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Fight an Anti-Knife DA by Attending New York Custom Knife Show in New Jersey

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In case you missed it several issues back in BLADE®, Manhattan, New York, district attorney Cyrus Vance recently banned just about all sporting knives, knife carry and just about anything else with an edge from his jurisdiction. As a result of this heinous act, Stephen D’Lack was forced to move the New York Custom Knife Show from New York City to Secaucus, New Jersey.

Well, this coming weekend is D’Lack’s show, and this is the chance for all good New Yorkers, New Jersey-ites and others to show Vance and his minions that no simple D.A., or any usurper of citizens’ rights, for that matter, can keep us knife enthusiasts from our appointed rounds at knife shows.

As a result, if you live anywhere near Secaucus, please attend the 33rd Annual New York Custom Knife Show, one of the world’s oldest custom knife shows, at the Crowne Plaza Hotel. For more information contact Stephen D’Lack, Dept. BLKS, POB 313, Turners, MO 65765 417-866-6688 hg_inchotmail.com.

Click here for complete show information.

Veterans Saluted With Free Meals, Discount Specials

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A number of restaurants and other businesses reportedly are offering free meals and/or special discounts to military veterans in observance of Veterans Day.

Applebee’s (http://www.applebees.com/vetsDay/default.aspx), Golden Corral (http://www.goldencorral.com/military/), McCormick & Schmick’s (http://www.mccormickandschmicks.com/featured-promotion/Veterans-Appreciation-Day.aspx), Outback Steakhouse (http://www.outback.com/pressroom/pr_101018.aspx), Home Depot and Lowe’s (http://themilitarywallet.com/home-depot-lowes-10-military-discount/) all are offering some kind of free deal or discount in connection with veterans and/or Veterans Day.

Visit any or all of the websites listed above for more details.

New York Custom Knife Show in New Jersy.

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We will be at the NY show that is being held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in SECAUCUS NJ. November 19,20,12 2010.
We will have a good seldction of knives. If you can drop by and say hello.
Pat and Wes Crawford

AKTI Makes Keeping Up To Date With Knife Laws Easier

Locate up-to-date information on legal issues that affect knife users, research laws in all 50 states and learn more about the activities of knife advocacy organization American Knife and Tool Institute (AKTI) on the redesigned AKTI.org website.

Knife advocates will find extensive legislation updates, educational materials and other current knife information at the new site. While some of the material is available only to members, much of the site caters to all knife users and provides resources for everyone who uses a knife as a tool—whether for work, recreation or as part of their everyday lives.

“For more than a decade, AKTI has used its website to keep the knife advocacy community updated about important issues that affect us all, in all 50 states, and at the federal level,” said AKTI Executive Director Jan Billeb. “This new design makes it easier for knife users to easily find the information they need, from knife safety resources to legislative updates to stories about how knives have been used in challenging work and recreational situations to save lives.”

Through its new website, the American Knife and Tool Institute shares information about state and federal knife laws and legislation. The organization has also added sections to the AKTI.org website specifically for legislators, law enforcement officers and media.

“We want to build on the work we’ve done and the reputation we have as the organization for those who work with or benefit from knives, and to support those who have questions about legal knife usage,” Billeb said.

Granger Knives is Knife Showcase Knifemaker of the Week

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Click to go to the Granger Knives page on Knife Showcase

Granger Knives is the Knife Showcase Knifemaker of the Week for Oct. 31, 2010.

Paul Granger has been turning out pieces since 1998 as Granger Knives and Pale Horse Fighters.

Despite fate’s best efforts to keep him from doing so, Granger said he sees no end in sight for his knifemaking.

“I’ve been shot, paralyzed from the neck down twice, almost died from meningitis and gone through a windshield backwards. So I know God loves me and isn’t through with me yet.”

Click here to visit the Granger Knives page on Knife Showcase.

Buck Hits Million Mark for Knives Made in 2010

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POST FALLS, IDAHO– When a 110 Folding Hunter rolled off the production line at Buck Knives on Friday, Oct. 29, it was the millionth knife made this year.

“We’re breaking records,” said Phil Duckett, Buck’s chief operating officer. “It’s awesome, and we still have two months to go.”

Another positive sign of growth has been the addition of 40 new employees this year, bringing Buck’s total workforce to 250 in their Post Falls, Idaho, plant.

“This is a testament to our commitment to making our products in America,” Duckett said. “The troops on the floor worked hard to get us to these impressive numbers.”

Pictured: Buck employees with the millionth knife produced in 2010.

Knives 55,000 Years Older Than Previously Thought

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Looks like man’s oldest tool just got older.

According to the journal Science, prehistoric humans were using a “highly skilled method” of making knives 75,000 years ago, about 55,000 years earlier than previously thought.

It had been assumed that the technique of “pressure-flaking”—otherwise known in the knife industry as “knapping” and practiced by Errett Callahan, Eric Bergland and others—was invented by Europeans 20,000 years ago. Basically, knapping consists of exerting pressure against the stone knife with another tool to create a sharp edge.

However, University of Colorado researchers found the same technique used in sharpening the “stone weapons” discovered in Blombos Cave in South Africa and knapped some 55,000 years earlier.

The researchers arrived at their conclusion by knapping some knives of their own and comparing the results to the stone points found in the Blombos Cave. The similarities between the results of the researchers’ knapped knives and many of the stone points from the cave led them to conclude the technique was used much earlier in the Middle Stone Age.

Information on exactly how the stone points were dated was unavailable at press time.

For more information visit http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/article863181.ece

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