August 2009

Myrtle Beach Hotels

The cost and quality of hotels are usually indicative of the range and type of services available. Due to the enormous increase in tourism worldwide during the last decades of the 20th century, standards, especially those of smaller establishments, have improved considerably. For the sake of greater comparability, rating systems have been introduced, with the one to five stars classification being most common.[citation needed]

Many hotels can be considered destinations in themselves, by dint of unusual features of the lodging and/or its immediate environment:

http://www.sandsresorts.com/

Adult Diaper

Adult Diaper

The decision to use cloth or disposable diapers is a controversial one, owing to issues ranging from convenience, health, cost, and their effect on the environment. Currently, disposable diapers are the most commonly used, with Pampers and Huggies being the most well-known brands in the industry. Plastic pants can be worn over diapers to avoid leaks.

In the 20th century, the disposable diaper gradually evolved through the inventions of several different people. In 1942, a Swedish paper company known as PauliStróm created the first disposable diaper using sheets of tissue placed inside rubber pants.

Live Food

Creatures that are the most common choices for live foods, ranging from feeder mice to crickets and mealworms, generally are bred and raised in captivity themselves, and can often be found both through local pet stores and from wholesalers or "farms" that breed them specifically for live food sales.

They can be purchased at most pet stores and bait shops. They are also available via mail order and via internet suppliers (by the thousand). Mealworms are typically sold in a container with bran or oatmeal for food. When rearing mealworms, commercial growers incorporate a juvenile hormone into the feeding process to keep the mealworm in the larval stage and achieve an abnormal length of 2 cm or greater.

Live Food

AP IMPACT: Banks added 10,000 branches in boom (AP)

DALLAS – Banks expanded at a breathtaking pace over the past five years, adding more than 10,000 full-service branches, but barely 1 in 10 were in inner-city, minority neighborhoods, another sign the financial spending spree skipped over substantial parts of the country.
The discrepancy means millions of people who don't live near a bank have had to hand over $2, $5 or $10 at a time — sometimes even more — in service fees to nonbank outlets to conduct basic transactions such as cashing checks or paying bills that most bank customers take for granted.
Nearly six branches were added every day, with bank offices racing to exclusive neighborhoods such as University Park in Dallas, Midtown West in Manhattan and Music Row in Nashville, Tenn., as well as the fast-growing exburban communities surrounding Sacramento, Calif., Phoenix and Cincinnati.
"It's crazy, and they're building another one!" said Mary Morgan, pulling into a parking spot at a JPMorgan Chase branch in University Park. Up the road, Comerica just cleared a lot to build a bank. A half-mile away, a financial institution is replacing a restaurant, she said.
"It's stupid," Morgan said. "How can the market be that big?"
Meanwhile, bank growth either declined or remained stagnant across wide swaths of the nation's inner cities, with branches closing in Cleveland, Pittsburgh and elsewhere.
Data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. shows that the nation's 99,000 banks generally followed the money. About two-thirds of all neighborhoods have a median household income higher than the national average; about two-thirds of the new bank branches were in those neighborhoods.
An Associated Press analysis, however, found that branches weren't added at a proportionate rate in minority neighborhoods. About one-third of the neighborhoods analyzed are predominantly minority, according to the Census Bureau; only about 1 in 10 new bank branches showed up in those areas.
The AP study was reviewed by the American Bankers Association and is consistent with other federal studies.
"It's like the proverbial ambulance chasers," said Charles O'Neal, a vice president at the Dallas Black Chamber of Commerce. "They're all chasing the same dollar and they get little return. Meanwhile, on this side of town, folks are literally spending sleepless nights trying to figure out where do we go to find a financial institution that will be responsive to their needs."
Bank officials say they are following the growth of customers to continue providing services because most people choose banks based on branch locations.
Bank watchdogs, however, say less-regulated financial institutions are filling the void and expanding at the expense of vulnerable, inner-city residents. As a result, they are relying on high-cost lending businesses for services traditionally provided by bank branches.
"When you don't have banks going into poor communities, you're going to wind up with places where there are a lot of predatory products," said Kathleen Day, a spokeswoman for the Center for Responsible Lending, a Washington-based advocacy group. "It's not always the case — payday lending seems to targets black and Hispanic neighorhoods regardless of income level or bank location — but it's a real problem."
Even in a digital age when banking is done online, the 99,000 bank branches are important barometers of economic health for thousands of communities. People in neighborhoods without banks are more likely to spend more of their money for basic financial transactions.
About 30 million people cash checks at businesses that aren't banks, according to MSG CPA, a New York-based accounting and consulting firm. There are more than 13,000 check-cashing outlets, handling about $80 billion annually. Customers use the businesses to cash paychecks, pay utility bills, buy money orders and take out payday loans, often at rates that exceed fees charged by banks or even credit card charges.
Under the Community Reinvestment Act, banks are encouraged to offer services in poor and minority neighborhoods. The vast majority of banks receive outstanding or satisfactory grades from regulators. The grades are important when banks apply to open new branches or acquire other banks.
James Ballantine, a senior vice president with the American Bankers Association, said banks that don't comply can be required to enter into agreements with regulators, fined or even lose their charter.
Even so, small and large banks alike focused most of their efforts on wealthy and fast-growing neighborhoods as the housing boom reached its zenith. Banks now receiving billions in federal bailout loans led the charge, according to the AP's analysis. The largest banks added nearly 6,800 branches between 2004 and 2008. Fewer than 900 of those branches wound up in minority neighborhoods.

