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Showing posts with label Wierd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wierd. Show all posts

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Most Interesting Places in College


There's a lot more to finding the best place to go to college than just whether a school is considered the best at something. College is a time to find yourself, to enjoy your youth, to make mistakes and learn outside of the classroom, so you might as well go somewhere interesting.
With that in mind, We are going to name the most interesting places to go to college. This list includes small and large colleges, public and private, Ivy League and liberal arts schools.
The list is not ranked in any order and is entirely subjective. What might be interesting to one person could be boring to the next, so each school included brings its own unique qualities that make it interesting.
Sometimes you just want to know where you're going to have a good time and this list should help.
Check out the most interesting colleges and universities in the list below, and head to the comments section to chime in on what school you find the most interesting.


University of Wisconsin-Madison


UW-Madison is sort of a hidden gem in the Midwest. It's a party school, named the "sexiest" school in the country, throws an epic party that the administration hates, and has alum Anders Holm of "Workaholics" fame as the commencement speaker. Speaking of comedy, The Onion was founded there in 1988. Not to mention, with big sports programs and a diverse population you get everything else a flagship university usually comes with. If anything, the only downside would be the snow. But when that happens, you just gather everyone for an EPIC snowball fight.

University of Minnesota-Twin Cities


The Twin Cities were cool before cool became hip, it's official. But being one of the coldest areas, it makes those hip beards and flannels more practical. There's actually a great music scene in the Twin Cities; it gave birth to Prince, Bob Dylan, Motion City Soundtrack and The Hold Steady, among others. Add in a great collection of record stores, unique restaurants and solid alt-news sourcess, it's crazy to think all of this can be found in the same place a big state university -- with a killer hockey program -- is at.

University of California-Berkeley


Cal is a state school that is often considered as good or better than many elite private and Ivy League schools. It has big football and basketball programs. It's in the beautiful Bay Area. Plus, there's all the protests. That whole Occupy movement in 2011? Cal students used the "Occupy" tag two years earlier in 2009 when they staged sit ins on campus like it was the 1960's. When Cal isn't consumed by protest, faculty are winning awards in nearly every field.

University of Iowa


Iowa may be best known currently as the top party school in the nation, which was only further boldened thanks to "Vodka Samm." Business Insider called it the No. 2 school on their "Most Fun" list. But it's also a campus that will have the rare privilege throughout 2015 to have virtually every presidential candidate on campus. In 2007, it was totally normal to walk to English class while spotting then-Senator Barack Obama giving a speech. Add in a med school, a law school, Ashton Kutcher stopping by wrestling matches, some wild football tailgating and a sweet outdoor pedestrian mall, and you have a surprisingly fun time in flyover country.

Cooper Union


Cooper Union is a historic, yet small, arts and engineering college in lower Manhattan. Abe Lincoln gave one of his most important speeches at the school in 1860, and around the corner from the campus is a bar that has a chair Lincoln once sat in. Cooper Union has less than 1,000 students, and currently no one pays a tuition bill. That could change soon, however, with a recent decision to begin charging tuition in fall 2014. Which leads to what makes this school so interesting: a large amount of students have been protesting, continuously for two months in some cases and incorporating art in their activism. Being creative types, they devised unique ways to keep their protests moving, like creating a pizza pulley system.

University of Colorado at Boulder


CU-Boulder is where you're most likely to encounter deadly wildlife on your way to class (mountain lion or bear, anyone?). It also has thousands of students attempting to gather on campus smoking pot every year for an annual smokeout -- although theadministration does their best to try to squash that. Boulder is a beautiful city within the greater Denver area, near amazing mountains and parks and a short drive from fantastic skiing. And if it weren't for this university, the world may never have known"South Park" or 3OH!3.

