Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Sandy prompts harrowing NYC hospital evacuation

NEW YORK (AP) ? Evoking harrowing memories of Hurricane Katrina, 300 patients were evacuated floor by floor from a premier hospital that lost generator power at the height of superstorm Sandy.

Rescuers and staff at New York University Langone Medical Center, some making 10 to 15 trips down darkened stairwells, began their mission Monday night, the youngest and sickest first, finishing about 15 hours later.

Among the first out were 20 babies in neonatal intensive care, some on battery-powered respirators.

"Everyone here is a hero," Dr. Bernard Birnbaum, a senior vice president at Tisch Hospital, the flagship at NYU, told exhausted crews as he released all but essential employees late Tuesday morning. "Thank you, thank you, thank you."

More than two dozen ambulances from around the city lined up around the lower Manhattan block to transport the sick to Mount Sinai Hospital, the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, St. Luke's Hospital, New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and Long Island Jewish Hospital.

Margaret Chu, 36, of Manhattan, gave birth to a son, Cole, shortly before noon Monday. "Then, a couple of hours later, things got a little hairy. The electricity started to flicker and the windows got shaky," she said from LIJ's Lenox Hill, where she was transported after generators failed and NYU was plunged into darkness.

Chu, accompanied by husband Gregory Prata, was able to walk 13 flights into a waiting ambulance with help from staff and first responders lighting the way by flashlight. She said other women who had given birth during the storm and were evacuated were carried down on sleigh-like gurneys.

"Everybody was pretty calm. I would call it organized chaos," she said.

Meanwhile, other New York hospitals canceled outpatient appointments and elective surgeries. And several closed and evacuated patients, including New York Downtown Hospital, a Manhattan campus of the VA New York Harbor Healthcare System and other NYU-affiliated facilities. Bellevue and Coney Island Hospital were evacuating Tuesday afternoon.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg was clearly angry about the NYU Medical Center crisis when he addressed reporters late Monday, saying hospital officials had assured the city they had working backup power.

Last year, NYU evacuated in advance of Hurricane Irene on the order of city officials, spokeswoman Allison Clair said. "This year we were not told to evacuate by the city."

Without power, there are no elevators so patients ? some of whom were being treated for cancer and other serious illnesses ? were carefully carried down staircases. As the evacuation began, gusts of wind blew their blankets while nurses and other staff huddled around the sick on gurneys, some holding IVs and other equipment.

Luz Martinez, 42, of Roosevelt Island off midtown Manhattan in the East River, was home recuperating from a cesarean section when she got her first inkling that her 3-week-old daughter was being transferred out of NYU's neonatal intensive care.

The baby, Emma, had been born prematurely. Martinez had been calling the hospital for regular updates but at one point Monday night, the phones were busy every time she called. Then she heard Bloomberg on television talking about the evacuation and soon after lost power at home.

"I went crazy. I wanted to come to the hospital," Martinez said.

She and her husband hopped in the car but could find no way into Manhattan because of storm damage and bridge closings. That's when NYU called her on her cellphone to say Emma was being taken to Mount Sinai.

But the terrified parents couldn't get there, either. They called Mount Sinai through the wee hours for regular updates and finally reached their baby around noon Tuesday.

"It was a nightmare," Martinez said by phone. "I've been doing a lot of crying."

Emma is doing fine. Martinez praised the staff at both hospitals. "They all handled everything as smoothly as they could," she said.

NYU sent home about 100 of its 400 patients earlier Monday to lighten its load, starting the evacuation of the remaining 300 patients at about 7:30 p.m. when backup generators began to fail, Clair said. There were no injuries during relocation.

The scene was reminiscent of hospital evacuations in New Orleans after Katrina, with patients being carried down stairs on stretchers because elevators were out, and nurses squeezing oxygen bags for them because of lack of power to run breathing machines.

The difference is that in New Orleans, patients were trapped in flooded hospitals; in New York, dozens of ambulances could get through to move patients to safety.

The hospital blamed the severity of Sandy and higher-than-expected storm surge that flooded its basement but had little else to say beyond a short statement emailed to reporters after the evacuation was complete.

"At this time, we are focusing on assessing the full extent of the storm's impact on all of our patient care, research and education facilities," the statement said.

Most of the power outages in lower Manhattan, where Tisch is located, were due to an explosion at an electrical substation, Consolidated Edison said. It wasn't clear whether flooding or flying debris caused the explosion, said John Miksad, senior vice president for electric operations at Con Edison.

At NYU, sporadic telephone service made it difficult for the hospital to notify relatives where patients were taken. It relied instead on receiving hospitals to notify families.

Until the generators failed, Chu considered herself and her new baby out of harm's way. By the time she was evacuated, the streets were eerily silent and the night sky lit up by emergency lights of waiting ambulances.

"My son will appreciate this someday," she said.

___

Marchione, AP's chief medical writer, reported from Milwaukee.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sandy-prompts-harrowing-nyc-hospital-evacuation-193813586.html

mardi gras fun. hepatitis c symptoms david bradley david foster wallace pinterest attwireless

Honeybees harbor antibiotic-resistance genes

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? Bacteria in the guts of honeybees are highly resistant to the antibiotic tetracycline, probably as a result of decades of preventive antibiotic use in domesticated hives. Researchers from Yale University identified eight different tetracycline resistance genes among U.S. honeybees that were exposed to the antibiotic, but the genes were largely absent in bees from countries where such antibiotic use is banned.

The study appears on October 30 in mBio?, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.

"It [resistance] seems to be everywhere in the U.S.," says Nancy Moran of Yale University, a senior author on the study. "There's a pattern here, where the U.S. has these genes and the others don't."

Honeybees the world over are susceptible to the bacterial disease called "foulbrood," which can wipe out a hive faster than beekeepers can react to the infection. In the U.S., beekeepers have kept the disease at bay with regular preventive applications of the antibiotic oxytetracycline, a compound that closely resembles tetracycline, which is commonly used in humans. Oxytetracycline has been in use among beekeepers since the 1950s, and many genes that confer resistance to oxytetracycline also confer resistance to tetracycline.

Using sensitive molecular techniques, Moran and her colleagues screened honeybees from several locations in the United States and from Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and New Zealand as well as several wild bumblebees from the Czech Republic, for the presence and abundance of tetracycline resistance genes. They found that U.S. honeybees have greater numbers and a more diverse set of tetracycline resistance genes than honeybees from the other countries.

Moran says it is reasonable to expect to see widespread resistance among bees, considering the decades-long use of oxytetracycline in honeybee hives. "It seems likely this reflects a history of using oxytetracycline since the 1950s. It's not terribly surprising. It parallels findings in other domestic animals, like chickens and pigs," says Moran.

Moran notes that beekeepers have long used oxytetracycline to control the bacterium that causes foulbrood, but the pathogen eventually acquired resistance to tetracycline itself. Of the foulbrood pathogens Melissococcus pluton and Paenibacillus larvae, Moran says, "They carry tetL, which is one of the eight resistance genes we found. It's possible that the gene was transferred either from the gut bacteria to the pathogen or from the pathogen to the gut bacteria."

Switzerland, the Czech Republic, and New Zealand do not allow beekeepers to use oxytetracycline in hives, so it is perhaps predictable that honeybees and wild bumblebees from these countries harbored only two or three different resistance genes and only in very low copy numbers, suggesting that the bacteria did not require the genes very frequently.

The authors of the study point out that by encouraging resistance and altering the bacteria that live in honeybee guts, decades of antibiotic applications may have actually been detrimental to honeybee wellbeing. Studies have suggested that the bacterial residents of the honeybee gut play beneficial roles in neutralizing toxins in the bees' diet, nutrition, and in defending the bee against pathogens. By disrupting the honeybee microbiota and reducing its diversity, long-term antibiotic use could weaken honeybee resistance to other diseases. Hence, the treatment that was meant to prevent disease and strengthen the hive may actually weaken its ability to fight off other pathogens.

