Newhouse: Cancer hasn't robbed high school friend's spirit
Thursday, December 31st, 20090 Comments | Oakland Tribune, Dec 3, 2009 | by Dave Newhouse
The phone call came before Thanksgiving from a high school best buddy, who sounded cheery and confident on the voice message. He left a return number and something about getting together.
We’ve rarely gotten together since high school, the way it is with most high school best buddies, I’m sure, or high school best girls for that matter. Life moves on, as life does. Old memories are like old scrapbooks, rarely reopened.
There were three of us best buddies back then at a Peninsula high school, 50-plus years ago — Curly Dan, Muggs and me, Big House, the older, larger brother of Little House. It was Curly Dan who dialed me up last week.
Most of us had nicknames in the fun-filled ’50s, the last decade when teenagers didn’t feel as threatened by their surroundings or by what lay ahead.
Curly Dan (Dan Tapson) and Muggs (Alan Robinson) were scholars, finishing in the top dozen academically in a graduating class of 352. I was in the bottom third of the class, barely interested in school.
Who knows, then, why some kids become best buddies? We three weren’t from affluent families, though, as were many of our schoolmates. Curly Dan and Muggs were lady’s men more than myself
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PAEDO WINS DAMAGES FOR TOOTHACHE IN JAIL; Prison chiefs pay cash to ‘dangerous psycho’
Wednesday, December 30th, 20090 Comments | Sunday Mail (Glasgow, Scotland), Dec 13, 2009
Byline: CHARLIE GALL
A SEX beast has won a cash payout from prison bosses who couldn’t find a dentist to treat his toothache.
Paedophile Neil Robertson launched the compensation claim from his cell in Peterhead Prison, it emerged yesterday He blamed prison chiefs for failing to find an NHS dentist to treat his toothache and sued the Scottish Prison Service over a delay in treatment. He has now received an out-of-court settlement.
Robertson, 44, from Ayrshire, was jailed for life in 2003 for abusing a seven-year-old girl. He met the girl’s mother through an internet chat room and wormed his way into her affections by pretending he had been a pilot, a businessman and qualified psychologist.
He quickly turned his attention to the youngster and within weeks he was taking photographs of himself abusing the girl.
Robertson was described by the judge at his trial in Dunfermline, as a “dangerous psychopath” with a 20-year interest in young girls. The payout has been agreed at a time when Aberdeenshire has one of the longest UK waiting lists of people seeking an NHS dentist. Furious Lesley Wood, 22, a nursery assistant from Aberdeen, has been without an NHS dentist for six years. She condemned the payout, saying: “It’s totally out of order. People are paying for emergency treatment and he’s getting our money
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Paris Fashion Week: Louis Vuitton
Sunday, December 27th, 2009in Fashion Style (submitted 2009-12-26)
“Street clothes, embracing the hippie-cyber, tribal-punk world,” he said, after a parade of 55 models, wearing giant, multicoloured, Afro wigs, and clad in everything from glitter-anoraks, fringed shirts and satin corsets to jewel-encrusted, denim hot-pants over lace-up leggings.
The collection, staged to a wild, music mix of the British girl band, The Saturdays, also featured a host of must-have accessories which the British high street will be falling over themselves to interpret for instant sales: fringed, coloured moccasins on metal “peg” heels, fluorescent sheepskin boots, kitten-heel cowboy boots with feather trims, fur trimmed PVC clog-sandals, and duffle-bags and saddle-bags trimmed with neon-coloured, fur tails, la Davy Crockett.
The show was awash with influences as wide-ranging as the Navajo, utility clothing and the Wild West, to the chaotic dress code of early Madonna.
The front row line-up included the actresses Catherine Deneuve, Freida Pinto and Leighton Meester; Sophie Dahl and her fianc, Jamie Cullum; the singers, Katy Perry and Alison Goldfrapp; and the British model, Daisy Lowe.
Jacobs, once known for starting shows up to two hours late, is now as precise a timekeeper as a Swiss watchmaker.
As the clock struck two-thirty in Paris on Wednesday afternoon, his show started on the dot, leaving several members of the audience scrambling for seats as the first model hit the catwalk, and latecomers cooling their high heels outside the doors.
His louis vuitton collection was one of the last in a hectic, nine-day schedule in Paris, featuring up to 12 shows a day. The season concludes on Thursday, with the Paris debut of the British designer, Giles Deacon, winner of the ANDAM 2009 prize worth 160,000.
