Monday, December 31, 2012

'Hobbit' Dominates 2012's Final Box Office

Django Unchained,' 'Les Miserables' also enjoy strong business during the year's final box office weekend.
By Josh Wigler


Martin Freeman in "The Hobbit"
Photo: Warner Bros. Entertainment

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1699496/the-hobbit-box-office.jhtml

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Harness The Power Of Email To Market Your Business | Internet ...

Do you have an active marketing via email campaign that isn?t doing as well as you might have hoped? Are you interested in email marketing, but aren?t sure where you should start? You?ve found the right place. The following article will tell you what you need to know to put together a successful marketing via email campaign.

Ask permission before adding people to an email list. If you send emails without permission, your emails may be considered spam. Your reputation could be ruined and you may even get blacklisted and have your emails blocked by their ISP.

Have a strong title. Understand the subject title will be the very first line of text that your readers will view when they look at their inbox. Ensure that your title is clever and makes them want to click on your link. Just by doing this simple thing, your customer is almost guaranteed to keep reading to see what you have to say.

Email Address

This may seem like an obvious tip, but it?s important to be sure that every email address is correct on your mailing list. It would be a waste of time to have to find the correct email address and resend your emails. It?s a waste of time.

Make sure you focus on holidays when you are sending on communications for email promoting. Make sure you plan your emails with holidays in mind! Come up with marketing with email campaigns that are centered around important retail holidays like Valentine?s day, Easter, and Christmas. Try to market a little extra during slow sales periods.

Having a visible link where the person can unsubscribe is a bright idea. Make sure that this unsubscribe link is clearly visible and not hidden in text somewhere. Your customers must be made to feel that they are choosing to subscribe, and not that your emails are being forced upon them.

Spam Filters

Write for real people and forget about the spam bots. You want to avoid spam filters, and if you stick to your topic and talk to your customers directly then you should have no problem doing this. If you try too hard to avoid certain sales words like ?deals? or ?free,? the mailing will likely irritate the recipient and get nabbed by spam filters anyway.

Give people an easy sign up option to receive your marketing emails, and you will see the numbers on your list climb. Make the sign up option stand out on your site and you can easily add potential customers to your email list.

Strive to set a personal tone in every message you send as part of an marketing via email effort. Your customers will then have a personal image of your site rather than one that is negative or impersonal. You could have the CEO or president of your company sign their name at the bottom of the email to help your message make a better impression on your audience.

You should use all types of resources, and learn as much as you possibly can concerning email marketing. You can find books in libraries and on the web. Also, attend as many classes and workshops as you can find locally.

Keep your marketing copy on a personal, friendly level. As with other types of marketing, customers will be more likely to purchase items from you if you add a personal touch. As an example, if you are aware of the reason why a group of your subscribers joined your list, add that reason into your messaging.

Each email should only contain a single topic. With a deluge of information in your email, you can create an overwhelmed or bored reader, very easily. Develop one message, keep it reasonably short and to the point. Your customers will be happy that they?re not being bombarded with too much information.

Illustrate to your readers that you appreciate their time in restricting yourself to only sending messages with worthy content they can benefit from. Respect the customers? intelligence by only sending well thought out emails containing pertinent information, not merely sales pitches. Offer your reader information they need, such as answers to questions, or information about upcoming promotions.

Make your customers anticipate the arrival of your newsletter in their email by using it to offer them exclusive specials and markdowns. This type of marketing with email provides readers with value for participation, and it provides them with encouragement to refer their friends. Referral programs can be beneficial if you wish to increase the amount of readers that could become customers.

Create email lists organically. Refrain from purchasing or borrowing a list. Create your list by giving potential and existing customers a place to sign up for receiving your messages. That way, your list will always be tailored toward boosting your business.

Subject Lines

Try using A/B testing on your subject lines. For a single email, split your mailing list in half randomly, with each half receiving messages that have different subjects. You will be able to see which subject lines encourage people to open your emails and which ones you should avoid.

Marketing via email is capable of delivering amazing results. However, just like other marketing tools, proper use is required to achieve these results. Luckily you have this article and the tips in it that can help you with email promoting. Take what you have learned here, and before you know it, you will start to see results.

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Source: http://shawnjohnsoninc.com/harness-the-power-of-email-to-market-your-business/

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Welcome, NFL Football Fans, Watch St. Louis Rams vs Seattle Seahawks Live Online Week - 17 exclusive American National Football League Exciting match and other football matches in our online TV. The match will start on Sunday Decmber 30, 2012. NFL fans don?t delay your time to watch this match live. Click & enjoy every football moments live broadcast on live football TV.

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Source: http://www.gameinformer.com/blogs/members/b/jhon-mickel_blog/archive/2012/12/30/watch-st-louis-rams-vs-seattle-seahawks-live-streaming-usa-nfl-video-online-satellite-tv-on-pc.aspx

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Michael Medved: Liberals Stink, Government Sucks, Yay War (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273795127?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

1 seed Falcons lose to Bucs, don't gain momentum

By CHARLES ODUM

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 3:48 p.m. ET Dec. 30, 2012

ATLANTA (AP) - The Atlanta Falcons are heading to the postseason with some injury concerns.

Josh Freeman threw a touchdown pass to Mike Williams and Doug Martin ran for 142 yards, including a 40-yard touchdown run, in the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' 22-17 victory over the Falcons, who lost two defensive starters.

The Falcons (13-3) had little to play for as they already have home-field advantage through the NFC playoffs. Coach Mike Smith said he wanted to "finish the regular season the right way," and he stayed with his starters through the game.

But, defensive end John Abraham, Atlanta's best pass rusher, left with an apparent left ankle injury in the fourth quarter. Abraham couldn't put his weight on the ankle as he was helped off the field. Starting cornerback Dunta Robinson suffered a head injury in the first quarter and did not return. His helmet hit Martin on the running back's 3-yard gain. Robinson walked off the field and was escorted to the locker room.

Asked if he considered removing his starters after Abraham's injury, Smith said "absolutely not. We were going to continue to play to win this ballgame."

Smith said he does not believe the injuries to Abraham and Robinson are serious.

The Buccaneers (7-9) snapped a five-game skid for a positive end to a disappointing season. Tampa Bay was 6-4 and in playoff contention before a 24-23 home loss to the Falcons on Nov. 25 started the skid.

Matt Ryan's only touchdown pass was his 7-yard throw to Harry Douglas on a fourth-down play with about 7 minutes remaining to cut Tampa Bay's lead to five points. Atlanta's defense held, and the Falcons took possession at their 19 with 3:44 remaining.

The Falcons gained one first down before Ryan's fourth-down pass for Tony Gonzalez fell incomplete with about 2 minutes remaining.

Ryan completed 28 of 44 passes for 238 yards with one touchdown and no interceptions. Ryan had difficulty finding open receivers against Tampa Bay's defense, which ranks last in the league against the pass.

Martin capped his strong rookie season with 28 carries for 142 yards. Freeman completed 19 of 35 passes for 222 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Freeman returned to his early season form after throwing four interceptions in each of the last two losses.