Moran says while the study is interesting from the perspective of honeybee health and could have implications for how honeybee diseases are managed, the presence of resistance genes in the honeybee gut doesn't pose a direct risk to humans. These gut bacteria, says Moran, "don't actually live in the honey, they live in the bee. We've never actually detected them in the honey. When people are eating honey, they're not eating these bacteria."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Society for Microbiology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/W70r1X2iA50/121030062405.htm

bob beckel anna paquin warren buffett 2012 nfl schedule dishonored april 18 delonte west

Andreessen Horowitz leads $15.5 million funding of ItsOn mobile firm

'},"otherParams":{"t_e":1,".intl":"US"},"events":{"fetch":{lv:2,"sp":"2146050964","ps":"LREC,MON","npv":true,"bg":"#FFFFFF","em":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'229e76d8-2398-34bf-953d-e55fe86ae2de\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000002GZ5iAAG\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'1550500;2299500;1542500;1547500;1092500;2332500\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}'),"em_orig":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'229e76d8-2398-34bf-953d-e55fe86ae2de\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000002GZ5iAAG\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'1550500;2299500;1542500;1547500;1092500;2332500\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}')}}};var _createNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);var nodeHTML;if(center && !node){nodeHTML=_conf.nodes[nId];center.insert(nodeHTML);};};};var _prepareNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-ad-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);if(center && node){center.set("innerHTML","");center.insert(node);node.setStyle("display","block");};};};var _darla;var _config=function(){if(YAHOO.ads.darla){_darla = YAHOO.ads.darla;_createNodes();};};var _fetch=function(spaceid,adssa,ps){ if (typeof(ps)!='undefined') _conf.events.fetch.ps = ps;if(typeof spaceid != "undefined") _conf.events.fetch.sp=spaceid;adssa = (typeof adssa != "undefined" && adssa != null) ? escape(adssa.replace(/\"/g, "'")) : "";_conf.events.fetch.em=_conf.events.fetch.em_orig.replace("ADSSA", adssa);if(_darla){_prepareNodes();_darla.setConfig(_conf);_darla.event("fetch");};};Y.on("domready", function(){_config();});;var that={"fetch":_fetch,"getNodes":_conf.nodes,"getConf":_conf};return that;}();/* Backwards compatibility - Assigning the latest instance to the main fetch function */YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.fetch=YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.photoslightboxdarla.fetch; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {YAHOO.namespace('Media.Social').Lightbox = {}; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.Media.Article.init(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.AuthorBadge(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.Branding(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.on("load", function () { YUI.namespace("Media.SocialButtons"); var instances = YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances || [], globalConf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.conf || {}, vplContainers = []; Y.all(".ymsb").each(function (node) { var id = node.get("id"), conf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.configs[id], instance; if (conf) { instance = new Y.SocialButtons({ srcNode: node, config: Y.merge(globalConf, conf.config || {}), contentMetadata: conf.content || {}, tracking: conf.tracking || {} }); vplContainers.push( { selector: "#" + id, callback: function(node) { instance.render(); instance = conf = id = null; } }); if (conf.config && conf.config.dynamic) { instances.push(instance); } } }); Y.Global.Media.ViewportLoader.addContainers(vplContainers); YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances = instances; }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if (!Y.Media) { return; } Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_targets = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_targets || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_whitelist = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_whitelist || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset['398e988859e33be8eb7f5d09cdbb3574'] = []; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs['398e988859e33be8eb7f5d09cdbb3574'] = {"spaceid":"2146050964","ult_pt":"story-lightbox","darla_id":"","images_total":0,"xhr_url":"\/_xhr\/related-article\/lightbox\/?id=229e76d8-2398-34bf-953d-e55fe86ae2de","xhr_count":20,"autoplay_if_first_item_is_video":true}; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.RelatedArticle({count:"2",start:"1", mod_total:"10", total:"0", content_id:"229e76d8-2398-34bf-953d-e55fe86ae2de", spaceid:"2146050964", related_count:"-1" }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function(d){ d.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(d.createElement('script')).src='http://d.yimg.com/oq/js/csc_news-en-US-core.js'; })(document); }); Y.later(10, this, function() { if(!("Media" in YAHOO)){YAHOO.Media = {};} if(!("ugcrate" in YAHOO.Media)){YAHOO.Media.ugcrate = {};} if(!("Media" in Y)){Y.namespace("Media");} YAHOO.Media.ugcrate.ratings_d5ba8b5b76e1f81f5f56e367dbf83779 = new Y.Media.UgcRate({"context_id":"5c45fbb3-cdb2-467d-ac33-5d2ab49dd099","sCrumb":"","containerId":"yom-sentimentrate-d5ba8b5b76e1f81f5f56e367dbf83779","rateDimensions":"d1","appLang":"en-US","sUltSId":"2146050964","sUltProperty":"news-en-US","sUltCampaign":"","sUltPlatform":"ugcwidgets","sUltIntl":"US","sUltLang":"en-US","selfPageUrl":"http:\/\/news.yahoo.com\/andreessen-horowitz-leads-15-5-million-funding-itson-070452685--sector.html?_esi=0","artContentId":"229e76d8-2398-34bf-953d-e55fe86ae2de","sUltQstnTxt":"Which size tablet would you prefer?","artContentTitle":"Andreessen Horowitz leads $15.5 million funding of ItsOn mobile firm","artContentDesc":"NEW YORK (Reuters) - Andreessen Horowitz is leading a $15.5 million round of venture funding for ItsOn Inc, a developer of software that supports more flexible mobile billing options like sponsored data services and split billing for work and personal use. ItsOn, which has had funding from Verizon Communications, Vodafone Group Plc and Best Buy in the past, said its technology will power a new service for one of the top three U.S. mobile providers starting in early 2013. ...","sUltBucketId":"test1","sUltSection":"sentirating","sUltBeaconUrl":"","sUltRecordPageviews":"1","sUltBeaconEnable":"1","serviceUrl":"\/_xhr","publisherContextId":"","propertyId":"2fcd79b5-b3a3-333e-b98e-722536a6698f","configurationId":"435db9ee-c55e-3766-b20d-c8ad3ff889d1","graphId":"","labelLeft":"Smaller works for me","labelRight":"Bigger is better","labelMiddle":"","itemimg":"http:\/\/l.yimg.com\/a\/i\/ww\/met\/yahoo_logo_us_061509.png","selfURI":"","aggregateRatingCount":"14519","aggregateReviewCount":"0","leftBlocksNum":"8476","rightBlocksNum":"6043","leftBlocksPerCent":"58","rightBlocksPerCent":"42","ugcrate_apihost":"api01-us.ugcl.yahoo.com:4080","publisher_id":"news-en-US","yca_cert":"yahoo.ugccloud.app.trusted_proxies","timeout_write":"5000","through_proxy":"false","optionStats":"{\"s1\":1254,\"s2\":632,\"s3\":1515,\"s4\":3876,\"s5\":1199,\"s6\":6043,\"s7\":0,\"s8\":0,\"s9\":0,\"s10\":0}","l10N":"{\"FIRST_TO_READ\":\"You are first to read this. Share your feelings and start a conversation.\",\"SHARE_YOUR_FEELINGS\":\"You too can share your feelings and start a conversation!\",\"HOW_YOUR_FRIENDS_THINK\":\"Thank you for sharing your feeling on this article!\",\"PRE_SHARE_MSG\":\"Your Facebook friends on Yahoo! can see how you responded to this question. To share your response on Facebook, click on the Facebook share option.\",\"START_THE_CONVERSATION\":\"Start the Conversation\",\"THANKS_FOR_SHARING\":\"Sure, that's how you feel... But what do your friends think?\",\"POLL_HEADER\":\"SOCIAL SENTIMENT\",\"SERVER_ERROR\":\"Oops there seems to be some error, please try again later\",\"LOADING\":\"Loading...\",\"SHARE_AFTER_COMMENT\":\"Your response has been shared on Facebook.\",\"UNDO\":\"Undo\",\"UNIT_PEOPLE\":\"People\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_DISAGREE\":\"disagree with your opinion.\",\"READ_MORE_TEXT\":\"Read what they have to say.\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"WHAT DO YOU THINK?\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_VERB_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"DRAG\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_THANKS_VOTING\":\"Thanks for voting\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 14,519 people have responded to this question\",\"ONE_PERSON_ANSWERED\":\" 1 person has responded to this question. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"TWO_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 2 people have responded to this question. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED_AND_SHARED\":\" 14,519 people have responded to this question. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s1\":1254,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s2\":632,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s3\":1515,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s4\":3876,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s5\":1199,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s6\":6043,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s7\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s8\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s9\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s10\":0}","fbconfig":"{\"message\":\"undefined\",\"name\":\"undefined\",\"link\":\"\",\"source\":\"\",\"picture\":\"http:\\\/\\\/l.yimg.com\\\/a\\\/i\\\/ww\\\/news\\\/2011\\\/09\\\/27\\\/yahoo-tc.jpg\",\"description\":\"\",\"captionLeft\":\"undefined\",\"captionRight\":\"undefined\",\"app_id\":\"196660913708276\",\"redirect_uri\":\"\\\/_xhr\\\/ugcratefbredirect\\\/\"}","template_id":"LONG_SLIDER_SOUTH","obj_id":"ratings_d5ba8b5b76e1f81f5f56e367dbf83779","opt_count":"6","opt_color1":"","opt_color2":"","template_html":"

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/andreessen-horowitz-leads-15-5-million-funding-itson-070452685--sector.html

phillies Ryan Dempster Phelps NBC Olympics Live Olympic medal count Medal Count 2012 London 2012 Fencing

Grapevine: new sensations in big old world of wine | Food & Wine ...

