If there is anything the nonconformist hates worse than a conformist it's another nonconformist who doesn't conform to the prevailing standards of nonconformity.

Your Ad Here

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Can food really turn you on?

 

By Jane Black , Tango Magazine (www.tangomag.com)

The other day, when I told my boyfriend, Sean, that I was going to be doing a little research on aphrodisiacs, he was surprisingly keen to help out.


"I'll buy the bacon," he said.


"Bacon is not an aphrodisiac," I said.


"Wanna bet?" he challenged.


Sean loves bacon - and, come to think of it, it did seem to put him in the mood for love. (On reflection, I realized that I had unconsciously begun incorporating it into more and more meals, wrapping thin strips around chunks of cod and adding crispy bits to pasta sauces.)


But can food produce sexual desire? Or, to put it another way, do aphrodisiacs actually exist?


Many people think so. An online poll conducted by sex therapist Linda De Villers found that strawberries, ice cream, pasta and whipped cream are the four foods most commonly associated with lust. But according to Martha Hopkins, coauthor of "The New InterCourses: An Aphrodisiac Cookbook," there are no real aphrodisiacs.


"Still," she laughs, "whatever makes you groan when you eat it counts."


If you think about it, a greasy slab of cured pork belly is no odder than many other foods that have historically been considered aphrodisiacs: asparagus, artichokes, avocados, bananas, black beans, chili peppers, figs, licorice and pine nuts have all been hailed for their ability to arouse desire.


In renaissance Europe, women were forbidden to eat artichokes, which according to legend had been created when the Greek god Zeus transformed a young maiden into the spiky vegetable. As a result, they were prescribed to men to improve their bedroom performance.


Of history's most famous aphrodisiacs, only chocolate and oysters still hold claim to their sensual reputation.

While the physical suggestion of sex may be enough for some, modern research shows that some classic aphrodisiacs can stimulate desire - and increase performance. Oysters, for example, contain high levels of zinc, which has been associated with increased sexual potency in men.


The smell of food, too, can elicit sexual feelings, according to research by Alan Hirsch, the neurological director of the Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago. Having noticed that people who lost their sense of smell also had a diminished sexual appetite.


Men responded to all of the aromas. But the top spot went to a blend of pumpkin pie and lavender, which increased blood flow 40 percent of the time. Runners-up were doughnuts with black licorice (31.5 percent) and pumpkin pie with doughnuts (20 percent).


Women, in contrast, responded most to the blend of cucumber and licorice - two traditional aphrodisiacs - and the scent of baby powder. But perhaps more revealing were the three scents that turned women off: cherries, barbecued meat and men's cologne. So much for the thrill of the grill.


In the end, Sean was right. Aphrodisiacs are personal. He loves bacon, while my friend James can't think of anything sexier than Nutella, that thick chocolate-hazelnut spread that is "perfect for feeding each other," he says.


And for "InterCourses" author Hopkins, the sexiest food is grilled asparagus dipped in her French boyfriend's homemade mayonnaise. But, she adds, the greatest turn-on of all is when he cooks, and then does the dishes.


"If you think it's an aphrodisiac, it always works," Hopkins says. So pour the champagne, grill asparagus or feed your true love strawberries.


At my house, we'll be eating heart-shaped waffles and a (hearty) side of bacon.

SunJournal.com - Can food really turn you on?

Technorati Tags: , ,

Police seek public help for kangaroo afoot in Denmark

Danish police appealed for public help Tuesday to track down a kangaroo that escaped from its owner's home in Copenhagen.

Two of the fleet-footed native Australian marsupials escaped from their owner's residence in the Copenhagen neighbourhood of Amager on Monday.

One found its own way home on Tuesday but the second remains on the loose, police said.

"Passersby saw it on Tuesday afternoon and its owner, Jan Passer, is on his way to try to persuade it to return home," a police officer told AFP.

"He is very nice, according to his owner, and easy to cajole with just a carrot," he added.

Quoted from http://breitbart.com/article.php?id=071030161447.ov1zrmu2&show_article=1&catnum=9:

Police seek public help for kangaroo afoot in Denmark

 

Technorati Tags: ,,

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

ISP: Bill Maher's Meltdown

Bill Maher takes on 9/11 conspiracies; a Larry Craig costume; and Snowball the dancing cockatoo.
Technorati Tags:

Doctors Test Hot Sauce for Pain Relief

By LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON (AP) - Devil's Revenge. Spontaneous Combustion. Hot sauces have names like that for a reason. Now scientists are testing if the stuff that makes the sauces so savage can tame the pain of surgery.

Doctors are dripping the chemical that gives chili peppers their fire directly into open wounds during knee replacement and a few other highly painful operations.

Don't try this at home: These experiments use an ultra-purified version of capsaicin to avoid infection - and the volunteers are under anesthesia so they don't scream at the initial burn.

How could something searing possibly soothe? Bite a hot pepper, and after the burn your tongue goes numb. The hope is that bathing surgically exposed nerves in a high enough dose will numb them for weeks, so that patients suffer less pain and require fewer narcotic painkillers as they heal.

"We wanted to exploit this numbness," is how Dr. Eske Aasvang, a pain specialist in Denmark who is testing the substance, puts it.

Chili peppers have been part of folk remedy for centuries, and heat-inducing capsaicin creams are a drugstore staple for aching muscles. But today the spice is hot because of research showing capsaicin targets key pain-sensing cells in a unique way.

California-based Anesiva Inc. (ANSV)'s operating-room experiments aren't the only attempt to harness that burn for more focused pain relief. Harvard University researchers are mixing capsaicin with another anesthetic in hopes of developing epidurals that wouldn't confine women to bed during childbirth, or dental injections that don't numb the whole mouth.

And at the National Institutes of Health, scientists hope early next year to begin testing in advanced cancer patients a capsaicin cousin that is 1,000 times more potent, to see if it can zap their intractable pain.

Nerve cells that sense a type of long-term throbbing pain bear a receptor, or gate, called TRPV1. Capsaicin binds to that receptor and opens it to enter only those pain fibers - and not other nerves responsible for other kinds of pain or other functions such as movement.

These so-called C neurons also sense heat; thus capsaicin's burn. But when TRPV1 opens, it lets extra calcium inside the cells until the nerves become overloaded and shut down. That's the numbness.

"It just required a new outlook about ... stimulation of this receptor" to turn those cellular discoveries into a therapy hunt, says NIH's Dr. Michael Iadarola.

Enter Anesiva's specially purified capsaicin, called Adlea. Experiments are under way involving several hundred patients undergoing various surgeries, including knee and hip replacements. Surgeons drip either Adlea or a dummy solution into the cut muscle and tissue and wait five minutes for it to soak in before stitching up the wound.

Among early results: In a test of 41 men undergoing open hernia repair, capsaicin recipients reported significantly less pain in the first three days after surgery, Aasvang reported this month at a meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

In a pilot U.S. study of 50 knee replacements, the half treated with capsaicin used less morphine in the 48 hours after surgery and reported less pain for two weeks. Ongoing studies are testing larger doses in more patients to see if the effect is real.

There's a huge need for better surgical pain relief, says Dr. Eugene Viscusi, director of acute pain management at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, one of the test sites. Morphine and its relatives, so-called opioid painkillers, are surgery's standby. While they're crucial drugs, they have serious side effects that limit their use.

Specialists are watching the capsaicin research because it promises a one-time dose that works inside the wound, not body-wide, and wouldn't tether patients to an IV when they're starting physical therapy.

"It's in and it's done," Viscusi explains. "You can't abuse it. You can't misuse it."

"There's been an enormous effort to try and develop alternatives to opioids with the same strength but not too much success," adds Dr. Clifford Woolf of Harvard and Massachusetts General Hospital. "We think we're moving toward it."

