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Get the Barnes & Noble NOOK Tablet for $199

Written By james on Tuesday, February 21, 2012 | 7:18 AM

The Barnes & Noble NOOK Tablet is on sale!
The NOOK Tablet, regularly priced $249, is available via an eBay deal for $199 after entering the coupon code CNOOKDEAL at checkout. The deal will last until midnight Friday, or until supplies run out.
Customers will need to have an eBay account in order to receive this deal. However, eBay provides a “Fast N’ Free” shipping option that will have the NOOK in your hands within four days.
The Barnes & Noble NOOK Tablet sports a 7-inch 1080p (1024 x 600) VividView IPS color touchpanel display. It is .02 inches thinner and .9 ounces lighter than its NOOK Color counterpart, with dimensions of 8.1 x 5 x .48 inches. It runs on a 1GHz dual-core TI OMAP4 processor, has 1GB of RAM, and has 16GB of built in storage, which can be expanded up to 32GB via a microSD card. It also runs a customized version of Android OS Gingerbread (2.3).
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Local Churches Plan Ash Wednesday Services




  • The Neighborhood Files

Local Churches Plan Ash Wednesday Services

Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the Lenten season. Here are a list of services planned at area churches.

  • Sewickley United Methodist Church will combine services with St. Matthews AME Church, which is undergoing renovations. There will be a dinner with St. Matthews at 6 p.m. followed by Ash Wednesday service at 7 p.m. in the sanctuary. 
  • Mass at St. Mary's Church at 444 Glenfield Road in Sewickley will be celebrated at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. Ashes will also be distributed at 1:30 p.m. at the Masonic Village. The stations of the cross will be at 7 p.m. Fridays in Lent. 
  • At St. James Catholic Church, 200 Walnut St., Ash Wednesday Mass will be celebrated at 6:45 a.m., 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. There will be a special prayer service at noon. Ashes also will be distributed from 2:30-3:30 p.m. at Sewickley Hospital for patients and employees at the hospital chapel.
  • Good Samaritan Parish in Ambridge will celebrate Ash Wednesday with prayer services at noon and 4 p.m. and Mass at 7 p.m. The stations of the cross will take place during Lent at 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. Fridays. 
  • The Presbyterian Church, 414 Grant St., Sewickley, will observe Ash Wednesday at noon in the chapel and at 7:30 p.m. in the sanctuary. Each Wednesday beginning Feb. 29, congregants will gather for a soup supper in the Robinson Room, followed by programs for adults and children.
  • St. Stephens Church, 405 Frederick Ave., will observe Ash Wednesday with a 7 p.m. service in the sanctuary. The Lenten Dinner series will be on Wednesdays, starting Feb. 29, where a pot-luck supper will be shared starting at 6:30 p.m.; there will be speakers from inside and outside the parish. Bring a main dish, salad or dessert to share. Childcare will be provided after dinner.
  • St. Joseph Church, 1313 Fifth Ave., Coraopolis, will celebrate Ash Wednesday Mass at 8:30 a.m., noon and 7 p.m. The stations of the cross will follow the 7 p.m. Mass. Pittsburgh Catholic Bishop David Zubik will preside at the first stations this week.
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Stephen Colbert returns to "The Colbert Report," honors his ailing mother

(CBS) Stephen Colbert returned to "The Colbert Report" on Monday after mysteriously cancelling the tapings of two episodes last week.



The host didn't directly give an explanation for the shows halt, but he hinted that it was due to his 91-year-old mother's health, as had been speculated.
"Evidently, having 11 children makes you tough as nails," said Colbert, 47, the youngest of 11 in his family, on the show Monday night. "Confidential to a lovely lady."
Last week, emails were sent to audience members saying the show had halted production for the rest of the week due to "unforeseen reasons."

Before the show's return the comedian tweeted:


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Deron Williams Handles Linsanity This Time