Best’s Bin 1 Great Western Shiraz 2011

Best?s Bin 1 Great Western Shiraz 2011

Another deadline was fast approaching and there I was grasping at straws trying to think of what to write about in this big old world of wine. In the background, I just happened to be listening to INXS? ?New Sensation? over and over (trying to learn my guitar parts in my head for rehearsal that night whilst writing this column ? who said men can?t do two things at once?). Anyway, that was when the penny dropped! There?s been a bevy of current ?new sensations? hitting the wine scene of late, all winning this or that or just being damn good, and I?ve been wading my way through them all and have come up with some of the better new sensations on offer.


Best?s Bin 1 Great Western Shiraz 2011 $25
Best?s Wines was last week awarded the famous Jimmy Watson Trophy at the Royal Melbourne Wine Show for their 2011 Bin No. 1 Shiraz. A revered wine award, the trophy goes to the best one or two year old red wine of the show. The same wine also won the inaugural Trevor Mast Trophy for ?Best Shiraz?. It?s been well documented in this column that I?m a fan of the region?s Shiraz and Best?s wines too, and the Bin 1 is an excellent introduction to the regional style ? easy drinking, medium-bodied with brooding layers of concentrated plummy black fruits, dark chocolate, pepper and spice. The feel is elegant, rather than powerful and makes for great drinking now, but this wine will continue to develop over the next 15-20 years and with this big trophy win, it won?t be around long!


Dog Point Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc 2012 $27
Dog Point is the creation of the former owners of Cloudy Bay, who took that label to the dizzy heights of world recognition and renown before cashing in and setting up Dog Point. Right from their first release, this wine has been all about class with this latest instalment possibly raising the bar in terms of precision, balance and finesse. The feel is textural, yet there?s a fine thread of minerality supporting the overall structure which has all the obvious condiments: herbaceousness, ripe passionfruit and so on. It?s all held in check in the background as a complex nuance leaving room for other flavour complexities to raise their heads for recognition like grapefruit, citrus and apple. And yet it?s not even about the individual flavour profiles. It?s something much deeper still. The overall picture of the wine tells the story of an outstanding and complete wine that shows off the true capabilities and quality of classy ?New World? sauvignon blanc.


Valli Gibbston Vineyard Central Otago Pinot Noir 2009 $65
Popped in to ?Pinot Palooza? last Monday for the big Pinot Noir tasting extravaganza and was (again) mightily impressed with this wine. The Central Otago region can produce truly fascinating pinot noir and winemaker Grant Taylor from Valli prefers to focus on the sub regional traits to be found within the region, and this wine sourced from the Gibbston Vineyard shows a beautifully poised, perfumed wine with fragrant floral and spice aromatics, and rich, complex textural dark fruits fleshing out the palate with silky elegance and finesse ? all hallmarks of great pinot noir. No wonder then that the soon to be released 2010 version won the trophy at the prestigious London International Wine & Spirits Competition earlier this month.

Source: http://www.surfcoasttimes.com.au/entertainment/foodwine/2012/10/30/grapevine-new-sensations-in-big-old-world-of-wine/

grapes of wrath silent house nfl mock draft project m rubio colts colts

Monday, October 29, 2012

The Call of the Philanthropist ? Spiritual Beauty Notes

On any given day, Frank Hanna will take a lot of phone calls. Most of the calls pertain to business; some, of course, are personal. And then, occasionally, there are times when the phone rings with a solicitation for charity.

Oftentimes it would be a friend, calling to ask for a donation to a favorite cause. For years, Hanna would listen patiently, agree that the charity indeed sounded worthy, and offer a contribution. He tried to keep the transaction time to a minimum.

But these calls began to bother Hanna. It wasn?t the money. Hanna is a highly successful merchant banker in Atlanta. He could easily afford the donations. And it wasn?t the time. He was good about keeping the calls short.

No, what bothered him was the haphazardness of it all. It seemed so scattershot, so directionless, that it was almost irresponsible. This, he realized, is not how I conduct my business affairs. Why should philanthropy be any different? He would often have occasion to recall F. A. Harper?s remark: ?Giving in many instances is really little more than the cost of peacefully evicting a well-intentioned trespasser.? In any event, this wasn?t at all what philanthropy was supposed to be.

Philanthropy should be approached with the same diligence as business: with an engaged and critical mind. It shouldn?t rely merely on cold calls. It should be undertaken with focus, discipline, and intelligence. At its best, philanthropy could even be a vocation, a Calling.

Just taking calls, he realized, was keeping him from answering the Calling.

***

Since that realization some 20 years ago, Frank Hanna has purposefully pursued the vocation of the philanthropist. Towards that end, he has developed a set of principles for thinking through the theory and practice of effective philanthropic giving. Those carefully wrought principles guide his support for the promotion of cultural renewal, educational opportunity, and his own Catholic faith. Indeed, Hanna is widely regarded as a precise strategic philanthropist, a donor who judiciously directs his funds to the point of maximal impact. In recognition of his long, quiet labors, The Philanthropy Roundtable has selected him as the winner of the 2007 William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropic Leadership.

The William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropic Leadership honors living philanthropists whose charitable giving has shown exemplary effectiveness. The Prize celebrates the principles which guided Mr. Simon?s many charitable initiatives, including personal responsibility, resourcefulness, volunteerism, scholarship, individual freedom, faith in God, and helping people to help themselves. The winner of the Prize receives a $250,000 award, payable to the charity of his or her choice. Previous recipients include Richard and Helen DeVos, Dr. Ben Carson, David Robinson, Sir John M. Templeton, Raymond G. Chambers, and the late John T. Walton. Hanna will receive the Prize at the Annual Meeting of The Philanthropy Roundtable, on Friday, November 9th, in Dana Point, California.

***

Frank J. Hanna III is a deeply thoughtful man. He listens to questions attentively, and will often pause and think before replying. When he answers, he speaks in measured and considered sentences, with the honeysuckle drawl of his native Georgia. In conversation, he is equally comfortable discussing finance, philanthropy, philosophy?and baseball.

For Hanna, the idea of philanthropy as a Calling has powerful religious resonance. He and his family are devout Roman Catholics, whose support for the church extends from their local parish to the Vatican. He is a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Order of St. Gregory, and his work within the church includes his efforts as a Knight of the Order of the Holy Sepulcher, a Knight of the Order of Malta, a board member of the Papal Foundation, and a member of Regnum Christi. Through it all, Hanna has also coached little league soccer and basketball, and taught Sunday School.

That same dedication characterizes Hanna?s career. His achievements are extraordinary. He was named a National Merit Scholar and a Truman Scholar before graduating, with First Honors, from the business college of the University of Georgia. He went on to study law at the University of Georgia, where he took his degree, cum laude, in 1986. After a stint as a corporate attorney for Troutman Sanders, LLP, Hanna accepted a position as Group Vice President, Finance and Administration, for Nationwide Credit. In 1989, he co-founded Account Portfolios Management, Inc. In his role as chief executive officer, he oversaw the purchase and management of portfolios of non-performing loans and accounts receivable. Three years later, he founded HBR Capital, Ltd., which he has headed ever since, guiding the firm as it invests in financial services and information-processing enterprises.

***

If you ask Hanna about philanthropy, be prepared for a nuanced disquisition on the nature of property, the legitimate purposes of wealth, and the moral imperatives of the virtuous life. His conclusion, however, is relatively simple. In essence, he believes that people should give away all non-essential wealth within their lifetime.

But what, exactly, constitutes non-essential wealth? The term seems to suggest that some wealth may, in fact, be essential. According to Hanna, essential wealth provides for the fundamentals of life. It includes provision for the bare necessities of life?food, water, shelter?both for ourselves and for those who depend on us. It likewise extends to our genuine needs, things that, though not strictly necessary for survival, nevertheless make life minimally comfortable?eyeglasses, for instance, or dental care. Genuine professional needs count as essential. Even beneficial goods?like traveling abroad or attending the symphony?can qualify as essential, since they genuinely improve us, even if we would still be able to flourish without them, if to a slightly lesser degree. Only once it exists beyond provision for these fundamental needs does wealth become non-essential.

Yet even non-essential wealth has the potential to serve highly productive ends. When actively and intelligently invested, it can lead to the creation of still more wealth?which in turn means more prosperity for more people. When non-essential wealth sits idly, however, earning mere market returns, it can become dangerous. Hanna is willing to explain at length and in detail how such idle, non-essential wealth threatens those who have it, and those whom they love. It can corrupt the soul, breeding arrogance and laziness; it can threaten identities and lead to irrational guilt. It can become a distraction and a frustration; it can destroy a healthy sense of limitation, and delay the resolution of real problems.

