CLICK HERE FOR BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND MYSPACE LAYOUTS »

Deals

Monday, November 17, 2008

Man who had ricin in Las Vegas gets federal prison

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A man who made enough ricin to kill hundreds of people — and kept it with him for a decade as he moved to various Western states — was sentenced Monday to 3 1/2 years in federal prison for possessing the deadly toxin.

Roger Bergendorff said at his sentencing in Las Vegas that he never intended to hurt anyone.

"I know it sounds crazy. I made it just to have — and that's why I kept it," he said.

Authorities have characterized the 57-year-old Bergendorff as a troubled man, but no terrorist. Their concern had been heightened in February, when the ricin was found in the unemployed graphic designer's Las Vegas motel room while he lay unconscious in a hospital bed.

Bergendorff detailed a life of personal torment and grief before he was sentenced, but said he never was motivated to use the deadly poison.

"I fear God's judgment," he said.

U.S. District Court Judge Robert C. Jones told Bergendorff that he needed to understand the severity of his crime.

"You not only proved a material threat to yourself, you proved a material threat to everyone around you when you possessed this stuff," said Jones, who also imposed a $7,500 fine, which he said was designed to force Bergendorff into a work release program.

The sentencing ended a dramatic saga that once raised fears Bergendorff had poisoned himself while plotting a biological attack on tourists or unsuspecting gamblers on the Las Vegas Strip, home to nearly 138,000 hotel rooms.

In a deal with prosecutors, he pleaded guilty Aug. 4 to possession of a biological toxin and possession of unregistered handgun silencers. Bergendorff's sentence was five months longer than recommended by prosecutors. He could have faced up to 30 years in prison and $750,000 in fines if convicted of all charges against him.

In interviews with The Associated Press, Bergendorff has admitted distilling the lethal powder from the beans of a backyard castor plant while he lived in San Diego in 1998. He said he carried it with him for a decade while living in Reno, in Utah and in Las Vegas.

Bergendorff said years of grief over dead family members, substance abuse problems and lost girlfriends led him to develop the toxin, which he considered a "harmless outlet for my anger" at the time.

"I really didn't think God had it out for me, but it felt that way," he said.

He has been steadfast that he would never have released it, accidentally or on purpose.

"Absolutely not. Zero chance. I had it triple-sealed," he said during one of a series of telephone calls to the AP from jail days after his guilty plea.

Cancer research is the only legal use for ricin, which has no antidote and can be lethal in amounts the size of the head of a pin.

Bergendorff summoned an ambulance to his motel room Feb. 14, complaining of respiratory distress. He spent almost four weeks unconscious at a Las Vegas hospital and was in critical condition for several more weeks.

A cousin, Thomas Tholen of Riverton, Utah, alerted authorities Feb. 28 after finding ricin powder in the room while he retrieved Bergendorff's belongings. The motel was evacuated and decontaminated; seven people were taken to hospitals for treatment but no serious injuries were reported.

Bergendorff has insisted that ricin did not cause the breathing problems that led to his hospitalization.

Authorities suspected Bergendorff was exposed to ricin, but said they couldn't be sure because the poison breaks down in the body within days. Bergendorff said he had been overcome by stress following a brother's death in January.

Authorities said Bergendorff had about 4 grams of crude but lethal ricin. Federal prosecutor Gregory Damm told a federal judge in April that he believed it was enough to kill more than 500 people.

Police said they also found three handguns and a rifle in the extended-stay motel room where Bergendorff lived with his dog and two cats a few blocks off the Las Vegas Strip, along with castor beans and books with instructions about how to manufacture ricin. A charge of possession of firearms without serial numbers was dropped in Bergendorff's plea deal.

Tholen, 54, was sentenced Oct. 22 to two years' probation after pleading guilty Aug. 11 to one federal charge of knowing about a crime but failing to report it. Prosecutors alleged Tholen knew Bergendorff had ricin when he lived at Tholen's house in the Salt Lake City suburbs in 2005-06.

