Wednesday 30 December 2015

A Glass Of Water Contains Millions Of Good Bacteria

An emerging research reveals that a glass of water contains 10 million bacteria. You definitely read that right but there is no reason to panic as these are the "good" ones. These microbes, in fact, aid in purifying the water that we gulp in every day.

Even though their long existence has remained unnoticeable, new research confirms that there are millions of good bacteria out in the water pipes and purification plants that make our drinking water safe to consume. A clean tap water always has harmless bacteria, according to researchers.
Otherwise known as biofilms, these thin, sticky-based microbes spurt and engulf along the surfaces of water pipelines and treatment plants. These findings add to the varied species of microorganisms and the use they may have that are yet to be discovered. Researchers suggest that these bacteria start the purifying process even while water is still in water pipes and not just on treatment plants alone. Advanced DNA sequencing and flow cytometry technology were used to see these bacteria. Researcher Catherine Paul from Lund University claimed to have counted 80,000 microorganisms per milliliter.

Microbes seen on pipes reached up to thousands of varieties. The researchers suggest that there is a correlation between bacteria composition and water quality.

Just like the "good" bacteria lingering in our tummies to aid in food digestion and illness protection, researchers believe that these actually help purify water. Even if the research was based in Sweden, these bacteria and biofilms are found across the world.

This knowledge may soon help experts update and improve the water pipeline system. "The hope is that we eventually may be able to control the composition and quality of water in the water supply to steer the growth of 'good' bacteria that can help purify the water even more efficiently than today," Paul said. 

Resource: http://www.sciencetimes.com/articles/8039/20151230/glass-water-contains-millions-bacteria-good.htm

Norman police raid pipe shop, seize items, owner says

NORMAN — Owners of the Friendly Market believe the law is on their side for selling glass pipes, but police seem to disagree.

Tuesday, Norman police raided the store at 1100 E Constitution, seizing thousands of dollars worth of merchandise and cash, an owner and an attorney representing the store said. A search affidavit had not yet been filed in the Cleveland County District Court as of Friday afternoon, and a Norman police spokeswoman declined to comment.

General Manager Stephen Holman, who is also a city councilman, was working at the store when the raid occurred.

The Friendly Market sells items such as books, clothing, jewelry, hats and candles. There is an interior room for patrons at least 18 years old where smoking accessories such as glass pipes and smoking accessories are displayed for sale.

In May, staff pulled the glass pipes off the shelves following police raids at two other similar businesses in Norman — McCloud'z Pipes and Fatt Hedz. Both shops shut down as a result.

However, after receiving legal advice from attorney Brecken Wagner, Friendly Market began selling glass pipes again.

"They're not doing anything illegal. These are smoking pipes," Wagner said. "The Friendly Market doesn't sell any type of incense, potpourri or anything like that. Strictly just smoking accessories, glass pipes, things of that nature."

A search warrant provided by the Norman Police Department lists drug paraphernalia as the purpose of the search.

Friendly Market staff is considering restocking the inventory seized by police, confident their merchandise is within the law.

"This really is nothing more than intimidation, harassment, and law enforcement trying to push their will on other people as well as civil forfeiture,” Wagner said.

Wagner successfully represented the owners of the Funky Munky, a novelty store in McAlester, after a 2014 raid by the Drug Enforcement Agency and other agencies. In that case, the agents obtained a search warrant for synthetic marijuana, but none was found, Wagner said.

Law enforcement seized smoking accessories from the store as well as $70,000 from the bank accounts of the owners, Wagner said. No arrests were made but Pittsburg County attempted to permanently seize the cash and merchandise through civil forfeiture, which Wagner fought in court.

In July of this year, the DEA returned all of the merchandise and most of the cash after a settlement agreement was reached, Wagner said.

Resource: http://newsok.com/article/5465011

Poll: Texans coming around to pot, gay marriage and still deeply in love with football


 Tim Timmons holds a glass pipe filled with marijuana prior to smoking it at his Garland home October 26, 2010. Timmons, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, offered to go before the Texas legislature to show lawmakers what a toke looks like and explain the benefits to convince them that medical marijuana should be legalized. (COURTNEY PERRY/Staff Photographer)


By BRANDI GRISSOM
and BRITTNEY MARTIN
 

(Editor’s note: This story has been updated throughout.)

Texans are chilling out about pot legalization, the results of a poll released Wednesday indicate.

A poll released Wednesday by the Texas Lyceum found that 46 percent of Texans support marijuana legalization, a 13 percentage-point jump from 2011. The increased support for relaxing weed laws comes after 23 other states have legalized marijuana for medical or recreational uses.

The Texas Lyceum is a nonprofit, nonpartisan leadership organization, and this poll was the organization’s eighth annual survey. The telephone survey contacted 1,000 adult Texans from Sept. 8-21. The poll’s margin of error is 3.1 percentage points. The pollsters asked people their views on a range of topics from border security and immigration to gay marriage and football.

“We continue to be disabused of the notion that Texans are all one thing or the other,” said Darren Shaw, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who worked on the poll. “There certainly is a conservative reservoir of opinion, but that plays out in complex ways depending upon the particular issue.”

Marijuana legalization, though, was an area in which Texans’ opinions shifted the most.
Of the 50 percent of respondents who opposed legalization, 57 percent said they would support reducing penalties for possession of small amounts.

Republicans and Democrats alike said they supported reducing penalties for possession.

During the legislative session this year, a measure that would have reduced the penalty for possessing less than one ounce of marijuana from jail time to a fine failed to gain traction.

Lawmakers rejected a measure to study the effect of marijuana as a treatment for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

A bill to eliminate criminal penalties for marijuana use also failed, along with one that would have legalized marijuana for medical use.

Still, marijuana proponents made more progress in 2015 than ever before.

Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill that allows patients with intractable epilepsy to treat the disease with cannabis oil that is low in THC, the psychoactive chemical in marijuana

“Texas is ready for marijuana policy reform – it can improve public safety, boost our economy, and provide much-needed health care options for struggling Texans,” said Ed Espinoza, executive director of the left-leaning group Progress Texas.

On other policy issues, Texans, as they have in recent years, continue to view immigration and border security as the most important challenges facing the states, the poll showed. Twenty-four percent of those surveyed said immigration was the top issue.

Overall, 62% supported increased border security spending by the Legislature, with Republicans overwhelmingly supporting it. This year, lawmakers dedicated $800 million to border security operations over the next two years.

Noting that immigration has been the dominant topic of discussion by real-estate mogul and TV personality Donald Trump, the GOP’s front-running presidential candidate, Shaw said that those issues are indicative of how people view the performance of government officials.

When it comes to gay marriage, following the U.S. Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex unions, 49 percent of Texans said they favor gay marriage, up from 33 percent in 2011.

The poll, Shaw said, shows that Texas is not a monolith of knee-jerk conservatism.

“The state has a very diverse population,” he said.

But Texans are pretty much of one mind when it comes to football. They still love it.

Nationally, there has been increasing concern about the potential long-term impact of repeated head injuries on children who play tackle football. A national NBC/Wall Street Journal poll last year showed that 40 percent of Americans would steer their kids away from the sport. The Texans polled by the Lyceum were not dissuaded from their dedication to the Friday night lights. Seventy-two percent said they would encourage their children to play, while only 21 percent would discourage them.
    
 

College Station High School football players warm up before a high school football game against Willis, Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, at Cougar Stadium in College Station, Texas. (Sam Craft/College Station Eagle via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT





Resource : http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2015/09/poll-texans-coming-around-to-pot-gay-marriage-and-still-deeply-in-love-with-football.html/

Medford man arrested for alleged marijuana following traffic stop

Medford >> Police arrested a Medford man following a traffic stop for allegedly having a mason jar with baggies of marijuana inside it.

Police arrested Evan C. Smith, 20, of Medford, after stopping a 2005 Chrysler 300 at 12:16 a.m., on Dec. 28, for multiple motor vehicle violations, including failing to wear a seatbelt, throwing debris from a moving vehicle, and having an unclear license plate, police said. During the stop the officer could detect the odor of raw marijuana coming from the passenger compartment of the vehicle, police said.

As a result of the on-scene investigation, police uncovered a mason jar containing three Ziploc bags containing suspected marijuana, additional Ziploc bags containing suspected marijuana and a glass smoking pipe containing marijuana residue, which were all found inside the vehicle, police said.

Smith was taken into custody and transported to the Medford Township Public Safety Building where he was processed. He was charged with possession of CDS under 50 grams of marijuana, possession of CDS paraphernalia, possession of CDS in a motor vehicle, throwing debris from a moving vehicle, and having an unclear license plate. Smith was subsequently released on a summons, pending a court appearance.

Resource: http://www.southjerseylocalnews.com/articles/2015/12/29/news/doc5682ae491a820446051483.txt

Stanhope man, Wantage woman face charges of marijuana possession

MOUNT OLIVE -- A pair of Sussex County residents were charged with marijuana possession, police said.


Terry L. Jackson Jr., 21, of Stanhope and Carla R. Torppey, 20, of Wantage, were both charged with possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.At 10:04 p.m. Monday, Dec. 28, a Mount Olive police officer was on routine patrol in Turkey Brook Park when he observed a gray Dodge enter the park and drive to the rear parking lot, police said.

The officer made contact with the Dodge -- driven by Torppey -- and as he spoke with the occupants detected the odor of marijuana coming from inside the vehicle, police said.Jackson then advised the officer that he had a glass smoking pipe in his bag and turned over the pipe, which contained suspected marijuana residue, to the officer, police said.An additional search of the vehicle produced a glass bong containing suspected marijuana residue, a glass jar containing suspected marijuana residue and a silver metal grinder containing suspected marijuana residue, police said.Both were arrested, charged and released pending a court appearance.

Resource: http://www.njherald.com/article/20151230/ARTICLE/312309986

Police report: Search results in drug arrests

Two Paris residents were each charged with felony possession of a controlled substance and felony possession of drug paraphernalia last week.

The charges against Layton Lusk, 56, and Sterling Keller, 55, were filed after a search was conducted at a South Elm Street residence on Dec. 9. The residence is owned by Lusk, according to court documents and Paris Police Department incident reports.

During the search, officers found residue of a crystal substance in a bedroom that showed a “presumptive reaction as methamphetamines” and two syringes containing a “dark in color liquid,” two additional syringes, two plastic bags with residue, six glass smoking pipes with residue, a spoon with residue and a homemade smoking device, according to incident reports.

Possession of a controlled substance is a Class D felony punishable upon conviction with up to six years in prison and a fine of $10,000. Possession of drug paraphernalia is a Class D felony punishable upon conviction with up to six years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

The two men are scheduled to appear at a plea and arraignment hearing on Jan. 15.

Woman faces charges

Kimberly Mitchell, 30, of North Carbon City Road, has been charged with felony possession of drug paraphernalia following a traffic stop.

A vehicle driven by Mitchell was stopped at North Elm and Roseville streets in Paris by a Paris Police officer. A search of the vehicle yielded a “glass smoking pipe with a white residue.” The residue showed “a presumptive reaction as methamphetamines,” according to a Paris Police Department incident report.

The charge against Mitchell was filed Dec. 3 and she is scheduled to appear in court on Jan. 15 for a plea and arraignment hearing.

Core Road resident charged

Raymod Sewell, 49, of Core Road, has been charged with felony possession of a controlled substance and felony possession of drug paraphernalia.

