Author: Serkadis

  • FTC Finally Forces FreeCreditReport.com To Be Honest In Its Advertising

    It’s been many years since we first wrote about the scammy services set up by the major credit reporting agencies to pretend to give you your federally guaranteed free credit report. The worst of the bunch has been FreeCreditReport.com, run by Experian, which despite its name, was actually just a way to get people to sign up for costly monthly credit monitoring services. The place to get your real free credit report is AnnualCreditReport.com, but FreeCreditReport.com tricked an awful lot of people into believing it was the real site, leading many to end up paying money (a lot of it) when they just wanted their mandated free report.

    The FTC has been battling Experian and the other rating agencies for years over this blatantly misleading advertising. The misleading ads have been incredibly lucrative for Experian, who apparently has convinced an astounding 20 million people to sign up for FreeCreditReport, and spends $70 million per year in advertising to get more people to sign up. For all that, the FTC forced Experian to pay a measly $1 million in fines (and refund money to plenty of customers), but you can understand why Experian has kept up its misleading adverising.

    However, Experian and the other credit reporting agencies are now required to clearly disclose what’s going on, and they’re testing much more straightforward messages on their websites. For example, MSNBC reports that some visitors to FreeCreditReport are already seeing a giant gray box at the top of the page with text that reads:


    “You have the right to a free credit report from AnnualCreditReport.com … the only authorized source under federal law,”

    And, with it, there’s a link and a call to action: “Take me to the authorized source.”




    What’s amazing is that it took this long to actually require basic truth in advertising on such ads.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Audi RS5 en el Salón de Ginebra

    Nueva novedad la que nos llega desde el Salón de Ginebra. Se trata del Audi RS5. Finalmente Audi ha mostrado este esperado coupé ante cientos de camaras y aficionados que se han trasladado a dicha feria del automóvil.

    Audi RS5

    En lo que respecta a la motorización, hará uso de un motor V8 de gasolina que desarrolla 450 CV de potencia. Por otra parte, ya ha sido confirmado su precio para España, ni más ni menos que 75.000€.

    A continuación os dejo con la galería de imágenes de su presentación:

    Related posts:

    1. Rumor, Audi RS3 en el Salón de Frankfurt
    2. Audi RS5, vídeo disponible
    3. Audi A1 disponible en Febrero de 2010
  • Food-borne illnesses cost U.S. $152 billion

    YAKIMA, Wash. — Food-borne illnesses, such as E. coli and salmonella, not only take a toll on American consumers’ health, they cost the United States $152 billion annually in health care and other losses, according to a report released Wednesday by a food safety group.

    The report comes as the U.S. Senate considers legislation that would require more government inspections of food manufacturers and give the Food and Drug Administration new authority to order recalls, among other things. The House passed a similar bill last year.

    The government estimates 76 million people each year are sickened by food-borne illness, hundreds of thousands are hospitalized and about 5,000 die.

    Food contamination affects both small regional firms and massive international corporations. Recent outbreaks have resulted in large recalls of peanuts, spinach and peppers.

    In 2008 and early 2009, salmonella contamination in peanut butter crackers and peanut paste sickened 714 people in 46 states and prompted the largest recall in history.

    In just the last few months, contamination fears have sparked numerous recalls, including onion soup mixes, salami, Nestle raw cookie dough and Eggo frozen waffles.

    The financial cost determined in the new report published by the Produce Safety Project, an initiative of the Pew Charitable Trusts, was significantly higher than the $35 billion reported by the Agriculture Department in 1997.

    That analysis looked only at some health costs related to a handful of pathogens, said author Robert L. Scharff, an Ohio State University assistant professor of consumer sciences and former Food and Drug Administration economist.

    Scharff’s study examined government data on all food-borne illnesses and included a broader set of economic losses. They included the costs of emergency and ongoing medical care, pain and suffering and death.

    Exposure to a food-borne pathogen can cause diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps within 12–72 hours.

    Although most people exposed to salmonella or other bacteria in food recover within a week without treatment, serious,
    long-term illnesses can occur, including seizures, coma or lingering paralysis.

    The peer-reviewed report also assigned costs to food-borne illnesses whose source was not identified, which the federal government estimates is more than three-fourths of all cases.

    The report did not include costs associated with food recalls or to industries involved, which are also substantial, Scharff said.

    ‘Serious burden to society’

    “The take away message from the report is that this estimate demonstrates that food-borne illness is a serious burden to our society,” said Sandra Eskin, director of Pew Charitable Trusts’ food safety campaign.

    The group is a member of the Make Our Food Safe coalition that includes other public health and consumer safety groups pushing for food safety legislation.

    U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., called the costs “shockingly high” and said the U.S. needs to reduce the risk of these preventable illnesses.

    “If people can’t engage in this issue because of the humanitarian aspect or the public health aspect, maybe they’re willing to listen because of the economic aspect,” she said in a conference call with reporters.

    The Agriculture Department inspects meat and poultry and shares inspection of eggs with the FDA. The FDA inspects most other foods, but at least 15 government agencies are a part of the food safety system.

    The Agriculture Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Dr. Jeff Farrar, FDA’s associate commissioner for food protection, said the agency had not had an opportunity to review the report.

    “We welcome all contributions toward a better understanding the impact of food safety in the United States,” he said.

    “The cost of food-borne illness is undoubtedly high and underscores the need for rapid passage of bipartisan legislation to provide new food safety tools for FDA.”

    Read the original article from msnbc health.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Instant dimples a cheeky fad

    While thousands of people shell out millions of dollars to have unsightly dimples removed from their derrieres, others are actually paying to have the more charming variety put in their faces.

    That’s right. Dimples — nature’s most appealing defect — are available through cosmetic surgery.

    “I’ve probably done a couple of hundred dimples in the last two years,” says Dr. Gal Aharonov, a board certified facial plastic surgeon with a private practice in Beverly Hills.

    “People will fly in from all over the world for it. There’s a certain segment of the population that’s always been fascinated with dimples.”

    That little twinkle

    Anna Garcia, a 23-year-old insurance agent and dimple devotee from Mammoth Lake, Calif., says she grew up loving the look because of her mom.

    “My mom has natural dimples and ever since I was little, I was amazed by them,” she says. “When somebody smiles and they have dimples, it makes their smile so much more beautiful. It adds that little twinkle. I’ve always wanted them.”

    Garcia recently had one dimple created in her left cheek (she already has a small dimple on her right) while her sister, age 25, had two put in (one on each side).

    There are no statistics on how many dimple-plasties are performed each year, but the dimple fabrication procedure has recently popped up on beauty forums, consumer sites and on an episode of the television show, “The Doctors.”