Nearly 18 percent of those full-service bank branches were in minority neighborhoods in 2004, according to the FDIC. By last year, that number had dipped to 16 percent as banks worked harder at pursuing customers in distant, mostly white suburbs.

Among the findings in the analysis:

_Fueled by explosive growth and its acquisition of Bank One Corp., JPMorgan Chase added 2,566 branches during the five-year period. Only 342 were in minority neighborhoods. In 2004, nearly 30 percent of Chase's branches were in minority areas. By 2008, that number had dropped nearly half, to 16 percent.

Christine Holevas, a bank spokeswoman, said most of the bank branches were added by acquisitions of other banks. Chase took over Bank One in 2004, adding 1,800 branches. The bank increased its number of branches again in 2004 when it acquired 300 Bank of New York locations. The acquisitions effectively reduced the bank's presence in minority neighborhoods.

Its most recent federal grade, issued in 2007, was "outstanding."

_Citigroup added 272 new branches between 2004 and 2008, the overwhelming majority in white neighborhoods. Only two dozen were created in minority neighborhoods, according to federal figures. The bank still has 28 percent of its banks in minority areas.

Elizabeth Fogarty, a bank spokeswoman, said Citi makes a strong effort to serve poor and minority communities.

_Fifth Third Bancorp increased its presence in minority neighborhoods by more than half, expanding from 60 offices to 95 branches. Still, only 7 percent of its 1,356 branch offices are in minority areas.

Stephanie Honan, a bank spokeswoman, confirmed the figures. She said the company has a small percentage of its branches in minority neighborhoods because of acquisitions over the past two years. She said the company has decided to not close or consolidate branches in minority neighborhoods for the next three years.

The company, she said, "is committed to expanding our presence in minority areas and making the best use of our branch distribution to serve our markets effectively."

Perhaps no place illustrates the expanding chasm as well as Dallas, a major financial center. The typical family living in the University Park section has an annual income of $200,000. The neighborhood, just north of downtown, is 97 percent white. Two percent of its residents are poor. Since 2004, banks have added 16 new branches. The area now has 43 banks, or one for every 475 people.

The market apparently isn't as big five miles away, where the typical south Dallas family earns about $17,000 annually. The neighborhood is 98 percent black. Half the people who live there are poor. In 2004, its residents could choose between a Bank of America branch and a Washington Mutual branch. By 2008, only the Bank of America branch remained, leaving the neighborhood with one bank for every 9,300 people.

It's a community of small, frame houses, some neat and tidy with security bars on the windows and doors; others are weathered, with peeling paint and tiny, weed-choked yards. The bank stands in the shadow of the State Fair of Texas, the giant Ferris wheel looming above the parking lot. The lack of financial services often takes a back seat to worries about crime, fear of unemployment, or simply having a place to live and food to eat.

