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Keys to understanding my deep and meaningful lyrics of pain:
(ªªª) denotes desperate wailing, like when you've lost a loved one
(ººº) is more of an "oooooooooh" whisper, like you're an evil spirit trying to scare people in a forest
My soul, this prison (ªªª)
My life, this trap (ººº)
Rahr! Rahr!
Vengeance has come.
In my state of uncontrollable misery
Demons and angel fight for eternity
They don't know the horrors,
They can't know the pain,
They can't feel the sorrow that I've felt.
My soul, these chains (ªªª)
My body, this torture (ººº)
Rahr! Rahr!
Oblivion is upon us.
Fuck your corpse!
(I ain't no hero)
Fuck your corpse!
(I ain't not saint)
Fuck your corpse!
(I'm no believer)
Fuck your corpse!
(That was a bad burger)
My soul, my soul, my bloody bloody heart
My fucking pain means nothing to the unlistening night
Does nobody care?
Nobody cares
No one wants to know
So fuck your corpse!
(I ain't no messiah)
Fuck your fucking corpse!
(I ain't no legend)
Fuck your fucking corpse, motherfucker!
(I ain't no martyr)
(Pepsi sucks)
What we learned: Michigan won't be undefeated or No. 1 this week
Published Sunday, Jan 13, 2013 at 4:18 pm EST
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What we learned from No. 15 Ohio State’s 56-53 victory over No. 2 Michigan in a Big Ten Conference game Sunday afternoon at Value City Arena:
Michigan won’t be No. 1. We won’t have an undefeated team this season, as if anyone thought we would. The Wolverines became the final unbeaten team to fall. Duke had gone down Saturday at N.C. State, and now UM lost to rival Ohio State.
Amir Williams and Ohio State sent Michigan to its first loss of the season. (AP Photo)
This isn’t entirely bad for the Wolverines. Being No. 1 is nice for the sports information department, but for the team carries no particular benefit.
The key is to be one of four No. 1 seeds at the end. Michigan will face some obstacles to that end, particularly the presence of a tremendous Indiana team in the same conference. But the Wolverines have as good a chance as anyone, if they get back to executing their offense as they had earlier this season.
Box score | Play-by-play
There is a D in DeShaun
Because Buckeyes star DeShaun Thomas is such a prolific shooter—with 20 points, he was the only Ohio State player in double figures—and because other aspects of the game have come gradually to him, Thomas has a reputation for being a suspect defender.
That hasn’t been entirely fair. A team can’t be No. 2 in defensive efficiency, as Ohio State was last season, with a huge leak at one of its five positions. Thomas also did a terrific job on Kansas All-American Thomas Robinson in last year’s Final Four—at least until he got into early foul trouble.
When Michigan had the ball down a basket inside the final half-minute, OSU twice had soft-doubled Wolverines star Trey Burke on ball screens set by center Jordan Morgan. Because Morgan is not a shooter, Burke really didn’t have a play option and the UM bench called time. Out of the huddle, coach John Beilein called for...
Thomas was guarding Robinson, so it was also a direct challenge for him to make the play. Thomas’ D against that play was so good Burke never got a clean lane to drive and make a play, and he was forced to step back into a 3-pointer. It nearly fell, but it didn’t fall.
Ohio State was letting its defense impact its offense
Most coaches worry that when their players aren’t scoring they will let it erode their defensive effort. For Ohio State, it seems, it was the other way around.
The Buckeyes had not been the oppressive defensive team early in the season that had been expected, that they were a year ago, and that was having a significant impact on the efficiency of their attack. With the Wolverines providing fuel with live-ball turnovers Ohio State gladly turned into fastbreak baskets, the conf...
Against Kansas last month, the Buckeyes were left open for just about any 3-point shot they wanted, so long as it wasn’t Deshaun Thomas wanting it, and made precious few of them count—only 8 out of 31 attempts.
In the Michigan game, even 24 percent shooter Sam Thompson, who’d made only six 3-pointers all year, fired with confidence in helping OSU to build a 29-8 lead.
