Sunday, August 4, 2013

New law better informs breast cancer patients

HUNTSVILLE, AL (WAFF)- Beginning August 1, if you are diagnosed with breast cancer, a new Alabama law requires that you be informed of all your treatment options.

The Breast Cancer Patient Education Act of 2013 requires the Alabama Department of Public Health to develop standardized information for breast cancer patients about the treatment options available to them. Doctors are then required to pass that information along to their patients.

The law also requires a breakdown of breast reconstruction alternatives and insurance coverage available to treatments.

A second portion of the law requires physicians issuing a mammography report to notify patients if they have dense breast tissue. Women with dense breast tissue have a higher risk of breast cancer, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

You can find a link to more information about your breast cancer treatment options right here.

Copyright WAFF 2013. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://albertville.waff.com/news/news/198283-new-law-better-informs-breast-cancer-patients

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Cops: 4 men found held in 'deplorable' Texas home

HOUSTON (AP) -- Four men found living in "deplorable conditions" in a Houston garage on Friday told police that they were being held captive after being lured by promises of food and cigarettes so that their captor could cash their public-assistance checks, authorities said.

Three of the men were malnourished and taken to a hospital after being discovered by officers responding to a 911 call about the home, Houston police spokeswoman Jodi Silva said. Sgt. Steven Murdock described the living conditions as like a "dungeon."

Investigators were still trying to determine how long the men lived there, but they said it may have been weeks.

Silva said the men told investigators they were forced to live in the garage - which included just one chair, no bed and a possibly malfunctioning air conditioner - so their captor could cash their assistance checks. She said the men were "given scraps to eat."

"They clearly stated to us they were being kept against their will," Silva said.

Silva said one person has been detained but no charges have been filed. He apparently did not live in the house, she said. Four women were also found living in the house, three of whom appeared to have mental disabilities, Silva said. She described the other woman as a caretaker. Unlike the garage, she described the living conditions inside the home as more normal.

A neighbor called authorities Friday morning expressing concern about men in the house in North Houston. Murdock, the police sergeant, said at least one of the men is a military veteran. He described them as malnourished and "almost invalids," saying they lived in "deplorable conditions."

Alberta Ewing, whose brother lives next door, said the men looked "very weak" and were hauled out on stretchers by paramedics. She said one of the men had approached her asking for help just weeks earlier during a Fourth of July gathering, but that she didn't take him seriously because he wasn't crying and she couldn't get him to explain further.

"He said, `Could you help me?'" Ewing recalled. "I said, `What's the problem?"

Neighbors said they occasionally saw the men sitting outside. Virginia Rogers, who lives five houses away, said she greeted them with a wave when she drove by.

"I'm shocked," Rogers said. "I'm baffled. I didn't have a clue."

The men were found in a working-class, residential neighborhood of one-story, brick homes. Harris County property records show the home was built in 1969 and is about 1,400 square feet.

Police were going in and out of the house's bright purple door and black gate Friday afternoon, removing evidence as neighbors stood outside watching.

A portion of the block was cordoned off with police tape.

---

Follow Juan A. Lozano at http://www.twitter.com/juanlozano70 .

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_ELDERLY_CAPTIVES_TEXAS?SITE=NYMID&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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Texas Six Flags Rollercoaster Fall Kills Woman

A woman has died after falling from the tallest steel-hybrid roller-coaster in the world.

The accident happened at the Six Flags Over Texas theme park in Arlington, Texas. Park officials confirmed the woman died but did not specify how she was killed.

However, witnesses said they saw the woman fall from the Texas Giant rollercoaster.

"She goes up like this, then when it drops to come down, that's when it (the safety bar) released and she just tumbled," said Carmen Brown who saw the accident happened.

Brown said she was next in line behind the woman and saw her being strapped into her seat next to her son.

"We heard her screaming. We were like, 'Did she just fall?'" Brown said.

Six Flags expressed sadness over the death and said it was temporarily closing the section of the park around the accident site.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the family and friends during this difficult time," the park said in a statement.

The Texas Giant is 14 storeys high, has a drop of 79 degrees and a bank of 95 degrees. It can carry up to 24 riders.

The ride first opened in 1990 as an all-wooden coaster but underwent a $10m (?6.54m) renovation in 2010 to install steel-hybrid rails before reopening in 2011.