Knicks Nets Deron Williams


NEW YORK — Linsanity started against the New Jersey Nets, and this time All-Star guard Deron Williams was determined not to be embarrassed by the Harvard guy again.
Williams scored a season-high 38 points, outplaying Jeremy Lin and leading the Nets to a 100-92 victory over the New York Knicks on Monday night.
Lin began his remarkable run against the Nets about two weeks ago, but Williams and the Nets were ready for him this time.
Lin finished with 21 points, nine assists and seven rebounds, but Williams outscored him 36-11 through three quarters, when the Nets led by 18. Lin shot only 7 of 18 and the Knicks lost for the second time in 10 games since his emergence against the Nets on Feb. 4.
"I think me in particular didn't come with the defensive energy we needed. Obviously, Deron Williams going for 30-whatever he had is not going to get it done," Lin said. "So I needed to come out with more energy, the team needed to come out with more energy and I think at the end of the day, I think that's why the team lost."
Carmelo Anthony, clearly rusty in his return from a seven-game absence with a strained right groin, shot 4 of 11 and scored 11 points.
Williams scored 18 in the third quarter, including 12 straight Nets points during one surge. Clearly amped up for the rematch – maybe too much so, because he fouled out with 3:07 left – he skipped across the court with three fingers in the air after burying a second straight 3-pointer during his blistering stretch.
MarShon Brooks had 18 points for the Nets in their third game in three nights.
They shut down a Knicks offense that rang up 104 points against the defending champion Dallas Mavericks on Sunday, when Lin had 28 points and a career-best 14 assists.

But Williams was locked in this time, and the U.S. Olympian could've gone for plenty more if not for spending most of the fourth quarter on the bench in foul trouble. But by then he had the Nets too far ahead for the Knicks to catch.
Williams, who shot 7 of 19 in the first meeting, made eight 3-pointers and was 10 of 22 overall on Monday.
"I don't think Deron Williams needs much of a prod," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said. "That's one of the best guards in the league. Jeremy still got 21 and nine. He had a great game, good game. Deron had a great game and that'll be that way sometimes. Again, I'm not big on the matchups just because it's a team thing and as a team we just didn't perform very well."
The Knicks had their five-game winning streak against the Nets snapped and failed again to move back over .500.
Baron Davis had three points in 9 minutes in his Knicks debut after overcoming a herniated disk in his back. Expected to be the starter whenever he became available, he'll be Backup Baron as long as Lin keeps it up.
The Knicks were 8-15, coming off losses on consecutive nights, and had already fallen into a double-digit hole against the Nets on Feb. 4 when Lin got his chance, coming off the bench for 25 points in a 99-92 victory.
So uncertain of his NBA future at the time that he refused to get his own place to live, Lin slept on teammate Landry Fields' couch the night before that game.
The days of sleeping on couches and riding the benches are long gone.
Lin had since averaged 25 points and 9.2 assists, the most remarkable story in the NBA this season. And even the Nets have been impressed. Coach Avery Johnson praised Lin and downplayed the notion that his stats were a product of D'Antoni's system, though Johnson also wasn't buying a certain comparison that has been popping up more regularly.
"I've heard a lot of different stories and even I got a question from even my daughter whether Lin was in (Steve) Nash's category. So we don't want to go there, OK?" he said. "It's only been nine games. Give the kid a chance.
"It's a great story and he's inspiring a lot of kids, but let's give the kid a chance to play a whole season, maybe even play a playoff series, before you know, we start putting him in Nash's category."
Nor is he in Williams' category. The All-Star point guard was in constant motion with or without the ball, powering his way to the basket on drives or hitting from well beyond the 3-point arc – once while being fouled by Lin for a four-point play.
It was a learning experience for Lin, anonymous last month but a marked man in the league now.
Knicks ratings have surged – Sunday's victory earned ABC's third-highest overnight rating ever for a non-Christmas broadcast – and celebrities are packing Madison Square Garden again. New parents Jay-Z, a part-owner of the Nets, and Beyonce were in the crowd for this one.
Lin graced the cover of Sports Illustrated and was the subject of a sketch on "Saturday Night Live" and there's no telling how far his celebrity will rise. The online sports book bovada.lv even is giving 5 to 1 odds he'll go on a date before the NBA finals are over with Kim Kardashian, split from Nets forward Kris Humphries.
Humphries, booed as usual since their brief marriage, had 14 points and 14 rebounds, and drew technicals on the Knicks when Anthony tried to trip him and when Tyson Chandler followed him to the bench jawing during a timeout.
The only question left for Lin was what he would do with Anthony, who was hurt 6 minutes into Lin's starting debut two nights after that Nets game. Both players scoffed at the idea that Anthony would mess it up, and Anthony has even said he went to D'Antoni and told him to give Lin more minutes – though the coach had no recollection of it.
Anthony's first basket came off a connection with Lin, setting a pick and popping out for a jumper. But the Knicks' offense went stagnant in the second quarter, and Williams took over the game in the third.
Notes: Knicks rookie Iman Shumpert sat out with a left knee injury and will be re-evaluated after the All-Star break. ... Nets C Brook Lopez, who just returned Sunday after breaking his foot in the preseason, sat out as part of the plan to not play him yet on back-to-back nights. ... The Knicks honored former coach Joe Lapchick, and players Nat "Sweetwater" Clifton and John Rucker as part of their "Pioneer Night: A Celebration In Black History." Clifton was the first African-American to play for the Knicks, though Rucker preceded him by two weeks in training camp in 1950, becoming the first African-American to wear the team's uniform.
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Deron Williams pours in 38 as Nets power past Lin, Knicks

An All-Star this season for the third time, Williams scored a season-high 38 points and made a career-high eight three-pointers, including three in a row in the third quarter — one a four-point play — when the Nets built a 78-59 lead.