By OSKAR GARCIA

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Pete Newell dies at 93; Hall of Fame basketball coach guided Cal to 1959 NCAA title


Newell, who retired from coaching at 44, brought Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to the Lakers in 1975 as the team's general manager.

Pete Newell, who coached UC Berkeley to the 1959 National Collegiate Athletic Assn. basketball title and was one of only three men to guide teams to National Invitation Tournament, NCAA and Olympic championships, has died. He was 93.

Newell died today, a Cal spokesman said. A cause of death was not specified, but Newell had been in poor health since lung surgery in 2005.

By winning the NIT with the University of San Francisco in 1949, guiding Cal to the NCAA title and winning the 1960 Olympic gold medal with a roster that included Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas and Jerry West, Newell became the first coach to claim all three titles.

The only others are Dean Smith and Bob Knight.

"In his time, I think he was one of the better coaches the game has ever seen," former UCLA coach John Wooden, a close rival of Newell early in his career, said in 2005.

"When I think of the outstanding teachers of the game, he ranked up there with the very best," Wooden said.

Knight, a generation younger than Newell, considered him a mentor.

"From a personal standpoint, no one had a greater influence on what I do or try to teach than Pete Newell has had," Knight said.

"The influence he had in basketball has been something that carried on for over 60 years, beginning when he was coaching at the University of San Francisco."

Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1979, Newell was elected not as a coach but as a "contributor," because his brief but stellar career was a year short of the 15-year requirement for coaches.

He retired from coaching in 1960 at only 44 -- in part because of the self-induced stress that contributed to his chain-smoking, chugging coffee and going without food before games, and in part, he later suggested, because of his discomfort with the adulation surrounding him.

Though he left the bench early, by the end of his life, Newell's impact on the game had extended almost five decades after his retirement as a coach.

As general manager of the Los Angeles Lakers from 1972 to 1976, Newell made the trade that brought Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to the Lakers in 1975 -- a watershed in the history of L.A. sports -- after Abdul-Jabbar let it be known he wanted to leave the smaller-market Milwaukee Bucks for either New York, where he grew up, or L.A., where he played college ball for UCLA.

Newell sent Elmore Smith, Brian Winters, Dave Meyers and Junior Bridgeman to Milwaukee to acquire Abdul-Jabbar along with Walt Wesley.

In the late 1970s, Newell began an annual clinic that came to be known as the Pete Newell Big Man Camp, a summer training ground for more than 250 NBA players over the years -- with a list of alumni that included Shaquille O'Neal, Hakeem Olajuwon, James Worthy, Scottie Pippen, Sam Perkins, Jermaine O'Neal and the Lakers' Andrew Bynum, who was 17 when 89-year-old Newell first tutored him.

Though there was never an official height requirement for the camp, guards were not invited.

"I just don't feel I could do what I want to do, which is keep the American center in business," Newell said at the 2005 camp in Las Vegas, where he counseled players even though he was less than five months removed from lung cancer surgery.

Newell considered today's players "over-coached but under-taught," meaning coaches focus too much on strategy without teaching players fundamental skills. In his camp, Newell emphasized footwork, spacing and a versatile array of individual offensive moves for post players in his camp.

"To me, the center position is the most demanding and important in basketball," he said. "I think Bill Russell proved that with the amount of championships he won in the NCAA and NBA. Today, Shaq [Phoenix Suns center Shaquille O'Neal] is an example of how important the center can be."

Though his legacy in the NBA is tied to the big men whose skills he honed as a college coach, Newell made the most out of the undersized and the less-talented, and he did it with defense, discipline and conditioning.

At a 2005 reunion of players from his teams at Cal and Michigan State, where Newell coached from 1950 to 1954, men nearly 50 years removed from their college days let out a collective groan at the mention of the "Hands Up" drill -- an exhausting knees-bent, hands-up defensive shuffle that Newell required his players keep up for as many as 20 minutes at a time.

"Apart from intelligence, he looked for toughness," said Stan Morrison, a member of the 1959 Cal team who went on to coach at Pacific, USC and San Jose State and is now athletic director at UC Riverside.

