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  • Scrabble Rules Change Allowing Proper Nouns For First Time In 62 Years

    Mattel is changing the rules of its classic board game Scrabble for the first time in 62 years. Highly-literate wordsmiths will now be permitted to use proper nouns, an act that has been prohibited for “Scrabblers” ever since the game was trademarked by creator Alfred Butts in 1948.

    New high scoring combinations will include Jay-Z (23 points), Lexulous (15 points), Xerxes (20 points) and Kyrgyzstan (29 points). Players can also score mega-points by using popular words like Beyonce, Pepsi, Jordin Sparks, and Shakira. Mattel is even considering allowing players to spell words backwards and upwards on the board and place words unconnected to other pieces.

    The new rules would be a “great new twist” on the classic game, a spokeswoman for the toy manufacturer said Monday.

    “The layout, the colors of the board, the rules and the game itself have all remained unchanged for more than 60 years. These changes are the biggest news for Scrabble lovers in the history of the game and will provide a great new twist on the old formula. We believe that people who are already fans will enjoy the changes but some people will want to continue playing the old way so we will still be selling a board with the original rules.”

    Mattel will unveil a new version of the game with the amended rules in July.

    Do we have any Scrabble fans out there? What do you think about the new proper noun clause? The Brainiacs will not be pleased….I can totally see this game taking a nosedive in popularity now.


  • Study: VA’s Computer Systems Cost Billions, but Have Big Payback

    vistaAnyone who follows health IT knows that the Department of Veterans Affairs often gets high marks for being an early adopter of electronic medical systems in the U.S. Now a study in Health Affairs tries to put a price-tag on what the VA systems collectively called Vista, for Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture.

    The bottom line: “We conservatively estimate that the VA’s investments in the four health IT systems studied yielded $3.09 billion in cumulative benefits net of investment costs by 2007,” say the authors, a team from Center for IT Leadership at Partners Healthcare in Charlestown, Mass. The results looks at measures such as reduced workloads, freed workspace and savings from items such as unneeded medical tests and avoided hospital admissions.

    The biggest VA outlay — and its biggest savings generator — was the Vista’s Computerized Patient Record System, the home-grown system for electronic health records that was found by the study to cost $3.6 billion. Other IT networks for administering medications with bar codes, picture archiving and communication systems and the Laboratory Electronic Data Interoperability application together cost $470 million.

    The study also did comparisons between the VA and the private sector. It found the government agency had spent proportionally more on IT than the private sector but could claim better performance in such areas as cancer screening and better glucose measures for diabetics.

    The authors cites lots of limits on their data. They also note the VA has a unique, integrated structure that is more likely to produce results from IT projects and is hard to match in the private sector. In short, they say your results may vary.

    Here’s an abstract of the study. For those who can’t get enough of this stuff, the latest issue of Health Affairs has numerous other articles on the track record and outlook for health IT in the U.S.

    Photo of VA medical record system by Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg News


  • Surgery Fire Lawsuit Filed Over Operating Room Mishap

    A medical malpractice lawsuit has been filed against an Oklahoma doctor after an operating room fire left a breast cancer survivor with severe and permanent burns to her face and the inside of her throat and mouth. 

    The surgery fire lawsuit was filed by Jack and Connie Plumlee against Dr. Brad Garber in Tulsa. The complaint alleges that Dr. Garber was performing reconstructive breast surgery on Connie Plumlee when a fire erupted in the operating room due to negligence on the part of the surgeon.

    Plumlee went to see Dr. Garber in December at Saint John Medical Center after having survived a double mastectomy due to breast cancer. During the surgery, after Dr. Garber had swabbed Plumlee with alcohol, he lit up a cauterizing tool which sparked the operating room fire. The flames caught on the drapes and ignited and partially melted the breathing tube down Plumlee’s throat.

    Plumlee has suffered severe damage and deformation to her face, lips, the inside of her mouth and tongue, according to a local news report from Newson6.com. The lawsuit says that she is in terrible pain and will have multiple surgeries to repair some of the damage, but she is most likely scarred for life.

    The plaintiffs say that Dr. Garber told her initially that she would not have scars from the surgery fire accident, and said that the damage would be similar to a chemical peel. When that turned out not to be the case, the Plumlees told Newson6.com that they tried to settle with Dr. Garber out of court, but to no avail.

    According to data gathered by the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting System in 2007, there are about 550 to 650 surgery fires every year, typically resulting in one or two deaths. However, many more patients suffer severe and disfiguring burns as a result of the fires that are often started by a combination of electrosurgical tools, oxygen, and flammable hospital drapes.

    Burns on the upper body or inside the patient’s airway account for about 65% of all surgical fire injuries. About 25% occur elsewhere on the body, and 10% happen inside the body cavity. Electrosurgical tools are involved in 70% of those fires, while 10% are caused by lasers. The rest are caused by sparks from wires, light sources, burrs or defibrillators.