His team is trying a different approach: Standard lidocaine injections numb all the surrounding tissue. Woolf and colleagues slipped lidocaine inside just pain-sensing neurons, by opening them with a tiny dose of capsaicin. Rats given the injections ran around normally while not noticing heat applied to their paws, they reported in the journal Nature this month.

That's years away from trying in people, and would have to be done in a way to avoid even a quick capsaicin burn.

In a third approach, Iadarola and NIH colleagues hope to soon test a capsaicin cousin called resiniferatoxin in advanced cancer patients whose pain no longer is relieved by opioids. Injections into the spinal columns of cancer-riddled dogs did more than temporarily numb - it severed some nerve connections.

 

Quoted from http://apnews.myway.com//article/20071029/D8SJ55H00.html:

My Way News - Doctors Test Hot Sauce for Pain Relief

Technorati Tags: ,,

Monday, October 29, 2007

He's not undead, just unsober...

BERLIN (Reuters) - Passengers on a German train mistook a Halloween reveler dressed up as a gore-covered zombie for a murder victim and called the police.

The 24-year-old man fell into a drunken slumber on his way home from a Halloween party in Hamburg, police in the northern town of Bad Segeberg said Monday.

Believing his hands and face were smeared with blood, passengers alerted police after getting no response from him.

A first aid team called to the scene soon cleared up the confusion. Police told the man to remove his make-up after which he was allowed to continue his journey.

"Bad Segeberg is in a rural area and Halloween isn't very well known there," police spokeswoman Silke Tobies said. "So people weren't expecting anyone to be dressed up in the train."

Quoted from http://www.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUSEIC94583820071029:

He's not undead, just unsober... | Oddly Enough | Reuters

Technorati Tags: ,,

Man fined for assisting old lady

 

23 October 2007

BRUSSELS – A man who assisted an elderly woman on Monday after train doors closed on her was "thanked" by the conductor with a 60-euro fine.

"I apparently could have caused a delay and that is not permitted," Daniël Dewulf from Ostend told newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws.

Dewulf managed to get on the Bruges-bound train just before the conductor's whistle. "Then I noticed that an elderly woman had tried to get on after me. The doors had closed on her, trapping her. In order to prevent a tragedy I pushed the door open and helped her get in. She thanked me profusely."

The conductor was less enthusiastic. "He gave me a fine because my actions increased the chance of a delay," Dewulf explained. "The train arrived right on time in Bruges in any event. The conductor did not see my point that I may have saved the woman's life as a mitigating circumstance. Result: 60-euro fine."

The Belgian Railways has since admitted that Dewulf should not be blamed and that he did help to prevent a worse accident. He will not have to pay the fine in the end. "We also offer our apologies. We should have in fact fined the woman in question for boarding the train after the whistle."

Man fined for assisting old lady, Belgian News, Belgium, Expatica

Technorati Tags: ,

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Maine: English Only for Driving Tests

 

Maine Bureau of Motor Vehicles announces it will only print driving manuals and testing materials in English.


Driving manualThe state of Maine announced on Wednesday that testing materials for anyone seeking a driver's license would only be provided in English. Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap canceled a planned program that would have printed the materials from the Bureau of Motor Vehicles in multiple languages. Dunlap suggested that it was too expensive to print materials for the six percent of the population that speak either French or Spanish.


"The prices really surprised us," Dunlap said in a statement. "We were hopeful this could be a cost-efficient project, but based on the prices companies were quoting us to provide accurate translations, that hasn't proved to be the case."


Dunlap may revisit the issue if there proves to be sufficient demand. Census Bureau statistics show that about 64,000 Maine residents speak French as their primary language and 10,000 speak Spanish.

Maine: English Only for Driving Tests

Technorati Tags: ,

Friday, October 26, 2007

Man accused of guzzling at Wis. Wal-Mart

 

MUKWONAGO, Wis. - A man told police he couldn't help himself when he took seven bottles of a spiked lemonade drink from the shelf at a Wal-Mart Supercenter and drank them in the liquor aisle.

Police Chief Fred Winchowky said the 43-year-old town of Eagle man claimed he was a recovering alcoholic and had been dry for 16 months before he went to the store Oct. 14 with his wife, who was not aware of what he was doing.

"He went down that aisle and he said 'I just couldn't control myself,'" Winchowky said. "He stated he was upset he broke his 16-month streak and he didn't know how he was going to tell his wife."

The chief said security video caught the man drinking the 12-ounce bottles of Jack Daniels Lynchburg Lemonade over a 15-minute period. He placed the empty bottles back on the shelf.

Confronted by a store official, he first denied it but smelled of intoxicants, Winchowky said.

The man was cited for retail theft.

Man accused of guzzling at Wis. Wal-Mart - Yahoo! News

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Prostitutes sew lips together in protest

 

LA PAZ (Reuters) - Prostitutes in the Bolivian city of El Alto sewed their lips together Wednesday as part of a hunger strike to demand that the mayor reopen brothels and bars ordered closed after violent protests by residents last week.

"We are fighting for the right to work and for our families' survival," Lily Cortez, leader of the El Alto Association of Nighttime Workers, told local television.

"Tomorrow we will bury ourselves alive if we are not immediately heard. The mayor will have his conscience to answer to if there are any grave consequences, such as the death of my comrades," she said, surrounded by about 10 prostitutes who had sewn their lips together with thread.

Some 30 other women were shown fasting inside a medical clinic nearby.

Mayor Fanor Nava told local radio he would not reopen the brothels and bars closed after city residents fed up with underage drinking and crime stormed the red-light district in El Alto, an impoverished city just north of La Paz.

Prostitution in Bolivia is legal but pimping is outlawed.

Student activists who want the bars and brothels permanently shut down were also on a hunger strike, along with the leaders of an association representing bars, restaurants and karaoke establishments.

"It's not only us owners and the sex workers who are affected, there are thousands of waiters, cooks, bartenders, taxi drivers and street vendors who will be without income," said Ramiro Orellana, spokesman for the business group.

El Alto is one of the largest urban areas in Bolivia, with nearly 1 million inhabitants, mostly Aymara and Quechua Indians.

Prostitutes sew lips together in protest | Oddly Enough | Reuters

Technorati Tags: ,

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Police seek man after fight with sister in cat-shaving case

By Bangor Daily News Staff
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - Bangor Daily News

SWANVILLE, Maine— Police continue to be on the lookout for a local man who fled into the woods after getting into a fight with his younger sister over shaving the family cat.

State Trooper Luke Cunningham said police were searching for Nicholas Palmer, 22, of Stevens Road. Police were called to the family residence at 1 p.m. Monday after Palmer’s 18-year-old sister claimed he choked and struck her. Before police could arrive, Palmer escaped into the woods. Using two tracking dogs, separate teams of officers searched unsuccessfully for Palmer for about four hours.

Cunningham said the sibling altercation began when Palmer attempted to stop his sister from shaving the family cat. The sister thought shaving would rid the cat of fleas and ticks. According to the sister, when Palmer attempted to cut the cord of the clipper she was using she responded by kicking him. The kick caused Palmer to cut himself with the knife he was using to sever the cord and he responded by choking and pushing his sister. He ran off when she called 911, Cunningham said.

"We’re still on the lookout for him," Cunningham said Tuesday. "We definitely want to get his side of the story."

 

Quoted from http://bangornews.com/news/t/news.aspx?articleid=155692&zoneid=500:

Police seek man after fight with sister in cat-shaving case

 

Technorati Tags: ,,,,,

Turkeys, once unseen in Massachusetts, are showing up in big numbers in cities and towns

Turkeys take to cities, towns

A wild turkey strolled along a sidewalk on Beacon Street in Brookline. The birds can grow to weigh roughly 20 pounds and stand 4 feet tall.
A wild turkey strolled along a sidewalk on Beacon Street in Brookline. The birds can grow to weigh roughly 20 pounds and stand 4 feet tall. (Globe Staff Photo/Mark Wilson)

By Keith O'Brien, Globe Staff | October 23, 2007

 

BROOKLINE - On a recent afternoon, Kettly Jean-Felix parked her car on Beacon Street in Brookline, fed the parking meter, wheeled around to go to the optician and came face to face with a wild turkey.

