Friday, August 31, 2012

Stuck Bolt Forces Extra Spacewalk for Space Station Crew

A stubborn bolt that prevented two spacewalking astronauts from properly installing a replacement power unit on the exterior of the International Space Station today (Aug. 31) will now require another spacewalk ? possibly as early as next week ? to attempt to resolve the problem, NASA officials said.

NASA spaceflyer Sunita Williams and Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide spent more than eight hours working outside the orbiting complex today, primarily to remove a faulty power box ? called a main bus switching unit (MBSU) ? and replace it with a spare. After the old unit was removed and stored, however, the spacewalkers were unable to drive in one of two bolts needed to secure the new box to the station's backbone-like truss.

Agency officials are now planning another spacewalk and discussing ways to fix the problem. The extra excursion could take place early next week, said Mike Suffredini, NASA's International Space Station program manager.

"If we can determine what we can do to get the MBSU ultimately installed, you'll hear us talking about perhaps trying to do that sooner rather than later in the program," Suffredini told reporters in a news briefing today from the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "If we can, we'll try to get out the door early next week if we can come up with a plan." [Photos: Spacewalking Astronauts Fix Up Space Station]

A main bus switching unit relays power from the space station's solar arrays and distributes it throughout the orbiting lab. Typically, there are four MBSUs operating on the station at any time, and without the use of one, the station is essentially unable to harness the power collected by two of its eight solar arrays, Suffredini explained.

Engineers and flight controllers are currently trying to determine why the bolt is stuck and how they can remedy the situation.

Without the MBSU up and running, NASA officials are also deciding how best to allocate the available power aboard the outpost to keep the crew safe, and with minimal disruption to the station's operations. During the time that the outpost relies on three MBSUs, systems that require a lot of power, such as the space station's robotic arm, will be powered down until they are needed again, said flight director Ed Van Cise.

"We can be creative with how we share power across the channels to provide as much balance as we can across them," Van Cise said. "The space station arm, when it's in use, does draw power, so one thing we'll do if we haven't done it already is, they will disconnect the robotic work station in the U.S. lab so that piece is not drawing power off the power channels. And we'll turn off equipment that is not necessarily required."

After repeated attempts to install the new power unit failed, Williams and Hoshide were forced to use a special tether to temporarily tie it down to the space station's truss.

Today's marathon spacewalk clocked in at a whopping 8 hours and 17 minutes, making it the third longest spacewalk in history and the longest ever performed by a space station crew.

Follow Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stuck-bolt-forces-extra-spacewalk-space-station-crew-234809373.html

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Scientist at Work: Beyond Antarctica's Photo Opportunity

Alexander Kumar, a physician and researcher at Concordia Station, writes from Antarctica, where he conducts scientific experiments for the European Space Agency?s human spaceflight program.

Monday, Aug. 20

On Jan. 17, 1912, Robert Falcon Scott?s team arrived at the South Pole defeated and exhausted, finding they had been beaten to it by the Norwegian Roald Amundsen. Scott wrote, ?The Pole. Yes, but under very different circumstances from those expected,? followed by, ?Great God, this is an awful place.?

While Amundsen or one of his sled dogs may have been the first to visit the South Pole, his team left behind only a legacy in exploration. But Scott?s team, with its British scientific leader and expedition doctor, Edward Wilson, also blazed a trail in Antarctic science ? a legacy that still burns bright today.

In fact, besides completing the Worst Journey in the World, Wilson had hauled a multitude of geological samples to what became his final resting place, never giving up to death. The final three members of the expedition team had died of starvation on their return from the South Pole, just 11 miles from the One Ton Camp supply depot and safety.

My friend Dr. Dale Mol? sent me a photo of a portrait of Wilson ? the first doctor to reach the South Pole ? that hangs in ?Club Med,? the infirmary of the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, an American outpost. It remains an inspiration to all lone doctors who dare to overwinter there.

It is to me ? so much so that on March 29, to celebrate Scott?s centenary, the date of his last diary entry, I slept in a tent outside, where the temperature was minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit). The tent was basic, with open sides that allowed wind to come in. It was simply the worst night?s camping I had ever done, and a memory I will keep forever. Never again will I moan about camping in the British rain.

Scott?s team had dreamed of the South Pole ? ?the uttermost end of the world,? as Scott described it. Today, 100 years later, I sit in my spacious, comfortable biomedical laboratory conducting research for the European Space Agency with my own century?s dream: to send a manned mission to Mars, and see it return.

At Concordia, one of the world?s most remote and isolated manned outposts, our 13 crew members have been working hard, enduring these long months alone and forgoing our previous lives, rich with family and friends, also in the name of science. We have conducted a variety of experiments, including my human science research, attempting to carry the torch of science through the extreme cold and polar darkness.

Two crew members are continuing glaciology research, following the success of a Concordia project known as EPICA (European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica) that ran from 1996 to 2005. The project charted about 800,000 years of climate history, revealing humankind?s impact on the planet from the more than 3,000 meters (about 10,000 feet) of ice cores that were brought up for analysis. The remaining shards and pieces of broken cores brought up to the surface are kept inside a tunnel.

As a tourist in Antarctica, you could pour yourself a whiskey and have it fizz with 760,000-year-old ice if it weren?t such a scientific atrocity. More interesting to me has been finding samples correlating to the year A.D. 0, ?when Jesus walked the earth.

I spent many long hours outside helping our glaciologist, Sebastien Aubin of France, carefully excavate untouched ice far from the station and bag it for later analysis. It was almost fun working at midday in the winter darkness, sometimes under the moonlight and starry polar night sky; it is the closest you could come to sampling life on another planet. The ?great white silence,? as a British documentary film from the 1920s called it, was so still that you couldn?t even hear the old souls drifting across the plateau.

Buried deep underground, hidden in the ice not far away, is a series of ladders and tunnels that lead to a single box. You cannot touch the box or step near it. It blinks and flashes red lights silently. This box measures the minute and distant torsions in the earth?s crust, watching from afar as the world tries to blow itself up.

Before the onset of winter, I was extremely privileged not only to visit the site and box, but also to witness one of Antarctica?s most unique sights. My French guide, the resident seismologist and station leader, Erick Bondoux, turned off the lights. The ambient temperature was minus 50 degrees Celsius (minus 58 Fahrenheit). I couldn?t even see my own breath. I set my camera up and took a photo. After some time, the most incredible sight appeared on my screen: an indigo hue produced by the filtration by the ancient ice of the sunlight from far, far above.

This year we have had the coldest temperature recorded on site in two winters ? minus 80.5 degrees Celsius (about minus 113 degrees Fahrenheit), without considering wind chill ? and the lowest atmospheric pressure ever recorded on site, at 610 hectopascals. The latter left us all feeling severely hung over from the simultaneous hypoxia, as oxygen was stolen from our breath before it reached our lungs.

Imagine the feeling of being half-submerged, half-drowned, continually short of breath, struggling with a hammering headache and wanting to vomit from the associated nausea. Besides the lowest records, we had two unusual days in which the temperature swung wildly from minus 70 degrees Celsius to minus 29 degrees Celsius (minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit to minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit) overnight.