    Considering the new crop of adorable celebrities with indentations — such as Carey Mulligan, who recently snagged a best actress Oscar nomination for “An Education” — instant dimples may even become the next star-fueled trend de jour.

    “People usually see it on somebody else and then they want it. It’s an imitative type of thing,” says Dr. Richard Ellenbogen, a board certified cosmetic plastic surgeon also practicing in Beverly Hills. “They’re trying to look like some celebrity or model they think is attractive.”

    Aharonov, who performed the procedure on the Garcia sisters, says the dimple seekers he encounters are usually 65 percent women (almost all of whom request cheek dimples) and 35 percent men (who sometimes ask for a chin dimple or cleft). After that, the dimple demographic is mixed.

    “All sorts of people get them,” he says. “My patients are young and old and from all different types of socioeconomic, ethnic and cultural backgrounds. The people who come in here just love them.”

    Dimples through the decadesCommonly inherited, dimples are caused by a defect in the cheek muscle, a small adhesion where the skin is attached to the muscle.

    But it’s a tiny defect that’s been revered (some cultures believe a dimple signifies luck or fertility) — and, yes, recreated — for decades.

    A procedure for artificial dimples via a “specially designed knife … a tiny, keen-edged scoop, and a very fine needle” was touted as early as 1896 in the New York Herald. In 1936, a New York woman by the name of Isabella Gilbert even came up with a “dimple machine,” a wire frame that people strapped onto their face at night in order to wake up with a pair of dazzling dents.

    Today, the procedure — which can cost anywhere from $2,000 to $5,000, depending on the number, the variety (chin or cheek) and the patient’s geographical location — is much more sophisticated.

    “It’s done in the office under local anesthetic and takes about ten minutes,” says Aharonov. “There’s no outside incision — everything’s done on the inside of the mouth.”

    Healing can take anywhere from a week to a month, he says, although the dimple itself will take about three weeks to “fall out.” It will appear at all times until it fully heals, after that it will only appear when the person smiles, like a natural dimple.

    Garcia, who got her dimple put in on a Saturday, says she was back at work the following Monday.

    “It was easier than going to the dentist,” she says. “You do feel a little tugging when he’s working on it, but no pain. I did have some minor swelling and had to be careful when I chewed, but we had lunch right after we left.”

    Digging deeper

    Dimples are appealing for a number of reasons.

    “One possibility is because it’s associated with youth,” says Stephen Franzoi, professor of psychology at Marquette University in Milwaukee. “Having dimples would enhance your perception of youthfulness and enhance people’s judgments of your attractiveness.”

    There’s also something about having a pair of matching dents that appeals to people on a deeper level, he says.

    “What that does is increase the perception of symmetry in your face,” says Franzoi. “There’s a lot of research that faces that a symmetrical are judged to be more attractive than faces that are asymmetrical.”

    Dr. Aharonov has another explanation.

    “I think part of it is the dynamic nature of dimples,” he says. “One second they’re there, the next second they’re not. I think humans — animals, in general — like things that grab your attention. We like things that are shiny, that sparkle. It’s like playing peek-a-boo with a kid.”

    Dr. Ellenbogen, who says he’s been performing dimple-plasties for 30 years, says it’s not a particularly common request.

    “I get maybe four requests a year and three of the four I talk out if it because they’re doing it for the wrong reason,” he says. “Some people think it will make their face look thinner.”

    Dr. Alan Matarasso, a Manhattan board certified plastic surgeon and spokesperson for the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, says this kind of “dimple disconnect” is fairly common.

    “Most of the time, people are looking for a more chiseled, angular face,” he says. “They express that desire by saying they want dimples.”

    The downside of dimplesOf course, not everyone is a diehard dimple fan.

    “I have two big dimples, one on each side, and I’ve hated the darn things since I was little,” says Danielle Menillo, a 32-year-old legal assistant from Seattle. “I feel like I’m not taken seriously because of the dimples.”

    Menillo’s deep dimples — which she refers to as “craters” — aren’t just annoying, though. They sometimes hurt.

    “I feel them pull,” she says. “It doesn’t hurt a tremendous amount but sometimes I have to hold my face when I laugh or smile.”

    Menillo says she asked a doctor to remove them when she was six (she’d grown tired of strangers pinching her cheeks), but was told that was impossible.

    Today, though, a dimple-ectomy is actually doable.

    “You can get rid of them now,” says Dr. Ellenbogen. “There are all sorts of new injections and fat grafting techniques. You can use an instrument called a pickle fork under the skin to break the connection that makes the dimple and then inject fat into that area.”

    For some, though, messing with Mother Nature’s “fingerprint” is truly pushing the ego envelope.

    “Cosmetic dimples? That’s bizarre,” says Roma Edmundson, a 36-year-old hair stylist from Seattle, who has not one, not two, but three natural dimples. “I’m more of a natural person, so it seems weird to me.”

    Diane Mapes is a Seattle freelance writer and author of “How to Date in a Post-Dating World.”

    Read the original article from msnbc health.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • New advice on prostate cancer test: Weigh risks

    ATLANTA — New advice from the American Cancer Society puts a sharper focus on the risks of prostate cancer screening, emphasizing that annual testing can lead to unnecessary biopsies and treatments that do more harm than good.

    The cancer society has not recommended routine screening for most men since the mid-1990s, and that is not changing.

    But its new advice goes farther to warn of the limitations of the PSA blood test that millions of American men get now. It also says digital rectal exams should be an option rather than part of a standard screening.

    The new advice is the latest pushback from routine screening to hunt for early cancers.

    Last year, a government task force said most women don’t need mammograms in their 40s and a doctors group said most women in their 20s don’t need annual Pap tests.

    American men have long been urged to have prostate cancer screenings, but over time studies have suggested that most cancers found are so slow-growing that most men could have avoided treatment. The treatments can lead to incontinence or impotence.

    The Atlanta-based cancer society is perhaps the most influential group in giving screening advice. Its new guidance released Wednesday on prostate cancer urges doctors to:

    • Discuss the pros and cons of testing with their patients, including giving them written information or videos that discuss the likelihood of false test results and the side effects of treatment.
    • Stop giving the rectal exam as a standard prostate cancer screening because it has not clearly shown a benefit, though it can remain an option.
    • Use past PSA readings to determine how often followup tests are needed and to guide conversations about treatment.

    Prostate cancer is the most common non-skin cancer in American men. An estimated 192,000 new cases and 27,000 deaths from it occurred last year in the United States.

