Thursday, February 28, 2013

Scott Gimple confirmed as "Walking Dead" showrunner

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - AMC has finally confirmed Scott M. Gimple as the new showrunner of "The Walking Dead," and announced that the fourth season will start production May 6.

Gimple becomes the show's third showrunner after Frank Darbont and Glen Mazzara both parted ways with the show due to differences with AMC.

The show will return with 16 episodes in October. It is currently in the second half of its third season.

Gimple had been expected to take the job since last month. He wrote several key episodes, including Season 2's midseason, "Pretty Much Dead Already", which horrifically revealed that Sophia was among the walkers in a barn on Hershel's farm.

AMC also announced that Greg Nicotero and Tom Luse will be promoted to executive producers with Gale Anne Hurd, David Alpert, and Robert Kirkman, who created the comics on which the hit series is based.

"Scott has been an essential part of this show since he came aboard at the very beginning of season two. He's contributed to guiding this show in a substantial way that has resulted in a lot of the key scenes and storylines fans have dubbed signature moments of ?The Walking Dead,'" said Kirkman. "I am thrilled to begin work on a brand new season of ?The Walking Dead' with Scott at the helm, and I truly believe we could be embarking on what will be the best season of this show yet."

Added Gimple: "I'm thrilled to continue the tradition of the spectacular, cinematic, horrifying, exciting and emotional storytelling of ?The Walking Dead,'" said Gimple. "I'm a huge fan of the comics, and started with the show on the other side of the set, as an avid viewer. Over the past two years, it's been an incredible privilege making such great television with the best cast and crew I've ever worked with - I can't wait to make some more."

Nicotero and his team received the Emmy Award for Outstanding Prosthetic Makeup two years in a row (2011/2012) for their work on "The Walking Dead." In addition to leading the visual and special effects and makeup for the series, Nicotero has directed several episodes. Luse has been with the show since the beginning of production and manages and oversees the day-to-day production of the series.

"Scott's voice has been an integral one since he joined the show. Greg Nicotero is a true artist whose work is simply brilliant. And, Tom Luse has really created the machine that allows this very large show to get made week to week. We congratulate all three in their new roles on the series and look forward to ramping up production on season four," said Joel Stillerman, AMC's executive vice president of original programming, production and digital content.

Earlier this month, Mazzara told TheWrap about Gimple's role within the writer's room.

"He and Evan Reilly were my No. 2 writers, breaking story while I was working on other material," Mazzara said. "Scott was very helpful with schedules and delivering material."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scott-gimple-confirmed-walking-dead-showrunner-214542193.html

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

To Build An Empire, Hold The Anchovies

Located north of Lima, Peru, the Caral-Supe settlement was the ancient home of the Norte Chico people, a civilization almost as old as the Egyptians.

Courtesy of Chris Kleihege

Located north of Lima, Peru, the Caral-Supe settlement was the ancient home of the Norte Chico people, a civilization almost as old as the Egyptians.

Courtesy of Chris Kleihege

Megalomaniacs, consider yourselves warned. Anchovies will not help you build your empire. To rule long and prosper, serve corn.

That's the word from archaeologists who say they've solved a mystery that has been puzzling their colleagues for the past 40 years: How did some of the earliest Peruvians manage to build a robust civilization without corn ? the crop that fueled other great civilizations of the Americas, like the Maya?

The Norte Chico people, who lived some 5,000 years ago, built a thriving civilization ? but from the archaeological evidence previously available, it looked like they did it solely on anchovies. And anyone who has ever nibbled an anchovy on a pizza knows there's not a lot of meat on those tiny bones.

Would that have given the Norte Chico enough oomph to build the monumental architecture they left behind, including dozens of large communities with huge earthen platforms and circular ceremonial plazas, some 40 meters across?

A view of one of the ceremonial plazas at the Caral-Supe archaeological site.

Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images

A view of one of the ceremonial plazas at the Caral-Supe archaeological site.

Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images

"Think about anchovy at every meal you ate," says Jonathan Haas, an archaeologist at the Field Museum in Chicago. "The problem with anchovies is if you are going to get calories out of them, you have to eat a lot of them, and it's not a balanced diet."

Agriculture is considered the engine of civilization, and in the Americas, that means corn.

Though very little evidence of corn consumption had been found in Peru dating back to the time of the Norte Chico, Haas and his colleagues figured these people just had to be eating corn. So they decided to look harder.

First, they searched Norte Chico archaeological sites north of Lima for proof that the ancient Peruvians had been growing corn. They found lots of old maize pollen.

Then, they went looking for pollen on the stone tools the residents of Norte Chico used to cook. They looked under the microscope, and "lo and behold, the large majority of the tools are being used to process maize," Haas tells The Salt.

Finally, they looked in the fossilized human poop found in the sites. They found anchovy bones ? and lots of corn starch. And that's not all: Turns out, sweet potatoes were the second most popular carbohydrate, and guava the most popular source of sugar. (You can learn a lot from fossilized feces.)

Haas says this "corn rules" thesis may be controversial, but he thinks his team's data are strong enough to hold up. The work was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Rather than being a maritime-based society, it's an agriculturally based society," Haas says. "South America then falls in line with the rest of the civilizations of the world."

Update: Photographer Chris Kleihege, whose photo project is documenting excavations at Caral-Supe, sends this photo of a 5,000-year-old corncob found at a pyramid at the ancient Peruvian site.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/02/25/172896292/to-build-an-empire-hold-the-anchovies?ft=1&f=1007

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Small Businesses Are Widely Using Quantum' DDS6 Tape Medium ...

Here at Odsi we're more than a competitive online reseller of brand name tape media. We focus on all of the things that are of interest to our customers, not only in saving you money but also in saving you time.

View all articles by Mark Paul The data which is used in the everyday running of the businesses is very important and crucial in nature. This data can be worth more than millions of dollars and the loss of such data can be no less than a disaster. What many people fail to understand is the fact that computers are just like machines and they cannot always be very reliable. What happens when a breaks down or some system is corrupted? You might end up losing all your data in such a scenario. This data can be lost forever unless there are any backup copies of it. You will not be having so much of a problem if you do have backups of this data. Backing up data doesn?t mean that you are required to back up each and every piece of information you have on the computer.

The backing up can be made more systemized to make it less time consuming and more efficient by choosing only the most important parts of data to be backed up. Backing up is now considered as necessary for businesses. There is not even a single organization which can run without keeping proper backups. Approx. 70% of the organizations are unable to bounce back after their data has been lost. We all have heard that prevention is better than cure than why not prepare ourselves for the worst so we don?t suffer great losses later.

There is absolutely no reason for businesses to avoid backing up their data in today?s world. A few years back backing up data might have been considered as a tedious and a time consuming task but today there are so many different ways to backup data and there has been enhancements in the backup technology which has made backing up easier and less time consuming. This is mostly the result of the introduction of the tape drives. Tape drives allow users to read and write off data. This data is stored on a magnetic tape and can be accessed later on whenever it is required. One of the best tape drives you can use for your business is the Quantum DDS6 tape.