George Murphy, 68, owns M&W Barber & Beauty Shop, a small business in the heart of the neighborhood. The lack of banks isn't a problem for him because it only takes 30 minutes to walk to one, and a bus is also available.

"I don't deal with checks," he said. "My business is cash only."

Even so, the line is long at the Ace Cash Express, less than two miles away. The sign reads, "No Bank Account Necessary." Customers can have their paychecks automatically loaded on a prepaid Visa card for a fee. William Bates, 70, sits out front on his motorized scooter, waiting for his wife to get a money order.

"Twenty-five or 30 years ago," he said, "there weren't no banks or nothing over here."

___

Bass reported from East Dover, Vt.

___

On the Net:

Center for Responsive Lending: http://www.responsiblelending.org/

JPMorgan Chase & Co.: http://www.jpmorganchase.com

Citigroup Inc.: http://www.citigroup.com

Fifth Third Bancorp: http://www.53.com

Dallas Black Chamber of Commerce: http://www.dbcc.org/

Webb Wins Release of U.S. Activist, Urges Freedom for Suu Kyi (Bloomberg)

Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Senator Jim Webb said he hopes
his visit to Myanmar will lay groundwork for restoring democracy
in the Southeast Asian nation, after meeting with pro-democracy
activist Aung San Suu Kyi and winning the release of an
imprisoned American.

“Suu Kyi’s situation is highly unusual,” Webb, a Virginia
Democrat, said during a stop in Bangkok. Webb said he was
pleased the Myanmar government allowed the meeting and freed
John Yettaw, the American imprisoned after swimming uninvited to
Suu Kyi’s Yangon home in May and staying for two days. Yettaw
was freed, departed with Webb and is undergoing medical
treatment, the senator said.

Suu Kyi, 64, was sentenced on Aug. 11 to jail for three
years with hard labor, after being found guilty of breaching a
detention order by letting Yettaw stay in her home. The military
junta that runs Myanmar commuted her sentence to 18 months under
house detention.

“I hope they will consider” freeing Suu Kyi and allowing
her to participate freely in the nation’s politics, Webb said.
He said he told Myanmar’s leaders “it would be impossible for
the rest of the world to believe that the elections were free
and fair if she was not allowed to take part.”

Webb was the first senior U.S. official to meet with the
top leader of the country’s military junta, Senior General Than
Shwe, the senator’s office said in a statement yesterday.

Yettaw Freed

Yettaw is a diabetic and epileptic father of seven,
according to Agence France Presse. He swam to Suu Kyi’s house
once before, in November 2008, and left a copy of the Book of
Mormon before leaving, the news agency reported.

The American went on a hunger strike after his arrest,
resulting in a series of epileptic fits, AFP reported. He is a
devout Mormon and former member of the military whose lawyer
said he was having visions that Suu Kyi was going to be
assassinated, according to AFP.

European Union governments on Aug. 13 stiffened sanctions
against Myanmar, formerly known as Burma. The United Nations
Security Council called on Myanmar’s military rulers Aug. 14 to
open “genuine” talks with Suu Kyi and begin national
reconciliation in the country.

The Council expressed “serious concern” at the extension
of Suu Kyi’s house detention last week and its political impact
before elections planned for next year.

House Arrest

The Nobel Peace Prize winner was placed under house arrest
at her home in Yangon in 2003. She has spent more than 13 years
in custody since her National League for Democracy party won
elections in 1990, a result rejected by the junta.

Myanmar holds about 2,000 political prisoners, according to
the UN. Elections are scheduled for next year under a
constitution that the opposition says is designed to entrench
military rule.

Webb, who is on a two-week trip to Asia, met with Suu Kyi
for nearly an hour and discussed plans for elections in the
nation next year, constitutional issues and her pro-democracy
party. He encouraged her party to work within Myanmar’s
political system, Webb said.

The senator, a Vietnam veteran who served as Navy secretary
under former President Ronald Reagan, has worked and traveled in
Southeast Asia for almost four decades, his office said.