The turkey eyed Jean-Felix. Jean-Felix eyed the turkey. It gobbled. She gasped. Then the turkey proceeded to follow the Dorchester woman over the Green Line train tracks, across the street, through traffic, and all the way down the block, pecking at her backside as she went.

"This is so scary," Jean-Felix said, finally taking refuge inside Cambridge Eye Doctors in Brookline's bustling Washington Square. "I cannot explain it."

Notify the neighbors: The turkeys are spreading through suburbia. Wild turkeys, once eliminated in Massachusetts, are flourishing from Plymouth to Concord and - to the surprise of some wildlife officials - making forays into densely populated suburban and urban areas, including parts of Boston, Cambridge and, most recently, Brookline.

Some Brookline residents have welcomed the birds, happy to see wildlife strolling amid the nannies with $300 strollers and Trader Joe's shoppers. But many others worry what the keen-eyed, sometimes ornery birds might do, prompting as many as a dozen calls to the police department every day.

"Some people are getting very upset," said Brookline police animal control officer Pierre Verrier. "One of the biggest things is, they're afraid. They don't want the turkeys to get hurt. And the other thing is, they're afraid of the turkeys around their children. They don't know what they'll do."

As such, Brookline police issued a statement last month, telling residents what they should - or should not - do if they meet a wild turkey in town. The basic advice: stay away from the turkeys. But still, people keep calling police headquarters to report the strangest sight: Turkeys in downtown Brookline.

* * *

July 20, 9:31 a.m., Rawson Road: Caller reports 18 turkeys in her backyard. "Something must be done," caller says. "It's just not right." Requests animal control officer.

* * *

Wild turkeys - the official game bird of Massachusetts - are impressive animals that can grow to be roughly 20 pounds and 4 feet tall. By 1851, they had been eliminated from Massachusetts, a victim of hunting.

"We were turkey-less for many years," said Wayne Petersen, director of the Massachusetts Audubon Society's Important Birds Area Program. "And then we decided it would be quite nice to get them back on the landscape."

Efforts to revitalize the state's turkey population between 1911 and 1967 failed. Then, in 1972 and 1973, the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife released 37 turkeys in the Berkshires. These turkeys survived and bred. And between 1979 and 1996, wildlife officials trapped more than 500 turkeys in the Berkshires and released them elsewhere in the state.

Biologists were pleased; today's turkey population in Massachusetts lingers around 20,000. But Marion Larson, an information and education biologist at MassWildlife, said officials had not counted on the turkey's appetite for suburban - and even urban - living.

"That was something that surprised us," Larson said. "Who knew? The last time there were turkeys in Massachusetts there weren't a whole heck of a lot of suburbs."

This time around, of course, that is not the case, and turkeys have proven especially adaptable to residential living. By his last count, Verrier said, there are at least two dozen wild turkeys living in Brookline, feeding off everything from bird seed to gutter trash and, sometimes, scaring the wits out of the townspeople.

* * *

September 4, 11:01 a.m., Chatham Circle and Chatham Street: Caller - who had gone under some beech trees to take a picture of turkeys - reports four turkeys chasing him. Requests animal control officer.

* * *

The problem, according to some Brookline residents, is that the turkeys can be aggressive at times. Dr. Ruth Smith, an internist from New York City, was staying with a cousin in Brookline a couple of weeks ago when she was stalked by what she describes as a 3-foot-tall turkey.

"He came at me and, at first, I tried to shoo him away," Smith recalled. "I figured I'd just go 'Shoo!' and he'd go. But he was very aggressive."

Smith said she escaped by ducking into the Dunkin' Donuts on Beacon Street. But some of the hounded do not have the luxury of going inside. Brookline postal carrier Rosanne Lane said she has skipped houses on her mail route because turkeys dissuaded her from approaching.

"They make a lot of noise and I just take off," said Lane.

Under state law, an animal control officer can kill a turkey if it creates a public safety threat. In 2005, for example, Canton police killed three. But for now in Brookline, it has not come to that, said Verrier. When dispatched to the scene of a turkey, Verrier offers advice instead.

He tells people not to feed them, not to be intimidated by them, and to keep their distance. Still, some people cannot help themselves. They need to be near the turkeys.

* * *

September 7, 7:39 a.m., Druce Street: Two packs of turkeys (15) in the road . . . Two not getting along.

* * *

Over an eight-hour stretch last week in Brookline, a lone turkey walked Beacon Street, strutting at times, preening at others, and napping every now and again in the landscaping near the sidewalk.

Most people did not even notice. And those who did simply edged a few feet away from him and kept right on walking.

But as afternoon turned to dusk - and the turkey, a male, moved down Beacon Street into the heart of Washington Square - a crowd began to gather.

Some, like Jessica Dolber, snapped pictures. Others, like Kelly Stearn, called police.

But not Kettly Jean-Felix, the woman who had been followed by the turkey earlier that afternoon.

When she finally left the optician's office on the corner just an hour after being stalked by the turkey, she headed straight for her car. And this time the bird did not notice Jean-Felix. He was too busy eating peanut shells in front of the 7-Eleven and gobbling to the delight of the crowd.

 

Quoted from http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/10/23/turkeys_take_to_cities_towns/?page=full:

Turkeys, once unseen in Massachusetts, are showing up in big numbers in cities and towns - The Boston Globe

Technorati Tags: ,,

Well, you don't see something like this every day

 

CANBERRA (Reuters) - An Australian barmaid has been fined for crushing beer cans between her bare breasts while an off-duty colleague has been fined for hanging spoons from her friend's nipples, police said Wednesday.

Police in Western Australia said the 31-year old barmaid pleaded guilty in the local magistrate's court to twice exposing her breasts to patrons at the Premier Hotel in Pinjarra, south of the state capital, Perth.

The woman "is alleged to have also crushed beer cans between her breasts during one of the offences," in breach of hotel licensing laws, police from the Peel district of Western Australia said in a statement.

The barmaid and the hotel manager were both fined A$1,000 ($900), while an off-duty barmaid was fined A$500 for helping to hang spoons from the woman's nipples, police said.

"It sends a clear message to all licensees in Peel that we will not tolerate this type of behavior in our licensed premises," local police superintendent David Parkinson said.

Well, you don't see something like this every day | Oddly Enough | Reuters

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Libraries across Mass. move with times, discover niches

Libraries move with times, discover niches

Leon Shaw, 15, of Boston competed with friends during a Dance Dance Revolution Tournament at the Boston Public Library on Friday.

Leon Shaw, 15, of Boston competed with friends during a Dance Dance Revolution Tournament at the Boston Public Library on Friday. (Yoon S. Byun/Globe Staff)

By Anna Badkhen, Globe Correspondent | October 22, 2007

 

At the Boston Public Library each month, teenagers get down to the vigorous techno thumps of the popular arcade game Dance Dance Revolution. The Norwell Public Library treats visitors to a monthly free dinner and a movie.

Borrowers in Andover take out portable, digital audio books so tiny that they can jog through the park or shop at the mall while listening to Dan Brown's bestseller "The Da Vinci Code."

And in Palmer, young patrons jostle for their turn to play Guitar Hero II, a video game that has replaced the more traditional karaoke nights in some bars.