The Buccaneers led 16-3 when Asante Samuel intercepted a pass from Freeman late in the third quarter. Samuel's 11-yard return to the Buccaneers 21 set up Michael Turner's 17-yard scoring run for Atlanta's first touchdown.

Tampa Bay answered quickly with an 80-yard touchdown drive capped by Martin's 40-yard run. Martin made a spin move to break a tackle attempt by Falcons safety Thomas DeCoud.

It was difficult for the Falcons to carry through with Smith's stated plan to treat this like any other game. With nothing on the line, there were empty seats in the Georgia Dome and little atmosphere to greet the players out of the tunnel.

The Falcons announced 69,644 tickets were distributed. Many were left unused.

The Falcons' only first-half points came on their second possession. Ryan led the team on a nine-play drive that stalled at the Buccaneers' 10, setting up Matt Bryant's 28-yard field goal.

---

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP-NFL

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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More news
Colts topple Texans from 1 seed

Andrew Luck threw a long touchdown pass and Deji Karim returned a kickoff 101 yards as the Colts defeated the Texans 28-16 in coach Chuck Pagano's first game back after battling leukemia.

Too little, too late for defending champ Giants

??There will be no repeat for the New York Giants. Not even a playoff berth.? The Giants (9-7) saw their playoff hopes end minutes after posting a 42-7 win over the Philadelphia Eagles when Chicago beat Detroit 26-24 to eliminate the defending Super Bowl champions from playoff contention.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50325327/ns/sports-nfl/

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Israel eases ban on building material for Gaza

GAZA (Reuters) - Israel eased its blockade of Gaza on Sunday, allowing a shipment of gravel for private construction into the Palestinian territory for the first time since Hamas seized control in 2007.

A Palestinian official with knowledge of an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire that ended eight days of fighting last month between Israel and Gaza militants said the move had been expected as part of the deal.

"This is the first time gravel has been allowed into Gaza for the Palestinian private sector since the blockade," said Raed Fattouh, the Palestinian official overseeing the shipment of 20 truckloads of the material.

Israel tightened the blockade after Hamas, an Islamist group that refuses to recognize the Jewish state, took power five years ago. But under international pressure, Israel began to ease the restrictions in 2010 and has allowed international aid agencies to import construction material.

The gravel was transferred a day after Egypt allowed building material into Gaza through its Rafah crossing, departing from a six-year ban. It was part of a shipment donated by the Gulf Arab state of Qatar, which has pledged $400 million to finance reconstruction.

Gaza economists say nearly 70 percent of the enclave's commercial needs - including building material and fuel - were being met through shipments via Israel and a network of smuggling tunnels running under the Egyptian border.

One Palestinian official said Israeli counterparts had promised "other building items" would be allowed into Gaza in the coming days.

"Israel has promised to ease the blockade more if the truce continues to hold," said the official, who asked not to be identified.

Israeli Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom, speaking to reporters in Jerusalem, said more than 300 truckloads of goods have been moving from Israel to the Gaza Strip on a daily basis.

"They can have much more if they would like to," he said.

(Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-eases-ban-building-material-gaza-104048304--business.html

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Google Drive

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

Source: http://forums.v3.co.uk/showthread.php?t=230613&goto=newpost

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New York's MTA subway data hits Android in beta form

Subway Time for Android

New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority this week released its "Subway Time" app for iOS, which gives real-time updates for trains in and and around New York City. Need to know how soon a certain train will be at a certain station? That's the app to have. 

Only, we use Android around these here parts. And MTA's not making an app for us. But what it is doing is making the data freely available to anyone -- and we've already seen our first "unofficial" app released in beta. Subway Time for Android, released by The Holodeck, taps into that MTA data and brings a fairly functional app to Android. There are bugs. There are layout issues. But those can be fixed. That we're seeing the app ported over in just a matter of days is proof positive that we're on the right side here, folks. So break out those MTA cards and let's give this guy a go.

More: MTA Developer Resources; Thanks for the tip, @EladKatz!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/89OJ4O6C-SQ/story01.htm

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family christmas 2012 {part two} - Lisa Leonard Designs Blog

December 28th | family

On Christmas day we had dinner at Grandma and Grandpa?s house {my parents}. In these pics you?ll see my mom?s enduring love for antiques, the electric typewriter that kept the kids busy for hours and the happiness of cousins.

It was such a sweet Christmas. I?m sad it?s over, but I?m so ready for a new year. Are you?

xoxo, lisa

Source: http://www.lisaleonardonline.com/blog/family/family-christmas-2012-part-two

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Friday, December 28, 2012

A look back at memorable days on Wall Street

2012 had its fair share of big days on the stock market. Here's a look back at what set off the biggest moves in the Dow Jones industrial average.

The Biggest Drops:

? Nov. 7: Down 313 points. On the day after the presidential election, investors worried that a divided government wouldn't reach deal on the budget in time to avoid across-the-board government spending cuts and tax increases Jan. 1.

? June 1: Down 275 points. A dismal report on hiring and employment for May sent the market swooning.

? June 21: Down 251 points. A sharp decline in a closely watched measure of manufacturing in the Northeast got investors worried about the U.S. economy. China also reports a slowdown at its factories.

? October 23: Down 244 points. Big companies including Xerox, DuPont and 3M report slumping revenues for the third quarter.

? April 10: Down 214 points. Rising borrowing costs for Spain and Italy made investors worry that those two major countries would become the latest to be engulfed in Europe's government debt crisis.

The Biggest Gains:

? June 6: Up 287 points. Hope that European officials would find ways to ease the region's debt crisis launched a rally.

? June 29: Up 278 points. Markets storm higher after European leaders came up with a plan to rescue banks, relieve debt-burdened governments and restore investor confidence.

? Sept. 6: Up 244 points. Mario Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank, unveils a program to buy government bonds from the region's struggling countries with the aim of lowering their borrowing costs.

? March 13: Up 218 points. U.S. banks led a powerful rally after JPMorgan Chase said it plans to buy back as much as $15 billion of its stock and raise its dividend. The government also reported strong retail sales for February.

? Aug. 3: Up 217 points. The U.S. government reported a sharp increase in hiring for July.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/look-back-memorable-days-wall-203325775.html

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Putin signs anti-US adoptions bill

MOSCOW (AP) ? President Vladimir Putin on Friday signed a bill banning Americans from adopting Russian children, making the legislation official less than 24 hours after his office received it from Parliament.

The bill has angered Americans and Russians who argue it victimizes children to make a political point, cutting off a route out of frequently dismal orphanages for thousands of children. The Russian-language hashtag "PutinEatsKids" was trending on Twitter just minutes after Putin signed it.

UNICEF estimates that there are about 740,000 children not in parental custody in Russia while about 18,000 Russians are on the waiting list to adopt a child.

The law also blocks dozens of Russian children now in the process of being adopted by American families from leaving the country. The U.S. is the biggest destination for adopted Russian children ? more than 60,000 of them have been taken in by Americans over the past two decades.

