Friday, June 14, 2013

Fallen trees condemn Peninsula homes - WAVY TV 10 News Updates






Updated: Friday, 14 Jun 2013, 6:15 PM EDT
Published : Friday, 14 Jun 2013, 6:15 PM EDT

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (WAVY) - Residents across Hampton Roads spent the Friday cleaning up after Thursday's severe weather. The hardest hit areas were on the Peninsula and in James City County.
At least four homes were condemned due to storm damage in James City County. Five homes were condemned in Newport News. Several residents whose homes were condemned told WAVY.com they can't get over how close they were to being injured or killed by the fallen trees.
Some would look at the uprooted tree lying on Linda Roger-Johnson's home and see devastation. But Johnson and her husband can only see how fortunate they are that their loved ones are alive.
"My home can be replaced, and my granddaughter wasn't sitting in that room," Johnson said. "That tree would have hit her for sure if she was there, and she would have got it."
Johnson's 31-year-old daughter was the only one in the home on Windsor Castle Road when the storm passed through Thursday night. Johnson said she and her granddaughter were at the store when the 
tree came crashing down on her home.
"She called me and said, 'Something hit the house, and I can't breathe," Johnson said.
Johnson's daughter is on oxygen 24 hours a day. Neighbors told 10 On Your Side they could see Johnson's daughter pleading for help after the tree fell over.
"My husband and a neighbor ran over there to see if somebody was inside," neighbor Christy Smith said. "We could hear someone yelling that they couldn't breathe."
Neighbors weren't able to reach Johnson's daughter. Emergency officials arrived quickly and pulled her from the home. She was not injured, just very scared.
Even after almost losing her daughter and being forced out of her home because of tree damage, Johnson said when she looks at her condemned home she only thinks about how much she still has, not how much she's lost.
"What goes through my mind is, 'Thank God nobody was hurt. Thank God that tree didn't shift over to where my daughter was or cause any damage to break the wall down," Johnson said. "There are so many areas I can look at and see a blessing."
Johnson's family has homeowner's insurance. The family will be living out of a hotel until their home is repaired.
Tom Laveille's childhood home was destroyed by a fallen tree Thursday night as well. His home is now covered by a tarp where a large tree smashed through his house.
"When you see a tree inside your house you think a lot differently," Lavielle said.
Lavielle said you think about how much you won't get back.
"One of the rooms we lived in is basically destroyed," Lavielle said. " All the furniture and all the memories that I can relate to are gone."
Lavielle said when a tree damages your home you also think about how close your loved ones were to danger. Lavielle's mother was in the backyard with her dog watching the storm come in Thursday night when she heard a loud noise.
"She was walking towards the door and she said the tree hitting the house shook her to the ground, and it took pictures off the wall," Lavielle said. "When she got up, it was snowing installation inside the house."
His mother managed to crawl out of the home, unharmed. And, if having their home condemned wasn't bad enough, Lavielle said looters tried to steal from them overnight.
"People have tried to rob the house multiple times just in one night ," Lavielle said. "We had telephone calls from police officers saying, 'We've been at your house. People are trying to get into your house.' It's really odd that someone would really want to kick you when your down."

News story link and the rest of the story.  WAVY TV 10.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Virginia State 9th in college attainment. But rate of jobs taking diplomas rising faster than degrees earned