"We are not your grandmother's library," said Kimberly Lynn, president of the Massachusetts Library Association. In the era of waning readership and Internet search engines, libraries in Massachusetts and across the country are shifting their resources and expertise to areas once unthinkable. Gone are the hushed bibliothecae of yore where even an occasional irreverent clicking of a heel prompted furrowed brows of disapproval.

The modern-day library, Lynn said, is a community living room-cum-reference clearinghouse, with some digital gaming sprinkled in.

"It's a zoo," Lynn said. "It's chaotic. It's not getting quieter."

Library circulation in Massachusetts grew by a million copies between fiscal years 2005 and 2006, according to the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners. But the growth is not necessarily because people are borrowing more books.

One in four American adults read no books at all in the past year, according to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll released in August.

Instead, public libraries are finding new niches that make them appealing to patrons, and patrons are increasingly using libraries as a free alternative to DVD rentals, music stores, Internet cafés, and even gaming arcades.

At the Forbes Library in Northampton, the circulation of books has remained unchanged during the last eight years, while the circulation of videos - both on DVD and on cassette - has increased by more than 36 times, from 2,052 in 1999 to 75,481 in fiscal year 2007, said Janet Moulding, the library director.

The Forbes Library has also increased its video collection by almost 50 times in eight years, from 120 to 5,969, she said.

"People are realizing how much money they can save their family, not going to a video rental store or even buying DVDs but instead renting them for a week for free," said Katie Krol, the video librarian at the library.

Krol, who used to work in a different section of the library, was hired two years ago to supervise the ballooning video section.

The Norwell Public Library went a step further last spring, launching a program that offers patrons a monthly viewing of an independent film and a light dinner for free. The menu varies, and guests are encouraged to bring their own desserts. The library has also held programs during which specialists brought in live owls and reptiles, encouraging visitors to learn about the animals and pet them.

Library officials do not have to look far to see what happens when towns decide their services have become irrelevant. Last summer, libraries in Saugus and Bridgewater, which had relied mostly on books, were on the verge of being shut down and were forced to reduce their hours.

"Libraries have to move with the times," said Dinah L. O'Brien, director of the Plymouth Public Library.

Audio and video materials accounted for more than one-third of last year's circulation in Plymouth, where many patrons borrow audio books to listen to during daily commutes to Boston.

"What better way to spend the time," said Don Conrad, 48, a Plymouth printer who works in Boston.

Officials at the Memorial Hall Library in Andover reported a similar distribution of circulation last year.

In addition to books on tape and on CD the library allows patrons to download books online and offers playaways, portable digital devices approximately the size of a pack of gum that carry audio recordings of books. Playaways are very popular with suburban patrons, said director Jim Sutton.

Once, libraries considered promoting literacy as their main role. Today, some librarians are stretching the definition of reading. "We consider listening to the audio books reading," said Lynn.

Loriene Roy, president of the American Library Association, agreed: "People are still what we call reading but in many different formats."

As part of its summer reading program, the Boston Public Library purchased several Dance Dance Revolution and Guitar Hero consoles.

The library held Dance Dance Revolution tournaments in its branches over the summer, and continues to offer that video game and Guitar Hero to teenagers once a month at the central branch.

"It's cool that we have activities other than reading books at the library now," said Leon Shaw, 15, panting after a particularly difficult Dance Dance Revolution pirouette in one of the library's basement rooms last week. "More libraries should do this."

Diana Preusser, who works with teenagers at the library, has ordered several other gaming consoles, including Nintendo Wii , which allows users to simulate playing sports.

Dance Dance Revolution and Guitar Hero II are hits with teenagers at the Palmer Public Library, where librarians at the young adults section set up the consoles every Tuesday for at least one hour, said Krista Navin, a librarian in the young adults section.

"We're not only trying to meet the [patrons'] reading needs but we also want to meet their social and recreational needs," said Preusser. "This is where libraries are going."

 

Technorati Tags: ,

Killer cow emissions

Livestock are a leading source of greenhouse gases. Why isn't anyone raising a stink?

October 15, 2007


It's a silent but deadly source of greenhouse gases that contributes more to global warming than the entire world transportation sector, yet politicians almost never discuss it, and environmental lobbyists and other green activist groups seem unaware of its existence.

That may be because it's tough to take cow flatulence seriously. But livestock emissions are no joke.

Most of the national debate about global warming centers on carbon dioxide, the world's most abundant greenhouse gas, and its major sources -- fossil fuels. Seldom mentioned is that cows and other ruminants, such as sheep and goats, are walking gas factories that take in fodder and put out methane and nitrous oxide, two greenhouse gases that are far more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide. Methane, with 21 times the warming potential of CO2, comes from both ends of a cow, but mostly the front. Frat boys have nothing on bovines, as it's estimated that a single cow can belch out anywhere from 25 to 130 gallons of methane a day.

It isn't just the gas they pass that makes livestock troublesome. A report from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization identified livestock as one of the two or three top contributors to the world's most serious environmental problems, including water pollution and species loss. In terms of climate change, livestock are a threat not only because of the gases coming from their stomachs and manure but because of deforestation, as land is cleared to make way for pastures, and the amount of energy needed to produce the crops that feed the animals.

All told, livestock are responsible for 18% of greenhouse-gas emissions worldwide, according to the U.N. -- more than all the planes, trains and automobiles on the planet. And it's going to get a lot worse. As living standards rise in the developing world, so does its fondness for meat and dairy. Annual per-capita meat consumption in developing countries doubled from 31 pounds in 1980 to 62 pounds in 2002, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization, which expects global meat production to more than double by 2050. That means the environmental damage of ranching would have to be cut in half just to keep emissions at their current, dangerous level.

It isn't enough to improve mileage standards or crack down on diesel truck emissions, as politicians at both the state and national levels are working to do. Eventually, the United States and other countries are going to have to clean up their agricultural practices, while consumers can do their part by cutting back on red meat.

Manure, methane and McGovern

In a Web forum for presidential candidates in September, TV talk-show host Bill Maher asked former Sen. John Edwards a snarky question: Because Edwards had suggested that people trade in their SUVs to benefit the environment, and cattle generate more greenhouse gases than SUVs, "You want to take a shot at meat?" Maher asked.

Edwards wisely dodged the question. It is extremely hazardous for politicians to take on the U.S. beef industry, a lesson learned by Sen. George McGovern in the late 1970s when his Select Committee on Nutrition dared to recommend that Americans cut down on red meat and fatty dairy products for health reasons. After a ferocious lobbying blitz from meat and dairy interests, the committee rewrote its guidelines to suggest diners simply choose lean meats that "will reduce saturated fat intake." McGovern was voted out of office in 1980, in part because of opposition from cattlemen in his home state of South Dakota.

Beyond the dangers of taking on the beef bloc, legislating food choices is an unpopular and nearly impossible task, so it's unlikely any candidate will endorse a national vegetarian movement to fight global warming any time soon. There are other approaches, though.

Cows and other ruminants have four stomachs, the first of which, called the rumen, is where the trouble lies; bacteria in the rumen produce methane. Scientists -- mostly in Australia, New Zealand and Britain, where the problem is taken a lot more seriously than it is here -- are working on a variety of technical solutions, including a kind of bovine Alka-Seltzer. Scientists are also trying to develop new varieties of feed grasses that are more energy efficient and thus generate less methane, and they are experimenting with targeted breeding to produce a less-gassy strain of cattle.

But it's not just about the belching. Livestock manure also emits methane (especially when it's stored in lagoons) and nitrous oxide, better known as laughing gas. There's nothing funny about this gas: It has 296 times the warming potential of carbon dioxide, and livestock are its leading anthropogenic (human-caused) source. The best way to reduce these gases is to better manage the manure; storage methods and temperature can make a big difference. The California Air Resources Board is studying manure-management practices as part of a sweeping effort to identify ways of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions, work that by the end of next year might lead to regulation of the state's ranches and dairies. Other states should do the same.