Without the efforts of Igor Petenko, our resident Russian meteorologist, all of these changes and records would have remained unknown. We would not be able to measure the human impact on all of the earth?s surface. After all, who else is going to do it around here? We are the only people living for more than 1,000 kilometers in most directions.

One of the greatest and most challenging journeys we undertook was to climb one of Antarctica?s highest towers in the winter darkness and extreme cold. American Tower, about a kilometer from Concordia Station, stands about 40 meters (130 feet) tall, with 25 levels up to its summit. On many of the levels, there are scientific instruments that require regular maintenance. With open sides and fierce winds, you need to fix yourself with a harness to a central rope to reach them. For me, standing on the top of the bottom of the world was magical, with shooting stars and satellites as our only company.

Living out of the reach of pollution, on top of a high-altitude ice cube and in the winter darkness, we have one of the clearest night skies available anywhere on earth. Up here, we can look into the Milky Way while being dazzled by the aurora australis, the southern lights.

Astroconcordia, overseen by the station astronomer, Guillaume Bouchez of France, is the headquarters for Concordia?s astronomy research initiatives, including the search for distant exoplanets that are like our own and could potentially support life. Guillaume spends a great deal of time outside, monitoring and cleaning his equipment. I spent a few hours late one night scanning the surface of the moon with him.

Living alone at this extreme, we have to be completely self-sufficient. Our plumber and resident explorer, G?rard Gu?rin of France, is responsible for keeping our water supply running and safe to drink. That may seem like a simple process: Turning ice into water simply requires the addition of heat. But heating in the coldest environment on earth can be terribly inefficient, and in a world full of landfill, it would be truly tragic and unthinkable to edge Antarctica toward the same fate.

Here we recycle our wastewater, using a gray water treatment unit built and managed by a French company, Firmus; it is similar to the system on the International Space Station. We have also a black water treatment unit and a digester, which, using a microbiological process, reduces our organic waste.

And so our team can not only survive in the world?s most extreme environment, but thrive while carrying out important scientific research during the worst winter in the world. I hope the scientific work of international overwintering stations on Antarctica continues to serve as an example to the rest of the world.

This entry is dedicated to those who, in the past century, gave their lives while working on the ice for the purpose of science and discovery. In particular, I dedicate this to the blazing legacy of science left by Dr. Wilson, my hero. It may be unpopular to say, but I believe Scott?s team was the first to reach the South Pole for the ?right? reason ? science ? which should also be the reason that humans, one day, land on Mars.

The only profit made from Antarctica should be in science. We may live in a world where $50,000 will buy a summer tourist a fly-by-night ticket to be photographed at the South Pole. But I am sure in my heart that the only way I would ever arrive at the South Pole is on my own two feet, starved in body but not in mind, dragging a sled of science behind me, repaving the trusted, century-old trail that at the turn of the last century blazed so brightly.

I would do so out of respect for others, like Wilson, who came before me, hauling to his death this same true belief in science and appreciation for the wonderful but dwindling diversity of what in the future may be found only in a textbook or on a Web site: life on Earth.


In 2014, Dr. Alexander Kumar will join the Imperial TransAntarctic Centenary Expedition?as the expedition?s doctor and chief scientist. He will be responsible for conducting a scientific protocol while completing the route originally planned but not undertaken by Sir Ernest Shackleton on his ill-fated Endurance expedition 100 years ago.

Source: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/30/beyond-antarcticas-photo-opportunity/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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BPW Career Center: Real Estate/Property Management jobs, Seattle ...

About Pinnacle.

We invest in great people. That's why clients trust us with their real estate investments!
At Pinnacle, we consider our employees our most valuable asset. In fact, our number one key business objective is to attract and retain the best talent in the industry! At Pinnacle, the key to our continued success and competitive advantage is our people.

We offer a total compensation and benefits package to help with your needs today and build for your future tomorrow. We recognize that each employee is an individual with individual needs, lifestyles, and interests. Our benefits package was created with the flexibility to support employees who are at different places in their lives and careers.

Pinnacle values diversity and is committed to equal opportunity in employment. We offer a safe, healthy work environment for employees through a commitment to maintaining a drug-free workplace.
Pinnacle has ongoing employment opportunities at our headquarters in Seattle, our more than 40 branch office locations nationally and our many managed communities throughout the country.

Pinnacle is the national leader in third-party fee management of investment real estate encompassing multi-family, commercial space, affordable housing and military housing. Pinnacle is built on four basic principles:

  • Quality people
  • Strong customer service
  • Solid market knowledge
  • Superior systems and support capabilities

    At Pinnacle, success is about more than having a healthy bottom line. Guided by our principles and values, we are committed to making Pinnacle an amazing and unique place to work for each member of our team.

    About the job..

    As a Business Manager at Pinnacle, youll put your outstanding leadership and savvy business skills to work at one of the most respected apartment companies in a management opportunity that offers real leadership, innovation and support.
    Our Business Managers are the cornerstone of our team. Theyre responsible for keeping our communities in the top-notch condition our residents have come to expect, building motivated and trustworthy teams who consistently deliver a notably higher level of service and maximizing the operating performance of our community. Be ready to be busy! This challenging position includes:

  • Operations. Ensuring the smooth running of our community in a fast-paced environment. Overseeing all operations including maintenance, capital improvements, lease administration, budgeting, forecasting, reporting, collections, evictions, vacancy anticipation, marketing, lease renewals, service contracts, expense control, audits, etc.
  • Customer service. Providing superior customer service and communication to our residents and prospects to enhance customer satisfaction and increase renewals, revenue, reputation and profitability.
  • People development. Developing, mentoring, leading, and managing a high-performing, cohesive team, including leasing, customer service, maintenance and management personnel, in order to maximize their engagement and minimize turnover.
  • Marketing. Driving revenues with your thorough understanding and analysis of competition and development of creative marketing programs.
  • Leading by example. Instilling, maintaining and modeling the Pinnacle mission to be the best national management company.

    Essential Responsibilities:

  • Supervise day-to-day operations of entire on-site team, ensuring that all Pinnacle policies and procedures are being followed.
  • Maintain effective on-site staff through interviewing, hiring, and terminating as necessary.
  • Maintain a positive living environment for community residents through prompt conflict resolution and consistent follow-up.
  • Manage and maintain all aspects of overall community budget and finances
  • Work with leasing staff to ensure that leasing/marketing goals are being met.
  • Maintain positive relations with all community vendors.
  • Coordinate special projects as requested by Investment (Regional) Manager.

    Personal Competencies:

  • A competitive spirit
  • High-energy
  • Demonstrated leadership and strategic thinking skills
  • Supervisory experience
  • Warm, friendly and service-oriented philosophy
  • High degree of flexibility and tolerance for change
  • Ability to train, develop, lead and mentor
  • Superior written and verbal communications skills
  • Extremely computer literate
  • Organized and detail-oriented
  • Customer-service driven
  • Able to multitask
  • Financials experience/experience working with a budget

    Qualifications:

  • Minimum of a high school diploma, Bachelors degree preferred
  • 3+ years of on-site property management experience
  • Excellent oral and written communication skills
  • Experience in supervisory role and managing staff
  • Experience in writing and maintaining budgets
  • Proficient in Yardi property management software or other similar property management software.
  • General office, bookkeeping and sales skills
  • Computer literate, including Microsoft Office Suite

    Pinnacle has grown to become America's largest apartment manager through many different successes. Yet, in today's ultra-competitive market, each success must fuel the next and speed is essential in the ongoing race to lead the industry.