Sewell was charged after syringes were found in his residence during a visit by probation and parole officers on Dec. 3. He is scheduled to appear in court on Jan. 15 for a plea and arraignment hearing.

Subiaco woman charged

Machelle M. Schluterman, 52, of Subiaco, has been charged with third degree domestic battery, a Class D felony punishable upon conviction by up to six years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000, according to documents on file with the 15th Judicial District Circuit Clerk’s office.

Schluterman is accused of biting and scratching her daughter during an altercation, according to court documents. The charges were filed on Dec. 3 and she is scheduled to appear at a plea and arraignment hearing on Jan. 15.

Subiaco man facing charges

Jeffrey Alan Hendren, 47, of Subiaco, has been charged with felony possession of drug paraphernalia and three misdemeanors in connection with a traffic stop on Nov. 29.

The misdemeanor charges are driving while intoxicated, driving on a suspended or revoked driver’s license and driving left of center, according to documents on file with the 15th Judicial District Circuit Clerk.

After being placed under arrest for the misdemeanors, a search of the vehicle he was driving yielded “a white powder residue” which was tested and yielded “a positive reaction to methamphetamine,” according to documents.

The charges were filed on Dec. 7 and he is scheduled to appear at a plea and arraignment hearing on Jan. 15

Resource: http://paris-express.com/news/police-report-search-results-drug-arrests.html

Tuesday 22 December 2015

Norman police raid pipe shop, seize items, owner says


NORMAN — Owners of the Friendly Market believe the law is on their side for selling glass pipes, but police seem to disagree.

Tuesday, Norman police raided the store at 1100 E Constitution, seizing thousands of dollars worth of merchandise and cash, an owner and an attorney representing the store said. A search affidavit had not yet been filed in the Cleveland County District Court as of Friday afternoon, and a Norman police spokeswoman declined to comment.

General Manager Stephen Holman, who is also a city councilman, was working at the store when the raid occurred.

The Friendly Market sells items such as books, clothing, jewelry, hats and candles. There is an interior room for patrons at least 18 years old where smoking accessories such as glass pipes and smoking accessories are displayed for sale.

In May, staff pulled the glass pipes off the shelves following police raids at two other similar businesses in Norman — McCloud'z Pipes and Fatt Hedz. Both shops shut down as a result.

However, after receiving legal advice from attorney Brecken Wagner, Friendly Market began selling glass pipes again.

"They're not doing anything illegal. These are smoking pipes," Wagner said. "The Friendly Market doesn't sell any type of incense, potpourri or anything like that. Strictly just smoking accessories, glass pipes, things of that nature."

A search warrant provided by the Norman Police Department lists drug paraphernalia as the purpose of the search.

Friendly Market staff is considering restocking the inventory seized by police, confident their merchandise is within the law.

"This really is nothing more than intimidation, harassment, and law enforcement trying to push their will on other people as well as civil forfeiture,” Wagner said.

Wagner successfully represented the owners of the Funky Munky, a novelty store in McAlester, after a 2014 raid by the Drug Enforcement Agency and other agencies. In that case, the agents obtained a search warrant for synthetic marijuana, but none was found, Wagner said.

Law enforcement seized smoking accessories from the store as well as $70,000 from the bank accounts of the owners, Wagner said. No arrests were made but Pittsburg County attempted to permanently seize the cash and merchandise through civil forfeiture, which Wagner fought in court.

In July of this year, the DEA returned all of the merchandise and most of the cash after a settlement agreement was reached, Wagner said.

Resource: http://newsok.com/article/5465011

Event Showcase: Johnnie Walker Symphony in Blue

Event takes a closer look at Done + Dusted's Johnnie Waker Symphony in Blue campaign - a multi-sensory experience that defined the brand's values.

Concept

Last year, Johnnie Walker Blue Label teamed up with television production and event-staging company Done + Dusted Productions and food architects Bompas & Parr to develop a live experience that told the story of the art of whisky blending. The campaign led to the agency winning the inaugural Game Changer accolade at the 2015 Event Awards in October.

According to Done + Dusted, the Johnnie Walker Symphony in Blue campaign was the first time such a luxury brand "had dared to discard all convention", taking 600 global influencers on a multi-sensory, experiential, musical and artistic journey. The agency says it had been hugely excited to create a unique brand experience that would go beyond the conventional parameters of brand marketing.

The show, which was performed three times at Merchant Taylors' Hall on 16 and 17 September 2014, was designed to break down the barriers that exist between performers, audiences, the arts, science, theatre and reality. Done + Dusted describes the event as "incredibly ambitious from concept to completion, with no blueprint or comparison".

The concept was driven by a desire to reimagine conventional ways of storytelling, by combining design, performance, sensory activation and even science to create a 360 deg entertainment property, the agency says.

"With the exclusive nature of the brand in mind, we wanted to create themes and memories that were equally rare for our guests. We created an interpretive, one-of-a-kind show where visual effects, music, dance, theatre, choreography and sensory wonders completed their voyage to the centre of a glass of Johnnie Walker Blue Label," explains Hamish Hamilton, director of Done + Dusted.
Experience

A Flavour Symphony took place across six interactive spaces and one concert space to represent the Johnnie Walker Blue Label blend.

The whole experience was inspired by the flavours and ingredients in the blend, as well as influences such as the Scottish weather, craftsmanship, flawless ice and the flair of the serve.

Attendees navigated their own way around the spaces, which included a demonstration of cask making where guests were encouraged to use a real flame-thrower to hand-char a barrel. They could also immerse themselves in a breathable cloud of Johnnie Walker Blue Label at the 'whisky weather' station, which simulated the thunder, humidity and dense fog experienced in Scotland.

Furs were available for guests to wrap themselves up in before they entered an icy tunnel, which led to a cavern containing an illuminated block of 10,000-year-old ice harvested from glaciers.

