30 November 2010

brits believe...

Science should find aliens, halt cancer: survey...


LONDON (Reuters) - Nearly half of Britons believe in aliens, and almost 80 percent say cancer is the disease which most needs a vaccine, a poll by one of the world's oldest scientific institutions shows today.

Britain's Royal Society finds 66 percent of respondents to a survey to mark its 350th anniversary say disease control and eradication should be a top priority for science.

Around 53 percent say they would like science to enable them to extend their lifespan.

Royal Society President, Martin Rees, said the lives of modern humans are hugely different from those of our ancestors because of the scientific advances made since the society was founded in 1660, when science was in its infancy.

"Science is an unending quest for understanding and over the coming 350 years our appetite for discovery could see us develop a cure for cancer, a solution to climate change, and even discover extra-terrestrial life," he said in a statement.

In terms of developing new vaccinations - after cancer, preventing HIV/AIDS was seen as important for 60 percent of the 2,000 people surveyed and with malaria 37 percent.

"There can be no better way to celebrate the Royal Society's 350th anniversary than to look to the future of science, built on the foundations of today's cutting-edge research," Rees said.

Nearly half of people in Britain (44 percent) believe in the existence of aliens, according to the poll.

Over a third think scientists should be actively searching for, and attempting to make contact with, aliens, a figure that rises to 46 percent for male respondents.

However, fewer than one in 10 people believe space exploration should be a top priority for the scientific community.

After health issues, climate change was the next highest priority for the public with a third of those questioned considering it important.

This figure rises to 44 percent among 18 to 24-year-olds, suggesting younger generations are more in tune with the threat of global warming.

As the curtain falls on the 350th anniversary year, the Royal Society is publishing, "Science sees further", a new report examining the most pressing issues facing the world today and asks what the future of science will hold.

Launched today, it includes chapters on whether we are alone in the universe, how we can manage the increasing demands on our planet's resources, and whether science can save the lives of millions with new vaccines.

(Reporting by Paul Casciato; Editing by Steve Addison)

granny kills! GRRRRRRRRRRRR

Grandmother charged after allegedly throwing toddler to her death off mall walkway...


MCLEAN, Va. - A toddler was walking out of a shopping mall with relatives when her grandmother suddenly flung her over a railing, sending the girl on a fatal plunge to the pavement, several stories below, police today.

Carmela Dela Rosa, 50, of Fairfax was arrested and charged with murder, said prosecutor, Ian Rodway.

Authorities said interviews with witnesses, and Dela Rosa, led them to the conclusion the girl's fall Monday night was no accident, but they couldn't yet explain why the grandmother threw her.

The 2½-year-old child, Angelyn Ogdoc, died in a hospital several hours later.

She fell from a walkway linking the mall's third floor to the parking garage's sixth floor, at Tysons Corner Center in Fairfax, just south of Washington, D.C.

Fairfax County police spokeswoman, Tawny Wright, said Dela Rosa was leaving the mall with the toddler, and two other adult relatives, when she abruptly picked the girl up and threw her over the railing.

Dela Rosa was being held without bond, and a preliminary hearing in the case was set for 04 Jan., Rodway said.

Deputy Public Defender, Dawn Butorac, who is representing Dela Rosa, declined to comment on the case.

No one answered at Dela Rosa's home in Fairfax this morning, but neighbor Russell Jackson, 51, described them as "a happy family", and said Dela Rosa lived with her husband and a son, and often cared for her granddaughter.

"She was a sweet, happy baby," said Jackson, who lives in the rowhouse next door.

Dela Rosa would sometimes leave the blinds in the front window open when she was caring for the girl during the day.

"You could see them in the window waving at you," he said, adding she would encourage the toddler to throw kisses to her neighbors.

Dela Rosa's daughter and granddaughter were frequently at the home, and the group were often seen going on outings as a family, as they did Monday.

No one came to the door at the two-story home where the girl lived.

___

Associated Press Writer Jessica Gresko in Washington contributed to this report.

no appeal?

Apple appeal: GM fruit doesn't turn brown...

Brown apple (Canadian Press)


29 Nov '10

By Tamsyn Burgmann, The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Growing an apple that doesn't turn brown is no pie-in-the-sky feat, but the British Columbia company that's got the technology on the ground still needs health regulators to declare its product isn't forbidden fruit.

Okanagan Specialty Fruits, a tiny biotech firm based in Summerland, B.C., has asked regulators in Canada and the U.S. to put their stamp of approval on its genetically modified crop.

If that goal comes to fruition, the fleshy insides of an age-old symbol of health and nutrition would stay a smooth, gleaming white, long after being sliced, or days after being dropped.

"The apples look exactly like what you'd expect — a Golden or Granny or Fuji — and it tastes like a normal apple," said company president Neal Carter, a fruitgrower and bioresource engineer.

"Their composition is, if anything, better or more nutritious, because, as you'd expect, browning is a bad thing in an apple."

The company has already submitted a whopping report to the U.S. Drug Administration, crunching the science at its concoction's core.

That includes data from third party labs, which, Carter said, found anti-oxidants and vitamin-C are preserved with the apple's color when a protein driving the browning reaction is turned off.

Discussions are also ongoing with Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which Carter believes will follow the American lead, but he won't present with facts until sometime early next year.

Yet the apple of Carter's eye is considered poison fruit, of a toggled tree, to critics of genetically modified foods.

"If this apple doesn't decompose, it can remain longer on the shelf," said Eric Darier, Greenpeace's Quebec director and anti-GMO campaign co-ordinator, who warns it could provide a false sense of health security.