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Source: http://web.orange.co.uk/article/news/texas_six_flags_rollercoaster_fall_kills_woman

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Obama commends work of consumer protection agency

President Barack Obama, left, speaks as Richard Cordray, right, the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, listens during a statement in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, July 17, 2013. The Senate voted on Tuesday, July 16, 2013, to end a two-year Republican blockade that was preventing Cordray from winning confirmation as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

President Barack Obama, left, speaks as Richard Cordray, right, the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, listens during a statement in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, July 17, 2013. The Senate voted on Tuesday, July 16, 2013, to end a two-year Republican blockade that was preventing Cordray from winning confirmation as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

President Barack Obama, left, listens as Richard Cordray, right, the new director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, July 17, 2013. The Senate voted on Tuesday, July 16, 2013, to end a two-year Republican blockade that was preventing Cordray from winning confirmation as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama is commending the work of a consumer protection agency created after the economic crisis.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau got its first permanent director this week after the Senate voted to install Richard Cordray after years of delay.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Obama says consumers can go to the agency to "get some measure of justice" when financial institutions disregard the rules.

He says the bureau has addressed more than 175,000 complaints and has helped recover more than $400 million in refunds for consumers.

In the Republican message, Reps. Todd Young of Indiana and Tim Griffin of Arkansas are calling on the Democratic-controlled Senate to vote on bills passed by the House to delay requirements on individuals and businesses by Obama's health care law.

___

Online:

Obama address: www.whitehouse.gov

GOP address: http://www.gop.gov/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-07-20-US-Obama/id-38ed8ecd877f4912894dee8c58070c25

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What if This Climbing Champion Were Trayvon? ? Beyond the Edge

Climbing phenom Kai Lightner; Photograph courtesy Travis Wills

Climbing phenom Kai Lightner; Photograph courtesy Travis Wills

The acquittal of George Zimmerman should not escape the interest of the outdoor recreation community. Like most of us I couldn?t immediately assign any relevance to the horrible death of Trayvon Martin and the world of adventure, but there are indeed several pertinent factors to consider when a gunman masquerading as a ?neighborhood watch volunteer? stalks, confronts, and kills an unarmed teenager as he walked home alone in the rain. A jury of his peers declared Zimmerman not guilty of 2nd degree murder and manslaughter. Under current Florida law justice, as they say, was served. But it wasn?t until I witnessed the reaction of a friend, the African-American mother of a 13-year-old rock climbing prodigy, that I put into perspective for me the genuine tragedy of this crime that will go unpunished.

My specialty in outdoor recreation not withstanding, as a person of color, the particular nature of this case demands from me a thoughtful response. As a writer of travel and adventure stories, I believe that at the heart of this topic is the reasonable expectation of free thinking people to safely venture from one place to another without fear of someone believing that they might be ?up to no good.? The outdoor industry is all about getting people to journey outside their comfort zone and explore the unknown. And though this case might seem to have nothing to do with outdoor recreation I believe that those of us in the business should take a look at the implications of what just happened in our society.

Though we could have learned from Trayvon?s death, as a society, that you can?t judge people by their appearance and take lethal action because you feel that you?re being threatened when no real risk exists. Instead black mothers and fathers are being made to caution their children, especially their sons, to fear those they encounter as people who might do them harm. I?m concerned that their fear will inhibit African-American youth from venturing to places or seeking out experiences where they believe for whatever reason that they don?t belong.

In recent weeks I?ve had the pleasure of getting to know Kai Lightner. At 13, he?s doing amazing things in the world of sport climbing. This spring Kai successfully ascended Southern Smoke (5.14c) and Transworld Depravity (5.14a) two particularly hard sport routes in the Red River Gorge of Kentucky. On the same two-week road trip, he climbed Proper Soul (5.14a) in the New River Gorge, West Virginia. I wrote about him in the August/September issue of Rock & Ice Magazine. And just last week Kai took his fourth champion title at the national Sport Climbing Series in Atlanta, Georgia. This summer he?ll climb for the U.S. in the Youth World Sport Climbing Championship in Vancouver, British Columbia.

?I?ve waited a long time for this,? Kai told me in a phone conversation. ?Ever since I started climbing I?ve always wanted to be in a world championship. The fact that I get to compete in it now is really overwhelming.?

With the support of his mother my friend Constance Lightner, a professor of Management Science at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina, Kai is on track to fulfill the fondest dream of his young life. After many years of hard work and discipline he?s earned the respect of his coaches, teammates, fellow competitors and a growing number of journalists. Smart, articulate, polite and a straight-A student this young climber epitomizes the very best that America?s youth has to offer. Kai is a fine individual to present his country in a world-class competition. But unfortunately these are character traits that many outside of the climbing community will fail to see. Kai Lightner is black.

Just a few months ago while traveling through Washington, D.C. on one of many weekend road trips to train at a climbing gym far from their home Kai and his mom Connie stopped at a gas station to refuel and use the restroom. On the way out of the facilities an attendant accosted Kai. This complete stranger, pulled up his shirt, frisked him and accused him of stealing. With no evidence of wrongdoing the boy was released to run back to his car, reduced to tears.