The DDS technology has improved the overall working of the tape drives and backing up data is no more a hassle. There are many things which you have to consider when you decide which tape drive you would want to sue in your business. If you are looking forward to backup all of your data, which will definitely be a huge amount, then you should first check the data storage capacity of the tape drive.

The next most important thing should be the data transfer speed which shows how easily and quickly your data will be transferred to the backup device. For all these functions, the Quantum DDS6 tape won?t disappoint you.The Quantum DDS6 delivers excellent efficiency and handles the requirements of small sized businesses. Preserve data up to 80GB or a massive volume of 160GB by compressing the files.

Business enterprises trust Odsi that is famous for the widest range of tapes, including DDS and all other types of leading IT products. For more information on latest discount offers, visit Odsi.co.uk Mark Paul Online Digital Solutions LLC, 39 Southend Road, East Ham London E62AL Tel: 0203 005 9500 Email: sales@odsi.co.uk

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Source: http://www.articlesbd.com/articles/328296/1/Small-Businesses-Are-Widely-Using-Quantum-DDS6-Tape-Medium-For-Backup-Storage/Page1.html

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Teacher of Mathematics - Kent - South East, Kent



  • Ofsted rated: OUTSTANDING

  • Permanent Teacher of Mathematics (MPS)

  • North Kent, to start in September 2013

This school is a mixed 11-18 popular and oversubscribed academy. The most recent Ofsted judged the school as outstanding in October 2009. The schools foundations are built on mutual respect and passion for learning. We seek innovative teaching methodologies that we believe will enhance and improve the learning of our young people.

I am seeking to appoint an outstanding practitioner of mathematics. The successful candidate should be able to teach across the age range, A? Level experience is not essential but welcomed. You should be an enthusiastic and driven individual who is able to inspire students to achieve.

The successful candidate must:


Applications close on 8th March 2013

The school is committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare and safety of young people. The successful candidate will be subject to an enhanced criminal records check.

For more information please contact James Fazzani at Capita Education Resourcing on 0207 202 0031 or e-mail your CV

Source: http://www.jobs.co.uk/jobs/Teacher-of-Mapematics-426366.htm

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Swastikas found painted at fire-ravaged day care

By Gilma Avalos, NBCMiami.com

MIAMI -- Bishop Ivory Wilson on Sunday gazed on the shattered window of a building that serves as a church on the weekend and as a day care during the week.

There is the charred cafeteria where children would eat their snacks. A roof is now blackened with soot. It's just feet away from where students learn and play at the day care center.

"We worked hard to make this,? Wilson said. ?The kids love us, the parents love us and we love them.?

Director Sandra Wilson said: ?This just broke my heart, I couldn't stop crying -- couldn't stop crying.??

They say they believe the fire was deliberately set, given the vandalism spray-painted on the walls: three large red swastikas.?

The owners of Little Leapers Childcare center in Fort Lauderdale say it?s a hate crime. In the last few weeks, employees say they also have been on the receiving end of a verbal threat.?

Three weeks before the fire, an anonymous someone phoned ?and threatened us,? said Joyce Bryant, lead schoolteacher. The caller told staff to pack their bags and get out, Bryant said.

More news from NBCMiami.com

When that call came in, the bishop and his wife contacted police. Sunday, instead of singing and praising in the auditorium, they're tallying up items that were stolen: Cameras, music equipment and flat-screen TVs used to live-stream sermons.

"Here we've got parents that won't know where to take their kids tomorrow morning," Wilson said.

They've been present in the community now for more than four years. They can?t understand why they?ve been attacked.

"We think everyone should be able to run their own business without anyone trying to run them out," Bryant said.

The bishop said vacating the building is the last thing they'll do, unwilling to let hatred win.

"We're not going to run,? he said. ?Whatever game they're playing doesn't frighten me.?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17083473-fort-lauderdale-day-care-marred-by-fire-swastikas-owners-allege-hate-crime?lite

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Islamists threaten to kill French kidnapped in Cameroon

DAKAR (Reuters) - Gunmen claiming to be from Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamist group threatened on Monday to kill a kidnapped French family of seven if authorities in Nigeria and Cameroon do not release Muslim militants held there.

French ministers said they believed the three adults and four children seized in Cameroon's far north near the Nigerian border on Tuesday were being held by Boko Haram which has killed hundreds to try to carve out an Islamist state in Nigeria.

The first sign of the family since they were captured came in a video posted on YouTube in which they appeared surrounded by three gunmen wearing turbans and dressed in camouflage.

"We have been taken by Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-Jihad," one of the male hostages said in the video, referring to the name in Arabic of Nigeria's Boko Haram militants.

"They want the liberation of their brothers in Cameroon and their women imprisoned in Nigeria," the man added, speaking in French as he sat on the floor beside another man, a veiled woman and four children.

"A video of the French family kidnapped in northern Cameroon last Tuesday has just been posted by Boko Haram," said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius. "These images are terribly shocking and show a cruelty without limits."

The hostage-taking highlighted the risk to French citizens in Africa after Paris sent thousands of troops into Mali last month to oust al Qaeda-linked Islamists operating in the country's vast desert north.

"The president of France has launched a war on Islam and we are fighting it everywhere," said one of the apparent kidnappers, speaking in Arabic and identifying himself as a member of Boko Haram. "Implement our demands. If you leave out even one, we will kill these people."

Boko Haram, a Nigerian militant group, has previously posted videos in Hausa, a language spoken in northern Nigeria. The black and white flag that hung behind the hostages in the released video is more associated with al Qaeda-linked groups.

A spokesman for Boko Haram had denied any connection with the kidnapping at the weekend.

However, security experts in Nigeria, Africa's largest oil exporter, say that Boko Haram is made up of multiple cells, without a defined command structure.

The militant group is known to have had some links to al Qaeda factions in North Africa and Mali, but experts say they appear limited for now.

Cameroon's Communication Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary said he could not comment because his government was not aware of the video.

The governor of Cameroon's Far North Region, Augustine Fonka Awa, said he was not aware of any Boko Haram members being held in the country.

(Additional reporting by Asma Alsharif in Cairo and Joe Brock in Abuja; Writing by David Lewis; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/islamists-threaten-kill-french-kidnapped-cameroon-183340550--finance.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Steam Buns While You Boil Hot Dogs

If you ever find yourself boiling hot dogs on the stove, put that steam to work heating and softening your buns.

Steam Buns While You Boil Hot Dogs

While spiral cutting hot dogs and grilling them might yield the best results, boiling dogs is a fine alternative when it's too cold to grill outdoors, and the steam from the pot is great for warming up your buns. All you have to do is rest a strainer or upside-down straining pot lid on top of the pot, and set the buns inside for a few seconds.

Hack Your Weiners - Steam Your Buns While You Boil Your Dogs | Reddit

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/PcNXjurjTN4/steam-buns-while-you-boil-hot-dogs

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Video: Pistorius? brother facing homicide charge

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50927796/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

China energy consumption rises 3.9% in 2012

AFP - Energy consumption by China, the world's leading emitter of CO2, rose 3.9 percent in 2012 from the previous year but fell by 3.6 percent per unit of gross domestic product, the government said.