Before he was elected to the Senate in 2006, Webb visited
Myanmar in 2001 to meet with business leaders, workers and
members of the junta. In March this year, he said U.S. sanctions
against the country appeared to be “counter-productive in terms
of our ability to affect the difficulties faced by the Burmese
people.â€

Webb has advocated the U.S. speak directly with Myanmar’s
leadership to work to resolve differences. He said in June that
as long as authorities in Myanmar continued the trial of Suu
Kyi, “it will be very difficult to pursue a meaningful change
in relations with Burma.”

To contact the reporters on this story:
Shiyin Chen in Bangkok at
schen37@bloomberg.net ;
Suttinee Yuvejwattana in Bangkok at
Suttinee1@bloomberg.net .

Milwaukee mayor hospitalized after pipe attack (AP)

MILWAUKEE – Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett remained hospitalized Sunday after a man attacked him with a metal pipe as the mayor tried to assist a grandmother screaming for help near the Wisconsin State Fair.
Barrett, 55, was in stable condition at a local hospital with a fractured hand and other head and hand wounds, official said.
The mayor had gone to the fair outside Milwaukee on Saturday night with his sister, two daughters and a niece. As the group left and walked to Barrett's car, they heard a woman screaming for someone to call 911, police said.
Police said the woman was a grandmother who was trying to protect her 1-year-old granddaughter from a 20-year-old man, an assault authorities characterized as a domestic dispute.
"The mayor stopped and said something (to the man) like, 'Let's all cool down here, I'm going to call 911,'" the mayor's spokesman Patrick Curley said. "He said it one or two times according to him. When he took out his phone, that's when the suspect attacked him."
The suspect hit Barrett in the head and torso with a metal pipe. Barrett apparently fought back, fracturing his hand when he punched the suspect.
"I think he hit the guy," Curley said. "I don't know where, but it was hard enough, whatever he hit, to fracture his hand."
The suspect then fled the area when he heard sirens. He was arrested on Sunday at a Milwaukee home, and police recovered the alleged weapon. The woman and baby were uninjured.
The mayor, who did not ask for security to accompany him to the fair because he wasn't on official duty, underwent successful surgery Sunday on his fractured right hand and also had cuts on his head and lip stitched up, Curley said. The mayor likely will remain in the hospital through Monday, he said.
The mayor's brother, John Barrett, said the family was optimistic about the mayor's recovery.
"We're extremely proud of Tom's selflessness and his courage," John Barrett said, fighting back tears at a news conference.
Gov. Jim Doyle said he also visited Barrett at the hospital Sunday morning and found him in "good spirits and looking good considering what happened."
"The mayor's heroic actions clearly saved a woman and others from harm," Doyle said in a statement.
Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn said authorities had no reason to believe the suspect knew it was the mayor he was attacking. Police said the suspect was intoxicated at the time, had wanted to see his daughter and had threatened to shoot himself and others.
Under the city's line of succession, Common Council President Willie Hines would take command if the mayor were incapacitated. Curley said he briefed Hines but didn't expect a transfer of power would be necessary because Barrett "is engaged, he's conversational."
Barrett was already planning to take this week off for a family vacation, Curley said.
The mayor's only regret about the incident is that his family was there to witness what happened, Curley said.
"He said it was hard because his kids and niece were there at the time of the incident," Curley said. "He knew he had to (intervene). It was the right thing to do."

Barrett was elected Milwaukee mayor in 2004 and re-elected last year with nearly 80 percent of the vote. He also served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1992 to 2002. His name also has begun circulating as a possible Democratic candidate for governor in 2010 after Doyle scheduled a news conference for Monday, reportedly to announce he will not seek a third term.