    If you are ready to work hard and be empowered and encouraged to innovate, contribute ideas and discover solution to provide current and potential residents with unparalleled, world class customer service please click Apply Online.


  • Source: http://careers.bpwusa.org/jobs/4897946/business-manager

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    Thursday, August 30, 2012

    Celebrating Women's Sexuality | WNC Woman

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    By Virginia Kaufmann

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    ?Sex is a natural function. You can?t make it happen, but you can teach people to let it happen? .?? ~Dr William H. Masters

    ?

    Recently, for the purpose of this interview, I had the pleasure of meeting Heather Cohen and Robin Fann-Costanzo, co-creators of Feel The Vibe, based here in Asheville. Though otherwise our paths might not have crossed, I am happy to have had the opportunity to meet them. As I would soon discover, they are truly dedicated to helping women and, by extension, the greater community. According to Robin, ?We strive to empower women to be pro-active around their bodies and sexual health. If women are encouraged to embrace their bodies and sexuality, then there is the opportunity to create intimacy with a partner, and loving, honest relationships with themselves, their families and their communities.?

    ?

    As a teenager in the early 70s, a friend and I discovered her sister?s book called ?The Art of Sensual Massage.? When we came across it, it was as if we had found a hidden cache of forbidden fruit. Though times have changed, and the media has brought the taboo into the mainstream, there are still many who are not totally comfortable with open sexuality. Actually, when asked to write this piece, I realized that I still carried a minor ?tickle? if you will, with the thought of openly addressing sexual topics. I told them both that as I age, I realize that I am very common; if I am feeling, thinking or dealing with something, odds are there are thousands more, just like me, feeling the same.

    ?

    Keenly aware of the stigma and issues that still surround women today, these two kind, well-educated women started Feel the Vibe to create a safe, supportive and educational environment to facilitate women coming together to explore issues around their sexual health, and offer tools for personal growth and exploration. ?There is no judgment. We meet the group where they are at and let the women lead. We strive to build community by encouraging authentic, true expression, and allow for each woman to have her voice heard,? smiles Heather warmly. I have to attest, within minutes of being in their company, I found myself not only willing, but also really wanting to share. Heather goes on to say, ?Each culture has found their own way to address sexuality. Many indigenous cultures use ritual and ceremony where female elders educate young women and male elders educate young men around issues of sexuality and relationship. Because our culture offers less ritual space, our hope is that our group provides a safe space for women to explore topics of sexuality and health, to learn from us and from each other.?

    ?

    Currently, Robin and Heather are providing sexual education, and body awareness through a class called Yoga for women?s sexual health and vitality at local venues like Asheville Community Yoga. During these classes, women learn skills to connect with their bodies and breath, and to move their vital/sexual energy in the safe confines of a yoga class. They also teach communication skills, Taoist visualization and breathing techniques. At these classes, they provide information and samples of sensual massage oils, erotic products and organic lubricants that are also available for purchase. As much as they enjoy these classes, because of the diverse groups of women that gather, Robin and Heather expressed a desire to have women host small private gatherings with their friends for a more intimate setting. ?Initially we visualized women bringing us in for women?s groups, workshops, wedding showers, or birthday parties,? says Robin. Heather said though currently their groups are women only, she would love to have Feel the Vibe offer educational groups for men, lead by men.

    ?

    ?Our vision is to create a safe, educational, sex-positive environment for women. We believe that when women are nurturing their sexual health it allows both men and women to lead more vital and satisfying lives. We offer the highest quality, eco-friendly, erotic toys and sensual products that are organic and local whenever possible.?

    ?

    Robin Fann-Costanzo has been a licensed massage and bodywork specialist and yoga instructor since 1993. She teaches Esalen? Massage (founded at The Esalen Institute in Big Sur, CA) and is actually featured on their instructional video. She also studied Gestalt Therapy and Craniosacral therapy at the Esalen Institute, which is where she met Heather. Originally from Omaha, Nebraska, Robin lived in California for 20 years and currently lives in Asheville with her husband, Corey Costanzo, and her two beautiful daughters, Sofia, age seven and Rosalina, age three. Robin also has a private massage and yoga practice. Her husband, Corey, is a massage therapist, somatic therapist and is currently a counselor at the not-for-profit ?Kids at Work? program which teaches at-risk kids how to cook. Robin has always had a passion for teaching women about their health and sexuality. She has studied with many teachers including Rachel Abrams, author of The Multi-Orgasmic Woman, Charles and Caroline Muir, co-authors of The Art of Conscious Loving and Margot Anand, author of The Art of Sexual Ecstasy. Robin will also be inducted into The World Massage Hall of Fame, later this month.

    ?

    Heather Cohen has a Master?s Degree in Art Therapy and 15 years experience providing art therapy for everyone from children to adults, including the rites of passage ritual and ceremony. Heather grew up in New York and moved to California, at the age of 20, where she attended The California Institute of Integral Studies. She then moved to Big Sur where she studied Gestalt Therapy at the Esalen Institute and assisted Rachel Abrams, a leading voice in Women?s Sexual Health. During her time in Big Sur, she also co-founded a Cultural Arts and Education Center. Heather moved to Asheville nine months ago and is currently an event director and producer. She is producing her second Asheville Chocolate and Arts Festival, at the Asheville Civic Center, December 8, 2012. Heather created this family-friendly festival, which offers world music, dance performances and workshops, local art and crafts, a live music Fashion show (featuring local designers and models) and free chocolate samples from 10 local chocolate and desert makers. For more information about The Asheville Chocolate and Arts Festival , please visit www.sacredcelebrationsproductions.com.
    (and see ad page 11)

    ?

    For more information, please feel free to contact Robin Fann-Costanzo at: fannrobin@gmail.com,

    Heather Cohen at: heathercohen16@gmail.com or visit www.Feelthevibewnc.com.

    For more information regarding Kids@work, please contact Corey Costanzo at kidsatwork.corey@gmail.com.

    ?

    ?

    And since I opened with a quote, I will close with one too, ?Don?t knock masturbation. It?s sex with someone I love.?? ~Woody Allen

    Source: http://www.wncwoman.com/2012/08/30/celebrating-womens-sexuality/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=celebrating-womens-sexuality

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    Community invited to race/walk for cancer research | VUMC ...

    by Dagny Stuart | Posted on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012 ? 10:29 AM

    (Vanderbilt University)

    Members of the Vanderbilt community are invited to lace up their athletic shoes and get ready to race/walk as members of ?Team Vanderbilt? at this fall?s cancer awareness events.

    This year, for the first time, Nashville will host ?Purple Strides,? an event sponsored by the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network. The 5K run/walk will be held Saturday, Sept. 15, at the Country Music Hall of Fame Park, 222 5th Ave. South, to raise funds for pancreatic cancer research and awareness.

    Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest forms of cancer and only about 6 percent of patients are still alive five years after diagnosis.