One of the players most emblematic of the rugged work ethic Newell prized was the star of Cal's championship team, Darrall Imhoff, a onetime walk-on who went on to become a 12-year NBA center despite a single-digit career scoring average.

Making it hard for the other team to score was the cornerstone of Newell's coaching philosophy.

Cal won the 1959 NCAA title by defeating two of the great offensive stars in basketball history in consecutive games: future Hall of Fame players Robertson of Cincinnati and West of West Virginia.

"Defense was his game," Morrison said. "Of all the innovations, the one that stands out was what was called 'sloughing defense.' It was a helping defense, and back then everybody used to guard their man like they owed him money."

Robertson led the nation in scoring in 1959, averaging almost 33 points, but against Cal in the NCAA semifinals, he made only five of 16 shots and was held to 19 points. The next year, the teams met in the semifinals again, and Robertson -- a three-time college player of the year -- made only four of 16 shots and finished with 18 points.

The Cal defense in '59 so impressed Fred Taylor, the Ohio State coach, that he sought out Newell at a coaching clinic and spent hours with him, learning the nuances of the system.

The next season, Cal met Ohio State in the tile game and lost by 20 points, though it might not have been only the defense: Ohio State had future Hall of Fame players Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek and a bench player named Bobby Knight, a future Hall of Fame coach.

Later, beginning when Knight was a young coach at Army, he and Newell became close friends -- perhaps not kindred in personal style, but in their love of the intricacies of the game.

"I think Pete probably understands the game better than anybody, ever," Knight told author Bruce Jenkins in the 1999 biography, "A Good Man: The Pete Newell Story."

"In all of sport, I think Pete is the least-known outstanding figure there is," Knight said. "He was at his best at a time when media coverage was nothing like it is now. Just imagine if he won the NCAA title today, went back to the title game the following year, then coached the Olympic team. He'd be at the forefront of everything. And he's so unusual, he has no animosities, no regrets whatsoever about leaving coaching when he did. You never hear, 'Boy, I wish I could have. . . . ' He is more at peace with himself and what he's done than any person I've known in my life."

Born Aug. 31, 1915, in Vancouver, Canada, Newell grew up in Los Angeles.

His mother, Alice, made her son into a reluctant child actor for a time, and he appeared in several "Our Gang" movies. But sports soon consumed Newell's interests.

"He was my hero as an athlete at that time," said Duke Llewellyn, a junior high classmate who went on to become chairman of the Los Angeles Athletic Club's John R. Wooden Award. "He was a good-looking guy, tall, with black hair, a nice guy to be around. If he told me to go out to left field, I'd trip over third base getting out there."

After graduating from St. Agnes High School at the corner of Adams and Vermont, Newell played basketball at Loyola University, now known as Loyola Marymount, and began moonlighting before he graduated, coaching football, basketball, track and softball at a local prep school.

It was a coaching career that began early, and in the eyes of some, ended far too soon.

Morrison, his former player, believes Newell was "embarrassed out of coaching" by the adulation that came with Cal's success.

"People attribute it to coffee and cigarettes, but I attribute it to that," Morrison said. "He was such a humble guy and it was just too much. Everyone would be on their feet when he came out, and we'd put the ball down and applaud. Even the visiting team would do it sometimes."

Newell acknowledged his discomfort in Jenkins' 1999 biography.

"It goes way back to my early days as a kid, when I hated everything that came with being an actor," he said. "Obviously, my health was the major thing. But toward the end there, the whole experience was kind of chokin' me."

Some people find it hard to resist what Morrison called the "woulda-shoulda-couldas" about what Newell might have accomplished if he had coached more than 14 years. A few of Newell's ex-players and colleagues still bristle over perceived slights in the rivalry with Wooden, who had not yet won an NCAA title when Newell won his first but finished with a record 10.

"Each of us had a pretty good streak against each other as far as victories," said Wooden, who won the first seven games his teams played against Newell's. Newell won the last eight.

"We were competitors, but we were always friends," Wooden said, adding that he admired the discipline and fundamentals of Newell's teams, particularly their defense.

"I learned from him," Wooden said.

