Friday, May 31, 2013

'German curse' no more for NYC Spelling Bee champ

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., holds the championship trophy after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., holds the championship trophy after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., watches as confetti falls after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., is congratulated by his mother Bhavani, as confetti falls after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., is congratulated by his mother Bhavani, as confetti falls after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., holds the championship trophy after he won the National Spelling Bee by spelling the word "knaidel" correctly on Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

OXON HILL, Md. (AP) ? As red and yellow confetti floated into his hair, the champ just stood there and cracked his knuckles, hardly the type of celebration expected from a 13-year-old. His smiles had come earlier, when he conquered "the German curse" on his way to spelling's top prize.

New York City has its first Scripps National Spelling Bee winner in 16 years. Arvind Mahankali has never had a "knaidel," but he was able to spell the German-derived Yiddish word for a matzo ball Thursday night to earn the huge trophy and more than $30,000 in cash and prizes.

"The German curse," Arvind said, "has turned into a German blessing."

Arvind finished third the two previous years, eliminated both times on German words. He had everyone laughing two years ago when he pronounced "Jugendstil" as "You could steal" and saluted the crowd when he got it wrong. Last year he flubbed "schwannoma" and quickly proclaimed: "I know what I have to study."

"I had begun to be a little wary of German words," Arvind said Thursday night. "But this year I prepared German words and I studied them, so when I got German words this year, I wasn't worried."

When Arvind got the word "dehnstufe" earlier in the finals, the audience groaned. Milking the moment, he asked, "Can I have the language of origin?" before throwing his hands in the air with a wry smile when the answer came back "German." He then spelled the word ? which means an Indo-European long-grade vowel ? without a hitch.

But after showing all that personality onstage, why didn't he have a reaction when he finally won ? beyond his familiar knuckle-cracking habit?

"He's matured a lot," said his father, Srinivas Mahankali.

Arvind, looking a bit overwhelmed, explained it this way: "I actually do not have a proper recollection of what I did these past few hours."

Arvind admires Albert Einstein and hopes to become a physicist. He's the first boy to win the bee since 2008, and the first champion from the Big Apple since Rebecca Sealfon in 1997. He's also the bee's sixth consecutive Indian-American winner and the 11th in the past 15 years, a run that began when Nupur Lala captured the title in 1999 and was later featured in the documentary "Spellbound."

Arvind's father is an IT consultant and his mother is a doctor. The family is originally from Hyderabad in southern India, where relatives were watching live on television as the event was broadcast from a suburban Washington hotel. His father cited a premium on education and language as reasons for the spate of Indian-American winners.

"At home, my dad used to chant Telegu poems from forward to backward and backward to forward, that kind of thing," Srinivas Mahankali said. "So language affinity, we value language a lot. And I love language, I love English."

The last three finalists were Indian-American, including 13-year-old Pranav Sivakumar from Tower Lakes, Ill., who was tripped up by "cyanophycean" and finished second. Sriram Hathwar, 13, of Painted Post, N.Y., placed third.

The week began with 281 spellers and was whittled down to 42 for the semifinals Thursday afternoon and 11 for the prime-time finals, with spellers advancing based on a formula that combined their scores from computerized spelling and vocabulary tests with their performance in onstage rounds.

The multiple-choice vocabulary tests were new. Some of the spellers liked the change, some didn't, and many were in-between, praising the concept but wondering why it wasn't announced at the beginning of the school year instead of seven weeks before the national bee.

"It was kind of a different challenge," said Vismaya Kharkar, 14, of Bountiful, Utah, who finished tied for 5th place. "I've been focusing my studying on the spelling for years and years."

The vocabulary tests were administered in a quiet room away from the glare of the onstage parts of the bee. The finals were the same as always: no vocabulary, just spellers trying to avoid the doomsday bell.

The crowd favorite on the final day of competition was fourth-place finisher Amber Born, 14, of Marblehead, Mass. Amber has wanted to be a comedy writer from the time she first saw the pilot episode of "Seinfeld" and had no trouble displaying her sense of humor, especially after she got to watch herself featured on an ESPN promo that also aired on the jumbo screen inside the auditorium.

After the promo was over, she approached the microphone and, referring to herself, deadpanned: "She seemed nice."

Vanya Shivashankar, at 11 the youngest of the finalists, fell short in her bid to become the second half of the first pair of sibling champions. Her sister, Kavya, won in 2009. Vanya finished tied for 5th after misspelling "zenaida," a type of pigeon.

___

Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

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Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-31-Spelling%20Bee/id-fb347bdaea4848308d5ecb55ae216076

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Kelly Osbourne: Sex, drugs, rock & roll 'ain't fun'

Celebs

17 hours ago

Kelly Osbourne in Cosmopolitan.

Cosmopolitan

Kelly Osbourne in Cosmopolitan.

No one can say Kelly Osbourne isn't loyal to her parental units. Her father, rocker Ozzy Osbourne, fell off the wagon in April, admitting he had relapsed into drinking and taking drugs -- and she stood by him.

And in the July issue of Cosmopolitan, she says she understands where her dad is coming from. "I love and respect that he's honest enough to say, 'Yes, I did this. It was my fault,'" she told the magazine. "He's a real man. Most people would hide, and he doesn't. It doesn't make me love him any less.

"It took a long time to get to that place, but I understand it now," she adds. "It made me break down and cry when my parents rather than the Boston Marathon were on the cover of the British newspapers. People lost their children from a terrorist attack, and that's superseded by this bulls--- story that is not even real."

And perhaps some of her empathy comes from having gone down some of the same road as her father. "He's an addict; I'm an addict," she says. "It's going to be one of those things we battle for the rest of our lives. I take the necessary precautions. If you're not happy and healthy, it's not worth any of it. Everyone says sex, drugs, and rock and roll are fun. It ain't fun. It is not something to glorify."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/kelly-osbourne-says-sex-drugs-rock-n-roll-aint-fun-6C10130978

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Obama, China's Xi to discuss cyber security in June meeting

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will discuss cyber security with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting in California next week, as Washington becomes increasingly worried about Chinese hacking of U.S. military networks.

"Cyber security is a key priority of this administration. It is a key concern that we have," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters on Air Force One as Obama flew to New Jersey.

"It is an issue that we raise at every level in our meetings with our Chinese counterparts, and I'm sure it will be a topic of discussion when the president meets with President Xi in California in early June," he said.

The Pentagon underscored its concerns in a report to Congress earlier this month, accusing China of using cyber espionage to modernize its military. It said the U.S. government has been the target of hacking that appeared to be "attributable directly to the Chinese government and military."