    The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network is a non-profit foundation that provides funds for research and patient support and Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center (VICC) is a sponsor of the Nashville Purple Strides event.

    VICC is sponsoring several local cancer fundraisers this fall and is hosting ?Team Vanderbilt? kickoff programs to make it easy for Vanderbilt staff, friends and families to sign up for the events.

    Registration fairs for Vanderbilt faculty and staff will be held Thursday, Sept. 6, 2-5 p.m. in the Langford Auditorium lobby, and Friday, Sept. 7, 11 a.m. ? 12:30 p.m. at Vanderbilt Health One Hundred Oaks in the first-floor conference room. Participants can find out more about each cancer event, register for the events they want to support and pick up ?Team Vanderbilt? T-shirts.

    Participants can also register for individual events online by visiting viccfallwalks.org.
    VICC is sponsoring or supporting the following 2012 cancer events in the Nashville area:

    • Sept. 15? ? Purple Strides? ? Pancreatic Cancer Action Network run/walk
    • Oct. 6? -? Music City Miles for Melanoma ? Melanoma Research Foundation run/walk
    • Oct. 12 -? Light the Night ? Leukemia & Lymphoma Society blood cancers run/walk
    • Oct. 20? -? Making Strides Against Breast Cancer ? American Cancer Society run/walk
    • Oct. 27? -? Race for the Cure ? Susan G. Komen for the Cure? -? Breast cancer run/walk
    • Oct. 27? -? Hank Thompson Trek and Treat ? Uniting Against Lung Cancer run/walk
    • Nov. 11? -? CureSearch for Children?s Cancer run/walk
    • Nov. 17? -? Breathe Deep? ? LUNGevity Foundation lung cancer run/walk

    For questions about the events, contact Jennifer.rice@vanderbilt.edu.

    Contact:
    Dagny Stuart, (615) 936-7245
    Dagny.stuart@vanderbilt.edu


    Source: http://news.vanderbilt.edu/2012/08/community-invited-to-racewalk-for-cancer-research/

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    Isaac triggers more evacuations after soaking New Orleans

    NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - Hurricane Isaac forced evacuations affecting tens of thousands of people in Louisiana and Mississippi on Thursday, even as relieved New Orleans residents said its destruction was nothing like that seen after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

    A slow-moving Category 1 hurricane when it hit the region on Tuesday, Isaac was expected to weaken into a tropical depression on Thursday. Only one fatality linked to the cyclone has been confirmed so far.

    But Isaac left a soggy mess across a widespread area along the U.S. Gulf Coast and could still bring heavy rain and flooding as it moves over the central United States - where rain is badly needed - in the next few days.

    More than 1 million residents of Louisiana and Mississippi were without power due to the storm on Thursday morning, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

    Fears about a possible imminent failure of the Lake Tangipahoa Dam in Mississippi prompted authorities to order the immediate evacuation of 60,000 residents in nearby communities in both Louisiana and thousands of others in Mississippi.

    The dam, in Pike County, Mississippi, is about 100 miles north of New Orleans, which was not in imminent danger.

    "It was badly damaged during the torrential rains last night but it has not been breached at this time," said Carlene Statham, deputy director of Pike County Civil Defense.

    The oil and gas industry in the Gulf of Mexico region has so far reported no major storm-related damage to infrastructure. Energy production was expected to start ramping up again, after nearly grinding to a halt as Isaac closed in on Louisiana on Tuesday.

    Benchmark Brent crude was little changed in Thursday afternoon trading at about $112.80 a barrel.

    Multibillion-dollar defenses built to protect New Orleans itself, after it was ravaged by Katrina almost exactly seven years ago, passed their first major test, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

    PLAQUEMINES PARISH FLOODED

    But massive rains and storm surge from the Gulf of Mexico inundated low-lying communities outside the federal flood containment system protecting the city, forcing the evacuation of thousands of people from their homes and dramatic rooftop rescue operations.

    The hardest-hit area was Plaquemines Parish, southeast of New Orleans, where floodwaters overtopped at least one levee on Wednesday and left many homes under about 12 feet of water.

    Local boatmen plucked dozens in Plaquemines from the roofs of their houses after they had decided they could ride out what, compared with Katrina, seemed like a small storm.

    Parish President Billy Nungesser said U.S. Army National Guard troops and local sheriff's office officials were going house to house through the area on Thursday to ensure that there were no deaths or injuries.

    Clearing weather permitted the use of military helicopters, mostly UH-60 Blackhawks, to aid in the operation.

    In St. John the Baptist Parish, northwest of the city, about 3,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes before dawn on Thursday due to storm surges from Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Maurepas, authorities said.

    In Slidell, a town of about 27,000 people northeast of New Orleans, storm surge from Lake Pontchartrain left the Eden Isle community under about a foot of water.

    Emergency services rescued about 350 people from Slidell homes and neighboring communities hit by more severe flooding, local authorities said.

    "We've had no power and no food for two days," said Steve Bales, 45, a Slidell-based construction worker.

    "We don't have a way out of town. We have nowhere to go," he added, sitting on the stoop of a city building with half a dozen townspeople.

    National Guard troops and police moved into the town Thursday afternoon as some local residents plowed along flooded streets in boats.

    IT WAS SCARY'

    Staff Sergeant Denis Ricou, a Louisiana National Guard spokesman, said about 5,800 troops had been deployed due to Isaac and the number could rise to over 8,000 in the coming days.

    City officials announced a dusk-to-dawn curfew on Wednesday to help prevent any return of the looting that occurred in New Orleans in the days after Katrina struck in 2005.

    New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu warned that the punishment for a looting conviction is harsh - a mandatory three years' hard labor.

    "If you loot, you'll wear an orange suit," Landrieu told a news conference.

    About a dozen looting-related arrests were reported in the city by Thursday morning but the streets were unusually quiet, littered with downed branches, trees and pieces of roofing material.

    Power remained out through most of the city, while in the historic French Quarter, a few people were out taking down the boards they had nailed up over store windows.

    Mark Wallace, 52, came out to check on his store, Fancy Boutique.

    "This one just took forever," Wallace said of the slow-moving storm, which has brought rain to New Orleans since late Tuesday. "Usually they blow through and are done with."

    Wayne Overton, 50, a longshoreman, came out to inspect a large, fallen tree in front of his home that had knocked down power lines. "This one lasted a while. It was scary," Overton said, noting that the storm had damaged the roof of his home, near the city's port. "There's going to be a lot of clean-up to do around here."

    DROUGHT RELIEF

    As the focus on Isaac shifted from the coast, many in its projected path further north have been praying it will bring rain desperately needed to ease a drought in the central states, where summer crops are drying up and many rivers and dams are critically low.

    Isaac never came close to the power of Katrina, which was a Category 3 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale when it smashed into New Orleans on August 29, 2005.

    But U.S. President Barack Obama still declared the impact on Louisiana and Mississippi major disasters and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts.

    City officials said Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, which closed late on Monday, would remain shut on Thursday until repairs can be done to the damaged lines that supply it with power.

    A tow-truck driver, 62-year-old Gregory Alan Parker, died early Thursday after a tree fell on his cab while he was trying to move a large tree from a main street in Picayune, a town in Pearl River County in southern Mississippi near the Louisiana border, according a spokesperson for the Pearl River Emergency Management Agency.

