Saturday, August 4, 2012

UN Assembly deplores Security Council's Syria failure

The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly passed a resolution Friday criticizing the Security Council's failure to act on the Syria conflict, which UN leader Ban Ki-moon said has become a "proxy war."

The resolution also condemning President Bashar al-Assad's use of "heavy weapons" in the civil war was approved by 133 votes, with 12 countries against and 33 abstaining.

Members deplored "the Security Council failure to agree on measures" to make the Syrian government carry out UN demands to end almost 18 months of fighting, the text read.

Russia and China have vetoed three UN Security Council resolutions on Syria and many diplomats said the assembly resolution was a show of frustration and anger at the lack of international action on the conflict.

The measure condemned "the Syrian authorities' use of heavy weapons including indiscriminate shelling from tanks and helicopters" and demanded that the government refrain from using its chemical weapons.

Ahead of the vote, Ban told the assembly that Syria had become a "proxy war" and also turned on the Security Council, which he said had become "paralyzed" by divisions over the conflict.

"Now, with the situation having worsened, they must again find common ground. The immediate interests of the Syrian people must be paramount over any larger rivalries of influence," the UN secretary-general said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-assembly-deplores-security-councils-syria-failure-171932567.html

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Friday, August 3, 2012

OlympicVillage Live Blog: Day Seven

Thursday, 3:25 p.m. ET/8:25 p.m. London -- Phelps Wins It!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/2012-summer-olympics-behind-scenes-day-seven/1-a-475551?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3A2012-summer-olympics-behind-scenes-day-seven-475551

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French town famed for extreme sports bans wingsuit

In this photo dated July 21st, 2012, two base jumpers wearing wingsuits jump from the Brevent needle above Chamonix in the French Alps. For nearly two months, daredevils in skin-tight suits with batwing sleeves and a flap between their legs hurled themselves off the Brevent cliff, soaring through the Alpine skies. Last week, tragedy struck: A Norwegian wingsuit flyer was killed when his parachute failed to open. The next day, the mayor of Chamonix-Mont Blanc banned wingsuits. The decision has triggered a debate about how to weigh the dangers of extreme sport against the passion of the thrill-seekers the Alpine town has famously encouraged.. (AP Photo/Cyril Duval)

In this photo dated July 21st, 2012, two base jumpers wearing wingsuits jump from the Brevent needle above Chamonix in the French Alps. For nearly two months, daredevils in skin-tight suits with batwing sleeves and a flap between their legs hurled themselves off the Brevent cliff, soaring through the Alpine skies. Last week, tragedy struck: A Norwegian wingsuit flyer was killed when his parachute failed to open. The next day, the mayor of Chamonix-Mont Blanc banned wingsuits. The decision has triggered a debate about how to weigh the dangers of extreme sport against the passion of the thrill-seekers the Alpine town has famously encouraged.. (AP Photo/Cyril Duval)

In this photo dated July 21, 2012, two base jumpers wearing wingsuits prepare to jump from the Brevent needle above Chamonix in the French Alps. For nearly two months, daredevils in skin-tight suits with batwing sleeves and a flap between their legs hurled themselves off the Brevent cliff, soaring through the Alpine skies. Last week, tragedy struck: A Norwegian wingsuit flyer was killed when his parachute failed to open. The next day, the mayor of Chamonix-Mont Blanc banned wingsuits. The decision has triggered a debate about how to weigh the dangers of extreme sport against the passion of the thrill-seekers the Alpine town has famously encouraged. (AP Photo/Cyril Duval)

PARIS (AP) ? The French town of Chamonix, deep in the shadow of Mont Blanc, has always embraced danger.

Climbers scale Europe's highest peak in dire conditions. Backcountry skiers risk avalanches or falling off cliffs.

But the arrival this summer of the wingsuit flyers offered peril on an entirely new scale. For nearly two months, daredevils in skin-tight suits with batwing sleeves and a flap between their legs hurled themselves off the Brevent cliff, soaring through the Alpine skies. Last week, tragedy struck: A Norwegian wingsuit flyer was killed when his parachute failed to open.

The next day, the mayor of Chamonix-Mont Blanc banned wingsuits.

The decision has triggered a debate about how to weigh the dangers of extreme sport against the passion of the thrill-seekers the Alpine town has famously encouraged. The ban isn't meant to be permanent ? local officials hope to come up with a set of rules on wingsuits that will satisfy everyone. But Chamonix remains shaken.