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The Opposite of a Baby Boom
Sunday, December 27th, 2009Some like it hot. According to environmentalist James Lovelock, we’ll get plenty of hot between now and the end of the century. “We are so far down the path toward the hottest we have been, since we were 55 million years ago,” Dr. Lovelock, who is also a leading atmospheric scientist, told StockInterview in a tape-recorded interview last week, “that as many of us look at it, it’s not going to make very much difference what anybody does.” In stronger commentary, which he wrote for England’s Independent newspaper, this past January, Lovelock warned, “The Earth is about to catch a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years.” And we were worrying about another Ice Age?
Skeptics might wonder if his 1200-word essay was just book publicity hype. Lovelock’s scathing our-world-is-doomed article was published about two weeks before Penguin Books (UK) began selling his latest work, The Revenge of Gaia, in bookstores across the British Isles. He did admit within his newspaper commentary, “This article is the most difficult I have written.” While interviewing Dr. Lovelock, during our transatlantic phone conversation, the octogenarian sounded sad with his prediction, but still optimistic, despite his ruthless appraisal of what may lay ahead for the rest of this century. “I see the crunch coming as an opportunity to improve ourselves in a way. Who knows? Man may have a better chance when he starts again.”
ONLY ABOUT ONE BILLION HUMANS WILL SURVIVE
What does he mean by starting again? “By the end of this century, there is a high probability that the bulk of our species on the planet will be eliminated,” the soft-spoken Lovelock gravely remarked. “There may be something, plus or minus, on the order of a billion left.” Is there much hope, we asked. “I don’t see our current civilization hacking it,” he lamented in his response. But, but, what if? “Enormous changes must be made,” he stressed. “Society is much too slow in cutting back.” He insisted these changes should have started at least 50 years ago. Later he added, as an afterthought, “If Europe and USA were trying to be good and cut back by 30 percent, it’s really not going to help much. I don’t think the public wants to do it.”
In Lovelock’s forecast, he envisions, at the end of this century, the last few humans would be forced to rebuild the remnants of our civilization in the Arctic. It won’t be as cold up there by then, as you might think. He told us, “Within 25 years, most of the global ice in the Arctic will be gone. You will be able to take a sailboat to the North Pole.” How long before we begin to feel these changes? “In my own modeling, I rather think it is an unknown number of years,” Lovelock explained. “It may be five years or it may be 30 years.” He offered a visual, “Think of it as a rope or a string. Global warming may run up in a straight line or a curve lying a bit loose as the IPCC seems to project.”
Lovelock summarized why his forecast is dire and probably irreversible, “Everybody forgets the greatest damage we’ve done to the earth is not so much the emissions from greenhouse gases, but taking away the natural resistance from the farmland ecosystem. By doing that, we have disabled the planet’s ability to regulate itself.” Lovelock does not enjoy painting a picture of what earth might look like several decades from now. He wrote in the Independent, in January, “Much of the tropical land mass will become scrub and desert, and will no longer serve for regulation; this adds to the 40 per cent of the Earth’s surface we have depleted to feed ourselves.” Through his book and in various articles, Lovelock has repeatedly blasted environmentalists who gamble away earth’s future by campaigning for renewable energy sources.
That’s when we began talking about environmentalists, especially the idealists who claim to be helping preserve the earth. So, we asked this leading environmental scientist what was really wrong with today’s environmental movement. Bitterness entered his voice when Lovelock answered, “It’s mostly made up of urban people, who know almost nothing about the countryside and still less about the ecosystem.” He scoffed, “Their solutions are basically urban-political solutions. They continue to insist on wanting to run their cars on bio fuels. This is one of the maddest ideas of the lot.” Lovelock cuts no slack for those championing the cause of bio fuels. He writes in The Revenge of Gaia, “It would require us to burn every year about two to three gigatons of carbon as bio fuel (a gigatons is one thousand million tons). Compare this quantity with our yearly food consumption of half a gigaton tons… We would need the land area of several Earths just to grow fuel.”
Does he believe environmentalists are wrecking the environment? “I’m afraid I do,” he glumly responded. Because we know there remain several environmental groups who refuse to embrace nuclear energy as a much-needed solution to the planet’s energy mix, we asked what he would like to say about them. “They are being very foolish,” he quickly shot back. After a pause, he added, “They are living in a dream world.” Like the father figure he is, Lovelock is disappointed but tries to remain buoyant. He wrote in his recent book, “My feelings about modern environmentalism are more parallel with those that might pass through the mind of a head-mistress of an inner-city school or the colonel of a newly formed regiment of licentious, and naturally disobedient young men: how the hell can these unruly charges be disciplined and made effective?”