For that reason, Hanna recommends as a safeguard against such dangers, donating a regular percentage of one?s wealth to philanthropy. His baseline suggestion is for whichever of these is greatest: either 10 percent of one?s annual increase in net worth, or 10 percent of one?s annual living expenses, or an amount equal to one?s net worth, divided by the number of years that one can reasonably be expected to live.? The proposal tries to approximate the venerable tradition of tithing, which makes relatively modest demands with absolutely regular consistency.

Crucially, Hanna stresses the importance of starting to give immediately. To delay the start of a philanthropic regimen is to beset oneself with problems. For one thing, there is always a reason to hold off for a little while longer. For another, delay denies help to those who need immediate assistance. For still another, delay forecloses the opportunity to teach philanthropy within the family. Starting a philanthropic regimen is like opening a school of virtue, where future heirs may begin to learn the art of giving?while being gently reminded that they have no absolute claim to non-essential wealth.

Resolving to give away non-essential wealth is the first step. Next comes determining how best to do so. It?s a question that has long occupied Hanna?s mind.

***

To Hanna, philanthropy is an undertaking that must be conducted according to the ?obligation of prudence.? Prudence is a term widely misunderstood today, but the concept enjoys a long and distinguished philosophical pedigree. Aristotle considered prudence the queen of the moral virtues; it alone involved both mind and will. Prudence, Aristotle argued, has a twofold intellectual component. It first determines the moral ends to be attained; then it designs the means best suited to their attainment. Once its intellectual work is accomplished, prudence must govern the appetites in order to attain the goal identified with the means designed.

Among businessmen, the obligation of prudence is intuitively understood and rigorously applied. But philanthropists?even the successful entrepreneurs among them?often seem to lose sight of it. For one thing, they are sometimes so impressed by manifest good intentions that they overlook the prudential imperative. The heart, alas, can overpower the head. Further complicating matters is the perennial problem of comparing moral goods. Who?s to say that it?s better to fund a soup kitchen than to build a healthcare clinic? Can we know for certain that it?s better to establish a primary school than to rehabilitate prisoners? The head, unfortunately, can be overwhelmed.

But the real obstacle for the prudent philanthropist is the absence of a common basis for measuring effectiveness. ?How do I measure success?? asks Hanna. ?How do I measure failure? These questions are the bane of philanthropy.? In business, money provides a common unit of measurement for comparing investments. Every businessman understands the concept of return on investment; profit margins are profit margins across all market sectors.

Philanthropy, however, lacks a definitive way to establish success. ?You have to move from an absolute measurement to a more relative or comparative measurement,? Hanna observes. ?It?s an inexact science. But there?s no point in getting too frustrated with the inexactitude. After all, raising children is an inexact science?but that doesn?t mean we shouldn?t do it.? Inexactitude simply requires additional care, a fact as true of philanthropy as parenting.

For that reason, Hanna has developed a set of prudential principles to guide his charitable giving. He begins with the first question of prudence: What are the moral goods to be pursued? The answer, he has discovered, subscribes to what he calls the Principle of Indispensability: ?Support indispensable causes to which your support is indispensable.?

According to Hanna, donors should direct their funds only to causes they deem truly essential. ?I believe,? he writes, ?that the charities to which we give significant help should themselves be indispensable. In other words, their success should bring to mankind physical, intellectual, moral, or spiritual benefits of the most important kind, benefits without which mankind (or particular individuals) would be fundamentally diminished.?

Once philanthropists have identified the indispensable causes, they should restrict their donations to charities for which their support is truly indispensable. A small contribution to a massive organization will have marginal influence, at best. A series of marginal contributions is hardly better. Funds are always best spent where they will be put to the most effective use. If the organization can succeed without this donation, the money would be better spent on an organization that absolutely needs the funds to attain its objectives.

The Principle of Indispensability is designed to help maximize the leverage of charitable contributions. ?Archimedes is credited with discovering how to use a lever to get seemingly disproportionate results,? says Hanna. ?But Archimedes didn?t just stick his lever anywhere. He had to find the point of maximal leverage.? So too with philanthropy: Charitable donations achieve seemingly disproportionate results when they are directed to the point of maximal leverage.

***

The Principle of Indispensability meets the first criterion of prudence; it identifies the moral goods to be attained. The second criterion of prudence, meanwhile, demands that adequate means be devised to achieve these moral ends. Hanna has devoted considerable thought to this second element of prudential philanthropy, and has devised a set of guidelines to help him maximize his charitable investments.

The philanthropist, no less than the businessman, should search for synergies. Donors should seek initiatives that will benefit from the specific combination of their knowledge, interests, wealth, and expertise. ?In practical terms,? Hanna explains, this means we ?should contribute money to philanthropic activities in fields in which we?re already actively and even eagerly involved. It?s in such endeavors that our judgments of the charities are likely to be keener, and our own contributions?financial and otherwise?are likely to prove indispensable.?

Donors should also take special care to observe the leaders of the organizations they support. ?You get extraordinary results from great leadership,? says Hanna. ?They?re like good managers in business. In business, you?re always on the lookout for good managers.? Good leaders exhibit a number of qualities?honesty, creativity, humility?but Hanna is especially interested in leaders who expect accountability. To the extent that they can, good leaders will offer independently verifiable evidence of their efficiency and effectiveness. They welcome evaluation, seeing it as an opportunity for improvement. ?Those are the All-Stars. Those are the Cy Young pitchers.?

For similar reasons, Hanna advises investment in initiatives rather than institutions. He allows that ?institutions are relevant,? but immediately warns that ?it?s hazardous to put your faith in institutions.? A well-established institution, redolent of tradition, may seem like a suitable venue for a prudent endowment. But while institutions can change, endowments are forever. Funding temporary initiatives is one way to ensure that money is used in ways consistent with the donor?s intentions.

To illustrate the point, Hanna recalls the tale of an elderly gentleman, who at great expense funded a chair in Catholic Studies at a prestigious university some 50 years ago. The benefactor devoutly wished to see his endowment promote a better understanding of the faith he loved so dearly. Instead, he witnessed professor after professor use the position to launch vicious attacks upon the church. The thought of it was enough to bring the old man nearly to tears.

When supporting initiatives, however, donors must also take care not to foster dependency. Charities strive to instill independence in individuals, and philanthropists should replicate the effort with respect to organizations. Once the entrepreneurial stage of a charity has been financed, if the endeavor is meeting its objectives, it should be spurring the donations of others.? ?A philanthropist has a moral obligation to spend wisely, and to encourage this type of strategic planning,? says Hanna. Good intentions are certainly laudable, but they are in themselves insufficient. Effort is not the same as effect.

Philanthropists should never hesitate to draw upon their private sector expertise. In Hanna?s case, that means finance. His work requires him to persuade other people to let him use their money, in order to generate greater returns for all parties involved. An analogous strategy can be applied to philanthropy through the creation of matching grants. Matching grants allow an organization to use other people?s money to incentivize further fundraising, without diminishing the enthusiasm of other donors.

Nevertheless, Hanna recommends against philanthropists becoming too directly involved in fundraising. For a charity, it may seem to make good sense to ask donors to help work the phones?the multiplier effect of additional donor-raised contributions can potentially be quite substantial. For individual donors, however, it is not at all clear that the arrangement is beneficial. Those with a genuine talent for business may actually serve their causes better by restricting themselves to making money and donating the extra funds. Investing time and energy into fundraising may actually diminish total returns; for many entrepreneurs, the comparative advantage lies in generating wealth. Donors, he concludes, should generally resist the fundraising temptation.

Finally, Hanna believes that philanthropists should limit their attention to a few, select initiatives. ?With so many needy and worthy organizations and persons vying for attention, it?s hard to stay focused. Before long, you can find yourself involved in so many projects that you?re not really serving any of them well, and even your financial contributions are not being used effectively.? For Hanna, it all comes back to prudence. Properly practiced, philanthropy is prudential. Prudence, by its nature, involves an honest assessment of limitations, and limitations sometimes require one to say, ?No.?

***

Hanna focuses his own philanthropy on efforts to renew the culture. The longstanding debate over how best to do so?whether to engage in politics or in culture?is not satisfactorily resolved with an either/or answer; politics and culture inevitably influence and reflect each another. He is fond of quoting the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan: ?The central conservative truth is that it is culture, not politics, that determines the success of a society. The central liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it from itself.?

Still, Hanna has a clear idea of where to begin: ?By and large, the most leveraged point for renewing the culture is in education.? He has been thinking about educational reform for a long time. He was an undergraduate when the National Commission on Excellence in Education released its bombshell report,?Nation at Risk. Like many others, Hanna was appalled at the report?s findings. Unlike many others, he committed himself to creating sufficient capital to make significant investments in education reform.

Those investments have taken multiple forms. For a while, Hanna produced and hosted a weekly television program in Washington, D.C., called?One Room Schoolhouse, which sought to teach parents how to become more actively involved in the education of their children. He later helped secure the passage of Georgia?s first charter school bill, and has since lent his support to school choice initiatives.