The Ohio State defense was so bothersome that Michigan seemed almost to want no part of it early in the second half. Tim Hardaway and freshman Nik Stauskas both fired guarded jumpers mid-way through the shot-clock cycle that looked more like surrender than attempts to score.
Aaron Craft still owns a piece of Trey Burke
They met three times last season, with Ohio State winning two of them—and Craft decisively winning the individual matchup in those two games.
Burke was co-Big Ten freshman of the year, but it’s likely he wouldn’t have gotten any part of that honor if he’d played against Craft every game. Last season Burke shot 12-of-36 in those three games and averaged 5.3 turnovers.
In this one Burke made an early 3-pointer, then failed to score for the rest of the first half. Craft essentially took his lunch money with 14:11 left in the game, reaching out and swiping the ball directly from Burke’s dribble.
Burke’s only option to playing like himself was to play like himself—pushing the ball into transition and getting it down court before Craft could set up in a defensive stance. The two second-half fastbreak baskets that cut the Buckeyes’ lead to 44-40 came on a Burke feed to Hardaway and then a Burke layup. Was that in...
“I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a guy play defense like he did today,” coach Thad Matta said to CBS after the game. “At one point he said, ‘Stop helping, I got him.’ ”
If the Buckeyes have to face defense, it’s trouble
What worked for Ohio State in this game was getting control of the balls the Wolverines were either setting loose on the floor or passing directly to the Buckeyes and transforming them into fastbreak scores.
After a terrific first half, the Buckeyes made only 4-of-16 in the first 15 minutes of the second half, and spiced that up with four turnovers. The lead that once was 21 points was gone when Glenn Robinson nailed a top-key 3-pointer to tie it at 46.
The Buckeyes recovered their bearings when they got into transition and wound up with consecutive dunks. The first by Sam Thompson had made it 46-43, and another by Evan Ravenel put OSU back into the lead. On the next Buckeyes trip, Ravenel wound up mismatched against Hardaway and bulled through him for a low-post scor...
Basketball needs the “advantage” call
In soccer if a foul occurs that is going to interrupt a potential scoring chance, the referee indicates the offense but allows the offense to continue its pursuit of a goal.
Why does basketball allow a beaten defender to use the rules to his advantage?
With Ohio State up six points in the final two minutes, Burke stripped Craft and took off into the open court. Craft—smartly, no surprise—reached out and attempted to foul Burke before he could score the easy basket. It did not appear that Craft actually got there in time. Craft struck Burke as he began a layup attempt...
Either way, it would be better for basketball to rewrite its rules to essentially take that foul out of the game. If Craft knew that the foul would not stop the play, he wouldn’t bother to commit it. Anyone out there really believe that what basketball needs is fewer fastbreak baskets?
class Task
Library: Foundation
Package: Tasks
Header: Poco/Task.h
A Task is a subclass of Runnable that has a name and supports progress reporting and cancellation.
A TaskManager object can be used to take care of the lifecycle of a Task.
Direct Base Classes: Runnable, RefCountedObject
All Base Classes: RefCountedObject, Runnable
Member Summary
Member Functions: cancel, getOwner, isCancelled, name, postNotification, progress, reset, run, runTask, setOwner, setProgress, setState, sleep, state
Inherited Functions: duplicate, referenceCount, release, run
    const std::string & name
Creates the Task.
~Task protected virtual
virtual ~Task();
Destroys the Task.
Member Functions
cancel virtual
virtual void cancel();
Requests the task to cancel itself. For cancellation to work, the task's runTask() method must periodically call isCancelled() and react accordingly.
Can be overridden to implement custom behavior, but the base class implementation of cancel() should be called to ensure proper behavior.
isCancelled inline
bool isCancelled() const;
Returns true if cancellation of the task has been requested.
A Task's runTask() method should periodically call this method and stop whatever it is doing in an orderly way when this method returns true.
name inline
const std::string & name() const;
Returns the task's name.
progress inline