"With all the 'Linsanity' we took it personal a little bit today and came out with the victory," Williams said.
Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni credited Williams but also harped on his team.
"Our energy wasn't where it had to be. … We had to pick it up earlier and just couldn't do it," he said.
Poor shooting — 40% from the field and 23.8% on three-pointers — didn't help. Nets forward Kris Humphriesirritated the Knicks, goading Anthony and Knicks centerTyson Chandler into technical fouls.
Humphries also had 14 points and 14 rebounds. Nets rookie guard MarShon Brookes added 18 points.
For the 23-year-old Lin, it was another strong performance: 21 points, nine assists, seven rebounds, four steals and only three turnovers in 36 minutes before fouling out.
"He had a good game," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Deron had a great game."
Much of the focus centered Anthony's return to lineup. How would his skills mesh with Lin's? Anthony took umbrage at suggestions he wouldn't fit in.
Anthony, who missed seven-plus games with a strained right groin, was rusty but not a disruption, going 4-for-11 for 11 points, with six assists and six turnovers. If anything, he deferred too much.
"My mind-set was not try to come in and do too much. Try to fit in. Try to play my game within the system that they've been playing the last couple of week — passing the ball, finding the open man, making the right play," Anthony said.
There were glimpses of how Anthony can flourish as a scorer and passer, but the Knicks require an adjustment period with new faces in the rotation. He had consecutive assists to forward Amar'e Stoudemire in the first quarter, and Lin delivered a perfect pass to Anthony as he cut to the rim.
He also missed some shots he normally makes and had uncharacteristic turnovers.
"I want Jeremy to have the ball, hands down," Anthony said. "I want him to create for me. I want him to create for Amar'e. I want him to create for everybody and still be aggressive as he's been in the past two weeks."
Said Lin: "We both can make plays, and we need to find a good balance. It's a little tough right now with no practice time. … Obviously, we're not happy with how it went, but sometimes when you go through these type of times you become a better team.
"We're not in panic mode because it doesn't just work where people just show up and all of a sudden you have great chemistry. So we're going to have to work through some struggles. But as long as we're all committed and buying in, we'll be fine."
D'Antoni understands it requires time to incorporate the newcomers. Guard J.R. Smith just joined the team from China, Anthony is back from injury and point guard Baron Davisplayed for the first time this season after coming back from injuries.
D'Antoni also realizes time is the enemy as the 16-17 Knicks reached the halfway point of their season.
"We can't do this anymore. That's it," D'Antoni said. "We've got to start playing."
The Knicks are approaching a stretch where they have one game in nine days. In a compact season where practice time is in high demand but short supply, the Knicks will have much-needed time to practice and work on development.
"We get to the All-Star break (and) we get four, five practices to figure out the kind of team, the identity we have … and re-tool a little bit and see what we can do," D'Antoni said.
The Knicks' next chance to work everyone in comes Wednesday at home against theAtlanta Hawks, following by traveling to Miami to face the Heat on Thursday before the All-Star break.
"We've got to get some things sorted out," D'Antoni said.
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Bethenny Frankel: Miscarriage its 'window's closing'

Bethenny Frankel, who kicked off a third season of her Bethenny Ever Afterreality show Monday night, caused buzz Monday morning when she revealed she had suffered a miscarriage.
When asked if she and hubby Jason Hoppy, who have a daughter, Bryn, who is almost 2, were considering expanding their family, Frankel said, "I'm 41. … It's a very personal question that I get asked a lot. We were pregnant with a second baby and at eight weeks I miscarried and that was a very emotional experience. It had a lot of different things that came with it." (It did not happenduring the taping of her show.)




"Thinking about women who can't have their own baby, even the first baby, I'm really lucky," Frankel continued, holding back tears. "I have the most beautiful daughter in the world and I'm grateful for her." She added, "The window's closing."
Frankel will give birth to a new project -- a talk show airing on Fox stations starting on June 11. "It's a girlfriends show, but it's really honest," she said Monday night. "Just what's really going on, have an honest conversation without it being just me being in the fishbowl. I want to involve everyone in the conversation."