The evening culminated in a dinner and show, which saw the room dressed with exotic stuffed birds, classical statuettes and ornate, oversized candelabras.

Entertainment came from the Flavour Conductor, a special pipe organ that 'played' the six flavours found in the blend: fresh, fruity, malty, woody, spicy and smoky.
Success

Attended by 600 invited guests - a mix of media, celebrities and VIPs - it generated more than 150 pieces of coverage from titles such as CNN, Vogue, Elle and Tatler, and featured in more than 1,000 social media posts, achieving a reach of close to three billion. Done + Dusted puts the show's PR value at more than £10m, and claims that it has changed the perception of the brand, pushing it more into the luxury sphere.

The agency says the event showed Johnnie Walker Blue Label to be a brand that behaves differently: "Not just like a whisky brand, but a luxury lifestyle icon, using entertainment to demonstrate Johnnie Walker to be progressive and entrepreneurial, communicating craft and rarity as its values."

Executive producer and chief operating officer Melanie Fletcher says: "Johnnie Walker Symphony In Blue set a benchmark and provided tools and content for a global expansion of the idea, through bespoke reinterpretation of the event in markets such as Monaco, Johannesburg and Mexico."
On reflection:

"Its unparalleled success has inspired both us and the brand to be bold and daring as we conceptualise the next campaign activation's life form," - Melanie Fletcher, executive producer and chief operating officer, Done + Dusted.

Comment below to let us know what you think.

For more in-depth and print-only features, showcases and interviews with world-leading brands, don't miss the next issue of Event magazine by subscribing here.

Resource:http://www.eventmagazine.co.uk/event-showcase-johnnie-walker-symphony-blue/brands/article/1374648

Gift Guide: 24 Excellent Yet Cheap Things for the Kitchen

The kitchen is the most important room in your house. Obvious, right? It’s where we cook, it’s where we hang out, it’s where the coffee and booze are. “Kitchen stuff” can be hard to gift, though. Apparently no one thinks a blender is a good Christmas gift. (We respectfully disagree, and we will gladly accept your re-gifted Vitamix, thank you in advance.) So think of these mostly as stocking-stuffers and one-offs. They’re not huge stainless-steel appliances, or total kitchen overhauls. They’re little things that make everything better. They don’t require a master’s degree in chemistry or engineering, and they don’t cost a million dollars or come with two burly men to install them.

They just make cooking more fun, your food more delicious, your cleanup a little easier. And then there are a few things that may be a little more expensive, but you can bet anyone who unwraps them will think of you every time they use them. And hey, if not? Take it back. You’ll love it.

Resource: http://www.wired.com/2015/12/gift-guide-cooking-gadgets/

Organ builder makes Christmas music pitch perfect

SAN ANTONIO - Organ builder Curtis Bobsin is a busy fellow this time of year, with many San Antonio churches relying on him to assure their beloved pipe organs sound majestic at Christmas services.

Each December, Bobsin visits several congregations per day, performing routine maintenance or urgent repairs. The same hectic pace precedes Easter, and whenever the weather changes enough to alter the sounds made by air being forced through organ pipes.

Bobsin's sharp ear for tuning and his mechanical skills with pipe organs are in high demand in San Antonio, around Texas and in several other states. He practices the unusual craft of organ building in an East Side workshop, where he and eight employees make entire pipe organs as well as components for existing installations.

It's a thriving yet unlikely career for the Kentucky transplant. He got in the trade in Louisville before relocating about eight years ago to San Antonio, when he took over a renowned local workshop and its clientele throughout South Texas.

In recent years, he's worked on organs at Our Lady of Grace and Our Lady of the Atonement in San Antonio, and Highland Park Baptist in Austin. He recently completed a major renovation of the instrument at Our Lady of the Lake Sacred Heart Chapel, whose more than 1,300 pipes had been silent about 15 years.
Texas

    Geneva Reed-Veal, left, and Sharon Cooper, center, the mother and sister of Sandra Bland, listen to attorney Larry Rogers Jr., right, explain concerns about the Texas grand jury's role in the death of Naperville resident Sandra Bland, Monday, Dec. 21, 2015 in Chicago. As a grand jury investigates the case of Sandra Bland, a black woman whose death in a Texas jail shook a raw year in American policing, the state police force at the center of her combative traffic stop is able to shield some complaints under special exemptions and has used what experts say are outdated practices for keeping nearly 4,000 troopers in check. (Phil Velasquez/Chicago Tribune via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT CHICAGO TRIBUNE; CHICAGO SUN-TIMES OUT; DAILY HERALD OUT; NORTHWEST HERALD OUT; THE HERALD-NEWS OUT; DAILY CHRONICLE OUT; THE TIMES OF NORTHWEST INDIANA OUT; TV OUT; MAGS OUT;
    Prosecutor: No indictment in Sandra Bland jail death
    EPA: Stone cover at Southeast Texas Superfund site damaged
    Killer whale dies at SeaWorld San Antonio
    AP NewsAlert
    Southwest to pay $2.8 million to settle FAA lawsuit

Last Wednesday, Bobsin had a look at the organ at Laurel Heights United Methodist Church, which has more than 3,000 pipes. Equipped with a roll of hand tools and a phone app for tuning, he moved through a checklist to make sure the instrument would be ready for upcoming services.

When his wife, Tory, pushed a key and the note didn't sound right, Bobsin would locate the corresponding pipe or reed and adjust it - a tedious process that can take several hours.

"Complicated machines often need a lot of ongoing maintenance and TLC to keep them working," said Geoffrey Waite, organist and music director at Laurel Heights Methodist.

"Pipe organs by their nature go out of tune - they change with the humidity and the temperature," he added.

