Thursday, August 1, 2013

Severe NFL injuries rose every season from 2009-12

Sure didn't take long for some significant injuries at NFL training camps ? Philadelphia Eagles receiver Jeremy Maclin, Baltimore Ravens tight end Dennis Pitta, Denver Broncos center Dan Koppen, to name only three.

Immediately, some theories developed: Too much offseason work. Not enough. New labor-contract rules limiting padded practices to one per day, while generally seen as helpful, are hardly a cure-all.

Washington Redskins linebacker London Fletcher thinks some guys get hurt in camp because players are trying so hard to impress coaches and earn a roster spot or a starting job.

"You know now coaches are really evaluating you," said Fletcher, whose teammate, second-year linebacker Keenan Robinson, tore his left pectoral muscle on Day 1 of training camp. "You've got guys with a competitive spirit and they're looking at it, like, 'My job's on the line. I need to make a play' and not realizing there's going to be times to show that coaches that you can hit, you can make plays in preseason games, but you don't want to have a guy go down because of something that happened in practice."

Whatever the cause, severe injuries are increasing in the NFL lately. The number of injuries that forced a player to miss at least eight days jumped every year from 2009 to 2012, according to an analysis of NFL injury data released Wednesday. The study by Edgeworth Economics, based on information collected by the league, also shows that players with concussions missed an average of 16 days last season, up from only four days in 2005, while the length of time out for other types of injuries has been steadier.

"Severe injuries are increasing in frequency," Jesse David, the economist overseeing the study, said in a telephone interview from Pasadena, Calif. "I know that's a very important issue for both the players' association and the league ? trying to tweak the rules and the equipment to deal with that. But despite everything they've been doing, it's still going on."

David said his company has done consulting for the NFL Players Association in the past and received the data for this study from the union, but wasn't paid by it.

The study says there were 1,095 instances of injuries sidelining a player for eight or more days in 2009 ? including practices and games in the preseason, regular season and postseason ? and that climbed to 1,272 in 2010, 1,380 in 2011, and 1,496 in 2012. That's an increase of 37 percent.

"The way I look at it, really, is that injuries are part of the game," said cornerback Kyle Wilson of the New York Jets, who lost another cornerback, Aaron Berry, for the season when he tore a knee ligament on the first day of practice last week.

"Injuries happen sometimes. They're unfortunate, but it really is just part of the game."

Concussions have become a far-more-noticed part of football in recent years, with more discussion of the links between head injuries and brain disease, hundreds of lawsuits brought by thousands of former players, and rules changes made by the NFL to try to better protect players.

During the nine years examined in David's study, the average number of days missed because of head injuries by players in the league went from 4.8 in 2004, four in 2005, and 4.1 in 2006, to 10.9 in 2010, 12 in 2011, and 16 last season.

"We have experts at practice every day to let you know, as a coach, if someone does have a concussion, so that makes it pretty easy. They leave it out of our hands; they put in the experts' hands," Redskins coach Mike Shanahan said. "But, yeah, I think there's more awareness in a lot of different areas when it comes to injuries over the last few years, and rightfully so."

David said "you now have more severe injuries overall" because of the hike in lengthy absences for reported concussions.

"Are the brain injuries actually more severe now than they were five years ago? Or is that players simply being held out longer for the same injury? That we can't tell from the data," David said. "My guess is it's both, but how much of each factor, I don't know."

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy, who said the league will look at the study's findings, attributed the longer absences for players with concussions to more caution in the treatment of those types of injuries.

"We do know that the game is safer now, but we still have work to do. We continue to work hard on many fronts to make the game better and safer for our sport at all levels," McCarthy wrote in an email. "Our ongoing efforts include making rule changes designed to take dangerous techniques out of the game and also improving medical care to properly manage and treat concussions and raise awareness of their seriousness."

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Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

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Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

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AP Sports Writers Joseph White, Dennis Waszak Jr., Joe Kay, R.B. Fallstrom and Rob Maaddi contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/severe-nfl-injuries-rose-every-season-2009-12-210430990.html

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Canada is the new Cyprus

Published: July 31, 2013 11:00 AM
Updated: July 31, 2013 11:45 AM

Dear editor,

Remember how horrified we were when we heard that Cyprus banks were allowed to take private deposits to bail out the banks?

This was called a ?bail in.?

Well, on June 10 when Harper?s latest omnibus budget bill passed, Canada became the new Cyprus.

Carefully buried on pages 144-145 of the budget bill, banks are allowed to rapidly convert certain bank liabilities (your deposits) into regulatory capital.

So thanks to Conservative legislation, your insured deposits, GICs, retirement savings plan, education funds for grandchildren can all be scooped up by your bank if it fails.

