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Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 5, 2013

Playing with Caterpillars: machines, not insects

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    December 2012: Equipment on display at the Caterpillar Visitors Center in Peoria, Ill.The Associated Press

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    December 2012: The center lets visitors climb inside the machines for a closer look while computer simulations provide an opportunity to learn how to manipulate the controls.The Associated Press

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    December 2012: The center lets visitors climb inside the machines for a closer look while computer simulations provide an opportunity to learn how to manipulate the controls.The Associated Press

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    December 2012: The center has a movie in a theater that's built into the bed of a giant truck used for mining.The Associated Press

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    December 2012: Alongside all the black-and-yellow machines are four computer simulators where you can see what it's like to drive an excavator or bulldozer.The Associated Press

Here's a place where the word caterpillar does not refer to fuzzy little insects. The new Caterpillar Visitors Center is all about the roaring black-and-yellow machines that dig and lift at massive construction and mining sites.

Caterpillar Inc., maker of the heavy machinery ranging from bulldozers and excavators to tunnel-boring machines and giant generators, is based in the central Illinois town of Peoria. The company opened a nearly 50,000-square-foot visitors center last fall, investing more than $52 million dollars in the center and the Peoria Riverfront Museum nearby.

My wife was a little dubious about my plans for a family day trip to the Caterpillar center, but my 4-year-old-son and I couldn't wait. My parents tell me my first word was "book" and my second word was "truck." I've been a big fan of both over the past four-plus decades. Now, with a little boy of my own, I had a perfect excuse to satisfy my mania for powerful engines, giant wheels, sturdy shovels and other nifty machines that dig, pound, push, flatten and otherwise manipulate materials in ways that seem beyond the strength of mere mortals. And I'm not alone: The center attracted 50,000 visitors within just four months of opening.

First thing you experience when you enter the center is a movie in a theater that's built into the bed of a giant truck used for mining. At 24 feet tall, the 797 Mining Truck is the biggest in the industry. When loaded, this truck can carry well over a million pounds. The tops of the wheels are higher than an NBA basketball hoop.

The theater fits 62 people comfortably, and shows a short movie about Caterpillar, its products and some of the jobs that have used Cat equipment. The seats vibrate to the sound of a revving diesel engine and the action-packed movie really makes you feel like you've ridden in one of these behemoths.

After the movie, it's time to hop into the cabs of an excavator, roller, bulldozer and a handful of other giant heavy vehicles. My son had to be pried out of a backhoe. I was doing the prying, since I wanted a chance at the controls.

The wide open main floor area teems with kids (and adults) grinning for photos while perched inside the giant buckets or scoops of the different vehicles. You don't get to drive them around, of course, or actually cause the equipment to move. But that doesn't stop fans from having the time of their lives while playing with the controls and letting their imaginations do the digging.

All the while, the giant mining truck towers above.

Alongside all the black-and-yellow machines are four computer simulators where you can see what it's like to drive an excavator or bulldozer, using the same controllers you would use in the real equipment. These simulators are used to train operators before they take out the pricey machines. I managed to damage the virtual pipeline I was trying to cover up.

Off the main floor, there are extensive exhibits about the company's history, engineering innovations and environmental efforts. The displays are media-rich, with many monitors showing neat footage like molten steel being formed into engines.

One of the big surprises to me was Caterpillar's attention to environmental sustainability. Engines are designed to be rebuilt and interchangeable. The center has several displays showing how a worn-out engine can be born anew with new steel fused to old and rebuilt parts added on.

Kathryn Spitznagle, the Caterpillar Visitors Center's manager, says increasing its energy efficiency — both in its equipment and in this new facility — is a point of pride for the company. The Visitors Center was built with solar panels that supply up to 75 percent of its energy on a given day, mechanical and electrical systems that use 35 percent less energy than a similar-size building, and rain water retention and irrigation systems that reduce potable water usage by 85 percent. The innovations won the building an LEED gold certification, which is awarded by the U.S. Green Building Council to buildings that meet certain standards for energy and environmental design.

Last stop at the center is the gift shop, where you can buy Cat clothes, model equipment, toys and other gifts featuring the familiar yellow-and-black design — though the company also offers items in pink and camo if you prefer.

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If You Go...

CATERPILLAR VISITORS CENTER: 110 SW Washington St., Peoria, Ill., http://www.caterpillar.com/visitors-center. Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., with last ticket sale and entry at 3:30 p.m. The average visit is 90 minutes to two hours. Closed Sundays and holidays. Adults, $7; children 12 and under accompanied by an adult, free (limit four children's admissions per one adult ticket; call 309-675-0606 to arrange school or group visits). Located about a three-hour drive from St. Louis, Chicago or Indianapolis.


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Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 4, 2013

Louisville's Sara Hammond could have been playing for Geno Auriemma and UConn

Louisville sophomore Sara Hammond had a tough choice when it came down to colleges. The Mount Vernon, Ky. resident was down to the Cardinals and UConn.

It came down to the ability of her family, notable parents Eddie and Roxanne, to watch her play that swayed her decision.

"I decided to stay at home because I wanted my family to watch me play," Hammond said. "I took a visit to Connecticut. I loved their program. I loved their campus. Geno Auriemma, besides Jeff Walz, was my next favorite coach. I saw the look on my mom and dad's face when they saw me excited.

"They loved it and they were happy for me. But I could tell they were going to be really sad if they couldn't watch me play basketball. And I knew 15 hours away from home would be heartbreaking to my family and me. So I think that was the main reason I stayed in Louisville. Instead of driving 15 hours they just had to drive only two hours down the road to watch me play."

It's worked out well so far as Hammond has thrived for the Cardinals getting them to the national championship game for the second time in five seasons.