LOVELOCK WANTS THE WORLD TO GO NUCLEAR NOW
The headline of a recent editorial in a Boston newspaper asked, “Are Pro Nuclear People the New Greens?” We discussed that. “It’s a bit of an old term, really,” he grinned. “Nuclear has been around for more than 40 years at least. I suppose in some countries, like the United Kingdom, you will find some groups are looking more toward nuclear.”
Make no mistake in thinking James Lovelock is anything but Pro Nuclear. His quote adorns the top of the front page of the World Nuclear Association’s website, “There is no sensible alternative to nuclear power if we are to sustain civilization.” Rightly so, the trade association refers to their proponent as the “preeminent world leader in the development of environmental consciousness.” In his book, Lovelock writes, “There is no alternative but nuclear fission until fusion energy and sensible forms of renewable energy arrive as a truly long-term provider. Nuclear energy is free of emissions and independent of imports from what will be a disturbed world.”
Lovelock briefly analyzes the value and harm of each energy source in The Revenge of Gaia. He has a burning disgust for coal mining, and finds carbon-based fuels inefficient and dangerous, not only to humans but also to earth as a self-regulating system. He has frequently warned that renewables are insufficient to meet our planetary energy needs. In contrast to renewable advocates Amory Lovins or Senator Hillary Clinton, Lovelock sees little value in the immediate future for either solar or wind energy programs, and has harsh words for them, writing, “It will fail and bring discredit both to the greens and to the politicians foolish enough to adopt renewables as a major source of energy before they have been properly developed.” He believes their renewable energy solutions might only hasten our civilization’s demise.
Because Lovelock strongly opposes widespread mining, and because nuclear power depends upon the mining of uranium, how does he feel about uranium mining? “I don’t think it matters because it will never be a very big operation,” he replied. “When you consider the ratio of the energy produced from uranium compared to coal, on a ratio of millions to one, the quantity of uranium being mined is trivial compared to coal mining.” We explained to Dr. Lovelock how U.S. uranium companies replaced conventional mining with In Situ uranium recovery. Lovelock thought the In Situ is “a good idea because it mobilizes the uranium with the oxygen in the water and doesn’t make a god-awful mess of the environment.”
CALLS NAVAJO NATION URANIUM BAN ABSURD
Because of our coverage regarding environmental developments in New Mexico for companies such as Uranium Resources (OTC BB: URRE) and Strathmore Minerals (TSX: STM; Other OTC: STHJF), we talked about uranium mining in that state. Given that it was such an odd event, we discussed the Navajo Nation ban on uranium mining in the four-state tribal reservation area, called ‘Four Corners.’ Puzzled ourselves by this, based upon the latest scientific developments of the in situ uranium recovery method, we discussed an earlier conversation we had with Dr. Fred Begay.
This past November, while visiting Los Alamos National Laboratories (LANL), we had asked Dr. Fred Begay about the new face of uranium mining. Dr. Begay, who is both a nuclear physicist and a Navajo, was continuing his affiliation with LANL by conducting community out-reach programs on the Navajo reservation. He told StockInterview, “The Navajo don’t get it. They have illiteracy on mining and uranium.”
We asked James Lovelock what he thought of the Navajo uranium ban in the context that the tribe also receives about $100 million annually from coal mining royalties. “Had there been no mining at all in the Navajo Nation, and they wanted to keep the deposits pristine as part of a natural ecosystem, I could understand their rejection to any mining,” he explained. “But if they allow coal mining, then it’s absurd to reject uranium mining.”
What would James Lovelock say to Navajo Nation president Joe Shirley, Jr. or to any of the aborigine tribes in Australia and elsewhere, which dislike uranium mining? “Very little,” he abruptly replied. Then, he clarified his response. “It’s almost like trying to persuade any religious person that their belief is unfounded. I wouldn’t dream to explain to a devout Catholic that I’m doubtful about the virginity of the Virgin Mary.” He compared it to an article of faith, adding, “They don’t think about it. They don’t know that it is wrong. It is very difficult to deal with people like that.” Does that apply to the average anti-nuclear environmentalist? He explained how he does deal with the uninformed, “The only thing I found effective in this country, the United Kingdom, is to say, ‘Yes, it may be slightly dangerous, but nothing quite so dangerous as global warming. So, we may have to use it to overcome this.’”