University of Southern California


To start, it's in Los Angeles. Maybe not in the best neighborhood, but still. It's one of the larger private schools, so it offers an atmosphere usually reserved for flagship universities -- like a big football culture and enrollment topping 30,000. Dr. Dre is starting his own school there. It has one of the most diverse student bodies. A ton of movies and TV shows were filmed on campus: "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel," "D2: Mighty Ducks II," "Forrest Gump," "The Graduate," "Legally Blonde (1 & 2)," "Matilda," "Young Frankenstein," "The Office," "The OC" and "Saved by the Bell," to name a few. And sometimes Will Ferrell randomly shows up on campus.

Brown University


Brown: the wildcard of the Ivy League. A school that hosts "sex week," "Nudity in the Upspace," the "Naked Donut Run" and the "Sex Power God" party. The photo here shows students demanding their university pay taxes it's not legally required to do. There are so many unique personalities at Brown, Pixar makes sure to go recruiting regularly on campus. So what if Brown doesn't have anywhere close to as many alumni in the White House as Harvard and Yale? Those schools are snooze-fests in comparison.

Drake University


Another school in Iowa, which will be sure to play host to a number of candidates in 2015 trying to be the next president of the United States. Yes, there are other early primary states, but none get as much attention as Iowa. And since this school is in the state capital -- Des Moines -- and has a law school, so you're going to have a lot more happening around politics here. But if politics isn't your thing, and you dream of working for Better Homes & Gardens, then lucky for you this school has connections with its publisher, Meredith, headquartered only a few miles from campus. One of the other biggest benefits is that Des Moines is a small pond where one can quickly become a big fish. The region is right in the middle of a burgeoning Silicon Prairie for anyone with a great idea for an app. For entertainment, it's a lot cheaper getting a drink or nice dinner compared to big cities like Chicago or New York. (Don't be surprised when you find bars offering two whiskey-sodas for $3.) There's plenty of delicious Jimmy John's spots nearby, and the university hosts an annual event calledthe Drake Relays that turns into a massive party.

Vassar College


A lot of private colleges have a history of first being all-male, then going co-ed in the 20th century. Vassar was all-female and coeducated in 1969, and today is one of the best liberal arts colleges in the country. FDR was once a Vassar trustee. Today, it's full of weirdness as one of the most hipster schools in the nation. As Unigo put it, "Beyond your usual a capella groups and dance teams, though, Vassar's clubs include juggling troupes, all-female theater collectives, erotic journals, and punk music enthusiasts -- these are the kind of niche activities that should appeal to any student who felt alienated in high school because of an interest no one else shared." There's even a quidditch team! Which fits with the Roman Gothic architecture.

The University of Texas at Austin


If you're a Longhorn, you've got a major football team, your president is constantly in a major political fight, your school is the center of a major Supreme Court case and sometimes conservative students try to hold demonstrations around that issue with bake sales that the administration considers "deplorable." Besides all that, you're in Austin, and have a front-row seat to the SXSW festival and constant block parties. Keep Austin Weird, UT.

New York University


When celebs get bored, sometimes they go to NYU, like the Olsen twins or James Franco. Or at least you can catch celebrities walking around the campus. It's hard to get much more interesting than going to school in Greenwich Village. Instead of hitting up a frat rager or a kegger at some kid's decrepit party house, students here go to hip loft and warehouse parties. It's a school where your part time job might be an internship at a major magazine or TV network, maybe working for a late-night TV show. After class you can take a stroll down Broadway and go shopping at stores that aren't located anywhere else in the country. On the weekend, head to the middle of campus and join the massive pillow fight in the same spot where people spend their nights playing acoustic guitars and bongos for change.

Sarah Lawrence College


In most classes at Sarah Lawrence, there will never be more than 15 students. There are no required courses, traditional exams are mostly tossed out the window, and their faculty advisors are referred to as "dons." The school bucked the trend of kowtowing to college rankings, but still gets considered one of the best. It has international programs in four countries, including Cuba.