But Pentagon spokesman George Little and other defense officials downplayed as outdated and overstated a report in Tuesday's Washington Post, which cited a Defense Science Board (DSB) report as saying that Chinese hackers have gained access to designs of more than two dozen major U.S. weapons systems.

The newspaper said the compromised U.S. designs included those for combat aircraft and ships, as well as missile defenses vital for Europe, Asia and the Gulf. But Little said it was wrong to suggest that U.S. capabilities had been eroded.

"We maintain full confidence in our weapons platforms," Little said in a statement. "Suggestions that cyber intrusions have somehow led to the erosion of our capabilities or technological edge are incorrect."

Little said the department was taking steps to strengthen the military's cyber capabilities, improve security of government networks and get more insight into threats faced by U.S. defense companies.

A Defense Department spokesman said some findings of the Defense Science Board report were dated because much of its research was completed two years ago, but it had highlighted some security issues that needed attention.

"Despite significant gains to better posture the department against cyber threats, the DSB report outlines several areas of concern that we will address promptly to ensure the viability of our cyber capabilities and defenses," the spokesman said.

"The findings of the DSB report make it clear that much work remains as we establish the right balance of integrated cyber defenses, capabilities and forces."

Among the weapons listed as compromised were the advanced Patriot missile system, the Navy's Aegis ballistic missile defense systems, the F/A-18 fighter jet, the V-22 Osprey, the Black Hawk helicopter and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

The report did not specify the extent or time of the cyber-thefts or indicate if they involved computer networks of the U.S. government, contractors or subcontractors.

But the espionage would give China knowledge that could be exploited in a conflict, such as the ability to knock out communications and corrupting data, the Post said. It also could speed China's development of its defense technology.

China dismissed as groundless the Pentagon's report to Congress earlier this month.

China also dismissed as without foundation a February report by the U.S. computer security company Mandiant, which said a secretive Chinese military unit was probably behind a series of hacking attacks targeting the United States that had stolen data from 100 companies.

AUSTRALIAN "SECURITY BLUNDER"

In Australia, a news report by Australia's ABC Television said hackers linked to China stole the floor plans of a A$630 million headquarters for the Australia Security Intelligence Organization, the country's domestic spy agency.

The attack through the computers of a construction contractor exposed not only building layouts, but also the location of communication and computer networks, it said.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei, asked about the report, said China disapproved of hacking.

"China pays high attention to the cyber security issue and is firmly opposed to all forms of hacker attacks," Hong said at a daily briefing. "Since it is very difficult to find out the origin of hacker attacks, it is very difficult to find out who carried out such attacks."

"I don't know what the evidence is for media to make such kinds of reports," Hong added.

Repeating China's position that every country is susceptible to cyber attacks, Hong said nations should make joint efforts toward a secure and open Internet.

The building is to be part of an electronic intelligence gathering network that includes the United States and Britain. Its construction has been plagued by delays and cost over-runs, with some builders blaming late design changes on cyber attacks.

The influential Greens party said the hacking was a "security blunder of epic proportions" and called for an inquiry, but the government did not confirm the breach.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said the reports were "inaccurate", but declined to say how.

Despite being one of Beijing's major trade partners, Australia is seen by China as the southern fulcrum of a U.S. military pivot to the Asia-Pacific. In 2011, it agreed to host thousands of U.S. Marines in near-permanent rotation.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason, Andrea Shalal-Esa, and Bill Trott in Washington,; Terril Yue Jones in Beijing; and Rob Taylor in Canberra; Editing by Alistair Bell and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-report-says-major-weapons-designs-compromised-chinese-033726944.html

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

On Memorial Day, Obama urges U.S. to remember troops' sacrifice

President Obama hailed the nation's fallen service members in a Memorial Day speech at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, in which he noted that the war in Afghanistan was winding down but not over.

"Fewer Americans are making the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan, and that?s progress for which we are profoundly grateful," Obama said Monday. "And this time next year, we will mark the final Memorial Day of our war in Afghanistan.

"But even as we turn the page on a decade of conflict, even as we look forward, let us never forget, as we gather here today, that our nation is still at war."

As of Friday, 2,093 U.S. troops had died in more than a decade of war in Afghanistan, according to Pentagon figures. More than 4,400 American troops died in the Iraq conflict, which Obama declared concluded in December 2011.

That shift was reflected in the fallen troops Obama chose to honor during the Arlington ceremony, which was attended by First Lady Michelle Obama, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, Joint Chiefs of Staff?Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey, and Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki.

At last year's event, Obama focused on service members who died in Iraq. This year, Obama praised and spoke briefly about ?Army Capt. Sara Cullen, Army Staff Sgt. Frankie Phillips and Marine Staff Sgt. Eric Christian, all of whom died in Afghanistan.

"Today, just steps from where these brave Americans lie in eternal peace, we declare, as a proud and grateful nation, that their sacrifice will never be forgotten," Obama said. "And just as we honor them, we hold their families close."

Obama, who greeted mourners at the cemetery after his remarks, also marked the 60th anniversary of the end of the fighting in the Korean War. More than 54,000 U.S. service members died in that conflict, which is not officially over.

The president also urged Americans to remember the fighting still underway in Afghanistan, where more than 60,000 U.S. troops remain.

"Not all Americans may always see or fully grasp the depth of sacrifice, the profound costs that are made in our name -- right now, as we speak, every day," Obama said. "Our troops and our military families understand this, and they mention to me their concern about whether the country fully appreciates what?s happening."

He concluded: "Let us never forget to always remember and to be worthy of the sacrifice they make in our name."

ALSO:

At least two killed in torrential San Antonio rain, floods

Boston runners finish last mile of the marathon to cheers, hugs

On first Sunday since tornado, Oklahomans gather to worship, mourn

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-pn-obama-memorial-day-20130527,0,2377748.story?track=rss

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

San Antonio flooding kills 1; dozens rescued

SAN ANTONIO (AP) ? Massive flooding from torrential rains in the San Antonio area left at least one person dead Saturday and sent emergency workers rushing in boats to rescue more than 100 residents stranded in cars and homes.

A woman was trapped in her car, got on the roof and was swept away in floodwaters, said San Antonio Fire Department spokesman Christian Bove. Her body was later found against a fence, he said. Her name was not immediately released.

Rescue workers were searching for someone who was missing after being trapped in another car, Bove said.

The water was very deep in some areas and more flood victims could be found, so the search will continue, officials said.

