, its been very heavily overfished. So we can do something useful in returning that,? he said.

?It?s also very useful in terms of employment in Mozambique, where we?re working in areas with 80% subsistence living.?

The company hopes to employ large numbers of people, even hundreds, very quickly, said Joy.

Read the full article here.

Source: http://www.scotlandfoodanddrink.org/news/article-info/4137/scottish-salmon-producer-to-farm-mulloway-in-africa.aspx

Jill Kelley hope solo hope solo tesla model s tesla model s act Black Ops 2

TechCrunch Goes To Athens On January 4th To Meet Up With Greek Geeks

greek-tcWhen I left Athens, Greece, over a decade ago, startups were definitely not cool. In fact, there were no tech startups at all. Since then a lot has changed. Tech entrepreneurship has become a global thing and, inspired by cultural influences like The Social Network in addition to?more serious factors, hackers all over the world want to build the next big thing. Despite the Greek government-debt crisis and the high unemployment rate, tech-savvy Greek folks are following the global trends and forging ahead to create their own jobs by founding promising early stage ventures. Tech entrepreneurship has become a legitimate career option for many of Greece?s ambitious youth; perhaps they can contribute into turning the economy in a few years time?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/8NT_eSOfUx0/

Rajesh Khanna friday the 13th paulina gretzky paulina gretzky toy story 4 toy story 4 steam

First freshwater mosasaur discovered

Thursday, December 20, 2012

A new mosasaur species discovered in Hungary is the first known example of this group of scaled reptiles to have lived in freshwater river environments similar to modern freshwater dolphins, according to research published December 19 in the open-access journal PLOS ONEby Laszlo Makadi from the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Hungary and colleagues from the University of Alberta, Canada and MTA-ELTE Lend?let Dinosaur Research Group, Hungary.

The species lived about 84 million years ago, the largest specimens reached about 20 feet in length, and belongs to a family called ?mosasaurs?, conventionally thought of as gigantic finned marine lizards, similar and perhaps even related to present day monitor lizards. The researchers discovered several fossils of the new species, ranging from small juveniles to large adults that suggest that this species had limbs like a terrestrial lizard, a flattened, crocodile-like skull, and a tail unlike other known members of the mosasaur family.

The fossils were recovered from an open-pit mine in the Bakony Hills of Western Hungary, which were once flood-plains. According to the study, this is the first known mosasaur that lived in freshwater, and only the second specimen of a mosasaur to have been found in rocks that were not once deposited in the ocean. Makadi says, "The evidence we provide here makes it clear that similar to some lineages of cetaceans, mosasaurs quickly adapted to a variety of aquatic environments, with some groups re- invading available niches in freshwater habitats. The size of Pannoniasaurus makes it the largest known predator in the waters of this paleo-environment."

Even in the modern world, scaly reptiles in the aquatic world are extremely rare. Only a few species live in the water, and even fewer, like marine iguanas and sea kraits, live in the oceans. The new species described here probably adapted to freshwater environments similarly to river dolphins, such as those now inhabiting the Amazon, Ganges and Yangtze rivers.

###

Makadi L, Caldwell MW, Osi A (2012) The First Freshwater Mosasauroid (Upper Cretaceous, Hungary) and a New Clade of Basal Mosasauroids. PLoS ONE 7(12): e51781. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0051781

Public Library of Science: http://www.plos.org

Thanks to Public Library of Science for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 43 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126034/First_freshwater_mosasaur_discovered

2012 dunk contest edgar vs henderson berkshire hathaway ufc 144 james jones james jones aladdin

Denver sirens are just a test, not doomsday signal

(AP) ? Officials in Denver want people to know this is only a test.

The city is testing new outdoor warning sirens on Friday, and they're well aware of all the talk about the Mayan calendar and time running out for the world's population.

In announcing the drill, officials said they wanted to make sure that people knew that the wailing sirens didn't mean it was the end of the world.

A chorus of books and movies has sought to link the Mayan calendar to rumors of impending disasters ranging from black holes and solar storms to a change in the Earth's magnetic field.

Scientists say predictions of an impending apocalypse are a bunch of hogwash.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2012-12-21-Mayan%20Calendar-Siren%20Testing/id-83d5c767743a40ee9feb9a005e5555a8

doppler radar colorado rockies moonshine news channel 4 radar weather morosini death jacoby ellsbury

Biologists design method to monitor global bee decline

Dec. 19, 2012 ? A global network of people monitoring bee populations may form an early warning system alerting scientists to dangers threatening the world's food system and economies.

"My goal is to give agencies all around the world an effective way to monitor bees," said San Francisco State University Professor of Biology Gretchen LeBuhn, lead author of a United Nations-sponsored study. "Biologists have talked a lot about how bee populations are declining, but I don't think we actually have good data that acts as an early warning signal for possible problems with our food system."