"As consumers, we're going to be deceived by perfect fruits in the stores."

Others object to altered apples because of possible repercussions of cross-pollination with conventional trees, gaps in knowledge about GMO's long-term environmental and human health effects and potential economic ramifications of raising seed prices so high developing world farmers can't afford their livelihood.

"A botox apple is not what people are looking for," said Andrew Kimbrell, executive director of the Center for Food Safety, a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., who explained genes that define those traits are one small part of a complex system.

"Scientists have been saying they're only turning one thing off, but that switch is connected to another switch and another switch.

"You just can't do one thing to nature.

"It's nice to think so, but it just doesn't work that way."

It's not mandatory to label genetically modified foods in Canada, and organizations, including Greenpeace, would like the government to change the rules so consumers know whether they're buying such products.

Carter isn't concerned his fruit will take a bruising from anti-GMO academics or activists.

He's branded the product "Arctic" apples, to reflect the pristine and natural quality of the Far North.

"It'll be identified at retail by the 'Arctic' name, and if people don't want that for their feelings associated with GM crops, they'll know that, and don't have to buy it," he said.

"Other people think that's a great trait, and they find the science to be acceptable.

"We've done, I think, a very credible job of applying the science in a very safe and innocuous manner."

Many companies already rinse their fruit in calcium and ascorbic acid to maintain freshness.

The company is targeting niche markets, including the food service and fresh-cut industry, where slices might be tossed on a salad or in a pre-made lunchpack.

Carter said the product has been in the works for more than a decade, using technology licensed from Australian researchers who pioneered it in potatoes.

His company would eventually license nurseries to propagate the trees, he said.

If all goes according to plan, the genetically modified apples will land on teachers' desks by 2015.

spud diet...

Washington state potato booster in spuds-only protest...


SEATTLE (Reuters) - The head of the Washington State Potato Commission ended a self-imposed diet of potatoes-only he said allowed him to shed more than 20 pounds in two months.

Chris Voigt, 45, began his spuds-only regimen to protest a U.S. Department of Agriculture rule barring low-income recipients of food vouchers under the federal Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program from using their benefits to purchase white potatoes.

While Voigt is not recommending his diet to others as a "healthy sustainable" weight-loss plan, it did help him lower his blood sugar, cut his total cholesterol by over a third, and reduce his weight from 197 to 176 pounds, he said.

Voigt, the executive director of the state-funded Washington State Potato Commission, stands 6-feet 1-inch.

"The whole purpose of this diet was to get white potatoes in WIC," said Voigt, who lives in Lake Moses, in the heart of the state's central potato-growing region, about 180 miles southeast of Seattle.

By the time his self-imposed diet ended at midnight Monday, Voigt had consumed 400 pounds of potatoes -- about 20 spuds a day, for 60 days -- and in virtually every shape and form imaginable, he said in a telephone interview.

He typically cooked up two boiling pots each night for the next day's meals and snacks: 3 pounds of mashed, 2 pounds of sliced and fried, and 2 pounds of roasted, snack-cubed red, and fingerling potatoes.

"If I found something I liked, I would eat it for two days straight," he said.

Seasonings -- rosemary, thyme, oregano, dill, mustard seed, cinnamon and nutmeg -- spiced up the otherwise bland fare.

For a special treat, Voigt prepared potato gravy, mixed up with bouillon cubes and potato starch.

"In a restaurant, you would send it back, but to me, it was heaven," he said.

On Thanksgiving Day, Voigt created a "tur-tato", a 5-pound chunk of mash, molded into the shape of a turkey, basted with olive oil, and broiled.

"When we carved away, it was tender."

USDA interim rules for the WIC program allow recipients -- usually low-income pregnant women, and mothers with young children -- to use vouchers to buy "any variety of fresh whole or cut vegetable, except white potatoes".

Orange yams and sweet potatoes are permitted.

The National Institute of Medicine in Washington, D.C., recommended the exclusion of white potatoes in April 2005 to USDA, for those using WIC vouchers, institute spokesperson, Christine Stencel, told Reuters.

"Americans consume white potatoes in ample quantities," Stencel said.

"The issue is more about improving the diversity and range of vegetables."

The USDA's Food and Nutritional Service, which administers the WIC program, plans to issue a final decision on the potato-ban rule next year.

Voigt plans to celebrate his diet's end today with a dinner feast of steak fajitas, and -- he said -- roasted potatoes, topped off with apples and milk.

"I'm looking forward to eating real ice cream," he said.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Peter Bohan)


******************************************


I really enjoyed last week’s experiment with a lentil loaf, but having been so successful forced me to ask what an appropriate accompaniment to it should be.

Mashed potatoes were the obvious choice, but was there anything I could do differently?

That’s how we roll here, at DinnerCakes.

Cauliflower

There’s nothing wrong with white potatoes.

As I’ve mentioned before, they are fat free, cholesterol free, low in sodium and high in vitamin C.

However, they also have a somewhat high glycemic index and, well, they aren’t exactly low on the calorie scale either (a fact always on my mind this time of year).

Enter the cauliflower.

This sucker is the ultimate competitor for the white potato.

It too is fat free, cholesterol free, low in sodium and has even more vitamin C than the white potato, providing you 100% of your daily vitamin C need with just 100 grams.

To top it all off, less than half the calories of the white potato.

Cauliflower "Mashed Potatoes"

Cauliflower mashed potatoes is a pretty well known substitute and is incredibly easy to make.

It’s so easy I’m almost ashamed to write about it.

With a food processor and some common kitchen ingredients, you’re good to go.