The measure is retaliation for an American law that calls for sanctions against Russian officials deemed human rights violators. The U.S. State Department has said it regrets Parliament's decision to pass the bill, arguing it would prevent many children from growing up in families.

Children's rights ombudsman Pavel Astakhov says that 46 children who were about to be adopted in the U.S. would remain in Russia if the bill comes into effect.

Putin has said that U.S. authorities routinely let Americans suspected of violence toward Russian adoptees go unpunished.

The passage of the bill followed weeks of a hysterical media campaign on Kremlin-controlled television that lambasts American adoptive parents and adoption agencies that allegedly bribe their way into getting Russian children.

A few lawmakers claimed that some Russian children were adopted by Americans only to be used for organ transplants and become sex toys or cannon fodder for the U.S. Army. A spokesman with Russia's dominant Orthodox Church said that the children adopted by foreigners and raised outside the church will not "enter God's kingdom."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-signs-anti-us-adoptions-bill-100228125.html

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Record number of claims against NYC police in FY 2011: report

(Reuters) - A record number of legal claims were filed against the New York City Police Department in fiscal year 2011, according to a report scheduled for release on Thursday.

In fiscal 2011, which ended June 30, 2011, a total of 8,882 claims were filed against the NYPD, up from the previous high of 8,110 filed in fiscal year 2010, New York City Comptroller John Liu said in the report.

The city also settled $185.6 million of personal injury and other tort claims that involved the NYPD, a 35 percent increase from fiscal 2010, the report said.

The city should "explore a unified method to track individual officers named in claim suits and the payouts," Liu's report said.

The claims against police don't include those filed in conjunction with the Occupy Wall Street protests that took place in lower Manhattan in September 2011.

Overall, the total number of new personal injury and property damage claims against all city departments dropped to 29,313 in fiscal 2011 from 34,768 in 2010, a 19 percent decrease.

However, the cost of settling claims rose 5 percent to $550.4 million - or about $70 per resident - from $522 million in 2010, the report said. Among the reasons for the claims: falls, police actions, medical malpractice and motor vehicle damage.

The city's sanitation department had the highest increase in the number of filings, with 3,539 in fiscal 2011, compared with 2,204 in fiscal 2010 - a rise of 61 percent. The increase was largely because of claims following severe snowstorms that hit New York City in late 2010.

Aside from tort claims, the city also paid out $135.9 million in other claims, including claims stemming from contract disputes, employment and tuition reimbursement, the report said.

(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/record-number-claims-against-nyc-police-fy-2011-033810641.html

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Dragonfly has human-like power of concentration

Dragonflies lack humans' big brains, but they still get the job done, according to new research that suggests that these insects have brain cells capable of feats previously seen only in primates.

Specifically, the dragonflies can screen out useless visual information to focus on a target, a process called selective attention. The new study, published Dec. 20 in the journal Current Biology, is the first to find brain cells devoted to selective attention in an invertebrate animal.

Selective attention is crucial for responding to one stimulus among the dozens of distractions that clamor for notice at any given time, said Steven Wiederman of the University of Adelaide in Australia.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. The year's top ancient mysteries (and missteps)

      The past year saw plenty of controversy over ancient mysteries ? and we're not just talking about Maya prophecies. So what happened to "Franken-saurus," the Gospel of Jesus' Wife and the plan to clone a woolly mammoth?

    2. 2,750-year-old temple found near Jerusalem
    3. Weird Science 2012: Sex, drugs and doomsday
    4. Peru's mysterious Nazca Lines form a labyrinth

"Imagine a tennis player having to pick out a small ball from the crowd when it's traveling at almost 200 kilometers an hour," Wiederman said in a statement. "You need selective attention in order to hit that ball back into play."

But little is known about how the brain locks onto its targets and ignores all else. To find out, Wiederman, who is from the university's Center for Neuroscience Research, and his colleague David O'Carroll turned to an unlikely animal. The researchers have long studied insect vision, and the dragonfly turns out to be quite adept in that arena. [ Photos: Dew-Covered Dragonflies & Other Sparkling Insects ]

"The dragonfly hunts for other insects, and these might be part of a swarm ? they're all tiny moving objects," Wiederman said. "Once the dragonfly has selected a target, its neuron activity filters out all other potential prey. The dragonfly then swoops in on its prey ? they get it right 97 percent of the time."

Using a glass probe with a tip 1,500 times smaller than a human hair, the researchers measured the neuronal activity that enables such amazing aerial hunting. A similar process is at work in the primate brain, O'Carroll said in a statement, but researchers weren't expecting to see the same thing in an insect that evolved 325 million years ago.

"We believe our work will appeal to neuroscientists and engineers alike," O'Carroll said. "For example, it could be used as a model system for robotic vision. Because the insect brain is simple and accessible, future work may allow us to fully understand the underlying network of neurons and copy it into intelligent robots."

Plenty of other insects have inspired robot designs. Swiss scientists, for example, have built a hovering drone that mimics insects in its ability to survive collisions with hard objects. Sometimes insects are recruited directly. North Carolina State University researchers reported in September that they'd managed to create cyborg Madagascar hissing cockroaches. The scientists wired a microcontroller to the insects' sensory organs, enabling them to steer the cockroaches' movements.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience@livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50307990/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Foreclosures in Perry GA 31069, November 2012

Foreclosures in Perry GA 31069, November 2012Consumers looking for a bargain may find it in the way of?Foreclosures in Perry GA 31069. ??

Currently, there are 10 Foreclosures in Perry GA for buyers to choose from.? Those properties range?in price from $24,900 to $925,000 and square footage from 1,025 to 6,236.

In November, 1 new foreclosure in Perry GA hit the market.? ?The details for this new property are as follows (address, price, heated sq feet, subdivision, year built):

  • ?200 Sugarloaf Parkway, $116,900, 1418, Sugarloaf, 2005

Buyers, give me a call when you are ready to preview any Perry homes for sale.

For a complete list of available Perry real estate, visit?Homes for Sale in Perry?or call me at (478) 960-8055 (C) / (478) 953-8595 x227 (O) so we can discuss your housing needs.

Foreclosures in Houston County Georgia

Bonaire GA Foreclosures ? 31005

Byron GA Foreclosures ? 31008

Centerville GA Foreclosures ? 31028

Jeffersonville GA Foreclosures ? 31044

Kathleen GA Foreclosures ? 31047

Perry GA Foreclosures ? 31069

Warner Robins GA Foreclosures ? 31088

Foreclosures in Perry GA 31069, November 2012

?

Statistics represent ONLY available foreclosure single family homes, condos, and townhouses in?Perry GA for the month listed.? (Source: CGMLS).? Information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

About Anita Clark Realtor

Anita Clark has written 888 posts on this blog.

Anita Clark Realtor+ sells Warner Robins Real Estate and provides community information as a service to the public. You can contact her at (478) 960-8055 or via email at anita@cbssk.com.

Source: http://sellingwarnerrobins.com/2012/12/foreclosures-in-perry-ga-31069-november-2012/

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Why Is Cashmere More Expensive Than Other Kinds of Wool?