?Anyone that knows my son knows that he is a mild mannered, respectful kid, that?s always maintained an A average in school,? Connie recounted on Facebook. ?Despite these facts, his physical attributes (race and size) in the past have typecast him.?

Like the parents of many black children Connie has taught Kai from a young age to comport himself in a manner void of anything that may be perceived as aggressive or threatening. Tall for his age but slightly built, like a climber, it?s hard to imagine Kai as anything but gentle and kind. More than just being polite and respectful, as all children should be, Kai is learning how not to draw the attention of people who will make assumptions of who he is based exclusively on the color his skin. It?s these people who will ascribe to this talented young man all manner of horrible attributes and character deficiencies and perceive him as a threat, people like George Zimmerman. Had this been Florida or any of more than 25 other states with a so called ?stand your ground law? Kai Lightner might have been Trayvon Martin.

?As the mom of an African American boy, incidents like the gas station and the Martin case scare me,? Connie wrote on Facebook. ?Do I tell my son to defend himself if he feels threatened? To run? I understand that for some, if you have never experienced similar scenarios, you may not understand. For me, it?s not anger, it?s fear.?

And now she can add to that fear a very real possibility. Should her child ever be injured or even killed by a person carrying a gun who feels threatened by a black teenager minding his own business that person will be acquitted of the crime. Where Connie as a mother feels fear, as a black man I feel anger. I?m angry because there are too many people out there who would look at Kai and never assume that he?s an A-student and a national sport-climbing champion. Among the first African-Americans ever to represent the US in a world climbing competition, Kai could just as easily be targeted as suspicious or as a threat while traveling between events or training venues simply because of his appearance. It?s heartbreaking to know that we live in a nation where people with guns can be allowed to shoot first and ask questions later.

But Connie takes comfort in the fact that Kai has always been supported and encouraged throughout his career as a climber. Since the age of seven he?s had every opportunity to excel in the sport he loves.? ?I am fortunate that my son is surrounded by a rock climbing community that has never seen race,? Connie wrote. ?Despite being a predominantly white sport, he has never felt different or outcast despite the fact that he is usually the only black person at events. My fear is that outside of this community, his reality is very different.?

That?s likely true of most African-American youth. It?s possible though that many might find that same safe and supportive place among the community of climbers and adventurers as Kai did. As I have. I can?t help but wonder what it would take to bring more African-American youth into the relative safety of the outdoor community.

The outdoor industry can take a great deal of pride in having created an even playing field where anyone with the will, courage, and determination to succeed can accomplish anything he or she desires. ?Over the past weeks several African-American climbers on two teams made a valiant attempt to summit Mount McKinley, also known as Denali the highest peak in North America. As they waited for a weather window to open at their 14,000-foot Advanced Base Camp there were likely more black climbers on the mountain at one time than ever before.

The Expedition Denali team, organized by the National Outdoor Leadership School brought nine black climbers ranging in age between 19 and 56. Their course instructors included Chicago-born backcountry ski guide Robby ReChord, one of only three African-American NOLS field educators of more than 800 world-wide. The other team, lead by world-class mountaineer and climbing team captain for The North Face Conrad Anker, included ReChord?s mentor NOLS instructor Philip Henderson and North Face snowboard ambassador Ryan Hudson, both black. Photographs taken throughout those days on Denali demonstrate the capacity of the outdoor industry to welcome and engage people of color in such a way that reflects their individual character and natural ability to perform. Unfortunately, a massive electrical storm just 700 feet from the summit forced both teams along with 40 other climbers to retreat back to Advanced Base Camp. Certainly the environment does not discriminate.

Following the example of NOLS and the North Face the makers of outdoor equipment and clothing as well as outfitting companies, retailers and environmental protection groups have an opportunity to demonstrate the supportive and inclusive nature of the industry as a whole. From the outside looking in this mostly white environment might appear threatening to anyone who is unaware just how inviting it can be. Lately we?ve been talking a lot about diversity and how important it is to reach out to more people of color. Now is the perfect time to make serious strides toward that goal.

It would help if we started by investing a few more marketing dollars to directly connect with minority communities, segments of the population that will soon be the majority. We could begin encouraging more companies to offer cultural competency training for outdoor professionals who work with the general public. And industry media organizations can try to include more images that depict people of color enjoying time outside. I believe that if we make a sincere effort to show ourselves as welcoming and inviting we would attract and retain more talented kids like Kai.