But Hanna?s real passion is for Catholic education. Catholic schools, he explains, are particularly well suited to the task of educating the whole person. Their pedagogy is rooted in the affirmation of human dignity and of humanity?s transcendent vocation. Hanna believes that, unlike the public schools, religious schools have the ability to teach that truth exists, that the human mind can learn truth, and that knowledge of truth contributes to the life of virtue.

Unfortunately, many Catholic schools face serious financial difficulties. For a variety of reasons, Hanna says, ?the average Catholic school today does not have a viable business model.? And the problem is most acute for middle-class families. The wealthiest tenth can afford the tuition at elite Catholic academies, while the poorest tenth can avail themselves of externally subsidized inner-city Catholic schools. But for the eight-tenths in the middle, Catholic education is becoming ever more unaffordable.

To that end, Hanna has helped found several new schools to serve Atlanta?s Catholic population. In 1993, he joined a group of businessmen, educators, and lay leaders who, under the spiritual direction of the Legionaries of Christ, established the Pinecrest Academy in Cumming, Georgia. The school set down its roots in a rented building with a single class of 29 students. Today, it flourishes, offering pre-kindergarten through high school, and is spread across a handsome 68-acre campus.

Pinecrest?s success convinced Hanna to repeat the effort. In 1996, he helped found the Holy Spirit Preparatory School in northern Atlanta. Like Pinecrest, Holy Spirit provides classes from preschool through high school. It too is prospering, and has likewise proven a blessing for middle-class Catholic families.

Most recently, Hanna led the effort to found Solidarity School in Atlanta. Unlike Pinecrest and Holy Spirit, Solidarity was not built with middle-class families in mind. The school is located in a predominantly Hispanic neighborhood, in what had been a crime-infested shopping center. Hanna bought out the complex, renovated the facilities, and opened the doors to the first class of 12 children in the Fall of 2000. Today the school serves over 90 students, and forms an integral part of a planned urban village, with a mission church, community services, and locally owned small businesses. Parents of the students mostly work in construction or fast food, as maids or day laborers, but all are expected to buy into the project, either with tuition (set at $5 per week) or volunteer labor.

Students at Solidarity receive a phonics-based, English-immersion education. They wear uniforms, stay in school until 4:00 p.m., and take only four weeks off for summer. Expectations are high. The school hopes that, upon graduation, its students as a group will test at least one grade level above students in the public school system. And parents are plainly delighted. ?We heard in Mexico that public schools in America don?t give a lot of attention to Hispanic children,? one parent told theAtlanta Journal-Constitution. ?I feel very satisfied with this school. It?s a little like family here.?

Hanna is quick to point out that the school has lent validation to an argument often advanced by proponents of school choice. Solidarity has actually served to improve the local public school. As parents in the public school system became aware of Solidarity?s success, they began to push for reforms. Competition increased quality across the board. A note of satisfaction creeps into Hanna?s voice: ?Our dollar a day program really shook up the community.?

Is Solidarity?s success replicable? ?Maybe,? says Hanna, ?but it?s too early to tell if the model can be franchised.? But the school was never intended just to be an educational experiment. ?It was and is, first and foremost, a corporal work of mercy.?

It is a corporal work of mercy that has attracted some notice. Hanna?s work with Solidarity School contributed to his appointment as co-chair of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Americans, where he oversaw the production and delivery of the commission?s report,?From Risk to Opportunity.

From reading?Nation at Risk?to writing?From Risk to Opportunity, there has been a long arc to Hanna?s work in educational reform. It has been the work of a lifetime?long, patient, and characteristically prudent.

***

If educational reform represents an effort to renew the culture from the bottom-up, then public policy advocacy is a way to change the culture from the top-down. Because the task of cultural renewal cannot ignore politics, Hanna has strategically donated to groups that he believes are making real progress in preserving and extending the American experiment in ordered liberty.

In doing so, he rigorously applies his Principle of Indispensability, avoiding organizations where his contribution would be non-essential, and focusing instead on a few, medium-sized, high-impact public advocacy groups. He reserves his support for those groups that know how to really leverage their resources. ?Einstein is supposed to have said that the Eighth Wonder of the World is compound interest,? says Hanna. ?A similar compounding effect?where gains build on gains?can come from dedicated organizations.?

Hanna believes that one such dedicated organization is the Acton Institute. Acton is a research and education think tank that describes its mission as the promotion of ?a free, virtuous, and humane society? which ?recognizes the benefits of a limited government, but also the beneficent consequences of a free market.? Hanna discovered Acton through a column in?Forbes. The essay was written by the Institute?s president, Fr. Robert A. Sirico. Hanna was impressed. ?This guy?s good,? he thought. (The esteem is clearly mutual; Sirico says of Hanna that he ?inspires me with his friendship, loyalty, honesty, and faith.?) The more Hanna studied the Institute, the more impressed he became. ?Acton is the nation?s foremost advocate for a free market circumscribed by the Judeo-Christian ethic. They?re the best I?ve found. Best in class.? In addition to financial support, Hanna has offered his time and talent, serving on Acton?s Board of Directors as vice chairman.

Hanna has likewise been impressed by the work of the Federalist Society. Founded in 1982, the Society is composed of center-right legal professionals who take as their foundational principles the ideas that the purpose of the Constitution is the preservation of freedom, that to achieve this end the Constitution requires a strict separation of powers, and that the judiciary best serves the cause of freedom when it restricts itself to its limited constitutional responsibility. Under its auspices, a network of law students, professors, and practicing attorneys gather to discuss and debate these principles in light of current developments within the law. ?They are stalwart defenders of the rule of law,? says Hanna, ?who benefit from brilliant leadership that understands how to bring people into contact with ideas.?

Hanna is also willing to find and fund individuals who are making genuine contributions towards the protection of American civil society. ?Look at Maggie Gallagher,? says Hanna, referring to the president of the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy. ?[She] is a top-notch scholar, working on demonstrating the importance of marriage as a social institution.? He points to Robert P. George of Princeton University, who is not only ?one of the world?s leading authorities on natural law,? but is moreover ?doing really amazing work in bioethics.? Rick Santorum has long been ?one of the most consistent and effective voices for the family. He?ll continue to do that, because he?s fearless.? Hanna supports each of these individuals, because he believes their work is indispensable to the task of cultural renewal, and because he believes his support is indispensable to their efforts.

In all of this, Hanna has dutifully followed his own guidelines for how to make the indispensable philanthropic investment.

Take leadership, for instance. Hanna frequently underscores the importance of good leaders: ?people who work in a superlative manner, who lead with wisdom and humility, they?re the ones who get disproportionate results.? Others have noticed and responded. Sirico recalls that ?Frank and I got to know each other over a period of time, during which I realized he was taking my measure. Once he was convinced of the soundness of our approach?and, I suspect, of my personal integrity?Frank was ready to move forward.?

Leonard Leo, the executive vice president of the Federalist Society, noticed much the same thing. ?Frank understands that lasting success requires more than just good ideas and a marketing plan. You need talented people to direct and manage an effort each and every day. When you make investments in good people, they in turn make investments in causes that have high returns in terms of transforming our culture.? Leo pauses for a moment, then continues. ?It?s like the parable of the master who gave each of his slaves 50 talents?I doubt Frank would have much patience either for the one who buried the money, without making any effort to direct his talents to multiplying value.?

Among the organizations he supports, Hanna has made it his constant practice to search for opportunities to leverage the group?s influence. ?Frank is one of those Board members who continually asks hard questions of us,? Sirico explains. ?He looks beyond the enthusiasm for a project and wants to know hard facts about how influential an idea or program will be?not how many books we will publish, but how many people will read the information. He wants bang for the buck, and is highly strategic in his thinking.?

Leo says much the same. ?I think that Frank saw in the Federalist Society an opportunity to create significant value dollar-for-dollar, because we are in the business of creating an infrastructure of talented leaders whose reach could extend to addressing many, many different problems with our legal culture. The versatility and broad reach of this infrastructure lays a foundation for ranging, long-term impact, well beyond a small set of particularized successes.?

But most of all, Hanna is known for taking an active, personal role in the causes he supports. ?Frank is not so much a philanthropist as he is an investor,? says Kevin Hasson, of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, another group Hanna supports. ?He not only invests money in you, but he?s committed to improving what you do so that both you and he are more successful. Frank always asks questions that no one else has thought of. He forces us to improve in ways that we didn?t realize we needed.? Leo again wholeheartedly concurs: ?Frank is the kind of philanthropist who provides more than funding. He is a role model, showing how a proper application of faith to all aspects of your life can lead to a better appreciation of your vocation, and, in turn, the achievement of greater good for your fellow man.?

Sirico agrees. With a grin tugging at the corners of his mouth, he attests, ?if Frank gets involved, he jumps in at the deep end.?