"We'll be out there as long as daylight permits and again in the morning if the water recedes," San Antonio Fire Chief Charles Hood said, adding that going into floodwaters was more dangerous for firefighters than entering a burning building.

About 130 people were plucked from their homes and cars in the San Antonio area, many by first responders using inflatable boats, he said. The water was up to 4 feet high in some homes, Bove said.

Even a city bus was swept away, but firefighters on a boat were able to rescue the three passengers and driver early Saturday, public transit spokeswoman Priscilla Ingle said. Nobody was injured.

The San Antonio International Airport by Saturday afternoon had recorded 9.87 inches of rain since midnight, causing nearly all streams and rivers to experience extraordinary flooding. The highest amount of rainfall recorded since midnight was 15.5 inches at Olmos Creek at Dresden Drive.

Numerous roads in several counties were closed. Mayor Julian Castro urged residents not to drive.

"We have had too many folks who continue to ignore low-water warnings," Castro said at a Saturday afternoon news conference.

A flash flood warning was issued for nearly two dozen counties as 2-4 inches of rainfall was forecast overnight.

A flood warning remained for Leon Creek at Interstate 35, where the level was 27.1 feet and was expected to peak at 29 feet Saturday night ? nearly twice the flood stage of 15 feet, according to the National Weather Service. The San Antonio River about 20 miles southeast of the city, near Elmendorf, was expected to peak at 62 feet by Sunday morning, well above the flood stage of 35 feet.

The National Weather Service called the region's flooding a life-threatening situation similar to what happened in October 1998. Up to 30 inches of rain fell in a two-day period, causing floods in the Guadalupe and San Antonio River basins that left more than 30 people dead, according to the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority. Parts of 19 counties received at least 8 inches of rain in that storm.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/san-antonio-flooding-kills-1-dozens-rescued-214241771.html

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

White House: Use Metric If You Want, We Don't Care

Earlier this year we discussed a petition on the White House's 'We The People' site asking the administration to adopt the metric system as the standard system of measurement in the U.S. Today, the administration issued a disappointing response. Simply put: they're not going to do anything about it. They frame their response as a matter of preserving a citizen's choice to adopt whatever measurement system he wants. Quoting Patrick D. Gallagher of the National Institute of Standards and Technology:
"... contrary to what many people may think, the U.S. uses the metric system now to define all basic units used in commerce and trade. At the same time, if the metric system and U.S. customary system are languages of measurement, then the United States is truly a bilingual nation. ... Ultimately, the use of metric in this country is a choice and we would encourage Americans to continue to make the best choice for themselves and for the purpose at hand and to continue to learn how to move seamlessly between both systems. In our voluntary system, it is the consumers who have the power to make this choice. So if you like, "speak" metric at home by setting your digital scales to kilograms and your thermometers to Celsius. Cook in metric with liters and grams and set your GPS to kilometers. ... So choose to live your life in metric if you want, and thank you for signing on."

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/NU13M4EUDFs/story01.htm

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

CA-NEWS Summary

PM says growing expenses scandal a distraction

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Tuesday dismissed a mushrooming expenses scandal as a distraction, but also said he was "very upset" that members of his Conservative Party had apparently tapped the public purse for personal gain. Harper, facing the biggest crisis since he won power in early 2006 with promises to clean up government, urged legislators to focus on the economy, which the Conservatives see as their strongest suit.

Whole neighborhoods razed by Oklahoma tornado that killed 24

MOORE, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Rescuers went building to building in search of victims and thousands of survivors were homeless on Tuesday after a massive tornado tore through the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, wiping out whole blocks of homes and killing at least 24 people. The death toll was lower than initially feared, but nine children were among the dead, including seven who died at Plaza Towers Elementary School, which took a direct hit on Monday in the deadliest tornado to strike the United States in two years.

As U.S. struggles with Syria policy, Senate panel backs arming rebels

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Senate panel voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to send weapons to rebels fighting Syria's government, but it was not clear who would get the arms even if the bill succeeds, as Washington struggles to deal with its response to the conflict. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted 15-3 for legislation that would send arms to "vetted" moderate members of the Syrian opposition, the first time U.S. lawmakers have approved such military action in the two-year-old civil war.

Iran bars candidates for presidential election

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranian authorities barred two potentially powerful and disruptive candidates from running in next month's presidential election on Tuesday, ensuring a contest largely among hardliners loyal to the clerical supreme leader. Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a veteran companion of the Islamic Republic's founder, a former president and thought potentially sympathetic to reform, was denied a place on the ballot by the Guardian Council of clerics and jurists, state media said.

Syrian foes move towards talks but fighting rages

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syria's opposition and the government of President Bashar al-Assad seem to be preparing to take part in an international peace conference against a background of some of the worst fighting this year. On Tuesday, Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and Syrian soldiers, backed by air strikes and artillery, renewed an offensive aimed at driving Syrian rebels from the town of Qusair near the Lebanese border, opposition activists said.

Discovery of alleged Russian plot points to growing jitters

OREKHOVO-ZUYEVO, Russia (Reuters) - As Russia congratulated its forces for foiling an alleged Islamist plot on Moscow, the discovery of the plan also pointed to the growing security threat before the 2014 Winter Olympics. Monday's killing of two suspected militants and arrest of a third in a sleepy town near Moscow was quickly followed by the killing of one of the leaders of an Islamist insurgency being waged in Russia's North Caucasus.

UK coalition to last despite rifts, infighting: Deputy PM

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's deputy prime minister will take the unusual step of holding a news conference on Wednesday to say the country's two-party coalition will hold together until 2015 as he tries to stabilize a government beset by infighting and rifts. In a demarche that risks being cast as a sign of weakness by political opponents, Nick Clegg, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, the junior partner in the coalition, will try to reassure voters that his alliance with Prime Minister David Cameron will endure until the next national election.

Attacks in Iraq kill over 40, sectarian tensions high

BAGHDAD, Iraq (Reuters) - A series of bomb and gun attacks across Iraq killed more than 40 people on Tuesday, a day after over 70 died in violence targeting majority Shi'ites that has stoked fears of all-out sectarian war with minority Sunnis. Nearly 300 people have been killed in the past week as sectarian tensions, fuelled by the civil war in neighboring Syria, threaten to plunge Iraq back into communal bloodletting.

With wary eye on the U.S., China courts India

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, smiling and effusive, was out to smooth ruffled feathers in India this week, promising to ease tensions and increase trade between Asia's fastest growing economies in his first trip overseas since taking office. "China will make your dream come true," Li told a banquet hall filled with Chinese and Indian business executives in the financial capital of Mumbai as he wound up his visit on Tuesday.

