CentreDaily.com - Morning Newsletter

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  • The dismal U.S. job market, which has intensified fears of another recession, may be even worse than the unemployment numbers suggest.

  • With buying from small, local, family-run farms becoming more popular, the results of a new study from Wisconsin could be surprising: It found that milk from big dairies is cleaner than that from small ones.

  • A tornado has caused some property damage near Albany, N.Y., one week after Irene caused destructive flooding in the region.

  • Weather Underground Forecast for Monday, September 05, 2011. Stormy weather will continue across the Southeast and Tennessee Valley Monday as Lee moves northeastward through southern Mississippi as a tropical depression. Lee will gradually weaken as it moves further inland through the day with maximum sustained winds near 35 mph and gusts between 46 to 52 mph. Bands of heavy rainfall associated with this system will provide a good soaking to areas of the Southeast and the Tennessee Valley. Total rainfall accumulations from Lee are expected to reach up to 20 inches, from the Central Gulf Coast into the Tennessee Valley through Monday night. Thus, expect flooding and flash flooding to remain major concerns throughout these regions. In addition to significant rain and wind, severe storms with brief, isolated tornadoes will be possible along the Central Gulf Coast, primarily in southern Alabama, the Florida Panhandle, and southwestern Georgia.

  • Residents of at least 100 homes were forced to flee after a small plane crashed and burst into flames, killing two people on board and igniting a fast-moving brush fire that burned early Monday near a California mountain community.

  • WILLIAMSPORT — With one inning remaining in the New York- Penn League season, umpire Ryan Additon called the State College Spikes and Williamsport Crosscutters off Bowman Field.

  • UNIVERSITY PARK — Fullbacks still get the ball every once in a while in the Penn State offense these days, but rarely to the extent that they did during Saturday’s 41-7 win over Indiana State.

  • COLUMBUS, Ohio — Penn State men’s soccer head coach Bob Warming got his 400th career win as the No. 15 Nittany Lions downed Florida International 1-0 on the final day of the Wolstein Classic.

  • Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay hasn't been shy about using Twitter to share his thoughts.

  • Ozzie Guillen and the Chicago White Sox arrived in Detroit hoping to start a last-ditch rally for the AL Central title.

  • • Through Aug. 30: The Boalsburg Heritage Museum presents “Pennsylvania Civil War 150: The Boalsburg Commemoration.” According to the museum’s website, the exhibit features letters written between 1839 and 1893 by Boalsburg resident Daniel Keller, who served with the Pa. 148th Volunteer Regiment, to his family members; a ceremonial sword that belonged Dr. Calvin Fisher, an assistant surgeon for the 148th; and an extensive collection of U.S. flags from different time periods that was lended to the museum by Boalsburg resident Jim Sorensen. Visit www.boalsburgheritage
    museum.org or call 466-3035.