There are also smart ways of treating or converting animal waste. Manure lagoons can be covered, capturing gases that can be used to generate power or simply be burned away (burning the gases converts most of the emissions to CO2, which is far less destructive than methane). That's the strategy being pursued by American Electric Power Co., a gigantic utility based in Columbus, Ohio, whose coal-fired power plants make it the nation's biggest emitter of carbon dioxide. This summer, the company began putting tarps on waste lagoons at farms and ranches and sending the gases they capture to flares.

American Electric is under heavy regulatory pressure. Last week, it was on the wrong end of the biggest environmental settlement in U.S. history and agreed to spend up to $4.6 billion to clean up its smokestacks. Its work on manure is part of an experiment in carbon offsets; the company anticipates that someday Congress will cap the amount of carbon dioxide that can be emitted and allow polluters to trade pollution credits. As a previous installment of this series noted, that's a less effective way to combat global warming than carbon taxes, but the American Electric example shows that it would also direct the economic might of industrial polluters toward solving off-the-beaten-path problems such as livestock waste.

Other possible solutions include providing more aid to ranchers in places like Brazil, where forests are rapidly disappearing, to make cattle operations more efficient and thus decrease the need to cut down trees. Changes in farming practices on fields used to grow livestock feed could help capture more carbon. And U.S. agricultural policy is overdue for changes. Subsidies on crops such as corn and soybeans have traditionally kept the price of meat artificially low because these are key feedstocks.

Broccoli: It's what's for dinner

Such policy shifts and new technologies would help, but probably not enough. A recent report in the Lancet led by Australian National University professor Anthony J. McMichael posits that available technologies applied universally could reduce non-carbon dioxide emissions from livestock by less than 20%. The authors advocate another, fringe approach that has long been embraced by dietitians and vegans but is a long way from going mainstream in the United States: eating less meat.

Americans love beef. According to the 2000 census, the U.S. ranks No. 3 in the world in per-capita consumption of beef and veal (after Argentina and Uruguay), gorging on 100 pounds per year. We're also among the leaders in obesity, heart disease and colorectal cancer, and there is a connection -- fatty red meat has been linked to all of these conditions.

McMichael's idea isn't likely to gain much traction outside Australia; he proposes that developed countries lower their daily intake of meat from about 250 grams to 90 grams, with no more than 50 grams coming from ruminant animals -- that's less than 2 ounces, or half a McDonald's Quarter-Pounder.

Still, as evidence mounts that cutting back on beef would both improve our health and help stave off global warming, a campaign urging people to do so is clearly in order. It's understandable why political candidates are wary of bashing beef, but less understandable why environmental leaders with nothing to lose are reluctant to raise the issue. They would be more credible in targeting polluters if they were equally assertive in pointing out what all Americans can do to fight global warming, and at the very top of that list -- way ahead of more commonly mentioned approaches such as buying fluorescent lightbulbs or energy-efficient appliances -- would be eating less red meat.

A University of Chicago study examined the average American diet and found that all the various energy inputs and livestock emissions involved in its production pump an extra 1.5 tons of CO2 into the air over the course of a year, which would be avoided by a vegetarian diet. Thus, the researchers found, cutting out meat would do more to reduce greenhouse gas emissions than trading in a gas guzzler for a hybrid car.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture assesses ranchers, dairymen and producers of other commodities to pay for marketing campaigns to promote their products, raising millions of dollars a year and turning such slogans as "Got Milk?" and "Beef: It's What's for Dinner" into national catchphrases. This isn't quite tantamount to a government-mandated campaign to promote cigarette smoking, but it's close. The government should not only get out of the business of promoting unhealthful and environmentally destructive foods, it should be actively discouraging them.

Quoted from http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-methane15oct15,0,1365993.story:

Killer cow emissions - Los Angeles Times


Technorati Tags: ,,

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Swarm of Fleas Attack Police Officers

 

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Four officers investigating a burglary were attacked, not by a fleeing burglar, but a swarm of fleas in a filth-ridden vacant house.

The tiny, biting attackers were so overwhelming that the South Bend patrolmen had to be decontaminated and ended up being sent home early from their shifts.

"They were all over the place—in our socks and even in our shorts. It was disgusting," said Cpl. Ken Stuart.

To avoid infesting their squad cars, the police station or relatives, Stuart, Cpl. Chris Slager and Patrolman Paul Strabavy endured a lengthy flea decontamination process.

A van took them back to the station, where the men showered with flea/lice shampoo and soap. A wife of one of the officers brought them spare clothes.

As many as seven officers helped with the decontamination on Sunday.

"The guys were very angry. The last thing they wanted to deal with was fleas," said Sgt. Chuck Stokes. "That killed the whole shift."

Stokes said the house's tenants had recently been evicted, but returned periodically to feed a dog tied up in the backyard and allowed it to run around inside the garbage-filled house.

Swarm of Fleas Attack Police Officers

Technorati Tags: ,

Alleged robber on lam

By CRAIG CROSBY

Staff Writer

FREEDOM -- Frank Morello figured he would be a good neighbor and offer to lend a hand when he looked down Goosepecker Ridge Road and saw a young man using a four-wheeler to pull a pickup truck from a ditch.

Morello got the shock of his life, however, when he got close enough to see that the four-wheeler, and the coins and jewelry scattered in the back of the pickup, were all his own.

"I went to call the cops and I saw he trashed my house," Morello said.

The Thursday encounter kicked off an intense eight-hour manhunt that involved the State Police Tactical team, the Maine Warden Service, and the Waldo County Sheriff's Department. Police believe the young man was Derek Creasy, 25, of Knox. Creasy is believed to have stolen guns, coins and the all-terrain vehicle from Morello's home before fleeing on foot to a Halldale Road home, where he allegedly rummaged through the house for valuables and stole another four-wheeler, according to police.

Creasy, who police say ditched the second stolen four-wheeler when confronted by citizens on Route 220 in Montville, was still on the loose Friday afternoon.

Morello was returning home for lunch around 1:30 p.m. when he saw the four-wheeler in the road and the young man talking on a cell phone. When confronted by Morello, Creasy said he had borrowed the four-wheeler from a homeowner at the end of the nearby driveway. The driveway happened to be Morello's.

Morello, who at that point did not know Creasy had allegedly broken into his home, told Creasy to wait while Morello went to the house to call the police.

"I hurried back and he was gone," Morello said. "I would have shot (him)."

Creasy fled on foot, leaving behind the pickup and most of Morello's guns, jewelry, and a stash of collectible coins worth about $1,000, Morello said.

"Most of the stuff was in the back of the truck," Morello said.

A loaded .22-caliber handgun is still missing, however.

Police searched the woods around the area of Route 220 -- where the second stolen four-wheeler was found -- until 11 p.m., according to Lt. Gerard Madden of the Maine State Police. Police obtained a warrant for Creasy's arrest on Friday and continued to search for him in the area.

It is the second time this year police have accused Creasy of robbery. He was free on bail after being arrested by Trooper Dan Webber in March and charged with stealing more than $1,000 from seven vehicles in Unity, Madden said.

Police believe Creasy still has at least one gun. Members of the public are urged to stay away from Creasy, but anyone with information is urged to call state police at (800) 452-4664.

Morello said it is going to take time and money to get things back to normal. The four-wheeler runs poorly now and his homeowners' insurance will not cover repairs. A door on the house was broken, Morello said, and repairs will eat up most of the $500 deductible. Morello said he and his wife spent about five hours cleaning up the mess left behind.

"He dumped every drawer and cabinet," Morello said. "He was looking for money hard.

"I guess it could have been a lot worse. How else can you look at it?"