Cashmere Goat at Wales Cashmere comes from the soft undercoat of goats bred to produce the wool

Photograph by iStockphoto.

Winter is upon us, which means that cashmere sweaters?a staple of holiday gift-giving and cold-weather fashion?have returned to store shelves. Those planning to purchase a garment boasting the label ?100 percent cashmere? can expect a hefty price tag; at Banana Republic, one cardigan is priced at $198; elsewhere, you can find cashmere sweaters for upward of $500. Why is cashmere so much more expensive than other kinds of wool?

Its costly production process and scarcity. Cashmere comes from the soft undercoat of goats bred to produce the wool. It takes more than two goats to make a single two-ply sweater. The fibers of the warming undercoat must be separated from a coarser protective top coat during the spring molting season, a labor-intensive process that typically involves combing and sorting the hair by hand. These factors contribute to the relatively low global production rate of cashmere?approximately 30,000 pounds a year compared to about 3 million pounds of sheep?s wool.

The name cashmere comes from an old spelling of Kashmir, the region where its production and trade originated, possibly as early as the Mongolian empire in the 13th century. According to historian Michelle Maskiell, author of ?Consuming Kashmir: Shawls and Empires, 1500-2000,? from the 1500s to as late as the early 1900s, Iranian and Indian emperors used Kashmiri shawls in political and religious settings; in the Mughal Indian courts, for example, the acceptance of a shawl from a political figure established a hierarchy between the giver and the receiver. In the late 18th century, Scottish textile manufacturer Joseph Dawson discovered shawls made from cashmere in India? and began to import the material to his factory in Scotland. Dawson sold shawls to upper-class British women who prized the fabric for its softness and warmth. (High-quality cashmere can be up to eight times warmer than sheep?s wool despite its light weight.)

But not all cashmere is equally luxe: The texture, color, and length of the fibers all affect manufacturing and pricing. Naturally, whiter cashmere fibers require less dye, diminishing the damage that coloring causes to its natural softness. Quality also depends on the region in which the wool is collected. In Inner Mongolia, for instance, the winters are harsh and the goats have a more meager diet, which produces the finer hair seen in the highest quality garments. Still, even the best raw material can be compromised by a sub-par finishing process. The fineness of a cashmere item comes down to that process, as the spinning and weaving of the fabric affects the look, feel, and touch of the final product.

China is the largest supplier of the raw material needed to make cashmere wool, but Europe has mastered cashmere manufacturing methods, and has cornered the market on premium quality (and costlier) products.

Luxury Explainer thanks Nick Hahn, founder of Hahn International, LTD and Karl Spilhaus, president of the Cashmere and Camel Hair Manufacturers Institute.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=732aef3b0b9dd571c0d3f890b8725b9a

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Game Theory: Making Room for the Women - NYTimes.com

Women. You must have heard of them. They?re like real gamers, only with little hands and silly, squeaky voices and constant gripes about being marginalized and hypersexualized and threatened with rape in online multiplayer settings.

To me, 2012 felt like the year that gaming culture really began to get to grips with being a mainstream commercial behemoth rather than a niche nerdy backwater. And a big part of that was sometimes agonizing struggles about the role of women in games ? making them, playing them and being featured in them.

Game Theory

Chris Suellentrop, Stephen Totilo, Kirk Hamilton and others discuss the year in video games.

If there was one thing I had to say far too often this year, it was this: ?Games aren?t a boys? club anymore.? Next year might be the one in which women finally outnumber men as players. (The split is 47 percent to 53 percent, according to the Entertainment Software Association, up from 42-58 in 2011 and 40-60 in 2010.) That development has been encouraged by the explosion in popularity of tablet and smartphone games, which have made every commute or evening in front of a TV show another opportunity to whip out Bejeweled or Contre Jour.

Unfortunately this rise in so-called casual play has upset some of those who see themselves as guardians of the true flame. There?s been a definite backlash against the idea that women are entering the hallowed citadel, dropping in a few scatter cushions and ending all the fun. Particular ire is reserved for anyone who dares to point out that female characters in games are often unsupported in the bra region for no apparent reason; given boring, bland supporting roles; and totally absent.

Take the Hitman: Absolution trailer, released in May, when an ultimately disappointing game was sold in a leering, objectifying way that would have had the ?Mad Men? Roger Sterling and Don Draper murmuring ?steady on.? It featured a group of sexy assassin nuns, with the camera following their buttocks as closely as a subway groper?s hand.

I wrote an article for The New Statesman about the trailer, headlined: ?I love you video games, so why do you keep doing this?? A procession of men lined up in the comments to tell me to keep my mouth shut. ?Here is a surprise,? one wrote, with more feeling than attention to spelling and grammar. ?A lady does not like us (men) looking at ladys bottoms. Please get a clue, this is nothing to do with feminism, sex sells and this game uses sex to sell itself, so please, please get over yourself.? Another had a more simple put-down: ?Yet another 5/10 getting irate about sexy women being sexier than she is.?

Every female games journalist gets this, and does it get boring quickly. (Tom Bissell doesn?t have to put up with this stuff, I think every time, as I sit on my hands to stop myself from replying.) But that kind of knee-jerk, make-me-a-sandwich comment pales against what can happen if you really kick the hive.

I spent the summer chronicling the abuse directed at the blogger Anita Sarkeesian for starting a Kickstarter project aimed at exploring the way women were depicted in games, and it still terrifies me to think that it could happen, really, to any of us. Angry fumers tried to hack her Twitter and Google accounts; they e-mailed her drawings of her being raped by video game characters; one even created a Flash game where you clicked the mouse and bruises and welts appeared on her face. As she explained in a recent TEDx talk, they effectively ?gamified? misogyny: returning to the forums they all frequented to award each other ?Internet points? for the worst outrages.

But there was another side to Ms. Sarkeesian?s story. Her Kickstarter project far exceeded its fund-raising goals. Thousands of people stood up and said to the perpetually incandescent sexists: You are nothing to do with us, or with gaming. And that has been the same throughout the year.

For every depressing piece of news that made me feel that a community I love doesn?t want or value me ? simply because I?m a woman ? there?s a flip side. For example, I was so disappointed when I heard that the new Lara Croft title would feature her fending off a rape attempt because it would be ?character-building.?

Later I heard that the scene had been described incorrectly, and that, even better, the writer who would be bringing Lara back was the talented Rhianna Pratchett. Similarly, even though women constitute fewer than 1 in 10 game writers or developers, there are now some prominent success stories, including Kiki Wolfkill, the executive producer of Halo 4, and Siobhan Reddy, the studio director of Media Molecule (the outfit behind Little Big Planet).

Some of the most alienating practices are also being stamped out. In October the Eurogamer Expo said it didn?t want ?booth babes? ? scantily clad women hired to pander to the belief that gamers are gaping dudes who can?t be interested in anything unless it has joyless breasts draped over it. Meanwhile, both Ms. Wolfkill and the 343 Studios leader, Bonnie Ross, made clear during their publicity tour for Halo 4 that they would do everything they could to make Microsoft take seriously the problem of sexist abuse in multiplayer voice chat.