University of Alabama


When you go to a powerhouse football school, it's usually way more exciting as a fan than say, being a fan of the Redskins while living in Washington, D.C. If you're dressed in boat shoes and Vineyard Vines, you're in good company with a school that's very supportive of its Greek system. Although that system was still desegregating in 2013. Not exactly the best thing to be known for, but it was definitely an interesting time on campus for people fighting for equality, like those in the Mallet Assembly.

University of Pittsburgh

Where else can you study in the second tallest academic building in the world that looks like Hogwarts on the inside and sometimes gets lit up in pretty colors? The city is gorgeous and hosts one of the most "hipster" zip codes.

Arizona State University

Every time we hear about things happening at Arizona State, we wish we would've gone there for school. Just look at the fun Daniel Tosh had visiting there! It's a party school, with big basketball, football and other sports programs, but it's not far from taking a quick vacay to Los Angeles, or Las Vegas if you ever want to leave the campus. It's one of the largest public universities by enrollment. And if you go here, you can count David Spade and Temple Grandin as fellow alumni.

Harvard University


If it happens at Harvard, it's news. Seriously, where else would it be such major news that a bunch of students cheated? One of the oldest higher education institutions in the country, it has produced more U.S. presidents and Nobel Prize winners than any other school by far. Frequently ranked one of the top schools in the country, and indeed, the world. Plus, from "Legally Blonde" to "The Social Network," it's a school that ends up in the movies a lot.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology


MIT is a world-renowned university at the cutting edge in a number of fields and its students are always inventing unique things. Fraternity brothers have one of the fanciest beer pong tables we've ever seen, the university is creating affordable 3D printers, grad students figured out how to turn Play-Doh and bananas into controllers, they figured out how to get all the ketchup out of a bottle and Fran Drescher dates faculty members who claim to have invented email. That's only the start of what the minds of MIT come up with. If we tried to list them all, we'd never finish. And if there's some way to ever get bored with all of that, the university is down the street from Harvard (which co-invented edX with MIT) and across the river from the wonderful city of Boston.

University of California-Santa Barbara


There's something about UC-Santa Barbara that seems to make everyone there so chill. If they weren't, we doubt the YouTube channel whatever would be doing so well. It's a party school, but still considered a Public Ivy. Champions of men's soccer and water polo. It's got an athletic student body, a very stinky flower, and all of this next to the Pacific Ocean. What could be better than a top ranked university on a campus with its own beach?






Adopted from Sources

Friday, November 22, 2013

Second Online Virginity Auction Of A Girl

Catarina Migliorini virginity

The Brazilian college student who attempted to sell her virginity through an online auction last year is hoping lightning will strike twice. In October, 2012, Catarina Migliorini was offered $780,000 for her virginity from a Japanese millionaire who bid for the privilege through a controversial online auction.

That deal was never consummated, but now she is attempting to do it again through her own website, VirginsWanted2.com. "Well, after being featured by so many media outlets in so many countries, I decided to actually auction off my virginity," she told The Huffington Post by email via a translator.
The bidding ends Dec. 12, but Migliorini said the minimum bid for her to get into bed is $100,000. She told the Brazilian website PurePeople.com.br that her goal is to get $1.5 million.

Migliorini's previous auction was part of a proposed documentary called Virgins Wanted being made by Australian filmmaker Justin Sisely. The auction made Migliorini a celebrity and Playboy cover girl in her native country, but also aroused controversy and skepticism.

In November 2012, after the auction, Brazil’s attorney general, Joao Pedro de Saboia Bandeira de Mello Filho, threatened Sisely with sex trafficking charges if the deal between Migliorini and Natsu took place.
Medical experts like Dr. Elizabeth Lyster, a board-certified gynecologist in Foster City, Calif., were incredulous, mainly because the time-honored technique of using an intact hymen to measure virginity is not foolproof, since it can be ruptured from activities like running or inserting a tampon.

"It causes a lot of problems in religious circles," Lyster told The Huffington Post.

Migliorini disagreed with the doctor and said she is prepared to do whatever it takes to prove she is truly a virgin.