Newell, whose wife, Florence, died in 1984, is survived by their sons, Pete Jr., a former high school basketball coach who guided Santa Cruz to the 2005 California Division III state championship; Tom, a former assistant coach and scout in the NBA and WNBA; Roger and Greg, as well as grandchildren.

By Robyn Norwood of the latimes.com

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Christopher Lloyd not to rebuild his $11 million home


A number of homes have been destroyed in the wild wire in the northwest of Los Angeles, and one of the homes belonged to Christopher Lloyd. He has said that he has a “different awareness” after he returned to his burnt out home.

Lloyd, most famous for playing Doc Brown in Back to the Future has said that he will not rebuild his $11 million home. He told ABC’s “Good Morning America “You watch TV, you see these kinds of incidents happening here and there, but you look with a kind of detachment because it’s happening … elsewhere,” he said, walking through the rubble. “But suddenly to be in the midst of it, it’s a very different awareness.”

Christopher Lloyd did add that he has been putting off sorting his memorabilia and then storing them, he said “Kind of don’t have to worry about that now.”

Stumble Upon Toolbar

"The Bachelor's" Mary Delgado Goes To Jail


“The Bachelor” season six winner (?), Mary Delgado, has been arrested for being a drunk, disorderly, awesome mess. Delgado was spending a quiet evening at Lorina’s Cantina in Del Rio, Texas, possibly discussing string theory or somesuch, when bar owners decided to throw her out. Delgado refused to leave, saying it was her “constitutional right” to stay as long as she wanted.

Cops were called and took a disgruntled Miss Delgado into their squad car, whereupon she proceeded to kick out their car radio. This is what transpires, pigs, when you choose to mess with someone constitutional right to cry into various empty glasses that once held frozen mango margarita.

Delgado was eventually released from Val Verde County Correctional Facility when her fiance, her fiance, Byron “The Bachelor” Velvick, bailed her out. Delgado was formerly charged with with having punched him in the face sometime last year.

Jealous?

Let’s try to get over our envy and come up with some way to keep Mary in the news so that she won’t have to stoop to being arrested outside of cantinas in Del Rio, Texas. We think she could write a memoir, perhaps:

From De Bachelor to Del Rio: The Mary Delgado Story

couple_11.17.jpg

Stumble Upon Toolbar

NYC Hunter Accidentally Shoots, Kills Toddler

SWAN LAKE, N.Y. (AP) ― An upstate toddler is dead and a New York City man is charged with manslaughter after a hunting accident in the Hudson Valley.

The Times Herald-Record of Middletown reports that Edward Taibi of Queens was hunting Sunday afternoon in rural Sullivan County when he shot a deer and then fired again about 400 feet away from a mobile home.

A 16-month-old girl in the home was hit in the upper body. She was flown to Westchester Medical Center, where she died. The child's name was not released.

State police have charged 45-year-old Taibi with second-degree manslaughter. Police are still investigating.

A telephone listing for Taibi was not found and it could not be immediately determined if he has a lawyer.

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Somali pirates hijack Saudi Arabian-owned oil tanker

NAIROBI, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- Somali pirates have hijacked a Saudi Arabian-owned oil tanker, the largest vessel ever seized, loaded with crude and carrying 25 crew members off the Kenyan coast, a regional maritime official said on Monday.

Andrew Mwangura, the East African Coordinator of the Seafarers Assistance Program, said the oil tanker is the largest ship pirates have hijacked along the east Africa coast.

"It seems the vessel was hijacked on Saturday because the ship is approaching anchorage off the port of Eyl in Somalia. For it to reach there, it must have taken three to four days," Mwangura told Xinhua by telephone.

Reports from the U.S. Navy said the tanker, Sirius Star, operated by Vela International, was hijacked after a group of pirates managed to scale the 10-meter high side of the ship.

Lieutenant Nate Christensen, a spokesman for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet said the hijacking was shocking because it highlighted the vulnerability of even very large ships and pointed to widening ambitions and capabilities among ransom-hungry pirates who have carried out a surge of attacks this year off Somalia.

