The 2016 James Beard Awards semifinalist list came out this morning, and we could have sworn we woke up in 2015. There were all the familiar names: Suzanne Goin, The Varnish, Margarita Manzke, Josef Centeno, Providence, Ludo Lefebvre. These chefs and restaurants are all deserving of their nominations, sure, but it's time the James Beard Foundation took a better, more updated look at our culinary scene (though we have to say, the inclusion of Baroo is both surprising and exciting). And with all of the fantastic bars that have come out in the past year, LA's single bar nomination is a bit of a slap in the face. What about Julian Cox's the Fiscal Agent? I guess we'll have to wait for next year.

The physical pressure of this experiment is clear. Around me, passengers are standing up just to stay awake. The crew have been asked to keep sleep diaries, and to use iPads to rate their fatigue, reaction times, workload and stress. That dozy frequent flyer at the front of the plane is asleep, again.


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It's big roll of the dice, especially at a time when the Houston restaurant market has contracted in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, and people are holding their breath to see what (and who) shakes out as the tax year ends.

So Mediterranean the next One Fifth shall be, aided and abetted by what Shepherd says is "probably the oldest wood-burning oven" in the Houston restaurant world. A few months back, during a dinner at One Fifth Romance Languages, amid the Italian and French and Spanish ideas, Shepherd suddenly started slapping dough around and shoveling it into the fiery furnace. Out came puffy orbs of unleavened bread that resembled supernal pita. I didn't know it then, but I was already tasting Shepherd's wholly unexpected Mediterranean restaurant to come.

So, Alicia C. Reid, who as a little girl used to play doctor by slapping bandages and arm slings on her daddy, can now be officially called Dr. Alicia C. Reid, proud recipient of a Ph.D. from the Weill Graduate School of Cornell University.

Chuck Gerding, a retired school teacher from Karlin, and his brother Bill, an auto body specialist from Lake Ann, were headed for the woods, as well, along with Karl Malin, who is an accomplished chef and culinary arts instructor from Traverse City, and who had taken a massive eight-point buck from Kehr's terrain the last time we had hunted together on opening morning.

It's a comical thing about men. Put four of them together and generally there's competition to see who can talk without interrupting another. And if someone gets interrupted, well, too bad. But put four of them together on opening morning of deer season and all you hear is boots slapping the snow. And, the occasional whisper.

"See you in a few hours," he whispered. And then he disappeared over a hill as I moved carefully toward the knoll's crest, past downed limbs and branches that snap when stepped on and double as a wake-up alarm for whitetails if you don't stroll softly.

Lulled into thinking winter was over? The forecast of 6-8 inches of snow for parts of Lower Michigan will wake you up. Locally, up to 2 inches of snow, rain and a possible thunderstorm will finish the workweek, with sun and highs in the upper 50 and 60s for the weekend, according to the National Weather Service.

Someone who will be joining the team at the new arena: Al Sobotka, the popular building operations manager/Zamboni driver/barbecue chef / octopus whipper. Here's what he'll miss about the old building and what he won't (hint: the stairs).

The Marines say a former drill instructor will face a general court-martial on several charges including the mistreatment of a recruit from Taylor who died a year ago at the Parris Island training depot in South Carolina.A military investigation last year found that Raheel Siddiqui, 20, of Taylor fell three stories in a barracks stairwell on March 18, 2016, following a standoff with the drill instructor, who had allegedly slapped him several times. The Marines claimed he committed suicide, citing witnesses and an autopsy report.