Without a doubt, I will be doing these again.

Cauliflower “Mashed Potatoes”

1 head of cauliflower

1 tablespoon butter

1/4 milk/cream/water (optional)

1 teaspoon dried thyme

2 teaspoons parsley

Cut the cauliflower into florets and steam for until tender; approximately 10 minutes.

Don’t worry about overcooking.

Once ready, transfer to a food processor, along with the butter, thyme, and parsley.

Chop until smooth.

If you like a creamier consistency, consider adding milk, cream, or even water a bit at a time, while continuing to process.

beware the players...

So, You’re Dating a Player...


26 Nov '10

By Elizabeth Bromstein

How can you tell can you tell if you’re dating a player?

Once you figure it out, does that have to mean the end of the relationship?

Or can you date a player, maybe even lasso that sucker, tag him, and claim him for your very own?

Questions, questions, questions.

Let’s see if we can answer some of them.

First off, I should clarify, I’ve known heartbreakers of both sexes and the carnage they’ve left in their wake is grim.

Players of different sexes are of vastly different varieties so here, just to narrow the field, we will focus on the male player, and what, if anything, to do with him.

Where to Start?

First off is the question of determining whether he or not he's a player.

Just what is a player, anyway?

A player, according to the good people at dictionary.com is “a person or a thing that plays”.

A player is someone who treats dating like a game.

He’s racking up chicks to shoot with his cue stick, so to speak.

He doesn’t care about you.

He just cares about a good time, and getting into as many panties as possible.

To outward appearances, at any rate, but we’ll get to that in a moment.

One for the ladies....  (iStockphoto)

First, the signs of a player are not as obvious as one might like to think.

You might not feel like he’s hiding something.

He’s probably not taking text messages from other women right in front of you.

You’ve just started dating him, so how are you supposed to know whether he’s acting “distant” or not?

Signs he might be a player include, but are not limited to:

He’s the most charming dude you’ve ever dated:

He opens doors, brings little gifts, listens when you talk, and picks up the check (the first time, anyway).

But you’re sometimes unsure whether he’s just given you a backhanded compliment.

The “neg” is a tool used by pickup artists, as described in Neil Strauss’s book, The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists.

He might say you look good for your age; or you have big feet, but your shoes look good on you.

Apparently the aim is to disarm; it works, too, on all kinds of women.

Even smart ones.

He has an astonishing number of funny and impressive stories to tell:

To the point where you start wondering whether they’re true or not, but would not feel comfortable questioning him.

Maybe he really did climb Mount Kilimanjaro, in the year before he went to med school.

Maybe his best friend really did die on the expedition.

Probably not.

When you run into women he knows, he introduces you as his “friend”:

Even if you think things have progressed beyond the “friend” point, he might introduce you with that qualifier, and you wonder if you’re being a crazy person.

Why couldn’t he just say, “This is Marianne”, instead of, “This is my friend, Marianne”.

Because he’s keeping his options open, and sending a clear message you are 'just a friend'.

That’s why.

He’s the most attentive date you’ve ever had... until you don’t hear from him:

“Players reveal themselves in their efforts,” says Evan Marc Katz, author of Why You’re Still Single: Things your friend would tell you if you promised not to get mad, and, according to his website, “America’s leading dating expert”.

“What determines whether a guy is interested is whether he calls you up, and asks to see you again.

"He can sleep with you, and tell you he loves you, but if he doesn’t call you the next day to say he can’t wait to see you again, that doesn’t matter.”

He has lot of female friends:

“America’s most quoted dating expert” (according to his website) David Wygant, disagrees with me on this one.

“A player doesn’t have female friends because nobody wants to be friends with the guy,” he says.

I beg to differ.

The sophisticated player leaves women disappointed... but not full of hate.

After delicately dumping a woman, he extends an olive branch, and adds her to his social circle of spurned women.

I have male friends who have huge circles of female friends, among whom I am the only person they have not slept with.

This is not (you’ll have to take my word for it) because I am grossly unattractive, but because I am 'one of the guys'.

Having a circle of female friends opens up his options.

So What Do You Do with Him?

You’ve determined you are, indeed, dating a player.

But you still like him.

There are probably many good reasons for this.

As I said, players are most charming.

They’re also often dynamite in the sack.

What to do?

The thing is, even if they appear to be treating dating as, well, a game, sleeping with a lot of people doesn’t automatically make him a bad person.

For a lot of these guys, for one reason or another, hooking up with chicks makes them feel valued.

They really are just looking for love, like everybody else.

But they’re picky.

Or scared.

Or stupid... or whatever.

The recently engaged Evan Katz says, “Just because a guy is not that into you doesn’t make him a player.

"Speaking from experience, I dated everyone in Los Angeles over the course of 10 years.

"The women to whom I did not commit could turn around and call me a player.

"But I’m looking for the person that makes me want to stop playing.”

There’s a point where it all just becomes kind of pathetic, particularly as men get older.

A player in his 20s is... cute.

A player in his 40s better have a great job and some money.

Sorry, but it’s true.

Players are insecure.

They probably didn’t have great relationships with their fathers, or were picked on at school.

They may have something to prove.

In a lot of these cases, you might want to walk.

Who needs someone with so much baggage they need to stick it into everything that moves?

If you’re determined to work through the inferiority complex, because you see somewhere inside your own personal player is a great man, waiting for the right woman, you can give it a go.

Wygant says, “You’ve got to play hard to get.

"You can’t be at his disposal.

"A player is only going to remain interested as long as you’re a challenge.