Piano student first

Bobsin's pre-holiday visit was scheduled well in advance, but that's not always the case.

"It's really valuable to have someone like Curtis when it's a Saturday night and something happens to the organ and you need it on Sunday morning. There's somebody in town you can call to come over and fix it," Waite said.For Bobsin, the route to becoming a master of his trade started as a young piano student in Kentucky."I didn't take to lessons well, so I learned by ear," he said, developing a trait that would serve him well years later.At age 16 and for the next five years, Bobsin was a tow truck driver, co-owning three trucks until the business went under.

"I needed a job, and we had a family friend who worked at Miller Pipe Organ in Louisville. I hired on as a gofer - the bottom of the ladder - and kind of took to it," Bobsin said. He rose to general manager and took control of the organ service company with clients in 10 states.

"We serviced 300 different organs, so I was exposed to every type of organ out there, and having to repair them and work on them in the field," he said."That informs my design work now - everything I build is with the mindset of having to maintain it for 50 years," Bobsin said.

Took over the business

Bobsin was drawn to San Antonio in 2007 to work with a regionally-prominent organ builder, the late John Ballard, who had no understudies when he passed away in 2010. As contract employees, Bobsin and his wife gradually began serving all of Ballard's clients, and eventually took over the business.

Several years later, the enterprise is thriving, with plenty of work to go around in the small world of organ building. In the nation's midsection, "there's at least one guy like me in each major city," Bobsin said. They're more common closer to the East Coast and less common to the West, he said.

In San Antonio, "there's only one other person left, an older gentleman who works out of his home and still maintains a few instruments here, but there are no other businesses as such," Bobsin said.

Bobsin's company, C. Bobsin Organs, based in an unmarked workshop, combines several disciplines including cabinetry, metalwork and electronics.

"Everything here we build from scratch," he said.Some finished components come from suppliers, but wood that will become an organ cabinet arrives rough-cut, and pipes are fabricated on-site from sheets of poured metal, he said."There's no models. Every organ is custom-built for where it goes," Bobsin said.That makes precise measurements, including sanctuary temperature readings, a key element of the practice.

A big part of the enterprise is revitalizing older organs, like the project at Our Lady of the Lake. Bobsin said he's fostered a reputation for "the willingness to reuse existing organs and existing pipes and build on what a church has already invested in. A lot of times an organ company wants to come in and literally throw everything out and put in their own brand-new organ," he said.

'Plenty of work'

Some organs require more attention than others, Bobsin said. The instrument at Trinity University's Parker Chapel is serviced about once a month during the school year because of frequent use, he said.

With potential jobs in several states, "we have to schedule our work strategically. We have plenty of work. The challenge is, what happens when a church in Victoria or Corpus Christi has an emergency and needs two weeks worth of work?"Pipe organs can be expensive to maintain for churches with meager resources, but they're a valued part of a congregation's spiritual environment, much like stained-glass windows, Bobsin contends.

"You might spend $25,000 to $75,000 on an electronic organ that has a 20-year life span. You might spend five or 10 times that much on a pipe organ, but it has an indefinite life span," he said. "As long as there's someone like me, you can actually refurbish the wood and leather to keep an organ going. It's a generational investment instead of a 20-year investment."

Resource: http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/texas/article/Organ-builder-makes-Christmas-music-pitch-perfect-6713748.php