The country used the equivalent of 3.62 billion tonnes of coal, the National Bureaus of Statistics reported in a paper on the state of the economy published Friday.

Coal represents 66.4 percent of the total energy consumed, with oil and natural gas accounting for 18.9 percent and 5.5 percent respectively, according to an estimate by the Diyi Caijing economic daily.

The rest is mainly provided by hydro while nuclear power still accounts for a very low proportion of China's energy mix, despite a major programme to construct atomic power plants.

The NBS said in 2012 Chinese consumption of coal rose 2.5 percent, oil 6.0 percent and natural gas 10.2 percent while electricity use climbed 5.5 percent.

Energy consumption per unit of GDP however fell 3.6 percent, it said.

China has pledged to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 40 to 45 percent per unit of GDP by 2020 compared to 2005 levels, rather than in absolute terms.

The world's second largest economy is expanding rapidly since it posted GDP growth of 7.8 percent last year, its lowest in 13 years after hitting 9.3 percent in 2011 and 10.4 percent in 2010.

Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20130223-china-energy-consumption-rises-39-2012

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NFL Scouting Combine running updates

2012 NFL CombineGetty Images

We're following the latest news out of?the 2013 NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

NBCSports.com

updated 4:49 p.m. ET Feb. 22, 2013

ProFootballTalk's Mike Florio and Darin Gantt, along with CSN's NFL insiders, are in Indianapolis this week for the 2013 NFL Scouting Combine. Follow their up-to-the-second updates on how the top 2013 NFL Draft prospects are faring in Indy:

Rotoworld NFL draft guru Josh Norris previews what's on-tap at the 2013 NFL Scouting Combine. He also ranks his top-40 draft prospects heading into the Combine and offers his latest mock draft. And don't forget to follow Rotoworld's NFL Draft player news for updates on player measurables, workouts, interviews and more.

On PFT Live from the Combine, Mike Florio explains how health is the main concern for prospects in Indianapolis. Florio also talks with Arizona coach Bruce Arians about how to reshape the Cardinals, as well as Titans coach Mike Munchak and Dolphins GM Jeff Ireland.

The merits of the 40-yard dash as a scouting tool have been long-debated. Count longtime NFL GM Bill Polian as a believer in it.

PFT's Darin Gantt says that while media interviews and the 40-yard dash are in the spotlight, it's the medical tests that teams value most at the Combine.

CSN Philly's Reuben Frank says Eagles GM Howie Roseman won't prioritize defense over offense, prefering a "big board" approach as he scouts talent in Indy.

CSN Houston's Dave Zangaro has 10 prospects on whom to keep a close eye in Indianapolis.

Georgia LB Jarvis Jones, widely viewed as one the draft's top prospects, won't run in Indianapolis.

CSN Houston's James Palmer has the skinny on international prospects who could turn heads at the Combine.

Inside the Irish blogger Keith Arnold says all eyes will be on Manti Te'o this week as the Notre Dame linebacker tries to rehab his image in the minds of NFL talent evaluators.

Te'o isn't the only Irish standout with something to prove at the Combine. Notre Dame RB Cierre Wood has a lot riding on his performance in Indy.

CSN Chicago's John Mullin talks about how the evolution of the Combine over the years has changed the way NFL draft prospects are evaluated.

CSN Philly's Ray Didinger pontificates on what the Wonderlic test means for players' draft hopes.

Alabama tackle D.J. Fluker, one of the fast risers among draft prognosticators, is rapidly losing weight, down from 355 pounds at the Senior Bowl to 339 at the Combine.

Dee Milliner, the draft's top CB prospect, will require surgery on his lingering shoulder injury.

Heisman finalist Collin Klein, hoping for a shot to play QB in the NFL, will work out at the Combine. Purdue DT Kawann Short, however, will not.

Cal WR Keenan Allen, one of the draft's top-rated WRs, will not work out, claiming to be only 70 percent recovered from a torn PCL in his left knee.

Speaking at the Combine, Cardinals coach Bruce Arians says he won't be focused on scouting read-options QBs.

It's been a few years since Tim Tebow worked out at the Combine. But Tebow's future could be decided there this week.

Speaking at the Combine, 49ers GM Trent Baalke says all options are still on the table regarding QB Alex Smith.

Eagles coach Chip Kelly said he wants to coach quarterback Nick Foles.

The man Kelly replaced in Philly, Andy Reid, appeared to be a happier and refreshed.

Panthers coach Ron Rivera told ProFootballTalk that the team likely put too much on Cam Newton last year.

The Ravens have no intention of letting Joe Flacco leave Baltimore, assistant GM Eric DeCosta told PFT. In the same interview, DeCosta said of wide receiver Anquan Boldin, "Anquan's a Raven." The same is no longer true of center Matt Birk, who retired on Friday. Florio says that the loss of Birk meansanother leader is out the door in Baltimore.

Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff and his old friend Scott Pioli, formerly the GM of the Chiefs, allowed PFT to tag along as they reminisced about old times. The two men were pups in the Patriots' front office.

The NFL and Players Association traded salvos on Thursday and Friday, with the league accusing the union of dragging its feet on HGH testing. When the NFLproposed an overhaul to the offseason schedule that would move free agency and the draft, the union said it was not on board. The NFL envisions a February "signing day," similar to that of college football, on which free agents would announce their destinations. In further NFL-NFLPA wrangling, Judge David Doty rejected the union's attempt to pursue collusion charges against owners related to the 2010 uncapped year.

Broncos president John Elway had an informative media availability, in which he said that the talented new batch of QBs is more the result of better-prepared players than better scouting. Elway went into more depth about the team's scouting approach in an interview with Florio later Friday, and he discussed whether the club has considered restructuring Peyton Manning's deal -- yes, already -- to avoid a future cap issue.

Speaking of quarterbacks fighting the noodle-armed rap, Matt Barkley met with the press on Friday, and he explained his decision not to throw at the Combine. Barkley said his right shoulder will be healthy for his March 27 pro day, and he will wow scouts with his arm strength.

West Virginia wide receiver Tavon Austin caused some ripples when he proclaimed himself the best player in the draft.

The Niners are bound to find trade partners for Alex Smith. So why would they release him? Jim Harbaugh said that's not going to happen.

Harbaugh's divisional rival in St. Louis has a tough decision to make about Danny Amendola, and the Rams apparently will not use the franchise tag on the free-agent wide receiver.

? 2013 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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It's the QBs, not the scout

PFT: According to Broncos executive John Elway, the rising tide of young quarterbacks in the NFL is a function of improved play, rather than improved scouting.

Getty Images
NFL Scouting Combine running updates

ProFootballTalk's Mike Florio and Darin Gantt, along with CSN's NFL insiders, are in Indianapolis this week for the 2013 NFL Scouting Combine. Follow their up-to-the-second updates on how the top 2013 NFL Draft prospects are faring in Indy.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50888469/ns/sports-nfl/

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Justin Timberlake and Jay-Z Tour Dates: Announced!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/justin-timberlake-and-jay-z-tour-dates-announced/

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Democrats' Drive to Turn Texas Blue May Be Harder Than it Seems

Texas Democrats, no doubt pumped up by a growing Hispanic population, have started to mull over the possibility that the Lone Star State could become Democratic for the first time since George W. Bush trounced Ann Richards in 1994.

