Wednesday, October 31, 2012

My Daughter is Five. Parenting Starts Now. | Pier to Peer

One of my favorite bloggers, What Would Gwyneth Do, recently wrote about?how she believes?parenting really started when her daughter turned?five. It struck a chord with me?since?I have a five-year?old kindergartener as well. I had such a ?aha!? parenting moment that this is the time?my daughter?will form her own childhood memories.

Here is the blog post by Raluca?of WWGD?that was so right-on! I am happy to share it with all of you.

My Daughter is Five. Parenting Starts Now.

I remember kindergarten.

I remember my teacher Mrs. Steiner with her curly black hair, thin-rimmed glasses and less-than-tall physique.

I remember being dropped off in the morning. The kindergarten kids had a separate side entrance in the building made of brick, but from our safe haven we could see the big kids and the yellow school buses barreling up the school?s main driveway and we watched with a mix of anticipation and fear.

I remember walking home across the big field after school, sometimes in green grass, sometimes through feet of snow, but despite the unpredictable weather, always excited to see my mom and have a snack?even if I wasn?t really hungry.

I remember going for sleepovers at my neighbor?s house and calling my dad in the middle of the night (probably 9pm or so, but middle of the night for a 5-year-old) to come and get me. I remember the comfort of walking home with him in my pajamas, my hand in his, and the feeling of seeing my mom?s tired face waiting for me.

Before that, I don?t remember much of life.

I remember a big black dog from when I was a toddler and being scared of it.

That?s about it.

My daughter is five years old now. She just started kindergarten.

And it has occurred to me that as amazing and challenging and inspiring as parenthood has been thus far, it really all only begins now.

Yes, the past five years have built a great foundation. She can walk, talk, potty, say please and thank you, dress herself, write her name, pour a glass of milk. All crucial things, of course.

But now, from now on, she will not only learn, she will remember.

She will really remember.

She will take elements of the every day from here on in and keep them with her forever. She will develop her sense of self, her sense of others, and her sense of the world around her, and it will stay with her, like an imprint on her mind. She will see things and taste flavors and visit places and then revisit them often, long after she has left. She will hear our words and see our actions and sense our emotions, and they will be more crucial than anything we have done thus far?more amazing, more challenging, more inspiring.

Because she will remember.

So what do I want her to remember?

I want her to remember Taco Tuesdays. I want her to remember after-school ice cream trips. I want her to remember sitting in the backseat of mommy?s car with the sunroof open and the music turned up loud. I want her to remember noisy, boisterous dinners with her family. I want her to remember the genuine joy in our faces when she bounds down the stairs in the morning. I want her to remember baking pumpkin loaves. I want her to remember sitting down at the kitchen table to do her homework every night. I want her to remember the odd time-out and how it made her feel to get it. I want her to remember the kids who were nice to her on the playground. I want her to remember the kids that weren?t so nice. I want her to remember how she reacted to both, how they made her feel. I want her to remember days at the beach and Friday movie nights and reading in bed with a flashlight.

And it?s my job to help her remember all that and more.

It?s my job to amaze and challenge and inspire.

It?s my job to create the memories and moments she will look back on when she has a child of her own.

And now, five years in, I feel like I am just getting to work.

Source: http://www.piertopeer.net/2012/10/30/my-daughter-is-five-parenting-starts-now/

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Gnomes!

Their noses ranged from potato-shaped to hawkish. A bubbling stew file with everything from tufts of grass to bird eggs danced in a bronze pot. Conversation was light: the gnomes had long ago tired of using their own games against one-another.

Slow-Turtle pulled out a copper pipe and began to play a tired, night-time melody. Beyond the ring of wagons, yellow glowing eyes watched -- hundreds of them -- but far too frightened by the flickering camp.

Nevertheless, High-Falcon and Lazy-Cat had their silver-tipped bolts at the ready. Simple lockbows were sufficient: one quick flick of the wrist and the string would snap the tips almost as fast as the wind could ever blow. Lazy-Cat sang to herself and her enchanted weapons.

Wild-Goose, snoring loudly through his pear-shaped nose, was armed with a steel knife; every other gnome (twelve in all) had but an iron dagger. Their names were: Wind-Biter, the illusionist; Rough-Weasel, the master of traps; Cold-Snake, the healer; Stomping Beaver, the chef; Angry-Goat, the acrobat; Pleased-to-Meetcha, the clown; Singing-Fire, the priest, and Guppy, the wizard.

They had set up camp in a small clearing just off the road. The ash and pine filled the air. The bubbling of the creek in the gulch below could still be heard beneath the moon and stars.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/Om9yLp8fG3c/viewtopic.php

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Reports: UK rocker arrested as part of Savile case

LONDON (AP) ? Police investigating child sex abuse allegations against the late BBC television host Jimmy Savile arrested former glam rock star and convicted sex offender Gary Glitter on Sunday, British media reported, raising further questions about whether Savile was at the center of a broader pedophile ring.

Police would not directly identify the suspect arrested Sunday, but media including the BBC and Press Association reported he was the 68-year-old Glitter.

The musician, whose real name is Paul Gadd, made it big with the crowd-pleasing hit "Rock & Roll (Part 2)," a mostly instrumental anthem that has been a staple at American sporting events, thanks to its catchy "hey" chorus. But he fell into disgrace after being convicted on child abuse charges in Vietnam.

Sunday's arrest was the first in a widening scandal over Savile's alleged sex crimes, which started garnering attention earlier this month when a television documentary showed several women claiming that Savile abused them when they were teenagers. Hundreds of potential victims have since come forward to report similar claims to police against Savile, a much-loved children's TV presenter and disc jockey who died at the age of 84 last year.

Most have alleged abuse by Savile, but some said they were abused by Savile and others. Most claimed they were assaulted in their early teens.

The scandal has raised questions about whether the BBC, the publicly funded and trusted broadcaster, had ignored crimes it suspected over several decades. Its executives have apologized and vowed to uncover the true scale of the alleged abuse.

"The BBC's reputation is on the line," Chris Patten, the chairman of the BBC Trust, wrote in The Mail on Sunday newspaper. "The BBC risks squandering public trust because one of its stars over three decades was apparently a sexual criminal ... and because others ? BBC employees and hangers-on ? may also have been involved."

On Sunday, the BBC and Sky News showed footage of Glitter, who wore a hat, a dark coat and sunglasses, being taken from his home by officers and driven away.

Police would not directly identify the suspect, but when asked about Glitter a spokesman said the force arrested a man in his 60s early Sunday morning in London on suspicion of sexual offenses in connection with the Savile probe. He was released later Sunday and was due to return to a London police station in December for further questioning, police said. British police do not generally identify suspects under arrest by name until they are charged.

Glitter, known for his shiny jumpsuits and bouffant wigs, was jailed in Britain in 1999 for possessing child pornography, and convicted in 2006 in Vietnam of committing "obscene acts with children" ? offenses involving girls aged 10 and 11. He was deported back to Britain in 2008.

In 2006, the NFL advised its football teams not to use the Glitter version of "Rock and Roll (Part 2)" at games.