In an article published online Dec. 12 in the journal Conservation Biology, LeBuhn and her co-authors outlined a simple and cost-effective method for enacting a monitoring system. The study found that counting and identifying bees regularly for five years at about 200 locations would produce data accurate enough to detect two to five percent annual declines in bee populations. The program is estimated to cost $2 million and include international sampling sites, although it could be scaled to fit different regional monitoring needs.

"The estimated cost of sustaining an international monitoring program is a relatively small investment compared to the potential economic cost of severe pollinator losses," the study said. Thirty-five percent of the global food supply depends on bees and other pollinators, including crops worth nearly $200 billion each year, according to LeBuhn.

"A monitoring program should be simple, repeatable, inexpensive, and, most importantly, have the ability to quickly detect declines if they are occurring," the study said.

The proposed system relies on paid workers around the globe to count and identify bees using simple "pan traps," in which bees are attracted to a brightly-colored pan filled with liquid. To determine scalable sampling techniques, costs and time scales for completing the work, the researchers designed simulations using data from eleven previously published multi-year studies.

The research was funded by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and the monitoring program has already been used in Brazil, Ghana, India, Kenya, Nepal, Pakistan and South Africa, with support from the Global Environment Facility and United Nations Environment Programme. LeBuhn said the long-term goal for the project is to establish a network of monitoring stations to provide data for a global analysis.

"We hope to eventually centralize some of the data collection so that people who are counting bees regionally can contribute to a larger data set."

LeBuhn is also known for organizing the annual "Great Sunflower Project," in which 100,000 citizen scientists across North America volunteer to count bee populations in their own backyards. The project, now in its fifth year, recently found low numbers of bees in urban areas across America, adding weight to the theory that habitat loss is one of the primary reasons for sharp population declines.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by San Francisco State University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Gretchen Lebuhn, Sam Droege, Edward F. Connor, Barbara Gemmill-Herren, Simon G. Potts, Robert L. Minckley, Terry Griswold, Robert Jean, Emanuel Kula, David W. Roubik, Jim Cane, Karen W. Wright, Gordon Frankie, Frank Parker. Detecting Insect Pollinator Declines on Regional and Global Scales. Conservation Biology, 2012; DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2012.01962.x

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/QvzjZohztkk/121220144205.htm

tracy morgan Chase.com Talk Like a Pirate Day raiders Demi Lovato iOS 6 Features big brother

Foxconn has started initial testing on 46 to 55 inch Apple TVs

Apple seems to be well on its way to making its own TV set. According to Focus Taiwan, the company's manufacturing partner Foxconn has started "initial testing" on the Cupertino-based company's TV. According to the report, Apple is working with Hon Hai?also known as Foxconn?on testing some TV sets, the sizes of which range between 46 and 55 inches.

The report says that the production schedule is set for a release at the end of 2013 and that the company might debut the product at the Consumer Electronics Show the next January. The biggest thing about this is that the company has never shown its products, new or otherwise, at CES.

Initial testing has started

?


According to an earlier report, the Apple TV is said to be in the early stages of testing with manufacturers at Sharp and Foxconn. According to a report published by The Wall Street Journal, sources who have association with Apple?s suppliers said the company has been testing prototypes of television sets for a number of years. The sources were cited as saying, ?It isn't a formal project yet. It is still in the early stage of testing.?

Tim Cook, CEO, Apple, recently dropped a big hint about Apple working on an HDTV. He stated that for Apple, the television industry was an area of intense interest. The Apple CEO stated, ?When I go into my living room and turn on the TV, I feel like I have gone backwards in time by 20 to 30 years. It?s an area of intense interest. I can?t say more than that.?

Earlier this year, in May, Foxconn CEO Terry Gou let it slip that his company is getting ready to begin producing the Apple iTV. Since then, there have been various analyst reports stating that the Apple iTV was imminent. As per a report by China Daily, Gou stated that Foxconn, the manufacturer of various Apple products, is making preparations for the Apple iTV. The report noted that though preparations were underway, the development and manufacturing of the television was yet to commence. iTV reportedly features an aluminium construction, Siri and FaceTime video calling.

These revelations by Gou were the most substantial bits of information known regarding the rumoured Apple HDTV, with all other previous leaks being revealed by anonymous industry sources and analysts. However, with Cook also voicing his opinion on the iTV, it backs rumours and speculations that an Apple-branded television is imminent in the near future.

To get a better idea on what this iTV would entail, anonymous sources in the past have revealed that one could start watching a movie on the television set and then pick up an iOS device, such as an iPhone, and continue watching from where they last watched. Reports? emerged stating that the television would look a lot like Apple?s Cinema Displays, only it would be a lot larger.

Source: http://tech2.com.feedsportal.com/c/34190/f/619581/s/26caba56/l/0Ltech20Bin0N0Cnews0Cgeneral0Cfoxconn0Ehas0Estarted0Einitial0Etesting0Eon0E460Eto0E550Einch0Eapple0Etvs0C656112/story01.htm

lana del rey snl enemy of the state golden globe nominees joe philbin miss america pageant 2012 shipwreck jose aldo vs chad mendes