Russia's Putin out to silence independent voices: pollster

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's leading polling group said on Tuesday it would fight to keep operating despite pressure to register as a "foreign agent" under what it calls a campaign by President Vladimir Putin to silence independent voices. Levada Center, Russia's only independent pollster, fears closure if it does not comply with a law obliging non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that are involved in political work and funded from abroad to assume a label many Russians see as pejorative.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ca-news-summary-162224859.html

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Charlie's Water Balloons and the Chocolate Monsters book ...

Charlie's Water Balloons and the Chocolate Monsters book download

Charlie's Water Balloons and the Chocolate Monsters Caryn Whitfield

Caryn Whitfield

. God did not talk to Moses to give him a science lesson, and even if he wanted to short of using magic powers to give Moses the ability to understand the real explanation God would have been stuck with giving a story book version of reality.Thursday ;s Free Books | Author Marketing ClubArts & Photography | Business & Investing | Children ;s Books | Christian Books & Bibles | Computers & Technology | Cookbooks, Food & Wine | Crafts, Hobbies & Home | Education & Reference | Health, Fitness & Dieting | History . The story features the adventures of young Charlie Bucket inside the. You can read together about . March 11, 2013 at 5:12 pm. . Then Charlie finds a golden ticket to go to the chocolate factory. Favorite . ;I always find that . It begins with a poor family who tries their best to keep light of things. "Oh, books, what books they used to know, Those children living long ago! . Water Balloon Drop Hit n Strip game - You live in a dark, seedy part . wrote that they wanted to publish it.The Sega Addicts Top 10 Hidden Gems on the DreamcastTaking a nod from other kart racing games, you had a variety of weapons at your disposal from bottle rockets and thumbtacks to oil slicks and water balloons . Berserk Button: Don ;t throw a snowball at her, do not throw a water balloon at her, and ; ; ;never ; ; ; call her ;fat ;. Balloon Decoration Ideas for a Little Boy's Birthday Party; Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Book 2005) - Goodreads Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a personal Roald Dahl favourite of mine,. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) - IMDb Title: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) 6.8 /10. . Show HTML View more styles. Books You ;d Unpack First | ShelfTalker - Publishers Weekly Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl (interestingly, the one book that doesn ;t maybe belong on this shelf. Start reading Charlie's Water Balloons and the Chocolate Monsters on your Kindle in under a minute. You Know That Show - TV TropesThe book was about her feeelings and conflicts with her older sister and her baby sister Charlie , whose relationship with her is the main focus of the plot. Water Balloon Drop Hit n Strip online game - You live in a dark, seedy part of town. 12, 2013) - Kindle eBook Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a 1964 children's book by British author Roald Dahl. silly monster March 13, 2013 at 3:09 pm


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Source: http://ktafopu.typepad.com/blog/2013/05/charlies-water-balloons-and-the-chocolate-monsters-book-downloads.html

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Denmark's Emmelie de Forest wins Eurovision Song Contest

By Alasdair and Fotheringham CHERASCO, Italy, May 17 - A series of small but challenging climbs late on Friday's stage of the 2012 Giro d'Italia could not stop Britain's Mark Cavendish taking his fourth stage win and second in two days. Italy's Vincenzo Nibali remained overall leader but it was sprinter Cavendish who stole the show again after compatriot and pre-race favorite Bradley Wiggins failed to start the 254 kilometer stage, the longest in this year's Giro. In a bunch sprint finish Cavendish outgunned Italy's Giacomo Nizzolo and Slovenia's Luka Mezgec. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/denmarks-emmelie-forest-wins-eurovision-song-contest-224013558.html

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20 flights without bags after Egypt airport strike

CAIRO (AP) ? Egyptian officials say baggage handlers in Cairo's airport have gone on strike to protest a colleague's death, leaving passengers on 20 international flights from Europe and Arab countries waiting several hours for luggage.

Airport officials say senior officials from the country's national carrier are meeting the baggage handlers to hear their demands, which include guarantees of safer working conditions.

The strike started Saturday after a baggage handler who works for EgyptAir died when a conveyer belt used to unload luggage fell on his head. Airport officials say it took more than an hour for the ambulance to arrive at the scene from the airport's onsite hospital.

Officials spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to brief the media.

The strike by around 60 baggage handlers did not disrupt flights.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/20-flights-without-bags-egypt-airport-strike-211301272.html

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Is MRSA the Godzilla of Superbugs?

In the years I?ve spent writing about infectious diseases I can only think of a handful that have made me squirm: Guinea worm disease, which involves painful extractions of long worms from the human body (blech); Naegleria fowleri, the brain-eating amoeba (pretty self-explanatory); Ebola (because, well, it?s Ebola); and Staph A (full name, Staphylococcus aureus).

Like most Americans, I?m privileged to live in an area where certain diseases are not as prevalent as others. (Human health is incredibly intertwined with socioeconomic status and human rights?but that?s a post for another time.) Being so fortunate, there are some diseases that just are not part of my everyday reality. And while it?s pretty unlikely that I?ll contract Guinea worm disease anytime soon, Staph A could easily become a very damaging part of my?and your?life.

?

?

Staph A is one pesky pathogen. It seems to be everywhere, too: It?s one of the most common causes of hospital-related and community-acquired infections (meaning those passed from person to person), according to the New England Journal of Medicine, and it can cause anything from a pimple to sepsis (a serious blood infection that can lead to organ failure and death). Between 25 and 30 percent of people actually carry Staph A on their skin or in their nasal passages, without being harmed.

But Staph A can be incredibly harmful?if it?s carrying the right genes. The genes that make up a Staphylococcus bacterium determine whether or not it will secrete an enzyme, a protein, or a toxin that will cause someone to become ill. Gastroenteritis, Toxic Shock Syndrome, and necrotizing pneumonia are all associated with toxins secreted by Staph A.

It?s becoming clear that Staph A is a threat to people even when it?s not resistant to antibiotics. But since this series is about superbugs?or bacteria that are resistant to a growing number of antibiotics typically used to treat them?we?re going to cover two superbugs in particular: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA).

The bacteria that were killed off when Alexander Fleming accidentally discovered penicillin were Staphylococcus aureus. Back then, penicillin was an excellent option for stopping Staph A infections. But by 1944?just as penicillin was being produced en masse?William Kirby published the first evidence of penicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. By the 1970s, studies were already showing a high prevalence of Staph A that couldn't be stopped with penicillin in hospitals and communities around the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

Penicillin, like carbapenems (another type of antibiotic), is what?s known as a beta-lactam antibiotic. Penicillin, though, differs from carbapenems in that it typically treats Gram-positive bacteria (like Staph A) rather than Gram-negative bacteria. After Staph A began showing resistance to penicillin, doctors switched and started using the antibiotics vancomycin and methicillin to combat these infections. Vancomycin is typically seen as a last-resort drug because of both its power and toxicity.