Patricia Hernandez wrote a beautiful piece for Kotaku.com about how, as a rape survivor, she had learned to stop jokingly telling people she had ?totally raped them? in the game Gears of War.

Of course this new, grown-up approach won?t make everybody happy. Clearly, some players enjoy having a part of their lives where they can rant about bitches and kitchens and sandwiches. But they?re outnumbered, and they are going to have to learn to play nice.

Game of the Year

Although I enjoyed Fez, Proteus and Johann Sebastian Joust for showing what could be done with the medium, I?m afraid my game of the year is a little more mainstream. Xcom: Enemy Unknown is an update of a 1994 turn-based strategy game, and it has become my go-to title because my boyfriend (who hates the twitchy reactions needed for first-person shooters) can play it alongside me. The idea of making games that are fun for people of different competencies to play together ? or even fun to watch ? was behind the Borderlands 2 lead designer John Hemingway?s ill-advised reference to making a ?girlfriend mode? for less experienced players. While I didn?t thank him for once again assuming that real gamers are straight men, the point is a good one. I?d love to see more games next year that ?conquer the living room.?

Helen Lewis is deputy editor of The New Statesman, a British current-affairs magazine.

Source: http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/25/game-theory-making-room-for-the-women/

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10 Sad People Who Already Broke Their Shiny New iPhones

Santa brought lots of good boys and girls across the world new iPhones yesterday. Hurray, Christmas! Unfortunately, with new iPhones come the perils of iPhone ownership, which is to say, that many of these beautiful new handsets are already broken. Here are some poor saps who already busted their new toys. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/2g1KdgiMe6U/10-sad-people-who-already-broke-their-shiny-new-iphones

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Chile Forum: Horse property to rent : Chile Pets and Animals

Re: Horse property to rent

Postby thisisreallycomplicated ? Tue Dec 25, 2012 9:49 pm

fayskelley wrote::?: Hi, we have two horses and am wondering whether (like the US) horse property is for rent ... if so, how much does it cost. Any special rules or regulations re horses? Equine vets available? Anything else I should know? Thanks ~


I don't know about property to rent. But I do know there are lots of horses here. And there's at least one good vet in La Serena that a couple people recommended. And I've been told he works a lot with horses.

?Now it?s conspiracy ? they?ve made that something that should not even be entertained for a minute, that powerful people might get together and have a plan. Doesn?t happen, you?re a kook, you?re a conspiracy buff!? ? George Carlin

Source: http://www.allchile.net/chileforum/topic9679.html

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Longest surviving coma patient dies after 42 years of ... - KWGN 2

Posted on: 11:57 am, December 24, 2012, by Web Staff, updated on: 04:36pm, December 24, 2012

(CNN) ? Colleen O?Bara bathed her older sister, Edwarda, and fixed her hair. She fed her through a feeding tube like she?d done countless times. It was going to be a good day, the day before Thanksgiving.

With her morning routine complete, Colleen planned to fetch a cup of coffee. She bent down and kissed her big sister, told her she?d be right back.

?She gave me the biggest smile she has ever given me in her life,? Colleen recalls. ?Her face was aglow. There was a sparkle in her eyes.?

But just then, Edwarda closed her eyes.

For 42 years, her family held vigil. They awaited the day Edwarda would awake, the miracle that never came.

At the age of 59, Edwarda died, believed by medical experts to have lived longer than anyone in a comatose state.

Her father, Joe, died six years after she fell into her diabetic coma, the strain of working three jobs to pay her medical bills too much. Her mother, Kathryn, had promised to never leave her side; she died in 2008 after caring for Edwarda for 38 years.

Former President Bill Clinton, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, singer Neil Diamond and other celebrities visited the home over the years. Renowned self-help author Wayne Dyer penned a book, ?A Promise Is A Promise,? about Kathryn?s unconditional love.

Thousands of people ? from Japan to Australia, from Italy to Canada ? took the pilgrimage to the O?Bara home, inspired by the devotion of her mother. They were drawn too because they believed Edwarda had miracle healing powers: A woman with an inoperable brain tumor was cancer-free months after she touched Edwarda. Two girls with cystic fibrosis were apparently healed in the months after visiting her room. Even skeptics said they felt a strange aura when they walked into the North Miami home.

Kathryn claimed Mother Mary appeared in visions. Mom wrote Pope John Paul II. He responded with letters of his own.

On the walls of Edwarda?s room, Mom pinned inspirational quotes: ?Where there is great love, there are great miracles.?

The Hemlock Society phoned often, pleading with the mother to let her daughter die. The day after Christmas in 1981, someone called to say he was going to put Edwarda out of her misery. A few hours later, three bullets were fired into the home. No one was hurt.

Edwarda was just 16 when she fell into her comatose state. Her favorite song then was ?Bobby?s Girl,? because she had a crush on a boy named Bobby.

In the decades that followed, Bobby would visit the home, but she even outlived him.

It seemed Edwarda touched everyone she came into contact with, even the doctor who saved her life. He struggled with the ethics of what he?d done.

He wondered: Would it have been better if I?d let her die?

A promise kept

Edwarda and Colleen were inseparable, born just 18 months apart. Edwarda was the studious, obedient, loving child. Colleen was the mischievous tomboy.

Edwarda and Colleen visit with Santa Claus. It was during Christmas break in 1969 that Edwarda fell into a coma.

?She kept me in check,? Colleen recalls. ?I had a short fuse on my temper when we were younger. My sister was just calm. She put up with me unbelievably.?

Family photos show the bonds of sisterhood at an early age: as ballerinas, on Santa?s lap, playing with the family?s German shepherd. Birthdays, Thanksgiving and Christmas were a bundle of fun, a time to celebrate as family.

?All I ever wanted in life was to have two girls. God was very good and granted me my wish,? Kathryn O?Bara told Dyer in his book.

Kathryn McCloskey and Joe O?Bara married in 1948, a promising young couple eager to start a family. She was the daughter of the mayor of Johnstown, Pennsylvania. He was the Navy?s middleweight boxing champion during World War II and went on to star on the University of Pittsburgh?s football team.

The family eventually settled in South Florida. Joe became a physical education teacher at a Catholic elementary school. Kathryn ? Kaye to family ? taught math at a high school.

Kathryn?s niece, Pam Burdgick, remembers her aunt and uncle as pillars of the family. She went to college in the mid-1960s in South Florida and would stay with the O?Baras on weekends. ?Kaye was the personification of unconditional love. That was for all of us, not just Edwarda.?

Edwarda, then 12, would watch her put makeup on. ?She was a sweet, loving child.?

Like so many girls, Edwarda and Colleen loved horses. At a nearby ranch, the sisters? friendship grew. ?Colleen had horses, and Edwarda had a pony because she was always the cautious one,? says Burdgick.

Edwarda did the hard work around the stables, allowing her younger sister a lot more time to ride the horses. ?My sister would clean the stalls, brush the horses, let me have all the fun, and she would do all the work.?

?That?s what she wanted to do for me. She?s the most giving sister that anybody could possibly have had,? Colleen recalls. ?She was my best friend in the whole wide world.?