In many ways, the rarified world of rock climbing, mountaineering, and other adventure sports has the same unwelcoming appearance of the gated community where Trayvon was gunned down. But as recent events have shown appearances can be deceiving. In sharing her story Connie wants people to know that her son has found a safe environment in which to thrive, and she hopes that other children like hers will be encouraged to find themselves there as well.

Source: http://adventureblog.nationalgeographic.com/2013/07/19/diversity-in-the-outdoors-how-can-we-help-more-kids-thrive-in-the-outdoors/

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Glad You Asked Blog: Glad You Asked: Weekend To-Dos

- Posted // 2013-07-19 -

Dear GYA, I just ? I just can?t handle it. I?m heartbroken over the Emmy snubs. How was John Slattery completely ignored? He was nominated for the first four seasons of Mad Men, and now nothing. He was amazing; Roger had more depth this season than any other. And Arrested Development was beaten out by The Big Bang Theory?! I mean, sure, Portia DeRossi didn?t look like herself, but the fourth season was still hilarious. I?ve been binge-watching all my favorite episodes, in hopes that somehow the nominations will be revised. Please tell me there is something going on worthy enough for me to tear myself away from my TV. ? Nathan Harvey, Sandy

Nathan, I understand. I, too, am saddened by Slattery?s snub; he was outstanding this season. And I completely get where you?re coming from about Arrested Development, but we can?t always get what we want. And at least Jason Bateman was nominated, right? It's going to be OK, and I can assure you there is plenty worth doing this weekend:

Friday's Events:

-Since you?re feeling blue, why not catch some laughs at Wiseguys Rocky Mountain Laugh Off? The comedy competition is sure to cheer you up. It starts at 7:30 p.m., at the West Valley City location. Plus, the admission is only $12.

-You need to be as far from your TV as possible, so head up to Snowbird, enjoy the wonder of nature, and catch one of their Family Flicks. This week, Up will be screening at 8:30 p.m. Best of all, admission is free!

-Since I'm sure you consider the Emmy snubbers a bunch of heartless bastards, why not see the Heartless Bastards perform at The Urban Lounge? The show starts at 9 p.m. and tickets are $18 in advance ($20 at the door). Writer opens up.

-If you're looking for something that will gently rock your sadness away, then check out the country band Son Volt at the State Room. The show starts at 9 p.m. and admission varies.

If you want to put your sad situation in perspective, go see Fiddler on the Roof at Center Point Legacy Theater. Admission is $18-$22 and the curtain goes up at 7:30 p.m.

Saturday Events:

A fun summer festival is sure to cheer you up right up, so head down to Spanish Fork and check out Llamafest! The festival runs all day and admission is just $3. It's sure to be a good time.

If lamas aren't your thing, you might enjoy seeing Breathe Carolina, at In The Venue. They're a electropop/eletronica duo. Their poppy beats are sure to put you in a good mood. The two take the stage at 7 p.m. and tickets are $20. T. Mills, The Ready Set and Keep It Cute are also in the lineup.

If you're not into electropop, then you might want to catch the punk band Rancid, at The Depot. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. and ticket prices range from $27 to $31. Special guest The Transplants will also be playing.

If you're not feeling mohawks and piercings, check out the local rap band Hurris & Gig at Kilby Court. The lyrics revolve around a lot of Utah-specific things. Admission is $6 and the band takes the stage at 7 p.m. Polytype and Mr. Smith open the show.

Nothing gets you feeling chipper like cheering for your favorite team, so head out to a Real game. The match kicks off at 8 p.m. and admission varies.

Sunday Events

Since the snubs have left your heart broken and you feel like death, you might be interested in seeing the death-metal band Six Feet Under, at In The Venue. Special guests Decrepit Birth and Cannabis Corpse will open. The show begins at 6 p.m. and tickets are $18 in advance and $20 the day of.

If you're not quite feeling that, go see Tift Merritt perform at The State Room. Her country tunes will certainly to lift your spirits. She takes the stage at 8 p.m. and admission varies.

For a complete list of this weekend's events, click here.

Twitter: @By_Renee

Source: http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/blog-16346-9718-glad-you-asked-blog-glad-you-asked-weekend-to-dos.html

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Surface RT. Or what is happening at Microsoft?

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Source: feeds.adobe.com --- Saturday, July 20, 2013
This isn?t a Ballmer rant ? that would be too easy and it?s being done constantly. I?ll save him my taking another pound of virtual flesh. Although to be honest, I?m itching to do it again. But I won?t. I am not going to go on about the Windows 8 debacle. The Windows phone debacle [...] ...

Source: http://blog.ericd.net/2013/07/19/surface-rt-or-what-is-happening-at-microsoft/

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