By the 1980s, the CDC was collecting data showing that the bugs were winning against methicillin, too, as more cases of methicillin-resistant Staph A (MRSA) turned up in large, urban medical centers. It was a trend that continued into the ?90s and started affecting smaller hospitals, too. In 1997, the New England Journal of Medicine revealed two infections of Staph A that weren?t as vulnerable to vancomycin, the "last resort" drug. You can guess the rest: MRSA and VRSA are now quite serious problems. ?

It?s worth noting that not everyone is equally at risk for MRSA and VRSA infections. Staph A is predominantly thought of as a hospital-acquired infection, though person-to-person infections outside hospitals have jumped over the years and should be taken seriously. The CDC says that people with chronic diseases like diabetes, cancer, and lung disease are particularly at risk. In hospitals, ICU patients; those requiring long-term hospital care; and especially patients on ventilators or using catheters for long periods of time are at an increased risk for Staph A.

So where do we go from here to fight this superbug? That?s not clear. Some agencies report that MRSA cases have declined over the past few years. A recent study in PLOS One suggests that a protein found in human breast milk could help reverse antibiotic resistance?including in penicillin- and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureaus. But there?s also so little federal funding for MRSA research right now that it?s not likely we?ll crack the code of finding a new-and-improved antibiotic to fight MRSA anytime soon. Wired reporter Maryn McKenna quotes Dr. Eli Perencevich and a World HAI Report, which notes that for every AIDS death there is $69,000 awarded in federal grants. For MRSA, that amount is just $570. And yet, according to McKenna, there are more MRSA deaths in the U.S. every year than from HIV, pneumococcal, meningococcal, and flu deaths combined.

For every death from MRSA we spend $570 on research. Compare that to $69,000 for every AIDS death, even though MRSA deaths far outnumber those from AIDS.

There?s also the issue of MRSA transmission from humans to animals, and from animals to humans. A study published in EMBO Molecular Medicine in early 2013 provides evidence of MRSA transmission from livestock to humans. Perhaps it?s time to take the use of antibiotics in livestock a little more seriously??

So let?s say the worst-case scenario happens and you are infected with MRSA. What happens?is there anything doctors can use to fight this powerful bacterial infection? There are a few drugs that remain effective against MRSA, and one of them is vancomycin. However?and this is key?the more we use vancomycin, the more vancomycin resistance we may see. If this drug-of-last-resort became useless, we?d have to treat with other super-strong drugs, like daptomycin. And, of course, we?d again be running the risk of more antibiotic resistance. Right now, cases of VRSA, thankfully, remain low. As of 2010, the CDC reported just 13 cases in the U.S. To keep these numbers down, we need to focus on limiting the spread of MRSA?and the use of vancomycin.

At the top of most lists of how to control these infections is hand hygiene (i.e., really good hand-washing). If you have a mild Staph A skin infection?MRSA or not?don?t try to treat it yourself; see a medical professional. The CDC also recommends rapid reporting of MRSA and increasing education and awareness so more people are aware of these infections and how to protect themselves against them.

--By Anna Tomasulo

Were you aware of MRSA infections? Do you know anyone who?s been infected? If so, how they contract MRSA or VRSA?

Related Stories on TakePart:

? 5 Things You Need to Know About: Superbugs

??Humans vs. Superbugs: Who Will Win?

??Antibiotics Creating "Bacterial Monsters"


The Disease Daily?is created by a team of medical doctors, veterinarians, and public health professionals who believe that infectious disease news should be accessible and comprehensible to everyone. As a publication from?HealthMap?at?Boston Children's Hospital, The Disease Daily has access to real-time reporting of infectious disease events all over the world. While HealthMap alerts thecommunity to the outbreaks, The Disease Daily puts those alerts into context, showing readers the impact of infectious disease on policy, economics, and community.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mrsa-godzilla-superbugs-211831011.html

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Security risks found in sensors for heart devices, consumer electronics

May 16, 2013 ? The type of sensors that pick up the rhythm of a beating heart in implanted cardiac defibrillators and pacemakers are vulnerable to tampering, according to a new study conducted in controlled laboratory conditions.

Implantable defibrillators monitor the heart for irregular beating and, when necessary, administer an electric shock to bring it back into normal rhythm. Pacemakers use electrical pulses to continuously keep the heart in pace.

In experiments in simulated human models, an international team of researchers demonstrated that they could forge an erratic heartbeat with radio frequency electromagnetic waves. Theoretically, a false signal like the one they created could inhibit needed pacing or induce unnecessary defibrillation shocks.

The team includes researchers from the University of Michigan, University of South Carolina, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, University of Minnesota, University of Massachusetts and Harvard Medical School.

The researchers emphasize that they know of no case where a hacker has corrupted an implanted cardiac device, and doing so in the real world would be extremely difficult.

"Security is often an arms race with adversaries," said Wenyuan Xu, assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the University of South Carolina. "As researchers, it's our responsibility to always challenge the common practice and find defenses for vulnerabilities that could be exploited before unfortunate incidents happen. We hope our research findings can help to enhance the security of sensing systems that will emerge for years to come."

This is not the first time vulnerabilities have been identified in implantable medical devices. But the findings reveal new security risks in relatively common "analog" sensors -- sensors that rely on inputs from the human body or the environment to cue particular actions.

Beyond medical devices, analog sensors are also used in microphones in Bluetooth headsets and computers in web-based phone calls. In those places, too, the researchers discovered vulnerabilities.

"We found that these analog devices generally trust what they receive from their sensors, and that path is weak and could be exploited," said Denis Foo Kune, U-M postdoctoral researcher and visiting scholar in computer science and engineering, who will present the findings May 20 at the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy in San Francisco.

uAlthough these medical systems and consumer electronics have security mechanisms, the information the analog sensors receive bypasses their safety layers. The devices convert the input from the sensors directly into digital information that they use to make quick decisions.

In the category of medical devices, the researchers tested cardiac defibrillators and pacemakers in open air to determine which radio waveforms could cause interference. Then they exposed the medical devices to those waveforms in a both a saline bath and a patient simulator. The experiments suggest that the human body likely acts as a shield, protecting the medical devices to a large degree, the researchers said.