Christopher Levenick is editor-in-chief of?Philanthropy?magazine.

?

Source: http://shannantaylor.wordpress.com/2012/10/27/the-call-of-the-philanthropist/

wes welker eli manning eli manning kelly clarkson national anthem halftime show super bowl halftime show 2012 ahmad bradshaw

Friday, October 26, 2012

Radioactive Fish Near Fukushima Suggest Ongoing Contamination

Bottom-dwelling fish continue to be found with high levels of radioactive elements, potentially coming from leaking radioactive water or contaminated sediments


greenling RADIOACTIVE FISH: Some source of radioactive contamination is causing bottom-dwelling fish, like the greenling pictured here, to absorb high levels of radionuclides. Image: Flickr.com / Brian Gratwicke

The fish off Fukushima remain radioactive more than a year after the earthquake and subsequent tsunami triggered three meltdowns at the Daiichi nuclear power plant. In fact, bottom-dwelling greenling fish caught in August 2012 bore the highest levels of radioactive particles seen to date?25,000 Becquerels per kilogram. (A becquerel is a unit of the rate of radioactive decay?or radiation emitted by a substance.) That is 250 times higher than current Japanese safety standards, a key reason fishing off Fukushima remains prohibited.

The findings suggest that contaminated water is still leaking from the stricken power plant, the sea bottom itself is now laced with radionuclides, or both. Concentrations in the ocean water itself remain below any human health concern but they do pass into fish that swim through those waters.

"When fish 'drink' they take [cesium] and other salts up from the water they are swimming in, that accumulates in the muscle tissue," explains marine chemist Ken Buessler of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who compiled the analysis of publicly released Japanese fisheries data and published it in Science on October 26. But the fish also shed that cesium if they swim in uncontaminated waters, as has been seen in tuna that migrated from near Japan to near San Diego, suggesting that levels in fish should decrease over time. For this reason, most of the fish caught off Japan's northeastern coast are not radioactive. But roughly 40 percent of bottom-dwelling fish, such as flatfish or halibut, caught off the coast adjacent to Fukushima bear radionuclides above the Japanese food safety standard of 100 becquerels per kilogram.*

According to a response to questions from Scientific American that was prepared by staff at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ingesting fish at that level "would only produce a dose that is a small fraction of the dose that people receive from natural levels." For example, as Buessler notes, fish caught off Japan in June 2011 boasted levels of potassium-40?a naturally occurring radionuclide?10 times higher than those of radioactive cesium from Fukushima.

Radioactive cesium decays by emitting what's known as a beta radiation, a negatively charged particle that is easily blocked by metal, plastic or wood?but not skin. In particular, ingesting beta-emitting radioactive elements is "a concern," according to the NRC. "Beta particles released directly to living tissue can cause damage at the molecular level, which can disrupt cell function." Plus, beta particles are small enough to travel far in the body, causing damage far and wide.

U.S. safety guidelines from the Food and Drug Administration permit foods to bear 1,200 becquerels per kilogram of radioactive cesium, but the FDA declined to comment for this article. "The more restrictive action taken by the Japanese seems reasonable for the population living close to Fukushima because they receive radiation doses from other sources, including non-fish food, drinking water and land surface contamination," the NRC staff writes. "Based on the FDA and [World Health Organization] recommendations, eating fish contaminated at 100 Bq/kg would result in a small and acceptable exposure to radioactive cesium."

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=7610f9cf0b2c572251237e4ff6741f3e

barney frank barney frank rob gronkowski kim richards robert hegyes mary louise parker mary louise parker

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Medicare and More High Quality Choices | Michigan Elder Law Center

Not only do people with Medicare have more high quality choices but the performance of Medicare Advantage plans is also improving. HHS also released the 2013 quality ratings for Medicare health and drug plans on the web-based Medicare Plan Finder. During Medicare Open Enrollment, people with Medicare can use the star ratings to compare the quality of health and drug plans options and select the plans that best suite their needs for 2013.

In 2013, people with Medicare will have access to a wide range of plan choices, including more four and five star plans than ever before.

  • People with Medicare will have access to 127 four-or-five-star Medicare Advantage plans. Currently, these serve 37 percent of Medicare Advantage enrollees, and may attract more with their improved quality ratings. In 2012, people with Medicare had access to 106 four or five star plans, which only served 28 percent of enrollees.
  • People with Medicare will be able to access 26 four or five star prescription drug plans, which currently serve 18 percent of enrollees. In 2012, 13 four or five star plans are serving only 9 percent of enrollees.

As a result of provisions in the Affordable Care Act, Medicare is doing more to promote enrollment in high quality plans and alert beneficiaries who are enrolled in lower quality plans. Currently, people with Medicare enrolled in consistently low performing plans (those receiving less than 3 stars for at least the past 3 years) will receive notifications to inform them that they can switch to a higher quality plan if they choose to do so. Also, 5-star plans are rewarded with the ability to continuously market and enroll beneficiaries throughout the year.

The Affordable Care Act phases out the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap also known as the ?donut hole.? In 2013, people with Medicare who reach the ?donut hole? will receive approximately 53 percent off the cost of brand name drugs and 21 percent off the cost of generic drugs. In addition, Medicare beneficiaries will continue to benefit from Medicare-covered preventive services at zero cost-sharing, including a yearly Wellness visit.

For details about the 2013 Part C and D Plan Quality Ratings:
http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Prescription-Drug-Coverage/PrescriptionDrugCovGenIn/PerformanceData.html.

Medicare Open Enrollment runs from October 15th through December 7th.

For more information about Open Enrollment, please visit: http://www.cms.gov/Center/Special-Topic/Open-Enrollment-Center.html?redirect=/center/openenrollment.asp.

?

Attorney Christopher J. Berry is a Metro Detroit?estate planning?and?elder law?lawyer who helps families, seniors, veterans and business owners with their important legal needs. Oakland County?estate planning lawyer, Christopher Berry is a partner in the Bloomfield Hills law firm of?Witzke Berry?PLLC. Mr. Berry practices in the areas ofestate planning, business, probate, veterans benefits &?Medicaid planning. Follow Christopher on Twitter@chrisberryesq

Source: http://michiganelderlawcenter.com/medicare-more-high-quality-choices/

will rogers ohio university ohio university keystone xl pipeline idaho potato bowl cagayan de oro cagayan de oro

MontainQuest

MontainQuest

the Dragons of Mt. Dromdor have been terrorizing the peaceful villages for months, and then the heroes showed up, to slay them.

Owner:

Game Masters:

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?MontainQuest?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "MontainQuest"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

User avatar
Elfangor19
Member for 0 years



Post a reply

RolePlayGateway is a site built by a couple roleplayers who wanted to give a little something back to the roleplay community. The site has no intention of earning any profit, and is paid for out of their own pockets.

If you appreciate what they do, feel free to donate your spare change to help feed them on the weekends. After selecting the amount you want to donate from the menu, you can continue by clicking on PayPal logo.