One witness recently told a BBC-TV show that she once saw Glitter having sex with a schoolgirl in Savile's dressing room at the broadcaster's TV center in the 1970s. Glitter has denied the allegations.

Police have said that though the majority of cases it is investigating relate to Savile alone, some involve the entertainer and other unidentified suspects. In addition, some potential victims who reported abuse by Savile also told police about separate allegations against unidentified men that did not involve the BBC host.

The scandal has horrified Britain with revelations that Savile, the longtime host of the popular BBC shows "Top of the Pops" and "Jim will Fix It," allegedly cajoled and coerced vulnerable teens into having sex with him in his car, his camper van, and even in dingy dressing rooms on BBC premises. Police describe him as one of the worst sex offenders in recent history.

The BBC has set up an independent inquiry into the corporation's culture and practices in the years Savile worked there. It also launched a separate inquiry into why its managers shelved an investigation into the allegations.

But the scandal continues to put the broadcaster under pressure, and it seems likely that more people ? either outside or inside the corporation ? could be implicated.

"It could be the beginning of other high-profile arrests," Roy Greenslade, a journalism professor at London's City University, said in an interview with The Associated Press on Sunday.

Max Clifford, a prominent public relations guru, claimed that dozens of celebrities from the 1960s and 1970s have approached him to express fear that they could be drawn into to the scandal and criticized for their hedonistic behavior in the past.

Greenslade said that while Glitter's arrest must be a huge concern to the BBC, it is too early to say that the broadcaster's reputation is in crisis.

"If any BBC employee is shown to be involved, then there would be a nosedive in public trust," he said. "But nothing at the moment has been proven."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reports-uk-rocker-arrested-part-savile-case-185828085.html

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Wall Street still dark, exchanges test systems

NEW YORK (AP) ? With large portions of lower Manhattan still dark early Tuesday, U.S. stock exchanges said they were testing contingency plans to ensure trading resumes as soon as possible this week after Hurricane Sandy smashed into the East Coast.

U.S. markets will be closed for a second day, but the New York Stock Exchange said that despite reports that its historic trading floor suffered irreparable damage, no such damage has occurred and that contingency plans are being tested only as a safety measure.

The measures would push the opening and closing auctions to the electronic NYSE Arca system.

Futures trading will go on until 9:15 a.m. Eastern Tuesday, but volume is light.

Dow Jones industrial futures fell 21 points to 13,033. The broader S&P futures gave up 0.6 points to 1,407. Nasdaq futures slipped 7.75 points to 2,651.25.

Officials with the NYSE and Nasdaq say they plan to open on Wednesday, though portions of southern Manhattan were inundated with water.

Tuesday marks the first time since 1888 that the NYSE remained closed for two consecutive days due to weather.

Dozens of companies have postponed earnings reports this week because of the storm, but Ford Motor Co. did release results for the third quarter that topped Wall Street expectations.

Ford's revenue fell 3 percent to $32.1 billion because of the economic crisis in Europe and falling sales in South America. The company exceeded Wall Street's revenue forecast of $31.5 billion largely because of North America, where revenue jumped 8 percent.

Global markets rebounded Tuesday though trading was subdued in the wake of the storm that pounded Wall Street, in addition to a broad swath of the East Coast.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 0.7 percent at 5,835 while Germany's DAX rose 0.9 percent to 7,266. The CAC-40 in France was 0.8 percent higher at 3,436.

Earlier in Asia, trading was mixed.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index fell 1 percent to close at 8,841.98.

South Korea's Kospi index rose 0.4 percent to 1,899.58 but Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 0.4 percent to 21,428.58. Benchmarks in mainland China also rose.

Crude oil prices rose 50 cents to $86.04 Tuesday in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-street-still-dark-exchanges-test-systems-111719709--finance.html

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reading "Garmin? Introduces GTX 3000 TCAS II - Garmin ...

OLATHE, Kan./October 29, 2012/Business Wire ? Garmin International Inc., a unit of Garmin Ltd. (NASDAQ: GRMN), the global leader in satellite navigation, announced today the GTX 3000, a new remote-mount, Mode-S transponder designed to accommodate the environmental and operational demands of transport category aircraft. The GTX 3000 meets the requirements for TCAS II/ACAS II compatibility and also meets the latest standards for full ADS-B ?Out? compliance, offering business and regional aircraft a new solution to satisfy worldwide regulatory requirements.?

?The GTX 3000 has an all-new, modern design that makes it much smaller and more lightweight, yet more advanced than other TCAS II-compatible transponders on the market,? said Carl Wolf, Garmin?s vice president of aviation sales and marketing. ?With higher transmit power and full ADS-B Out capability, this transponder is another reflection of Garmin?s commitment to offering the most forward-looking products in business aviation.?

The GTX 3000 has received TSO/DO-260B authorization allowing it to meet current compliance standards as a certified ADS-B Out solution, when paired with a compatible position source. The GTX 3000 broadcasts on the 1090 MHz ADS-B frequency, making this an ideal solution for those business aircraft that fly at high altitudes or outside of the U.S. where it will be required to broadcast on the 1090 frequency band.

The GTX 3000 will be standard equipment on several new aircraft platforms including the Cessna Citation TEN, Citation Latitude, Citation Longitude and Citation Sovereign, the Bombardier Learjet 70 and Learjet 75, as well as future forward fit and upgrade programs.

Garmin?s aviation business segment is a leading provider of solutions to OEM, aftermarket, military and government customers. Garmin?s portfolio includes navigation, communication, flight control, hazard avoidance, surveillance, and other products and services that are known for innovation, reliability, and value.

About Garmin
Garmin International Inc. is a subsidiary of Garmin Ltd. (Nasdaq: GRMN), the global leader in satellite navigation. Since 1989, this group of companies has designed, manufactured, marketed and sold navigation, communication and information devices and applications ? most of which are enabled by GPS technology. Garmin?s products serve automotive, mobile, wireless, outdoor recreation, marine, aviation, and OEM applications. Garmin Ltd. is incorporated in Switzerland, and its principal subsidiaries are located in the United States, Taiwan and the United Kingdom. For more information, visit Garmin's virtual pressroom at www.garmin.com/pressroom or contact the Media Relations department at 913-397-8200. Garmin is a registered trademark of Garmin Ltd. or its subsidiaries.

All other brands, product names, company names, trademarks and service marks are the properties of their respective owners. All rights reserved.