Dozens die in militant battle in NW Pakistan (AP)

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan – Fierce clashes between Taliban fighters and those loyal to a pro-government warlord killed at least 70 people Wednesday, intelligence officials said, a week after a CIA drone reportedly killed the top Taliban leader in Pakistan.
The battles pitched Taliban militants against followers of tribal warlord Turkistan Bitani on the fringes of the South Waziristan border region, where U.S. and Pakistani officials believe Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud died in a missile strike on Aug. 5.
Pakistan's army sent in helicopter gunships as reinforcements to pound about 300 Taliban fighters attacking Bitani's mountain stronghold, two intelligence officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.
The fighting raged for five hours, with militants using rockets, mortars and anti-aircraft guns against Bitani's village of Sura Ghar, the officials said. They said wireless intercepts from the area showed at least 70 people — including one woman in the village — were killed. Ten of the dead were from Bitani's stronghold, the officials said, while the rest were militants.
It was impossible to independently confirm the death toll, as the fighting was taking place in a remote mountainous area that is off-limits to journalists.
Bitani put the casualty figure higher, telling The Associated Press that about 90 fighters were killed and 40 houses destroyed.
The fighting followed days of confusion and competing claims over Mehsud's fate. While U.S. and Pakistani officials say they are almost certain he is dead, Taliban commanders insist he is alive.
Neither side has produced any evidence, and since the claims of Mehsud's death, both the Taliban and the Pakistani government have been waging competing propaganda campaigns over the state of the Taliban's leadership.
Days after the missile strike, Interior Minister Rehman Malik claimed a Taliban meeting to choose Mehsud's successor degenerated into a gunbattle between the leading contenders — Waliur Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud — and that one of the two was dead.
Bitani made similar claims, saying there had been a gunfight at the meeting, known as a shura — although he had said both Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud were dead.
The two militant commanders both later phoned international media organizations to prove they survived.
Baitullah Mehsud and his followers have been the target of both U.S. and Pakistani operations aimed at ridding the country's volatile northwest of militants.
Washington has increased its focus on Pakistan's rugged tribal regions because they provide safe haven for insurgents fighting international forces across the border in Afghanistan. The U.S. is also concerned the militants could undermine the stability of the government in Islamabad, especially after Taliban insurgents briefly captured areas some 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the capital. That bold takeover stoked fears Pakistan's nuclear weapons could fall into the wrong hands.
A recent report written by a U.K.-based security expert said militants had attacked nuclear facilities three times in two years, but a military spokesman denied that on Wednesday.
Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said there is "absolutely no chance" the country's atomic weapons could fall into terrorist hands.
Shaun Gregory, a professor at Bradford University's Pakistan Security Research Unit, wrote that several militant attacks have already hit military bases where nuclear components are secretly stored. The article appeared in the July newsletter of the Combating Terrorism Center of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
Abbas said Wednesday that none of the military bases named was used to store atomic weapons.
Separately, a bomb and gunfire attack against a paramilitary checkpoint in the southwestern city of Quetta killed at least two passers-by and wounded four other people, including a police officer, authorities said.

Senior police officer Mohammad Suleman said a booby-trapped motorcycle exploded near a Frontier Corps checkpoint, and then gunmen on another motorcycle opened fire.

Quetta is the capital of Baluchistan, where ethnic Baluch militants have waged a low-level insurgency for decades. Suleman said Baluch separatists were suspected in the attack.

____

Becatoros contributed from Islamabad. Associated Press writer Zarar Khan in Islamabad also contributed to this report.

Report: NASA can't keep up with killer asteroids (AP)