    Together with an unconfirmed death in a Louisiana apartment fire, his was the only U.S. fatality blamed on Isaac so far. The storm killed 23 people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic on its way across the Caribbean to the Gulf of Mexico.

    The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Isaac, now a tropical storm with top sustained winds of 40 mph, was centered about 165 miles northwest of New Orleans and churning slowly northwest.

    It was followed by Hurricane Kirk, which formed on Thursday over the open Atlantic Ocean, about 1,065 miles northeast of the Caribbean northern Leeward Islands, the Miami-based hurricane center said.

    (Additional reporting by Ben Gruber and Kathy Finn in New Orleans, Emily Le Coz in Tupelo, Missisippi, Chris Baltimore in Houston, David Adams and Kevin Gray in Miami; Writing by Tom Brown; Editing by Jackie Frank)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/drenched-orleans-passes-post-katrina-hurricane-test-012334449.html

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    Wednesday, August 29, 2012

    Nearly 18 percent of Kentuckians lack health insurance | Economics

    In 2010, nearly 641,000 or 17.5 percent of Kentuckians under the age of 65 did not have health insurance, according to estimates released?today by the U.S. Census Bureau.

    At 17.5 percent, the rate of uninsured residents in the state was higher than in all but 18 states. Massachusetts had the lowest rate of uninsured at 5.2 percent; Texas was highest at 26.3 percent.

    Minorities and the poor were more likely to be uninsured, according to the Census Bureau estimates.

    More than 28 percent of residents under 65 in families that made less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level lacked health insurance. ??For residents under 65 in families that made less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level the percentage lacking health insurance jumped to 30 percent.

    The uninsured rate among whites was 16.5 percent compared to 20.1 percent for blacks and 37.4 percent for Hispanics.?

    The uninsured rate among persons under 19 years of age was only 6.7 percent compared to 21.8 percent for persons 18 to 64 years of age.?

    Oldham County had the lowest percentage of uninsured residents, at 10.2 percent.? The highest estimated uninsured rate was in Casey County, at 24.2 percent followed by Monroe County (23.8 percent); Todd County (23.5 percent); and Adair and Cumberland counties each with an uninsured rate of 23 percent.

    With more than 101,000 uninsured residents, Jefferson County had the largest number of uninsured followed by Fayette County with 46,700 and Kenton County with 21,300 uninsured.?

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    ?

    Posted in: Census, Demographics, Health care

    Source: http://cincinnati.com/blogs/economics/2012/08/29/nearly-18-percent-of-kentuckians-lack-health-insurance/

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    NYTimes leads group defense in mobile patent suit - seattlepi.com

    The New York Times Co. is girding for a legal battle that many larger organizations have avoided.

    The Times is leading the defense of a diverse group of companies that use technology they assumed was free: sending text messages with Web links to mobile phones.

    The technology was patented by inventor Richard J. Helferich, who filed an outline of how such a system would work with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in September 1997. He was granted several patents on the method, giving him the right to sue companies that use it without permission.

    Since 2008, his company, Helferich Patent Licensing, has filed 23 suits against companies ranging from Best Buy Co. to the National Basketball Association, claiming they are infringing on his intellectual property.

    HPL offers companies the chance to settle by paying a one-time fee of $750,000. Many companies gladly pay, rather than getting bogged down in a court fight that could cost millions. Roughly 100 companies have settled with HPL already, it says, including Apple Inc., The Walt Disney Co. and McDonald's Corp.

    The Times' general counsel, Kenneth Richieri, says he wants to prevent Helferich's patents from becoming a burden on activities that are commonplace in the digital age.

    "In some ways, it's a tax for being on the Internet," Richieri said. "Millions and millions of dollars collectively is going out of the pockets of people who earned it to people who, in my opinion, didn't do anything."

    If the Times loses, it's likely it will have to pay more than the $750,000 that HPL initially sought to continue using the technology. The Times has used it to alert readers by mobile phone of breaking news or severe weather.

    Steven Lisa, a registered patent attorney who represents HPL, would not comment on the specifics of any settlements.

    The U.S. patent system is designed to protect inventors and allow them to profit from their ideas. Where would General Electric be without legal protection for Thomas Edison's light bulb? What might have become of AT&T if competitors had been free to copy Alexander Graham Bell's telephone? The patent office views its role as vital to the growth of the U.S. economy, and last year, it issued around 245,000 patents.

    HPL's cases, however, fit into a controversial category. Opponents point out that HPL doesn't make products or provide services. They say it simply uses patents to seek licensing fees from others who actually do business. Critics label such companies "patent trolls".

    "You really have to wonder what contribution they are making to our economy or our society, or if it's just a drain," said Jason Schultz, director of the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at the University of California, Berkeley.

    Patent trolling is legal. The patent office doesn't require inventors to put their ideas into action.

    In 2011, entities like HPL sued 5,073 companies in the U.S. for infringing on patents that they either got on their own or acquired. That was more than double the number in 2009, according to PatentFreedom, a research organization that offers consulting advice for defendants in patent lawsuits.

    PatentFreedom estimates the typical cost of a patent defense is $1 million to $5 million. Taking the low estimate, multiplied by the number of defendants, it sees such suits as a drag on the economy of more than $5 billion a year.

    "Law firms are doing very well at this. Operating companies are not," says Daniel McCurdy, the founder of PatentFreedom.

    The Times is fighting the case on two fronts: at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in the courts. Beginning late last year, it filed a number of complaints with the patent office on grounds that the government issued the patents incorrectly. The Times' legal team notes, for instance, that Intel Corp. received a similar patent in February 1996, some 18 months before Helferich got his. A few of the complaints have initially been found in the Times' favor, according to the newspaper company's outside counsel, Brian Buroker, although HPL is appealing. The process could take 18 months to complete.

    The Times is also fighting the case in the U.S. District Court in Chicago, where it argues HPL already receives licensing fees from cellphone manufacturers for the same technology and therefore shouldn't be allowed to double dip and charge content providers.

    The Times is spearheading the defense of a group that also includes CBS Corp., Comcast Corp.'s TV channels Bravo and G4 and J.C. Penney Co., according to court filings. HPL sued The New York Times Co. in July 2010; Bravo, G4 and CBS in October 2011 and J.C. Penney in December 2011.

    The technology in dispute has become a key part of the companies' marketing campaigns. CBS texts followers to prompt them to visit its website for exclusive pictures and video to shows such as "Big Brother." Bravo sends messages to viewers' mobile phones to get them to participate in live online chats and polls. J.C. Penney lets shoppers with mobile phones know about sweepstakes and giveaways.

    Although the lawsuits were filed separately, the defendants are saving money by sharing strategies and resources instead of fighting the lawsuits on their own. The lawsuit against the Times is scheduled to go through at least the middle of next year.

    Some see the case as highlighting the need for patent reform.

    Berkeley's Schultz says it should be easier for defendants to force the patent office to re-examine its past decisions on issuing patents, and easier for patents to be struck down in court. That way, patent holders would be less able to make a business out of extracting settlements by using the threat of costly litigation.