Notice on Forward-Looking Statements:
This release includes forward-looking statements regarding Garmin Ltd. and its business. Such statements are based on management?s current expectations.? The forward-looking events and circumstances discussed in this release may not occur and actual results could differ materially as a result of known and unknown risk factors and uncertainties affecting Garmin, including, but not limited to, the risk factors listed in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 25, 2010, filed by Garmin with the Securities and Exchange Commission (Commission file number 0-31983).? A copy of such Form 10-K is available at www.garmin.com/aboutGarmin/invRelations/finReports.html.? No forward-looking statement can be guaranteed.? Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made and Garmin undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

###

Source: http://garmin.blogs.com/pr/2012/10/garmin-introduces-gtx-3000-tcas-iiacas-ii-compatible-and-ads-b-compliant-transponder-for-business-an.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Obama: Storm is 'serious and big,' and slow-moving

President Barack Obama, center, attends a briefing with Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate, right, at the National Response Coordination Center at FEMA Headquarters in Washington, on Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Barack Obama, center, attends a briefing with Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate, right, at the National Response Coordination Center at FEMA Headquarters in Washington, on Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Barack Obama speaks as he attends a briefing with Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate, right, at the National Response Coordination Center at FEMA Headquarters in Washington, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012.(AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Barack Obama pauses before speaking to the media at the National Response Coordination Center at the Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters in Washington, on Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. FEMA is coordinating the deployment of federal resources in preparation for Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama said Sunday that the storm taking aim at the East Coast is a "serious and big storm" that will be slow-moving and might take time to clear up. The government would "respond big and respond fast" after it hits, he said.

Obama met with federal emergency officials for an update on the storm's path and the danger it poses to the Middle Atlantic States and New England.

"My main message to everybody involved is that we have to take this seriously," Obama said. He urged people to "listen to your local officials."

The president said emergency officials were confident that staging for the storm was in place.

Hurricane Sandy was expected to hit the East Coast late Monday, then combine with two winter weather systems as it moves inland, creating a hybrid superstorm. At least four battleground states are likely to be hit: New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia.

Obama traveled the nearly three miles from the White House to the Federal Emergency Management Agency's headquarters in his motorcade. He made the comments after a briefing by agency officials that was led by FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate. The group participated in a conference call with governors in states in the storm's path, including Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and New York. The president also spoke with mayors from Washington, Newark, N.J., Baltimore and Philadelphia.

As part of the briefing, the president also met with FEMA workers and thanked them.

"My message to the governors as well as to the mayors is anything they need, we will be there, and we will cut through red tape. We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of rules," he said. "We want to make sure we are anticipating and leaning forward into making sure that we have the best possible response to what is going to be a big and messy system.

Later Sunday the president was heading to Florida where he's campaigning on Monday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-28-Obama/id-9d82008ee9814a31a2f97fa74fe59ce4

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Personal grievance devil's in the detail | Stuff.co.nz

OPINION: It is not too hard to picture an employee who has been dismissed storming out of the office yelling: "I am bringing a personal grievance - see you in court".

Sounds very Boston Legal, but it does sometimes happen. The question is, then, whether this type of proclamation is enough to validly raise a grievance under the Employment Relations Act.

On the face of it, raising a personal grievance sounds easy. In reality, there is more to getting it right than one would think.

The universal ability of employees in New Zealand to pursue a personal grievance over the way they have been treated in their employment was introduced by a National government in the early 1990s. How grievances are commenced has changed little since that time.

An employee has to "raise a personal grievance", which essentially means letting the employer know that they have a specific complaint to make about their employment.

Personal grievances can be made alleging unjustified dismissal, unjustified disadvantage, discrimination, and sexual and racial harassment.

Importantly, there is a time limit of 90 days in which to raise a personal grievance with an employer. This starts from the date of the event giving rise to the grievance, or when the employee became aware of the event, and is 90 calendar days - not business days.

Where the complaint is about conduct that is ongoing, as in some cases of sexual harassment or bullying, 90 days begins from the most recent occurrence of the inappropriate behaviour.

Essentially, raising a personal grievance requires the employee to notify the employer of their grievance in enough detail that the employer can respond.

Specific words do not need to used, nor does it need to be done in a particular format or through a particular medium. The employee can tell the employer verbally, write a letter, or send an email. What matters is the timing and the content - and this has been the subject of several cases before the Employment Relations Authority.

The recent case of Idea Services Ltd v Valerie Barker is an example. Barker was employed as a community service worker for Idea Services, an organisation that provides support to people with intellectual disabilities throughout New Zealand.

Issues arose with Barker's employment and, after a meeting with her manager, she was advised that she was being dismissed with two weeks' pay in lieu of notice.

At the meeting, her union representative tried to raise a personal grievance, saying, "We will be taking action for Ms Barker under s103 of the CEA Personal Grievance and also the Health and Safety in Employment Act."

The Employment Court considered that the words used by Barker's union representative were not enough to validly raise a personal grievance. The employer could not tell from what the representative said what Barker was complaining about in enough detail to enable it to respond.

After the meeting, Barker wrote to her employer advising that she was taking this opportunity to inform them that she would "be pursuing a personal grievance against yourself as Lakeland Branch, Community Service Manager".

The court again considered that this was not clear enough for the same reasons.

In an earlier case (Creedy v Commissioner of Police), the court held that it is not enough for an employee to say that they have a personal grievance, to refer to the particular section of the Employment Relations Act 2000, or to simply say that they consider they have been unjustifiably dismissed.

What matters is whether they have provided enough detail for the employer to respond with a view to resolving the grievance soon and informally.

The employer needs to know why the employee is complaining. For example, what exactly is it about the dismissal that they consider unjustified and why?

An employee who fails to raise a personal grievance within 90 days, or in enough detail, risks not being able to pursue their grievance. They lose their recourse to any remedy - no lost wages, no compensation for hurt and humiliation, and no possibility of reinstatement.

An employee may raise a grievance outside of the 90 days only with the consent of the employer, or where exceptional circumstances exist. Not having an employment agreement explaining the 90-day rule, as required by law, may be grounds for exceptional circumstances.

Exceptional circumstances may also exist where the employee has been so affected by the matter that they were unable to take action sooner. This is a very high standard to meet - it essentially requires the employee to show they were so incapacitated on each day of the 90-day period that they could not have taken steps to raise a grievance.

Another ground for exceptional circumstances is where the employee has made reasonable arrangements with a union representative or lawyer to raise the grievance on their behalf, and that person has failed to do so within the required time frame. Shameful as it is, this ground is most often successful.

Both employers and employees need to understand how the 90-day period for raising a grievance works. Employees need to make sure they provide enough information and get the grievance in within the 90-day period.

Conversely, employers should always check that any grievance raised is within the statutory time period and enough information is provided. If not, the claim may be thrown out before it starts.

- Susan Hornsby-Geluk is a partner at Chen Palmer, New Zealand public and employment law specialists.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/opinion-analysis/7879047/Personal-grievance-devils-in-the-detail

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Download PhoneWorks Pro 2004

PhoneWorks 2004 is an easy-to-use and powerful telephone, voice mail answering system, and fax messaging solution for your PC. PhoneWorks solves your messaging problems by dramatically simplifying how you read, listen to, and manage your daily information. Accessible remotely while you are on the road, PhoneWorks acts as a central database that stores and manages your e-mail, voice mail, and fax messages.

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Source: http://www.free-to-try.com/windows/communications/fax-tools/phoneworks-pro/

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

OpEdNews - Article: Emergency preparedness checklist for perfect ...

Cross-posted from Natural News Called a "monster storm," Hurricane Sandy is much more than a hurricane. It's a?hybrid monster storm system?that weather experts are now warning could cause $1 billion in damage when it strikes the U.S. eastern seaboard early Tuesday morning.