    The American Society of Anesthesiologists has released recommendations on actions hospitals can take to reduce the risk of surgical fires. These steps include:

    • Perform regular operating room fire drills, which less than half of all U.S. hospitals currently conduct.
    • Improve communications between surgeons and anesthesiologists, such as doctors announcing when they plan to use an electrosurgical tool, so the anesthesiologist can temporarily lower the oxygen supply.
    • Expand training and education of medical staff on awareness and prevention of fires during surgical procedures.
  • 25 dead, 4 missing in Massey coal mine disaster

    Seven miners were killed and another 19 are missing “after an explosion rocked a Massey Energy underground coal mine” in southern West Virginia this afternoon.  Wonk Room’s Brad Johnson has the story in this repost.

    The explosion took place at 3 pm at Massey subsidiary Performance Coal Co.’s Upper Big Branch Mine-South between the towns of Montcoal and Naoma. MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow dedicated the beginning of her program to covering the disaster, interviewing veteran Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward, Jr., and Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) by telephone. Listen to Ward reporting on the tragic details slowly emerging from the mine:

    This Massey disaster is on the scale of the 2006 Sago Mine disaster which killed 13 people, the worst coal mine disaster in the United States since the Farmington Mine disaster of 1968, which killed 78 miners. “It’s very emotional, very powerful, very awful, and finally very Appalachian,” Sen. Rockefeller told Maddow. He concluded:

    Of all the glory of West Virginia characteristics of fighting and climbing hills all the time, this is the tragic part.

    Watch the interview:

    This tragedy is the latest deadly disaster to involve coal baron Don Blankenship’s Massey Energy. In 2006, two miners died in a fire at Aracoma Mine after Blankenship personally waived company policy and told mine managers to ignore rules and “run coal.” “In the past year, federal inspectors have cited Massey and fined the company more than $382,000 for repeated serious safety violations involving its ventilation plan and equipment at the mine run by subsidiary Performance Coal Co.,” the Associated Press reported. “The violations also cover failing to follow the ventilation plan, allowing combustible coal dust to pile up, and having improper firefighting equipment.”

    As of 7:12 AM, Tuesday: The Associated Press reports that the death toll is now twenty-five:

    It is the most people killed in a U.S. mine since 1984, when 27 died in a fire at Emery Mining Corp.’s mine in Orangeville, Utah. If the four missing bring the total to 29, it would be the most killed in a U.S. mine since a 1970 explosion killed 38 at Finley Coal Co., in Hyden, Ky.

  • Secondary Sources: Recession End, Oil Prices, Muni Troubles

    A roundup of economic news from around the Web.

    Recession End: Harvard’s Jeff Frankel, who sits on the NBER’s recession-dating committee, says the final piece has fallen into place to call the end of the recession. “The recession is over. The last piece has fallen into place, with the BLS announcement that employment rose in March. Identifying the beginnings and ends of recessions has been difficult in recent decades because the two most important indicators, output and employment, have sometimes behaved differently from each other. Most notoriously, in the recovery that began in November 2001, employment lagged far behind economic growth. If one had gone by the labor market, one might have called it a three year recession. But if one had gone by GDP, one might have wondered whether there was a recession at all. This time around, the difficulty is not so great.”

    Rising Oil Price: The Economist’s Ryan Avent notices the climb in oil prices and notes the risks. “As the global economy has continued to move away from the abyss, the price of crude has climbed back to near $90 a barrel. Increases much beyond that will begin to squeeze household budgets in places heavily dependent on oil. If those increases happen slowly, then they won’t be that damaging; households will have time to adjust commutes, buy more efficient vehicles, and find other ways to substitute away from petrol. If they happen rapidly, then the result will be enough damage to consumer spending to tip the American economy back toward, and perhaps into, recession. There’s really not much that can be done about this in the short term. Officials simply need to hope that households have continued to reduce their exposure to petroleum prices in the wake of the 2007-2008 spike in the cost of crude.”

    Muni Troubles: Rick Bookstaber looks at where the next crisis may come from. “Well, guess where we have a market that is (1) leveraged and opaque, that is (2) very big and tied to the credit markets; and is (3) viewed by investors as being diversifiable by holding a geographically broad-based portfolio; with (4) huge portfolios where assets and liabilities are apparently matched; and with (5) questionable analysis by rating agencies; and where (6) there are many entities, entities that may not approach default with business-like dispatch, and that have already mortgaged sources of revenue that are thought to support their liabilities? Answer: The municipal market.”

    Compiled by Phil Izzo


  • Craig Newmark: Social Networks Are Shifting the Balance of Power

    Craigslist founder Craig Newmark says that he believes social networking and the rise of distributed trust and reputation networks are helping to shift the balance of power in society, away from those with nominal power and money and towards people who emerge from the grassroots. Although personal social networks are relatively small in real life, unless someone is a celebrity or a politician, Newmark says that social networking allows online networks to be much larger and much more powerful by comparison.

