2010年12月13日星期一

athletes are confused replica brand watches about the rules

Each cup may cost less than a tenth of a cent, but it replica Omega watch all adds up. Financially, it makes sense for coffee shops to encourage their customers to reuse cups. Environmentally, most cups end up in landfills, and it took 9.4 million carbon-sequestering trees to make all of this year's cups. Lindsey Vonn has posted on her Twitter account that she will not be tweeting during the Vancouver Games because its against Olympic policy. But theres actually no such policy, Wired reports. Bob Condron, a spokesman for the U.S. Olympic Committee, says that athletes are allowed to blog and post on social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, as long as they post in firstpersonnot as a journalistand they dont include mention of sponsors that arent official partners of the Olympics, which includes a ban on photos that reference sponsors.

Condron says that although some athletes are confused replica brand watches about the rules, he expects heavy tweeting, Facebooking, and blogging during the Games: These are going to be the Twitter Olympics. Theresno telling where the updates will come from. It could be the benchduring a hockey game, or even on the medal stand.You can check out our list of the top ten Olympic athletes on Twitter and follow the Olympians on our Twittter page.Aileen TorresThat's a lot of waste. Carbon dioxide levels are still rising despite the International Energy Agency's prediction that the recession would lower industrial output and therefore drop the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 2.6 percent in 2009. Scientists from the Norwegian Polar Institute reported a .

54 parts per million increase in carbon replica Tag Heuer watch dioxide during the first two weeks of March. What's that mean? Mostly that the increase in carbon dioxide appears to be accelerating. The UN says to expect more floods, mudslides, heat waves, and higher sea levels as a result.The data "seems to show that we continue to emit as if there was no tomorrow," said Kim Holmen, the director of research at the Norwegian Polar Institute, according to Reuters. I didn't buy coffee from that shop because I'm cheap ($2.48 for a brewed coffee--what?!) but it ticked me off that I was being charged to do something good for the environment. If you want to bypass coffee-cup waste issues, check out One Hundred 80 degrees's Melamine mugs--they even look like regular cups! The extra plus is that most shops won't charge you to use them. --Kyle Dickman