"For us, adventure doesn't mean extreme risk," said Chamonix mayor Eric Fournier. "We have to ask questions of responsibility and respect for other sports."

In Chamonix, near the Swiss and Italian borders, paragliders and hikers share space with mountain gondolas, climbers and BASE jumpers, adventurers who leap from high places and float down by parachute.

Last month, nine experienced climbers died in an avalanche on the French side of the mountain. And there have been increasing concerns that the area is becoming just too crowded.

Wingsuits are a relatively new offshoot of BASE jumping, coming into their own only in the late 1990s. Flyers start high and hope for a breeze strong enough to make the flight last, before opening their chutes to land.

Mont Blanc winters are long and harsh, and the wingsuit season there is short, dependent upon warm air and favorable conditions for landing.

That's where the cliffs above Chamonix come in. Popular in winter among skiiers, in summer among paragliders and hikers, the cliffs are easily accessible by trail. That's just high enough to allow for a wingsuit jump and close enough for multiple jumps in a day ? a rarity in the wingsuit world. As a wingsuit site, Brevent was relatively unknown until late this spring, when YouTube videos caught the attention of flyers everywhere.

They came by the dozens, according to Fournier and Roche Malnuit, who lives in Chamonix and is president of the French BASE Association.

It's an exhilarating, dangerous sport with a small number of passionate adherents, numbering a couple hundred in France and perhaps a thousand or two in the world. The suits can cost over ?1,000 ($1,200) and are made from the same synthetics used for hot-air balloons or parachutes. Flyers commonly jump from planes or helicopters ? less commonly from cliffs ? and can soar long distances before opening their parachutes to land.

The world record, set from an airplane jump, stands at 16 miles. For BASE jumping wingsuit flyers, the distance is considerably shorter, Malnnuit said. At Brevent, where the cliff's stands at an altitude of 2,500 meters (7,500 feet), Malnuit said flyers can expect to travel about 4.5 kilometers (nearly 3 miles).

Malnuit learned to fly in a wingsuit from his father, who was a BASE jumping pioneer in the 1980s. Malnuit said his father gave it up at age 50 "because the risks became too great. He said he was happy to have lived it."

"I love nature, I love sports, I love the mountains," Malnuit said, explaining his own path to wingsuit flight. "I had my father who was there to teach me. He taught me that it's a sport of risk."

Tore Hovda is the brother of 38-year-old Jon Inge Hovda, who was killed after jumping from the Brevent cliff on July 23.

Hovda said his brother got into the sport 15 years ago after starting out with parachuting. "That (BASE jumping) was his whole life. He just couldn't stop with it."

Despite his brother's death, Hovda said he did not think the sport should be forbidden.

"People should be able to jump if they want to," Hovda said from his home in Stavanger, in southeastern Norway. "It would be wrong to put a ban on it."

Many public places have done just that, including national parks in the United States. Even in California's Yosemite, where solo rock climbing without safety gear is permitted and considered a mark of the highest skill, wingsuits are banned along with other BASE jumping, for many of the same reasons Chamonix is struggling with the sport.

"Yes, we allow free soloing and rock climbing, which are also high risk activities. However, the ban on BASE Jumping is not based on the high risk nature of the activity, rather it is based on its overall impacts to other park activities: the 'circus-like' atmosphere it creates, its impacts on climbers, potential impacts to park resources, etc." Scott Gediman, a spokesman for Yosemite, told The Associated Press in an email. Yosemite has dozens of climbers a day at the high season and thousands of visitors on the trails.

Gediman said he himself watched a BASE jumper leap to her death in 1999 when her borrowed chute failed to open.

Fournier, whose sports include skiing, paragliding and mountain climbing, doesn't envision a permanent wingsuit ban in Chamonix. He doesn't want to try wingsuits, but he understands the appeal and he expects to work with flyers to figure out how to proceed.

"It's a practice that taxes the mind and the body," said Fournier. "In these last few weeks, it was opened too quickly to too many people."

Malnuit supported time to reflect on the dangers, but said he hoped the cliffs will reopen soon to wingsuits.

"With wings, you truly arrive at flying," he said. "You can steer, you can accelerate. You're truly in flight."