But a close analysis suggests that may be easier said than done.

More Hispanic voters may mean a tilt toward Democrats in Texas

Newsmax, noting an increase in the Hispanic electorate nationwide, which tended to vote for Obama, suggests that the political trends in Texas will shift toward the Democrats going forward. RealClearPolitics points out that Texas is already a majority/minority state in which non-Hispanic whites make up just 45 percent of the population.

Immigration as a wedge issue

Democratic politicians in Texas point to the immigration issue as something that can be used to drive Hispanic voters to the Democrats, according to Newsmax. Mitt Romney, whose hard-line stance on the issue was noted during debates in the Republican primary, has taken the blame for a poor performance by Republicans among Hispanic voters nationwide.

Texas Republicans have been more adroit at wooing Hispanic voters

However, RealClearPolitics votes that Texas Republicans have proven more adroit at wooing Hispanic voters. Gov. Rick Perry, for instance, managed to grab close to 40 percent of the Hispanic vote in his re-election bid in 2010, according to Newsmax. Perry, whose stance toward immigration was less hard-line than Romney's, has also managed to use economic and social issues to good effect to woo Hispanic voters. Republicans have also elected their own Hispanics to public office, including Ted Cruz who, albeit Cuban and not Mexican, has won a seat in the United States Senate.

White Texans trending more Republican

One other factor that mitigates against Texas trending toward the Democrats is that white Texans have been shifting more toward the Republican Party, as the New Republic notes. While Obama did better with Hispanic voters in Texas in 2012 than he did in 2008, he did worse overall in the Lone Star State, mainly because he did worse among white voters.

Texas trending blue or staying red

Nevertheless, RealClearPolitics notes that Texas Democrats still hope that can leverage the Hispanic vote to at the very least make the Lone Star State competitive again. They believe they have a rising star in the form of San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, who could be competitive in the 2014 governor's race. However Texas Republicans seem to realize that the advantage they have enjoyed in statewide races for the past 20 years will not maintain itself, realizing that they will have to work to preserve it. How well they do may prove to be a model for Republicans nationwide in the task of making the Hispanic electorate competitive and not a lock, like African Americans, for the Democrats.

Texas resident Mark Whittington writes about state issues for the Yahoo! Contributor Network.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/democrats-drive-turn-texas-blue-may-harder-seems-185900265.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Michigan GOP introduce law to let teachers carry guns in class, tea party group to give free classes

It?s hard to say which is the most freakish element of this story. Is it that some Michigan Republicans want to allow concealed weapons to be carried in our children?s classrooms? Or is it that a tea party PAC is offering free gun classes to get teachers trained so that they can?

Let?s take the legislation first. House Bill 4098 (pdf) adds this section to Public Act 372:

A teacher, administrator, or other employee of a school is not precluded from carrying a concealed pistol in that school or on that school property if the chief executive officer of the school has authorized that individual to carry a concealed pistol in that school or on that school property. The chief executive officer shall condition his or her approval upon the requirement that the teacher, administrator, or other employee successfully complete training considered appropriate by the chief executive officer. The training may be in addition to the training required under Section 5J . If an individual authorized to carry a concealed pistol under this subparagraph does not carry the pistol on his or her person, that pistol shall be placed in a container that is securely locked to prevent anyone other than that individual from gaining unauthorized access to that pistol.

This is a kneejerk response to the Newtown massacre, of course. It is, of course, insane. The thought of teachers packing heat in our state?s classrooms is a terrifying thought. We have, according to the State of Michigan, 1,565,390 K-12 students in our state?s classrooms. It doesn?t take a very active imagination to conjure up all sorts of realistic scenarios where that gun becomes separated from the teacher and kills someone. It gets accidentally dropped. It gets snatched by a student. It goes off unexpectedly. There?s a fight between teachers or a teacher and student. That?s just the easy-to-imagine stuff.

The astonishing thing is that three of the co-sponsors are actually on the House Education Committee.

Then we have RetakeOurGov, the tea party PAC group that thinks this is such a fine idea that they are giving free classes to two contest winners to make these teachers eligible for this option should Michigan Republican lawmakers and Governor Snyder completely lose their minds and pass this hideous piece of crap into law:

A local ?tea party? group is putting money behind its belief that teachers should be allowed to carry guns at school, an idea the organization said is consistent with ?tea party? values.

This week, Hartland Township-based RetakeOurGov announced it will fund concealed-pistol-license, or CPL, training for two Livingston County teachers through a contest.

The organizers anticipate that teachers who apply will want the option to carry concealed pistols at school, something currently not allowed under Michigan law.

The training will be provided by a National Rifle Association-certified instructor and will qualify the teachers for CPLs, according to the group?s website.

RetakeOurGov said it decided to be ?proactive? following the December massacre of 20 students and six adults by a gunman at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school.

The contest promotes support for a bill in Lansing that would amend Michigan?s concealed-pistol law to give school boards the ability to allow school employees, including teachers, to carry concealed pistols at school. {?}

?Providing this service to educators I just see as a public service,? [RetakeOurGov treasurer Wes] Nakagiri said.

Teachers are not all so excited by the prospect.

Legislators and nonteacher ?tea party? activists do not understand what arming teachers would mean ?on the ground,? said Jay McDowell, president of the Howell Education Association, the Howell school district?s teachers? union.

McDowell said an armed faculty, high emotions among teachers and the possibility of students stealing teachers? guns would be a recipe for disaster.

Armed teachers could be put in a position of shooting their former students, he added. In Newtown, the gunman attended Sandy Hook Elementary School when he was young.

McDowell said there will likely be Howell teachers interested in the free CPL training, but only because it will be at no cost.

?I just don?t think Representative Rogers or the ?tea party? have thought through what this would really look like on the ground,? McDowell said.

?This is not the solution that we want. It is a solution foisted on us by people who would not be put in that position,? he added.

Besides the three bill co-sponsors on the Education Committee, there are 14 others, including six Democrats. We can only hope that sane adults will put an end to this before the legislation even leaves their committee.

[Graphic by Anne C. Savage, special to Eclectablog]

Source: http://www.eclectablog.com/2013/02/michigan-gop-introduce-law-to-let-teachers-carry-guns-in-class-tea-party-group-to-give-free-classes.html

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

The sequester blame game (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/286149475?client_source=feed&format=rss

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The Engadget Podcast is live tonight at 5PM!

Remember all that talk last week about the slow down between CES and MWC? Not this week, man. No way. PlayStations, HTCs and a whole lot more dropped in the past seven days. Join us after the break at 5PM. We've got lots to talk about.