Edwarda was diagnosed with diabetes in late 1969. She was prescribed an oral insulin medication ? a medicine that is no longer given to adolescents due to harmful side effects.

Her diabetes didn?t hinder her studies. A junior in high school, she got straight A?s. Edwarda had been accepted to the University of Notre Dame, at a time when the school was mostly male. She hoped to become a pediatrician.

The family looked forward to Christmas that year. But during the break, Edwarda fell ill with the flu.

?She was sick and throwing up and stuff,? Colleen says.

If Edwarda had been given insulin shots, her bad bout with the flu likely would have been just that, nothing more. But every time she vomited, she was throwing up her medicine ? and sugar was building up in her system.

By the time anyone realized what was happening, her health had deteriorated.

Joe O?Bara had just returned from a fishing outing when he went into his daughter?s room. The skin on her legs had sugar lumps under them, like Charley horses. They were all over.

?My sister was screaming. I remember it like it was yesterday,? Colleen says. ?My dad started rubbing her legs to try to get the sugar to flow in her legs. He picked her up, and we just rushed her to the hospital.?

It was January 3, 1970, when Edwarda arrived at North Miami General Hospital around 2 a.m. ? Joe and Kaye?s 22nd wedding anniversary.

Dr. Louis Chaykin, who was on call that night to treat another patient, remembers seeing Edwarda and her mother in the emergency room. Daughter and mother were holding hands.

?I remember the words the daughter told the mother when she was lying in the emergency room: ?Don?t ever leave me,?? the doctor says. ?And the mother said she never would.?

Soon, her lungs collapsed. Her kidneys failed. Her heart faltered, causing a lack of oxygen to the brain.

Chaykin was 35 then. A nurse suggested Edwarda?s mother ask him to care for her daughter. He was an endocrinologist with specialized skills.

?When I saw her, she was almost near death. It was a Sunday. We worked on her for hours,? he says. ?We got her into intensive care, and we were able to reverse a lot of the metabolic abnormalities, but the damage that was done to the brain appeared to be permanent.

?She was in a comatose state. She would respond to pain, but that was it.?

Colleen, then 15, continued her life at school, thinking her sister would eventually be OK. ?I didn?t realize how bad it really was,? she recalls. ?You see, my sister wasn?t on any machines or anything. She just didn?t wake up and speak.?

For five months, Edwarda was treated at the hospital. The family refused to put her in a nursing home. Medicaid would have paid for those expenses, but mom had made a promise. And so they brought Edwarda home.

?To my parents, if you promised somebody something,? Colleen says, ?you never broke a promise.?

Edwarda and Colleen dressed for a recital. The sisters, born 18 months apart, were inseparable.

The parents? bedroom in the family?s humble bungalow was transformed into a round-the-clock care center, with Kathryn serving as chief nurse. She set up a folding chair next to Edwarda?s bed. It was eventually replaced with a brown velvet recliner. Every two hours, she fed her daughter baby formula through her feeding tube. She had more than a dozen alarm clocks. They went off at midnight, 2, 4, 6 in the morning. Angel figurines and family photos adorned the room.

Mom gave insulin shots, turned her daughter so bedsores wouldn?t grow, changed her diaper. Mom?s back grew hunched from slouching over. She got arthritis. Sleep came in 75-minute power naps.

Chaykin pledged to treat Edwarda for free. He set up an IV for fluids and the feeding tube through her stomach.

?It?s not a big deal,? says Chaykin, 77. ?Recognizing the cost of just maintaining Edwarda, it was a non-starter. I wouldn?t accept any money.?

Kathryn called the doctor her angel.

Yet, as he watched the family grapple with Edwarda?s condition and her father die under the weight of it all, the doctor worried that he might?ve done the wrong thing by saving her.

?I felt that it was very futile,? Chaykin says. ?That was early on.?

His views, though, changed with time. ?I became so impressed by the dedication and the love that this mother had. As I grew older, I thought that, perhaps, God had a better reason for me allowing Edwarda to survive, albeit in a comatose state.?

He remembers watching hundreds, if not thousands, of people visit Edwarda?s bedside because they believed ?there were certain miracles that would happen if they came and visited Edwarda and touched her.?

?There were different things that happened that I could not explain as a doctor,? he says.

He wondered: Was it coincidence or something more?

?A mystery of faith?

No one remembers exactly when the first of the perceived miracles happened. Most everyone from those early days has died. But whatever the cause ? a mother?s devotion, visions of Mother Mary ? word spread, and people ranging from sick children to missionaries on healing trips flocked to the home.

Joi Mejia brought both of her young daughters, around 6 and 8 years old, to the home. They suffered from cystic fibrosis.

?I was willing to do anything and try anything,? she says.

Kathryn O?Bara had been Mejia?s kindergarten teacher. She had heard of Edwarda?s healing powers and felt the urge to visit ? the start of a friendship that lasted until Kathryn died.

?The feeling of peace and love in the room was so profound,? she says.

Family and friends celebrate Edwarda?s 51st birthday.

In the months that followed, doctors told Mejia her daughters no longer suffered from cystic fibrosis, something the mother chalks up to the miracle of Edwarda. Touched by what happened, Mejia helped Kathryn tend to Edwarda for years.

?There were many miracles that came,? Mejia says. ?We don?t always get a perfect package, but we always get a perfect soul.?

A woman from South America once visited. Chaykin said she?d been diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor, traveled to Massachusetts for a second opinion and stopped at the O?Baras? while flying back home. She prayed at Edwarda?s bedside.

?About six or nine months later, a truck pulled up with new furniture for the whole downstairs with a note saying, ?I just got back from my doctor, and the tumor I had is gone,?? Chaykin says.

?Those things happened all the time.?

Adds Mejia, ?That was the freaky part. People came from everywhere. Why would it draw them? ? It?s a mystery of faith.?

A devout Catholic, Kathryn told people that caring for her daughter was a blessing from God.

Yet she could also muster a joke about its physical toll. ?If I could turn myself in and get some new parts, I?d be all right,? she once told the Miami News.

The family fell into mountains of debt. Joe began painting homes and fixing motor boat engines for extra cash to supplement his teaching income. But the pain ? both financial and emotional ? was too much for the Navy tough guy, who died in 1976.

?No question that it contributed to the father?s death,? says Chaykin.

Colleen gave up her dream of college to help her family pay their debts.

Already shattered by her sister?s condition, Colleen?s pain deepened with the death of her father.

She wondered: What type of cruel God would torture a family so?

The power of two words

Mom never lost faith.

She rarely left her daughter?s side, let alone the house. On Mother?s Day in 1982, Kathryn had a heart attack as she watched Edwarda sleep. She was hospitalized for 10 days, the first time she?d been away from Edwarda overnight in 12 years of caring for her.

Among those who covered the story was Miami Herald columnist Charles Whited. He first met the family in the years after she fell into the coma. He?d write a column around the holidays of a mother who refused to give up on her daughter.

