All of these are American bald eagles. The ones that don’t look like it are immature eagles.
Friends, gather round: It’s time to test your food knowledge. When you eat delicious strawberries, enjoy fresh fish, or down a rejuvenating beer, you probably think you can discern the flavors bringing those foods to life. Well, it turns out food is more complicated than just the basic taste groups like sweetness and bitterness. Today, we’re going to see how refined your sense of taste really is.
Below are 10 different foods (the first is peanut butter; the second, apple cider; the last, beer). Below each of them are four other foods, only one of which has a strong, chemical—as in objective, scientific—flavor overlap with the original ingredient. Your task is to decide which foods have the most flavors in common.
This surprisingly tough quiz will make you second guess how well you know food
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This surprisingly tough quiz will make you second guess …Test your taste buds: Can you guess which foods have the most flavors in common? | |||||||
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Just in time for April Fool’s Day. You can play Pacman anywhere in Google Maps.
The easiest way it to just visitGoogle Mapson the Web, click on the little Pac-Man icon on the bottom-left of the screen and prepare for nostalgia.
Google will analyze your map and use the roads to render a level. If the location isn’t suitable for game play, Google will let you select a new area, or
you can just click “I’m feeling lucky” to be transported to a preselected area.
60 Minutes tonight with several parts. Remarkable results in patients that uses a re-engineered polio virus against the most malignant
form of brain cancer – glioblastoma multiforme. Several patients have gone into long term remission and possibly cure. The therapy
also shows promise against many other solid tumors to include lung, kidney, etc.
TripAdvisor says a package of peanuts will set you back $12.80 at your hotel room in Boston.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2015/03/28/chart-the-average-cost-of-room-service-in-15-u-s-cities/
Do parents, especially mothers, spend enough time with their children?
Though American parents are with their children more than any parents in the world, many feel guilty because they don’t believe it’s enough. That’s because there’s a widespread cultural assumption that the time parents, particularly mothers, spend with children is key to ensuring a bright future.
Now groundbreaking new research upends that conventional wisdom and finds that that isn’t the case. At all.
In fact, it appears the sheer amount of time parents spend with their kids between the ages of 3 and 11 has virtually no relationship to how children turn out, and a minimal effect on adolescents, according to the first large-scale longitudinal study of parent time to be published in April in the Journal of Marriage and Family. The finding includes children’s academic achievement, behavior and emotional well-being.