    But it is a slow-growing cancer in many cases, and depending on a man’s age, he may be more likely to die of something else. Major studies have suggested routine screening doesn’t save lives and often leads to worry and unnecessary treatment.

    Read the original article from msnbc health.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Dacia Duster

    Dacia acaba de presentar en el Salón de Ginebra un nuevo modelo, el Dacia Duster. Es un nuevo SUV que tendrá un precio apróximado de 12.000€. Tendrá unas emisiones de CO2 de 135g por cada km recorrido.

    Dacia Duster

    Tiene unas medidas de 4,31 metros de largo y 1,82 metros de ancho. Dispone de unas llantas de 16 pulgadas y cristales tintados, además de diferentes acabados cromados.

    En lo que respecta a la motorización, tendremos a nuestra elección un motor de gasolina 1.6 de 110 CV o dos diésel de 85 CV y 100 CV respectivamente. Dicha potencia estará asociada a una caja de cambios de seis velocidades.

    Related posts:

    1. Dacia Duster 4×4
    2. Dacia Duster, foto espía del interior
    3. Fotos espía del Dacia Duster SUV
  • Geneva 2010: Bertone Alfa Romeo Pandion Concept reaffirms our love of car shows

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Bertone Alfa Romeo Pandion Concept — Click above for high-res image gallery

    Even though our colleague Paul Esienstein might not agree, car shows serve a few pretty great purposes. Besides reuniting with old colleagues, pressing manufacturers’ flesh and geeking out over (certain) booth babes, it’s the wild and well done concept cars that get our juices flowing the fastest. Take the Alfa Romeo Pandion Concept from all-star design house Bertone. It rocks.

    When we first saw the Panidon images we were less than impressed. Yeah, the shape was good, as Stile Bertone kept this far out show car classically proportioned (low, long hood, short deck, big wheels). But something didn’t quite click. Then we walked past the Pandion during the press conference and did a big double take. Whoa. You know what didn’t click? The doors, as they were closed in the press pictures.

    First of all, reverse-hinged scissor doors are the coolest Bertone show car feature since they debuted the Lamborghini Countach’s front-hinged scissor doors at the 1973 Geneva Motor Show. Not only are the rear-hinged doors cool, they’re massive, sticking about ten-feet straight up in the air. In case you’ve read this far and haven’t looked at the above photo (fat chance, we know) the doors include part of the front fender. Very, very cool says us.

    Also spectacular is the rear end of this sucker. It looks as if someone tossed a softball through a stained glass window and hit pause. Hundreds of tiny shards of shattered… stuff (carbon fiber, magnesium – you tell us) appear to be frozen in mid-explosion. It’s something TVR might have come up with if a second generation Sagaris had come to fruition. The rear end is different, fabulously so, and to reiterate the title of this here post, it’s why we love covering these manic car shows so dang much. Be sure to check out the albino HR Giger-skeleton interior and the flippin’ wheels, which replicate the smashing rear end. As they say here in certain parts of Switzerland, tres magnifique! Or, in Alfa Romeo’s native tongue, countach!

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    Geneva 2010: Bertone Alfa Romeo Pandion Concept reaffirms our love of car shows originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 12:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Arraignment postponed in Grayslake-area dog-shooting case

    The arraignment of a Grayslake area man accused of shooting a dog outside his home was delayed Wednesday in Lake County Circuit Court after he requested a new judge be assigned to his case.

    Elvin Dooley, 57, is charged with aggravated cruelty to animals, animal torture, possession of a weapon by a felon and possession of a weapon without a state Firearms Owner’s Identification card in the Jan. 26 incident.

    Dooley’s attorney, Assistant Public Defender Sharmilla Manek, requested the case be assigned to a judge other than Circuit Judge Victoria Rossetti.

    The case was reassigned to Associate Judge Theodore Potkonjak, and Dooley’s arraignment was rescheduled for Thursday.

    Police said Dooley fired repeatedly at a dog running in a field near his house in the 24000 block of Townline Road.

    The dog, which had run away from the Save-A-Pet No Kill Adoption Center where it had been abandoned, died of a single gunshot wound to the neck.

    An employee of the center was chasing the dog and told police she saw Dooley firing a rifle with a scope mounted on it from a window in his house.

    Police went to question Dooley about the shooting and discovered thousands of rounds of ammunition in his basement and garage.

    Dooley eventually led them to 17 firearms police say he is not allowed to possess because of a 1974 burglary conviction in Alabama.

    Assistant State’s Attorney Michael Mermel said Dooley faces up to 14 years in prison if convicted.

    He is held in the Lake County jail on $250,000 bond.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Geneva 2010: Audi A8 Hybrid a concept in name only

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Audi A8 Hybrid Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    In the Them’s Big Words department, Audi is calling its A8 Hybrid “the efficiency standard.” And it’s not exactly untrue since the top-of-the-peak, 211-horsepower 2.0-liter sedan boosted by a 45-hp electric motor has more power than an A3 TDI and a faster 0-to-60 sprint, yet the gas mileage comparison isn’t unfavorable: the A3 gets 34 miles per gallon combined, the A8 Hybrid does 38 mpg. And you get all that A8 size and panache. And 21-inch rims. Responsibly.

    All that is certain to cost you come negotiating time: It remains a concept so Audi hasn’t released a price, but when you’re talking about getting the moon, it’s safe to figure it’ll cost you a few stars. You can have a look at another glimpse of that expensive future in the gallery of high-res photos below.

    Gallery: Audi A8 hybrid

    Continue reading Geneva 2010: Audi A8 Hybrid a concept in name only

    Geneva 2010: Audi A8 Hybrid a concept in name only originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 12:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Review: 2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon, station-wagons can be cool

    Cadillac will forever indebted to two individuals by the names of Wayne Cherry and Kip Wasenko; those are the individuals who designed the CTS, and in turn put Cadillac back on the map, making GM’s luxury brand one to be taken seriously in the segment once again. The duo’s stealth aircraft-inspired “Art and Science” design language continues to be a staple at Cadillac. In hopes to further reinvent the brand and expand its offerings, Cadillac has introduced the CTS Sport Wagon. Before you cringe in disgust at the thought, the sharp-edged rear-end, shiny wheels, and sharp red paint make this wagon one of the sharpest looking on the market, at least in our comparison.

    Being the first Cadillac station-wagon offered to the U.S. market that is not a hearse, the CTS Sport Wagon offers a practical solution to pet-lovers, campers, and travelers alike.

    Click through to read more and to view our high-res image gallery (at the bottom of the post).

