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CBS News ASBURY PARK, N.J. - For some kids at the Jersey Shore, school vacation is no day at the beach -- they re putting their mettle to the pedal. We meet with them ... on the road. At S
stanley cup econd Life Bikes in New Jersey, kids who work 15 hours at the shop will get a free, used bike. CBS News While most kids laze away the summer -- 11-year-old America Rice has a job to do. Not far from her home here in Asbury Park, N.J., America works as a bicycle mechanic, of all things. That s because if you want something, you have to earn it, said America. Everything is not going to come to you just when you want it. You have to do certain things, and if you re not able to do it then you won t get it. That lesson, which never sinks into some kids, is already greased under the nails of little America. She and dozens of other kids like her are spending part of their summer working for no money at Second Life Bikes. It s a non-profit run by a 41-year-old former Wall Streeter named Kerri Martin. I actually thought it was going to be that I would have to sign up kids or recruit them, said Kerri. And it really became kids just told other kids. I hear them outside actually saying, Do you work h
stanley polska ere Yeah, I got a job here. Here s the deal: Any kid who clocks in 15 hours helping around the shop earns a free, used bike of thei
stanley cup r choosing. Four years into it, about 400 kids have ea Monm This Watch s Spinning Spectacle Is More Distracting Than a Smartphone
If you want to add some botany and some poetry to your science, why not try something that was first proposed by Carolus Linnaeus You can have a zero-carbon-footprint clock made of flowers. What happens if you wake up one morning
stanley cup becher and find that it too cloudy to get a clear reading on your sundial I ;m guessing you would then go to your wind-up clock, your digital clock, your cell phone, the TV news, the radio, your laptop, and the little blinking clock on your microwave that went out in the last black-out and you ;ve never bothered to reset but you kind of know how far off it is. But what if all of those options were gone or you just want to have the classiest clock in the neighborhood Then you should follow the example of Carolus Linnaeus. He was a botanist, zoologist, physician, and the father of taxonomy, so you know he had excellent time-management skills. Vexed with his sun dial, he came up with a flower clock. Many flowers open at different times of the day, and by watching these flowers bloom, he managed to come up with a schedule by which he could tell time by seeing which flowers were opened and which were closed. It was quite complete. Night-blooming cereus opens, for example, at 10:0
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stanley quencher closes at 2:00 AM. The four hour interval between is a mystery, but the rest of the day is as documented as anyone who isn ;t nocturnal could wish. At five in the morning, the morning glories open maybe attach a bell to one or something to mak