Tuesday 1 December 2015

Go Through An Enhanced Smoking Experience With These Wholesale Glass Pipes



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Tuesday 17 November 2015

Vapers oppose Bangor proposal to restrict e-cigarette use

BANGOR, Maine — The drive took an hour and a half but the trip to the city’s new vape shop was worth it, according to Deer Isle residents Jacob Trundy and Sabrina Hutchinson. The couple quit smoking tobacco cigarettes a month ago in favor of using electronic cigarettes, known as vaping.
“We literally drove up for this,” Trundy said Tuesday while taste-testing flavors at Vapeway, a vaping supply store that opened two months ago on Columbia Street.
The couple came to Bangor the day after the City Council’s Government Operations Committee voted 4-1 to move forward on plans to prohibit vaping in the same areas where smoking tobacco is banned.
Trundy and Hutchinson think the idea is ridiculous.
“It’s a lot better than cigarettes,” Trundy said of the electronic devices that heat vegetable glycerin, propylene glycol, flavoring and, most of the time, nicotine into a vapor that is inhaled.
The practice’s growing popularity, the opening of the new store and the concern of city officials and health care organizations has put Bangor in the middle of the vaping debate.
“My biggest problem is they are trying to consolidate the whole e-cigarette, e-liquid, industry in with tobacco,” Vapeway manager Carl Pillitteri, a longtime vaper who also is a former smoker, said from behind the counter. “Our product is not a tobacco product. It is a nicotine product.”
Some of the flavored e-liquids on the Vapeway shelves do not even contain nicotine, he said.
“We don’t want people getting cancer and hurting their lungs,” Pillitteri said. “If you’re a smoker there are many pros to being a vaper. The biggest is: It’s not smoke and the hundreds of chemicals that come with tobacco. It’s four ingredients.”Vegetable glycerin and propylene glycol, the base for all the e-liquid flavors, are used in many common products. Vegetable glycerin, also known as glycerol, is a naturally occurring chemical used in some medicines, according to the health website WebMD. The Food and Drug Administration lists propylene glycol as “generally recognized as safe,” which means that it is acceptable for use in flavorings, drugs and cosmetics and as a direct food additive, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
Nicotine is a highly addictive drug that affects reward pathways in the brain, often producing pleasurable sensations, according to the National Institute of Health website. Long-term use can produce brain changes that result in addiction.
There are many vape flavors available, such as coconut, caramel and even apple pie.
“Do your research,” Pillitteri suggested to city councilors concerned about the contents of e-cigarettes.
Pillitteri also took issue with the way Patty Hamilton, the city’s health and community services director, cited a January study published in the New England Journal of Science, telling councilors that electronic cigarettes contain formaldehyde, which he says is misleading.
One of the five authors of the January report, Dr. David H. Peyton, who a chemistry professor at Portland State University in Oregon, said in an email interview that he understands Hamilton’s confusion because mainstream media have blown portions of his group’s research data out of proportion by focusing only on the formaldehyde, a carcinogen.
“We never claimed that they are more dangerous than traditional cigarettes,” said Peyton, who spent part of his youth in East Holden and briefly attended Brewer High School. “Traditional cigarettes have been studied for decades, and we are still learning more about their dangers.”
The report, titled “Hidden Formaldehyde in E-Cigarette Aerosols,” states that formaldehyde-containing hemiacetal, or formaldehyde releasing agents, were detected with e-cigarettes operated at a high voltage, but no formaldehyde was detected with low-voltage e-cigs.
“We don’t yet know all that much about the toxicities of e-cigs [and] we don’t yet know just how safe (or not) e-cigs are, and under what conditions,” he added. “It would, in my opinion, be a mistake to assume safety.”
“Our research, and that of others will hopefully be used by e-cigarette manufacturers to make safer devices,” Peyton said. “I say this because e-cigarettes are not going away.”
In fact, the popularity appears to be growing, with vaping shops and lounges opening up recently in Bangor, Portland and other Maine locations.
E-cigarettes hit the market in 2006, and the FDA issued a report in 2009 about the dangers of chemicals found in the flavored fluids, which has led to major changes in the industry in an effort to eliminate harmful ingredients, Pillitteri said.
The federal agency issued a statement earlier this year saying more study is needed, and that the FDA Center for Tobacco Products is accepting public comments on e-cigarettes and public health, supported by research and data, through July 2, 2015.
Only e-cigarettes that are marketed for therapeutic purposes — including one for erectile dysfunction — are regulated by the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, but the federal agency has issued a proposed rule to add e-cigarettes.
The electronic devices also can be used to ingest medical marijuana prepared in a highly concentrated liquid form known as “honey oil.”
Peyton said that, “e-cigs may be useful in aiding people who have had tremendous problems in quitting traditional tobacco products,” and said that he would not ban their use by adults.
“I am not currently a fan of indoor vaping. But then I’m not a big fan of total bans on e-cigs, especially in outdoor venues,” the chemistry professor said, noting that Portland State University is going smoke and e-cigarette free in the fall.
“We did report that, at lower power levels, we did not detect the formaldehyde-related products, so that people can make the choice to vape more safely,” he said later.
E-cigarettes come in all shapes and sizes and their voltage is based on their battery. Many, including the one used for the Portland State University study, feature a variable-voltage battery and a refillable tank for the fluid. At 3.3 volts, no formaldehyde releasing agents were detected, but when turned up to 5 volts, the carcinogens were detected, the report showed.
The pre-packaged e-cigarettes sold at convenience stores for around $10 apiece are regulated at 3.6 volts, and middle- and high-cost e-cigs, which range from $25 to $400, have variable voltage, Pillitteri said.
Not knowing the ingredients in the pre-packaged e-cigs is one reason why vaping supply stores, where customers can choose from a selection of liquids to refill their vape pens, are becoming more popular, Pillitteri said. A refill that costs around $7 can last a moderate user up to two weeks.
Hamilton estimated that it would take city staff about a month to draft the vaping ban proposal. The Bangor proposal comes about a month after the Portland City Council banned vaping in public places.
State law bans smoking in all workplaces, enclosed public places and outdoor dining areas with several specific exemptions such as hotel rooms designated for smoking. It also bans smoking in cars when any person under the age of 16 is present.
Smoking is allowed outside so long as the smoker is at least 20 feet from a door or window and smoke does not encroach on any place where smoking is prohibited.
Bangor may also add a provision to ban vaping in cars when minors are present.
Pillitteri said he and others plan to be at the public hearing in Bangor to voice their disapproval of the planned prohibition.
“We will let everybody know about it,” he said.

Resource: http://bangordailynews.com

11 Best Electronic Cigarette Brands

It has not been long since electronic cigarettes came into existence in the United Stated market. Within this short span of eight years, the annual global sales are showing drastic increments! The numbers showing that the graph is going higher indeed, actually points towards startling trends. According to a study, the usage of E-cigarettes have more than doubled, among the adults in The United States, during 2010 to 2013. There are different factors like smoking status, household income and education level, which altogether are the reasons for the abrupt rise in E-cigarettes usage.
There has always been an ongoing debate about whether electronic cigarettes are one of the biggest health hazards or the best chance for smokers to quit their long habit of tobacco cigarettes. Although there are no long term studies that suggest that E-cigarettes are safer than regular tobacco cigarettes, many believe that they are exposed to less harm as compared to more harmful results when using regular tobacco cigarettes. Though E-cigs are increasing in popularity and many smokers believe that it helps in reducing their tobacco consumption or even help them to quit smoking eventually, it has also been noticed by the smokers that getting off these E-cigarettes affects their health a lot.
If you are more of “real cigarette lover” then check our other list of Most Expensive Cigarette Brands.
There are many surveys that had been made about the best electronic cigarettes that are available. The data had been collected from hundreds of vapers and test products to get the top brands of electronic cigarettes preferred by the smokers. There are various factors considered for this survey to get the best electronic cigarettes brands. The first is E-cigarette’s design. For the smokers to get the real experience, the design should resemble the real tobacco one. Also it is identified whether it can be color customized or not. Next area to be considered is the battery performance, the time it takes to charge and how long the charge holds. Of course, the longer the better.
The performance and convenience of electronic cigarettes also plays a major role in deciding the best among them. Vapor production is the next thing to consider. If an electronic cigarette produces thick and satisfying clouds of vapor, it surely qualifies as a good e-cigarette as most of the vapors prefers the same kind of e-cigarette. The next and most important factor is it should be easy to use and enjoyable. Other considerations are the flavors available and nicotine strengths in each brand. The final factor is the overall price of the e-cigarette and how much it is worth. These factors overall give the list of best electronic cigarettes.
According to another survey, there are different kinds of electronic cigarettes as well. The first kind is disposable one which is much closer to regular tobacco cigarettes in resemblance. The next one is refillable cigarettes which is a more economical option as well as produces stronger vapors. The third kind is variable voltage electronic cigarettes. These are much more expensive and offer many advanced features.
The quality of any electronic cigarette can also be estimated by the sales it makes. There is high correlation between consumers’ preferences and the sales. According to recent estimates by Nielsen, ‘Vuse’ is described as the most selling e-cigarettes brand with a U.S. market share of 33.6 percent and is available in more than 100,000 retail outlets. It is followed by blu at second place (23.6% market share) while Logic being in third place (14.5% market share). MarkTen with 5.9% market share and NJOY with 5.1% market share are distant followers.
The similar sales figures are indicated by another sales study with Vuse being the most selling electronic cigarette brand.