  • Over the next four years, Pennsylvania, along with many other states, will commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. Organizations are scheduling re-enactments, exhibits, lectures and other events. In addition, scholars and history buffs are re-examining the causes, issues and repercussions of the bloodiest conflict in American history.
    Penn State University Libraries will participate in the commemoration by hosting two exhibits that examine various facets of the Civil War, including slavery and abolitionism, the common soldier’s battlefield experience and construction of cultural memory of the conflict. The exhibits were designed with the purpose of correcting common misperceptions of the war, as well as illustrating how the war affected Centre County and Penn State.
    “You’ve got this synergy coalescing around the 150th anniversary,” said Jim Quigel, head of Historical Collections and Labor Archives at Paterno Library.
    “Home Front to Battlefront: Celebrating the Civil War Legacy” will be on display through Oct. 7 in the Eberly Special Collections Library, 104 Paterno Library. The exhibit draws upon an array of primary source materials including family letters, diaries, photographic images, historical lithographs, broadsides and official government records. Among the themes explored are slavery and abolitionism, sectionalism, and health and medical conditions during the war.
    “There’s more than just the military aspect (of the war),” Quigel said. “There’s the social aspect.”
    The exhibit is curated by Quigle. Other HCLA staff members who contributed interpretative cases to the exhibit include Barry Kernfeld, Gwen Johns, Doris Malkmus, Jenna Sabre, Meredith Weber and student intern Desa Amos.
    “Civil War from the Stacks,” which will be on display through Sept. 24 in the Diversity Studies Room, 203 Pattee Library, presents recent scholarship that gives a richer, more nuanced view of the war. The exhibit, composed of books from the University Libraries’ collection and images from the Library of Congress Collection of Civil War photographs, explores topics such as religion and slavery, the impact of Hollywood movies and television on the public’s perception of the war, and the role of black politicians during the Reconstruction era.
    “Scholars are taking another look at the Civil War to clear up any misconceptions,” said Angela Breeden, exhibit coordinator for the University Libraries.
    For the “Home Front to Battlefront” exhibit, Quigel and his assistants created several display cases of original and digitized artifacts that illustrate various aspects of the Civil War. The stark reality of slavery is highlighted by a set of shackles that borrowed from the Charles L. Blockson Collection at Paterno Library. Contrary to what people may assume, Quigel said, the shackles were used in the mid-18th century in Bristol, R.I. While northern states had mostly abolished slavery by that time, he added, northern merchants and shippers frequently transported slaves across states. Visitors of the exhibit can also view an original copy of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” an anti-slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe that was published in 1852.
    Local residents may not be aware of just how close to home the Civil War hit. “Home Front to Battlefront” features a number of documents, photos and items that illustrate the impact of the war on the Penn State community. When the war started in 1861, Quigel said, the university, then known as the Farmers High School of Pennsylvania, had just graduated its first class. Visitors to the exhibit can read a letter written by the father of a student to Evan Pugh, the first president of Penn State. In the letter, the father accuses Pugh of encouraging his son to abandon his studies and join the war effort. Also displayed is a revolver that belonged to George Atherton, who served in the Connecticut militia in the Civil War before he became president of Penn State in 1882.
    “Civil War in the Stacks” complements the Special Collections exhibit by giving people the opportunity to delve deeper into the war’s themes. Breeden selected about 50 books that examine the Civil War from various angles and sought out materials written by Penn State faculty members. “Making and Remaking Pennsylvania’s Civil War,” which explores the impact of the war on Pennsylvania, was edited by Penn State history professors William A. Pencak and William A. Blair. The book won the 2002 Philip S. Klein Book Prize for best book that illuminates the history of Pennsylvania from the Pennsylvania Historical Association.
    Other books that present unique views of the war, Breeden said, include “The Civil War As a Theological Crisis” by Mark A. Noll, which examines the role of religion in the war; and “Women at the Front: Hospital Workers in Civil War America” by Jane E. Schultz.
    “The role of women in the Civil War is an important topic and this book addresses it,” Breeden said.
    To bring the exhibit to life, Breeden said she felt it was important to include images that would interest visitors. She downloaded images from the Library of Congress Civil War Photography Collection that complemented the subject matter of the books, then created posters with the images and summaries of the books.
    Breeden emphasized that the “Civil War in the Stacks” exhibit is open to the entire community, not just Penn State. The books highlighted in the exhibit, she added, “would be equally interesting to the scholar, student or layperson.”
    “We’re living in a time of war,” she said. “I think that the more you understand about history, the more perspective you have.”

  • ACOUSTIC BREW SERIES, Center for Well-Being, Lemont, www.acousticbrew.org

  • One of the highlights of the opening day of the Centre County Grange Encampment and Fair is the fair queen coronation, which will take place at 7 p.m. at the Southside Stage.

  • While the Centre County Grange Encampment and Fair is known to showcase rising stars, it’s played host to some of the big names from country music’s past.



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CentreDaily.com - Morning Newsletter

To view this email as a web page, go here.

  • The Philipsburg Historical Foundation Museum had become more repository than resource, more attic than archive.