CHINA AND FINAL WORDS
One can not talk about 21st century nuclear energy without bringing up China’s dilemma. The world’s largest coal miner and one of the worst air polluters, China is planning the most aggressive nuclear energy expansion program of the past thirty years. “The Chinese government is the strongest government in the world,” Lovelock began. “I have a friend that goes over there regularly to advise the Prime Minister on their environmental problems.” Thus began a classic Lovelock anecdote:
“They say to him, ‘We’re all doing our best to have more renewable energy than anybody else. We are building nuclear power stations, as fast as we possibly can, so as to not add more carbon to the atmosphere. However if we can’t develop the resources for our people, strong as our government is, there will be a revolution tomorrow. We are in no position to stop using the coal resource until we build enough nuclear or other renewable sources to meet our needs.’”
He concluded, “If the Chinese can’t do it, how the heck can the Western democracies do it?” Therein lies what some consider his fatalism about Earth’s health. Is he truly the pessimist some make him out to be?
“Quite to the contrary,” he responded
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Virtual Health Technologies 10Q Reports 3rd Quarter Positive Income; Explains VHGI Gold Strategy
Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009PR Newswire, Dec 2, 2009
LEXINGTON, Ky., Dec. 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Virtual Health Technologies, Inc. (BULLETIN BOARD: VHGI) today confirmed that their 3rd quarter 10Q showed income of approximately $43,000 versus a loss of approximately $109,000 for the same period in 2008. The increase in income for the third quarter is largely attributed to the settlement of debt tied to the previous acquisition of one of VHGI’s healthcare technology subsidiaries. $900,000 of debt was settled for 1,000,751 shares of VHGI stock.
“We are pleased with the continued improvement of VHGI’s balance sheet. Reducing our debt by 25% through the issuance of stock at approximately $.90 per share is acceptable to VHGI and deemed to be in the best interest of all shareholders,” stated Jim Renfro, President of VHGI. “Also, as we are focused on our financials I would like to take this time to explain our expansion into the Gold Industry through the creation of VHGI Gold and the acquisition of the Treasure Gulch Gold Mine Lease-Purchase Option.”
“VHGI intends to increase our revenue stream without adding significantly to our fixed costs through corporate involvement with different performance-based sectors of the economy. VHGI has historical operations within the Gold Mining and Ore Processing Technology industries which we intend to make use of. We believe that by leveraging the company’s current financial structure and operating history we are poised to significantly enhance shareholder value,” continued Renfro. “However, VHGI shareholders need to be assured that our expansion within this industry will be through a conservative approach that minimizes the risks and looks to maximize the returns for our shareholders.”
In a related announcement, VHGI announced that they expect to release news shortly concerning appointments to a VHGI Gold Advisory Board and developments regarding the due diligence of the Treasure Gulch Gold Mine, as well as potential analyst profiling of VHGI.
About VHGI Gold and the Treasure Gulch Gold Mine
VHGI is leveraging the company’s operating history and corporate resources within the Gold Mining and Precious Metals Industry. Although Gold is selling at an all time high, global economic events have created significant opportunities within these markets. VHGI intends to pursue these opportunities through Lease-Purchase opportunities, Acquisitions and Joint Ventures for the goal of enhanced shareholder value.
VHGI Gold, a wholly owned operating subsidiary of VHGI, has successfully negotiated an extension through February 15, 2013 for VHGI to conduct gold mining activities at the Treasure Gulch Gold Mine, and secured renewal options through 2023. Additionally, we have been granted a reduction in the strike price for the outright acquisition of the property through our Lease-Purchase Option.
VHGI Gold is presently making arrangements for due diligence and ore sampling evaluation to determine a plan for development of the Treasure Gulch Gold Mine. Unverified historical due-diligence material estimates Proven and Probable Gold Reserves in excess of $35,000,000.00 using a valuation of $800.00 per ounce.
About Virtual Health Technologies, Inc.
VHGI is a diverse company with assets and interests focusing on opportunities within the Healthcare Technology Industry and Precious Metals / Energy Resources Markets
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Gifts taken in Ilkeston hairdressers break-in
Friday, December 18th, 20090 Comments | Ilkeston Advertiser (Ilkeston, England), Dec 10, 2009
> Four GHD hair straightener gift sets, which customers had already paid for, were swiped by burglars after they broke the lock on the rear fire exit of Peter James in South Street.
It is the second time the salon has been burgled this year.
Director Liza Earl, 36, said: “We’re really not happy about this a not only have we had to pay for the damage to the door and for new security, but we’ve had to go out and buy new gift sets for the customers.
“It’s cost us hundreds a it’s just ridiculous.”
The thieves also stole bottles of shampoo after breaking in at some point between 3.30pm on Saturday and 8.30am on Monday when the burglary was discovered.
Anyone with information about the raid should call Derbyshire Police on 0345 123 33 33.
The complete idiot’s guide to medical tourism
Friday, December 18th, 2009SciTech Book News, Dec, 2009
The complete idiot’s guide to medical tourism.