    Some changes are coming. Last September, President Barack Obama signed into law the first major change in patent law in six decades. It is aimed at streamlining the patent process, reducing costly legal battles and giving the patent office more money to process applications in a timely fashion.

    Certain parts of the law won't take effect until March, but a provision that took effect right away has made it more difficult for patent holders to name dozens of defendants in a single suit. That has led to a decreased number of companies sued. PatentFreedom estimates the number of defendants this year will fall to around 3,500.

    Source: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/NYTimes-leads-group-defense-in-mobile-patent-suit-3820940.php

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    Hurricane Isaac tops Louisiana levee on Katrina anniversary

    NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - Hurricane Isaac drove water over the top of a levee on the outskirts of New Orleans on Wednesday, triggering life-threatening flooding seven years to the day after Hurricane Katrina, authorities said.

    Emergency management officials in low-lying Plaquemines Parish reported the overtopping of the 8 or 9 foot (2.4 or 2.7 meter) high levee between the Braithwaite and White Ditch districts southeast of New Orleans.

    Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said about 2,000 residents of the area had been ordered to evacuate but only about half were confirmed to have gotten out before Isaac brought driving winds and rain beginning late on Tuesday.

    "On the east bank right now, we have reports of people on their roofs and attics and 12 to 14 foot of water (in their homes)," Nungesser told CNN.

    "This storm has delivered more of a punch than people thought," he added.

    It was not immediately clear how many people may have been stranded in the area, as torrential rain and hurricane-force winds prevented a full-scale search.

    "The sheriff's deputies are over there but all the roads are unpassable ... We don't know if some people are left behind and now we can't get there and there is no way we can operate a boat or an air boat in these winds," Nungesser said.

    Isaac was the first test for multibillion-dollar flood defenses built after levees failed under Katrina's storm surge, leaving large parts of New Orleans swamped and killing 1,800 people, the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history.

    Plaquemines Parish was outside the city limits that benefited from the beefing up of New Orleans' flood defenses.

    Hundreds in and around New Orleans drowned in 2005 and many survivors waited for days to be plucked from their rooftops by helicopter. New Orleans endured days of deadly disorder and widespread looting.

    While not nearly as strong as Katrina - a Category 3 hurricane when it slammed into New Orleans on August 29, 2005 - Isaac, with Category 1 winds up to 80 mph, was a threat that authorities said should not be underestimated.

    At 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT), Isaac was about 50 miles south-southwest of New Orleans and packing top sustained winds of 80 miles an hour, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

    It said hurricane force winds extended outward up to 60 miles from the storm's center.

    Isaac was slogging west-northwestward near 6 mph, a slow pace that increases the threat of rain-induced flooding.

    WIDESPREAD FLOODING EXPECTED

    Isaac killed at least 23 people and caused significant flooding and damage in Haiti and the Dominican Republic before skirting the southern tip of Florida on Sunday and heading across the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico.

    It spared Tampa, Florida, where the Republican National Convention is being held. But it forced party leaders to reshuffle the schedule and tone down what some might have seen as excess celebration about Mitt Romney's presidential nomination as Gulf Coast residents faced danger.

    The leading edge of the storm was felt along the Gulf Coast starting late Tuesday, and authorities had warned it could flood towns in Mississippi and Alabama, as well as Louisiana, with storm surges of up to 12 feet.

    Rainfall accumulations, potentially totaling as much as 20 inches in some areas, were expected to trigger widespread flooding.

    Energy companies along the Gulf Coast refining center braced for the storm's impact by shuttering some plants and running others at reduced rates ahead of Isaac's landfall.

    Oil production in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico nearly ground to a halt and ports and coastal refineries curtailed operations.

    Intense hurricanes such as Katrina - which took out 4.5 million barrels per day of refining capacity at one point - have flooded refineries, keeping them closed for extended periods and reducing fuel supplies.

    This time, though, the U.S. Department of Energy estimated that only 12 percent of the Gulf Coast's refining capacity had gone offline. Louisiana usually processes more than 3 million barrels per day of crude into products like gasoline.

    Perceptions that the area's oil facilities would not sustain major damage, and that production would quickly bounce back, pushed international benchmark Brent crude down 74 cents early Wednesday, toward $111.84 a barrel.

    (Additional reporting by Ben Gruber in New Orleans, Emily Le Coz in Tupelo, Missisippi, Kristen Hays, Erwin Seba, Chris Baltimore in Houston, and Ellen Wullhorst in New Orleans; Writing by Tom Brown and Ros Krasny; Editing by Vicki Allen)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hurricane-isaac-makes-landfall-louisiana-000237979.html

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    Tuesday, August 28, 2012

    Watching Over The Ocean In Kailua, Hawaii

    A volunteer helps in Hawaii. Enlarge Courtesy of HOK

    A volunteer helps in Hawaii.

    Courtesy of HOK

    A volunteer helps in Hawaii.

    Some may see the efforts of Hui o Ko'olaupoko as just a drop in the bucket, but the bucket is the Pacific Ocean and arguably every drop is important to the health of the whole planet.

    HOK works with landowners in Windward Oahu to improve and conserve threatened land and to restore the watershed. So far this year, 1,150 volunteers have logged 2,947 volunteer hours.

    One of the group's biggest challenges, says Executive Director Todd Cullison, is "showing measurable changes in water quality. We have been degrading our watersheds for many generations. It's not an overnight reversal of past practices."

    Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/participationnation/2012/08/27/159735754/watching-over-the-ocean-in-kailua-hawaii?ft=1&f=1007

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    Cooper, UT Southwestern research: Midlife fitness ... - Health Blog

    Fit in her late 50s, Linda Jackson is paving the way for more good health later in life. (Courtney Perry/Staff photographer)

    Let?s see?as if feeling better, looking better, being calmer and more optimistic aren?t enough, here?s yet another reason to exercise:

    You?re more likely to avoid chronic-care issues in old age.

    My dad, God love him and rest his sweet soul, wasn?t an exerciser. As his health began (and continued) declining, I wondered whether his life would have been any different had he worked out when he was younger.

    Turns out?maybe so. Research by The Cooper Institute, in collaboration with UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas shows people who are fit at midlife have fewer chronic diseases when they?re older.

    Published in The Archives of Internal Medicine, the study followed 18,000 ?generally healthy? men and women, average age 49 at its onset, who underwent baseline preventive medical exams at Cooper. In addition to a treadmill test, participants were screened for other risk factors such as blood pressure, cholesterol, and body mass index (BMI).

    An average 26 years after examination, participants? health status was evaluated using Medicare data. The result: Fitter individuals ?aged well with fewer chronic illnesses to impact their quality of life,? says Dr. Benjamin Willis, staff epidemiologist at Cooper and first author of the study.

    In addition, the fitter people studied had a lower burden of such chronic conditions as heart failure, Alzheimer?s disease, diabetes, coronary artery disease, chronic kidney disease, and certain cancers.

    Another promising finding: The fittest of those who died spent less time burdened by chronic health problems.

    So take that walk, climb those stairs, swim a few laps. You?re paving the way for a healthier future.

    Source: http://healthblog.dallasnews.com/2012/08/cooper-research-midlife-fitness-fewer-chronic-care-issues-later-on.html/

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    Internet Marketing is the best way to promote your company ...