    While distributed trust systems are just emerging through services such as Facebook and LinkedIn and new ventures such as Unvarnished , the Craigslist founder says the potential implications of such networks are significant.

    By the end of this decade, power and influence will shift largely to those people with the best reputations and trust networks, from people with money and nominal power. That is, peer networks will confer legitimacy on people emerging from the grassroots. This shift is already happening, gradually creating a new power and influence equilibrium with new checks and balances. It will seem dramatic when its tipping point occurs, even though we’re living through it now.

    Newmark also says in his post — which he is discussing in a live-streamed talk this morning at the Reynolds Journalism Institute — that he sees the need for reputation networks that can manage the distributed identities and trust information of people online, just as banks manage money.

    The repositories of trust information are the banks in which we store this big asset. Like any banks, having a lot of this kind of currency confers a lot of power in them. Having some competition provides some checks and balances. We need to be able to move around the currency of trust, whatever that turns out to be, like we move money from one bank to another. That suggests the need for interchange standards, and ethical standards that require the release of that information when requested.

    Newmark’s blog post expands on ideas he raised when I had coffee with him recently at his favorite cafe in San Francisco, where I shot a short video embedded below. At the time, he said that managing trust and reputation online was “the next big problem for the web,” and called some form of distributed trust system “the killingest of killer apps.”

    Newmark suggested that big players such as Google, Facebook and Amazon were the kinds of entities that would have the scale to handle such a distributed trust or reputation-management network, and said that despite some occasional missteps by both Google and Facebook when it came to privacy (Google Buzz and Facebook Beacon, respectively), he believed that both were acting in good faith and had a policy of “not being evil.”

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d): Can Enterprise Privacy Survive Social Networking?

  • Dion Hinchcliffe: We Are Now Part of the Dachis Group

    dachis_handc.pngDion Hinchcliffe announced this morning the sales of his successful practice to the Dachis Group, one of the largest services organizations in the field, focused on building social technologies in the enterprise.

    In recent months, the advent of social technologies catered to the enterprise has shifted into high gear. Hinchcliffe said in an interview yesterday that the opportunities presented to Hinchcliffe & Company have scaled in the past few months.The Dachis Group will help meet those opportunities.

    Sponsor

    The Dachis Group, founded by Jeff Dachis in 2008, is well-known for its emphasis as a services firm focused on social technologies for large enterprise organizations. It is funded by Austin Ventures. The company has grown considerably in the past year, acquiring Headshift Technologies last September.

    Hinchcliffe is undoubtedly one of the most well respected voices in Enterprise 2.0. He is the Enterprise 2.0 blog for ZDnet. He brings a unique understanding that comes from years as an information architect. He came early to the social Web movement in the enterprise. He picked up early on the concept of web-oriented architectures and what it means for the transformation of the enterprise.

    Hinchcliffe had this to say today about the shift in our society and the enterprise:

    “To the latter point, it’s almost a truism that focus is something that is hard to achieve in any organization on the emerging edge of business and technology. When Web 2.0 arrived on the scene in the middle of the decade, it was clear that something momentous was happening in our personal lives, but it was almost too large a change for most of us to easily digest. Now, much the same transformation has begun in our businesses. Back then I decided to immediately create a company to bring these ideas — and changes that accompany them — in the most positive possible way to enterprises around the world and I haven’t looked back.

    The outcome was something most of you are now quite familiar with in the subject matter we explore in depth in our blogs, workshops, books, articles, speeches, and consulting practice: social software, cloud computing, open APIs, innovation, crowdsourcing, Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0, Social CRM, and more. It is now increasingly clear that these ideas are all part of a macro set of trends and concepts that are changing the way we structure and operate our organizations today. Thus, as I stated in the press release, I believe that Social Business Design captures these ideas in a comprehensive approach that will be an essential foundation of next-generation enterprises.”

    The significance of this news comes down to what we all are seeing happen in the enterprise. Social technologies represent a cultural shift in how we view our world. The changes to come in the next five years will be profound. Hinchcliffe and the Dachis Group will play an important role in that transformation.

    Discuss


  • Calling all bandits, outlaws and do-gooders to the Robin Hood Tax Treasure Hunt

    I don’t imagine it is often that you find policy officers, volunteers and campaigners having an impromptu archery comp in the corner of the office on a Friday afternoon. But this is where we found ourselves a couple of weeks ago, venting some left over energy as we fired rubber arrows at a huge target (I surprised myself at being spectacularly rubbish, my arrow barely managing to get past my toes).