If you're living anywhere near Philadelphia, Boston, Delaware or surrounding states, you have a very limited window of opportunity to get ready with everything you'll need to ride out this storm. That's the purpose of this article: To give you an emergency preparedness checklist for surviving this "monster storm."

Even if you don't live nearby, this storm can serve as an important reminder: We must ALL be prepared for unexpected events, or we can easily be caught empty-handed.

A long-lasting event: 2-3 days of being hammered by Mother Nature ?

Hurricane Sandy is not some simple hurricane that blows through in one night and then is over. "It's going to be a long-lasting event, two to three days of impact for a lot of people,"?said James Franklin?of the?National Hurricane Center in Miami. "Wind damage, widespread power outages, heavy rainfall, inland flooding and somebody is going to get a significant surge event."

Given that it usually takes another 2-3 days for cleaning up city streets after a massive snowfall event, this means the following:

!!?You need to have a 6-day food and water supply ready right now!?!!?


That's 3 days for the storm and 3 days for cleanup. And that's if nothing else goes terribly wrong. In a worst-case scenario, this could extend to 7-10 days in some of the harder-hit areas.

Local grocery stores are already sold out of essential items ?

Anthony Gucciardi of?NaturalSociety.com?lives in the area expected to be hit by this super storm. Here's his first-hand report from earlier today:
"Major grocery stores in the area have completely sold out of essential items like batteries, bottled water, and even highly processed snack foods that do not require preparation or refrigeration. I personally went to purchase a few minor items for my?preparedness?kit from a local grocery outlet that is quite large and witnessed completely empty shelves within the aisle that generally contains large amounts of water bottles along with gallon jugs, and various glass sparkling?water?bottles. The aisle that houses the batteries (particularly the heavy duty kind used for most flashlights) was also almost entirely dry. When shopping I also saw several individuals with the government-approved 'survival'?checklist, striking off the items one by one as they acquired them.

"Last year's hurricane Irene prompted somewhat of a response from locals within the Philadelphia and New York City area in regards to preparation and concern, but this hurricane has generated one that is far more severe. It is conservative to say that by the end of this weekend going into the storm (assuming it does hit as predicted), most if not all local stores will be out of most essential and even non-essential items. And this is just a few days after the news of the storm hit the mainstream media."

See my complete preparedness checklist, below...

Staying warm ?

Another huge concern with all this is the possibility that?the power may be out.?As temperatures drop, this could put many people in the position of having to endure very cold indoor temperatures. This lack of heating could endure for many days, even as long as two weeks in some areas.

The best defense against the cold is, of course, to have good shelter (a roof over your head), warm clothing and extra sleeping bags for all family members.

Do NOT plan on using propane heaters indoors as these are a health hazard and a fire hazard when used indoors. Same story with candles.

Water: Do you have enough? ?

Imagine a week without tap water. Now you're starting to get the picture of what may be coming.

If this storm hits as promised, you're going to be living in?third-world conditions?for about a week. Most Americans have never lived in a third-world country like I have, so they've never really tried to live without running water, electricity, grocery stores, and so on. (It's no fun, believe me. Nothing like a cold sponge shower to wake you up in the morning, eh?)

You'll need a MINIMUM of 2 gallons per day, per person, stored in your home or apartment. So if there are two of you living there, and you're planning for six days without running water, you will need?24 gallons of water?stored, got it?

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The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.

Writers Guidelines

Source: http://www.opednews.com/articles/Emergency-preparedness-che-by-Mike-Adams-121027-438.html

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Threat of superstorm launches mass evacuations in coastal areas

SHIP BOTTOM, N.J. (AP) ? Forget distinctions like tropical storm or hurricane. Don't get fixated on a particular track. Wherever it hits, the rare behemoth storm inexorably gathering in the eastern U.S. will afflict a third of the country with sheets of rain, high winds and heavy snow, say officials who warned millions in coastal areas to get out of the way.

"We're looking at impact of greater than 50 to 60 million people," said Louis Uccellini, head of environmental prediction for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

As Hurricane Sandy barreled north from the Caribbean ? where it left nearly five dozen dead ? to meet two other powerful winter storms, experts said it didn't matter how strong the storm was when it hit land: The rare hybrid storm that follows will cause havoc over 800 miles from the East Coast to the Great Lakes.

"This is not a coastal threat alone," said Craig Fugate, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. "This is a very large area."

President Barack Obama was monitoring the storm and working with state and locals governments to make sure they get the resources needed to prepare, administration officials said.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie declared a state of emergency Saturday as hundreds of coastal residents started moving inland and the state was set to close its casinos. New York's governor was considering shutting down the subways to avoid flooding and half a dozen states warned residents to prepare for several days of lost power.

Sandy weakened briefly to a tropical storm early Saturday but was soon back up to Category 1 strength, packing 75 mph winds about 305 miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C., as of 11 p.m. Forecasters said the storm was spreading tropical storm conditions across the coastline of North Carolina, and they were expected to move up the mid-Atlantic coastline late Sunday. Experts said the storm was most likely to hit the southern New Jersey coastline by late Monday or early Tuesday.

Governors from North Carolina, where heavy rain was expected Sunday, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday.

Christie, who was widely criticized for not interrupting a family vacation in Florida while a snowstorm pummeled the state in 2010, broke off campaigning for Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in North Carolina on Friday to return home.

"I can be as cynical as anyone," the pugnacious chief executive said in a bit of understatement Saturday. "But when the storm comes, if it's as bad as they're predicting, you're going to wish you weren't as cynical as you otherwise might have been."

The storm forced the presidential campaign to juggle schedules. Romney scrapped plans to campaign Sunday in the swing state of Virginia and switched his schedule for the day to Ohio. First lady Michelle Obama canceled an appearance in New Hampshire for Tuesday, and Obama moved a planned Monday departure for Florida to Sunday night to beat the storm. He canceled appearances in Northern Virginia on Monday and Colorado on Tuesday.

In Ship Bottom, just north of Atlantic City, Alice and Giovanni Stockton-Rossini spent Saturday packing clothing in the backyard of their home, a few hundred yards from the ocean on Long Beach Island. Their neighborhood was under a voluntary evacuation order, but they didn't need to be forced.

"It's really frightening," Alice Stockton-Rossi said. "But you know how many times they tell you, 'This is it, it's really coming and it's really the big one' and then it turns out not to be? I'm afraid people will tune it out because of all the false alarms before ... (but) this one might be the one."

A few blocks away, Russ Linke was taking no chances. He and his wife secured the patio furniture, packed the bicycles into the pickup truck, and headed off the island.

What makes the storm so dangerous and unusual is that it is coming at the tail end of hurricane season and the beginning of winter storm season, "so it's kind of taking something from both," said Jeff Masters, director of the private service Weather Underground.

Masters said the storm could be bigger than the worst East Coast storm on record ? the 1938 New England hurricane known as the Long Island Express, which killed nearly 800 people. "Part hurricane, part nor'easter ? all trouble," he said. Experts said to expect high winds over 800 miles and up to 2 feet of snow as far inland as West Virginia.