    Benefits of internet Marketing
    Internet Marketing has never been more popular along with today?s business owners, sufficient reason for more and more companies experiencing and enjoying the power of marketing online, it?s crucial that you as a business jump on the particular bandwagon too. The tiniest business in the world could possibly be the largest business online with successful Internet marketing. So so that you can grow your business, you will need specifically designed Internet marketing strategies to transform your online exposure.

    Because of so many benefits of internet marketing, why not?
    The advantage of internet marketing is that it has a lot of different approaches. Whatever may be your organization interest, it needs genius marketing strategies to make it successful. Internet marketing not only entails on site work and also offset by guiding traffic to your site. This includes social networking sites, emails or even wireless media; so it gets your communication across fast and effectively.

    Kindle Ritual review

    Internet marketing has a great number of benefits over traditional marketing. For example, you can course how well you are doing, help to make immediate changes and acquire fast results. Internet marketing is also a whole lot cheaper than traditional advertising and marketing such as T.Versus and radio, although also giving you the ability to choose your audiences; which in return makes it a lot more effective.
    Search engine optimization and PPC may lead your business down the road of marketing
    Some ways to advertise your business online will be through SEO and also PPC. SEO (Search Engine Optimization) is done through the organic listings. Marketing your business this way can take efforts and get a number one place on the search engines, playing with the long term you will get an increased return on your investment. PPC however has immediate outcomes, and also lets you fiddle with different approaches to see what works best.

    Based on your type of business many internet marketing specialists would counsel you to have a mixture of the two for optimum results.
    One of the primary reasons why businesses don?t invest in good internet marketing is lack of understanding.. However, since the world is becoming increasingly more internet savvy, it can be detrimental to any organization if they do not purchase internet marketing. Your business can not improve its potential with no smart Internet business marketing and advertising plan. Once you have dedicated to this kind of marketing, you will note your company go from energy to strength.

    For more information about Kindle Ritual please visit the website.

    Source: http://www.welcometocoastcity.org/internet-marketing-is-the-best-way-to-promote-your-company-2.php

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    Monday, August 27, 2012

    Slidehow: The best photos of the day

    Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/photos-of-the-day-1340925511-slideshow/

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    Louise Phillips: RED RIBBONS - BLOG TOUR ...it's all happening!

    Well it's all about to kick off and already the RED RIBBONS blog tour is proving novel and different!

    We don't have a 1 Week Blog tour - We don't have a 2 Week Blog tour, but rather a

    ?2.29 WEEK BLOG TOUR!

    Starting Thursday the 30th August, the tour begins with the lovely lady herself, Katy O'Dowd, and ends Friday 14th September, with the wonderful, Brian Kirk.

    All participants are great friends of mine. You might follow some of them already on Twitter, Blogger or Facebook, but if not, they are folks who are great fun to connect with and who are also extremely generous and supportive to me by facilitating the RED RIBBONS (2.29 Week) Blog tour.


    KATY O'DOWD, is an arts and entertainment journalist and has worked for Time Out, Associated Newspapers and Comic Relief and her articles have appeared in The Times (London), Metro (London) and many other arts and entertainment publications, paper and online.

    She reviews for the Historical Novels Review and the British Fantasy Society, is a commissioning editor at Pendragon Press and is co-editor of the Nasty Snips II Project for that press.

    Alongside writing with her Dad under the pen-name Derry O?Dowd, whose first book ?The Scarlet Ribbon? was chosen to launch the History Press Ireland?s fiction line, she writes under her own name.

    ?The Lady Astronomer?, a YA Steampunk novel, is out with Untold Press this Autumn. She is currently writing a Steampunk adult series because writing for tweens and teens is damnably hard work.

    Visit Katy at? www.katyodowd.com???????????????????????????????????????????????? And on Twitter @katyod



    ?
    MICHELLE MOLONEY-KING, is a primary school teacher, writer, avid reader and a pretty awesome person! She blogs about country life, books, school, IT, flash fiction and more at http://teacherMoloneyKing.com

    Visit Michelle at http://teacherMoloneyKing.com?????????????????????? And on Twitter @MoloneyKing




    DEBBI MACK, is the New York Times ebook bestselling author of the Sam McRae mystery series, featuring lawyer/sleuth Stephanie Ann ?Sam? McRae. She's also had several short stories published, including one nominated in 2010 for a Derringer. A ?recovering attorney,? Debbi has also worked as a journalist, librarian and freelance writer/researcher. You can read more about Debbi and her books on her Web site. She also has five blogs, including My Life on the Mid-List, and you can find her on Twitter and Facebook. Vist Debbi at www.debbimack.com?????????????????????????????????????????????? And on Twitter??? @debbimack



    SUSAN CONDON, is a native of Dublin, who began writing poetry and short stories in 2008.?Writing awards include first prize in the Bealtaine SDCC and CWC SCC City of Dublin VEC Short Story Competitions in 2010; highly commended in Ireland?s Own Prose Competition and www.fivestopstory.com in 2011, and she has just been long-listed in the RT? Guide/Penguin Ireland Short Story Competition 2012.

    Publications include South of the County: New Myths and Tales in 2010, Senior Times and The Echo in 2011 and InTallaght and www.fivestopstory.com?in 2012.

    A member of Platform One Writer?s Group, Rua Red, Susan is currently completing her first novel ? a crime fiction thriller set in New York.



    ALISON WELLS, is a writer of flash fiction, short stories and?novels, and mother of four from Bray, Co. Wicklow. She has worked as?a technical writer and has degrees in Psychology and????? Communication Studies.?Her short fiction has appeared in the Sunday Tribune, Crann?g, The View from Here, Metazen and?in many anthologies including the Higgs Boson, Voices of??????? Angels, and UK National Flash Fiction Day?s?Jawbreakers. She has been shortlisted for Hennessy New?Irish Writing and for the Bridport, WOW, and Fish Award. This year she won the Big Book of Hope Ebook fiction?category with her flash fiction medley Flashes of Entropy?and Hope and was awarded a writing residency in Cill Rialaig,?Co. Kerry to work on The Exhibit of Held Breaths. Another?literary novel is ready for submission.?She blogs for writing.ie and??on Head above Water www.alisonwells.wordpress.com. Alison has published a space comedy novel Housewife with a Half-LIfe and?a mini short collection including Stories to read on the Train.????

    Visit Alison at www.alisonwells.wordpress.com??????????????????????? And on Twitter @AlisonWells


    ?

    ?
    VALERIE SIRR, has had short fiction and flash fiction widely published (Ireland, UK, US, Australia and Asia). Some poems are forthcoming in anthologies from Revival Press, Ireland. Awards include 2007 Hennessy New Irish Writer Award, two Arts Council of Ireland bursaries and other national and international literature prizes, most recently a flash fiction award (2011) from The New Writer Magazine (UK), judged by Catherine Smith, British poet and writer. Valerie?s flash fiction appears on the National Flash Fiction Day 2012(UK) website.

    She holds an M. Phil in Creative Writing from Trinity College,Dublin. She teaches creative writing, and she hopes to find a publisher for her flash and story collections soon and is working on a novel.

    Visit Valerie at www.valeriesirr.wordpress.com.????????????????????????????And on Twitter @ValerieSirr


    ???