    In fact, it is not often that we have archery equipment lying around. They are left over from some of our recent campaigning stunts around the Robin Hood Tax- you may have heard about it- it’s a tiny tax on bankers to raise billions to tackle poverty and climate change. This powerful little tax has tossed up for us a whole world of campaigning gems and wonders (as well as some frivolous antics in the office) and I want to introduce you to the latest tool in the Robin Hood Tax campaign box…

    We are inviting people to become modern merry men and women on a multi-media treasure hunt around Brighton on Saturday 24 April and in East London on Sunday 2 May.

    By solving clues, and producing creative content like photos, videos and tweets along the route, your team could win tickets to summer music festivals.  You can sign up as groups of 6, or we can put you together with new friends to form teams. Robin Hood will send you off of on a 3 hour adventure, to acquire money from the rich to redistribute to the poor. After the hunt, there will be chance to share tales of banditry over ale and cider with all of the merry men at our after hunt bash. 

    You can grab your ticket by visiting www.robinbrighton.eventbrite.com or www.robineastend.eventbrite.com
    Tickets cost a fiver. A bargain, surely.

    Have a crack at it and let us know if we have reached dizzying new heights of combining good times and world change!

  • Actually, The Unemployment Ratio Is 41%

    The broadest measure of unemployment is the Civilian Employment-Population Ratio, which is exactly what it sounds like: the ratio of employed civilians to the total population. It stands right around 59%, which is the lowest its been since the early 80s.

    Fortunately, the recent end of layoffs seems to have staunched the fall.

    But even if the economy rebounds, don’t expect this measure to jump back to old highs.

    For one thing, the recovery could very well be jobless.

    But beyond that, demographics won’t be very favorable here as more and more Americans retire, placing a greater strain on those who are working.

    The one way this won’t be true if is we continue to keep bringing in immigrants like we have. Let’s hope the integration of them works out well.

    And don’t miss: 10 countries on the verge of a crippling demographic crisis >

    chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • France oil company charged with corruption in Iraq oil-for-food scandal

    [JURIST] A Paris judge has charged French oil company Total with bribery and complicity in connection with a scandal involving the UN’s Iraq Oil-for-Food program, the company’s lawyer confirmed Tuesday. Total announced the court’s decision in its annual report last week but maintained that the company followed UN policy and acted lawfully. Total CEO Christophe de Margerie claimed that the 2005 Volcker report, published by a UN-appointed Independent Inquiry Committee investigating corruption in the oil-for-food scandal, had eliminated all bribery complaints related to the UN program. The investigation found that oil companies like Total allegedly paid Iraqi officials over $1.5 billion in illegal kickbacks in exchange for being selected as oil purchasers. The oil-for-food program allowed the Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein, under UN sanctions in the wake of the first Gulf War, to sell limited stocks of oil in return for foodstuffs and other humanitarian supplies.
    The charges are the latest legal problems facing Total. Last week, the Paris Appellate Court upheld a lower court’s 2008 decision finding Total and several other defendants criminally liable for an oil spill that occurred of the coast of Brittany in 1999. The court also increased the fine against the defendants from 192 million euros to 200 million euros. Over 20,000 tons of oil seeped from an oil tanker called Erika, which Total chartered from an Italian company, decimating 400 kilometers of coastline and causing harm to wildlife. Total said Tuesday that it plans to appeal the judgment.

  • Google Offers Suicide-Prevention Hotline with Some Queries

    Google takes much pride in its algorithms, it is a company built by engineers after all, and it is especially proud of its search-ranking algorithm, still its biggest product. Over time, the company has always steered clear of adjusting the search results manually or intervening in any other way, even if it was clear that the algorithm … (read more)

  • Home Sales Driven by Grand Rapids Pre Foreclosure Homes

    Lower-priced pre foreclosure homes in Grand Rapids are among the major drivers of the increase in house sales in March, based on sales data from the Grand Rapids Association of Realtors.

    Home Sales Driven by Grand Rapids Pre Foreclosure Homes

    Home sales also surged because homebuyers decided to take advantage of low interest rates and the federal tax incentives which are set to expire on April 30.

    A total of 1,244 houses in Grand Rapids were sold in March, an increase of 28 percent from total sales in March 2009 and an increase over every sales total for the month of March since 2006. Only the sales total for the month of March 2005 was higher, which reached 1,270 units.

    Realtors in the area were elated at the increase in sales, hoping it was a sign of housing market recovery from the adverse effects of foreclosures in Grand Rapids. They said that the sales increase in March marked the 14th consecutive month that total sales surged on a year-over-year basis.

    As lower-priced Grand Rapids pre foreclosure homes enticed buyers to buy homes, realtors were encouraged by the uptick in the average price for homes sold, although the price level was still much lower than prices during the boom.

    The average sales price for Grand Rapids homes in March 2010 was $113,883, an increase of 13 percent from the average price in March 2009, but still much lower than the average sales price of $153,579 in 2005.