BY KARIN KAPSIDELIS
Richmond Times-Dispatch


Virginia ranks ninth nationally in college attainment but faces “a troubling talent gap” in meeting future workforce needs at its current pace of awarding degrees, a report Thursday by the Lumina Foundation says.
About 45 percent of the 4.4 million adults between the prime working ages of 25 to 64 in Virginia held at least a two- or four-year college degree in 2011, with the Richmond metro area second behind Northern Virginia in the number of graduates.
However, education levels vary widely across the state, and at the current rate of degree production only about 54 percent of adults, or 2.5 million people, will hold college degrees in 2025, the report projects.
Jamie P. Merisotis, president and chief executive officer of Lumina, cites research from the Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce showing 64 percent of all Virginia jobs will require postsecondary education by 2018.
“This means that Virginia is now facing a troubling talent gap and significantly more graduates are needed to meet future workforce needs,” Merisotis said in comments accompanying the report.
Virginia has set a goal of achieving an additional 100,000 associate and baccalaureate degrees by 2025.
Both the state and Lumina Foundation see as a source of additional degrees people who started college but didn’t finish.
According to Lumina’s report, “A Stronger Nation through Higher Education,” 20.7 percent of the adult population in Virginia fits that category.
Lumina’s goal is to increase the proportion of Americans with degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.
Nationally, 38.7 percent of working-age adults held a two- or four-year degree in 2011, up from 38.3 percent from 2010.
Virginia’s numbers also improved from 2010, when the rate was 43.9 percent and the state ranked 11th nationally.
The report points to the higher attainment rate among younger Virginians as a promising indicator. In 2011, 46.6 percent of Virginians ages 25 to 34 held at least a two-year degree, surpassing the national rate of 40.1 percent.
According to the report, the highest levels of college attainment for adults 25 to 64 were in the Washington-Arlington-Alexandria area, at 54.73 percent; metro Richmond at 40.49 percent; and Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News at 38.55 percent.

Based on census data, college attainment rates by county ranged from more than 65 percent in Fairfax and Loudoun to 10.42 percent in Greensville and 13.45 percent in Sussex. Among cities, the rates ranged from 78.27 percent in Falls Church and 66.47 percent in Alexandria to 14.74 percent in Hopewell and 18.37 percent in Petersburg.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Song Of The Day - An Entire Album, Persson - Instrumental Blues



Today we are going the bonus round by putting up an entire album.  Play it here before you even download it.  If you like blues, you are going to love todays selection.  Persson knows the blues and plays it right.


(cc) Some Rights Reserved - Attribution-ShareAlike CC BY-SAYou can copy, distribute, advertise and play this album as long as you:

  • Give credit to the artist
  • Distribute all derivative works under the same license




Enhanced by Zemanta

Doctor's Note - Vitamin C Can Kill Any Virus - Also, Deadly Secrets of Fluoride Video

Vitamin Line-Up
Vitamin Line-Up (Photo credit: Earthworm)
Friday, June 14, 2013 by: Jonathan Landsman
Tags: vitamin CvirusDr. Thomas Levy

(NaturalNews) If you suffer from fatigue, muscle weakness, achy joints and muscles, bleeding gums or leg rashes - you could be vitamin C deficient. Everything from the common cold to cancer can't resist the healing power of vitamin C. In fact, there is not a known virus that can survive in the presence of this essential antioxidant.

If you would like to learn more about the health benefits of vitamin C; the best way to consume vitamin C supplements for disease prevention plus much more - don't miss the next NaturalNews Talk Hour with Jonathan Landsman and Dr. Thomas Levy.

Visit: http://www.naturalhealth365.com and enter your email address for show details + a FREE gift!

How does vitamin C help to kill unwanted viruses and prevent disease?

Vitamin C expert, Dr. Thomas Levy says, "vitamin C is referred to as an antioxidant that donates or gives up its electrons. On the other hand, a toxin, infection or anything that causes a medical symptom in the body is a result of oxidative stress or due to a lack of electrons." So, it's really quite simple, if our body lacks enough electrons - we will get sick.

This is the easiest way to understand why a healthy diet - rich in fruits and vegetables (loaded with vitamin C) - does help us to literally prevent disease. Eating enough vitamin C, antioxidant-rich foods make it virtually impossible for our body to experience cellular inflammation. And, remember, inflammation is an essential component to just about every chronic, degenerative disease - including cancer.