"I am willing to subject myself to any exams that are necessary," she said. "When I say I am a virgin it's because there is no one in the world that can prove the contrary. I never had sexual relations of any type with anyone, not vaginal, not anal and not oral."
Migliorini said she pulled out of the original auction after she was introduced to the reputed auction winner, "Natsu." She didn't think he fit the description she had been given previously and became suspicious.

She also said she believes Sisely was trying to defraud her and others with his documentary.

“He wanted to forge words and phrases, situations and even feelings that did not exist,” she said. “For a while, I agreed but then I disagreed. To me, a real documentary must be something spontaneous.”

She also claims Sisely still owes her 20 percent of the money he is earning from the documentary.

Sisely has denied all of Migliorini's allegations and claims she breached their contract on at least two occasions.
"Aside from that, she failed to show up on filming days on several occasions. After being warned," he told HuffPost earlier this year. "After two years and three visa refusals trying to get her to Australia, she left the country for a fashion show in Brazil during filming."

He also said the finished documentary will support his side of the story.

Based on the reaction to her first attempt at selling her virginity, Migliorini is prepared for negative comments and is OK with them.

"I know that this is not a very conventional decision, but it is my decision," she said. "I am the sole owner of my own body. I am of legal age and have the right. I accept all criticism whether positive or negative, because talking is a right for all and is free." She also is fine with other women following her lead, such as "Shatuniha," the 18-year-old girl from Siberia who recently sold her virginity for $27,000.

"Of course I don't care," she said. "The sun rises for all of us."



























Sources: Agency

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Girl Learns She Was Born With No Vagina

A British teenager said she was in "total shock" to learn that she had been born without a vagina.


During a routine visit to the doctor, Jacqui Beck, 17, mentioned that she hadn't started getting her periods. Tests soon showed that she had MRKH syndrome, a genetic condition that meant she had been born without a vagina, womb or cervix.

"I left the doctor's [office] in tears. I would never know what it was like to give birth, be pregnant, have a period. All the things I had imagined doing suddenly got erased from my future," Beck told the Daily Mail. "I was really angry and felt like I wasn’t a real woman any more."

Shocking as it may seem, Beck is not alone. In fact, her condition isn't even especially rare. According to the National Institutes of Health, Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome (named for the physicians that first diagnosed it), or MRKH, affects one in 4,500 newborn girls.

The condition mainly affects the reproductive system and "causes the vagina and uterus to be underdeveloped or absent." According to the NIH, it mostly occurs in people with no family history of the disorder.

The external genitalia are normal, and women with MRKH have functioning ovaries and undergo puberty. The condition is usually detected once someone with MRKH tries to have sex, or doesn't begin having periods by age 16.

Like Beck, Christina Ruth was diagnosed with MRKH at age 17. She spoke out about her condition in May, after graduating from high school. She said the shame associated with the disorder can be difficult to deal with.

"I had two doctors ask me why I hadn't fixed myself yet," Ruth told Lancaster Online at the time. "That's completely inappropriate. I was born this way and should not be made to feel like I am second-rate because of it."

Although the condition has no cure, there are several treatment options available to women with MRKH. Medical procedures such as dilation or surgery can help create a vaginal canal in women with MRKH, allowing them to have intercourse. Eggs can be removed and fertilized to be used in surrogacy.

Several support communities for women with MRKH exist. The Beautiful You MRKH Foundation, a non-profit group, seeks to "eliminate the shame and isolation that often accompanies a diagnosis of MRKH."

Beck, now 19, is also taking ownership of her condition.

"I’m a hopeless romantic and I see it as a great test of someone’s character. Instead of focusing on it putting off men, I actually think it will help me find 'the one',” Beck told the Daily Mail.

"I want to be upfront with any men I meet and tell them straight away about my condition... If they run at the mention of MRKH then I don’t want to be intimate with them."