Resource: http://www.insidermonkey.com

The Unadvertised Health Risks of E-Cigarettes

In just a few short years, e-cigarettes have grown from an obscure, mostly unknown product into a booming industry across North America. While retail sales data in Canada is hard to come by, sales in the United States have exploded from a mere $80 million (USD) in 2010 to $1.7 billion (USD) in 2014, an over 2000% increase in only 4 years. A 2015 survey in Canada found that 15% of all Canadians and 20% of Canadian youth have tried, or are actively using e-cigarettes. Contrasting these numbers with Canada's rate of traditional tobacco cigarette smoking, which stands at just 16%, demonstrates just how mainstream the use of e-cigarettes has become.
This drastic growth rate has left governments scrambling to create new legislation to regulate these products. With no existing laws addressing where e-cigarettes can be consumed, or where and to whom they can be sold, the current situation has been described as akin to a "Wild West' by prominent figures in health and education, where anyone - even minors - can purchase e-cigarettes and use them in nearly any setting, including public spaces where the smoking of tobacco cigarettes is forbidden. Laws such as Ontario's Making Healthier Choices Act, which on January 1, 2016, will place similar restrictions on e-cigarettes to those that exist for tobacco cigarettes, are quickly becoming the new norm -- usually over the strident objections of the e-cigarette industry and its proponents.
So what exactly are e-cigarettes and how safe are they?
All e-cigarettes have the same basic components -- a battery, a heating element, and a cartridge that is usually filled with a combination of nicotine, flavouring, and a liquid such as glycerin or propylene glycol. When the battery activates the heating element, the liquid inside is vaporized, creating a fog, which is very similar to that seen at rock concerts. It is this fog that users inhale and exhale, rather than smoke from combustion as is produced by tobacco cigarettes. While nicotine e-cigarettes are technically illegal in Canada, nicotine cartridges for e-cigarettes are sold extensively "under the counter" in stores across the country.
Several primary questions over the safety of e-cigarettes have been raised by those in health circles. First, no data exists as to the long-term effects on human health of breathing e-cigarette vapour. While glycerin and propylene glycol are approved for oral consumption, no studies have been performed to measure the effects of their chronic, repetitive inhalation into the lungs, and medical science is replete with examples of substances that, while safe for the GI tract, are extremely hazardous to our lungs. Second, there are concerns that the vaporization process used by e-cigarettes might generate harmful chemicals such as formaldehyde, with potentially severe resulting health risks. A third, oft stated concern, especially among public health experts, is that the acceptance of e-cigarettes, especially in previously off limit public spaces, may lead to a re-normalization of smoking behaviours, particularly among youth, risking a reversal of decades long trends of decreasing smoking rates.
The e-cigarette -- or "vaping" -- industry and its proponents have disputed these worries, often quoting a 2014 study by the Harvard School of Public Health that found that only 1 per cent of non-smokers had ever tried an e-cigarette. Concluding from this data that the vast majority of "vapers" are those that are already smoking tobacco cigarettes, the industry argues that there is no possibility that e-cigarettes could be more dangerous than the tobacco cigarettes that they replace, and that they are a valuable tool in the war to reduce traditional cigarette use. To quote a prominent pro e-cigarette web site: "they cannot be as harmful as cigarettes, since with cigarettes, it is the mode of nicotine delivery...that is responsible for most of the disease."
However, recent data from two new studies raises serious concerns with respect to the industry's assertions of e-cigarettes' absolute safety versus tobacco cigarettes.
In a study published in January by the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers found that e-cigarettes powered at higher voltages actually produced up to 15 times more formaldehyde than a tobacco cigarette, resulting in a 5 times greater cancer risk versus traditional cigarette smoking. Despite the vocal objections of the industry that the 5-volt setting used in this study did not represent real world use of these products, most adjustable voltage e-cigarettes generate power levels of up to 6-volts, placing this setting well within their operating parameters.
And in February of this year, the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health published a laboratory study of the effects of inhaled e-cigarette vapour on the ability of mice to withstand bacterial and viral infections. Their ominous finding: "The mice exposed to e-cigarette vapour were significantly more likely to develop compromised immune responses to both the virus and the bacteria, which in some cases killed the mice"
Similarly, there is a growing body of recent data to suggest that e-cigarettes do act as a strong gateway to traditional cigarette smoking for young non-smokers. A study published in February by the University of Michigan, of 40,000 US teenagers, found that among 14 year olds, 8.7 per cent had tried an e-cigarette while only 4 per cent had ever tried a tobacco cigarette -- meaning that, in direct contradiction of the previous 2014 Harvard study, the majority of e-cigarette using teens had never smoked before. Even more worrisome, the CHETS study from Wales, UK, published in late 2014, found that 6 per cent of 10 year olds they surveyed had tried e-cigarettes, compared to only 2 per cent that had tried tobacco, and that children who had tried e-cigarettes were 7 times more likely to state they might start smoking tobacco cigarettes within 2 years versus children that had never smoked at all.
So when no evidence exists to show that e-cigarettes are safe for long-term use by humans, when laboratory studies demonstrate worrisome potential physiological risks, and when strong evidence is mounting that e-cigarettes are leading our youth to consider smoking tobacco cigarettes, I would contend that caution here is the only reasonable approach. Laws such as Ontario's, that will prevent minors from purchasing these products and also protect bystanders from inhalation of second hand vapour, are a common sense first step, and one that will hopefully be extended across the country in short order. The alternative -- blind acceptance of a potentially dangerous new product, and a possible reversal in decades of hard won success in reducing tobacco cigarette use -- is just too frightening to allow.