"You need to tease him.

"Make him know every other guy wants you.”

Sounds like a tall order for a whole relationship….

“Play his game,” Wygant goes on.

“When you have sex with a player, be great in bed, and then just shut him down, for two or three days, so he aches for you.

“A player will settle down with a woman who is really cool.

"Who is always a challenge, who is always fun sexually, mentally, and emotionally.

"You’ve got to play it cool.

"You’ve got to be that cool, fun woman.

"When he’s out with his friends, don’t text him.

"The less you question him, the less he’ll do.

"Respect his individuality.

"You gotta realize your life is your life, and his life is his life.

"Then he may realize you’re the coolest woman in the world.”

A lot of that, except maybe the shutting down after sex part, just sounds like grounds for a good relationship, in general.

Maybe it will work for you, and you and your Lothario will live happily ever after.

Or maybe you’ll decide it’s not worth the trouble.

Then, it’s time to walk away.

Katz says, “You can’t really change anybody.

"The goal of being in a relationship is finding someone you can accept.

"If you can’t accept a guy is a certain way, you probably shouldn’t be with him.

"Only a player can decide if he wants to stop playing.”

no parole...

Serial killer, Olson, denied parole...


STE-ANNE-DES-PLAINES, Que. - Clifford Olson, one of Canada's most notorious serial killers, declared he would never seek parole again, after having his request for freedom rejected today.

He appeared before the National Parole Board for the second time in four years.

The decision came as no surprise.

The last time he tried, in 2006, Olson was swiftly rejected, and, again today, the parole board concluded he still represented a threat to society.

"This is the final time," Olson said after hearing the verdict.

"Never again."

As the child-killer left the room, he said, "And I'm out."

It is highly unlikely Olson would ever have seen the outside of a jail anyway, having shown little sign of remorse, and twice having been found by the parole board to represent a threat, despite decades of incarceration.

He killed 11 young people in the early 1980s.

Olson, wearing a white t-shirt, and with a shock of untamed hair, was less combative than usual today.

He immediately told the board he didn't expect parole, but he was exercising his right to a hearing.

"I'm here because I have a right to appear," Olson said.

"I'm not asking the board for parole, because I know I'm going to be turned down."

In a half-hearted attempt to show progress, Olson said he'd been taking university-level courses in psychology... and French.

Despite his 70 years, Olson said he'd return to a construction job if he ever got out, probably in Montreal.

It remains a highly unlikely scenario.

His caseworkers said he's shown no progress.

"If he was to reoffend, it would be in a violent manner," said parole officer, Genevieve Theriault.

Olson rambled on a little, presenting an affidavit that waived rights to future hearings.

At one point, he appeared to renounce his Canadian citizenship, and requested he be sent to the U.S.

Two victims' families attended the hour-long hearing, and the board heard two victim-impact statements.

Reporters observed via close-circuit television.

In a bizarre twist, Olson chose as his advocate, Toronto Sun columnist, Peter Worthington.

Everyone has the right to have an advocate, to advise and speak on behalf of an inmate seeking parole.

Worthington said he wasn't there to represent Olson, but had known him for about 20 years, and came because the serial killer asked he be there.

"I don't see him as the danger other people see," Worthington told the board.

"If it were up to me, he would have been executed a long time ago."

The board took only a few minutes to render its decision.

Some family members said they wanted to be there in person to see him being turned down.

The families of some of his 11 victims say Olson shouldn't be allowed any more time in the spotlight.

This year he became embroiled in a clash with Ottawa, when the federal government tried to strip him of his pension.

Olson, now 70, has served 25 years of a life sentence for murdering young people in British Columbia, in the early 1980s.

According to parole rules, Olson now has the right to request an audience before the board, every two years.

The families of his victims have said in the past he seems to relish the idea of dragging them back.

During his first hearing in 2006, parole officials took only about half an hour to deny Olson parole, saying he posed a "clear and present danger" to the public.

A three-member board agreed with recommendations by correctional staff Olson would surely murder again if released.

Citing recommendations from correctional staff, board member Jacques Letendre said in 2006 the risk posed by Olson hadn't diminished in nearly three decades behind bars.

"Olson presents a high risk and a psychopathic risk," Letendre said four years ago.

"He is a sexual sadist, and a narcissist."

"The correctional team believes, if released, he will kill again."

While new federal legislation is in the works to do away with automatic parole hearings after 25 years, the legislation won't be retroactive.

That means Olson, the self-described "Beast of British Columbia", is able to get on a soapbox every two years and argue his right to be free.

Victims' families would be happy if he stuck to his word, and never surfaced again.

Sharon Rosenfeldt, whose son, Daryn Johnsrude, was Olson's third victim, compared Olson to a famous fictitious serial killer.

"Hannibal Lecter — that's what comes to my mind," Rosenfeldt said.

"Although he was fictional, Clifford Olson is not.

"He is real."

The hearing took place under tight security in Canada's only super-maximum security prison, where Olson is locked up, north of Montreal.

The Special Handling Unit is reserved for the most dangerous inmates.

Despite being kept in isolation, Olson has managed to stay in the news through a fight with Ottawa over pension checks he's receiving; a few years back, he also attempted to sell his personal effects on a website.

Olson was sentenced to life in prison in 1982, after he confessed to murdering eight girls and three boys, ranging in age from nine to 18.

He struck a deal with authorities, and was paid $100,000 to lead police to their bodies.

The money was given to his ex-wife and son.

At his 2006 hearing, Olson appeared delusional.

He refused to return to the room to hear the board refuse his release.