And the storm was so big, and the convergence of the three storms so rare, that "we just can't pinpoint who is going to get the worst of it," said Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Officials are particularly worried about the possibility of subway flooding in New York City, said Uccellini.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to prepare to shut the city's subways, buses and suburban trains by Sunday, but delayed making a final decision. The city shut the subways down before last year's Hurricane Irene, and a Columbia University study predicted that an Irene surge just 1 foot higher would have paralyzed lower Manhattan.

Up and down the Eastern Seaboard and far inland, officials urged residents and businesses to prepare in big ways and little.

On Saturday evening, Amtrak began canceling train service to parts of the East Coast, including between Washington, D.C., and New York. Airlines started moving planes out of East Coast airports to avoid damage and adding flights out of New York and Washington on Sunday in preparation for flight cancellations on Monday.

The Virginia National Guard was authorized to call up to 500 troops to active duty for debris removal and road-clearing, while homeowners stacked sandbags at their front doors in coastal towns. At a Home Depot in Virginia Beach, employee Dave Jusino said the store was swamped with customers.

"We have organized chaos, is what I call it," Jusino said. "We organize a group of 10 associates, give them certain responsibilities and we just separate the lines, organize four customers at a time, load up their cars and get them out the door and then take the next customers."

Utility officials warned rains could saturate the ground, causing trees to topple into power lines, and told residents to prepare for several days at home without power. "We're facing a very real possibility of widespread, prolonged power outages," said Ruth Miller, spokeswoman for the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency.

Warren Ellis, who was on an annual fishing pilgrimage on North Carolina's Outer Banks, didn't act fast enough to get home. Ellis' 73-year-old father managed to get off uninhabited Portsmouth Island near Cape Hatteras by ferry Friday. But the son and his camper got stranded when high winds and surf forced the ferry service to suspend operations Saturday.

"We might not get off here until Tuesday or Wednesday, which doesn't hurt my feelings that much," said Ellis, 44, of Amissville, Va. "Because the fishing's going to be really good after this storm."

Last year, Hurricane Irene poked a new inlet through the island, cutting the only road off Hatteras Island for about 4,000.

In Connecticut, the Naval Submarine Base in Groton prepared to install flood gates and pile up sandbags to protect against flooding while its five submarines remain in port through the storm.

Lobsterman Greg Griffen in Maine wasn't taking any chances; he moved 100 of his traps to deep water, where they are less vulnerable to shifting and damage in a storm.

"Some of my competitors have been pulling their traps and taking them right home," said Griffen. The dire forecast "sort of encouraged them to pull the plug on the season."

In Muncy Valley in northern Pennsylvania, Rich Fry learned his lesson from last year, when Tropical Storm Lee inundated his Katie's Country Store.

In between helping customers picking up necessities Saturday, Fry was moving materials above the flood line. Fry said he was still trying to recover from the losses of last year's storm, when he estimates he lost $35,000 in merchandise.

"It will take a lot of years to cover that," he said.

Christie's emergency declaration will force the shutdown of Atlantic City's 12 casinos for only the fourth time in the 34-year history of legalized gambling here. The approach of Hurricane Irene shut down the casinos for three days last August.

Atlantic City officials said they would begin evacuating the gambling hub's 30,000 residents at noon Sunday, busing them to mainland shelters and schools.

Tom Foley, Atlantic City's emergency management director, recalled the March 1962 storm when the ocean and the bay met in the center of the city.

"This is predicted to get that bad," he said.

Eighty-five-year-old former sailor Ray Leonard said if he had loved ones living in the projected landfall area, he would tell them to leave. Leonard knows to heed the warnings.

He and two crewmates in his 32-foot sailboat, Satori, rode out 1991's infamous "perfect storm," made famous by the Sebastian Junger bestseller of the same name, before being plucked from the Atlantic off Martha's Vineyard, Mass., by a Coast Guard helicopter.

"Don't be rash," Leonard said in a telephone interview Saturday from his home in Fort Myers, Fla. "Because if this does hit, you're going to lose all those little things you've spent the last 20 years feeling good about."

___

Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C. Contributing to this report were AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein in Washington; Emery Dalesio in Kill Devil Hills, N.C.; Karen Matthews in New York; Glenn Adams in Augusta, Maine; Randall Chase in Lewes, Del.; Rodrique Ngowi in Boston; Ron Todt in Philadelphia and Nancy Benac in Washington.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-superstorm-threat-launches-mass-evacuations-214445032.html

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Syria airforce bombs cities, truce "practically over"

AMMAN (Reuters) - Syrian jets bombarded Sunni Muslim regions in Damascus and across the country on Sunday, activists said, as President Bashar al-Assad kept up air strikes against rebels despite a U.N.-brokered truce that now appears to be in tatters.

"The ceasefire is practically over. Damascus has been under brutal air raids since day one and hundreds of people have been arrested," said veteran opposition campaigner Fawaz Tello.

"Assad has been trying to use the truce to seize back control of areas of Damascus," said Tello, who is well connected with rebels.

Speaking from Berlin, Tello said Sunni districts in the city of Homs, 140 km (90 miles) north of Damascus, and surrounding countryside came under Syrian army shelling on Sunday.

Both sides in the 19-month-old conflict have violated the ceasefire intended to mark the Muslim religious holiday of Eid al-Adha. The truce, brokered by international peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, was supposed to come into effect on Friday, the first day of the four-day holiday.

Syrian authorities blame "armed terrorists" for breaking the truce and the opposition says a ceasefire is impossible while Assad continues to move his tanks and use heavy artillery and jets against populated areas.

Brahimi hopes to end the conflict that has killed at least 32,000 people and worsened instability in the Middle East. It began when a popular revolt broke out in March last year against four decades of authoritarian rule by Assad and his late father, President Hafez al-Assad.

The ceasefire appeal had won widespread international support, including from Russia, China and Iran, President Assad's main foreign allies.

But the truce seems destined to share the fate of failed peace efforts that have preceded it, with dozens of people continuing to be killed daily and international and regional powers at odds while they back different sides.

A sectarian divide between Assad's minority Alawite sect a and Syria's majority Sunnis is also growing, fuelling religious fervor in the region and driving more foreign jihadists into the country.

In the capital Damascus, activists and residents reported large explosions and plumes of smoke rising over the city as Syrian airforce jets bombed the suburbs of Zamalka, Irbin, Harasta and Zamalka.

A statement by the Harasta Media Office, an opposition activists' group, said aerial and ground bombardments had killed at least 45 people in the district since Friday.

Electricity, water and communications had been cut and dozens of wounded at the Harasta National Hospital had been moved as the bombardment closed in, the statement said.

Activists also reported fighting in the suburb of Douma to the northeast, where Free Syrian Army fighters have been attacking roadblocks manned by forces loyal to the government.

Assad is a member of the minority Alawite sect, which is distantly related to Shi'ite Islam. It has dominated majority-Sunni Syria since the 1960s, when Alawite officers assumed control of a military junta that had taken power in a coup.