    NIAMH BAGNELL, ran a 4-page newspaper for a few months in 1985: it cost 20p per issue and was a big hit with the neighbours. Her long-awaited return to writing came in mid-2007, when she joined Lucan Writers Group (meeting, among other talented people, the lovely Louise Phillips). Published in several poetry magazines, and the Stinging Fly.?

    She hosted a writing based radio show on Liffey Sound for 1.5 years before giving it all up to move away to hide in the wilderness...? Her blog is variouscushions.blogspot.com which she updates when baby, work, and other circumstances allow...

    Visit Niamh at http://variouscushions.blogspot.ie ????????????????????? ?And?on Twitter @variouscushions





    TRIONA WALSH, is a writer of short stories and poetry (and a couple of novels that live in her desk drawer.) Her writing has appeared in a number of journals and anthologies -? Poetry Bus 1 & 3, Petals on a Bough anthology, Caught in Amber anthology, Kay's Book anthology, Flavours of Home, Petals on a Bough, South of the County - New Myths and Tales.

    And she has been lucky enough to have had some success in competition, in particular - Winner in the NWA Awards 2008, Winner of the Jonathan Swift Award 2008, Short listed Jonathan Swift 2009 Shortlisted Kay McDonnell Short Story competition 2009, Shortlisted Malahide Library Centenary Short Story competition 2010. Her ambition is to write the next great Irish novel, but she'll settle for just getting out of the slush pile.

    Visit Triona at http://trionawalsh.blogspot.ie/??????????????????????????? And on Twitter???? @DomesticOub



    ETHEL ROHAN,?is the author of Hard to Say and Cut Through the Bone, the latter longlisted for The Story Prize. Her work has or will appear in World Literature Today, Tin House Online, The Irish Times, The Rumpus, Post Road Magazine, and The Los Angeles Review, among many others.

    She earned her MFA in fiction from Mills College, California. Raised in Ireland, Ethel Rohan now lives in San Francisco where she is a member of the Writers Grotto.

    Visit Ethel at?www.ethelrohan.com
    http://ethelrohan.tumblr.com?????????????????????????????????????????????????????? And on Twitter @ethelrohan

    NIAMH BOYCE, was awarded the Hennessy XO New Irish Writer of the Year 2012 for her poem Kitty. Her fiction has been shortlisted for the Francis McManus Short Story competition 2011, the Hennessy Literary Awards 2010 and the Molly Keane Award 2010.

    Her novel ?The Herbalist? will be published by Penguin in 2013. She blogs at http://niamhboyce.blogspot.com.

    Visit Niamh at http://niamhboyce.blogspot.com??????????????????????????? And on twitter??? @niamhboyce

    LAURENCE O'BRYAN, studied English and history, then business, and IT at Oxford University. He spent ten years working in the City of London, the creaking hub of world finance. He was first published by a school newspaper when he was ten, for a short story about aliens getting lost. The Istanbul Puzzle is his first novel published. It is part of a three book contract with Harper Collins. It will be translated into 9 languages and be published in about 15 countries, and in 2007, he won the Outstanding Novel Submitted award at the Southern California writer's conference.

    He is a member of the UK Crime Writer's Association, the Society of Authors, the Irish Writing Centre, two "live" writing groups in Dublin and online writing communities in England and the States. His research has taken me all over the world, from San Francisco to deep in the Arab world. And he still enjoy looking at the stars and listening to the stories of strangers.


    Visit Laurence at http://lpobryan.com/ And on Twitter at @LPOBryan



    ???
    CATHERINE RYAN HOWARD, is a writer and blogger from Cork, Ireland. Following the success of her self-published travel memoir, Mousetrapped: A Year and A Bit in Orlando, Florida, Catherine went onto self-publish Backpacked: A Reluctant Trip Across Central America and Self-Printed: The Sane Person's Guide to Self-Publishing. She shares her pragmatic, caffeine-infused self-publishing advice at www.catherineryanhoward.com, and currently divides her time between her desk and the sofa.
    ???


    Source: http://120socks.blogspot.com/2012/08/red-ribbons-blog-tour-its-all-happening.html

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    Bus collides with tanker in China, killing 36

    BEIJING (AP) ? A double-decker sleeper bus rammed into a tanker loaded with highly-flammable methanol on a northern Chinese highway on Sunday, causing both vehicles to burst into flames and killing 36 people, state media said.

    The official Xinhua News Agency said 39 people were on the long distance sleeper bus when it crashed and only three survived. The survivors were hospitalized, it said, but didn't say what condition they were in.

    The tanker had just returned to the highway after an early morning rest stop when it was apparently rear-ended by the bus at around 2:40 a.m. close to the city of Yan'an in Shaanxi province, the official China News website said.

    The bus had left Hohhot in Inner Mongolia at 5 p.m. Saturday and was headed south to Xi'an city, it said.

    Xinhua news photos showed the charred metal skeleton of the bus rammed up against the back of the tanker.

    An official with the local Communist Party propaganda bureau in Yan'an confirmed that the crash occurred but was unable to give details and was unsure of the death toll.

    Road safety is a serious problem in China. According to Xinhua, poorly maintained roads and bad driving habits result in about 70,000 deaths and 300,000 injuries a year.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bus-collides-tanker-china-killing-36-025103116.html

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    Sunday, August 26, 2012

    PFT: Roethlisberger blames FieldTurf for DeCastro's injury

    Matthew+Stafford+Detroit+Lions+v+Oakland+Raiders+y5LcmFG1tiMlGetty Images

    There?s little worse than having your starting quarterback leave with an injury in the preseason, but it looks like the Lions got little more than a temporary scare from Matthew Stafford on Saturday.

    The Lions quarterback left the game with an injury to his left hand, but x-rays taken during the contest were negative. Stafford, who wore a wrap on the hand, said afterward that he would have returned if it had been a regular season game.

    ?Probably what would have happened in a regular season game is right after it happened, I would have up for x-rays,? Stafford said, via Anwar Richardson of MLive.com. ?If they would have said they were negative, I would have come back in the game. It feels okay right now. It feels fine, really. It?s scary to look down and see your hand swell up by the second.?

    Running back Kevin Smith also seems to have avoided an injury that will keep him out of the lineup for an extended period. The oft-injured running back hurt his ankle early in the second half, but also got good news when x-rays came back negative on Saturday.

    ?It just gets scary under the pile of those big guys laying on you. It?s just a minor tweak, something I?m pretty sure I can get rid of quick. Just stay in the training room,? Smith said. ?More than anything, I was very scared. Just being that I had a high ankle sprain, I know how long it took to get back healthy. It?s not a high ankle sprain, so that?s positive. I?ll get in the treatment room and get back as soon as I can.?

    Given the thin ranks at running back early in the season for Detroit, an injury to Smith would have forced the team to look for backfield help before the season starts. They still might do that, but it doesn?t appear they will be quite as desperate as many feared when Smith hobbled off the field in Oakland.

    Now the Lions just need to clear up the status of the two cornerbacks who went down against the Raiders to make the whole night a momentary scare instead of a lingering problem.

    ?

    Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/08/26/roethlisberger-blames-fieldturf-for-decastros-injury/related/

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