The U.S. Navy said the Saturday's hijacking of the oil tanker occurred in the Indian Ocean far south of the zone patrolled by international warships in the busy Gulf of Aden shipping channel, which leads to and from the Suez Canal.

Sirius Star, designed to carry more than two million barrels of crude, "is three times the size of a U.S. aircraft carrier and shows how they are successfully expanding their operations," Christensen said, noting that previous attacks have occurred within 200 nautical miles of land.

"We have heard reports that the ship has been freed and we are checking into it, we have no information to confirm."

Christensen said the bandits were taking it to an anchorage off the Somali port of Eyl. The port on Somalia's northeastern coast has become a pirate haven and a number of ships are already being held there as pirates try to force ransoms.

The ship was sailing under a Liberian flag and its 25-member crew includes citizens of Croatia, Britain, the Philippines, Poland and Saudi Arabia. A British Foreign Office spokesman said there were at least two British nationals aboard the vessel.

The waters off Somalia's coast are considered to be some of the world's most dangerous -- pirates have hijacked more than 30 ships this year and attacked many more.

Most attacks have been in the Gulf of Aden between Yemen and north Somalia, a major route leading to the Suez Canal linking Europe and Asia.

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Mark Cuban Charged with Insider Trading

WASHINGTON -- Federal regulators have charged Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban with insider trading for allegedly using confidential information on a stock sale to avoid more than $750,000 in losses.

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil lawsuit against Cuban on Monday in federal court in Dallas. The agency says that in June 2004, Cuban was invited to get in on the coming stock offering by Mamma.com Inc. after he agreed to keep the information private.

The SEC says Cuban knew the shares would be sold below the current market price, and a few hours after receiving the information, told his broker to sell all shares in the search engine company.

"As we allege in the complaint, Mamma.com entrusted Mr. Cuban with nonpublic information after he promised to keep the information confidential. Less than four hours later, Mr. Cuban betrayed that trust by placing an order to sell all of his shares," Scott W. Friestad, deputy director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement, said in a statement. "It is fundamentally unfair for someone to use access to nonpublic information to improperly gain an edge on the market."

According to the SEC, the complaint seeks to permanently enjoin Cuban from future violations of the federal securities laws, disgorgement (with prejudgment interest), and a financial penalty.

Mamma.com, a Canadian search engine, merged with Copernic Technologies in December 2005. Copernic also offers search software and online advertising services. Mamma.com now trades under Copernic's ticker, CNIC.

To read the full complaint, click here.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report

Stumble Upon Toolbar

60 Minutes Interview with Obama video - Here’s whole, full, complete, entire 60 Minutes inteview with Obama to watch online…

I still haven’t watch the whole, complete, full, entire 60 Minutes interview with Obama video posted below — I watched part of Obama’s 60 Minutes interview that my husband DVR’d last night, but since the stupid football game ran late, it interrupted the TiVo schedule thingee.

Anyway, thank the Lord 60 Minutes had the smarts to put their entire interview with Barack and Michelle Obama online for us to watch.

Watching the 60 Minutes interview with Obama, I couldn’t help but ponder over his new gray hairs, and how much he reminds me of my cousin Kevin for some reason — and what a good thought that was: That a president in the White House (soon and very soon!) would remind me of my own cousin.

Watch the 60 Minutes interview with Obama video online Here

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Copy of famed Lincoln letter turns up in Dallas

DALLAS (AP) — A Texas museum hopes a document found in its archives turns out to be an authentic government copy of Abraham Lincoln's eloquent letter consoling a mother thought to have lost five sons in the Civil War.

The famed Bixby Letter, which the Dallas Historical Society is getting appraised as it prays for a potential windfall, has a fascinating history.

The original has never been found. Historians debate whether Lincoln wrote it. Its recipient, Lydia Bixby, was no fan of the president. And not all her sons died in the war.

The letter, written with "the best of intentions" 144 years ago next week, is "considered one of the finest pieces of American presidential prose," said Alan Olson, curator for the Dallas group. "It's still a great piece of writing, regardless of the truth in the back story."