Warplanes also hit towns and villages in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor, the northern provinces of Idlib and Aleppo, where rebels have been trying to push their advantage in rural areas by cutting off supply lines to the major cities, none of which has fallen completely under opposition control.

CLASHES WITH KURDS

Fighting was reported in the city of Aleppo, Syria's industrial and commercial hub. Rebels attacked several road blocks manned by Assad's loyalists and a 20-year-old girl was killed in army bombardment on Suleiman al-Halabi neighborhood, opposition activists said.

Rebel attempts to portray themselves as a united alternative to Assad suffered a setback when clashes broke out on Saturday in Ashrafieh, a Kurdish district of Aleppo that had up to now stayed out of the fighting. Armed clashes broke out between opposition fighters and members of the Syrian branch of the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK).

Mouhaimen al-Rumaid, coordinator for the opposition Syrian Rebel Front, said the fighting erupted when PKK fighters helped Assad's forces defend a security compound in Ashrafieh that came under rebel attack.

Rumaid said scores of people were killed and rebels seized dozens of PKK members.

"The Ashrafieh incident has to be contained because it could extend to other areas in the northeast where the PKK is well organized," he said.

(Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Amman newsroom, editing by Rosalind Russell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-bombards-major-cities-weakening-truce-120102793.html

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Ann Coulter on Donald Trump Charity Off: I Love It!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/10/ann-coulter-on-donald-trump-charity-off-i-love-it/

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Ericsson seeks more cost cuts as slowdown bites

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Monday's Google event in NYC canceled due to Hurricane Sandy

Android Central

Bad news folks, this has just landed in our inbox: 

Hi Phil,

We are canceling our Monday morning event in New York due to Hurricane Sandy. We will let you know our plans as soon as we know more.

Stay safe and dry, The Android Team

So, it's off. What does this mean for any launch plans? We don't know. And it looks like Google doesn't yet either. When we know more, you guys will be the first to know. But, the priority is for people to stay safe. If you're affected by Hurricane Sandy, take care of yourselves. There'll be time for phones on the other side. 



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/2vF2FmY6FSk/story01.htm

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Arch Coal reports sharply higher 3Q earnings

ST. LOUIS (AP) ? Arch Coal Inc. said Friday its cost-cutting efforts helped boost third-quarter earnings.

St. Louis-based Arch said net income totaled $45.8 million, or 22 cents per share, in the July-September period. That compared with $8.9 million, or 4 cents per share, a year earlier.

Adjusted income totaled $41.8 million, or 20 cents per share, compared with $7.4 million, or 3 cents per share, a year earlier.

Revenue fell 9 percent to $1.09 billion.

On average, analysts polled by FactSet expected Arch to report an adjusted loss of 15 cents on revenue of $1.02 billion.

Arch's president and CEO, John Eaves, said the company believes the global coal markets are correcting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/arch-coal-reports-sharply-higher-3q-earnings-130427775--finance.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Green Blog: On Our Radar: A Diminished Dead Sea

The Dead Sea has dropped a record 4.9 feet in depth over the last year because of industry use and evaporation, the Hydrological Service of Israel says. This is prompting calls for Israel and Jordan to prevent fertilizer makers from drawing on so much of the water. [Bloomberg News]

BP scraps plans to build an ethanol plant in south-central Florida that was to have produced 36 million gallons a year. The company says it will end its pursuit of commercial ethanol production in the United States and focus instead on developing the next generation of biofuel technology. [Southeast AgNet]

Scientists discover bacteria that function as living electrical cables on the seabed in Aarhus Bay in Denmark. The electrical currents had been detected there previously, but researchers had not determined the source. [Aarhus University]

Enormous balls bouncing down Fifth Avenue: a visualization of carbon dioxide emissions in New York. [The Guardian]

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/26/on-our-radar-a-diminished-dead-sea/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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New materials may help prevent infections by blocking initial bacterial attachment

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2012) ? Bacteria's ability to cling to virtually any surface is a vexing problem in the medical community. Engineering a surface that can easily slough off these dangerous bugs has, until recently, had limited success. Recently, however, a team of British researchers has discovered a new class of materials that resists bacterial attachment. Now these scientists from the University of Nottingham, U.K., are ready to set out on the approval process that will take their research to the clinical testing stage, paving the way for medical applications.

The researchers will present their findings at the AVS 59th International Symposium and Exhibition, held Oct. 28 -- Nov. 2, in Tampa, Fla.

To date, scientists have been unable to fully explain how bacteria are able to adhere so durably to virtually any surface. Despite this limited understanding of bacteria-material interactions, the Nottingham researchers were able to screen thousands of different chemical combinations for resistance to bacterial adhesion. The studies revealed that one particular class of compounds, acrylates with hydrophobic groups, proved highly resistant to bacteria's sticky tendencies.

"The new materials are to bacteria what non-stick cookware is to food," said Andrew Hook, a researcher at the Nottingham School of Pharmacy. "Bacteria can stick to the surface of [traditional] medical devices and form a community, known as a biofilm, where the bacteria become highly resistant to antibiotics and the immune system."

By preventing the biofilm from forming on devices in service, the new materials help the immune system to simply eliminate the bacteria as if the device had never been inserted. In contrast, current antibacterial materials, like silver, actually kill bacteria.

After the new non-stick materials were identified, they were successfully tested on surfaces in the laboratory and on standard medical devices, such as catheters, within an animal model. In laboratory studies of the new materials, the researchers found a 96.7-percent reduction in bacterial coverage compared to commercially available silver-containing catheters for the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus.

By coating medical devices with the optimal polymer composition of one of this class of acrylates, for example the compound tricyclodecane-dimethanol diacrylate that the researchers tested, scientists believe they can prevent bacteria from attaching and also prevent associated infections, which could reduce health care costs.

The researchers are now ready to take their research to the next level and prepare the regulatory package to begin clinical trials. They hope the trials will show that by denying bacteria a foothold on medical equipment in humans, the chances of a patient contracting a medical device-associated infection are much lower.

Nottingham pharmacy professor Morgan Alexander hopes that since no antibiotics are used this will lead to a method to reduce infections from bacteria without the risk of antibiotic resistance developing. "The challenge now is to have materials recognized by the medical device industry," Alexander said. "That would allow us to develop products for specific applications. There's a lot of potential to improve human health, but we need to prove that."

The researchers are in discussions with potential partners to develop coated devices and are hopeful their material could reach the market in 5 to 10 years.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/LFQldSsZI-U/121026143219.htm

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

What happened to the gender gap?

WASHINGTON (AP) ? What gender gap?

Less than two weeks out from Election Day, Republican Mitt Romney has erased President Barack Obama's 16-point advantage among women, a new Associated Press-GfK poll shows. And the president, in turn, has largely eliminated Romney's edge among men.

Those churning gender dynamics leave the presidential race still a virtual dead heat, with Romney favored by 47 percent of likely voters and Obama by 45 percent, a result within the poll's margin of sampling error, the survey shows.