    Review: 2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon:

    2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon 3.6L V6 Specifications:

    Base Price: $43,365.
    Price as Tested: $45,200.
    Engine: 3.6L direct-injected V6 – 304-hp / 273 lb-ft of torque.
    Transmission: 6-speed automatic transmission with manual shift.
    Curb Weight: 4,212 lbs.
    0 to 60 mph: 7.1 seconds.
    Top Speed: 146 mph.
    Fuel-Economy: 18/26 mpg (city/highway).

    All Photos Copyright © 2010 Omar Rana – egmCarTech.

    Exterior:

    “It’s a taut, sleek design,” said Clay Dean, global design director for Cadillac. “The drama of the sedan is amplified in the wagon, as the centerline cue that is part of the exterior and interior is more prominent and plays a stronger role in defining the design at the rear of the vehicle.”

    While most of the CTS Sport Wagon borrows its look from the sedan, the rear of the vehicle is where the Sport Wagon establishes its own identity. Most sedans give up a certain amount of aesthetic appeal when being converted to a station wagon, however, the CTS Sport Wagon pulls it off almost seamlessly. This is accomplished by blending the roofline of the CTS Sport Wagon with the roof edges, allowing an unobstructed placement of cross bards and creating a fin-line effect at the trailing edges of the rear panels.

    Overall, when compared to German rivals in the segment (including the BMW 5-Series Sport Wagon, the Mercedes-Benz E-Class Estate and the Audi A6 Avant), the CTS Sport Wagon really stands out with its sharp creases and downright aggressive styling.

    Interior:

    By its very nature, a station-wagon is all about the interior and the cargo space that it offers. The front of the cabin is a carbon copy of the CTS sedan, so the fact that you’re driving a wagon might not be readily apparent; until you turn your attention rearward. Though it shares almost the same exterior dimensions as the sedan, the interior carrying capacity is nearly doubled, offering 25 cubic feet (720 liters) of space behind the rear seats, and 53.4 cubic feet (1,523 liters) with the rear seats folded down.

    The rear cargo area also contains an integrated cargo management system that stows neatly under the floor when not in use. The standard power liftgate is operated by push-button and can be programmed to lift to a specific height.

    Depending on what trim-level you purchase, you can opt for a 40-gigabyte internal hard drive, pop-up navigation screen, a large available panoramic rear sunroof, heated and ventilated seats and a rear-entertainment system.

    Performance:

    As mentioned above, one will hardly notice a difference between the front exterior/interior of the wagon and that of the sedan, and the same holds true for performance.

    The base 2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon, starting at $38,265, is powered by a 3.0L direct-injected V6 making 270-hp and 223 lb-ft of torque. Mated to a Hydra-Matic 6-speed automatic transmission, the 3.0L equipped models manage an EPA-estimated highway fuel-economy of 28 mpg.

    GM also offers the CTS Sport Wagon with an optional 3.6L direct-injected V6 making 304-hp and 273 lb-ft of torque (our test-model); however, pricing for the trim-levels carrying the more powerful engine start at $43,365. The extra money for the 34-hp might be somewhat wasted however, as GM says both engines balance performance and efficiency while operating on regular unleaded gas; many of the vehicles competitors require premium fuel. EPA estimated fuel-economy for the 3.6L V6 model comes in at 18/26 mpg (city/highway). We managed to average 17.6 mpg throughout our week long test.

    The CTS Sport Wagon features advanced chassis technology in the form of Cadillac’s StabiliTrak electronic chassis control system, integrating the car’s standard four-channel ABS with the full-function traction control, hydraulic brake assist and engine drag control systems. Also available on the Sport Wagon, as on the sedan, is the optional all-wheel drive system.

    The CTS Sport Wagon may get an even more powerful engine. Bob Lutz had confirmed this past November that GM planned to expand its CTS-V lineup to include the Sport Wagon, but nothing has developed since.

    Overall:

    Practicality, sedan-like performance, and a very competitive price tag – those are all the things that make the 2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon a desirable option on any station wagon shopper’s list.

    Review: 2010 Cadillac CTS Sport Wagon:

    – By: Omar Rana

    All Photos Copyright © 2010 Omar Rana – egmCarTech.


  • OLIN Part of Winning Design Team for U.S. Embassy in London


    OLIN is part of the design team headed by KieranTimberlake that has won the international design competition for the new U.S. Embassy in London. A total of 37 submissions were received, and then four finalists were chosen to explore the ”symbolism of the Embassy and its presence and position in the cityscape of London,” writes OLIN. OLIN was involved in three of four of the finalist proposals, including those of KieranTimberlake, Morphosis and Richard Meier & Partners. Hallie Boyce, an OLIN partner, said: “The US Embassy in London provides our studio with the opportunity to create a contemporary working landscape – one that is welcoming yet secure, beautiful yet employs sustainable systems, truly American yet responsive to the context of London.”

    The Guardian (UK) argues that the overall design is “cool, remote, and far from subtle,” adding: “Luckily for London, the American people are considerably more sophisticated and less populist than we are. Here in Nine Elms, the new embassy will adopt the form of a giant glass box on stilts rising from a Princess Diana-style memorial park, complete with a lake and what appears to be a ha-ha. Seriously.”

    The L.A. Times says the new design aspires to a set of values focused on “ecological responsibility and neighborliness within a tight urban fabric.” Christopher Hawthorne discusses the landscape architecture in some detail: 

    “At ground level, the architects, working with landscape architect Laurie Olin, have tried to engage the neighborhood despite security guidelines that require the building to sit back within a circular zone of blast protection. A park will wind like a corkscrew from the riverfront onto the embassy grounds and into the building itself, which will feature a number of interior sky gardens, including a two-level Ambassador’s Garden on the upper floors. A formal plaza leading to an entrance for embassy employees and dignitaries faces east, and the general public will enter through a curving path lined on both sides by greenery.

    The embassy will sit safely on its northern edge, where it faces the river, behind a protective semicircular pond. On the other sides, parking and some meeting rooms are tucked away securely under undulating landscaped mounds designed to do double duty as green space and protective barriers. Although this proposal represents a move away from the bunker mentality that has marked so many recent U.S. embassies, it will likely be a stiff challenge to keep the building from looking armored at pedestrian level. The move from Grosvenor Square to the new location, after all, was in large part driven by a desire to build a more easily protected facility.”

    The New York Times’ Nicolai Ourossoff thinks that the landscape architecture is primarily designed to camouflage the site, and protect it from attack:

    “The building is surrounded by an elaborate landscape that reaches out to the surrounding city. A semicircular pond borders the structure on one side, and terraced meadows wrap around the other. Pathways running alongside the meadows would connect the site to a proposed public promenade (part of the city’s plans for the development zone). A narrow park runs between the pond and Nine Elms Lane, the main approach from the Vauxhall tube station. Conceptually, the landscape continues right up through the building, with a series of terraces carved into the facade. The abundance of green space contributes to the design’s environmentally friendly image. Circuitous paths weave through the park, which in renderings is full of young professionals. The main entry plaza for the building, which extends along the edge of the pond before slipping under one side of the colonnade, is conceived as a lively public space.