___

Associated Press writers Louise Nordstrom in Stockholm, Sweden, and Traci Cone in Fresno, California, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-08-02-France-Wingsuit%20Ban/id-170a264e5e29463eb69ec7c30f3265d1

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Thursday, August 2, 2012

Patricia Sheridan's Breakfast With ? Terri Orbuch | Short Stories for ...

Summer is prime time for weddings, which means that Terri Orbuch, known as ?The love Doctor,? gets lots of requests for advice. the author of five books on relationships and a research scientist at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, she still finds time to lead marriage workshops. she is a family and marriage therapist as well as a professor of sociology at Oakland University. Ms. Orbuch was in Pittsburgh as the guest of Henne Jewelers earlier this year to talk about her new book, ?5 Simple Steps to take Your Marriage from good to great.?

What got you into the study of relationships?

I am much more interested in what keeps people together and happy. I got into it because I was a psychologist, and I noticed that relationships are so important to one's health and well-being psychologically and physically. I also turned to my life and saw how important my relationships were to how I felt on a daily, weekly and almost yearly basis. I really think my interest stems from how important I saw they were to people.

Summer is wedding season, so how do brides and grooms keep their fairy-tale expectations in check? or should they?

Absolutely, I think they should keep the fairy-tale expectations in check. What I found from following 373 married couples for over 25 years is that when you have those unrealistic expectations, you are much more likely to get frustrated because your partner or spouse can't meet those expectations. that frustration eats away at the happiness in the relationship. Then that relationship becomes unhealthy and you are much more likely to get divorced. especially before you get married or really shortly after you get married, you should ask yourself: What are your expectations about this relationship? about your partner? Write them down and have your spouse do the same thing. Switch pieces of paper and then talk about your expectations and whether or not they are realistic.

Does a show like ?Mad Men? fuel nostalgia among men for the husband to rule relationships?

That's a really good question, Patricia, but I don't think so. when I look at the couples in my own research study, most of them really want to be a part of a team.

But if they are coming to you, aren't they already in the right mind-set?

Well, actually the couples in my long-term study, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health, are a very random representative sample. What I did was look at marriage licenses in 1986 in a four-month period. So it wasn't people who were happier or less happy in their relationships. believe it or not, both husbands and wives say, ?I really want to feel or consider that I am part of a team and we are in this together.? So when I ask what that means, it typically means that we share. Not equally perhaps, but we share in doing things together in the household and with the kids and money. again it's not equal 50/50, but it is a ?we are in this together? kind of feeling.

How do you keep competition between spouses from becoming terminal to the relationship?

What you really need to do is make sure both of you appreciate the other's strengths and the unique gifts that you bring to the relationship. You make sure regularly that you tell each other how much you care about each other and how special each of you are. Then when there is competition, whether it be who brings in more money or who beats the other at a board game or a sport, you still can see that the other recognizes you and doesn't take you for granted. As long as you have that sense, then competition is OK. Losing or winning is OK.

So basically it is about respect.

Respect is so very important. I also think that people don't want to feel like they are being taken for granted or they are not noticed. What happens a lot over time in relationships is we tend to do that because everything else gets really busy.

How important is physical attraction to finding love when the bloom of youth is gone?

Being physically attracted or being attracted to a partner is extremely important. It is very essential because touch and passion and sexuality are essential to happiness and stability in a relationship, no matter what the age. But [laughing] it's not the only factor that is important, and I don't even necessarily think it is the no. 1 important factor.

Books like ?The Talent Code,? ?Outliers? or ?How we Decide? all talk about deep learning and the importance of making mistakes. So have we gotten away from that in trying to make everyone feel like a winner, especially children?

I don't necessarily think we have gotten away from that. I think competition is important. Winning and losing are important for kids, but it is how we talk about the wins and the losses with our children, explaining what you can learn from a loss or not getting a good grade or not getting what you want. I think loss is fine as long as we talk about it. It is important for us to keep checks and balances on ourselves and make sure we are not too involved.

Are ?Tiger Moms? actually hurting their children's sense of accomplishment by pushing so much?

We have to motivate our kids. I think when a child has passion for an activity and is motivated to do well, that is really wonderful. But what we want our kids to do well in might not always be the same things our kids want. Rules and structure are great for kids, but too much is a lot of pressure and stress. we want it for something we didn't do in our lives typically, rather than it is going to help or make our kids happy.