After a commanding first debate performance and a generally good month, Romney has gained ground with Americans on a number of important fronts, including their confidence in how he would handle the economy and their impressions of his ability to understand their problems.

At the same time, expectations that Obama will be re-elected have slipped: Half of voters now expect the president to win a second term, down from 55 percent a month earlier.

For all of the good news for Republicans, however, what matters most in the election endgame is Romney's standing in the handful of states whose electoral votes still are up for grabs. And polls in a number of those battleground states still appear to favor Obama.

As the election nears, Romney has been playing down social issues and trying to project a more moderate stance on matters such as abortion in an effort to court female voters. The AP-GfK poll, taken Friday through Tuesday, shows Romney pulling even with Obama among women at 47-47 after lagging by 16 points a month earlier.

But now his campaign is grappling with the fallout from a comment by a Romney-endorsed Senate candidate in Indiana, who said that when a woman becomes pregnant during a rape "that's something God intended."

Romney quickly distanced himself from the remark by Republican Richard Mourdock. But Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the incident was "a reminder that a Republican Congress working with a Republican President Mitt Romney would feel that women should not be able to make choices about their own health care."

A renewed focus on social issues would be an unwelcome development for Romney: Among female likely voters, 55 percent say Obama would make the right decisions on women's issues, compared with 41 percent who think Romney would.

Romney's pitch to women has been focused squarely on the economy, making the case that what women want most is to ensure their families and their country are on a solid financial footing. The poll shows that message appears to be taking root.

A month ago, women favored Obama over Romney on the economy 56 percent to 40 percent. Now, the split has shifted to 49 percent for Romney and 45 percent for Obama.

Similarly, Obama's lead among women as the candidate who better understands the people's problems has narrowed considerably, from a 58-36 Obama advantage last month to a 50-43 Obama edge now.

Monica Jensen, a 55-year-old independent from Mobile, Ala., says she voted for Obama in 2008 but will shift her vote to Romney this time, largely because of the economy.

"I'm ready for a change," she said. "I want to see the economy go in a different direction."

Ginny Lewis, a Democrat and 72-year-old retired district attorney from Princeton, Ky., says she'll vote for Romney because "I'm tired of the Republicans blaming all the debt on Democrats, so let them take over and see what they do."

Not that she's optimistic about how that will turn out, though. "I think things will get worse before they get better," she said.

Lindsey Hornbaker, a 25-year-old graduate student and nanny, hasn't been swayed by Romney's charm offensive.

Hornbaker, interviewed Wednesday in Davenport, Iowa, where she was attending an Obama rally, said Romney can tweak his tone but not what she sees as a record focused far more on top income earners and out of touch with most working families.

"I heard him go out of his way to sound so moderate during the debate," she said. "And I thought: 'Who is this? Where did this come from?' He may sound like he's focused on the middle class. But where's the record?"

Obama, meanwhile, has been working to shore up his support among men, who tend to be more Republican than women. In the 2008 election, men broke 49 percent for Obama to 48 percent for John McCain, even though Obama got 53 percent of the vote overall. The president's job approval ratings among men have tended to fall below his ratings among women throughout his first term.

A month ago, Romney's advantage among men was 13 percentage points. Now, it's down to 5 points, with most of the shift toward Obama coming among unmarried men.

Obama's election chances hinge on turning out voters like Jon Gerton, a disabled construction worker from Jonesboro, Ark. Gerton's a staunch Obama supporter ? but he didn't vote in 2008.

"It takes longer than four years to get things to the point where things are going better," Gerton said. "Four years, it's not very long."

There has been a gender gap in every presidential election since 1980. In 2008, women were 7 percentage points more likely than men to vote for Obama.

Overall, people are significantly more optimistic about the economy and unemployment in the coming year than they have been at any point in AP-GfK polling going back to March 2011, when the poll first started asking those questions. And likely voters are even more optimistic than other adults.

Nearly six in 10 likely voters think the economy will improve in the next year, up from 46 percent last month. And 42 percent think the number of unemployed Americans will drop in the next year, up from 32 percent in September.

Count Chrysta Walker, of Cedar Lake, Ind., among the voters who are sticking with Obama because they think he's got the right solutions for the fragile economy.

"He's got the middle class at heart," says the 58-year-old Walker. On the economy, she says, Obama "did as well as could be expected because he didn't get a lot of cooperation."

David Bierwirth, who owns an autograph sales business in Las Vegas, turned out at a Romney rally in Henderson this week to show his support for the GOP nominee. To Bierwirth, his vote for Romney is all about the economy.

"I want people back to work," he says, "because then they will buy my products."

The Associated Press-GfK poll was conducted Oct. 19-23 by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,186 adults nationwide, including 839 likely voters. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points; for likely voters it is 4.2 points.

__

Online:

http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com

___

AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and Stacy A. Anderson in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Davenport, Iowa, and Ken Ritter in Henderson, Nev., contributed to this report.

___

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-poll-romney-erases-obama-advantage-among-women-071129692--election.html

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New vitamin-based treatment that could reduce muscle degeneration in muscular dystrophy

New vitamin-based treatment that could reduce muscle degeneration in muscular dystrophy

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Boosting the activity of a vitamin-sensitive cell adhesion pathway has the potential to counteract the muscle degeneration and reduced mobility caused by muscular dystrophies, according to a research team led by scientists at the University of Maine.

The discovery, published 23 October in the open access journal PLOS Biology, is particularly important for congenital muscular dystrophies, which are progressive, debilitating and often lethal diseases that currently remain without cure. The researchers found that they could improve muscle structure and function in a zebrafish version of muscular dystrophy by supplying a common cellular chemical (or its precursor, vitamin B3) to activate a cell adhesion pathway.

Muscle cells are in themselves relatively delicate, but derive important additional mechanical strength from adhesion protein complexes; these anchor the muscle cells to an external framework known as the basement membrane, thereby helping to buffer the cells against the extreme forces that they experience during muscle contractions. Mutations in the genes that encode these adhesion proteins can weaken these attachments, making muscle cells more susceptible to damage and death.

The resulting muscle degeneration can eventually lead to progressive muscle-wasting diseases, such as muscular dystrophies. A major component of the basement membrane, a protein called laminin, binds to multiple different receptors on the muscle cell surface and forms a dense, organized network.

The study was led by UMaine Associate Professor of Biological Sciences, Clarissa Henry, whose laboratory focuses on understanding how cell adhesion complexes contribute to muscle development. The researchers discovered that a pathway involving a common cellular chemical called nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) plays a role in the formation of organized basement membranes in muscle tissue, during development of the fish embryo. As disordered basement membranes are seen in many different types of muscular dystrophies, the researchers wondered whether activating this pathway might reduce the severity of some muscular dystrophies.

In the current study, the researchers show that NAD+ improves the organization of laminin in a zebrafish version of muscular dystrophy. Zebrafish lacking either of the two main receptors for laminin have a disorganized basement membrane, causing muscle degeneration and difficulties with movement. However adding extra NAD+, or even a vitamin packet containing vitamin B3 (niacin, a precursor to NAD+), significantly reduced these symptoms.