This is now the law of the land.? Only Parliament can change the law.

This Canadian government ?bail in? legislation says nothing about guaranteeing protection for depositors. This means that government doesn?t have to bail out banks as it did, saving taxpayers a bundle.

Wait a minute, aren?t bank depositors taxpayers?

Boy, I?m sure glad I don?t live on Cyprus.

Cliff Boldt,

Courtenay

?

Source: http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/217794411.html

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Obama Offers GOP New 'Grand Bargain' (ABC News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/322842562?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Daughter's cancer diagnosis compels mother to complete triathlon

Triathlon success for mother

A MOTHER who staged her own triathlon to raise money for a cancer charity has raised just over ?3,000 from her venture.

Jill Harker, from Northallerton, spent her 59th birthday on Saturday, July 27, swimming, cycling and running to raise money for a cancer charity.

Mrs Harker?s daughter, Wendy, was diagnosed with a tumour in her eye, so she set herself her athletics challenge to raise funds for the Eye Tumour Research Fund.

She covered the equivalent of a half marathon - swimming just over three miles in Richmond Swimming Pool, then cycling five miles and running five miles.

Mrs Harker, who worked as a teaching assistant at Romanby Primary School for 18 years, until retiring this summer, said: ?I have no plans to do any more triathlons at this moment, but I would like to say a huge thank you to everybody who supported me.?

Source: http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/10580083.Daughter_s_cancer_diagnosis_compels_mother_to_complete_triathlon/?ref=rss

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Letter from USC President about recent resignation of USC ...

For those of you that don?t know, Jessica Tong, the USC?s coordinator for the Sexual Health and Consent Education Service has resigned with an open letter (http://iksusc.tumblr.com/).? I guess you could say this is our first public hurdle for my team and I, and I?d like to think we?ve a learnt a lot and gained some new perspective about the USC.? These are some of the lessons we?ve learned and some of the goals we are continuing to work towards.

Firstly, I want to categorically assure you that the USC is committed to social justice; it is at the core of the student government and everything we do.? We are committed to supporting survivors of sexual violence and educating our peers about consent.

I also want to commend the work of two very strong and dedicated advocates for survivors of sexual assault, Jessica Tong and Sam Krishnapillai.? Ms. Tong stood up for what she believed in, and by resigning she has sparked constructive discussion about the mission and goals of Peer Support Network (PSN) and the I Know Someone campaign.? She has every right to share her opinions about her experience.? The USC?s Vice-President Internal, Sam, is one of the hardest working and dedicated people I get the pleasure of working with.? She has been striving to ensure the PSN is working as effectively to serve students as possible.? The events in the past day are, however, not about these two individuals, in my opinion, they are symptoms of some greater challenges for the USC.

One of these larger issues is how we handle volunteers.? Ms. Tong left the organization frustrated: this means we didn?t provide her with the meaningful experience she deserved.? We?ve inadvertently done it before, but as a student government we are committed to bettering all volunteer experiences.? We are building better training and personal development programs, better communications tools, and better institutional supports: projects like access to the Human Resources Office and better workspaces where our commissioners, coordinators and interns can collaborate and work together to better our services.? This is something that will take time, but we are dedicating a lot of the government?s resources into developing this program.? Keep watching the USC; it will soon be the best place to learn outside of the classroom through meaningful volunteer experiences.

The other issue that I think we need to discuss is determining the goals of the Peer Support Network.? I think there is a real disconnect between what the elected councilors, who set the direction of council, want and what it is perceived to provide. I think there aren?t enough of our students who access the services that can provide great resources for them. From the perspective of the USC (according to our direction from council) the Peer Support Network aims to be a well-known source of education and support for students from all walks of life, while remaining a place of refuge and community for specific groups.

As a campus, we need to start thinking about what is the responsibility of the student government.? Which services we can offer ourselves through peer support and which services should we be advocating the university or external governments to provide?? We need to acknowledge that we aren?t experts, as executives and coordinators; we can only do so much alone.? How can we better integrate our existing external partners as advisors to what we do?

We?ve been talking to councilors and service coordinators about this, and we are starting to do what we do best: make a plan to make a plan (that?s my attempt at humour).? We?re going to be using some of our new feedback tools, like an online Idea Forum and the upcoming engagement policy (bottom paragraph: http://www.westerngazette.ca/2013/07/17/summer-council-roundup-amending-the-budget-tracking-turf-and-engaging-students/) in order to gauge what the broader student body would like to see.

We will continue to work very hard to solve some of these larger problems, but we need your input, your patience and your support in order to accomplish these goals.