Doesn't free play stimulate creativity and imagination?

Absolutely, unstructured time for kids is great. that is when all that creativity comes out. They can go out in the backyard and just play, not have a group they have to go to or a class or sports practice. I think we overschedule our kids. I see this as a university professor, that many parents stress that kids have to know what they are going to do or be or major in by the time they get to college, and they are doing that in ninth and 10th grade. I see it as too bad because it is not allowing kids to take all kinds of classes and figure out what interests they may have. let them explore and take different kinds of classes.

Last question: What about the advice to a newly married couple to never to go to bed angry?

It's wrong advice, I even talk about this in my book. that is a myth, and there are many myths about relationships that get perpetuated in our culture. What we know is couples should go to bed mad if they are upset or angry. You would sleep on it, and, yes, you should still talk about what happened the next morning. You should still talk about the issue at hand, but you are much more likely to say it is not as major as I thought it was the night before, and you are able now to be rational and pragmatic and problem-solve. I always tell people either go to sleep or take a break and cool down. For seconds or minutes, take a break and then come back and say, ?OK, let's talk about this again.? or make a date to talk about it the next day.

Source: http://www.shortstoriesforchildren.net/patricia-sheridans-breakfast-with-terri-orbuch

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LYNYRD SKYNYRD'S GARY ROSSINGTON TO BE HONORED AT ...

Lynyrd Skynyrd founding member Gary Rossington will join a distinguished roster of Georgia performing artists and music industry leaders in accepting awards on-stage at the 34th Annual Georgia Music Hall of Fame Awards Concert and Show, scheduled for Sunday, October 14 at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre. Rossington will be honored in the Songwriter Category having written well over 120 songs throughout his career including classic iconic songs like ?Sweet Home Alabama,? ?Simple Man,? and ?What?s Your Name.? Lynyrd Skynyrd release their new album, Last of a Dyin? Breed, on August 21, 2012.

Atlanta?s celebrated television icon Monica Pearson will be Mistress of Ceremonies of the event.? A Special Performance by American Idol stars and recording artists Snellville, GA-raised Diana DeGarmo and her fianc?e Ace Young, who met while appearing in the Broadway revival of ?Hair,? will be another highlight of the evening.? Many of the inductees will also perform during the Concert.

At the Concert and Show, to be televised live by GPB (Georgia Public Broadcasting), artists representing extraordinary talent in classical, contemporary, country and Southern Rock music will be saluted and will perform on-stage during the evening.? According to Dr. Bobbie Bailey, President of Friends of Georgia Music Festival, Inc., ?Since the first presentation in 1979, at which the legendary Ray Charles was an inductee, the Georgia Music Hall of Fame Awards Show and Concert has emerged as the premier forum for recognizing the scope of the performing virtuosity of Georgia-born-or-based music professionals.?? Dr. Bailey thanked Jack Sawyer of Wilmington Trust, Joel Katz of Greenberg-Traurig, Delta Air Lines and Michael Taormina of the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre for ?their generous and loyal sponsorship support.?

The 2012 inductees include, in addition to Robert Spano, recipient of the Chairman?s Award, musical and artist living legends as well as three giants of the Georgia entertainment arena being recognized posthumously:

?????? Performer ? Sugarland, Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush:? From the Platinum-selling #1 hit ?Stay,? 22 million worldwide sales of albums and singles and five Country Music ?Vocal Duo of the Year? Awards to Grammy and Academy of Country Music accolades, the duet partners combine vocal, songwriting, production and multi-instrumentalist greatness.

?????? Group ? 38 Special: ?Bringing a strong Southern Rock influence to American music, 38 Special?s breakthrough hit ?Hold On Loosely? has been followed by #1 Billboard albums and hits including ?Back Where You Belong? and ?Second Chance.?

?????? Non-Performer ? Alex Hodges:? ?A native Georgian, Alex Hodges is CEO of Nederlander Concerts and started his career as an agent at Walden Artists where he introduced Georgia?s Otis Redding and other R&B legends to the world.? As principal at Paragon Agency and later Empire Agency, he guided the illustrious careers of stars including Stevie Ray Vaughan, Gregg Allman and groups such as Lynyrd Skynyrd. The Police, The Allmann Brothers Band, Atlanta Rhythm Section, The Outlaws, Sea Level, The Marshall Tucker Band and The Charlie Daniels Band, among others.