Alleged robber on lam

Technorati Tags: , ,

Friday, October 19, 2007

Tipsy driver alerts police by mistake

 

VIENNA (Reuters) - An Austrian motorist too drunk to change a tire phoned a police emergency number by mistake instead of the breakdown service and wound up losing his license, police said on Thursday.

"He mixed up emergency service numbers," a police official in the central town of Andau told Reuters.

"On the phone it was clear he was highly intoxicated and we sent over a patrol car. He doesn't need his vehicle now because we took his license."

Tipsy driver alerts police by mistake | Oddly Enough | Reuters

Technorati Tags: , ,

Thursday, October 18, 2007

"Vinegar Boy", as told by Aaron - Customers Suck!

 

Thursday, April 3

This is what happens when I swap work hours with the day shift - I get all their weirdoes!


About 2 pm today, in storms this woman who starts going totally apeshit at me and screaming incoherently while waving around a half-full bottle of malt vinegar.
I had no idea what she was on about and, before I could find out, the police arrived - but I hadn't called them!


Now, I know nearly every cop within fifty miles of my site (I call them all often enough), so when they come in, I greet them by name and they do the same back and tell me they've been called here because of allegations I've poisoned a small child.


Wuh?
The crazy lady identifies herself as the kid's parent and tells them I poisoned her lad. To avoid describing twenty minutes of ranting and gibbering on the woman's part, I'll cut right to the chase.


I had sold a 1L bottle of malt vinegar to a kid (about fifteen years old) that morning and he had taken the bottle home and drunk half of it - yes that's right, he had drunk vinegar. Of course, he got sick as a dog and "redecorated" the walls and floor of several rooms.


[No, I do not know why a teenager, who should be old enough to know better (and be at school too, for that matter) would drink half a litre of malt vinegar.]


At this point the cops and I exchange looks and one said, "Damn Aaron, and we all thought you had finally snapped." Ha ha. There's always a comedian.


The woman demanded that I be arrested, but the police weren't buying it now that they knew the situation. She eventually relented on her demands that I be be thrown in jail, but demanded an apology from me for "failing to tell her son not to drink vinegar."


I said, "I don't tell people not to stick the fuel nozzle up their nose and fill their brainpan with diesel either. And do you know why? Because most people aren't that stupid!"


End result: I refuse to apologize, and stand firm by my statements that her child is a moron. She demands apology, threatens to sue for slander, and promises to return tomorrow when the manager is here.


And I thought the loons only came out after dark
I'm curious to see what sort of reaction she'll get from my half-wit manager if she comes back. But knowing him, he'll probably apologize to her, and make a new rule that all staff will have to tell people not to chug-a-lug vinegar.

 

Monday, April 7


She came back in! This time she apparently brought both the vinegar-drinker and her husband.


I got the call from my manager around noon today after they had been in to see him. The story they gave him was, unsurprisingly, very different from how it happened.


In their revised version, the kid asked me whether or not you could drink vinegar and I said yes. However, since we now have cameras that record sound (I don't know how I ever got along without them!), the manager played back the transaction to them. Apparently she now claims we edited out the sound.

 
Despite all that, my worthless sack of shit manager caved in to them and apologized, and told me on the phone that he wanted me to write them a letter of apology.


THAT was never going to happen and, after an extended argument, with my manager using the "saying sorry does not mean you accept blame, it just means you're sorry" speech, he's decided to write one for me which he tells me I have to sign.


Well, that's never going to happen either. He can sign the damn thing himself if he wants, but there's no way I'll be apologizing to this stupid woman because of her stupid child.
So much for unwinding on my days off .


Tuesday, April 8

A lot of nasty stuff happened today.


My manager called me again today and told me to come in to work for a meeting. He wouldn't say why, but I guessed it was either about Vinegar Boy or the recent hassles we've been having with 'Sudsy', the drug dealer I had arrested, and his junky horde.


When I get in to work, I find my store manager (SM), the territory manager (TM), the stupid mother, and Vinegar Boy all there.


Can you spell 'ambush'? My manager can.


We go out to the back office, and my SM and the TM tell me off in front of the idiot family for failing to exercise due care in selling a fifteen year old boy a bottle of vinegar. The TM tells me to apologize immediately. I ask, for what should I apologize?


The stupid mother chose this moment to pipe up and screech, "I want you to say sorry for telling my son it was okay to drink vinegar - he could have DIED!"


I reply that I never did any such thing, and told her that her son was either grossly in error or a liar.


Both my SM and the TM again say to apologize - and now they want me to say sorry for calling the kid a liar. I say I have nothing to apologize for, and that I never told the kid it was okay to drink vinegar.


At this point I should point out that I managed to keep my temper under check for the entire time, even though I was extremely angry at being ambushed. I figured there was a time and a place to unleash it, and that it could wait for a little while.


Then the TM says that they know I did tell Vinegar Boy it was okay, they have it on film (technically, we have it on computer disk, but who's quibbling?). I ask to see the replay and if, from that viewing I am seen to tell the kid it is okay to drink vinegar, not only will I apologize, I will donate my last month's salary to the kid as restitution.


The mother goes off about how we edited the footage to remove my words and the manager started to get a bit shifty. The TM looked curious about all this, and I thought that if the TM really hadn't seen the footage, I might get out of this with my manager getting his lazy arse kicked right out of the company.


Silly me - like that was going to happen.


So, at the TM's insistence, we watch the footage and sure enough, all I say to the kid is to greet him, tell him the price, count him his change, and a goodbye as he leaves.


The TM looked pretty angry and glared at my SM, but said nothing. Nothing! He then repeats his demands to apologize.
I was floored by this. The TM saw I did nothing wrong, and still demanded I grovel to this sack of waste after he and my SM publicly abused me in front of her.


I refused to apologize (again!) and this time, demanded an apology from both the SM and TM for ambushing me, attempting to humiliate me in front of a proven liar and for trying to get me to apologize to Vinegar Boy and his mother.
The TM told me to apologize, or I would be suspended for a week and written up. I say, "Fine" and walk out with the stupid woman trailing me and gloating at how I got what I deserved. As I get to the door, the SM comes out and says, "If you walk out the door, don't bother to come back!"
I didn't even pause.


When I got home, I had nearly a dozen messages from work on my machine, but I deleted them without listening to them. I've now changed the message on my machine telling my ex-SM that anything he has to say to me can now be done through the union and to stop calling my number - of course he hasn't listened and has called me at least another fifty times since I got home.


When I had calmed down a bit, I called the site owner to see if he could take a look at what happened. The owner of my site is a totally cool guy, he's been in the fuel business since Henry Ford was a boy and is very clued-in. But as he's semi-retired now, it's pretty hard to get into contact with him. I did manage to catch his wife, so I explained things to her.


Tomorrow, I'm going to my union rep to see about suing those sons of bitches till they fucking bleed.


But right now, despite how angry I am at what happened, there's a big upswelling of sheer, unadulterated joy bubbling to the surface because I'm free of that damn craphole, and I'll be making my SM's and TM's life hell for as long and as hard as is humanly possible.

__________________

"Vinegar Boy", as told by Aaron - Customers Suck!

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Middle School To Offer Birth Control

 

PORTLAND, Maine (GNS/WCSH) -- In a 7-to-2 vote, the Portland School Committee has approved a proposal to offer a full array of birth control options -- including birth control pills -- to students at King Middle School.


At a the meeting Wednesday night, a vast majority of parents spoke out against the proposal.


The plan, offered by city health officials, makes King Middle School the first middle school in Maine to make a full range of contraception available to students in grades 6 through 8, according to the state Department of Health and Human Services.


There are no national figures on how many middle schools, where most students range in age from 11 to 13, provide such services.


Chairman John Coynie voted against it, saying he felt providing the birth control was a parental responsibility. The other no vote came from Ben Meiklejohn, who said the consent form does not clearly define the services being offered.