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PLAYING THROUGH PAIN: UConn center Stefanie Dolson admitted that in the past she might not have been able to play through the level of pain that she is dealing with right now. She has a stress fracture in a non-weight bearing bone in her right ankle and plantar fasciitis in her left foot.

Dolson still played 29 minutes in Sunday's 18-point win over Notre Dame and finished with nine points and a career-high five blocks.

"Last year probably, the year before probably not," the junior said referring to whether or not she would have been able to play through these injuries.

"Obviously, maturity comes along with it. My teammates help a lot with just supporting me and making sure that I know that I'm not letting them down when I can't do things in practice or whatever, which is kind of a hard thing to swallow when you can't practice sometimes. But, yeah, I don't think I would've been able to handle it as well as I am."

Dolson said the only time she's not in pain is when she's sleeping. She said she's not looking into having surgery after the season.

"Just a lot of rehab and stuff," Dolson said.

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FREE THROWS: Notre Dame holds a distinct honor as the men's and women's teams were the last school to beat the eventual national champion. The men's team knocked off Louisville in the five-overtime thriller. It's the first time that's ever happened according to STATS. ... It's the third time that a school has had both its basketball teams play in the championship game. Both the Duke men and women lost in the 1999 championship games and Connecticut swept the 2004 titles. ... Louisville would be the lowest seed ever to win a national championship. One or two seeds have won the past 15 national titles and 29 of the 31 overall. ... Louisville is the third team to reach the championship game without a member of AP All-America first, second or third teams. Rutgers did it in 2007 and Michigan State achieved it in 2005. Both those teams lost. ... This will be the third time that the Big East holds both national championships. The Syracuse men won in 2003 as well as the UConn women. Connecticut swept the 2004 titles.

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AP Sports Writer Brett Martel contributed to this report.


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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 3, 2013

Alice Cooper, Doors guitarist playing at academy

A pair of Rock and Roll Hall of Famers took the stage Thursday in South Dakota for the first show in a week of concerts benefiting a music academy for Sioux Falls Boys & Girls Clubs members.

Alice Cooper and guitarist Robby Krieger of The Doors jammed with a who's who of '80s glam and metal to help christen the $3.6 million Brennan Rock & Roll Academy in Sioux Falls. Also performing: Joey Allen of Warrant, former Skid Row frontman Sebastian Bach, and Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer of Kiss.

"These guys all know my songs, so I'll be doing four or five of my songs, and then a couple of Doors songs," Cooper told The Associated Press before the show.

He said he was looking forward to performing the late Jim Morrison's parts on "Break on Through (To the Other Side) and "Back Door Man."

"I'm filling in for Jim tonight. I've done it many times," Cooper said.

The all-star band also planned to perform some Kiss songs and a little Skid Row.

The $1,000-a-ticket concert is a fundraiser for the center, which is the brainchild of Sioux Falls native Chuck Brennan. Brennan, the founder of short-term lender Dollar Loan Center, based his idea on Cooper's Solid Rock Foundation in Phoenix.

Cooper said about 100 kids a night are flocking to his Solid Rock center, which opened about two years ago.

"If you take one kid out of a gang and get him involved in rock 'n' roll or get him involved in a guitar or bass or drums, you don't just change that kid, you change the neighborhood," he said.

The Sioux Falls academy has had the feel of an exclusive, intimate venue this week, but starting in April it will become the afternoon home for young people looking to learn or improve their skills in guitar, bass, drums, keyboards or vocals.

Lessons will be given in nine soundproof rehearsal rooms, five of which are wired to a professional mixing and recording studio. The four upstairs rehearsal rooms will honor Kiss, with each decorated as an homage to the band members' characters: The Demon, Starchild, Catman and Spaceman.

Kiss' Thayer, who grew up playing saxophone in a school music program before he ever touched a guitar, said the facility will spark kids' creative side.

"I'm blown away with this whole facility," Thayer said. "I think it's a great thing."

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Follow Dirk Lammers on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ddlammers .


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Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 3, 2013

Playing castaway on Fowl Cay

On this small island in the Bahamas, fill your days with ocean adventures, or master the art of doing nothing at all.

The Middle of Nowhere

Once upon a time, local villagers used Fowl Cay as a place to keep their chickens. That is, until a French couple bought the island in the 1950s as a laid-back family retreat. There's still something of that Swiss Family Robinson feel to the place today, in spite of its evolution into a high-end, all-inclusive resort, reopened after an extensive renovation to its oceanfront villas last year. Sandy paths are lined with conch shells, blood red hibiscus flowers grow wild by the wayside, and hand-painted wooden signs point the way to various landmarks.

Oceanfront Villas

Fowl Cay's six oceanfront villas are plantation-style and whitewashed, fronted by a veranda with a swinging love seat and twin rocking chairs. (Yes, Fowl Cay is pretty conducive to romance.) Inside, the vibe is upscale beach shack: overstuffed white sofas, bowls of shells, a framed poem from young children to their father. Every villa comes fully stocked with groceries, wine, soft drinks, chocolates, fruit—everything you'd need for either a cloistered romantic getaway or a family vacation.

Soak up the Sun

Each villa slopes down to its own perfect little stretch of beach. The calm, balmy water is just right for lazy swimming sessions or snorkeling. Each villa comes equipped with its own personal motorboat, so guests can take off into the wild blue yonder at their own whim. With 365 islands and cays in the archipelago, you could literally visit one each day for an entire year.

See more things to do in Fowl Cay at Coastal Living

More from Coastal Living

5 Coastal Road Trips

The Best Golf Courses on the Coast

20 Fabulous Villa Vacations

The 31 Best Beach Vacations


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