WASHINGTON – NASA is charged with seeking out nearly all the asteroids that threaten Earth but doesn't have the money to do the job, a federal report says.
That's because even though Congress assigned the space agency this mission four years ago, it never gave NASA money to build the necessary telescopes, the new National Academy of Sciences report says. Specifically, NASA has been ordered to spot 90 percent of the potentially deadly rocks hurtling through space by 2020.
Even so, NASA says it's completed about one-third of its assignment with its current telescope system.
NASA estimates that there are about 20,000 asteroids and comets in our solar system that are potential threats to Earth. They are larger than 460 feet in diameter — slightly smaller than the Superdome in New Orleans. So far, scientists know where about 6,000 of these objects are.
Rocks between 460 feet and 3,280 feet in diameter can devastate an entire region but not the entire globe, said Lindley Johnson, NASA's manager of the near-Earth objects program. Objects bigger than that are even more threatening, of course.
Just last month astronomers were surprised when an object of unknown size and origin bashed into Jupiter and created an Earth-sized bruise that is still spreading. Jupiter does get slammed more often than Earth because of its immense gravity, enormous size and location.
Disaster movies like "Armageddon" and near misses in previous years may have scared people and alerted them to a serious issue. But when it comes to doing something about monitoring the threat, the academy concluded "there has been relatively little effort by the U.S. government."
And the U.S. government is practically the only government doing anything at all, the report found.
"It shows we have a problem we're not addressing," said Louis Friedman, executive director of the Planetary Society, an advocacy group.
NASA calculated that to spot the asteroids as required by law would cost about $800 million between now and 2020, either with a new ground-based telescope or a space observation system, Johnson said. If NASA got only $300 million it could find most asteroids bigger than 1,000 feet across, he said.
But so far NASA has gotten neither sum.
It may never get the money, said John Logsdon, a space policy professor at George Washington University.
"The program is a little bit of a lame duck," Logsdon said. There is not a big enough group pushing for the money, he said.
At the moment, NASA has identified about five near-Earth objects that pose better than a 1-in-a-million risk of hitting our planet and being big enough to cause serious damage, Johnson said. That number changes from time to time, usually with new asteroids added and old ones removed as more information is gathered on their orbits.
The space rocks astronomers are keeping a closest eye on are a 430-foot diameter rock that has a 1-in-3,000 chance of hitting Earth in 2048 and a much-talked about asteroid, Apophis, which is twice that size and has a one-in-43,000 chance of hitting in 2036, 2037 or 2069.
Last month, NASA started a new Web site for the public to learn about threatening near-Earth objects.
___
On the Net:

NASA's near-Earth object site: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/asteroidwatch

TV station fined for misquoting official in Iraq (AP)

BAGHDAD – An Iraqi court has fined a television channel $87,000 after ruling that it slandered a military official by misquoting him, a spokesman said Wednesday.
The Iraqi military filed a lawsuit in April seeking to shut down the Iraq operations of Al-Hayat, a major London-based Arabic language newspaper, and Al-Sharqiya television station, for falsely reporting that orders had been issued to arrest ex-detainees recently released by the United States.
Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, the main military spokesman in Baghdad, insisted he said only that ex-detainee files would be reviewed to determine if any of them were involved in a recent uptick in bombings.
Al-Hayat issued a correction on its Web site saying its information did not come from al-Moussawi but another unidentified official. Al-Sharqiya, which quoted the newspaper report, said the military complaint "is not worthy of a response."
The Baghdad court fined Al-Sharqiya 100 million dinars ($87,000) for slander against al-Moussawi, according to judicial spokesman Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar.
The Dubai-based Iraqi channel is known for its harsh criticism of the Iraqi government and security forces. Officials with the station refused to comment on the court verdict.
The decision comes amid fears of a worsening environment for media in Iraq despite U.S.-backed efforts to promote an independent press.
"We do respect the Iraqi judiciary system, but we do not like to see an Iraqi channel being fined for delivering news in a country that honors freedom of expression," said Hadi Chalou of the Baghdad-based independent Journalistic Freedom Observatory.
Iraq has been the most dangerous place in the world for journalists to work, with the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists saying 139 have been killed since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

EKG Machines

From splachnopleuric mesoderm tissue, the cardiogenic plate develops cranially and laterally to the neural plate. In the cardiogenic plate, two separate angiogenic cell clusters form on either side of the embryo. Each cell cluster coalesces to form an endocardial tube continuous with a dorsal aorta and a vitteloumbilical vein. As embryonic tissue continues to fold, the two endocardial tubes are pushed into the thoracic cavity and begin to fuse together and are completely fused at approximately 21 days.
At 21 days after conception, the human heart begins beating at 70 to 80 beats per minute and accelerates linearly for the first month of beating.

The apex is the blunt point situated in an inferior (pointing down and left) direction. A stethoscope can be placed directly over the apex so that the beats can be counted. It is located posterior to the 5th intercostal space just medial of the left mid-clavicular line. In normal adults, the mass of the heart is 250-350 g (9-12 oz), or about twice the size of a clenched fist (it is about the size of a clenched fist in children), but extremely diseased hearts can be up to 1000 g (2 lb) in mass due to hypertrophy. It consists of four chambers, the two upper atria and the two lower ventricles.

EKG Machines