Opponents cited religious and health objections.
Diane Miller said she felt the plan was against religion and against God. Another opponent, Peter Doyle, said he felt it violated the rights of parents and puts students at risk of cancer because of hormones in the pill.


A supporter, Richard Verrier, said it's not enough to depend on parents to protect their children because there may be students who can't discuss things with their parents.


Condoms have been available since 2002 to King students who have parental permission to be treated at its student health center.


Five of the 134 students who visited King's health center during the 2006-07 school year reported having sexual intercourse, said Amanda Rowe, lead nurse in Portland's school health centers.


The school's principal told the committee the girls would be given an exam, and be warned about the dangers of sex, but their parents would not have to know if they're on the pill.
Parents have to sign a consent form for the students to be treated at the health center, but any treatment the students receive falls under doctor-patient confidentiality.


If two students decided to have consensual sex parents would not be made aware of the situation. However, if a crime is involved the school would contact authorities.

11Alive.com - Middle School To Offer Birth Control

School adds birth control options

 

The School Committee votes to let contraceptives be prescribed to students at King Middle School.

By KELLEY BOUCHARD, Staff Writer October 18, 2007

 

Photos by Doug Jones/Staff Photographer

The Portland School Committee decided Wednesday to make prescription birth control available to students who have parental permission to be treated at King Middle School's health center.

Photos by Doug Jones/Staff Photographer

Diane Miller, a Portland resident and former school nurse, said she was “horrified” by the proposal.

The committee's 7-2 vote means King will be the first middle school in Maine to offer a full range of contraception in grades 6 to 8, when students are 11 to 15 years old.

The King Student Health Center, which is operated by the city's Public Health Division, has provided condoms as part of reproductive health care since it opened in 2000.


The proposal to expand birth control options drew national attention and raised local concern about its impact on the rights of parents to oversee their children's health care.

Doug Jones/Staff Photographer While students need written parental permission to be treated at Portland's school-based health centers, state law allows them to receive confidential care for reproductive health, mental health and substance abuse issues.

Doug Jones/Staff Photographer

Kelley McDaniel, a librarian at King Middle School who supported the measure, said she would have benefited if there had been a school health center when she was molested as a child and raped as a teenager.

Committee member Sarah Thompson, whose daughter is an eighth-grader at King, supported the change even though it made her "uncomfortable."

"I know I've done my job as a parent," Thompson said. "(But there) may be a time when she doesn't feel comfortable coming to me (and) not all these kids have a strong parental advocate at home."


Committee members Rebecca Minnick, Robert O'Brien, Peter Eglinton, Lori Gramlich, Ellen Alcorn and Susan Hopkins also supported the measure. John Coyne, chairman, and Benjamin Meiklejohn voted against the change.


Coyne said he believes social agencies and public schools have distinct roles that have blurred over the years. "At some point there needs to be a clearing of the gray lines," he said.


Meiklejohn said after the meeting that he would have supported the measure if his vote had been necessary to ensure passage.


It's unclear whether prescription birth control will be offered this school year or next, said Lisa Belanger, a nurse practitioner who oversees the student health centers.


When prescription birth control is available, parents will be sent a new enrollment form that clearly states the services offered and related student confidentiality requirements under Maine law, she said.


During the public hearing, nine people spoke against the change, largely because parents wouldn't be notified and because they believe it would encourage adolescents to have sex.


"We are dealing with children," said Diane Miller, a Portland resident who is a former school nurse and now works in a gynecologist's office. "I am just horrified at the suggestion."
Supporters of the change said a small number of King students are sexually active, but they need better access to birth control.


"This isn't encouraging kids to have sex. This is about the kids who are engaging in sexual activity," said Richard Veilleux, whose daughter attends King and who was one of three people who spoke in favor of the proposal.


Five King students, ages 14 and 15, reported having sexual intercourse last year, said Amanda Rowe, head nurse for Portland schools.


In the last four years, Portland's three middle schools reported 17 pregnancies, not counting miscarriages or terminated pregnancies that weren't reported to the school nurse, Rowe said.


The percentage of middle school students in Maine who reported having sexual intercourse dropped from 23 percent in 1997 to 13 percent in 2005, according to the Maine Youth Risk Behavior Survey.


The city's Public Health Division operates health centers at Portland High School, Deering High School, King Middle School, West School special education program, and Reiche and East End community schools, which are elementary schools. They are funded by state money and foundation grants, MaineCare/Medicaid and private health insurance reimbursements, and in-kind contributions of space and services provided by the city.


There are 27 school-based health centers in Maine, 20 of which are funded and overseen by the state, including those in Portland. Maranacook Community School in Readfield, which is a combined middle and high school, has the only school-based health center outside Portland that also provides contraception, Belanger said.


Of 1,700 school-connected health centers in the United States, one in four provides birth control ranging from condoms to prescription contraception, according to the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care.


Of 2,877 students eligible to attend Portland's six health centers last year, 1,261, or 44 percent, were enrolled. The center at King, which has 510 students, enrolled 307 students last year. Belanger said 134 of those students were treated at the center for a total of 266 visits last year.


Contraception would be prescribed after a physical examination by a physician or nurse practitioner and would include follow-up care, Belanger said.


Types of prescription birth control available through the health centers include contraceptive pills, patches or injections, as well as the morning-after pill. Diaphragms and IUDs are not usually prescribed, she said.


King is the only one of Portland's three middle schools with a health center, primarily because it has more students who get free or reduced-price lunch, Belanger said.


Moore and Lincoln middle schools don't have health centers, and their students are ineligible for treatment at the King Student Health Center.

School adds birth control options

Technorati Tags: ,

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Man blames health drink for unwanted erection

 

29-year-old claims Boost Plus caused condition that required surgery

NEW YORK - A man has sued the maker of the health drink Boost Plus, claiming the vitamin-enriched beverage gave him an erection that would not subside and caused him to be hospitalized.

The lawsuit filed by Christopher Woods of New York said he bought the nutrition beverage made by the pharmaceutical company Novartis AG at a drugstore on June 5, 2004, and drank it.

Woods’ court papers say he woke up the next morning “with an erection that would not subside” and sought treatment that day for the condition, called severe priapism.

They say Woods, 29, underwent surgery for implantation of a Winter shunt, which moves blood from one area to another.

The lawsuit, filed late Monday, says Woods later had problems that required a hospital visit and penile artery embolization, a way of closing blood vessels. Closing off some blood flow prevents engorgement and lessens the likelihood of an erection.

Woods’ lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, names Novartis Consumer Health Inc. as a defendant. A spokeswoman for the company, Brandi Robinson, said Tuesday the company was aware of the lawsuit but does not comment on pending litigation.

Woods’ lawyer did not return telephone calls for comment Tuesday.

Novartis’ Boost Plus Web site describes the drink as “a great tasting, high calorie, nutritionally complete oral supplement for people who require extra energy and protein in a limited volume,” in vanilla, chocolate and strawberry.

Man blames health drink for unwanted erection - Men's Health - MSNBC.com

Technorati Tags: , ,

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Boy, 3, obeys law during toy car joyride

OMRO, Wis. - The candy-apple red Mustang GT is just a toy, but that didn't stop 3-year-old Jordan Will from taking his battery-operated wheels for a brief ride along a busy stretch of highway. Drivers stopped and neighbors chased down the car until an officer could pull over Jordan and his 2-year-old passenger on Sunday.

"Nothing bad happened, so it's kind of cute now when you look at it," said his father, Doug Will. "But at the time, it wasn't cute at all. It was scary. I was really upset."

The Mustang is decked out with all the extras: a rear spoiler, a premium sound system and chrome wheels.

The boys drove the tricked-out ride through their Omro neighborhood and pulled up to a busy intersection.