February 21, 2013 5:00 PM EST

Filed under:

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/21/engadget-podcast/

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The ethics of access: Comparing 2 federal health care reform efforts

The ethics of access: Comparing 2 federal health care reform efforts [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System

Learning from problems with Reagan-era emergency access law could help improve Obama-era Affordable Care Act, trio of U-M doctors says

ANN ARBOR, Mich. Two major health reform laws, enacted 25 years apart, both try to meet an ethical standard to provide broad access to basic health care. Neither quite gets there -- but it's not too late for modern health care reform to bring the nation closer to a goal of comprehensive and coordinated care for all.

That's the conclusion of a commentary published in the new issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association by a team of University of Michigan Health System physicians.

The authors a family physician, an emergency physician and a primary care pediatrician/internist take a hard look at the implications of the ethical standard set in 1986 by a law that mandated universal access to emergency care. They assess the ability of both that law, and the Affordable Care Act of 2010, to meet the standard of providing access to basic health care to all who live in the United States. They conclude that both laws fall short of that standard.

But, by learning from the quarter-century of the nation's experience with the emergency care law called EMTALA they say the current Congress and administration may still be able to implement and tweak the ACA so it comes closer to the public's ethical expectations.

The crux of the issue, they write, is that the ACA doesn't ensure access to preventive care for all, nor coordination among all types of health care. An estimated 30 million people will still be without insurance even after all of its provisions take effect.

"Health care in the U.S. is sometimes treated as a right and sometimes as a privilege," says U-M health care policy researcher Katherine Diaz Vickery, M.D., a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar who also sees patients at U-M's Ypsilanti Health Center. "When we compare EMTALA and the ACA, we see that while emergency care is treated as a right, primary care, it seems, is treated as a privilege."

EMTALA focused on taking care of individuals in urgent or emergent situations, and did not address how to make all people in the U.S. healthier, say the authors. They cite the need for a balanced health care system that focuses on both illness and wellness, and allows patients and providers the chance to work together to prevent illness and save money.

Co-author and U-M emergency medicine physician Kori Sauser, M.D., notes that while the ACA comes closer to changing that perspective, it does not go far enough.

"As the provisions of the ACA kick in, millions more people will have access to primary care providers and preventive services like vaccinations and routine screenings for high blood pressure and cancer," says Sauser, who is also a RWJF Clinical Scholar. "Even so, demonstration projects haven't convinced us that patients will choose primary care offices over the emergency department for their acute care. A major missing piece in the ACA is in failing to determine how to connect emergency care with primary care resources in ways that meet patients' needs."

EMTALA, which requires hospitals and providers to evaluate, stabilize and provide basic lifesaving treatment to any patient who comes to an emergency department or is in active labor, was passed during President Ronald Reagan's administration. It does not allow a patient's ability to pay to be considered during emergency care.

Its ethical core, to ensure access to care in medical emergencies, includes an acknowledgement of "community responsibility" and "historic standards" in health care.

But in the years since, it has led patients who do not have insurance or the ability to pay for care out of their pocket to rely on emergency rooms for care. That in turn has burdened hospitals and led to spending that doesn't take advantage of potentially cost-saving primary and preventive care.

The authors note that ACA does not expressly lay out the way to integrate the emergency and primary care worlds in a way that ensures access to care -- what the authors call a major oversight.

And, at the same time that the ACA is being implemented, payments to hospitals to fund care for the uninsured are being decreased -- in spite of estimates that 30 million people will remain uninsured in 2020.

The authors conclude: "Ultimately, the ability of the US health care system to satisfy the ethical obligation to ensure access to care -- first codified in EMTALA -- will be a core measuring stick for the success of the ACA and for any future reforms."

The article grew out of discussions that Vickery and Sauser had with Matthew Davis, M.D., M.A.P.P., who is co-director of the RWJF Clinical Scholars program at the University of Michigan and holds faculty positions in the U-M Medical School and U-M Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.

Vickery, who had previous experience treating undocumented immigrants at a Federally Qualified Health Center, notes that the issue of access to primary care for that population, and for others who will not become insured under the ACA, still needs to be addressed. She recalls instances where patients had to be hospitalized for severe complications of diabetes that had never been diagnosed or controlled, because their only health care access came through emergency rooms.

On the flip side, Sauser notes that not having to consider someone's insurance status in the ER feels like a "luxury" but that every day she sees a need for better ability to coordinate the care of a patient who has been seen for an emergency.

Both say that the accountable care organization, or ACO, model of care encouraged under the ACA may help patients within ACOs get access to more coordinated care.

By looking back at lessons from EMTALA which will continue to be the law of the land even under the ACA they hope to inform policy makers and health leaders who are working to implement or introduce potential changes to the ACA.

###

Reference: JAMA, Vol. 309, No. 7, pp. 665-666 http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1653529


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


The ethics of access: Comparing 2 federal health care reform efforts [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System

Learning from problems with Reagan-era emergency access law could help improve Obama-era Affordable Care Act, trio of U-M doctors says

ANN ARBOR, Mich. Two major health reform laws, enacted 25 years apart, both try to meet an ethical standard to provide broad access to basic health care. Neither quite gets there -- but it's not too late for modern health care reform to bring the nation closer to a goal of comprehensive and coordinated care for all.

That's the conclusion of a commentary published in the new issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association by a team of University of Michigan Health System physicians.

The authors a family physician, an emergency physician and a primary care pediatrician/internist take a hard look at the implications of the ethical standard set in 1986 by a law that mandated universal access to emergency care. They assess the ability of both that law, and the Affordable Care Act of 2010, to meet the standard of providing access to basic health care to all who live in the United States. They conclude that both laws fall short of that standard.

But, by learning from the quarter-century of the nation's experience with the emergency care law called EMTALA they say the current Congress and administration may still be able to implement and tweak the ACA so it comes closer to the public's ethical expectations.

The crux of the issue, they write, is that the ACA doesn't ensure access to preventive care for all, nor coordination among all types of health care. An estimated 30 million people will still be without insurance even after all of its provisions take effect.

"Health care in the U.S. is sometimes treated as a right and sometimes as a privilege," says U-M health care policy researcher Katherine Diaz Vickery, M.D., a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar who also sees patients at U-M's Ypsilanti Health Center. "When we compare EMTALA and the ACA, we see that while emergency care is treated as a right, primary care, it seems, is treated as a privilege."

EMTALA focused on taking care of individuals in urgent or emergent situations, and did not address how to make all people in the U.S. healthier, say the authors. They cite the need for a balanced health care system that focuses on both illness and wellness, and allows patients and providers the chance to work together to prevent illness and save money.

Co-author and U-M emergency medicine physician Kori Sauser, M.D., notes that while the ACA comes closer to changing that perspective, it does not go far enough.

"As the provisions of the ACA kick in, millions more people will have access to primary care providers and preventive services like vaccinations and routine screenings for high blood pressure and cancer," says Sauser, who is also a RWJF Clinical Scholar. "Even so, demonstration projects haven't convinced us that patients will choose primary care offices over the emergency department for their acute care. A major missing piece in the ACA is in failing to determine how to connect emergency care with primary care resources in ways that meet patients' needs."