    But the real function of these landscape elements is to serve as camouflaged security barriers. The northern pond is a reflecting pool — but also a castle moat. To the south, a concrete wall frames the outer edge of the lower meadow, which can be patrolled by guards.”

    Bloomberg News also focuses on how the U.S. State Department’s stringent security requirements impacted the design, but may have also provided opportunities for including ecological components. ”The glass cube sits aloof on beefy columns atop a shrub- covered mound, which will be partly open to the public as a garden. The mound’s mass can dissipate the explosive force of a car bomb, while avoiding the menacing walls and fences that deface so many consular facilities. A pond on the north side offers a pleasing amenity, while acting as another obstacle to would-be bombers and a heat sink for the biomass plant.”

    Hugh Pearman appreciates the integration of security features and site design: “The oblique, spiralling approach to the building – here made through what is effectively a large garden or small park – is something we’re all used to from real castles on the tourist trail, and we like that. It was obviously essential to avoid a short, direct route. This and the level changes around the building will make it near-impossible to mount a surprise attack.”

    While most critics have focused on how the proposed site and building will integrate security design, OLIN provided more details on the philosophy behind the landscape architecture proposal:

    • “Rather than employing a plinth to accommodate the large programs located at the lowest levels of the building, the colonnade sits atop a gently rising earthen mound. Within this landscape form are parking garage ramps and basement service and mechanical areas to the south, and the lower level of the Gallery and Multi-Purpose Meeting Space to the north and west.
    • Instead of fragmenting the embassy into a plinth and tower, this strategy transforms the large footprints of the lower levels along with the entrance pavilions into earthen landscape form to enhance the prominence of the embassy colonnade and transparent building.
    • The visual presence of the whole is that of a beacon that is a respectful icon representing the strength of the U.S.-U.K. relationship.
    • All elements are purposeful in multiple ways: from image and expression to the environment and urbanism, to the productivity and comfort of the users.”

    The ground breaking for the Embassy is expected in 2013 and construction will be completed in 2017. The 12-story green building, which will feature glass, photovoltaic film-laminated ETFE scrim walls, rooftop solar panels, and biomass generators, as well as the site’s landscape architecture, is expected to cost some $500 million in total, writes Bloomberg News.  

    In addition to KieranTimberlake and OLIN, members of the winning team include Arup for Sustainability, MEP/FP and Civil Engineering; Weidlinger Associates for Structural and Blast Engineering; Gensler for workplace design; Davis Langdon for Cost Consulting; and Sako & Associates for Technical Security.  

    OLIN partners Hallie Boyce and Laurie Olin, FASLA, will lead the landscape project.  Learn more about Laurie Olin, FASLA, and his work in this in-depth interview.

    Image credit: renderings copyright of KierenTimberlake/Studio amd

  • Blur release date revealed, multiplayer beta detailed

    It seems Bizarre Creations has stealthily announced a release target for Blur, nestling the date deep in the text of a recent update regarding the game’s multiplayer beta.

  • Geneva 2010: Sbarro Autobau Concept is a Geneva classic

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Sbarro Autobau Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Some of us were just barely mastering our Big Wheels back in the 1970s, but we imagine most of the concepts at those Salon de Geneves all looked hairy and wild. You know what we’re talking about. Star Trek meets George Barris design language, lower than your waist, nonsensical ingress/egress mechanisms, $5 afterthought interiors and colors pulled from the center of only the finest quaalude trips. Kinda like SEMA cars actually, but with European sensibility and sophistication.

    Meet the Sbarro Autobau, a concept car we know almost nothing about but really enjoy looking at. Yes, it’s totally non-conventional (hey, it’s a Sbarro), and according to the Francais-only marketing material the Autobao is a tribute to Swiss racing stud Fredy Lienhard. It’s also (supposedly) packin’ 12-cylinders, 500 horses and weighs about 3,200 pounds. What a concept.

    Geneva 2010: Sbarro Autobau Concept is a Geneva classic originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Lending Haiti a hand a message that hits home with the young

    Children from across the Northwest suburbs have been stepping up in big numbers to help earthquake-ravaged Haitians in crisis, collecting thousands through school fundraisers.

    While experts welcome the efforts as ways to help while also teaching children empathy and generosity, they also caution adults about how much exposure children have to graphic details of tragedies. Having adults taking the lead and reassuring children about these catastrophes is even more important as earthquake images over the weekend from Chile reached stateside.

    An example of the positive comes from Nicole Saunders and her classmates at Hunting Ridge School in Palatine. Their efforts to help have brought them joy and a sense of accomplishment.

    Collecting spare change in a jar over a week in the front of their classroom, the kindergartners raised $875 for the Red Cross. Saunders said she hopes the money is spent on medicine and food.

    Seeing her classmates donate money made her feel “really happy,” she said.

    “I thought about the kids there that were really sad and lonely,” Nicole said.

    Her mother, Teresa Saunders, has encouraged her daughter to have a balanced worldview. She notes that Nicole was particularly moved by the stories of injured children.

    “She wanted to know how we could reach out and help,” Saunders said.

    Other fundraisers include “penny wars,” a competition between classes to see which homerooms can bring in more change.

    Red Cross officials said it’s not rare for elementary school fundraisers to bring in $1,000.

    Schoolchildren appear to be helping more in the wake of major tragedies, whether that’s Hurricane Katrina, California wildfires or earthquakes in China, said Carli Franks, manager of corporate partnerships of the American Red Cross of the Greater Chicago Area.

    “I think anytime there’s a large natural disaster, a lot of media attention touches a high response from schools,” Franks said.

    And while getting children involved in helping others is a healthy thing, experts say adults should make sure children don’t get overloaded with information about the tragedy.

    The human brain isn’t fully developed until people are in their 20s, and that leaves youngsters vulnerable.

    “They don’t have judgment, they don’t have insight, they don’t have a worldview,” said Dr. Cecelia Horan, the clinical psychologist at Alexian Brothers Behavioral Hospital in Hoffman Estates. “Everything is very concrete, everything is literal.”

    Horan said the media has improved in the coverage of the Chile earthquake compared to Haiti, not showing as many images of homeless and injured children, the kind that captivated American children.