Sources:Agency

Sunday, November 10, 2013

The Weirdest Beauty Pageants

What do you think about the beauty pageant? Have you ever been to one ? There are different beauty pageants held in the different cities .some of those beauty pageants can be so wired that you wold be amazed to see them. Here are some of the beauty pageants which you have never heard of and they are really wired

Miss Drumstick


In this beauty contest that is celebrated every year as part of the annual Turkey Trot Festival, the women of Yellville, Arkansas show off their legs while actually hiding their faces behind turkey masks. Then they parade around for prizes, which have included a guest spot on The Late Show with David Letterman.



Miss Beautiful Ape


In June 1972, Radio and TV personality Gary Owens ran the “Miss Beautiful Ape” contest in Century City that coincided with the release of Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, the fourth movie in the Planet of the Apes franchise. The winner, Dominique Green, who was contestant No. 2, won a role in the future Battle for the Planet of the Apes, the fifth movie in the series. 



Miss Perfect Posture


When the nation's chiropractors descended on Chicago for a weeklong convention in May 1956, they threw a beauty contest. The judges crowned Lois Conway, 18, Miss Correct Posture. Second place went to Marianne Caba, 16, and Ruth Swenson, 26, came in third.

However, this was no ordinary pageant. All three were picked not only for their apparent beauty, but also for their X-rays and their posture. Each girl stood on a pair of scales — one foot on each — and the winning trio each registered exactly half of her weight on each scale, confirming the correct standing posture.

At the time, contests like this were pretty common. They were held to burnish the reputation of the profession. 


These contests date to the 1920s, but they became the rage during the '50s and '60s. Contestants were typically judged on beauty, poise, posture, and X-rays to evaluate their spinal structure. 

But the pageants began to wane as chiropractors achieved their licensure goals. The last big contest was held in Chattanooga, TN in 1969. 


Miss Trans Brazil (Where the Winner Gets a Free Sex Change 

Operation)


As the Brazilian contestants sashayed onto the stage in pink bikinis for a beauty pageant held in Rio de Janeiro's João Caetano Theatre, their incredible figures drew loud applause and cheers from a hyped up, excited audience. 

The wolf-whistles and shouts of appreciation were not just for the models' feminine curves; they were also for the breathtaking courage of the leggy, high cheeked sirens. By flaunting their bodies, contestants made an unequivocal statement that they are proud to be transvestites and transsexuals, since they were all born as men.
However, that wasn't the most controversial aspect of the Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest. 


For the first time, the organizers, the Transgender Association for the State of Rio de Janeiro (RIO ASTRA), offered the winner a transsexual operation from male to female in Thailand. The prize encountered controversy because a sex change operation is against the law in Brazil.

The show is sponsored by the government's Social Assistance and Human Rights Department as part of the campaign to combat homophobic violence in the country.


Miss Pinup


Forget bikinis and fake tans - here's a beauty contest that celebrates glamour and elegance 1950s style. The fledgling Miss Pinup Australia competition avoids the less-is-more approach to clothing in modern beauty contests, instead showcasing styles and fashions that appear to be straight out of an episode of Mad Men.

NSW finalist Scarlette Rose, 25, said that she was drawn to the classic look and femininity of the era's clothing, makeup, and hairstyles. "I like taking care of how I present myself and putting a bit of effort into how I dress," she said.
"It's just very feminine compared to what comes out now." 


Miss Bobbed Hair


Bobbed hair and flapper dresses epitomize the “Roaring Twenties.” Around the country, women would cut their tresses for bobbed cuts while discarding their corsets and conservative clothing for loose, boxy dresses with dropped waistlines. These trends were so popular that, on February 27, 1925, Coral Gables in Florida decided to hold a beauty contest. The women were judged on one main factor – their hair. “Miss Bobbed-Hair” embodied the “Roaring Twenties” with her short, cropped hair and modern approach to femininity.