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Mardi Gras meet all King Cake flavor requirements, but are simpler to make and to serv





The cake was packaged with beads and doubloons and made for a fun party all around. I was always very popular during Mardi Gras season. That is really my idea of what a King Cake should be, though I know there are many different versions. Those were the first, and still the best, King Cakes I have ever had. But now, I often find the bakeries in my local grocery stores offer wildly decorated King Cakes leading up to Mardi Gras. I have bought them, but they are generally dry and tasteless and a real disappointment (and often stale). I once ordered a fancy, artfully decorated King Cake from a New Orleans bakery at great expense, but even it was dry.
These bars meet all my King Cake flavor requirements, but are simpler to make and to serve. They make a great dessert for a Mardi Gras party, and would pack up beautifully to carry to a parade-viewing spot. I sprinkle colored sanding sugar in the traditional purple, green and gold color scheme over the top for a sparkly Mardi Gras feel, but you could easily tint the glaze, use sprinkles or the fancier luster dust.
And a word about the baby. Traditionally, King Cake has a small plastic baby figure backed inside. The person whose piece of cake contains the baby is then responsible for hosting the next King Cake party. Many bakeries now include the baby in the box, but don’t bake it into the cake. I assume this is for liability reasons, as a small plastic baby is a choking hazard. If you do happen to have a plastic baby, feel free to bake it into the King Cake Bars, though it is likely to show through the filling and be less of a surprise.
King Cake Bars
Makes about 15 bars
For the Crust:
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup (2 sticks) cold butter
6 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons milk
For the Filling:
2 (8-ounce) blocks cream cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
For the Glaze:
1 cup confectioners’ sugar
2 tablespoon milk
Colored sanding sugar or sprinkles (purple, green and gold)
For the Crust:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.  Spray a 9- x 13-inch glass baking dish with cooking spray.
In the bowl of a stand mixer, mix the flour and sugar. Drop in the butter cubes and beat on low speed until the mixture is crumbly and looks a bit like wet sand.  Add the milk and beat until it starts to stick together. Sprinkle the mixture into the prepared baking dish and press it in to form an even layer, making sure there are no holes or gaps.
For the Filling:
Wipe out the mixer bowl and rinse and dry the paddle. Beat the filling ingredients together until completely smooth. Spread the filling evenly over the prepared crust. Bake the bars for 20 – 25 minutes until the crust is golden brown and the filling is set.
For the Glaze:
While the bars are cooking, whisk together the confectioners’ sugar and milk until completely smooth. As soon as you remove the bars from the oven, spread the glaze in an even layer across the top.  Immediately decorate with sanding sugar.  Leave the bars to cool completely, then slice.
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King Cake recipe

king-cake-food-network.jpg


Nothing says Mardi Gras like king cake! (Okay... nothing that doesn't involve nudity and booze.) In case you're not familiar with the flavorful and often colorful dessert, it's a traditional cake served in New Orleans and throughout southern Louisiana during the Carnival season -- particularly on Fat Tuesday.

Included somewhere in the cake is a "baby" - either a bean, a pecan, or an actual plastic/ceramic trinket. The person who gets the slice with the baby is King or Queen of the day -- and has to supply the cake at the next gathering. In some circles, it implies that the person who gets the baby will be the next person to have a child.

We're quite TV-obsessed here at Zap2it, so it should come as no surprise that our favorite recipes for king cake come from Food Network chefs. Here we've included the best recipe, from Food Network fave Emeril Lagasse from his show "Emeril Live." Be warned, this isn't a quick stop in the kitchen. King cake may look like fun and games, but it requires some serious work!

Ingredients

    1/2 cup warm water (105 to 115 degrees)
    2 packages dry yeast
    2 teaspoons sugar
    4 to 5 cups flour
    1/2 cup sugar
    2 teaspoons salt
    1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
    1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
    1/2 cup warm milk (105 to 115 degrees)
    1/2 cup melted unsalted butter, cooled
    5 egg yolks
    1/2 cup finely chopped candied citron
    1 pecan half, uncooked dried bean or King Cake Baby

Glaze:

    2 cups sifted powdered sugar
    2 tablespoons lemon juice
    2 tablespoons water
    Purple, green and gold sugar crystals


Preheat the oven 350 degrees. Combine the warm water, yeast and 2 teaspoons sugar in a small bowl. Mix well and set aside to a warm place for about 10 minutes. Combine the 4 cups of flour, 1/2 cup sugar, salt, nutmeg, lemon rind and add warm milk, melted butter, egg yolks and yeast mixture. Beat until smooth. Turn dough out on a lightly floured surface. Knead in enough remaining flour until the dough is no longer sticky. Continue kneading until the dough is smooth and elastic (about 10 minutes). Place the dough in a well-greased bowl. Turn once so greased surface is on top.