Historians say Lincoln wrote the letter at the request of a Massachusetts official, who passed along news of a Boston woman grieving the loss of her five sons. The letter is addressed to "Mrs. Bixby, Boston, Mass." and begins with an acknowledgment that nothing written could possibly make a grief-stricken mother feel better about such a horrific loss.

"I feel how weak and fruitless must be any word of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming," Lincoln wrote.

After thanking Bixby on behalf of a grateful nation, Lincoln wrote that he would pray that God relieve her anguish and leave her with only the "cherished memory of the loved" along with "the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom."

The letter, as was the president's custom in his personal correspondence, is signed "A Lincoln."

"It is so beautifully written," said James Cornelius, curator of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill. "It is an extraordinarily sensitive expression of condolence."

There was renewed interest in the letter after it was read in the 1998 film "Saving Private Ryan." It also sparked a new round of debate centering on Lincoln's authorship and the fate of Bixby's sons.

Evidence indicates two of Bixby's sons died, a third was a deserter and a fourth ended up in a prisoner-of-war camp, Cornelius said. A fifth is believed to have received a discharge, but his fate is unknown.

Historians have also argued that John Hay, one of Lincoln's secretaries, wrote the letter. Hay was an accomplished writer who wrote a biography of Lincoln and later became ambassador to the United Kingdom.

"Lincoln probably wrote it," Cornelius said. "Hay did on some occasions write letters in Lincoln's name and sign them — or have Lincoln sign them — but probably not something like this that purports to be so personal and individual and heartfelt."

The letter received widespread attention days after it was written. Bixby either sent it to the Boston Evening Transcript or a postal worker intercepted it and tipped off the newspaper, which reprinted the letter, Cornelius said.

The touching note came about two months after Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman had broken through Atlanta on his march to the coast and about two weeks after Lincoln won re-election. Union spirits were high, Cornelius said.

"The letter was so popular that it was published in newspapers and people copied and sent it to relatives," Olson said. "That letter and the words in it affected the nation. It tugged at people's hearts at the time of a really bloody period in America."

Olson hopes he has an official government copy of the Bixby Letter and not something one relative sent to another. In an era before photocopiers or carbon paper, secretaries hand-copied documents to be retained for their files, he said.

The paper and ink appear authentic to the Civil War era, he said. The historical society has asked an expert at Christie's auction house in New York for an opinion.

Stacy McDermott, an assistant editor at The Papers of Abraham Lincoln, estimated that an official government copy of the Bixby Letter would fetch millions of dollars.

But Cornelius doubts the letter is authentic. He said the Lincoln White House would have been unlikely to make a copy of such a personal letter and points out that a pair of rival New York companies sold copies of the letter as keepsakes beginning in the 1890s.

Olson said he stumbled across the letter over the summer in the historical society archives, which contain about 3 million items. He said he does not know how or why the letter ended up in the archives.

The discovery, Olson said, will provide a teachable moment even if it doesn't prove to be a bankable one.

"If it's not worth a lot of money — too bad," Olson said. "It's still a fascinating story and it's still a great display piece."


By JEFF CARLTON

Stumble Upon Toolbar

A Citi of Layoffs: 52,000 More to Lose Jobs

The other shoe dropped at Citigroup, and it was a big one. The banking giant said it is cutting another 52,000 jobs, on top of the roughly 23,000 in reductions made earlier this year.

In a town hall meeting Monday with employees, however, Citi said that its underlying business remains strong and that revenues have been stable.

It noted in a slide presentation on Citi's website that expenses are expected to be down 20 percent from peak levels. The company has a very strong capital position and is currently in a strong competitive position to seize future opportunities, according to documents on the website.

According to CNBC, the new round of job cuts is expected to come from layoffs, the sale of units, and attrition. Investment banking, which has all but dried up, is expected to take an especially big hit, the cable business channel said.

According to the Associated Press, Chairman Sir Win Bischoff said on Monday at a Dubai conference, "What all of us have done, and perhaps injudiciously, we've added a lot of people over ... this very benign period."