Other methods to knock someone out quickly and non-lethally include: In Western media, there's the punch to the jaw (AKA a "knockout punch"). Again, in reality this could inflict serious injury to both parties. Without hand protection, the attacker could very easily break his fingers; boxers and MMA fighters wear gloves not to protect their opponents' heads (which they only partially donote The gloves may protect the other person's face from things like cuts and the like to an extent, but they do cause more damage to the brain since with your hands being cushioned by the gloves, you can apply more force to the other person's head, causing the brain to be hit with more force.), but to protect their own hands (which they do). Modern-day productions often depict the person throwing the punch injuring their hand in some way, sometimes for humorous effect. Common in anime is the "sharp shot to the solar plexus", often used to subdue a struggling person. It makes it fairly easy to pick up the now-unconscious person and sling them over one's shoulder for easy carrying. Its effects in real life vary; the severity depends on several factorsnote victim body build, tensed torso or abdomen, force of the blow, etc., a serious blow normally impacts the nerve bundle in the region and causes the diaphragm muscles to spasm uncontrollably, which makes any activity requiring air very difficult. It can cause unconsciousness in certain circumstancesnote when the amount of stimuli (pain, shock) inflicted to the victim's nervous system exceeds the body's threshold to endure; typically when there is a large gap in body conditioning between victim and attacker (i.e an untrained or amateur victim being caught unaware by an expert martial artist), and is somewhat safer than a blow to the throat or the back of the head, but it is difficult to tell what amount of force will cause what damage. It is very easy to veer into excessive force and cause dangerous organ or nerve damage such as rupture and internal bleeding. Choke Holds, where an arm around the neck is used to cut off blood to the brain ("blood strangle/choke") or oxygen to the lungs (chokehold, stranglehold). Properly applied, this is a safer and more reliable way of causing someone to become unconscious (still used in judo/jiujitsu competitions to this day), but carries a risk of stroke or other dangerous problems if used on an older victim or one with a weakened circulatory system. It also tends to wear off quickly (as in, after a couple of seconds), or alternatively when it doesn't, cause varying levels of brain damage. Not depicted very often in film or TV as it's difficult to distinguish on screen between a choke hold and someone having their neck broken or being strangled to death, potentially giving the wrong impression if the intent is to show non-lethal takedowns. Another variant is instant knockout caused by shattering either a vase or lamp over someone's head or even just on their back. This is even more of a no-no in real life, as a hand made of flesh is merciful compared to a hard object. Swinging a few pounds of porcelain at the noggin with enough force to shatter said porcelain is a definite leap from "attempted knockout" to "attempted murder". Sometimes the knock-out victim will be hit with a Tranquilizer Dart instead of being hit. While this is a bit safer and more grounded in reality (as any park ranger can tell you), anasthesia is risky, as too small of a dose doesn't give the target anything worse than a moment of drowsiness, while an overdose could cause cardiac arrest. The exact height, weight, and species of the target must be known beforehand or else there's a risk of losing or killing the target (or of your target waking up before you want them to and rampaging through San Diego). Of course, in fiction the dart will always inject the exact amount of tranquilizer no matter who it hits, and the victim will suffer no ill effects upon waking up. Another variant is Electricity Knocks You Out: knocking someone out via electric shock. A tased/shocked character will scream for a moment (maybe we'll see a brief outline of their skeleton) before they promptly black out. This is a bit more common in science fiction (where electricity weapons are more common), and is even less possible then most other versions in Real Life. In reality, tasers (briefly) incapaciate people via uncontrollable muscle contractions and pain, not unconsciousness, and on occasion, even this can fail, as terrifyingly, adrenaline and some drugs can override the muscle contractions, causing the enraged target to begin blindly attempting to assault those trying to apprehend them. Tasers can cause dangerous medical conditions, even cardiac arrest, but if you lose consciousness due to them, you are unlikely to ever wake up. However, in fiction the tased person will, of course, wake up with no pain and suffering no ill effects. If played for laughs, the knock-out may be accompanied by Circling Birdies or a Cranial Eruption. Can induce moments of euphoria.

Audio Plays  In "The Further Adventures of Nick Danger", Nick gets hit on the head by Nancy/Betty Jo. As he slowly fades into unconsciousness, he begins to hear voices, one of which is the announcer saying, "we'll be back to Nick Danger after these commercial messages". People who get knocked over the head with heavy objects in Wolf 359 have a surprising lack of concussion. Most notably Eiffel, who gets knocked out multiple times but wakes up with only a brief moment of wooziness and a headache.

Visual Novels  Zigzagged in the Ace Attorney series. Frequently, the murder victims are killed by a blow to the head, but just as frequently, witnesses are temporarily incapacitated by this trope with no lasting physical effects. (In 3-2, the murderer kills his victim and knocks out a witness the same way.) At one point, Phoenix is belted with a fire extinguisher and only gets a morning's worth of amnesia from it. In Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Naegi goes to a hidden room at Kirigiri's advice which holds some plot-important records. Before he can actually read them, someone in a mask bashes him over the head and he wakes up with the entire bookshelf empty, and enough stamina to walk back to his room within the same night. In-story, Kirigiri seemingly believes trope when she hears about what happened in the room and tells him he should be man enough to walk it off. ff782bc1db

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