    Over the past 12 months, the average sales price was $110,649, an increase of 14 percent over the previous one-year period. Although the pace of foreclosure activity in Grand Rapids in 2009 was slower than in other Michigan metro areas such as Detroit, Flint and East Lansing, prospective buyers planning to find foreclosure listings in Grand Rapids will not be frustrated.

    The total number of homes notified of default and foreclosure last year in the Grand Rapids area exceeded 7,800 units, representing 2.46 percent of all residential units in the area or equivalent to one foreclosure filing for every 41 homes in the area.

    Grand Rapids ranked 56th in a listing of 203 metro areas based on rates of foreclosure, far below the 35th ranking of Detroit, which suffered from the collapse of its auto manufacturing sector.

    According to local realtors, Grand Rapids pre foreclosure homes made home prices more affordable to buyers, enhancing other home buying incentives like tax credits and low mortgage rates.

  • A teacher openly crusades for better school food—and gets seared

    by Ed Bruske

    Colorado teacher Mendy Heaps: dangerous lunchroom radical—or fruit-cart-pushing concerned citizen? Mendy Heaps, a stellar English teacher for years, had never given much thought to the food her seventh-graders were eating. Then her husband, after years of eating junk food, was diagnosed with cancer, diabetes ,and high blood pressure and suddenly the french fries, pizza and ice cream being served in the cafeteria at rural Elizabeth Middle School outside Denver, Col., took on a whole new meaning.

    Heaps was roused to action. She started teaching nutrition in her language-arts classes. She bombarded colleagues, administrators and the local school board with e-mails and news clippings urging them to overhaul the school menu. She even took up selling fresh fruits and healthy snacks to the students on her own, wheeling alternative foods from classroom to classroom on a makeshift “fruit cart,” doling out apples for a quarter a pop.

    Finally, the school’s principal, Robert McMullen, could abide Heaps’ food crusade no longer. Under threat of being fired, Heaps says she was forced to sign a personnel memorandum agreeing to cease and desist. She was ordered to undergo a kind of cafeteria re-education program, wherein she was told to meet with the school’s food services director, spend part of each day on lunch duty recording what foods the students ate, and compile data showing the potential economic impact of removing from the menu the “grab and go” foods Heaps found so objectionable.

    “It was humiliating to stand in the cafeteria in front of the kids and the other teachers every day ‘collecting data,’ ” Heaps says. “I called it my penance.”

    Heaps’ husband, Robert Heaps, a retired police officer, said his wife is paying the price for rocking the boat in a small town. “Unfortunately, she works in a semi-rural district in a tight-knit community where change isn’t always at the top of the list of things to do,” he said. “My only concern for Mendy is that it seems she is fighting a losing battle. I don’t care to see rifts created between her and the school board or the administration over an issue as important as this. I suspect she could become a target and subjected to hostile work conditions. But she appears to be up against a brick wall.”

    McMullen, the school’s principal, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

    The case of Mendy Heaps is a stark reminder that at least one voice is largely missing from the debate over school food that’s getting so much attention lately: the voice of teachers. Teachers see what kids eat every day. They have opinions about the the food and how it impacts children’s health and school performance. Yet they are almost universally silent.

    With one notable exception: An Illinois teacher recently created an internet sensation by blogging anonymously and publishing photos about her self-imposed diet of cafeteria food. Calling herself “Mrs. Q,” she frequently writes about her fear that she could be fired for exposing what kids are eating every day at school.

    As I was gathering information for this report, Heaps said her local teachers union urged her to stop talking to me. “The union rep in my building came to my classroom and ‘begged’ me to stop everything I was doing,” Heaps wrote in an e-mail. “She insisted they will find a way to ‘get rid of me’ and there is nothing the union will do to help me. HOW’S THAT FOR SUPPORT!!!”

    Heaps says it isn’t so much the food served in the federally subsidized cafeteria line that concerns her most, although that’s bad enough: “Mashed potatoes and corn are usually served more than anything else, along with breaded chicken nuggets, chicken patties, and chicken tenders,” she said. “Hamburger patties are also served a lot—drenched in canned gravy with mashed potatoes sitting on top of a slice of bread or on a bun with a serving of corn or green beans.”

    Students who choose the subisidized meal are also entitled to a salad bar. But only a small percentage of students at the school qualify for free or reduced-price meals based on family income and apparently fewer still choose to pay for the federally supported food. According to Heaps, some say they are embarrassed to be seen in the subsidized food line.

    No, what really makes her blood boil are the alternate foods sold in what the school calls the “deli” line or “grab and go”:  Pizza, corn dogs, Subway sandwiches, Chick-fil-A, Cheetos, nachos, fruit rollups, ice cream sandwiches and especially the “healthy” fries. “They call them ‘healthy’ because they’re baked!” Heaps says. According to numbers she compiled while assigned to the cafeteria, somewhat fewer than half  the 170 students in seventh grade bring lunch from home. Only a very small number—15 to 24—eat the reimbursible “hot lunch,” she said. Between 25 and 30 do not eat, and the rest—58 to 78—purchase food at the “grab and go.”