"He even obeyed the signs, so that was good. He stopped at the red light and got on the cross walk," said neighbor Jaci Bauer.

Another neighbor, Jason Bauer, panicked when he saw the boys cross over a highway, onto a sidewalk and over a bridge. He gave chase for a few blocks until an officer pulled the boys over.

"By the time we stopped them, they probably made it five or six blocks from home before anyone even noticed they had been wandering around town," Jason Bauer said.

Doug Will had been searching for the boys when he got the call to come get the car.

"He just said, 'We went for a ride, daddy,'" Will said.

All Jordan can do now is sit in the little car. His father has taken away the keys and removed the battery.

Officers said Jordan's dad won't be cited.

Omro is in east-central Wisconsin, about 10 miles west of Oshkosh.

Quoted from http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071012/ap_on_fe_st/odd3_year_old_s_joyride:

Boy, 3, obeys law during toy car joyride - Yahoo! News

Technorati Tags:,

Pepsi, Coke workers trade punches at Wal-Mart

By Associated Press
Published on: 10/12/07

Indiana, Pa. — The long-standing rivalry between Coke and Pepsi took a physical turn Friday when a Pepsi deliveryman allegedly punched his Coke counterpart in the face at a western Pennsylvania Wal-Mart, state police said.

The two deliverymen were "apparently bickering back and forth" while unloading their wares at the Indiana County store, police said. When the Coke deliveryman left the store, his counterpart allegedly punched him in the face three times, breaking his nose and giving him a black eye, police said.

No charges have been filed, but police characterized the incident as a misdemeanor simple assault.

 

Quoted from http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/coke/stories/2007/10/12/CokeOrPepsiFight_1012.html:

Pepsi, Coke workers trade punches at Wal-Mart | ajc.com

Technorati Tags:,,

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Nintendo to boost Net support for Wii

By YURI KAGEYAMA AP Business Writer Article Last

CHIBA, Japan—Nintendo hopes to give its popular Wii game console another boost by offering support services that make it easier to connect the machine to the Internet in Japan, the company's president said Wednesday.

A network connection not only allows people to download games but also play with others online, as well as see other content and information from the Net.

Nintendo will work with Japan's top telecommunications company, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp., to provide network connection services in people's homes and technical support by phone, President Satoru Iwata said. More details will be disclosed later.

Nintendo Co., the Kyoto-based manufacturer of Pokemon and Super Mario games, has scored a hit with its $250 Wii, which comes with a wandlike remote controller for mimicking the motions of fishing, golfing and other activities.

Wii and Nintendo's DS handheld machine have succeeded in drawing newcomers, including women and the elderly, to games. But more work is needed so that effort doesn't run out of steam, Iwata told reporters at a hall in this Tokyo suburb.

"People tend to get bored, and the skeptics are asking whether it's just a one-time deal," he said. "We must think of the next step."

Competition also is heating up with rivals Sony Corp. and Microsoft Corp. ahead of the key Christmas shopping season. Both companies in recent months have announced price cuts for their consoles.

Iwata said only about 40 percent of Wii owners in Japan have the console connected to the Net. And more games will be available as downloads from the Internet, he said.

During a media event Wednesday, Nintendo designer Shigeru Miyamoto appeared on stage to demonstrate the "Wii Fit," a game planned for December, which allows players to weigh themselves, check their balance and play fitness games.

Nintendo has chosen a different strategy from Sony and Microsoft, with their more expensive machines, and has been trying to woo novices with brain teasers, sport games and virtual pets, instead of the usual shooters and role-playing games.

Since Wii went on sale late last year, Nintendo has shipped 9.3 million units around the world, with supplies barely keeping up with demand. By the end of this fiscal year in March 2008, Wii global shipments are expected to have reached 22.3 million.

So far, Sony's 5 million PlayStation 3s, which went on sale late last year in Japan and the U.S. and in March in Europe. Microsoft has sold 11.6 million Xbox 360 machines in the last two years.

 

Quoted from http://www.denverpost.com/nationworld/ci_7136079:

The Denver Post - Nintendo to boost Net support for Wii


Technorati Tags:,,,,

So You Were Zoned Out at Work...

Excerpt from "Cube Monkeys: A Handbook for Surviving the Office Jungle"


By CareerBuilder.com and Second City Communications

A parody on "must-have" office handbooks, "Cube Monkeys: A Handbook for Surviving the Office Jungle" by The Editors of CareerBuilder.com and Second City Communications (Collins) offers laugh-out-loud advice on how to make it through the workday.   Full of irreverent humor from Second City Communications, the corporate division of the world renowned comedy theatre The Second City, "Cube Monkeys" features top 10 lists, quizzes, step-by-step guides, games and hilarious advice that will help make the longest 40 hours of the week seem a little less unbearable.
Here's an excerpt:


Top 10 Snappy Responses and Quick Recoveries to Questions You Didn't Hear Because You Were Zoned Out


1. "I'm not going to dignify that with a response!"


2. "Whoa, I just had one of my psychic realizations: someone in this room is embezzling money!"


3. "What did you say about my wife!?" They will quickly repeat the question.


4. Raise your index finger to your lips and say, "Shhh, let's all just listen with our hearts for a moment. I think the answer will become obvious."


5. "I must have answered this question a hundred times in the last month! Doesn't anybody listen anymore?"


6. Act as if you are silently falling in love with the person waiting for your response.


7. Act as if you are going to respond, then pause to reconsider your response. Repeat for hours on end until quitting time.


8. Hang your head and say, "What difference does it make? We're all going to die anyway!"


9. "That may be true. Or not. What do you think, Ed?"


10. "I didn't hear your question; I zoned out. I was a million miles away. Which brings up a greater issue: what are we going to do to liven up these lame meetings?"

 

Quoted from http://msn.careerbuilder.com/custom/msn/careeradvice/viewarticle.aspx?articleid=1142&SiteId=cbmsn41142&sc_extcmp=JS_1142_advice&catid=wi&cbRecursionCnt=1&cbsid=1eee2b608d2b41ceb9626bc5963fbbd2-245405457-VB-4:

MSN Careers - So You Were Zoned Out at Work... - Career Advice Article

Technorati Tags:,

95-year-old woman gets the horn

A 95 year old woman from Zhanjiang, south China, has sprouted a 12 centimetre long horn on her forehead.

Horn head woman

The horn first grew in 2003 and has grown progressively bigger and bigger, taking over the poor woman's face.

Doctors are baffled by the protrusion - and can only speculate that Xiou Ling is suffering a hormone imbalance.

Her family are currently saving up for treatment to remove it.

 

Quoted from http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/article.html?in_article_id=69680&in_page_id=2:

95-year-old woman gets the horn | Metro.co.uk

 

Technorati Tags:,

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Man sentenced in "pride" killing of ostrich

 

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A U.S. man was sentenced to five months in jail after he and a friend, acting on wounded pride, gunned down an ostrich that had kicked them as their female companions laughed, a newspaper reported on Saturday.

"This whole thing is about male pride," prosecutor Steve Wagstaffe said, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

The powerful flightless bird, named Gaylord, kicked Timothy McKevitt, 19, and Jonathon Porter, 21, last October when they trespassed on an ostrich ranch south of San Francisco after a night of drinking, the paper cited attorneys as saying.

As the startled bird attacked, the women began to laugh, prosecutors said. McKevitt was kicked in the ribs and knocked over, while Porter suffered scrapes and bruises.

The two men returned with a rifle and shotgun seeking revenge, the Chronicle said. They fired at least seven shots at Gaylord, according to a police report.

McKevitt, free on bail, was ordered to turn himself in on November 3. Porter was sentenced in March to seven months in jail after pleading no contest in the ostrich killing, the paper reported.

Man sentenced in "pride" killing of ostrich | Oddly Enough | Reuters.com

Technorati Tags: , ,