The research team found that the main protective effects of NAD+ come from enhancing the organization of the laminin structure in the basement membrane, which helps to increase the resilience of diseased muscle fibers.

Because the same cell adhesion complexes are found in humans, the research team is optimistic that these findings may one day positively impact patients with muscular dystrophies. "Although there is a long way to go, I'm hopeful that our data could eventually lead to new adjuvant therapies," says University of Maine Ph.D. student Michelle Goody, who led the research team with Prof. Henry.

Prof. Henry summarizes; "One of my favorite aspects of this study is that it is a poster child for how asking basic biological questions can lead to exciting discoveries that may have future therapeutic potential."

###

Public Library of Science: http://www.plos.org

Thanks to Public Library of Science for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124756/New_vitamin_based_treatment_that_could_reduce_muscle_degeneration_in_muscular_dystrophy

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NY cop killed in traffic stop called 'exemplary'

This undated image provided Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012 by the Nassau County Police shows Officer Arthur Lopez. A motorist fleeing a possible hit-and-run traffic accident fatally shot Lopez in broad daylight Tuesday near the Belmont racetrack and then apparently killed another driver not far away during a carjacking, authorities said. The suspect was identified as 33-year-old Darrell Fuller, who was on parole after serving time for attempted murder, authorities said. (AP Photo/Nassau County Police)

This undated image provided Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012 by the Nassau County Police shows Officer Arthur Lopez. A motorist fleeing a possible hit-and-run traffic accident fatally shot Lopez in broad daylight Tuesday near the Belmont racetrack and then apparently killed another driver not far away during a carjacking, authorities said. The suspect was identified as 33-year-old Darrell Fuller, who was on parole after serving time for attempted murder, authorities said. (AP Photo/Nassau County Police)

In this undated photo provided by the New York State Department of Correctional Services and Community Supervision, inmate Darrell Fuller is shown. New York City police arrested Fuller in the Queens borough of New York after a massive manhunt. Police say Fuiller shot and killed two men on a Long Island Highway, one of them a Nassau County Police Officer who had pulled his car over for leaving the scene of an accident. (AP Photo/New York State Department of Correctional Services and Community Supervision)

Police officers investigate at the scene of a shooting in Bellerose Terrace, N.Y., Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2012. A police officer on New York?s Long Island and another person were killed after shooting erupted Tuesday morning during what a witness described as a routine traffic stop at the New York City limits on Long Island. (AP Photo/Frank Eltman)

Nassau County PBA President James Carver, left, discusses the shooting death of Police Officer Arthur Lopez, shown in picture on table, at a news conference, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2012 at Police Headquarters in Mineola, N.Y. Listening from second left are Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano, District Attorney Kathleen Rice, County Comptroller George Maragos and First Deputy Police Commissioner Thomas Krumpter. A motorist fleeing a possible hit-and-run traffic accident fatally shot Lopez in broad daylight Tuesday near the Belmont racetrack and then apparently killed another driver not far away during a carjacking, authorities said. (AP Photo/Frank Eltman)

Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano discusses the shooting death of Police Officer Arthur Lopez, in picture at right, Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012, as Police Commissioner Thomas Dale stands behind at police headquarters in Mineola, N.Y. A motorist fleeing a possible hit-and-run traffic accident fatally shot Lopez in broad daylight Tuesday near the Belmont racetrack and then apparently killed another driver not far away during a carjacking, authorities said. (AP Photo/Frank Eltman)

(AP) ? A suburban New York City police officer killed after being shot in what started out as a traffic stop was an "exemplary officer," a county official said Wednesday, as he acknowledged the death of the civilian had been overshadowed by the outpouring of grief for the officer.

Nassau County Officer Arthur Lopez was killed Tuesday after getting shot in what had started out as a traffic stop near the Belmont Park racetrack. Ex-convict Darrell Fuller, 33, was arrested on charges of shooting him as well as another driver, 52-year-old Queens resident Raymond Facey, in a subsequent carjacking.

Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano called Lopez, an 8-year veteran on the force, "an exemplary officer, a real heroic officer."

"His file is full of commendations," Mangano said on Fox 5 News Wednesday morning.

Lopez, 29, was on patrol Tuesday in Bellerose Terrace, a community at the border of New York City's Queens borough and Nassau County. The officer and his partner spotted a damaged silver Honda that was "running on rims," suspecting it was wanted for leaving the scene of a hit-and-run accident, authorities said.

The officers followed the car, and it pulled over. There was "a brief exchange of words" between Lopez and the driver before the driver left the vehicle and fired one round into Lopez's chest, police Chief Steven Skrynecki said, adding that the officer wasn't wearing a bulletproof vest.

Mangano said Nassau does not have a mandatory bullet-proof vest policy, saying "it's up to each police officer."

"The shrieks of his mother will haunt me and all those who were present forever," said Mangano, who visited the family after the shootings. "A mother doesn't want to live when she loses a son."

He said he had not yet visited Facey's family. "I know it's been overshadowed" by Lopez's murder but "we're equally shocked and dismayed that such an act would take place in New York, on Long Island. It's terrible."

The second officer administered first aid to Lopez, officials said, and was later hospitalized for trauma.

The shooter got back into his car and drove away, and then accosted Facey, authorities said. He shot the Queens man in the head, dragged him out of his car and left him dead on the roadway as he drove away, they said. The car later was found abandoned in a residential neighborhood in Queens.

The slayings touched off a search for Fuller that included heavily armed New York Police Department officers going door-to-door in Queens. Authorities also closed the Cross Island Parkway for several hours, causing traffic delays.

A 911 caller reported hearing gunfire in Queens amid the massive manhunt for Fuller. Responding officers found him in a vehicle ? not the one carjacked ? with what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Fuller was hospitalized in police custody for treatment of an undisclosed wound. It was unclear if he had a lawyer.

Fuller had served four years in prison after pleading guilty to attempted murder in 2005, authorities said. He was jailed again in 2010 after violating his parole, but was released in May 2011.

"We're endeavoring to find out what triggered this entire series of events," Skrynecki said while announcing the arrest late Tuesday.

Before the shootings, Fuller left a hospital and had gotten in a car accident, the chief added, but wouldn't elaborate.

"It's absolutely shocking that a man who committed attempted murder only did 5 years, got back on the streets, arrested again and out of jail again," said Mangano. "Whoever let him out on a parole, it's ridiculous ... outrageous."

A man who witnessed the officer's shooting as he was stopped at a gas station along the highway said it looked like a routine traffic stop.

"The officer's walking up to the car. They just pulled out (a gun) and shot," said Paul Walcott, a music producer from the Queens neighborhood of Bayside. "He went right down. He got hit point blank. He went straight down."

The car then sped off, heading south on the Cross Island Parkway, a north-south highway along the border of Queens and Nassau County.

"In broad daylight, this time of day, it was incredible to see something like that," Walcott said.

The shooting unfolded within blocks of Belmont Park, the racetrack where the Belmont Stakes is held.

___

Hays reported from New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-24-US-Police-Shooting-NY/id-66a610c4f8314e3fb95ec0a18313af87

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