    It reminded Heaps too much of her husband’s lousy diet. “When I met him about nine years ago, the only liquids that passed his lips were Pepsi and coffee and sometimes orange juice. He never ate fruit or vegetbles or dank water. The folks at McDonald’s and Krispy Kreme knew him by his first name,” Heaps said. “If he did cook for himself, it was processed food—[frozen] pizza, pot pies, hot pockets, hot dogs, canned soups and chili, lots of chips and Hostess cupcakes…Bob had no knowledge of nutrition—tomato sauce and french fries were vegetables, Wonder bread was vitamin fortified, and apple pie was the same thing as eating an apple.”

    Robert Heaps was diagnosed with kidney stones and while he was being treated for that he was found to have bladder cancer. He underwent surgery three times to remove tumors, each time followed by weeks of chemo-therapy. Subsequently he was found to be suffering Type II diabetes and high blood pressure.

    Mendy Heaps’ concern about the food being served at school became urgent. “I started feeling guilty that I had never really done anything to change what was going on, even though I knew it was wrong.”  Heaps said she could not understand why the school condoned students eating so much “junk” food. “Why do we serve or sell ANYTHING that isn’t good for the kids?” she said. “I hate the food they serve, but I hate even worse that they sell so much JUNK along with the bad food they serve.”

    According to Heaps, food services director Susan Stevens and other school officials respond that students are entitled to “treats,” and should be free to choose their own food. “They feel like my ideas are too radical and you should not ‘restrict’ kids,” Heaps said.

    Stevens did not respond to requests for comment. In an e-mail she sent to Heaps on April 28, 2009, she said, “My job is to provide each student with a healthy meal that adheres exactly to CDE [Colorado Department of Education] mandated nutrition guidelines. Our kitchens and staff are regularly audited to prove that we follow these guidelines and that we are all in compliance with state safety and health regulations.”

    Ron Patera, who oversees food services as the school system’s finance director, said in a statement, “Ms. Heaps and I are both in support of providing nutritious and safe meals to Elizabeth’s students so they have every opportunity to enhance their academic peformance. Elizabeth’s schools meet and exceed the Federal and State laws governing the National School Lunch Program.”

    Federal nutrition guidelines currently do not cover foods sold outside the subsidized food line. Legislation making its way through the U.S. Senate would, for the first time, give the secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture authority to regulate all foods available in public schools. That measure reflects growing sentiment that schools need to address a nationwide epidemic of childhood obesity and stop selling nutritionally inferior food to students.

    Heaps said one of her students was unable to use a standard-size desk in class because she was so heavy and had to be outfitted with a special table instead. That student habitually ate choco-tacos for lunch from the “grab and go”—two or three of them, according to Heaps—“and washed them down with a big Gatorade.”

    Klondike brand choco-taco is an ice cream dessert folded inside a cookie and dipped in chocolate. A single choco-taco contains 290 calories (40 calories more than a McDonald’s cheesburger), 11 grams of saturated fat (four grams more than a BallPark beef hotdog) and 24 grams of sugar, (slightly less than a one-cup serving of Coca-Cola). “Of course the kids loved them and I’m sure the cafeteria made a boat load of money selling them,” Heaps said. “They were meant for dessert, but what middle school kids do—when they have money and there is a ‘concession stand’ open at lunch—is they buy only ‘dessert’ and eat it for lunch. Duh—they’re kids.” Heaps said the school no longer offers choco-tacos.

    Heaps said she was told that sales from foods such as nachos and ice cream were needed to support the lunch program. But student behavior after meals was so disruptive, classes following lunch were rotated so that no single teacher would be forced to bear the brunt of it every day. “They were hyper and crazy…and then they crashed,” Heaps said.

    At one point, Heaps began teaching nutrition with seventh-grade science teachers but found she could not reconcile what they were telling the children in class with what the children were being served in the cafeteria. In an e-mail she sent to the entire school staff, Heaps wrote: “When I started teaching nutrition a la language arts/science, I realized everything I was teaching did not go along with what is happening at our school when it comes to eating healthy. Do I simply tell the kids we need the money more than they need their future health? Or should I tell them that maybe only ‘some’ of them will get diabetes or cancer or have heart attacks—so go ahead and play the odds!”

    Finally, Heaps took matters into her own hands and started selling what she considered healthier foods from her “fruit cart.”

    “I used the cart that my overhead projector sat on,” Heaps explained. “Once I started selling fruit in my classroom and the kids knew, they kept coming to my room to buy it…I decided to take the fruit to them. I got some kids to help. We piled the fruit on the cart (we also had cheese sticks, granola bars, peanuts) and the kids pushed it around from room to room.”