    She warns parents and teachers to use common sense. She hearkens back to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 and said clinical research is revealing the adverse effects on children from watching the planes crash into the World Trade Center.

    Symptoms can include bad dreams, changes in appetite or sleep patterns and listlessness. It’s difficult to predict how long the effects of seeing these images will last on children who can’t but help replay the scenes in their head as part of their visual memories.

    Parents should be observant of symptoms of stress after the Chilean earthquake, Horan said. Children may have questions if America is vulnerable, given the proximity of the two disasters, she added.

    Still, Horan said that the tragedies also can be used to educate, as children learn about Haitian and Chilean cultures, not just about the relief effort.

    When the Red Cross visits a school, Franks said, officials focus on what the charity can do to help and don’t use graphic imagery. And teachers are carefully walking this fine line, hoping to make the best of tragedy.

    “I feel it’s very important for kids today to be aware of a cause greater than themselves,” said Stacey Magnusson, an art and drama teacher at Cumberland School in Des Plaines.

    Students at Cumberland raised $350 for the Salvation Army through selling valentines. Magnusson, who’s active in charities, said she doesn’t expect all her students to volunteer as they grow older, but hopes that some will follow her lead and continue after their school days.

    And don’t scoff at the notion of how loose change from a piggy bank can help. While Franks with the Red Cross said she doesn’t advise potential donors to show up with a jar of pennies, she does say even a little bit of money makes a difference. In Haiti, for example, $5 buys a bottle to store clean drinking water, while $10 buys a blanket and $25 buys a kitchen set, including pots and pans.

    Kids are not just raising money. Over at Fields Elementary in Wheeling, student Jake Estes is collecting bars of soap to send on a mission to Haiti.

    And a competition with a reward is one way to pique children’s interest in aiding in the relief effort.

    At Dooley Elementary School in Schaumburg, youngsters were pushed by the notion that their principal would dress herself head to toe in the blue – the school color – if fundraising efforts reached $4,000. The students succeeded and Principal Marian Friebus-Flaman painted her face and hands blue while wearing blue clothes at a school assembly.

    Students at Dooley wanted to know how the earthquake happened and if anyone was hurt. Teachers explained, but didn’t go into specific details that could have proved traumatizing.

    “We made it clear the way the Haitians kids were living is much different from the way they were living,” teacher Tiffany Naatz said. “And that was before their lives were being interrupted.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • 8th Dist. challenger lost condo to foreclosure

    A suburban congressional candidate who’s stressed the need for fiscal restraint lost a condominium to foreclosure last October, the same month he announced his bid for office, court records show.

    Joe Walsh, the Winnetka Republican running against Democratic incumbent Melissa Bean in the 8th House District, used to own a condominium on the 1400 block of Sherman Avenue near downtown Evanston. The two-bedroom unit went into foreclosure in 2008 and Walsh was evicted last fall, Cook County circuit court records and real-estate reports indicate.

    Court papers filed in September 2008 show he stopped making mortgage payments that May.

    In a statement e-mailed Tuesday to the Daily Herald, Walsh admitted losing the condo.

    “This experience helped me gain a better appreciation for the very real economic anxieties felt by 8th District families, many of whom are just a paycheck or two away from facing similar difficulties,” Walsh said in the e-mail.

    Walsh did not make himself available for questions. His statement did not explain why he failed to disclose the foreclosure during the primary campaign or why he chose to allow his mortgage to go into foreclosure.

    Walsh defeated five other hopefuls to win the party’s nomination on Feb. 2. Gene Dawson, the GOP’s state central committeeman for the 8th District, said he wished he knew about Walsh’s foreclosure before the primary showdown.

    “I feel very strongly that any candidate for any elected position should disclose anything and everything that could be detrimental so they can go forward with a clear conscience,” said Dawson, who is not related to a candidate named John Dawson who ran against Walsh. “I do not know what prevented Joe from disclosing the issue.”

    GOP leaders need to meet with Walsh and talk about the foreclosure and why he didn’t tell anyone about it earlier, Dawson said. When asked if the party should ask Walsh to resign from the race, Dawson said “it’s a matter that has to be taken under advisement.”

    A Bean spokesman declined to comment.

    Walsh’s residency was an issue during the primary. At public forums and on his campaign Web site, the 48-year-old Walsh billed himself as a Barrington-area native and barely acknowledged he lives well outside the district in Winnetka, something for which he was criticized in the media and by some political opponents.

    Such a candidacy is allowed by federal law. Regardless, Walsh, who works in private equity funding, admitted he wouldn’t vote for a candidate who lived outside the district and said he plans to move into the 8th District.

    Walsh, whose full name is William Joseph Walsh, lived in Evanston when he ran for the 9th District congressional seat in 1996 and for the state House in 1998.

    Real-estate industry records indicate Walsh purchased the Sherman Avenue condominium in 2004 for $320,500. He borrowed $288,450 to make the purchase, according to documents available at the Cook County recorder of deeds Web site.

    He and his second wife, Helene, moved to Winnetka in 2006 and to his current home in 2009, a campaign spokeswoman said. Both homes have been rental properties, Walsh said.

    They moved to Winnetka because they needed more space for their seven-person family, Walsh told the Daily Herald. The couple obtained a $303,500 mortgage for the Evanston property in September 2006, court documents show. Records didn’t indicate whether this loan refinanced the first loan or was a second mortgage.

    The Walshes intended to rent or sell the Evanston condominium but had no luck, Walsh said.

    “Then the housing bubble burst and by 2008, with no buyers for my condo, I found myself struggling to keep up with two homes and five children,” Walsh said in the statement.

    A foreclosure lawsuit over the condominium was filed against the Walshes in September 2008 by HSBC Mortgage Corp., according to court records.

    Walsh said he accepted responsibility and worked with his bank on the foreclosure. An attorney who represented the bank in the lawsuit could not be reached for comment.

    At the time of the foreclosure, the principal balance due was an estimated $299,805. It was listed in court records as a non-owner occupied dwelling.

    The foreclosure was finalized Oct. 13, 2009, and a sale of the property by the Cook County sheriff’s office was approved, records indicate.

    The Walshes were ordered out of the condominium the same day but legally had 30 days to vacate, records show.

    The Federal National Mortgage Association, commonly known as Fannie Mae, now owns the condo, but it is under contract to be purchased by a new, unidentified owner, public real-estate records indicate.

    A recent online listing price valued the condo at $274,900, far less than what Walsh paid for it.

    Walsh has billed himself as a conservative candidate and has embraced the tea party protesters who’ve rallied against high taxes and government spending.