  • I went to my first Renaissance Faire with my wife-to-be in San Rafael, across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco, sometime in the late 1980s. So much of those days are forgotten now, but I remember the jugglers in the forest, the games of strength, and the pleasure of being much younger

  • The Chesapeake Bay watershed’s six states and the District of Columbia are on a “pollution diet” that sets standards for how much they must reduce phosphorous, nitrogen and sediment pollution.

  • Before the lawyer walked into her Bellefonte cafe two years ago, Wendy Fultz had never heard of baked oatmeal.

  • SPRING TOWNSHIP — With a checklist covering manure management, soil loss and agricultural erosion in hand, Daina Beckstrand made her way to Guided Path Farm on what was one of 100 similar stops to be made this year.

  • The New Orleans City Council has set a deadline of Sept. 12 for applications for an interim appointment to the at-large council seat being vacated by Arnie Fielkow.

  • Twenty-five years after a reactor at Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded and melted down, its surroundings are well-explored territory, including the abandoned workers' town of Pripyat, two kilometers (about a mile) from the plant. The guides who take visitors through the area know exactly where to go and, more important, what to avoid.

  • The center of Tropical Storm Lee lurched across Louisiana's Gulf Coast on Sunday, dumping torrential rains that threatened low-lying communities in a foreshadowing of what cities further inland could face in coming days.

  • President Barack Obama's own job may be on the line as he presents his plan for job creation this week, with the nation's unemployment rate mired at 9.1 percent and his popularity at a record low.

  • The National Hurricane Center says Tropical Storm Katia is trekking across open ocean with little change in strength but it is forecast to regain hurricane strength during the day.

  • • Through Aug. 30: The Boalsburg Heritage Museum presents “Pennsylvania Civil War 150: The Boalsburg Commemoration.” According to the museum’s website, the exhibit features letters written between 1839 and 1893 by Boalsburg resident Daniel Keller, who served with the Pa. 148th Volunteer Regiment, to his family members; a ceremonial sword that belonged Dr. Calvin Fisher, an assistant surgeon for the 148th; and an extensive collection of U.S. flags from different time periods that was lended to the museum by Boalsburg resident Jim Sorensen. Visit www.boalsburgheritage
    museum.org or call 466-3035.