He also rambled during that hearing about information he had on the 9-11 attacks.

hero...

New York man jumps to save subway rider - and still gets to work...

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York grocery clerk, fearing he might be late for work, jumped onto city subway tracks to haul an injured passenger to safety, after he fainted, authorities said.

The victim was taken to a local hospital after his rescue, Sunday, by Carlos Flores, who said he leaped to save the man so he would not be late for work.

"I was thinking, 'if he gets hit I can't go to work'.

"It's Sunday.

"I can't miss out.

"It's a time-and-a-half day," Flores was quoted as saying in the New York Daily News.

A Metropolitan Transportation Authority spokeswoman said the incident, while heroic, was dangerous.

"We do not recommend people jump to the roadbed," spokeswoman, Deirdre Parker, said on Monday.

The subway's third rail pumps 600 volts of electrical current, and climbing back onto the platform from the tracks is much harder than it looks, she said.

(Reporting by Basil Katz, Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Jerry Norton)

how some killers escape...

Drunk drivers hide out in hospitals: study...


Hospital emergency departments are “safe havens” from prosecution for drunk drivers involved in fatal or personal injury crashes, because of legal, and other rights, accorded such drivers, says a study in the B.C. Medical Journal.

Co-authored by B.C. doctors and Ontario law professors, the study shows because of legal issues for police in collecting evidence such as blood-alcohol readings from injured, impaired drivers, only seven to 11 per cent of them are eventually convicted of impaired driving.

Even worse, a review of B.C. accidents from 1999 to 2003 shows nearly a third of such impaired drivers go on to face more drunk-driving charges, even after they killed or maimed others in the initial accidents.

Dr. Roy Purssell, an emergency room doctor at Vancouver General Hospital, said even though the data is somewhat dated, there’s no reason to believe things have changed.

“Followup over a 4.5 year period indicates 30.7 per cent of the injured, impaired drivers were engaged in subsequent impaired driving, notwithstanding they injured or killed someone, in more than 84 per cent of initial crashes,” says the study, led by Purssell.

“These studies suggest that our emergency departments may have become safe havens for the worst drinking drivers, those drivers who are involved in fatal or personal injury crashes,” Purssell said in an interview.

Because of legal, professional, and ethical concerns, doctors can’t release patient information to police without patient consent.

That means doctors can take a blood sample, but rarely are allowed to share that information with police.

Purssell said, generally speaking, police can only demand a blood sample if they get a warrant, because the patient is unable to provide a breath sample at the accident scene.

Under the law, the collection of such evidence must occur within three hours of the accident.

The authors recommend the federal Criminal Code be amended to authorize police to demand blood samples from any hospitalized occupant of a vehicle involved in a fatal or personal injury crash.

“The evidentiary collection process could be modeled after the systems in place in England, New Zealand, and Australia,” they say.

To enable quick collection of blood samples, the authors say they should be taken from all occupants of vehicles involved in fatal or personal injury crashes upon admission to hospital.

“The samples should be stored in a secure location, and only released if the police can independently establish grounds for their seizure.”

Purssell said he’s delved into such research because, as an ER doctor, he’s witnessed so many tragedies associated with impaired driving (which causes nearly 1,250 deaths a year in Canada and nearly 75,000 injuries).

The Canadian Medical Association Code of Ethics permits disclosure of patients’ personal health information to third parties only with their consent, or as provided for by law.

The Canadian Medical Protective Association advises: “While physicians may have a desire to collaborate with police to foster public safety and injury prevention, physicians are bound by a duty of confidentiality to their patients.

As such, physicians should not provide any patient information to the police, unless the patient has consented to this disclosure or where it is required by law.”

Section 257(2) of the Criminal Code protects doctors from criminal and civil liability for taking a blood sample after a valid demand or search warrant, but it doesn’t protect them from liability for breaching confidentiality.

If police wrongfully obtained confidential patient information, a blood sample demand made, or a warrant obtained based on this information, would be invalid.

The subsequent seizure of the blood sample could violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and be excluded at trial.

Sun Health Issues Reporter.

pfayerman@vancouversun.com

a deserved win...

Luck changes for Markham, Ont., man, one of two 6-49 jackpot winners...

TORONTO - It looks like a 59-year-old Ontario man left unable to work due to an injury will no longer have to worry about working at all.

Harold Volk of Markham is one of two winners of Saturday's Lotto 6-49 jackpot.

He, and the other winner — from a ticket sold in Quebec — will be splitting the $30-million jackpot.

The married father of two says the money comes just at the right time.

He depleted most of his life savings after suffering a permanent injury, leaving him unable to perform his job in the transportation industry.

He says he and his wife plan to pay off their debts, buy a house, and maybe spend some time traveling.

"During the past decade, it has been one step forward and two steps back, for us," said Volk.

He says when he first checked his numbers Saturday night, he thought he had five numbers.

"Then I realized I had a match for all six, and I ran upstairs to tell my wife.

"She said she hasn't seen me move that fast in years!" Volk said Monday, with a laugh.

Volk says his wife is quitting her job this week, and he will leave it up to her to plan some vacation getaways.

outrageous!

During Pat Burns' funeral: someone smashed into widow's car; hockey items stolen...


MONTREAL - A heartbreaking crime was committed at Pat Burns' funeral.

While the hockey world gathered, yesterday, to mourn the death of the great coach, someone was smashing into his widow's car.

Montreal police say someone broke into the car belonging to his wife, Line, and stole a number of the Burns family's valuable possessions.

The stolen items included 30 autographed hockey jerseys, jewelry, and the late coach's wallet.