    Heaps said the parents of one of her students were local produce distributors and started delivering fresh fruit to her on Wednesdays. “My sister gave me a small refrigerator for my classroom so I could keep things cold. The fruit they delivered was awesome. They let me buy it at a discount so I was getting strawberries, blueberries, pears, all different kinds of apples. It was great.”

    But Heaps made a mistake one day, taking the cart into the cafeteria during lunch. Federal rules forbid competing food being sold alongside the subsidized meal. “I had taken the Fruit Cart in the cafeteria because the kids wanted to have some fruit for lunch and the cafeteria either wasn’t selling any, or the fruit I had was so much better, the kids wanted it instead.” Then she sent an e-mail to the school staff—except the principal and assistant principal—in which she referred to the kichen workers as “evil lunch ladies.” Heaps said she meant it as a joke, but the gaffe was her undoing.

    In a personnel memo dated May 1, 2009, principal Robert Mcmullen wrote, in part, “Your continued campaign has caused dusruption to the normal operatons of the district Food Serivce Director, district Finance Director, myself, your colleagues and the school…Therefore, I am issuing the following directive:

    “You will support and treat all school and district personnel and departments with respect.

    “You will include Mr. Westfall [assistant principal] and myself on all mass emails from or to school accounts.

    “You will cease the fruit cart sales after the end of the school year.

    “You will spend at least 15 minutes each day on lunch duty for the remainder of the 2009 school year. This will give you an opportunity to observe what our students are truly eating at lunch.

    “You will bring me hard numbers regarding the percentages of EMS [Elizabeth Middle School] students who do eat hot lunches each day. These numbers will include both the full lunch as well as the pizza, Chick-Fil-A, Subway, etc. served in the hot line.

    “You will meet with Susan Stevens, before the end of this school year, to better understand the realities of the economics of Elizabeth Food Services. Let me know when that meeting will take place and report to me your findings.

    “You will bring to me the data showing the economic costs of eliminating the ‘Grab and Go’ line as you have proposed.

    “You were hired to teach Language Arts. You will ensure that all your units, lessons and materials focus on the Language Arts standards and benchmarks.”

    Heaps says she no longer teaches nutrition in her classes. But she does talk to her students about her husband and “how much our life changed when he got sick.”

    “When I got the memo, everyone became afraid,” said Heaps. “If I tried to talk about the memo, no one wanted to listen. I got a little support from a couple of teachers, but not very much. Everyone wanted to forget about it and they wanted me to forget about it too…The only thing I still do is write letters and try to get someone interested! I’m working on one for Michelle Obama right now.”

    Related Links:

    What a D.C. private school can teach us about public-school lunches

    Underground school lunch blogger hits ‘Good Morning America’

    Ask Umbra on Ronald McDonald’s retirement, card games, and a coffee stirring stir






  • The Science of Kissing COVER! | The Intersection

    So what do you think?! The Science of Kissing will be out next January and is already available for pre-order on Amazon. Here’s the description: From a noted science journalist comes a wonderfully witty and fascinating exploration of how and why we kiss. When did humans begin to kiss? Why is kissing integral to some cultures and alien to others? Do good kissers make the best lovers? And is that expensive lip-plumping gloss worth it? Sheril Kirshenbaum, a biologist and science journalist, tackles these questions and more in THE SCIENCE OF KISSING. It’s everything you always wanted to know about kissing but either haven’t asked, couldn’t find out, or didn’t realize you should understand. The book is informed by the latest studies and theories, but Kirshenbaum’s engaging voice gives the information a light touch. Topics range from the kind of kissing men like to do (as distinct from women) to what animals can teach us about the kiss to whether or not the true art of kissing was lost sometime in the Dark Ages. Drawing upon classical history, evolutionary biology, psychology, popular culture, and more, Kirshenbaum’s winning book will appeal to romantics and armchair scientists alike.


  • Samsung Moment2 spotted, sporting slight design refresh

    Despite the relatively young age of the Samsung Moment, the leaked images above are said to be the Samsung Moment2.  From what I can gather, the design is a bit more rounded than the original, with slight changes to the keyboard and exterior buttons (around the optical trackpad).  Unfortunately, there’s no information beyond the OS (Android 2.1) and the fact that it’ll run a TouchWiz 3.0 overlay, so we don’t know what’s running under the hood.

    The tipsters claim that they’ll be back with more information, so I’ll be sure to pass along as soon as I receive it.  In the meantime – something you’d be interested in, or are you holding out for the EVO 4G?

    Via BGR


  • Healthy Handmade Pottery Cat Dishes

    Classy Cat Dishes

    The dishes you use to feed your cat can really make a difference in her health. These unique pottery feeding dishes from Classy Cat Dishes have several features that make them a perfect option. First, these dishes are raised to just the right height so kitty doesn’t have to bend over to eat, helping with digestion. They come in a range of sizes, including a shallow dish that prevents delicate whiskers from bumping on the sides of the dish. There are also deeper bowls for dry food in multi-cat households or for water. All the designs have scoop shaped walls so no food can get caught in the corners, and the turned in rims help keep food in the bowl. Classy Cat Dishes are made of high fired stoneware and are dishwasher and microwave safe, plus the glazes are absolutely lead free. Feeding kitty in a ceramic dish helps to reduce acne-causing bacteria that can grow on plastic feeding dishes.