They found that in the saline bath and the patient simulator, a perpetrator would need to be within five centimeters -- about two inches -- away to cause interference. Current guidelines instruct patients to keep potential sources of interference at least 27 centimeters, or 10.5 inches, away from their chest.

"People with pacemakers and defibrillators can remain confident in the safety and effectiveness of their implants," said Kevin Fu, U-M associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science. "Patients already protect themselves from interference by keeping transmitters like phones away from their implants. The problem is that emerging medical sensors worn on the body, rather than implanted, could be more susceptible to this type of interference."

The team proposes solutions to help the sensors ensure that the signals they're receiving are authentic. Software could, in a sense, ping the cardiac tissue to determine whether the previous pulse came from the heart or from interference. If the source was not the heart, the software could raise a red flag.

The researchers also found pathways to tamper with consumer electronics. They were able to use specific radio signals to convince the mic on a phone paired with a Bluetooth headset that a caller was dialing touch-tone selections at an automated banking line. They demonstrated this by changing the call language from English to Spanish.

Foo Kune said the technique could conceivably enable more harmful scenarios such as fraudulent money transfers. In another experiment, they canceled out speech on one side of a web-based phone call and replaced it with a song (Weezer's "Island in the Sun").

"The microphone was receiving the song even though the room was silent," Foo Kune said.

"This type of interference can be prevented with shields and filters like those seen today in military-grade equipment," said Yongdae Kim, professor of electrical engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology. "Safety critical systems, such as smart grids and automated vehicles, rely more and more on sensing technology for their accurate operation. Malicious input signals with improved antenna and power may cause serious safety problems."

Last week, the Archimedes Center for Medical Device Security at U-M held a private briefing and problem solving session for medical device manufacturers and trauma centers. The paper is called "Ghost Talk: Mitigating EMI Signal Injection Attacks against Analog Sensors."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/kUQetuFIXgQ/130516123920.htm

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France's Hollande urges euro zone government, common debt

PARIS (Reuters) - French President Francois Hollande called on Thursday for an economic government in the euro zone that would have its own budget, the right to issue debt, a harmonized tax system and a full-time president.

Speaking at a news conference marking his first year in office, a day after economic data showed France had slipped back into recession, the Socialist leader said he sought to create a full political European Union within two years.

His proposals seemed likely to encounter stiff resistance from Germany, Europe's leading power, which opposes mutualising debt among European states and is reluctant to give the euro zone its own secretariat or create new divisions in the EU, of which 10 countries are not in the 17-nation single currency.

It also comes as Britain's government faces growing domestic pressure to hold a referendum on leaving the bloc.

"My initiative has four points that I am putting to our partners. The first is to create an economic government with the euro zone countries which would meet every month with a real president appointed for a long period and who would be devoted to this task," Hollande said.

"This economic government will debate the main political and economic decisions to be taken by the member states, harmonize tax policy, start the convergence of social policies from the top and launch a battle against tax fraud."

The other planks were:

- an initiative to bring forward planned EU spending to combat youth unemployment, now at record levels across southern Europe;

- a European energy community to coordinate the transition to renewable energy sources;

- "a new stage in fiscal integration with a budget capacity that would be granted to the euro zone and the gradual possibility of raising debt".

Hollande, whose approval rating has fallen further than any previous elected president in his first year, sought to reassure his left-wing electorate that he remained true to his Socialist colors, saying France could keep its generous welfare state provided it was made more efficient.

He expressed full confidence in Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and played down criticism of clashes among his ministers on economic policy, saying there might eventually be a reshuffle but not now.

But he said the current pension system was unsustainable and, ahead of a reform due later this year, said the French would have to work longer in future to receive a full pension.

He stuck to a promise to reverse the rising trend in unemployment by the end of the year, despite widespread skepticism among economists that this can be achieved while the economy remains flat.

He also called for a 10-year public investment plan in the digital sector, the promised energy transition, public health and in big transport infrastructure projects.

Hollande said it was paradoxical that Europe, which remained the world's number one economic power, was regarded "as a sick, declining, doubting continent.

"It is my responsibility as the leader of a founder member of the European Union... to pull Europe out of this torpor which has gripped it, and to reduce people's disenchantment with it."

(Reporting by Mark John and Ingrid Melander; Writing by Paul Taylor)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/frances-hollande-says-wants-euro-zone-government-143842679.html

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An Imprisoned Hacker Invented an ATM Attachment That Stops Skimmers

Valentin Boanta has a lot of free time on his hands?five years worth, to be exact. That's because Boanta is currently serving a prison sentence for, according to Reuters, "supplying gadgets to an organized crime gang used to conceal ATM skimmers." So with all that time to think about what he's done, the apparently penitent prisoner spent six months developing an ATM add-on to prevent the exact crime that put him there in the first place.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/0JqwSqhq0tA/an-imprisoned-hacker-invented-an-atm-attachment-that-st-508232101

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Yes she Cannes! Emma Watson hits red carpet

Celebs

5 hours ago

Emma Watson and her cast mates from "The Bling Ring," along with director Sofia Coppola, made a splash on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday.

While we're sad we can't bring you a new disco GIF of Watson, you should at least enjoy another stylish turn from the actress as she rolls out her latest film with all the required French flair.

Image: Emma Watson

AFP - Getty Images

Emma Watson poses at the 66th edition of the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday.

Image: Emma Watson

Getty Images

Watson blows a kiss as Katie Chang, left, and Sophia Coppola look on.

Watson, who rose to fame as Hermione Granger in the "Harry Potter" film series, said at a Cannes news conference that those days seem "like such a long time ago."

"I enjoy the chance to transform into new roles and work with new creative people," the 23-year-old actress said of her turn in the film about a gang of celeb-robbing teens.

"The Bling Ring" opens in theaters in the US next month.

Image: Emma Watson

Getty Images

Bling ring, indeed. A detail view of the earrings worn by Watson on Thursday.

Image: "The Bling Ring" stars

Getty Images

"The Bling Ring" stars, from left, Claire Julien, Taissa Fariga, Katie Chang, Israel Broussard, Watson and director Sophia Coppola.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/yes-she-cannes-emma-watson-hits-red-carpet-bling-ring-1C9948208

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Visualized: Google Glass prototypes

Visualized Google Glass prototypes

As a part of the 7 Techmakers and a Microphone panel tonight at Google I/O, Project Glass Staff Hardware Engineer Jean Wang dropped in this slide reflecting on the process of developing the headset. We've seen pictures of a few early Glass prototypes before, but as she describes, this shows off the full process from strapping a cellphone to a pair of goggles along with a pico projector shining directly into the wearer's eyes. The jump from off the shelf components to custom 3D-printed materials is represented in the third version (top right), and allowed the progress seen along the bottom row.

