Tuesday, April 20, 2010
National Geographic
Friday, April 16, 2010
Rural Life Museum
The LSU Rural Life is museum is one of many Southern history tourist attractions in the Baton Rouge area. Located in downtown Baton Rouge, it possesses one of the largest collections of 19th century material around. In this rural 25 acre setting, you can expects many old structures like barns, living quarters, and other examples of other folk architecture which you can look at and study.
The museum is open almost year round, with few holiday closures. The hours are from 8:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. Tourists must pay an admission fee for the museum (somewhere around $4-$7), and there is also a gift shop. Things like cameras, cell phones, etc. are all allowed. Parking at the museum is free. There is a number of restaraunts, hotels, and other local establishments which have partnered with the Rural Life museum for you to enjoy. Also, tours of the museum can be made available for those who are in groups of ten or more.
The Exhibit at the Museum has many items which can be as old as a few hundred years, and were all used in plantation life. Each item is explained in detail so the tourist can understand the history. As mentioned before, there are also old quarters located on the plantation for viewing. There is the commissary, overseer's house, sick house, slave cabins, blacksmith shop, sugar house, schoolhouse, and grist mill on the property. The buildings are all typical of their time. The Folk Art portion of the exhibit showcases houses, cabins, and other structures which are typical of other periods of Louisiana history.
The Rural Life museum has been described as "not only a museum, but a replica of a small settlement." "The museum is spectacular... Everything you could imagine... Old carriage drawn funeral carriages, spinning wheels, all sorts of farming tools, medical equipment, etc."
Besides architecture and tools/implements, the museum also showcases what life was really like back in those plantation days. Throughout the year, the museum holds programs which illustrate every-day life and re-enact things which people really had to do back then, which really helps the modern person to understand and appreciate history.
Monday, March 22, 2010
ABC (Athens News)
Al Jazeera
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
The Apple iPad
Monday, March 15, 2010
ABC Articles
How- Murderers can't be stopped by a piece of paper!
Imprisoned For A Kiss? Two British in Trouble in Dubai:
Who-Ayman Najafi and Charlotte Adams
What-Kissing crime
When- recently
Where-Bob's Easy Diner in Dubai
Why-Because they were showing PDA :)
How-they were convicted of public indecency for a simple peck while dining at a restaurant.
Indian Spices, Powders Linked to Lead Poisoning:
Who-Whoever
What- Indian spices could cause lead poisoning
When- recently
Where- Massachusetts
Why- science!
How- Indian spices are linked to possible lead poisoning after several cases in young children.
Erin Andrews' Peeping Tom to Be Sentenced:
Who- Mike Barrett
What- sentenced for stalking
When- recently
Where- California
Why- Erin Andrews had a stalker and was ready to see him go to jail
How- he was sentenced for being a creeper
Doctors Use Tiny Clip to Repair Leaky Heart Valve Without Surgery:
Who- doctors in Illinois
What- a way to avoid heart surgery
When- in the near future
Where- Illinois
Why- to avoid heart surgery
How- the clip would cut off the leaky valve in the heart .
Death Row Inmate Nikolaus Johnson Gets Facebook Profile Yanked:
Who- Nikolaus Johnson
What- facebook profile kept by convicted killer is now disabled
When- recently
Where- cyber world
Why- it was against the policies of his sentence
How- he was maintaing profile through outside contact...but now the profile has been deleted