Vitamin C has been shown to help detoxify lead, kill cancer cells plus much more

According to the work of Linus Pauling and the Linus Pauling Institutevitamin C therapy has been shown to prevent, even reverse serious health condition, like cancer. Generally speaking, the Linus Pauling Institute recommends that healthy men and women eat "at least five servings (2? cups) of fruits and vegetables daily" - which provides about 200 mg of vitamin C. Obviously, if you suffer from any chronic disease, greater amounts may be required and not just orally.

Research has shown that as little as 10 mg of vitamin C per day can eliminate the threat of scurvy. Naturally, diseases like cancer and heart disease require much larger quantities. But, the main point is that health problems like, cancer, coronary heart disease, diabetes, gout, high blood pressure and stroke can all be treated with vitamin C therapy.

If you would like to learn more about the health benefits of vitamin C; the best way to consume vitamin C supplements for disease prevention plus much more - don't miss the next NaturalNews Talk Hour with Jonathan Landsman and Dr. Thomas Levy.

Visit: http://www.naturalhealth365.com and enter your email address for show details + a FREE gift!

This week's guest: Thomas Levy, M.D., J.D., internationally recognized vitamin C expert

Discover little known truths about the use of vitamin C to kill viruses plus much more - Sun. June 16

Dr. Thomas E. Levy is a board certified cardiologist and has written six books on health-related issues. Most of his work has centered on how to restore and maintain good health in the face of the many different forms of toxicity that all of us face, typically on a daily basis. He no longer has a clinical practice of medicine and cardiology. Rather, he limits himself to research and writing at this time, and he is currently working on his seventh book, Death by Calcium: The Supplement that Kills.

Most of his work over the last ten years has centered on the importance of maintaining a healthy antioxidant status in the body. His work currently is focusing on the importance of liposomal technology as a way to optimally deliver vitamin C, glutathione, and other nutrients into the body orally, appearing to even surpass the bioavailability seen with the intravenous administration of these antioxidants.

If you would like to learn more about the health benefits of vitamin C; the best way to consume vitamin C supplements for disease prevention plus much more - don't miss the next NaturalNews Talk Hour with Jonathan Landsman and Dr. Thomas Levy.

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/040770_vitamin_C_virus_Dr_Thomas_Levy.html#ixzz2WEBvuUNY



Fluoride's Deadly Secret Video
Enhanced by Zemanta

Recipe of the day - How To Make Exotic Sugars

English: A bowl filled with sugar
English: A bowl filled with sugar (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
We recently ran across an article on how to make lavender sugar and the process was so easy that it lead to an entire host of really neat ways to create something extraordinary from something as simple as sugar.  The recipe for lavender sugar is very simple.  Put fresh lavender flowers into a muslin bag and put it into the middle of a sealed container of sugar.  Let it sit for about a month.  After one month, remove the muslin bag of lavender.  You now have lavender flavored sugar.

Great for tea's and not all that bad in coffee.  It imparts a light flavor.  For quicker results that can yield even more stunning flavors, add any type of extract to a paper napkin or towel and wrap lightly in either wax paper or plastic film.  Lay on top of sugar in a sealed jar.  Let stand for a few days and then remove, if desired, the paper towel extract and it's container.

  One can make lemon sugar, rum flavored sugar, vanilla flavored sugar, peppermint flavored sugar, or anything else one can think of.  How about a raspberry flavored sugar?  You are only limited to your imagination here.   Of course this is how candy all came about.  But we are actually doing something a bit different than making candy.
Enhanced by Zemanta

NFL Updates from ESPN

Chase The Rainbow - Scenes After Yesterday's Storm - June 14th, 2013.



Chase the rainbow is a short video clip of a rainbow as seen in Gloucester, Virginia after yesterday's storm.  These pictures and video were taken in Hayes.  At some points you could see a double rainbow.  It was a stunning scene.  The colors in the sky kept changing which created interesting effects in our pictures.


Enhanced by Zemanta