    “I will fight to cut spending, reduce taxes and return to a balanced budget,” Walsh told the Daily Herald in a candidate questionnaire last year. “Residents of the 8th Congressional District will benefit most from my efforts to lower taxes … and eliminate the crushing debt that is being passed onto our kids and grandkids.”

    Walsh has been the focus of a few controversies during the roughly four months he’s been a candidate.

    In addition to being criticized for living outside the 8th District, Walsh took heat from some of the other GOP candidates for changing his views on some hot-button political issues, including abortion rights and whether assault weapons should be banned.

    Walsh now opposes abortion and a weapons ban, but he didn’t when he first ran for Congress in 1996. Earlier this year, he told the Daily Herald his views on abortion changed after a spiritual journey, and he shifted on gun control after being “educated” on the issue.

    He also said he had a more liberal stance on gay rights in 1996 “because I was running in Evanston, Ill.,” a reference to the largely left-leaning city.

    Additionally, this past January, a Walsh campaign video was removed from YouTube and then Walsh’s own Web site after a lawyer for the rocker named Joe Walsh accused the candidate of infringing on the copyright for the musician’s classic rock song “Walk Away.”

    Although Walsh the candidate insisted the video would reappear on the Web, it hasn’t.

    Walsh also was sued by a former campaign manager who quit in December and then said the candidate owed him $20,000 for services. The case is pending in Cook County court.

    The 8th District includes parts of Cook, Lake and McHenry counties. Bean, of Barrington, is seeking a fourth term. Green Party candidate Bill Scheurer of Lindenhurst also is running for the seat.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Obama Administration Civil Liberties Neglect: Oversight Board Remains Empty

    graphic: courtesy of Sunita's Blog

    In New York, the cops are getting frisky with minorities (suspect classes under the equal protection clause):

    From 2004 through 2009, in a policy that has gotten completely out of control, New York City police officers stopped people on the street and checked them out nearly three million times, frisking and otherwise humiliating many of them.

    Upward of 90 percent of the people stopped are completely innocent of any wrongdoing. And yet the New York Police Department is compounding this intolerable indignity by compiling an enormous and permanent computerized database of these encounters between innocent New Yorkers and the police.

    Not only are most of the people innocent, but a vast majority are either black or Hispanic. There is no defense for this policy. It’s a gruesome, racist practice that should offend all New Yorkers, and it should cease.

    Police Department statistics show that 2,798,461 stops were made in that six-year period. In 2,467,150 of those instances, the people stopped had done nothing wrong. That’s 88.2 percent of all stops over six years. Black people were stopped during that period a staggering 1,444,559 times. Hispanics accounted for 843,817 of the stops and whites 287,218.
    ….
    “They have been collecting the names and all sorts of other information about everybody who is stopped and frisked on the streets,” said Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, which is fighting the department’s stop-and-frisk policy and its compiling of data on people who are innocent. “This is a massive database of innocent, overwhelmingly black and Latino people,” she said.

    Bob Herbert is right, it is “a gruesome, racist practice”. Thank god we have a Constitutional law scholar President, expert in civil rights and dedicated to protecting the liberties afforded by them. This is a perfect situation for the President’s Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board!

    Oh, wait……..

    When President Bush two years ago failed to name members to a federal board to monitor the protection of civil liberties, Democrats and activist groups were duly outraged, seeing it as one more example of his administration’s indifference to the subject.

    But more than a year into a new presidency, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board—created by Congress in 2007—remains as much a cipher under Barack Obama as it was under George W. Bush. The White House has yet to nominate a single person to sit on the five-person board. It has no members, no staff, and no office.
    …..
    All the letters noted there would be no shortage of issues for a civil-liberties oversight board to investigate, ranging from the impact of Patriot Act reauthorization proposals to the administration’s plans to install body scanners and other new security measures at airports. And then there’s the mounting controversies over new technologies, such as the Justice Department’s expanding collection of cell-phone tracking data gathered surreptitiously.

    But when she recently raised the issue of the vacant board with Denis McDonough, one of the president’s top national-security advisers, Harman said the response she got back was “nothing,” just “we’re working on it.”
    …..
    But others are getting skeptical. According to Franklin, nobody at any of the civil-liberties groups that signed off on this week’s letter is aware of anybody even being contacted by White House personnel about accepting such a job. Another leading civil-liberties activist (who asked not to be identified because of political sensitivities) said he suspects top White House officials like chief of staff Rahm Emanuel are reluctant to staff a board that can only give it political grief.

    Yeah, Presidents Emanuel and Obama sure wouldn’t want any entity with subpoena power out there actually trying to protect the citizenry from civil rights abuses; that would be totally inconvenient. I’m sure they will continue working on appropriately staffing the board at the current break neck pace….

    Who could have ever suspected that Obama was more interested in political expediency than actually protecting silly little things like Constitutional civil rights?

    (Graphic courtesy of Sunita’s Blog)

    Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

  • Rep. Conyers Compares Lack Of A Performance Right Tax To Slavery

    We thought it was crazy enough when an RIAA-organized lobbying group called radio “a form of piracy” because it didn’t pay musicians to promote their songs. But it appears that Rep. John Conyers, one of the biggest backers of forcing radio stations to pay an additional tax to help promote music, has taken it a step further. Via Copycense we learn that at an event put on by recording industry lobbyists, Conyers decided to compare the lack of a performance right mandatory fee for radio stations to slavery and indentured servitude. Seriously:


    “In 1865, slavery was abolished by the 13th Amendment. No more free labor,” Conyers said. “It abolished at the same time involuntary servitude. What does that have to do with what we’re here for today? Well, when you tell somebody that you’re benefiting from their work product but there’s no avenue for compensation, it kind of harkens back to that great problem.”

    What an incredibly shameful thing to say. Beyond making the absolutely bizarre and ridiculous connection between the failure of one giant industry to force another big industry to hand over a chunk of cash (most of which never will be seen by any musicians), it ignores basic economics. Historically, the money has flowed the other way. For decades, record labels and promoters have used forms of payola to pay radio stations to play certain musicians. Why? Because they clearly knew that they got a ton of value out of those songs being promoted on the air. Songs on the radio are advertisements. What kind of industry gets Congress to force broadcasters to pay to run their advertisements — and then has the gall to have an elected official claim that not paying to play these ads are the equivalent of indentured servitude?

    Of course, Conyers knows all about Payola. Back in 2002, he was the one who called for payola hearings on Capitol Hill. So how is it that he suddenly thinks that money not going the other way is somehow “no avenue for compensation”? He’s being blatantly intellectually dishonest here. Is it worth mentioning that in the last election the two largest contributors to his campaign were lawyers and the Music/Movie/TV industry?