Who is online

Registered users: 1Toklo1*, 360Tan*, abbs15*, Adantas, Adoration*, Ahri*, AlexAlonez, AlexAnnify*, ali_rox96, almostinsane, Animality Opera, ArhaHitomi888*, Arik223*, Armageddon*, asfjnm*, Asher MstrImmortalis*, AshleighC*, AtsukoRage, AugustArria*, Avander*, AzricanRepublic*, Azrieldemourn, Banshee, BeautifullyBroken*, BlaizeJ01*, BleedingLover, BlueTeddyBearMelody, BoxWithMadMan, Bromander Shepard, Bugbuster, BumbleDrop*, C4L3N, Caeruleus Lupis, Calligraphy Jack*, Canibelle*, Carlos_Joaquin*, Cataphractii, Cayleen*, ceh12*, Celaira, ChaosxChild13*, Choclate~Pyrus*, Cienpher, cmpuncle*, Conloth, Cooper*, coricidinForte*, cosmopolitanlove*, CrashQueen, Crooked Thoughts*, crystalrain*, CussingChild*, Dalmar*, Dark Star*, DarlingRapture, DeadlyBandages, dealing with it, deathrisesagain, Dekar*, delfiler*, DemiKara*, DemonDante, desire99600*, DestroytheOrcs, Digital_Muse*, dimon lord*, Disarmhxc, Dragon*, draketemple*, Draruto, DustAndEchoes, ebon15*, Eisenhorn, Elfangor19*, Emerald.x, EmperorCaesar*, Enter Username Here, Erik7622*, Eyliel*, Fencer, Firewind*, FizzGig*, FollowerOfDarkPaths*, Forensic_Anthro, Forget~Me~Not*, freakofnature, fringe, gezzygezzy, Google [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], Google Feedfetcher, GoriexGorie*, GreenSweatshirtGal*, Grimpunker96*, Gypsy*, Hallowed777*, HayleyTruLove, HitoriRaven*, holothewisewolf*, Horseygirl, HybridGurl*, Hydrall*, Hyperiant*, Isra*, jackrules158, Jadebud98*, Jadeling Hawkins*, Jarlas*, JEDH3*, Jewliet115*, Jinx911, Juular*, Kai, Kohananinja*, Korrye, Kuroe*, Lady Inali*, Laerodon*, Lainpinky131*, Layla, Lenyx, Lifecharacter*, lightningpoint, LittleIrishLove*, Lorrim*, lovelyzombie*, LuckyNumber24, Lufia, Magic Man*, Majestic-12 [Bot], Malachite, MaliceInWonderland, masato22, Mathew Littlepaw, MegaKooala12*, Mephisto, MetalSliver*, Midnightclub*, MiraMija*, Morgan, MrMusic*, MSNbot Media, muketsu_bara*, Nannyhap*, Nemo, NeonWingedPhoenix*, Nightmaric_Angel*, Nikolai*, NotAFlyingToy, Oblivian*, Oborosen*, Odinson, OpalePhantasmagoria, Orion Vryce*, Ottoman*, OurLadyofSorrows, Patcharoo*, Perception*, PirateofPie*, Porecomesis*, Princess Awinita*, Psyche*, QueenJen*, Ramphy*, Ran_Akuma, reap*, ReaperGirl4, Resoan, Roku Mushabuki*, Romaneck*, Rougeshadow*, rpannier*, Runika*, RydeDawg*, Saarai*, Saint Crash*, SarcasticIrony*, Seanhiruki*, ShadtheWerepire*, Shan?, ShaShaBoomStar, Shiki29, Shiva*, Shpleem*, sketchypigeon, SkullsandSlippers, Skwidge, SkyRight*, slcam, Snow*, St. Valentine*, Stella11, SuperVixen, Sweet Angel Jocelyn*, SylphofSpace*, Taidine, Tainted Twinkee, Talisman, Tanman*, Temperance*, Tenill*, Terrus*, The Black Death*, The Great Thundorz*, The Painkiller*, The(Doctor)Horrible*, TheFirstFist, TheMadBlackRabbit, TheNoremac42*, Thundergod1020, tigerking1292*, Tiko*, True Grave, TRUE-ASSASSIN, TwiliXDragon*, Uncertainly*, Valerie_Nix, Verum Umbra, Vestiline*, VindicatedPurpose, Vinno1234, virginnyboo*, Wake*, warthog*, Wildfawn, William Krypt*, Winds Of Fate*, Witless*, wolfoftheage*, WordSail*, Wudgeous, X64, xoxMissClairexox*, YellowGrand*, YoungJae*, ZacharyTC, Zenia*, zeno3111*

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/jYl0UsZd3Mk/viewtopic.php

marianas trench camille grammer camille grammer us supreme court breaking dawn part 2 trailer mississippi state chris carpenter

Utah Republican activist facing rape charges found dead after jail release

SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - A Utah Tea Party activist and Republican fundraiser charged with more than two dozen felony counts of rape and sexual assault has died from an apparent suicide just four days after he was freed from jail on bail, his attorney said on Wednesday.

Greg N. Peterson, 37, was found dead in his remote Heber City-area cabin, in the mountains about 50 miles east of Salt Lake City, by two bail bondsmen late on Tuesday, defense lawyer Cara Tangaro said.

An initial investigation indicates Peterson died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, Wasatch County Sheriff Todd Bonner said at a news conference Tuesday night. The death remained under investigation.

The cabin was the site of Peterson's annual Rocky Mountain Conservative BBQ - an annual summer fundraiser initiated in 2010 for Republican Party luminaries, including presidential nominee Mitt Romney, Utah Senator Orrin Hatch and the state's governor, Gary Herbert.

Peterson was arrested in July and charged by Salt Lake County prosecutors with 25 counts sexual abuse, assault, rape, sodomy and kidnapping. The charges stem from allegations that Peterson had attacked four women he met through an online dating site for Mormons or at church-related events.

Wasatch County prosecutors filed a similar sex abuse case against Peterson in August after a fifth woman came forward.

Peterson, a financial planner, had denied the allegations, although he had not yet entered a plea in either case. On Friday, Peterson had posted bail of $2 million and was released from jail.

The bail bondsmen went looking for Peterson on Tuesday after something went awry with the signal from his ankle monitor and no one was able to reach him by phone, Tangaro said.

"We were worried that something was wrong," Tangaro told Reuters on Wednesday. "We had been having contact with Greg daily since his release."

Peterson had no known medical history that put him at risk for suicide and had not displayed any signs that he was in distress, Tangaro said. Peterson had felt, however, tremendous pressure from media coverage of the case, which he believed had unfairly demonized him, she said.

"I think the thought that he may not overcome that image, no matter the outcome of his case, was very difficult," Tangaro said. "We were absolutely shocked by (his death)."

Tangaro said she does not believe Peterson's apparent suicide should be interpreted as an admission of guilt.

(Reporting by Jennifer Dobner; Editing by Steve Gorman and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/utah-republican-activist-facing-rape-charges-found-dead-022738677.html

pro bowl 2012 roster yamaguchi road house occupy oakland occupy oakland morgellons disease arik armstead

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Japan: Kawagoe City Hall

The eight islands of Japan sprang into existence through Divine Intervention.

The first two gods who came into existence were Izanagi no Mikoto and Izanami no Mikoto, the Exalted Male and Exalted Female. It was their job to make the land for people to live on.

They went to the bridge between heaven and earth and, using a jewel-encrusted halberd, Izanagi and Izanami churned up the sea into a frothy foam. As salty drips of water fell from the tip of the halberd the first island was formed. Its name was Onogoro.

So far, so good. But when Izanagi and Izanami first met on their island, Izanami spoke to Isanagi without being spoken to first. Since she was the female, and this was improper, their first union created badly-formed offspring who were sent off into the sea in boats.

The next time they met, Izanagi was sure to speak first, ensuring the proper rules were followed, and this time they produced eight children, which became the islands of Japan.

I'm sure you did not fail to miss the significance of this myth for the establishment of Japanese formal society.

At present, Japan is the financial capital of Asia. It has the second largest economy in the world and the largest metropolitan area (Tokyo.)

Technically there are three thousand islands making up the Japanese archipelago. Izanagi and Izanami must have been busy little devils with their jewelled halberd...

Japan's culture is highly technical and organized. Everything sparkles and swooshes on silent, miniaturized mechanisms.

They're a world leader in robotics, and the Japanese have the longest life-expectancy on earth.

Text by Steve Smith.

Source: http://www.360cities.net/image/kawagoe-city-hall-japan

dwyane wade the night they drove old dixie down levon oklahoma city bombing robbie robertson the curious case of benjamin button secret service prostitute

HMV bans open-toe shoes and extreme body art - AOL Money UK

HMV storeAnna Gowthorpe/PA Wire

Troubled HMV has hit the headlines again - this time for its staff dress policy. The store has told staff they can't wear open-toed sandals, or have 'extreme' body art on display. So will we see an end to the days when record shop workers are expected to be a bit alternative? And can the store stop people from expressing themselves?

Or will this be the latest in a long line of woes for the music retailer?

New rules

The announcement is part of a new 'appearance policy' reported by the Daily Telegraph, which comes into effect on Friday. It requires that men wear blue denim jeans and women blue denim skirts. Both genders will be banned from flip flops and other open-toed shoes; and 'extreme' body art will have to be covered up - only discrete tattoos and piercings will be allowed.

There has been a shocked reaction from a public that is used to seeing some outlandish dress in record shops. However, James Hall, an associate in the employment and pensions team at lawyers Charles Russell told AOL Money that the shop is perfectly within its rights to set a dress code.

He explains: "There is concern from a lot of retailers that their staff ought to look approachable."

He accepts that the image of record shop staff may be more alternative than in many stores, but adds: "Asking them to cover up all tattoos would perhaps be a bit extreme, but they are not doing this, they are talking about extreme body art. They may be a music shop, but they have a classical section, and they have elderly customers, who they want to ensure are comfortable asking for help." He said that the shop has a right to insist that staff are dressed acceptably, look approachable and portray the right corporate image.

An HMV spokesman told the newspaper that this is exactly what the policy aimed to do: "More discreet tattoos and piercings are not an issue so long as people look smart. It goes without saying that we want our work colleagues to feel valued as individuals who can express their personalities, but it's also important that we balance this against the needs and expectations of our customers, who, ultimately, have to be at the heart of everything we do," he said.

Warning

Hall warned, however, that the store needed to take care to enforce the policy sensibly, to avoid falling foul of claims for discrimination. He said: "The key thing is that the policy has to be enforced consistently. Everyone's tattoos are different, and I don't think a tribunal would expect an employer to have something like a rule about a maximum surface area covered by tattoos. However, there has to be a clear structure behind the decisions, they need to be taken at a management level, and the individuals making them need to have training for how to handle them."