EMTALA, which requires hospitals and providers to evaluate, stabilize and provide basic lifesaving treatment to any patient who comes to an emergency department or is in active labor, was passed during President Ronald Reagan's administration. It does not allow a patient's ability to pay to be considered during emergency care.

Its ethical core, to ensure access to care in medical emergencies, includes an acknowledgement of "community responsibility" and "historic standards" in health care.

But in the years since, it has led patients who do not have insurance or the ability to pay for care out of their pocket to rely on emergency rooms for care. That in turn has burdened hospitals and led to spending that doesn't take advantage of potentially cost-saving primary and preventive care.

The authors note that ACA does not expressly lay out the way to integrate the emergency and primary care worlds in a way that ensures access to care -- what the authors call a major oversight.

And, at the same time that the ACA is being implemented, payments to hospitals to fund care for the uninsured are being decreased -- in spite of estimates that 30 million people will remain uninsured in 2020.

The authors conclude: "Ultimately, the ability of the US health care system to satisfy the ethical obligation to ensure access to care -- first codified in EMTALA -- will be a core measuring stick for the success of the ACA and for any future reforms."

The article grew out of discussions that Vickery and Sauser had with Matthew Davis, M.D., M.A.P.P., who is co-director of the RWJF Clinical Scholars program at the University of Michigan and holds faculty positions in the U-M Medical School and U-M Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.

Vickery, who had previous experience treating undocumented immigrants at a Federally Qualified Health Center, notes that the issue of access to primary care for that population, and for others who will not become insured under the ACA, still needs to be addressed. She recalls instances where patients had to be hospitalized for severe complications of diabetes that had never been diagnosed or controlled, because their only health care access came through emergency rooms.

On the flip side, Sauser notes that not having to consider someone's insurance status in the ER feels like a "luxury" but that every day she sees a need for better ability to coordinate the care of a patient who has been seen for an emergency.

Both say that the accountable care organization, or ACO, model of care encouraged under the ACA may help patients within ACOs get access to more coordinated care.

By looking back at lessons from EMTALA which will continue to be the law of the land even under the ACA they hope to inform policy makers and health leaders who are working to implement or introduce potential changes to the ACA.

###

Reference: JAMA, Vol. 309, No. 7, pp. 665-666 http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1653529


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/uomh-teo022013.php

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Video: Bipartisan push for marriage equality

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/hardball/50879588/

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ZTE Aims To Launch The First Tegra 4 Smartphones In China By The End Of 1H 2013

zteWhen NVIDIA officially pulled back the curtains on its new Tegra 4 SoC at CES, it had no shortage of praise for the thing -- the company referred to it as "the world's fastest mobile processor" -- but there was something missing from the announcement. Who would be using be using it? Sure, Vizio revealed a 10.1-inch, T4-powered tablet just a day later, but there was nary a phone partnership in sight until tonight. NVIDIA has just announced it is working with the folks ZTE to launch the first Tegra 4-powered smartphones in China during the first half of this year.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/42lexNCqpkM/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Obama to use emergency responders to push GOP on cuts

President Barack Obama on Tuesday morning will stand with emergency responders at the White House, according to a White House official, to issue yet another warning to congressional Republicans ahead of across-the-board, automatic spending cuts known as the sequester. The cuts total $85 billion and are set to go into effect if a budget is not passed by March 1.

The president is scheduled to deliver his remarks at 10:45 a.m. ET. He will discuss the impact of federal cuts on emergency first responders, as well as the effect of the sequester on other jobs and the middle class, according to the official.

Obama has urged Congress to pass a short-term budget fix in the absence of a complete budget resolution. The alternative, the White House says, will derail the economy.

The White House accuses Republicans of preferring a sequester over closing tax loopholes for the nation's wealthiest. Many Republicans, including House Speaker John Boehner, have voiced their disapproval of the sequester (even though Boehner and a majority of Republicans voted for the fiscal cliff plan that maintained it), and have pushed the president and Democrats to offer a concrete alternative that tackles debt and deficit problems.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-emergency-responders-push-republicans-sequester-141651336--politics.html

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The Passing of a Dharma Friend ? Ah! Dharma reflections based on ...

By Clemma Dawsen

I?m here to talk to you on behalf of our tiny sangha in rural Vermont and how

together we experienced the teachings of Anyen Rinpoche in a very immediate way as

we shared in the dying of one of our members. It?s our hope that reading this will give

you an idea of how amazing and beautiful and possible it is to die with confidence. We

should all aspire to be surrounded by trusted dharma friends. One of life?s greatest gifts

is to be a dharma friend; if you are asked to be one you should have no doubt as to

your good fortune. As the hours and days passed leading up to Bob?s death, tangible

benefits of each of our particular practices arose spontaneously and we came to a

greater understanding of how important the sangha truly is. No matter how large or

small, no matter the level of expertise of its members, the sangha holds things together.

?

I dedicate the merit of writing this story to Bob?s wife, Sally, who by selflessly

opening her heart as her beloved Bob was dying offered each of us the opportunity

to accrue astoundingly good karma and gain the depth of understanding that can

only come from experience. May she be strengthened and blessed with clear vision

for her future. It?s her wish and ours that continuous benefit radiate in ever widening

circles from our sangha to yours and beyond. On behalf of our sangha, I offer deepest

gratitude to Anyen Rinpoche for first accepting Bob and Sally?s invitation to come to

Vermont, and for supporting us from afar as he traveled to Bodhgaya at the time of

Bob?s passing; and to Ven. Konchog Norbu who committed to Sally in October that he

would return to Vermont to be with Bob in his final days and made good on his promise.

His gentle presence and pure honesty gave us all room to simply be.

?

As one friend wrote from Colorado upon Bob?s passing, ??I am so deeply touched

to see Rinpoche?s vision? for sangha to come together and transform the experience of death-

- happen for Bob and Sally. We may not have all the skills yet, but the compassion and loving

motivation to help is flowing from your hearts. Thank you all so much. Those of you who have

been with Bob and Sally this past week wrote such beautiful poetry about your experience?it

seemed quite magical. You were obviously surrounded with Buddha?s blessings. And Bob gave

us a gift from his heart as well. His practice over the years supported him even when his mental

faculties could not??

?

Bob was diagnosed with Alzheimer?s disease in 2010. By last fall he was failing

fast and yet still eagerly wished to be with Rinpoche and attend Level I Phowa training

in Manchester. Although he did not express it in words, it seems Bob had chosen to

prepare for death. Sally, ever devoted, set out purposefully to see him through.

At the retreat Bob?s open-hearted acceptance of the compassion we showed

toward him opened our hearts to receive his in return. It works that way. Those of us

who knew him, as well as those who traveled from all over the U.S. and Canada to

attend the training were blessed by his company. While he struggled to remember

names and faces, directions and schedules, Bob somehow remained more present

than seemed possible, more present at times than those of us consciously aiming to be.

Whenever I was with him, I understood bodhichitta in a way I never had before.