?????? Songwriter ? Gary Rossington:? A founding member of the legendary band Lynyrd Skynyrd, Gary Rossington has contributed to the group?s 30 million+ worldwide album sales, three 2x Platinum records and a position among the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time by Rolling Stone magazine.? He has created songs that cement him as a cultural icon, including ?Sweet Home Alabama,? ?Simple Man? and ?What?s Your Name? among many others.

?????? Horizon Award ? Riley Biederer:? Riley Biederer is a singer/songwriter from Atlanta, USA, with a voice bigger than her ex-gymnast?s frame and a resume beyond her fifteen years.? Since winning Georgia state titles in the vault and the floor exercise, she has been focusing exclusively on her music.? In addition to writing prodigiously on her own, she has collaborated with a host of well-known songwriters in the pop, rock and country genres, and recorded with producer/engineer Matt Still.? (Elton John, Outkast).? She is currently writing and recording songs for her debut album.

?????? Posthumous:? Blues guitarist Jonny Jenkins, Fox Theatre?s organist and WSB personality Bob Van Camp and Atlanta?s beloved DJ Skinny Bobby Harper.

The honorees and luminaries of Atlanta?s entertainment, cultural and philanthropic scenes will walk the Red Carpet, beginning at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 14. ?For early arrivals, a cash bar will open at 4:00 p.m. ?The Awards Concert and Show will begin at 5:00 p.m. Tickets starting at $60 per person and $20 per student are available for sale from August 4th?onwards through www.cobbenergycentre.com or www.ticketmaster.com ?or call 1-800-745-3000.

About Friends of Georgia Music Festival, Inc.
Friends of Georgia Music Festival, Inc. has been keeping the arts alive in Georgia communities by recognizing and promoting artists and the music industry for the past 34 years. Friends of Georgia Music Festival, Inc. is a non-profit organization that honors the many achievements of Georgia musicians, songwriters, composers, conductors, publishers and agents. Each year, Friends of Georgia Music nominates, elects and inducts honorees into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame, celebrating individuals who have made a significant contribution to Georgia?s musical traditions.

Source: http://hhmzine.blogspot.com/2012/08/lynyrd-skynyrds-gary-rossington-to-be.html

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Severly Obese Children Show Signs For Heart Disease | Children's ...

From The Dromore Leader?..

?Two thirds of obese children show early signs of heart disease?, the Daily Telegraph has reported.

The news is based on a study that examined how common risk factors for diseases that can affect the heart and the blood vessels (cardiovascular disease or ?CVD?) are in severely obese children. There is no internationally agreed consensus on what constitutes severe obesity in children.

The researchers found that a majority of children identified had risk factors for CVD that you would normally only expect to see in older adults, such as:

? over half (56%) had high blood pressure
? around one in seven had high blood glucose levels

Worryingly, researchers found that when specifically looking at those younger than 12 years, 62% already had more than one CVD risk factor.

These types of risk factors do not usually cause any noticeable symptoms in children but they significantly increase the chance of a child developing a serious disease, such as coronary heart disease in later life.

To read the full story?..Click here

This entry was posted in Health / Fitness Articles and tagged Childhood Obesity, Len Saunders by Len Saunders. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://www.lensaunders.com/wp/?p=2706

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

subjoin tokyoite: Peter Gilberts book benefits Vermont Humanities ...

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? Arts & Entertainment, Lifestyle, Our Town ? Peter Gilbert?s book benefits Vermont Humanities Council

On Tuesday evening at the Vermont History Museum in Montpelier, Wind Ridge Publishing (WRP) and the Vermont Humanities Council celebrated the publication of Peter Gilbert?s book ?I was Thinking?Travels in the World of Ideas.? Gilbert is executive director of the Vermont Humanities Council as well as a regular commentator on Vermont Public Radio. One hundred percent of the author?s earnings as well as 10 percent of WRP?s net profit from the sale of the book will benefit the Vermont Humanities Council. Pre-release copies of the book can be purchased directly online at www.windridgepublishing.com/titles or by calling Lin Stone at WRP, 985-3091. General release of the book is scheduled for early fall.

Source: http://shelburnenews.com/?p=2025

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Source: http://subjoin-tokyoite.blogspot.com/2012/07/peter-gilberts-book-benefits-vermont.html

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