Burns, an award-winning coach of the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins, and New Jersey Devils, died after a lengthy battle with cancer.

At his funeral yesterday, people remembered the gruff ex-cop as a tough but fair man, who cared about his players, and knew how to motivate them.

Burns' widow discovered the crime this morning.

Mrs. Burns, Getty Images

Police say they will launch a public appeal to the thieves, asking them to leave the stolen items in an agreed-upon spot where they could be recovered.

404...



I Got It!




cheap...

5 moves that make you look cheap...

Money wallet, The Canadian Press


by Tara Struyk

18 November '10



Thanks to the recent financial crisis, frugality and thrift are increasingly becoming positive attributes.

If, like many people, you find yourself looking for ways to trim your spending, you may find yourself flirting with what can be a very fine line.

You know: the one between making smart financial choices and being outright cheap.

In fact, in many cases it's a line between thrift and outright thievery.

You know you've hit it when your savings become someone else's loss - or your own.

A few common examples, below, where thrifty become downright cheap.

How far would you go?

Thrifty: Buying Items on Sale

Cheap: Only Buying Items on Sale

Seeking out sales can be a great way to help make groceries, clothes, and virtually any other items you need fit into a tight budget.

At the grocery store, you might choose the cereal on sale, rather than the one on your list.

When people cross the line to cheap is, when they refuse to buy anything not on sale.

This can often backfire, by causing you to buy things of lower overall value, or you wouldn't have considered buying otherwise.

You may find yourself spending more than you would have had you just purchased what you needed.

It can also put shoppers out of touch with the value of what they're getting for their money - and isn't that what thrift is all about?

Thrifty: Tipping According to Service

Cheap: Never Tipping at All

Common etiquette requires customers provide tips for certain services.

As a result, some of these service providers are actually paid considerably less by their employers, because they expect tips will make up the difference.

In some states, this may even be less than minimum wage.

If you get rude or indifferent service, it may be fair to leave nothing, but if you never tip, ask yourself why.

Is it really because you feel your waiter or taxi driver makes plenty of money, or is it just because you can't bear to part with it?

(For more guidelines on tipping, read When To Tip? And How Much?)

Thrifty: Putting Money Aside for Savings

Cheap: Saving Everything and Living on Nothing

Living a very Spartan lifestyle can a great way to achieve a big goal, but it's no way to live.

If you're working toward retiring early, buying a house or taking time off work to spend with family, travel or pursue other goals, digging deep to make this happen just might be worth it.

If you find yourself saving nearly every penny and scrounging to make ends meet, it may be time to ask yourself just what you're saving for.

If you don't have an answer, you've probably gone too far.

(Get some great (and reasonable) saving tips in 5 Painless Ways To Save More Money.)

Thrifty: Taking Advantage of a Good Deal

Cheap: Taking Advantage

If you find a great way to stretch a dollar, there's nothing wrong with making good use of it.

For example, if you're in a coffee shop that provides free refills, stick around and enjoy a few cups if you're in the mood.

Please, don't keep the cup and come back later (or every day thereafter) for more.

A couple of extra cups of coffee probably won't put a dent in a business's bottom line, but if more people follow your lead, it might just quash its free refills.

(Your caffeine habit may be costing more than you think. Find out just how much in The Real Cost Of Drinking Coffee.)

Thrifty: Cutting Out Internet and Cable

Cheap: Stealing It from Your Neighbors

If you start cutting costs, you'll soon learn that you can get by with a lot less.

If you want to be able to brag about your frugal living ways, you have to actually do without.

If you cut out your internet but then log on through your neighbor's wireless signal, you're about as enviable as the guy who parks a Prius in his driveway... but keeps a Hummer in the garage.

Bottom Line

If you've cut your budget so far you need to resort to taking advantage of others, consider yourself cheap.

The same is true if your sense of frugality begins to look more like austerity or self-denial.

Budgeting and saving money should be a measured approach to reach a financial goal or survive tough times, not an end in and of themselves.

While being frugal may be trendy right now, taking this trend to its extremes may be no better than falling prey to overspending.

After all, neither approach leads to living well, which is what smart financial planning is all about.

wow!



Caption this picture



can't...



demotivational posters - WHAT HAS BEEN SEEN CANNOT BE UNSEEN


grin...



funny dog pictures-Hold Still Plz




Manic Mondays... mm 49



***

Cowboy Joe...

Hey pard, you were one neat hombre right from the first when my son and I just moved into this here spread some 12 years ago, disseminating good will to one and all with your gentle humor and friendly, helpful ways, going so far as to offer up your headboard for my bed when you were given another one.

We always shared a joke or two, or simply nods and smiles in passing, with never a discouraging word from you about anyone, for that was your way, gentle soul that you were.

Then, a few days ago, some dang skunk of a varmint, lower'n a snake belly and twice as twisted, pounded on your door, looking for some 'girl'... then knifed you!

Later, he calmly sat on your couch, watching television, flicking channels with the remote... according to one who saw him there... while you lay bleeding to death!

A murder most foul, as dame Agatha Christie so aptly penned the phrase.


We may never know the reason why you were taken from us, with so many good years yet to give your sisters, children and grandchildren, but the whole community has been somber since we heard of the dastardly deed.

You will be missed, replete with your cowboy hat and its feather tucked in at a jaunty angle, your black leather vest, and for the true gentleman you were, and always will be, for as long as we recall your name and helpful hands.