On the final day of the retreat, each of us came quietly forward with bowed heads

and folded hands to receive Rinpoche?s blessing. When it came time for Bob to step

up, he raised his head and approached Rinpoche with a determined step and an open

smile. Before Rinpoche could extend his colorfully wrapped bamboo staff to bless Bob

with a touch or a tap, Bob reached out with both hands, seized hold of the staff and held

fast. The long moment that followed enveloped us all as we were suspended in pure

dharma. It was as if Rinpoche and Bob formed the center of a great lotus while the rest

of us became in turn its many petals, fanned out in translucent light that could not be

contained by mere walls.

?

It was an image I returned to time and again in the weeks that followed the

retreat as Bob began to fragment into ever more random bits of being. Sally continued

to be his anchor but was at times fraught with despair and exhaustion. At times fearful,

agitated and confused, Bob could also become very angry, or simply seem to disappear

altogether. When he was hospitalized yet again in late December, it seemed logical to

use the time to figure out how to not bring him home this time, to find somewhere to

?place? him. People on all sides encouraged Sally to take this obvious next step. Sally

however, was not so sure. In fact, she was pretty much against it right along.

Over the next couple of weeks, as Sally agonized over what to do we shared

her uncertainty. We continued to meet as a sangha, to offer prayers and dedicate

merit. This was to prove especially crucial during this painful and tumultuous phase of Bob?s

dying. We Westerners are prone to getting into our heads, bypassing our hearts when

decisions have to be made until the balance is so skewed we abandon logic and swing

to the other side, often making rash choices based purely in emotion. Yet the teachings

remind us again and again to maintain mindfulness and discernment so as to balance

the logic of our heads with the loving kindness of our hearts.

?

This is why we take refuge in the sangha. It?s critical that we do this as

practitioners; otherwise confusion will reign, and lead inevitably to more uncertainty and

doubt. Sally needed support for her practice in order to keep her heart open and her

mind clear. The sangha needed to practice together to build confidence in our ability to

be present for Bob and Sally. Our busy lives somehow supported rather than thwarted

our endeavors, dishing up the sort of signs we needed that we were doing it, we were

being mindful, living our practice in the day-to-day, seeing how the dharma permeates

everything and everyone. Instead of falling further into doubt, one day in early January

Sally simply knew what she had to do. She took a leave of absence from work and

brought Bob home to die.

?

What we had talked about for months?the inevitability of Bob?s passing and our

sangha?s role in the process?was suddenly upon us. Sally prepared a room for Bob

based on what Rinpoche?s teachings said would support his passing. A fire burned

gently in the glass-fronted stove at the foot of the bed, candles and flowers adorned

the room and a small shrine upon which she placed photos of Bob?s teachers and other

personal dharma objects stood against the wall. Entering their home, one was met with

profound peace and a sense of everything being in right order and ready for what was

to come.

?

Jan. 16 ?

Sally (in an email to us):

? A soft snow is falling this morning; the wood stove is stoked, sending light and warmth into

the darkened room. I have again awakened with anxiety mixed with peace. I get up each

morning around five or six giving myself time to have coffee and some time alone. I try to sit on

the cushion each morning, either chanting the Heart Sutra or the Meditation on the

Compassionate One. Often my thoughts intrude, and getting down into that deeper state seems

impossible, I practice breathing in and out, feeling my heart pounding in my chest, I then wait to

hear sounds from Bob?s room. Yesterday he stood up by himself and opened the door, the day

before I had to wake him up around 8:30 and when I brought him out into the living room his

legs buckled underneath him. He is taking very little food at this point, preferring smoothies

and liquids; he seems to have lost all interest in solids. He spends a good portion of the day

sleeping. Yesterday and the day before he was only up about three hours each day. He is on very

little meds, whereas before we had him on 7.5 mg of an anti-psychotic twice a day, now I only

give him 3.25 once a day when he begins to get confused and seems a bit agitated. Most of the

?time when he is awake he seems to be very present responding to questions with a clear yes or

no, though he speaks only in a whisper and cannot really form more than a one or two word

sentence. Yesterday the visiting nurse came and has recommended that the

hospice nurse evaluate him. I struggle with my own thoughts of wanting this to be

over quickly, for both of our sakes. I have begun to put together a small team to help me and to

also research the legalities for my wishes to have the body home for 3 days after passing and I

have been assured by a funeral director that this is possible, I wish to make this journey as

seamless as possible and feel the prayers and support of all of you.

?

?Jan 16?

A sangha member replies:

?I am able to confirm what Sally feels certain of, that Bob is far more present than he has been

for months. It?s important to look with our hearts to see it?as Sally said in her note this morning,

Bob doesn?t speak above a whisper and spends a great deal of time whispering to himself and

gazing past us into the world that he can see and we cannot. It?s good to talk directly to him,

to not assume he doesn?t hear us?with our hearts we are able to sense what Bob is seeing and

hearing and it?s very peaceful where he is abiding. We can convey that energy to him when

we speak, or as we sit quietly with him we can send him love and clarity for the path. This is

what I wanted to tell you all, that Bob is in a state of grace right now that?s very good. His

eyes are clear and the lines in his face are gone. Although he is very thin, thinner than ever,

there?s ?more? of him than when I saw him last, he seems fuller, more put together. Sally spends

a lot of time chanting and praying with Bob and the energy in the house is sacred and lovely?as

Sally said, it would be a wonderful thing if this were to continue and Bob were able to die this

way without having the agitation and rage return that he was experiencing not long ago. We

have no way of knowing what will come, but can continue to pray and offer whatever we can to

the process; whether in person or from afar. Making Sally laugh felt really good, there needs to

be room for laughter and joy at such a time?remembering that it?s not irreverent to laugh in the

face of death.

?

Jan. 19?

Sally:

Dear all?on Wednesday afternoon Bob went to bed at 4:30 and the next day I was not able

to arouse him, he has been semi-comatose/sleeping since, and is now actively dying. Rinpoche

is in Bodhgaya and is offering prayers along with 3000 other monks and tulkus. I am piecing

together necessary details while supporting his process. I will keep you posted?

?

Jan. 20?

Sally:

?Konchog (Ven. Konchog Norbu) is here and is staying for the duration, he is in the room

with Bob chanting, we are so blessed, please come when you can, much love to all..Bob

still comfortable?hospice came this morning?

?

Jan. 20?

A sangha member:

This afternoon at Sally and Bob?s house, it was clear that Bob?s condition has declined

dramatically since I last saw him?The earth and water elements appear to have dissolved, Bob

continues his journey toward the bardos.

Konchog, who arrived last night, is staying at the house. I found him seated at Bob?s bedside,

reading aloud from the Tibetan Book of the Dead. During the afternoon, Bob and Sally?s

daughters and families arrived. While strong winds blow through the surrounding hills and

forest, the air within the house is still and rich with compassion, acceptance and strength. When

I told Bob that he was in Rinpoche?s prayers from Bhodgaya, his reaction was immediate and

unmistakable.

It?s clear that Bob is an extremely fortunate being. Sally?s immense courage, great heart, and

dedication to the dharma have allowed this gentle soul to leave this world with unmatched love

and support. We are privileged to be able to share in their journey.

?