    Classy Cat Dishes

    Classy Cat Dishes are handmade on Vancouver Island and range from $24 to $42 US. Check out the whole selection on the Classy Cat Dishes website.

    Thank to Cynthia for the find.

  • MetroPCS Launches Voice Mail-to-Text Service

    Metro PCS
    Following in the footsteps of Google Voice, MetroPCS has just launched message transcription for their voice mail service. For a $3 monthly fee, voicemails will be automagically transcribed to text and sent to you via SMS or email, eliminating the arduous task of dialling in to check your voice messages.

    The service, powered by Yap, also includes the original message along with the email, presumably so any misinterpreted words can be cleared up before you do anything rash.


  • Dallas Pre Foreclosure Homes Adding to Tax Revenue Fall

    Dallas pre foreclosure homes have been contributing to property tax revenue fall in the county, according to Dallas County officials.

    Dallas Pre Foreclosure Homes Adding to Tax Revenue Fall

    Ryan Brown, director of the Dallas County Budget Office, said that the county is facing a budget deficit of $56.5 million this year due mainly to the expected drop in real estate tax revenue.

    Since property taxes comprise about 50 percent of county revenues, about $31 million of the expected budget deficit can be ascribed to the expected drop in property values. Foreclosures in Dallas continue to drag down real estate values, particularly residential property values.

    Brown said that property values in Dallas County are expected to fall by 8 to 9 percent this year, the biggest reduction in many years. In 2009, property values dropped by just above 3 percent, the biggest drop for the 1992 to 2009 period.

    Commercial property values are also expected to fall by 5 to 10 percent, as vacancy rates have shot up and rents have fallen substantially. A lot of tenants have been threatening to leave if their leases are not renegotiated.

    According to county officials, the operating budget for the fiscal year 2009-2010 totaled $445 million and the expected shortfall covers the current fiscal year and the next.

    The lower prices of Dallas pre foreclosure homes have also put a downward pressure on property values within the city of Dallas, cutting down the anticipated property tax revenue by a substantial percentage. The city expected a budget shortfall much higher than that of the county – an expected deficit of more than $100 million.

    To help the city cope with the anticipated shortfall, the city manager has asked most city departments to cut their budgets by 30 percent.

    According to Ken Nolan, appraisal chief for the Dallas Central Appraisal District, foreclosures are now spreading into affluent communities like University Park and Highland Park. People asking how to find foreclosure listings in Dallas can start looking in these communities if they are interested in high-end homes that are now priced much lower.

    According to some county commissioners, raising property taxes is one way to close the gap in the budget, but an increase in tax rates will only worsen the situations of residents. They also expect a fierce opposition from the public, since resident are expected to question the wisdom of raising taxes at a time property values are being dragged down by Dallas pre foreclosure homes and foreclosed properties.

  • Well, That’s One Use For The iPad… [Ipad Accessories]

    Shame you’d have to fork out $39.99 for the iBookend to give the iPad purpose (if it were a real product, obviously). [Dominic Wilcox] More »







  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 6, 2010. Easter prayer breakfast

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 5, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 2010

    In the morning, the President will host an Easter Prayer Breakfast at the White House. Christian leaders from across the country will join the President at this breakfast for a time of prayer, reflection, and celebration of Easter. The President will also highlight the important role that Christian organizations play in serving our country. The remarks will be pooled press. The President’s remarks at the Easter Prayer Breakfast will be streamed on www.whitehouse.gov/live.

    Later, the President will receive the Presidential Daily Briefing in the Oval Office. The President and the Vice President will then receive the Economic Daily Briefing in the Oval Office. These briefings are closed press.

    In the afternoon, the President and the Vice President will have lunch in the Private Dining Room. This lunch is closed press.

    Later, the President will meet separately with senior advisors and Secretary of Defense Gates in the Oval Office. These meetings are closed press.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: ABC
    Print: Houston Chronicle
    Radio: CBS

    EDT

    8:00AM Pool Call Time

    9:40AM THE PRESIDENT hosts an Easter Prayer Breakfast
    East Room
    Pooled press (Pre-set 8:00AM – Final Gather 9:20AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    10:45AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    12:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT receive the Economic Daily Briefing
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    12:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT have lunch
    Private Dining Room
    Closed Press

    2:00PM THE PRESIDENT meets with senior advisors
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    4:30PM THE PRESIDENT meets with Secretary of Defense Gates
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    Briefing Schedule

    1:00PM Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs

    ##