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Sunday, December 23, 2007

Power back ON!

Well, I suppose I shouldn't look at the gift horse in the mouth. Thank you, Mrs. Mommy. You did a great job cracking the whip and getting your people on the MOVE-ON. I wuz takin' MAJOR notes.

I have been without power since last Tuesday, 18 December, when PSO actually came to cut, yes, as in a pair of cable cutters, to snip at the wires that brought power to my house.

Yeah, so what that the meter was on the ground and off the side of the house? Power worked fine since 15 December. NOBODY got hurt. I was MIFFED to say the least.

But, SCREW IT. After a few days, I got along fine without electricity, until I had to figure out how to fix the roof.

I needed power for the circular saw. So that got put off indefinitely. SCREW THAT too!

Oh, well, I haven't been feeling too well. Coughs, lotsa mucus, general tiredness, acheness, and just plain CRANKINESS. Not a pretty sight. So, I'll spare you the pictures. But, hey, what else is new?

This blog will not be receiving the attention as it has in the past. Mainly, because it does NOT pay! I NEED a paying gig, people. So, I've moved my attention to Bike Billboards. I don't know if I'll get back here again. But, help me out by supporting Bike Billboards. Buy ad space on bike billboard. Buy a bike billboard. BUY, BUY, BUY!!!

Monday, December 17, 2007

NJ bans death penalty

By TOM HESTER Jr., Associated Press Writer 51 minutes ago

TRENTON, N.J. - Gov. Jon S. Corzine signed into law Monday a measure that abolishes the death penalty, making New Jersey the first state in more than four decades to reject capital punishment.

The bill, approved last week by the state's Assembly and Senate, replaces the death sentence with life in prison without parole.

"This is a day of progress for us and for the millions of people across our nation and around the globe who reject the death penalty as a moral or practical response to the grievous, even heinous, crime of murder," Corzine said.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Eat meat, get cancer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People who eat a lot of red meat and processed meats have a higher risk of several types of cancer, including lung cancer and colorectal cancer, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.

The work is the first big study to show a link between meat and lung cancer. It also shows that people who eat a lot of meat have a higher risk of liver and esophageal cancer and that men raise their risk of pancreatic cancer by eating red meat.

"A decrease in the consumption of red and processed meat could reduce the incidence of cancer at multiple sites," Dr. Amanda Cross and colleagues at the U.S. National Cancer Institute wrote in their report, published in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Medicine.

The researchers studied 500,000 people aged 50 to 71 who took part in a diet and health study done in conjunction with the AARP, formerly the American Association for Retired Persons.

After eight years, 53,396 cases of cancer were diagnosed.

"Statistically significant elevated risks (ranging from 20 percent to 60 percent) were evident for esophageal, colorectal, liver, and lung cancer, comparing individuals in the highest with those in the lowest quintile of red meat intake," the researchers wrote.

The people in the top 20 percent of eating processed meat had a 20 percent higher risk of colorectal cancer -- mostly rectal cancer -- and a 16 percent higher risk for lung cancer.

"Furthermore, red meat intake was associated with an elevated risk for cancers of the esophagus and liver," the researchers wrote.

These differences held even when smoking was accounted for.

"Red meat intake was not associated with gastric or bladder cancer, leukemia, lymphoma, or melanoma," added the researchers, whose study is freely available on the Internet at http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document& doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.0040325.

Red meat was defined as all types of beef, pork and lamb. Processed meat included bacon, red meat sausage, poultry sausage, luncheon meats, cold cuts, ham and most types of hot dogs including turkey dogs.

Meats can cause cancer by several routes, the researchers noted. "For example, they are both sources of saturated fat and iron, which have independently been associated with carcinogenesis," the researchers wrote.

Meat is also a source of several chemicals known to cause DNA mutations, including N-nitroso compounds (NOCs), heterocyclic amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).

Jeanine Genkinger of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and Anita Koushik of the University of Montreal said the findings fit in with other research.

"Meat consumption in relation to cancer risk has been reported in over a hundred epidemiological studies from many countries with diverse diets," they wrote in a commentary.

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Green tea fights rat colon cancer

Rats fed Polyphenon E, an active ingredient in green tea, ward off colon cancer. Scientists announced the results at Sixth International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention, sponsored by the American Association for Cancer Research.

In the study, researchers injected rats with azoxymethane, a chemical known to produce colorectal tumors in humans. Then they fed the animals a high-fat Western-style diet with or without Polyphenon E for 34 weeks. The amount of Polyphenon the animals took in was roughly equal to about four to six cups of green tea per day.

Polyphenon E decreased the total number of tumors per rat and decreased tumor size, compared with control rats that were not given Polyphenon E.