The dog dirt maggot what done you in was quickly apprehended by the horsemen of the law, and were the death penalty still an option, we'd cheer at its hangin'

Rest in enduring peace, dear Joe Walker, the community, and I'm sure the whole world, is a sadder place for your cashing in your chips from such an evil happenstance.

Happy, peaceful trails to the new and glorious sunrise.

~2010 laughingwolf




Cowboy With a Poker Face Holding Cards


*****

still...




funny pictures-I tried to see things your way.    You're still an idiot.




how. . .




Get Fuzzy Nov 28, 2010...


to vet...



funny dog pictures-Let's take YOU to the vet  and see how you like it!




finally in court...



Accused Killer in Court...


Nicholas Edward White, 24, arrives at Dartmouth provincial court on Monday. He is charged with second-degree murder in last week’s killing of Joseph Walker at an apartment building where both men lived in Lower Sackville. (Tim Krochak / Staff)
Nicholas Edward White, 24, arrives at Dartmouth provincial court on Monday.

He is charged with second-degree murder in last week’s killing of Joseph Walker at an apartment building where both men lived, in Lower Sackville. (Tim Krochak/Staff)

Four elderly sisters waited patiently for almost six hours Monday for the man accused of killing their older brother to be brought into Dartmouth provincial court.

Nicholas Edward White, 24, a hulking man, who is six-foot-four and 230 pounds, remained silent during the few minutes he appeared in front of Judge Frank Hoskins on a charge of second-degree murder.

The body of Joseph Walker, 76, was discovered by RCMP officers early Friday inside the apartment building where he lived at 70 Cobequid Rd., in Lower Sackville.

White, who lived in another unit in the same building, was arrested at a nearby cemetery.

A police dog helped officers track him down.

A gash was visible Monday on the right side of White’s forehead, and his right eye was black.

He also had a nick on his right cheek and cuts and scrapes on both hands.

Defense lawyer Warren Zimmer asked the setting of dates for a preliminary inquiry be adjourned until 20 Dec.

Zimmer said he hopes to have seen the evidence against his client by then.

Police haven’t said how Walker died, but sources say he was badly cut up.

Forensic officers remained at the apartment building Monday collecting evidence. An autopsy was also being performed.

Walker’s sisters said they don’t know when the apartment will be released to the family.

They said police haven’t told them any details about the slaying.

"We don’t know anything," said Mary Fleet, of Halifax.

"We’re all devastated," said Jean Warner, who resides in Lower Sackville.

"We can’t believe it."

Fleet said she was driving in her vehicle Friday, when she heard on the radio there’d been a murder in Lower Sackville.

"I didn’t think too much about it," she said.

"Then I saw the news on TV, and knew it was Joe they were talking about."

The women said Joe came from a family of eight siblings, and had three sons, one daughter, and several grandchildren.

He was preparing to sell some of his possessions and move to Alberta, to be with his children and grandkids, they said.

"He was a walking angel, let’s put it that way," Fleet said.

Warner said her brother was a lovely man who’d "do anything for you".

Funeral arrangements will be made after his children arrive in town this week, Fleet said.

The women said they had all visited Walker’s apartment, but couldn’t recall ever seeing White.

According to court records, White is well known to police.

He has 18 convictions, including six for theft, four for assault, three for breaching probation, and one each for assault causing bodily harm, robbery, break and enter, possession of stolen property, and impaired driving.

[how the hell did he pass housing screening? GRRRRR]

White is being held at the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility in Dartmouth.

If he wants bail, he’ll have to apply for it in Nova Scotia Supreme Court.

( sbruce@herald.ca)

**************************************

Family of slain elderly man in ‘shock’...

Police have yet to release how Joseph Walker was murdered
Ryan Taplin/Metro

Nicholas Edward White, 24, is escorted into Dartmouth provincial court yesterday.


by ALY THOMPSON

METRO HALIFAX

30 November 2010

Mary Fleet was watching the local news when she learned of an elderly man’s death in Lower Sackville last weekend.

In disbelief, she tried calling her 76-year-old brother.

There was no answer.

“He didn’t call back.

"He always calls back,” Fleet told Metro yesterday.

Joseph Walker was found dead in his Lower Sackville apartment early Friday morning.

Four of his five sisters were at Dartmouth provincial court yesterday to face Nicholas Edward White, charged with second-degree murder in Joe's death.

“We’re all in shock.

"It hasn’t really hit us yet,” said Fleet, sitting beside her sisters, Beverly Crowell, Joan Mead, and Jean Warner, at the court house.

The remaining sister, Helen Ohearn, wasn’t in attendance.

“He was a brother, and look, I’m telling you he was the most wonderful person you’d ever want to meet,” said Fleet.

Fleet said her brother was a man-about-town.

She said he could often be seen walking the streets of Lower Sackville, sporting a cane and a black cowboy hat, equipped with a long feather.

“He very seldom took the bus, or he would walk one way and take the bus back.

"He was in good shape for his age,” said Warner.

When the suspect entered the courtroom yesterday, the sisters sat quietly.

“Everything is over and done with, and we can’t bring Joe back.

"There’s no sense in saying anything to him,” Fleet said before White appeared.

Walker lived alone in his apartment at 70 Cobequid Rd., for 15 years.

He had three sons, one daughter, and “too many grandchildren to count,” said Fleet.

Suspect showed little emotion in court appearance

Nicholas Edward White said nothing, and showed little emotion, as he entered a Dartmouth provincial courtroom yesterday.

After a brief appearance, the 24-year-old was remanded back to the Central Nova Correctional Facility in Burnside and will appear in court again Dec. 20 to set a date for preliminary inquiry.