  • Over the next four years, Pennsylvania, along with many other states, will commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. Organizations are scheduling re-enactments, exhibits, lectures and other events. In addition, scholars and history buffs are re-examining the causes, issues and repercussions of the bloodiest conflict in American history.
    Penn State University Libraries will participate in the commemoration by hosting two exhibits that examine various facets of the Civil War, including slavery and abolitionism, the common soldier’s battlefield experience and construction of cultural memory of the conflict. The exhibits were designed with the purpose of correcting common misperceptions of the war, as well as illustrating how the war affected Centre County and Penn State.
    “You’ve got this synergy coalescing around the 150th anniversary,” said Jim Quigel, head of Historical Collections and Labor Archives at Paterno Library.
    “Home Front to Battlefront: Celebrating the Civil War Legacy” will be on display through Oct. 7 in the Eberly Special Collections Library, 104 Paterno Library. The exhibit draws upon an array of primary source materials including family letters, diaries, photographic images, historical lithographs, broadsides and official government records. Among the themes explored are slavery and abolitionism, sectionalism, and health and medical conditions during the war.
    “There’s more than just the military aspect (of the war),” Quigel said. “There’s the social aspect.”
    The exhibit is curated by Quigle. Other HCLA staff members who contributed interpretative cases to the exhibit include Barry Kernfeld, Gwen Johns, Doris Malkmus, Jenna Sabre, Meredith Weber and student intern Desa Amos.
    “Civil War from the Stacks,” which will be on display through Sept. 24 in the Diversity Studies Room, 203 Pattee Library, presents recent scholarship that gives a richer, more nuanced view of the war. The exhibit, composed of books from the University Libraries’ collection and images from the Library of Congress Collection of Civil War photographs, explores topics such as religion and slavery, the impact of Hollywood movies and television on the public’s perception of the war, and the role of black politicians during the Reconstruction era.
    “Scholars are taking another look at the Civil War to clear up any misconceptions,” said Angela Breeden, exhibit coordinator for the University Libraries.
    For the “Home Front to Battlefront” exhibit, Quigel and his assistants created several display cases of original and digitized artifacts that illustrate various aspects of the Civil War. The stark reality of slavery is highlighted by a set of shackles that borrowed from the Charles L. Blockson Collection at Paterno Library. Contrary to what people may assume, Quigel said, the shackles were used in the mid-18th century in Bristol, R.I. While northern states had mostly abolished slavery by that time, he added, northern merchants and shippers frequently transported slaves across states. Visitors of the exhibit can also view an original copy of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” an anti-slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe that was published in 1852.
    Local residents may not be aware of just how close to home the Civil War hit. “Home Front to Battlefront” features a number of documents, photos and items that illustrate the impact of the war on the Penn State community. When the war started in 1861, Quigel said, the university, then known as the Farmers High School of Pennsylvania, had just graduated its first class. Visitors to the exhibit can read a letter written by the father of a student to Evan Pugh, the first president of Penn State. In the letter, the father accuses Pugh of encouraging his son to abandon his studies and join the war effort. Also displayed is a revolver that belonged to George Atherton, who served in the Connecticut militia in the Civil War before he became president of Penn State in 1882.
    “Civil War in the Stacks” complements the Special Collections exhibit by giving people the opportunity to delve deeper into the war’s themes. Breeden selected about 50 books that examine the Civil War from various angles and sought out materials written by Penn State faculty members. “Making and Remaking Pennsylvania’s Civil War,” which explores the impact of the war on Pennsylvania, was edited by Penn State history professors William A. Pencak and William A. Blair. The book won the 2002 Philip S. Klein Book Prize for best book that illuminates the history of Pennsylvania from the Pennsylvania Historical Association.
    Other books that present unique views of the war, Breeden said, include “The Civil War As a Theological Crisis” by Mark A. Noll, which examines the role of religion in the war; and “Women at the Front: Hospital Workers in Civil War America” by Jane E. Schultz.
    “The role of women in the Civil War is an important topic and this book addresses it,” Breeden said.
    To bring the exhibit to life, Breeden said she felt it was important to include images that would interest visitors. She downloaded images from the Library of Congress Civil War Photography Collection that complemented the subject matter of the books, then created posters with the images and summaries of the books.
    Breeden emphasized that the “Civil War in the Stacks” exhibit is open to the entire community, not just Penn State. The books highlighted in the exhibit, she added, “would be equally interesting to the scholar, student or layperson.”
    “We’re living in a time of war,” she said. “I think that the more you understand about history, the more perspective you have.”

  • ACOUSTIC BREW SERIES, Center for Well-Being, Lemont, www.acousticbrew.org

  • One of the highlights of the opening day of the Centre County Grange Encampment and Fair is the fair queen coronation, which will take place at 7 p.m. at the Southside Stage.

  • While the Centre County Grange Encampment and Fair is known to showcase rising stars, it’s played host to some of the big names from country music’s past.



This email was sent by: Centre Daily Times 3400 East College Avenue State College, Pennsylvania, 16801, USA
Update Profile
Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter

Brain Eating Amoeba, Kills secong child : Nine-year-old boy dies after swimming in water infected by bug

A nine-year-old Virginia boy has died after swimming in water infected by a bug known as the "brain-eating amoeba," according to reports. It was the second such death this month.