NYC horse-drawn carriage draws fire, ire

NYC Councilman Tony Avella plans to introduce City legislation next Wednesday to ban tradition-rich horse-drawn carriages from operating within City limits. Animal rights activists claim the operators, predominantly Irish and Italian working families, mistreat the animals.

The Horse & Carriage Association of New York responds to the proposal, stating that the city's carriage horses are in excellent health and Avella "is the one who should be put out to pasture."

VT Halloween



While most of us celebrate Halloween with the usual, boring costumes of ghouls, goblins, and Santa, a couple of Penn State student geniuses dressed as VT gunman victims, complete with gunshot holes, and bloody T-shirts. The pictures taken at a very closed, private party, appeared on Facebook.

While VT is obviously outraged, the Penn State geniuses didn't seem to share the pain.

More 'UN-wholesome' fun

Meanwhile, stateside, actually, Duncanville, Texas, a Dallas suburb, of 36,000, with 50 places of worship, play host to some pretty wild and crazy parties of the naughty variety.

City officials are trying to shut down resident Jim Trulock's Friday and Saturday "Naked Twister" nights. Mr. Trulock's home, on upscale Ceder Ridge Drive, attracts over 100 swingers, generating neighbor complaints of noise, traffic, and strangers, in the neighborhood. Partygoers dubbed the Trulock home as the "Cherry Pit."

Dawn Burton, 45, a Naked Twister night regular, complains, "It's crazy that they want to force their morality down our throats. We're all frustrated."

Grandmas gone WILD

Turning the tables on the sex tourists trade in Kenya, more than a few older ladies of the Caucasian persuasion are turning to younger, buffer, and darker men of Mombasa. Local tourist officials are not amused.

They are encouraging hoteliers to refuse certain courtesies to this "unwholesome" practice, such as refusing to upgrade single rooms to doubles for single, obviously older white female tourists.

CompUSA Sold

Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim sold CompUSA to Gordon Brothers Group. Gordon help C-USA restructure operations.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Pastor-in-Chief?

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Confused cops

No Road Tax

The so-called Complete Our Street report came out today, as promised. I suppose that's a good thing. It could have been delayed for another month.

A few things of interest:

1) 28% of Tulsans do not have access to vehicles, presumably privately-owned automobiles. Also, another reference to young professionals' preferences. (Introduction, Page 2).

2) Irritating typo "Sollutions." (Finance Committee Summary Recommendations).

3) More irritating: Pass a general obligation bond of $650 million, in '08 elections. The property owners' hit: $12.50 per month per $100,000 accessed value. Permanent half-cent sales tax, $35 million per year. (Finance Committee Report, Page 2)

4) Stronger recognition of sustainable transportation. (Smart Urban Design report)

5) Continuing street widenings.

There really is no change from the current mindset to maintain the status quo of the automobile as the main form of transport.

I will vote NO ROAD TAX. 'Nuff said.

Monday, December 03, 2007

Git off butt PEDAL!

By Amy Norton 1 hour, 1 minute ago

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Exercise seems to increase the production of naturally occurring brain chemical with antidepressant effects in mice, researchers reported Sunday.

The findings, published in the journal Nature Medicine, point to potential new ways to treat depression in people.

Studies have found that exercise can help ease depression symptoms, but the reasons for the benefit have not been clear. For the new study, scientists used a tool called a microarray to examine how exercise changed gene activity in the brains of mice.

They focused on a brain region known as the hippocampus, which has been implicated in mood regulation and in the brain's response to antidepressant medication.

The researchers found that mice that had a week's worth of workouts on a running wheel showed altered activity in a total of 33 genes, the majority of which had never been identified before.

In particular, exercise enhanced activity in the gene for a nerve growth factor known as VGF. Nerve growth factors are small proteins important in the development and maintenance of nerve cells.

Moreover, when the researchers infused a synthetic version of VGF into the brains of the mice, it produced a "robust antidepressant effect" in standardized tests of animals placed in stressful situations.

"The major finding is that we have identified a key factor that underlies the antidepressant effects of exercise -- information that could be used for the development of novel therapeutic agents," said senior researcher Dr. Ronald S. Duman of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Exercise "clearly has effects on the brain," he told Reuters Health, and they are both direct and indirect. It's possible, he explained, that the current findings reflect a direct effect of exercise on nerve cells in the hippocampus, or more general changes in the brain, like better blood flow or increased hormonal activity.

Besides offering more support for the benefits of exercise, the findings also point to VGF as a target for new antidepressants, according to Duman and his colleagues. Such medications, they point out, would work by an entirely different mechanism than existing antidepressants, which are effective for about 65 percent of patients.