Jan. 21

Konchog:

Bob passed so peacefully in the lion posture at 7:41pm EST, on this, the 10th day of Guru

Rinpoche. Just before he passed, his eyes, which had been closed for days, opened, directed

at the candle Rinpoche had told us to place in his view, set up as an offering to an image of

Amitabha in Dewachen. A light snow had just begun to fall. Sally and the two children they had

together were here, emotional, but holding it together pretty well. After his last breath, I lightly

tapped at his fontanel, said Amitabha?s name many times, and sang his mantra. I then read

the Heart Sutra and Karma Chagmed?s ?Prayer to be Reborn in Dewachen,? made incense and

light offerings with Atisha?s extensive light offering prayer, and all of us together did the simple

reading for the first three days of death. Now we are notifying various people while a lovely

recording of the Mani mantra plays for Bob.

?

Sally had already arranged for Bob?s body to remain undisturbed for 3 days

before being removed for cremation, so when he died the stove was shut down and the

window opened to invite the chill air. The vigil began. Over the next 3 days, Konchog

and Sally remained a steady presence while others from our sangha and from Sally

and Bob?s family came and went, taking turns snugged in a heavy coat or wrapped in

a blanket to sit with Bob?s body. The sacred space that Sally had prepared for Bob was

now fiercely cold and yet magically warm and inviting; lit with candles, fragrant with

incense. Bob?s body, too, was a comforting presence rather than something strange or

off-putting. Outside the open window, chimes hanging from the eaves lightly sounded in

the breeze. On Wednesday night, 2 days after his outer breath had ceased, our sangha

met at Sally and Bob?s house as a group and sat together with Bob?s body. Konchog led

us in the specific prayers that Rinpoche instructed us to use.

?

On Friday the body was removed for cremation and on Saturday, January 23,

a ceremony of remembrance was held for Bob at the Manchester Shambhala Center,

lovingly adorned for the occasion. The service was a simple, moving event filled with

prayers and ritual befitting the final days of Bob?s life. As with all aspects of Bob?s

passing, the day itself was auspicious, being the full moon Amitabha day. The room

was packed; some guests on cushions, others in chairs or standing, squeezed in

and familiar with one another if only for the hour. Many had never been to a Buddhist

ceremony of any kind; if they felt awkward upon arrival their awkwardness quickly gave

way to a sense of openness and peaceful acceptance. Toddlers wandered through

the crowd, laughing and chattering. Babies were held gently in loving arms. The sense

that we were all being held in fact, was much like the moment at the retreat when Bob

received his blessing from Rinpoche. When nothing separates who we are from what

we do, everything is sacred. Dharma readings and prayers, music, poetry and loving

words mingled as deeply as the styles and hearts of the people in attendance. People

remarked later on that it was like being suspended in time.

?

Bob and Sally?s daughter, Sam, read the words that Sally had written for the?ceremony:

?I would just like to share a little about these last weeks, which have been sad, but also peaceful

?and filled with love. When Bob was in the hospital I was told over and over that he needed to

?be in a nursing home. I got very, very close to putting him in one. I struggled daily with the

?decision but after visiting a nursing home, I realized I couldn?t do this, I couldn?t not bring

?Bob home. So on January third we brought him home, against doctors? advice. He was weak

?and disoriented and was brought home by ambulance. Bobby and I cuddled into bed with him;

?and we were smiling to each other, saying over and over ?you?re home.? Bob was so visibly

happy. Please understand that for someone with Alzheimer?s, it?s hard to show emotion. It?s

all blurred. He knew he was home, that is, he was safe, with family, with us. If he?d been in a

?nursing home, we would have lost him. We would have lost anything of him that we could pull

?back, that we could touch. It would?ve been gone.

?

In these last weeks he seemed to become more lucid, more present, even though

?his ability to communicate was diminished to only a word or two, he seemed softened.

?On Monday the 7th we laid in bed together and we talked; again, you have to understand

?he had lost the ability to speak in sentences of more than one or two words. We talked

?about Alzheimer?s and he said, ?it?s killing me?. I asked him whether he wanted to continue

?to fight this or whether he wanted to just be home, no more hospitals? He said home? I

?said to him a couple of times, ?do you understand what I am saying?? and he said ?yes.? I

?repeated, ?do you understand what I am saying?? and again he said ?yes.? ?later I helped

?him walk out into the living room and when we sat down Bob looked over at me and said, ?talk

?more?? I said to him, ?do you want to fight this, ?cause I will do anything in my power if that is

what you want,??. He nodded his head yes. He immediately looked alarmed and then said to me

?so very clearly ?other, other.? So I said, ?do you just want me to support you spiritually?? His

?face visibly relaxed and he said ?yes, yes??

?

Over the course of the next week Bob stopped eating solids. He slept more and more. On

Wednesday of last week he slipped into a semi-coma. We were told by hospice that he

?probably had less than a week. On Saturday night, Konchog came to be with us and began

?chanting and saying prayers throughout the day and late into the evening. On Monday night

?Bob peacefully died at home with Bobby, Sam, Konchog and I at his side. We continued to say

?prayers for him for the next three days after his passing.

?

This has been an incredible journey; one with acceptance, rawness, beauty, and love, I can?t

?put it all into words. When I was younger I loved Dylan Thomas?s poem ?Do Not Go Gentle into

?That Good Night?, but today?I stand here, older, and a little wiser. Death had always seemed

?a great mystery, full of fear and sadness. Bob has shown us grace, courage and a deep knowing.

?Together with my children and grandchildren we have cried, and laughed, and sobbed and

?prayed and we have learned that this great rite of passage holds unbridled compassion.?

?

After the service, Sally and her family threw a fine party. The Bob I knew was

fond of saying, ?I?m Irish.? He would attach this addendum to the increasingly abstract

things he came up with that nonetheless made perfect sense. We?d be pondering the

dharma and Bob would just come out with something so strangely yet perfectly put

together that we knew exactly what he meant but would be hard pressed to explain it. A

sort of Alzheimer?s koan, if you will. Then he?d get that twinkle in his eye and say, ?Hey,

I?m Irish.? So although he didn?t have the traditional Irish wake, Bob didn?t leave without

a celebration in his honor. Afterwards, we all went home, one by one, back to our lives,

leaving Sally to hers and yet not. The inevitable grace of the sangha remains because

that?s how it is, that?s how it works.

?

?and on January 28th, seven days after Bob?s passing, as I was sitting on the deck early

?one morning, after a deep snow, a small finch lit upon my shoulder. om mani padme hum.

?-Sally Leonard, East Dorset,?Vermont

?

Anyen Rinpoche?s book,?Dying with Confidence?includes Rinpoche?s heart advice to support practitioners through the dying process. ?The Dying with Confidence training program will give students the guidance and opportunity to master all the skills necessary for a practitioner to use death as an opportunity for enlightenment and to help all sentient beings.?The next Level I Training will be held September 26-30, 2013 in Denver, CO.

For more information and an application:?http://www.phowafoundation.org/PFCrestone%202012.php

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Source: http://www.anyenrinpoche.com/blog/2013/02/19/the-passing-of-a-dharma-friend/

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