Citi has lost more than $20 million in the past four quarters thanks to the blow-up of the global real estate and financial markets.

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Burlington, VT is healthiest city & Huntington, WV is unhealthiest city in America

The Centers for Disease Control has completed a survey of the United States and found that Burlington, Vermont (pop. 39,000) is the healthiest city in the United States. The city is among the best in exercise and among the lowest in obesity, diabetes, and other measures of ill health; and 92% of residents report being in good or great health.

At the other end of the health spectrum is Huntington, West Virginia (pop. 49,000). Many of their health challenges there are related to obesity.

Huntington is essentially tied with a few other metropolitan areas for proportion of people who don’t exercise (31 percent), have heart disease (22 percent) and diabetes (13 percent). The smoking rate is pretty high, too, although not the worst.

However, the Huntington area is a clear-cut leader in dental problems, with nearly half the people age 65 and older saying they have lost all their natural teeth. And no other city comes close to Huntington’s adult obesity rate, according to the report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, based on data from 2006.

The dental statistic jumps out at me: 48.1% of people over 65 in Huntington have none of their original teeth left.

Some of the differences between the healthiest and unhealthiest cities are interesting:

  • Burlington is younger, with an average age of 37, compared to 40 in Huntington, according to the Census Bureau.
  • Burlington is better off financially, with 8 percent living at the federal poverty level, compared to 19 percent in Huntington.
  • It’s much more educated, with nearly 40 percent of area residents having at least a college bachelor’s degree. Only 15 percent in the Huntington area do.

Poverty is a significant factor in Huntington’s high obesity rate and other health problems; people there don’t have much leisure time to exercise and often can’t afford to eat healthy foods. The news story refers to “the KFC $10 Challenge” which the the fried-chicken chain is advertising. They challenge a family to go to the grocery store and put together a dinner for $10 or less that was comparable to KFC’s seven-piece, $9.99 value meal. “This is what we’re up against,” said Keri Kennedy, manager of the West Virginia health department’s Office of Healthy Lifestyles. She notes that it’s an extremely persuasive ad for a low-income family that is accustomed to fried foods. “I don’t know what you do to counter that.”

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Eri Yoshida to Become the First Female Pro Baseball Player in Japan


A Japanese schoolgirl is making headlines across the world today as the first woman to play pro baseball in Japan. Not only that, but she’s only 16 and coming straight out of high school. Eri Yoshida was drafted by the Kobe 9 Cruise, a pro team in an independent league in Japan.


"I always dreamed of becoming a professional," Yoshida, who is 5-feet (152-centimeters) tall and weighs 114 pounds (52 kilograms), told a news conference Monday. "I have only just been picked by the team and haven't achieved anything yet."


Yoshida’s special pitch that got her noticed is a side-arm knuckleball and her goal is to follow the path of fellow knuckleballer Tim Wakefield of the Boston Red Sox.


Wait, can this happen like, anywhere, specifically in America? Like, if a girl just happens to be good enough in a particular sport, can she join the men’s league? I mean they’ve done that in NASCAR and F1 racing, but those aren’t really sports.


It’s obviously not going to happen in say, pro football, or basketball, or hockey. But maybe in say, baseball or soccer? What do you think about inter-sex league integration? Maybe girls’ points count as double?

Stumble Upon Toolbar

Moderate San Diego Earthquake Strikes in California

San Diego, Calif. - An earthquake with the magnitude of 4.1 has struck just north of the Palomar Observatory in northern San Diego County.

The earthquake, moderate in size and strength, didn't do any significant harm to any structures when it struck this morning 10 miles north of the Palomar Observatory.

The Associated Press reports: The observatory operated by the California Institute of Technology

in Pasadena was closed when the quake struck. Caltech seismologist Anthony Guarino says the quake was felt from San Diego to Palm Desert.

Experts say San Diego is among the counties that will be affected by predicted future earthquakes.


Stumble Upon Toolbar

ADVERTISMENTS

Yahoo! Personals Sign up and get $25 Bonus Pay Per Click Ad credits Visit PowerbookMedic.com Today!