Miss Jail


In a country known for its beauty -- both natural and human -- it appears that even Brazil's convicted killers are easy on the eye. A prison in Recife, a city in the state of Pernambuco, recently held its inaugural Miss Jail pageant, joining a growing global list of contests for beauties behind bars.

Twelve contestants were judged for beauty, general knowledge, and their good behavior record. First prize included about $1,000 in cash to be deposited in the winner's prison bank account. The winner of Miss Jail 2011 was 19-year-old convicted murderer Rebecca Rhaysa Suelen Guedesin.

Miss Jail is the latest in a growing trend. Prison beauty pageants have also been held in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro, as well as in Russia, Colombia, and Lithuania. 



Miss Hooker


First of all, it's not what you think, you dirty minded reader. This event -- albeit with an eye-catching, titillating title -- is a celebration of art, talent, and... sparkles on steroids. On Friday, March 30, 2012 in Los Angeles, Corey Helford Gallery was pleased to present Natalia Fabia's 2012 Hooker Beauty Pageant at the Dragonfly Bar in Hollywood. The event was hosted by Brian Posehn, with judges Dave Navarro, Traci Lords, and Alexis Arquette.


According to hooker visionary and figurative artist Natalia Fabia, the word "hooker" could be loosely defined as "someone who sells one's talents and abilities, talent, or name for money, (but it also means) a rad, strong, talented, tough, colorful, independent, stylish, and beautiful woman." This pageant is Fabia's platform for highlighting real women in Hollywood's music and art scene. It's part burlesque performance, part improvised event and applauds beauty, brains, and brawn. 


Miss Atomic Bomb


Nevada became the center of the nation's attention during the 1950s after President Harry S. Truman authorized a 680-square-mile section of the Nellis Air Force Gunnery and Bombing Range for nuclear bomb testing. As each atomic blast lit up the Nevada scenery public interest increased, so much so that Americans around the country witnessed the first televised atomic blast in 1952. Atomic bomb fever began to infiltrate every aspect of society, from household goods to football teams naming themselves the “Atoms.”

Inspired by the cultural phenomena, Las Vegas decided to combine two of its major attractions – nuclear bombs and showgirls – into a beauty contest. The first atomic pin-up girl, Candyce King, appeared on May 9, 1952 in the “Evening Telegraph” (Dixon, Illinois) and the “Day Record” (Statesville, North Carolina) papers. She was called “Miss Atomic Blast.” In the spring of 1953, the city of North Las Vegas chose Paula Harris as Miss North Las Vegas of 1953 and gave her the nickname “Miss A-Bomb.”

Perhaps the most famous “Miss Atomic Bomb” was Copa Showgirl Lee A. Merlin. She was crowned, coinciding with Operation Pumbbob, while wearing a cotton mushroom cloud on the front of her swimsuit. The popular photograph by Don English was distributed nationally. She was the last “Miss Atomic Bomb.”



Miss Holocaust Survivor


In 2012, while grinning and waving, 14 women who survived the horrors of World War II paraded in an unusual pageant, vying for the honor of being crowned Israel's first "Miss Holocaust Survivor." Billed by organizers as a celebration of life, the event also stirred controversy. In a country where millions have been touched by the Holocaust, many argued that judging aging women who had suffered so much based on physical appearance was inappropriate, and even offensive.

Pageant organizer Shimon Sabag rejected the criticism, saying that the winners were chosen based on their personal stories of survival and rebuilding their lives after the war, and physical beauty was only a tiny part of the competition.

Nearly 300 women from across Israel registered for the competition and contestants were whittled down to the 14 finalists. The women, ranging in age from 74 to 97, clearly enjoyed themselves. Wearing black dresses, earrings, necklaces, and sporting blue-and-white numbered sashes, they were introduced to the adoring audience. Music played as the contestants walked along a red carpet, introduced themselves, and described their memories of World War II. 


Miss Dairy Cow


Contestants pose with dairy cows during the Miss Dairy Cow Pageant in Shuozhou, Shanxi Province. 















Sources:Agency