She also got a laugh pointing out that the Glass-inspired SNL skit starring our friend Fred Armisen wasn't "too far off" the team's initial efforts in gesture and voice control. The panel itself focused on a series of TED-style segments featuring seven women discussing being technical leaders inside their company. You can check out the entire thing embedded after the break or just zoom to the Google Glass part (6:13) for more details.

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Via: Danny Sullivan (Twitter)

Source: Google Developers (YouTube), Google Developers

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/15/visualized-google-glass-prototypes/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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A Profile of the Order of Good Death - Pacific Standard

At first, it might sound gross or a little bit scary. Ridiculous, even. You wonder if it?s going to hurt. Will it be meaningless? Messy? What if you don?t know what to do?or if it happens too fast or too slow?

Relax, man. It?s totally natural. WE ARE ALL GOING TO DIE.

Funny how rarely this seems to come up. Imminent death is the only thing you have in common with every single person you meet. And unlike, say, weddings and weather, the subject of mortality is always interesting. Trying to make small talk about death, though? Well, bring it up at your next business lunch and see how that goes.

The truth is most of us go to great lengths to avoid having to talk?or even think?about death. Nearly half of people over the age of 65 haven?t yet brought themselves to face end-of-life planning. In a culture saturated with violence, we?re not sure how to talk to our kids about what happened at Sandy Hook and the Boston Marathon. And most people prefer to suffer in silence when they deal with common challenges like eldercare and miscarriages.

Are fear and denial really the best ways to approach something that?s unavoidable?

Death has always been inevitable, of course, and so has grief, but there was a time in the not-so-distant past when the attitudes and practices surrounding it were more open and practical.

In part, this comfort level was out of sheer necessity. In the 19th century, before doctors learned to wash their hands, germs killed a lot of people. Since funeral homes (and indeed, the funeral industry) didn?t exist, most people died in their beds, and corpses remained at home for up to three days while the family prepared for the funeral?which was also at home. Death was very much a part of daily life.

That changed for a variety of reasons, but the most important shift occurred during the Civil War. Suddenly, embalming?a preservation technique that had been reserved for medical cadavers?was practiced widely on Union dead so the remains would survive the journey home to their families. For those who could afford it, embalming became the preferred way to preserve a corpse?better even than packing soldiers into kegs of whiskey, another technique used to ship bodies north during high summer.

According to Gary Laderman, a prominent historian of death, the American psyche was undergoing a brutal transformation even as the professional funeral industry coalesced. The devastation wrought by the war required a certain disengagement with death, something akin to the mindset of traumatized survivors in books and movies about the zombie apocalypse. A long estrangement with death ensued, where it was increasingly pushed away from the home?out of sight and out of mind.

Dwelling in darkness for almost 150 years now, death in America has turned into something unspeakable.

The Order of the Good Death wants you to turn on the light.

Caitlin_Doughty

Caitlin Doughty.

FOUNDED BY CAITLIN DOUGHTY, a thoughtful young mortician in Los Angeles, the Order of the Good Death is a collective of death professionals, artists, and academics who promote real talk about death and dying. While its name has an occult quality, the Order?s mission is actually quite public: to encourage people to be ?death positive,? or open to exploring their thoughts, feelings, and fears about mortality.

While it started in 2011 as a network of around 10 friends and like-minded colleagues, the Order quickly expanded as it resonated with other writers, scholars, and designers. The growing group has worked hard to make death a part of the cultural conversation. They approach this task through a wide variety of projects aimed at different audiences?some within the funeral industry, and many others further afield.

Some of the Order?s most prominent movers and shakers are young women, which is remarkable, given that as recently as 1971, 95 percent of the students enrolling in mortuary schools were men. To name three, there?s Doughty herself, who remains the head and heart of the Order; Sarah Wambold, a mortician who?s reinventing the American funeral home; and Megan Rosenbloom, a medical librarian who?s launching an innovative conference called Death Salon this fall. Dissatisfied with the trappings of the traditional funeral industry and the cultural atmosphere surrounding death, these women want to help repressed Americans become more intimate with their most morbid thoughts and feelings.

THE SELF-APPOINTED NATIONAL spokeswoman for death, Caitlin Doughty is the reaper?s most dedicated PR person.

Doughty is best known for her winsome Web series, ?Ask A Mortician,? a lighthearted and informative exploration of viewers? questions about death. Featured on Jezebel and bolstered by an aggressive social media campaign on Facebook and Twitter, the videos help direct traffic to the Order of the Good Death?s website, a sort of central repository where Doughty curates essays, artistic videos, and other media. She also writes a blog that she occasionally lends to other Order members who want a platform for their own thoughts and projects.

The mortician first heard the call to public service five years ago, around the time she began working at a crematory in Los Angeles. It was her first real job in the industry. The work was more challenging than she expected, and she was surprised by many of the processes and practices. A lifelong fascination with death had not prepared her for the harsh physical realities of fire, ash, and bone. Surprised to realize there are still some things you just can?t Google, Doughty recognized the world sorely needed someone who was willing to share basic facts about the death industry. She decided then and there that her life?s work would be in public education.

Her first stop after the crematory was mortuary school. On the other side of the mirror, Doughty learned that the funeral industry itself was estranged from death in its own way. To a fault, the focus was on technical skills and body work. Having devoted serious thought to death during her undergraduate career at University of Chicago, where she studied medieval history, Doughty was scandalized by what she saw as a lack of emotional and intellectual rigor in the curriculum.

?A lot of funeral directors don?t really reflect very deeply on their place in the industry and their relationship with death,? she said. ?They think if they do that, it will open Pandora?s box to all sorts of negative emotions that are very hard to handle.?

But Doughty doesn?t think that funeral homes are doing society any favors by placing people who have ?passed on? in their ?slumber rooms.? And she has a general distaste for expensive products like ?protective? caskets that make the natural process of decay sound like a grisly nightmare. At the top of her long list of gripes: the practice of embalming, which she sees as unnecessary and bad for the environment. Doughty wants to educate people about their options and to promote greener choices like natural burial (sans casket) and cremation.

She?s also an advocate of home corpse care. ?The thing that most people don?t know is that death doesn?t really require a professional at all,? she said. ?There?s no reason that you can?t do most everything surrounding the death process yourself. I consider my role as a mortician really as a kind of facilitator and hand-holder to get people to do most of the work.?