    The performance right tax is not about “indentured servitude.” It’s not even about people benefiting from a product where “there’s no avenue for compensation.” Quite the opposite. Getting your music on the radio is a huge challenge for most artists, and if you can get your music heard that way, it’s still a huge boost to a musician’s career. Does Conyers think that when there’s a popular commercial on TV that people want to see that the makers of that commercial are “slaves” because they’re not getting paid every time the commercial is played? It’s yet another example of corrupt politicians in DC pushing legislation that helps one particular industry, and making up completely ridiculous arguments to support their position. This isn’t about slavery or indentured servitude. It’s about Congress granting a huge mandatory windfall to the record labels (at the expense of radio stations) because those labels are unwilling to actually do something to properly capitalize on free promotion from the radio stations.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • The Tokyo Vikings have moved up to Valhalla

    Tomonobu Itagaki’s legal procedings against Tecmo have now been settled (qjnet/news/itagaki-vs-tecmo-case-now-settled.html), so time’s ripe for the former Team Ninja boss to get to work on his next project.
     
     
     
     

  • This Morning’s Biggest Losers (And Gainers) In The S&P 500

    Stocks are up this morning but no rally is going to help Staples. Let’s take a look at the biggest gainers and losers on the S&P 500.

    Losers:

    • Staples Inc. (SPLS): $22.70 / -2.37%
    • Western Digital Corp. (WDC): $38.72 / -2.25%
    • Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (LH): $73.26 / -1.86%
    • Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB): $12.46 / -1.58%
    • Priceline.com Inc. (PCLN): $237.89 / -1.43%

    Gainers:

    • Novell Inc. (NOVL): $6.03 / +27.01%
    • RadioShack Corp. (RSH): $21.45 / +7.95%
    • JDS Uniphase Corp. (JDSU): $11.73 / +5.57%
    • FMC Technologies Inc. (FTI): $60.56 / +5.23%
    • Titanium Metals Corp. (TIE): $13.05 / +4.84%

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Should Those with HCV Be Concerned About Bathing?

    Find out how some with Hepatitis C unintentionally expose their skin to bath water contaminants that can place an additional burden on their liver.

    by Nicole Cutler, L.Ac.

    Many people are careful not to drink contaminated water but don’t necessarily think about the cleanliness of the water they bathe in. We usually consider showering or bathing as part of taking care of ourselves. After all, washing up gets rid of dead skin cells, removes lingering pathogens and aromas, clears the pores of dirt, eases body pain and hydrates the skin. While all of these benefits can be healthful to those with Hepatitis C, the water being used to bathe with could harbor toxins. Unfortunately, such toxins are easily absorbed in a bathing environment and can have detrimental consequences to a liver fighting Hepatitis C.

    The reason bath water poses such a concern to those with Hepatitis C is because a warm shower or bath opens the pores, causing the skin to act like a sponge. As a result, water droplets are not only inhaled, but they are also absorbed through the skin, directly into the bloodstream. Thus, contaminants in bathing water can gain easy access to your blood supply.

    The first step in finding out if your liver is in danger from your bathroom’s water supply is to determine your water’s safety. When investigating what is in your water, it is important to recognize that contaminants can originate from the water supply – or they can come from your home’s pipes. There are two main ways to learn about your water:

    1. Municipal Water Report – For those who have public water, U.S. law requires that everyone have access to their municipal water report. Once you have obtained this report, it should be easy to determine what an appropriate range is for the different contaminants and whether your water supply is within that range.

    2. Home Water Test Kit – For those who have a well or are concerned with what potential toxins may come from their pipes, home water test kits are relatively inexpensive and simple to use. Just like the municipal water report, a home water test kit will help you determine if the contaminants found in your water are within a normal range.

    According to Mehment Oz, MD, host of The Dr. Oz Show, Vice-Chair and Professor of Surgery at Columbia University and Director of the Cardiovascular Institute & Complementary Medicine Program at NY Presbyterian, there are five contaminants in water to look out for. These include:

    · Nitrates and Nitrites – With the potential to damage cells in the body, these chemicals may be in water as a result of runoff from fertilizer or sewage. While a little bit in water is acceptable, make sure your amount does not exceed the acceptable range.

    · Arsenic – Arsenic is an odorless and nearly tasteless element that occurs naturally in the earth’s crust. There is no tolerable limit in water for this substance, which is toxic to the liver.

    · Mercury – Mercury is a metal that occurs naturally in the environment, but it is extremely toxic to humans. There is no tolerable limit of mercury in water.

    · Cyanide – Cyanide can be toxic to the liver, and only a miniscule amount can be tolerated by the body.

    In addition, there is sufficient reason to be concerned about additives put in water to “disinfect” it. Chlorine and substances that chlorine breaks down into (like chloroform and dichloroacetic acid), readily contribute to cellular damage. Since people living with Hepatitis C must work extra hard to protect the cells they have from injury, it seems obvious to minimize their exposure to chlorine.

    Before giving up on the splendors of bathing, there is a solution for toxins found in your water supply. While you don’t have to pump bottled water into your shower, you can filter your shower water. If municipal and/or home water tests show contaminants in your home’s water supply, you can install a filter right on the showerhead – or put your entire home on a filtration system. Keep in mind that in their daily duties of removing contaminants, most water filtration systems require some sort of maintenance. In addition, Dr. Oz suggests the following for those who are unable to filter their showerhead or bath faucet:

    · Do not put your shower’s misting capabilities up high. This will contribute to more mist that can be more easily inhaled and can more easily penetrate the skin.

    · Do not shower in hot water. The hotter the temperature is, the more your pores will open and absorb whatever it comes in contact with.

    It may seem that being concerned about the quality of your bathroom’s water is overkill. However, some experts report that under the right conditions, toxins can make their way into your bloodstream six times more readily through absorption than consumption. If and when clinical trials prove this fact, shower filtration systems will become standard practice for those with liver concerns – especially for those living with chronic Hepatitis C.

    References:

    http://toxtown.nlm.nih.gov/text_version/chemicals.php?id=3, Arsenic, Retrieved October 23, 2009, US National Library of Medicine, 2009.

    http://www.annieappleseedproject.org/chlorinyours.html, Chlorine in Your Shower Water, Retrieved October 22, 2009, annieappleseedproject, 2009.

    http://www.doctoroz.com/videos/dont-drink-water, Don’t Drink the Water Video, Retrieved October 22, 2009, ZoCo 1, LLC, 2009.

    http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw000/contaminants/dw_contamfs/cyanide.html, Ground Water and Drinking Water, Retrieved October 23, 2009, Environmental Protection Agency, 2009.