White is charged with second-degree murder in the death of Joseph Walker.

White avoided eye contact with members of Walker’s family as he entered the courtroom yesterday afternoon.

He was wearing a yellow and gray rugby shirt, and black track pants.

Police were called to an apartment at 12:30 a.m. on Friday, and arrested White a few minutes later, at a nearby cemetery, with the help of the K-9 unit.


All-Clad Roasters...

allcladroaster1sm.jpg

Last year, Williams-Sonoma released a line of exclusive All-Clad flared roasters.

They are expensive, but well worth it if you do a lot of oven cooking.

I cooked a 27lb turkey in the extra large one last year, and have since been using this pan for all kinds of things.

The design makes for very even cooking, especially if you don't have a convection oven: the low flared sides give good heat exposure, so you get excellent browning on the underside of roasts, and the aluminum core provides outstanding heat distribution.

I was pleasantly surprised to find out how much of a difference these two design changes made.

Of course, it's basically a very large saute pan, so it gives the results you'd expect from All-Clad on the stove as well.

I've also used it successfully to make a huge pan of mac and cheese (mixing the roux/bechamel right in the pan on the stove), and I use it often for large batches of braised lamb shanks and short ribs.

In the latter, the low wide design encourages a lot of reduction of the braising liquid to yield a more flavorful sauce.

The extra large size is unwieldy - before buying, make sure it fits in your oven and sink.

Although the curved design also makes it very easy to clean with a brush (there are no sharp corners for gunk to get stuck in), this size barely fits in my sink.

While I love the extra large one and it's great at what it does, it is a bit of a beast to get out (but indispensable if you need the capacity).

I've spent the last year wondering how I could justify spending the money for the large version as well, and they made it easier for me by recently releasing an even smaller and cheaper version for roasting chickens.

allcladroaster2sm.jpg

This one is essentially the same pan, in a smaller form factor, which makes it much more convenient if you don't need the larger.

This has quickly become my standard everyday pan for most things.

It also comes with a suspension arm for cooking a chicken elevated.

I've experimented with the suspension arm a bit, which I initially dismissed.

At least in my oven, which is not a convection oven, breast side up is a disaster.

Not enough heat reaches the bottom, and the white meat gets overcooked while the thighs stay very undercooked.

Breast-side down, however, gives outstanding results.

Twice I've gotten evenly cooked meat (very tender and juicy breast meat, properly cooked thighs) and crispy skin, with no added oil or basting (just salt and pepper or a dry rub).

The suspension arm can be a little testy.

If it's jostled too much, the whole chicken will fall into the pan.

It's a bit of work to get it put back up, but it does actually yield good results with less work overall.

Regardless of which size is right for you, these are just great roasting pans, and I highly recommend them.

The images are pretty deceptive with respect to the size differences and it's difficult to judge from the picture how big they actually are.

It's worth a trip to the store to see which size is actually best for you.

-- Adam Fields

All-Clad Stainless Steel Flared Roaster
$280 (extra large: 18 3/4" x 14 3/4" x 3" high)
Available from Williams Sonoma

All-Clad Ultimate Chicken Roaster
$180 (14 1/2" x 11 3/4" x 2 1/2" high)
Available from Williams Sonoma


panic...




...


wolf/lion...

Wolf and Lion...

A WOLF, having stolen a lamb from a fold, was carrying him off to his lair.

A Lion met him in the path, and seizing the lamb, took it from him.

Standing at a safe distance, the Wolf exclaimed, "You have unrighteously taken that which was mine from me!"

To which the Lion jeeringly replied, "It was righteously yours, eh?

"The gift of a friend?'

~Aesop


temp...




...


mind...




Peanuts Nov 30, 2010...


ticket...



PC and Pixel Nov 30, 2010...


nuffin...



Geech Classics Nov 30, 2010...

uh-oh!

dint...




Herman Nov 30, 2010...


lissening...

tools...


30 November 2010

Putting Our Tools to Use...

Bringing Inspiration into Form

Many of us have so many life tools we have learned, sometimes we forget to use them.
Revisit your toolbox.


Every craftsperson has a toolbox full of tools, and a number of techniques to help them bring inspiration into form.

In the same way, throughout our lives, we discover our own life tools and techniques, the ways and means that helped us create our lives up to this point.

Sometimes we forget about the tools and skills we've acquired, and we wonder why we aren't moving forward.

At times like these, it might just be a matter of remembering what we already know, and rediscovering the tools we already have at our disposal.

In the process of becoming who we are, and creating our lives, we have all gone through the experience of being inspired to do something, then finding the tools we needed to do it.

If we look back, we may be able to remember we used, for example, the tool of writing, every day, in order to clarify our intentions.

We may also have used the tools of ritual, meditation, or visualization to make something happen.

In addition, we may have been fueled by a new idea about how the universe works, which is what gave us the inspiration to use these tools.

In order for ideas to be powerful, they must be imbued with the energy of our engagement with them, and in order for tools to be effective they must be put to use.

This sounds obvious, but often we fall into the habit of thinking we are engaging with ideas, and using tools, by virtue of the fact we are reading about them, or listening to other people talk about them.

In truth, using our tools is a very personal action, one we must take on behalf of ourselves.

Like artists, we are each unique, and no two of us will receive the same inspiration, nor will we bring it into form in the same two ways.

To discover the truth of our own vision, we must take action by remembering our tools and putting them to use.

For more information visit dailyom.com

This article is printed from DailyOM - Inspirational thoughts for a happy, healthy and fulfilling day.

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Bringing Inspiration into Form


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