?I?ve seen her, over these years, alternately buoyed by hope and crushed by despair, with even her faith tested as she awaits the miracle that never comes: Edwarda?s awakening,? Whited wrote in 1982.

Kathryn would call him often. Sometimes, she?d send letters. Her return address always carried the message: ?Hope never dies.?

?One of these days Edwarda is just not going to be able to fight off another infection,? she said in one of her letters. ?But even then, I will be richer for having cared for her and experienced all the love that people have shown her.?

The next year Whited penned a different column. In August of 1983, Edwarda?s mother said she?d heard her daughter utter one word: ?Hey.? She was in the kitchen with friends at the time. They rushed into the room.

?You?ll never know the sensations that went over me. It was Edwarda?s voice. We all ran in. She was smiling, as if she had done something terrific,? Kathryn told him.

The next night, Edwarda said ?hey? again. Kathryn wept at her bedside for an hour.

Whited asked, what if Edwarda never said anything again.

?I?m so elated that nothing can knock me down now,? she told him. ?Edwarda spoke. She really spoke.?

Edwarda would never speak again. She would outlive the columnist. By 21 years.

The years came and went. Mom remained steadfast, always hoping, always praying. Edwarda had been reading the James Michener novel ?Hawaii? when she fell ill during that Christmas in 1969. Mom read it to her more than 10 times over the years.

?It was never a sad place,? recalls niece Pam. ?She always considered it a privilege. She loved having people come and visit. ? You left with a kind of sense of priorities, of how important family is.?

While pilgrims made their way to visit Edwarda in South Florida, across the state a very different saga was playing out: that of Terri Schiavo, whose persistent vegetative state became a political, legal and family feud with her husband wanting to let her die and her parents wanting to let her live.

Schiavo, 41, died in 2005 after 15 years in a coma after a judge sided with her husband.

Kathryn paid attention to that battle but didn?t cast judgment. She told people that families must deal with such tragedies in their own way ? and hers was united behind Edwarda.

Stephen Mayer, a professor of neurology and neurological surgery at Columbia University, has treated many comatose patients over the years. He says new research suggests that patients in persistent vegetative states may perceive what?s around them in a way that doctors didn?t previously understand.

?The best evidence of that are people who don?t follow commands and appear to be vegetative, but after several years they wake up and start following commands,? says Mayer.

Mayer, who did not treat Edwarda, says it?s possible ?she was perceiving what was going on around her to some extent over those 40 years, but not really able to communicate to us in a way that we can believe. And maybe the daily contact, the voices, the touches with her loved ones gave her reason to live.?

?One thing I?ve learned over the years as somebody who treats people in a coma and tries to save them,? he says, ?is there?s something very important about human contact with the people that bring meaning to your life, your loved ones.?

Kathryn believed that to the fullest.

?God has given me the strength to care for Edwarda by sending angels in many forms ? friends, families, strangers who became friends, and many others,? she told Wayne Dyer. ?God has given me the gift of staying cheerful and being able to help others.?

In March 2008, at the age of 80, Kaythryn was found dead on the floor in her daughter?s room. She?d cared for Edwarda for nearly four decades. Mom had kept her promise.

Kathryn had worried what would happen if she died first. She wasn?t sure whether Colleen could handle the stress of caring for Edwarda. ?She can?t understand why God did this,? Kathryn once said of her younger daughter.

Mom had wondered: Could Colleen stand up to the task?

?A hole in my heart?

Colleen tried to live as normal a life as possible. Yet she couldn?t shake her devastation.

Her sister ? her best friend ? lay in a coma. Her father was taken from her when she was 21. Dad had become her confidant. ?I always had my dad to fall back on when my mom was tied up with my sister,? she says.

It would be too much to bear for most anyone, let alone a young woman trying to find meaning.

She married in 1974, with the reception held in Edwarda?s room. She gave birth to a son, Richard, in 1976, just eight days after her father died. Colleen?s marriage lasted only six years.

The divorce was yet another bad blow. She and her son moved in with her mother, and her boy became a fixture alongside Edwarda.

?My marriage fell apart and I didn?t feel like I belonged anywhere,? she says. ?That?s when I ventured into drugs. I was just trying to belong somewhere.?

Her troubles spiraled further. She was arrested on an array of drug offenses in the early 1990s. She was sentenced to nine months in prison at the Broward Correctional Institutional.

Being locked up, she had an epiphany: If something happened to her mother while she was behind bars, Edwarda would have no one to care for her ? all because of her selfishness.

?I went to prison and turned my life around,? she says. ?I knew where I belonged.?

She took a job as a horse trainer, not too far from the family home. Many days she wished she could put Edwarda in her car and take her to the stables.

When their mother died, Colleen immediately quit her job. She suffered from multiple sclerosis but quickly figured out a way to manage her sister?s needs.

?My mom worried I wouldn?t be able to do it,? she says. ?But when you love somebody, you can do it. That?s what you do for family.?

And so she tended to her sister, day and night, for five years until that morning this past November.

?When I was down in the dumps, she would give me a big smile and it would just make everything seem like it was OK,? Colleen says. ?I talked to her just like I would talk to you.?

She still rises before the sun, expecting to feed her sister. Then, her loss sinks in.

?I knew I loved my sister, but until she was no longer physically here I didn?t realize how much I would ache,? she says. ?I feel a hole in my stomach, a hole in my heart.?

In a quiet ceremony on November 28, Edwarda was buried next to her mother and father. Colleen was never sure what to make of her mother?s visions of Mother Mary. Colleen had never seen the visions herself.

When she returned to the empty home after the funeral, Colleen walked into Edwarda?s room.

There on the screen, she says, was an image of Mother Mary. ?Not sitting on my TV, but on my actual TV screen.?

It lasted for six seconds, then disappeared.

Source: http://kwgn.com/2012/12/24/longest-surviving-coma-patient-dies-after-42-years-of-unconsciousness-3/

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GaryMoller.com - Health, Fitness - Naturally!: Widespread over ...

"Hi Gary

My doctor prescribed 50,000 ui(?) of vitamin D daily for a week then once a month - for a deficiency that showed in the blood test.? I think that?s why I was given it.? I have chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia and she said it would help.

The dose made me sick and within 3 days of taking the pills I stopped because a rash broke out on my entire neck and the sides of my face.? It was unbelievably itchy and painful."

_________________________________________

Gary:
It appears there was a General Practitioner's CME (Continuing Medical Education Conference) early this year, during which the issue of vitamin D was discussed.

If you have been following medical politics, you will be aware that doctors will not prescribe a natural substance that is not owned manufactured by Big Pharma and not on the Pharmac Prescribers' List. ?This includes natural vitamin D.

However, there is now a solution: Synthetic Vitamin D such as Ergocalciferol which doctors are now prescribing?indiscriminately?with no regard for the potentially dangerous side effects. ?Incidentally, Ergo means "same as". ?Vitamin D is otherwise known as "cholecalciferol". ?Note the connection?

Normal therapeutic doses of natural vitamin D are at about 2,000iu per day and no more. ?This poor woman was prescribed 50,000iu per day which is about 350,000iu for the week! ?She would have been lucky to live through this without more serious side effects.