It remains to be seen how the policy is enforced, and whether it turns out to be a sensible corporate decision to keep staff smart - or a can of worms waiting to be opened.

HMV can only hope its fortunes change and this goes off without a hitch. It has already seen its sales fall below ?1 billion for the first time in a decade - as consumers go online for music and DVDs.

More stories

Source: http://money.aol.co.uk/2012/10/24/hmv-bans-open-toe-shoes-and-extreme-body-art/

Aurora victims usher James Holmes Minka Kelly sex tape Colorado shooting Colorado shooting victims aurora

Legal Issues With Video Hosting Sites? - Web Hosting Talk

Hey guys, had a few quick questions,

Out of curiosity I was wondering if it was legal to start a video hosting site such as GorillaVid, MovPod, Daclips, etc. How are these guys running? If they put together a valid DMCA / Terms of Use page and are willing to take down reported videos are they in the clear? What differentiates these guys from MegaVideo that got into so much trouble?

Thanks

Source: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1203393

marion barber syracuse ohio state girl with the dragon tattoo ohio state basketball collateral dick cheney heart

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Life University announces plans to eliminate campus police force, sparking safety concerns among students

Oct. 22, 2012

Dive Summary:

  • Life University in Marietta has announced plans to eliminate its campus police department in favor of a private security firm.
  • The switch will eliminate 14 jobs, and the new guards will be unarmed and unable to make arrests.
  • Dr. Brian McAulay, the school's executive vice president and provost, says the school's size makes a campus police force unnecessary, but some of the school's 2,500 students (400 live on campus) are concerned about the safety issues that may arise from not having a campus police force.

From the article:

A metro Atlanta college is making major changes to its campus security. Life University in Marietta has chosen to eliminate its police department entirely?and some students say the decision to hire a private securityfirm has them concerned about their safety. ...

Source: http://www.educationdive.com/news/life-university-announces-plans-to-eliminate-campus-police-force-sparking/66079/

minnesota timberwolves jr martinez melasma jimmy rollins jimmy rollins let it snow jason trawick

NHS encourages frail patients to die at home rather than seek life ...

The NHS are requesting GPs draw up ?Death Lists? of frail patients who are to be encouraged to die at home rather than seek life-saving treatment at hospital, with the objective of saving the government ?1.35 billion a year.

The Liberal Democrat Care Minister Norman Lamb has unveiled the NHS Death List ?tool kit? that GPs and Social Workers will use to identify patients to be encouraged to die. ?The ?toolkit? makes clear that a quarter of all hospital beds are occupied by dying people and said that? four in ten have no medical need to be there. ?It goes on to state that if each had one less emergency admission into hospital in their last weeks and? months, that would save the NHS ?1.35billion a year.

The ?tool kit? tells doctors: ?After several years of falling, the death rate is about to increase again as the baby boomers reach old age. This is a bad situation, which is going to get worse unless we act now.?

The government?s euthanasia plan is being disguised under the euphemism ?End of Life Care Registers? which claim to have patients best interests at heart, so they can die in comfort in their homes.

GPs have been asked to select one in every 100 of their patients likely to die over the next 12 months?to go on a ?Death list?. The GPs will not tell their patients or families that they have been selected for the ?Death List? but instead will encourage them to make Living Wills that request that nutrition and hydration are withdrawn if they become incapacitated and that they are not?resuscitated.

The NHS is distributing Death ?tool kits? not only to GPs but also to?health and social workers, which provide guidance on how to select patients for the ?Death Lists.?

It states that ?approximately? 1 per cent of people on a GP?s list [of all patients] will die each year ? this equates to an average of 20 deaths a year. Around 70 per cent to 80 per cent of all deaths are likely to benefit from planned end-of-life care.?

It said: ?Have your local practices identified the 1 per cent of their practice population who may be likely to die in the next year??

Doctors are told to pick out such patients during routine consultations that show? ?indicators of frailty and deterioration? and are told that? ?older people are a priority? to consider?.

They are also told to use feedback from district nurses or hospital consultants, while patients in care homes should be ?actively considered for your register?, the advice states.

Information for GPs on what happens to such patients said they would be ?less likely to be subject to treatments of limited clinical value?.
The Daily Mail reports:

Thousands of patients have already been placed on ?death registers? which single them out to be allowed to die in comfort rather than be given life-saving treatment in hospital, it emerged last night.

Nearly 3,000 doctors have promised to draw up a list of patients they believe are likely to die within a year, Department of Health figures showed yesterday.

Some medical professionals went public with their worries yesterday following the Daily Mail?s disclosure of the NHS request to doctors to put one in every 100 of their patients on death lists.

?

Dr Peter Saunders, of the Christian Medical Fellowship, warned about the risks of drawing up ?quotas? for the dying.

?We all know that doctors? estimates of patients? lifespans can be sometimes accurate but sometimes wildly inaccurate,? he said.

?A skilled doctor can in the great majority of cases assess when a patient is within a few hours or days of death. However, once we start to talk about weeks or months we know that we can often be right, but equally very badly wrong.?
NHS plans to creat ?Death Lists? emerged at the same time that the government rejected calls from the Catholic Church to review the misuse of the Liverpool Care Pathway:

The Archbishop of Southwark wrote to the Secretary of State for Health last month, urging him to launch a ?thorough and urgent investigation? into the controversial care pathway.

In a letter dated September 27, Archbishop Peter Smith expressed concern to the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt about the growing controversy surrounding the Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP).

He wrote: ?It does seem to me that a thorough and urgent investigation needs to take place, examining the evidence on which the criticisms that have been made of the LCP rest, so that conclusions can be reached as to whether any corrective action is needed.?

Archbishop Smith added: ?If the allegations that are being made can be substantiated, there is serious cause for concern either that the LCP is in some way structurally unsound and needs to be modified or that some doctors and nurses are failing to implement the guidelines as intended.

?Equally, if the allegations are without substance, dying patients and their loved ones are at risk of being caused needless anxiety as a result of which they may well seek to avoid treatment and care from which they would benefit.?

The LCP, which is used by hospitals as a framework to guide medical care of the dying, faced fresh criticism this week after it was reported that an 85-year-old woman had died alone at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital because medics allegedly did not consult her family before placing her on the pathway.

According to reports, Olive Goom died without family or friends as hospital staff had assured relatives that there was no urgent need to visit, although they had already removed her tubes, which provided food and fluid.

Dr Anthony Cole, the Catholic chairman of the Medical Ethics Alliance, said: ?The LCP is inherently hazardous and it is also unnecessary. Excellent end of life care can be delivered without referring to the LCP framework. It is time for an inquiry by the Department of Health into how the LCP is actually operating.?

But a spokeswoman for the Department of Health told The Catholic Herald that it would not be launching an official inquiry into the LCP.

She said: ?We would expect all trusts to investigate any reports of abuse or clinical failure and to act accordingly.

?The Liverpool Care Pathway is supported by leading clinicians and charities such as Marie Curie and is NICE [National Institute for Clinical Excellence] recommended. We continue to fully support its proper use as a way of managing a patient?s care with dignity and respect in their last days.?

Jim Dobbin, a Catholic MP and co-chair of the Dying Well All Party Parliamentary Group, which opposes euthanasia and promotes palliative care, has expressed the group?s support for an inquiry.

Protect the Pope comment: With the unquestioned use of the Liverpool Care Pathway and GPs creating ?Death Lists? the government is putting plans in place to create a euthanasia conveyor belt for the Baby Boomer generation.

The Care Minister?s toolkit makes it clear that the NHS sees the ageing Baby Boomers as a ?bad situation, which is going to get worse unless we act now.? Acting now means persuading them, without their knowledge of the government?s plans, that they decline life-saving treatment in favour of dying in comfort at home on the Liverpool Care Pathway, which will lead to hydration and nutrition being withdrawn if health care professionals and social workers decide that they are dying. If they become agitated, then they will be heavily sedated to ease their ?passing?.

The objective of saving the NHS ?1.35 billion a year is being dressed up as being in the best interests of frail patients. Being told that you?re going to die soon and you have a choice of dying at home surrounded by loved ones or in hospital where you?ll be a burden on the State, what do you think old people will choose?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2219351/Three-THOUSAND-doctors-putting-patients-death-lists-single-allowed-die.html

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2218790/Put-1-100-patients-death-list-GPs-told-Frailest-asked-choose-end-life-care.html

http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2012/10/18/state-rejects-archbishops-call-for-review-of-care-pathway/

?

?

?

Source: http://protectthepope.com/?p=5879

howard stern free shipping day free shipping day golden globe nominations 2012 war in iraq war in iraq government shutdown