While she?d like to see American traditions circle back to resemble what they were before the Civil War, she realizes that DIY corpse care is probably too ambitious for most people. After she finishes her memoir (which will be published in 2014 by Norton, the highest bidder in an eight-publisher auction), Doughty will open an alternative funeral home in Los Angeles, guiding people through the emotional, logistical, and bureaucratic challenges they face when someone dies.

Sarah Wambold

Sarah Wambold.

MEANWHILE, SARAH WAMBOLD IS preparing?to open her own alternative funeral home, Continuum, later this year. Where Doughty has worked on the national level to rehabilitate death?s public image, Wambold has focused more on serving locals in her community of Austin, Texas.

?The general idea is to reimagine the funeral home as a dual space for the living and the dead,? said Wambold, who wants her facility to function as a performance space and an art gallery. Put off by the gimmicky customization options like the golf-themed funerals offered by the traditional funeral industry, she wants to offer services that celebrate individuality. ?We want to have a conversation with people about what death means to them,? she said. ?Most funeral homes really don?t do that. They just don?t fill that need.

?I was inspired by Austin,? she said. ?It?s a different sort of city than I had ever lived in. The people here seem to support local businesses, and it seemed like they were underserved in the funeral service area. I felt like they needed a funeral home that was more community-oriented and creative.? Unable to find a job at the sort of funeral home she had in mind, Wambold came to the reluctant conclusion that she?d have to build one herself.

A big part of her vision is simply in rejecting the stuffy parlor aesthetic favored by traditional funeral homes. ?The worst thing about being a funeral director was having to walk into the funeral home,? she said, recalling a job she left in 2009. ?I just hated the overstuffed chairs, the heavy drapery, the generic paintings?all of that.?

Wambold has been documenting the process of opening Continuum (?a nightmare?) on Doughty?s blog since 2012. There have been many challenges and discouraging developments along the way. In addition to the usual kinds of problems that small start-ups face, such as finding funding and an affordable workspace, Wambold is dealing with obscure levels of bureaucracy and inscrutable state laws. Most recently, she?s been trying to puzzle out why the state of Texas demands that she own embalming supplies if she?s not required to practice embalming. After serious study, the answer remains unclear.

Once she finally opens her doors for business, Wambold will face another difficult hurdle: marketing. While she said that people seem receptive to the concept of Continuum, the ideas behind it generally require some degree of elaboration. The 30-second elevator pitch of a funeral home cum performance space can sound sort of flip, particularly to someone who isn?t even aware there?s such a thing as an alternative funeral industry. As professionals like Wambold start their own businesses, the Order of the Good Death will transition from a philosophical movement to an organization of flesh-and-blood members with loans and light bills. Their bottom lines add a new sense of urgency to the organization?s mission.

Megan Rosenbloom

Megan Rosenbloom.

TO HELP EASE THOSE growing pains, the Order will host its first formal conference, Death Salon, from October 18 to 20 in Los Angeles.

Death Salon is the brainchild of Order member Megan Rosenbloom, a medical librarian at the University of Southern California. A rare books nerd, Rosenbloom has been organizing talks and events that promote her library?s special collections since 2009. While program development and community outreach is unusual for someone in her role, her favorite part of the job is developing exhibits, leading tours, and hosting speakers. This year?s big guest will be Mary Roach.

While many are quick to write off old medical texts as curiosities, Rosenbloom sees them as essential to the curriculum at the medical school. ?I have these books from around the time when this country was founded where they show what a baby looked like in utero,? she said, by way of example. ?Their understanding, the way they believed things were situated, is just comical.? She uses materials like these, which were at one time state-of-the-art, to teach medical school students about humility?a useful mindset in today?s technology-obsessed milieu. ?I don?t think you have to be hyper-serious about interacting with the material, but it grounds you in the perspective that we don?t know everything,? she said. ?They have to understand they might be wrong.?

Similarly, she feels that historical perspective adds an important dimension to contemporary conversations surrounding death. The precise point at which a person dies, for instance, has never been well understood; to prevent people from being buried alive, some caskets used to come equipped with a primitive alarm system?a string attached to a bell situated on top of the grave. ?Our understanding of death is still a little nebulous,? Rosenbloom said, drawing a parallel between those bells and the controversy that now surrounds abortion, vegetative state, and assisted suicide. ?I think the history of medicine can really give people perspective on the ways that other people have interacted with these issues in the past.?

The idea for Death Salon came about earlier this year, when Rosenbloom and other Order inductees were talking about how much they?d enjoy the chance to formally meet. With her experience at the library and the organizational feat of planning her own wedding last year, Rosenbloom figured she had the logistical know-how to plan the event.

Death Salon will incorporate Rosenbloom?s love of medical history with the varied perspectives of Order members from different disciplines. The goal is to offer something for everyone, so the weekend will be a mix of private Order business and high-profile events. Friday?s daytime programming, which will be curated by Doughty, will be closed to the public, but she is also curating a special public show on Friday night. That event, Death Cabaret, will combine elements of a party with flash talks, short films, and a performance by Adam Arcuragi, the founder of the ?death gospel? genre.

Saturday will feature symposium-style programming curated by Joanna Ebenstein, whose Morbid Anatomy project?s recent Kickstarter was like the Veronica Mars of the weird book world. Sunday will involve a field trip organized by Atlas Obscura, a travel website dedicated to unusual destinations. Throughout the weekend, Death Salon will host pop-up shops by L.A. businesses and offer beers crafted by local breweries.

?As I?ve been putting it together, I?ve been astounded at the level of interest,? said Rosenbloom, who reports that there has already been talk of franchising Death Salon. ?People from across the country are contacting me because they want to volunteer. I was so surprised and flattered that we?re doing something that people are really responding to.

?I?m not going to pretend that I?m the most death-positive person, or that I?m completely comfortable with the idea that I could drop dead at any moment,? she said. ?But I think it?s really worthwhile for people to engage with that. I feel the zeitgeist is changing. People are rejecting the idea that the denial of death is a good thing.?

Doughty, too, senses something in the air that extends beyond her own efforts to agitate for change. ?I know there?s a real cultural shift coming,? she said. ?There?s a ton of new people doing this work.?

The death-positive movement has been built on a staggering statistic: our 100 percent mortality rate. In a little over a century, the seven billion people that currently populate this planet will all be dead.

You and me and everyone we know. Not a damn thing we can do about it. What happens after that?well, that?s up to you.

Source: http://www.psmag.com/culture/the-death-positive-movement-57768/

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