Cover the dough and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk (about 1 1/2 hours). Punch the dough down and place on a lightly floured surface. Sprinkle with the citron and knead until the citron is evenly distributed. Shape the dough into a cylinder, about 30 inches long. Place the cylinder on a buttered baking sheet. Shape into a ring, pinching ends together to seal. Place a well-greased 2-pound coffee can or shortening can in the center of the ring to maintain shape during baking. Press the King Cake Baby, pecan half or dried bean into the ring from the bottom so that it is completely hidden by the dough. Cover the ring with a towel, and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, about 45 minutes.

Bake for 30 minutes, or until golden brown. Remove the coffee can immediately. Allow the cake to cool. For the glaze: Combine the ingredients and beat until smooth. To assemble, drizzle cake with the glaze. Sprinkle with sugar crystals, alternating colors. Cut into the cake and hope you do not get the baby.
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Photo/Video credit: Food Network
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Carl Crawford, Manny Ramirez, Mike Cameron, And Mariano Rivera

Photo


Carl Crawford is at JetBlue Park in Fort Myers, and he's the topic du jour for the Red Sox beat. Let's start at the beginning: with Crawford's wrist.
Tom Caron notes that Crawford says his wrist, "feels pretty good," although he's still not cleared to swing a bat. That wrist isn't the reason for his 2011 struggles -- or, at least, not the reason. As Crawford puts it, the culprit was his stance and swing, which were, "all out of whack" in 2011.
It's not surprising to hear him say that, as he never looked comfortable, even before the injuries. There were multiple podcasts here during the year where one of the topics of discussion was Crawford's swing, and how he would need a winter of video to correct what was wrong with him. That's just what he's spent his off-season doing, getting himself back to the stance that's worked for him in the past.
Crawford claimed his stance was too open; the same complaint that new manager Bobby Valentine had about it while still working as an ESPN analyst. Valentine and Crawford, by the way, were caught getting along with each other on camera. Constructive criticism at work!
Star-divide
Former Red Sox Manny Ramirez has signed a one-year deal with the Oakland Athletics for $500,000. He's going to miss 50 games due to his suspension from last year, but if he's still got it, the A's don't have a better hitter on the roster than Manny. That's a huge "if", of course, but the projection systems seem to think he's still got something to give.
Now, whether that comes with an extraordinary amount of baggage or not is another question, and it's not one PECOTA, ZiPS, or any of us are qualified to answer. The A's (and everyone else) probably aren't qualified, either, but they could sure use the offense, so here we are.
For the sake of those around him, I hope Manny actually has turned a corner and is contrite about his past. It's always been fun to watch him hit baseballs, but as time went on and his skills eroded, it became harder to put up with the other stuff. Returning for a year and at least attempting to make things right would be a fine last step in a career that ended due to his own mistakes.
*****
Another former Sox is in the news, as Mike Cameron announced his retirement. Cameron's Red Sox tenure didn't go well, thanks to a stomach injury that ruined his 2010 and might have eroded the 37-year-old's skills for good. Before that, though, he was one of the more underrated players out there. Cameron had a great career spanning 17 seasons and seven teams. Despite being a ridiculous outfielder even in his later years, he won just two Gold Gloves. On the flip side, despite spending years and years in pitcher's parks, Cameron hit .249/.338/.444 -- combined with elite defense, that's quite the center fielder.
In fact, Cameron ranks #27 in wins above replacement from 1995-2011. His 46.7 rWAR puts him about a win above the (likely retiring) J.D. Drew, and about five wins better than another former Red Sox and Hall of Famer, Jim Rice.
Don't take that as a criticism of Rice or Cooperstown. It's meant to show you that, despite what we personally saw of Cameron in a Red Sox uniform, he had a fine career that merits your acknowledgment.
*****
Speaking of the Hall of Fame, it seems that Red Sox nemesis Mariano Rivera is hinting that 2012 might be his final season. Rivera has been around too long -- and involved in too many moments in the Red Sox/Yankee rivalry -- for me to dislike him. I respect him and his tremendous abilities, and regardless of the uniform he's wearing, that cutter is flat-out ridiculous and a joy to watch in action. It'll be weird to watch a baseball world where he and his cutter aren't closing out games.
That being said, 365 days until Mariano Rivera doesn't report to spring training for the Yankees! (Maybe!) Now if only we could convince Evan Longoria to seek early retirement, too.
6:24 AM | 0 comments | Read More