The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported that Christian Alexander Strickland, 9, of Henrico County, became infected after he went to a fishing camp in the state.
The child died from meningitis Aug. 5 and Bonnie Strickland, his aunt, told the paper that Naegleria fowleri — or "brain-eating amoeba" as it is sometimes known — was a suspected cause of the illness.
"The doctor described it to us as such a slight chance that they didn't even think it would be possible," Bonnie Strickland told the Times-Dispatch.
Health department officials told the paper they do not comment on individual cases. However, they confirmed a case of meningitis and an infection by the bug.
"Sadly, we have had a Naegleria infection in Virginia this summer," Dr. Keri Hall, state epidemiologist at the Virginia Department of Health, in a statement, according to the Times-Dispatch. "It's important that people be aware of … safe swimming messages."
Naegleria fowleri moves into the body through the nose and destroys brain tissue, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The bug causes primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, a nearly always fatal disease of the central nervous system, the CDC reported.
Naegleria fowleri is usually found warm, stagnant water in freshwater lakes, ponds and rivers. It can also be found in wells.
No known treatment for infection Currently, there is no known treatment for people who develop a brain infection with this bug, said Dr. Roy Gulick, chief of infectious disease at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
“It’s a very rare disease,” he explained. “There have only been 111 cases reported since 1962. So it’s difficult to know what an effective treatment might be.”
Earlier this month, Courtney Nash, 16, died as a result of a Naegleria fowleri infection in Florida after swimming in the St. John's River, ABC News reported.
NBC-affiliate WESH.com reported that Nash was diving off a dock with family at her grandmother's house when it is thought that she caught the disease.
'I didn't get my miracle' Courtney's mother, Patricia Nash, said that shortly before her death, Courtney had decided to become an organ donor.
She told WESH that both lungs were transplanted and Courtney's liver and pancreas were "performing another miracle for someone else." Her kidneys were also being transplanted.
"I didn't get my miracle, but she has performed other miracles," Patricia Nash said, according to WESH. "If we can save other people's lives so they don't have to go through what I just went though, this could be a blessing in disguise."
Vaccine wouldn't have prevented deaths Inoculation with the meningitis vaccine wouldn’t have prevented these deaths, said Gulick. That’s because the vaccines target meningitis-causing bacteria, and this is an amoeba.
One of the difficulties facing doctors and researchers is the very rarity of the disease. "People don’t think of the diagnosis,” Gulick said. “And people usually present two to 15 days after exposure. Death usually results 3 to 7 days after symptoms appear.”
Another problem, he said, is that the symptoms of this kind of brain infection are common to several other illnesses.
“When the amoeba gets into the brain, the symptoms are non specific: fever, nausea, stiff neck, headache,” he said. “There are many diseases that can cause those kinds of symptoms.”
Still, Gulick said, “anyone presenting with these symptoms should seek medical attenuation because they can be caused by diseases that are far more common, including viral and bacterial meningitis.”
No evidence of an outbreak Though two cases might spark fears of an outbreak, Gulick says there’s no evidence to suggest that this is anything other than coincidence.
The best information doctors have, he explained, is from the CDC, which reports that Naegleria fowleri killed 23 people in the U.S. between 1995 and 2004, "including 2 children in the Phoenix, Arizona, area in 2002, who had been exposed to well water but had not consumed it." The agency also reports 6 documented deaths in 2007, all in warmer regions (Arizona, Texas, Florida).
No one knows why some people develop a brain infection while others don’t.
“It’s a very rare infection,” Gulick said. “Millions are likely exposed, but only a very small percentage develop this."

Limbaugh: Where Are Obama's Former Girlfriends?


Rush Limbaugh is again raising questions about President Barack Obama's personal background, wondering where all of his former girlfriends, classmates and students are.

"I got one of these email things," Limbaugh said on his program this afternoon.
"And, of course, I've only seen it a thousand times, and knew it before I received the first one. And you probably have seen this one going around. This one is, 'Where are all of Obama's former girlfriends?' It's a takeoff on where are all of the students Obama taught who claim to have been inspired by him when he taught law at the University of Chicago. Where are all of the former classmates of Obama who can tell wonderful stories about their experience with Obama on campus or in the classroom?"

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