Marsek, Patrick W. and Frances Sharpe.
Alpha Books
2009
378 pages
$19.95
Paperback
RA793
This guide explains how to find the best doctors and hospitals when going overseas for major medical care. The authors introduce the concept to those who are unfamiliar with it, list the top destinations, compare costs in the US to other countries, describe its safety, and discuss common cosmetic, medical, and dental procedures and where to go for them. They also cover how to choose doctors and hospitals, whether to hire an agency, costs and travel expenses, insurance and other ways to pay for treatment, and preparing for the trip. The appendix contains specific information on many countries and costs of procedures there
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Wednesday, December 16th, 2009-
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Stuart to Lead Connect by Hertz Global Car Sharing
Tuesday, December 15th, 2009Market Wire, December, 2009
Hertz Global Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: HTZ)
today announced that Robert J. Stuart, Senior Vice President, Global Sales,
has been given the additional responsibility to direct the Company’s global
car sharing business, Connect by Hertz. Launched in December 2008,
Connect by Hertz provides car sharing services in London, New York City and
Paris as well as on 20 college campuses and at several corporate campuses
in the U.S. and U.K.
The Company also announced that Griff Long, Senior Director, Global Car
Sharing, who has overall responsibility for Connect operations in the
United States, will assume operational responsibility for Connect’s
European operations as well, reporting to Mr. Stuart.
Mark P. Frissora, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, commenting on Mr.
Stuart’s increased responsibilities, said, “We have successfully launched
Connect by Hertz in three large target markets — urban, university and
corporate — and the keys to future growth are a much larger membership
base and turning Connect members into repeat customers. Under Bob
Stuart’s direction, we will be able to leverage the global sales team at
Hertz to drive Connect’s growth, increasing our already significant
presence in the car sharing market, and enabling us to make customer demand
based decisions about future car sharing investments.”
Mr. Stuart joined Hertz in 2007 after seven years in senior sales and
marketing management positions at General Electric and, prior to that, 13
years in sales management positions at The Halex Company and Philips
Lighting Company.
Connect by Hertz, The Hertz Corporation’s global car sharing club, has over
650 vehicles, 10,000 members and more than 300 locations worldwide,
including corporate offices and universities. Connect by Hertz offers
vehicles in the Personal, Social and Jet Set Collections; all are available
for online reservation at competitive rates through the Connect, Connect 50
or Connect 125 programs. All cars are equipped with Eileo technology,
and benefits covered by the hourly rate include gas, insurance, GPS
turn-by-turn navigation, 24/7 roadside assistance, 24-hour Member Care
Center communication, and 180 free miles per day. For more information, see
www.connectbyhertz.com .
The Hertz Corporation ( www.hertz.com ), a subsidiary of Hertz Global
Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: HTZ), is the world’s largest general use car rental
brand, operating from approximately 8,000 locations in 145 countries
worldwide. Hertz is the number one airport car rental brand in the U.S.
and at 42 major airports in Europe, operating both corporate and licensee
locations in cities and airports in North America, Europe, Latin America,
Asia, Australia and New Zealand. In addition, the Company has licensee
locations in cities and airports in Africa, and the Middle East. Product
and service initiatives such as Hertz #1 Club Gold, NeverLost
customized, onboard navigation systems, SIRIUS XM Radio, and unique cars
and SUVs offered through the Company’s Prestige, Fun, and Green
Collections, set Hertz apart from the competition
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DIRK LOVES GETTING HAMMERED
Tuesday, December 15th, 20090 Comments | Sunday Mirror, Nov 29, 2009 | by SIMON MULLOCK
DIRK KUYT has revealed how he recovers from the stresses and strains of the Premier League – by getting hammered.
The Liverpool striker employs a unique team of alternative medical experts to keep him in top shape, including an orthomanual therapist who uses a mallet to realign bones and ligaments in his body.
The therapist – nicknamed “Jan-Jan the hammer man” by Kuyt – puts the Dutchman through gruelling treatment sessions twice a year with the full blessing of the Anfield medical staff.
Kuyt also uses the services of a pedicurist, a faith healer and a haptonomy expert who helps him deal with any emotional turmoil. Many footballers are exploring how alternative medicine can help them combat the physical and emotional effects of the game, but no one has embraced it more than the 29-year-old.
Kuyt explained: “The bigger the club you play for, the bigger the pressure is to stay fit and healthy.
“I have a good team behind me who help me to stay in good condition, including an orthomanual therapist who I call Jan-Jan the hammer man.
“Twice a year I see him
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