We want to try something new to answer questions you might have about the recent events.? Since everyone is away for the summer, we wanted to try and have online town-hall style discussion.? Sam and I will be available to answer any of your questions and discuss your ideas this Thursday from 1PM to 3PM at westernusc.ca/townhall.? People have been wondering what we can do to improve the USC, and we think the first step is to open the channels of communication.? I sincerely need your help in understanding fully what you want to see from the Sexual Health and Consent Education Service.? I look forward to talking soon!

Finally, I want to say that Sam, Amir and I ran on the principle of listening: engaging with students about changes to services, listening to the ideas they have to make Western even better.? My executive and the whole USC still stand behind that goal, and we are working every day to make it easier for you to tell us what you need.

The USC remains entirely committed to operating the Sexual Health and Consent Education Service and the I Know Someone campaign once a new coordinator has been hired.

Please feel free to contact me anytime with any questions or concerns.

?

Pat Whelan
USC President

Source: http://westernusc.ca/blog/2013/07/30/letter-from-usc-president-about-recent-resignation-of-usc-coordinator/

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Architizer Relaunches To Connect Architects With Other Architects, And Brands, And Clients Too!

Screen Shot 2013-07-28 at 3.26.43 PMFor 100 years or more, architects have relied on a massive catalog sitting on their desk to find the right products to use in their architectural project — this brand of glass, or that brand of toilet. That catalog had a monopoly on the market for a century, but with the birth of the internet, that catalog never made the transition over to digital. But a site that launched back in 2009 as a platform for architects to publish their work, Architizer, is relaunching tomorrow to finally fill that void.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cU2nUKV6tUI/

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Differences small between student loan bills

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The House is set to go along with a bipartisan Senate compromise that would link college students' interest rates to the financial markets and offer borrowers lower rates this fall.

The Senate bill hews closely to one the House already has passed, and leaders from both parties and in both chambers expect those differences won't stand in the way of quick resolution, perhaps as early as Wednesday.

House approval would send the measure to President Barack Obama, who has said he would sign it into law "right away."

But critics note that if the economy improves, as expected, rates could climb higher.

If the Republican-led House consents to the Senate's tinkering with the House's earlier proposal, and Obama signs the legislation before students start returning to campus, families would see better deals on some federal loans this year than they did in 2012. Undergraduates could borrow at rates as low as 3.4 percent for subsidized Stafford loans and 6.8 percent on unsubsidized Stafford loans last year, while graduate students and parents borrowed at 7.9 percent last year.

Those 3.4 percent rates doubled on July 1 because Congress did not act. Lawmakers from both parties said the rate increase was unacceptable and worked on various proposals to extend rates, overhaul rates and even remake the entire program before classes start this fall.

Both chambers would link the interest rate to the 10-year Treasury note plus an added percentage, based on the type of loan. Each sets caps on how high the loans can go.

But under the Senate bill, once a student or parent takes a loan for the school year the rate would not change. The House bill would make the interest rate variable, meaning it could change every year until the loan is repaid.

A look at what the House and Senate bills would mean for students and their parents:

UNDERGRADUATES:

Senate: Undergraduates who take subsidized and unsubsidized Stafford loans would pay the 10-year Treasury note, plus an additional 2.05 percent. That would put the interest rate at about 3.9 percent this fall. Rates would be capped at 8.25 percent.

House: Under the House bill, undergraduates who take subsidized and unsubsidized Stafford loans would pay the 10-year Treasury note, plus an additional 2.5 percent. That would translate to an interest rate of about 4.3 percent interest rates for loans taken this fall. Rates would be capped at 8.5 percent.

GRADUATE STUDENTS:

Senate: Graduate students would borrow at the interest rate of the 10-year Treasury notes plus an additional 3.6 percent. That would bring 5.4 percent interest rates for borrowers this fall. Rates would be capped at 9.5 percent.

House: Graduate students and parents would borrow at the 10-year Treasury note plus an additional 4.5 percent. Under this formula, graduate student loans this fall would carry a 6.3 percent interest rate. Rates would be capped at 10.5 percent.

PARENTS AND SOME GRADUATE STUDENTS:

Senate: Parents and some graduate students would borrow at the 10-year Treasury note plus an additional 4.6 percent. That works out to a 6.4 percent interest rate for fall term. Rates would be capped at 10.5 percent.

House: Graduate students and parents would borrow at the 10-year Treasury note plus an additional 4.5 percent. That would bring about 6.3 percent interest rates for borrowers this fall. Rates would be capped at 10.5 percent

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Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philip_elliott

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/differences-small-between-student-loan-bills-140411223.html

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