Her skin condition may be the result of massive mobilisation of calcium from the bones into the blood stream, causing a severe skin dermatitis. ?This may be diagnosed as Lupus Erythmatosus or Rosacea and normally treated with powerful steroids. ?This is how one drug leads to another and another and another. ?Next thing you know, the poor patient is on half a dozen drugs and the original reason for?prescribing?the first drug has long been forgotten! ?Overwhelmed by dangerous side effects! ?This is the dangerous Cascade Effect of drugs prescribing.

Please read the article here which describes the dangerous side effects of over-dosing with vitamin D and also why you don't prescribe large doses for conditions like fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue or heart problems.
http://blog.garymoller.com/2011/06/is-monthly-administration-of-50000iu.html

You might think this unusual but it is not. ?I have had several similar cases come to my attention this year but this is the worst case of ever-prescribing yet. ?I hear of these cases because the person is being hurt and is desperate for relief and they may come to me as a last-ditch grasp for relief. ?Often there is no immediate connection between their distress and their "vitamin medication".

It really does beg the question:?


  • Do these people really know what they are doing to their patients?
  • Do they have the best interests of their patients in mind, or have they been totally captured by the huge medical-pharmaceutical money-making machine?
  • Do they even care?

The people most being prescribed these horrible synthetics in such massive doses are the elderly. ?Please keep a close watch on what is being given to your Gran. ?If the drug does not make her noticeably healthier, then she might be better without!

Source: http://blog.garymoller.com/2012/12/widespread-over-dosing-patients-with.html

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Pagano back to coach Colts after cancer treatment

Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano speaks during a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano speaks during a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Tina Pagano, right, and her daughter Taylor Pagano, listen as Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano speaks during a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano hugs his daughter Taylor Pagano following a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Indianapolis Colts former interim head coach and offensive coordinator Bruce Arians listens as head coach Chuck Pagano speaks during a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. Arians coached the team while Pagano was on leave. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano speaks during a news conference Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, in Indianapolis. Pagano returns to the team after undergoing successful leukemia treatment. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

(AP) ? Chuck Pagano stepped to the podium Monday, hugged his team owner, thanked his family for its support and wiped a tear from his eye.

He might, finally, turn out the lights in his office, too.

Nearly three months to the day after being diagnosed with leukemia, the Colts' first-year coach returned to a team eager to reunite with a boss healthy enough to go back to work.

"I told you my best day of my life was July 1, 1989," Pagano said, referring to his wedding date. "Today was No. 2. Getting to pull up, drive in, get out of my car, the key fob still worked. I was beginning to question whether it would or not. When I asked for Bruce to take over, I asked for him to kick some you-know-what and to do great. Damn Bruce, you had to go and win nine games? Tough act to follow. Tough act to follow. Best in the history of the NFL. That's what I have to come back to."

The comment turned tears into the laughter everyone expected on such a festive occasion.

For Pagano and the Colts, Monday morning was as precious as anyone could have imagined when Pagano took an indefinite leave to face the biggest opponent of his life, cancer.

In his absence, all the Colts was win nine of 12 games, make a historic turnaround and clinch a playoff spot all before Sunday's regular-season finale against Houston, which they pegged as the day they hoped to have Pagano back. If all goes well at practice this week, Pagano will be on the sideline for the first time since a Week 3 loss to Jacksonville.

Pagano endured three rounds of chemotherapy to put his cancer in remission.

That Pagano's return came less than 24 hours after Indy (10-5) locked up the No. 5 seed in the AFC and the day before Christmas seemed fitting, too.

"I know Chuck is ready for this challenge. In speaking to his doctor multiple times, I know that the time is right for him to grab the reins, get the head coaching cap on and begin the journey," owner Jim Irsay said. "It's been a miraculous story. It really is a book. It's a fairytale. It's a Hollywood script. It's all those things but it's real."

The reality is that he's returning to a vastly different team than the one he turned over to Arians, his long-time friend and first assistant coaching hire.

Back then, the Colts were 1-2 and most of the so-called experts had written them off as one of the league's worst teams. Now, they're ready to show the football world that they can be just as successful under Pagano as they were under Arians, who tied the NFL record for wins after a midseason coaching change.

Pagano also has changed.

The neatly-trimmed salt-and-pepper hair and trademark goatee that were missing in November have slowly returned, and the thinner man who appeared to be catching his breath during a postgame speech in early November, looked and sounded as good as ever Monday.

He repeatedly thanked fans for their prayers and letters, the organization and his family for their unwavering help and promised to provide comfort and support to other people who are facing similar fights. During one poignant moment that nearly brought out tears again, Pagano even recounted a letter sent to him by a 9-year-old child who suggested he suck on ice chips and strawberry Popsicles in the hospital and advised him to be nice to the nurses regardless of how he felt ? and he never even paused.

"I feel great, my weight is back, my energy is back and again, it's just a blessing to be back here," Pagano said.

In the minds of Colts players and coaches, Pagano never really left.

He continually watched practice tape and game film on his computer, used phone calls and text messages to regularly communicate with players and occasionally delivered a pregame or postgame speech to his team.

"He texted me and called me so much, it was like he was standing there in my face every day," said receiver Reggie Wayne, who has been friends with Pagano since the two were working together at the University of Miami.

But the Colts found plenty of other ways to keep Pagano's battle in the forefront.

They began a fundraising campaign for leukemia research, calling it Chuckstrong. Players had stickers with the initials CP on their locker room nameplates, and Arians wore an orange ribbon on his baseball cap during games. Orange is the symbolic color for leukemia. At one point, nearly three dozen players shaved their heads to show their ailing coach they were with him.

That's not all.

Arians and first-year general manager Ryan Grigson decided to leave the lights on in Pagano's office until he returned. Pagano noted the team even installed plastic clips to make sure those lights were not mistakenly turned off while he was gone. Those clips were removed when Pagano arrived Monday morning.

And Arians said nobody sat in the front seat of the team bus.

"He's always been our head coach," Arians said.

So after getting medical clearance from his oncologist, Dr. Larry Cripe, to return with no restrictions, Pagano couldn't wait to get to the office Monday morning.

Arians arrived at 7 a.m., three hours early for the scheduled team meeting. By then, Pagano had already driven past the inflatable Colts player with the words "Welcome Back Chuck" printed on its chest and was back in his office preparing for the Texans.

Players showed up a couple of hours later, and when the torch was passed from Arians back to Pagano, players gave their returning coach a standing ovation that Wayne said was well-deserved.

All Pagano wants to do now is emulate the success Arians and his players have had this season.

"I asked him (Arians) if he would lead this team and this ballclub and this organization and take over the reins," Pagano said. "What a masterful, masterful job you did Bruce. You carried the torch and all you went out and did was win nine ballgames. You got us our 10th win yesterday and you got us into the playoffs. You did it with dignity and you did it with class. You're everything that I always knew you were and more."

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Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-12-24-FBN-Colts-Pagano-Returns/id-c78d402d1a9946dd817fe9432bee534f

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