Resource: http://www.huffingtonpost.ca

Carriage of e-cigarettes Banned as Lithium Battery Fires Persist

US – WORLDWIDE – The doubt and confusion regarding the carriage of lithium batteries aboard aircraft has taken another twist with the announcement from US authorities that the carriage of battery-powered portable electronic smoking devices in checked baggage is now not permissible. The move comes in response to recent smoke and fire incidents involving e-cigarettes in passenger baggage, following on from a history of problems involving both freight and passenger flights, something we have been writing about for over five years.
An ‘interim final rule’ has been made by the US Pipelines and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) mandating no electronic devices such as e-cigarettes, e-cigars, e-pipes, personal vaporizers, electronic nicotine delivery systems etc. to be carried in checked baggage. Carriage of these items in ‘carry on’ baggage is to continue however.
Only in the US could such a measure be called an ‘interim final rule’, surely a contradiction in terms, however this sensible step has been made necessary by numerous recent incidents involving the products, plus the need to harmonise the Hazardous Materials Regulations with a recent addendum to the 2015-2016 International Civilian Aviation Organization (ICAO) ‘Technical Instructions for the Safe Transport of Dangerous Goods by Air’, which became effective this June.
After the scares involving three flights which caused the deaths of four crew in 2006/2010/2011 and then again the problems with the newly released Boeing Dreamliner, the discord which arose over the carriage of lithium-ion and lithium-metal batteries between the US Department of Transport and the International Air Cargo Association (TIACA) seems to have faded, with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) subsequently issuing guidelines to operators to mitigate risk.
As well as the most serious incidents it is the plethora of minor ones which have spurred the authorities into action. Fires in several US airports including Boston and Los Angeles in the past few months, directly linked to the carriage of e-cigarettes causing combustion, made the matter of control unavoidable. The problem is exacerbated by counterfeit batteries, widely sold on the internet and often the cause of problems including flammability.
With the rapid uptake of ‘vaping’ devices, such as e-cigarettes, and their technical development, the problems have become more diverse than most people will be aware of. There is not one single type of battery cell involved here but dozens of variants. Firstly the equipment may utilise single use or rechargeable cells. They may be manual or automatic, manual means the user presses a button to take a drag, automatics have sensors which react with a change of pressure and deliver the dose of whatever the device is charged with. Some are variable voltage and many suppliers, whilst telling how safe their products are, advise not to charge the batteries overnight or in an unoccupied dwelling.
Photo: UPS Flight 1307 burnt out at Philadelphia 2006. This incident prompted the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) to recommend lithium-ion batteries ‘be transported in crew-accessible locations where portable fire suppression systems can be used’. Courtesy of NTSB

Resource: http://www.handyshippingguide.com

Vaping in Georgia

I bought my first pack of cigarettes in April, 2007, and have been abusing my lungs since. As years passed and the days added up, so did the amount of cigarettes I lit up, smoked, and flicked away. At the peak of my habit, I was smoking three packs a day.
Cheap smokes and being able to light up anywhere I wanted did not help with my addiction. I’ve spent many nights playing video games and smoking like a chimney. At one point I realized something had to change, and I decided to try electronic cigarettes.
An electronic cigarette, or e-cig, is a battery powered device which heats and vaporizes a liquid mixture of propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, flavorings, and an optional dosage of nicotine.
In simpler terms, it’s basically a nicotine delivery system minus the other 3,999 chemicals a traditional cigarette contains, 43 of which are known carcinogens. Yes, that cancer causing agent you have been reading about in the news recently.
The modern e-cig was created in 2004 by Hon Lik, a Chinese pharmacist and inventor. Lik’s invention came into existence after his father, a heavy smoker, died of lung cancer. Lik patented his design in 2003, and it’s been copied and reproduced illegally by US and Chinese companies.
Georgia saw its first e-cig commercial in 2007, marketed as an alternative to conventional smoking. Initial versions of the electronic cigarette resembled their analog counterpart, the cigarette.
Today, vaping devices come in all shapes and sizes, from small and discrete, to large and flashy. Larger devices offer more advanced features, such as digital displays, longer battery life, temperature control, variable wattage, and puff counters.
Georgia, a country where 30%, according to a 2012 study, of the population smokes, is seeing an increase in its vaping market. In the last two years online stores, shopping mall boutiques and shops have opened all dedicated to selling and distributing e-cigarettes, e-liquids and other accessories.
I went to one of these stores, Corsair World Georgia (CWG) - a vape shop located on Ilia Chavchavadze Avenue in Tbilisi - and spoke with its owner, Paata Tsivadze.
“Corsair World Georgia strives to provide a healthier alternative to smoking,” Tsivadze told me.
“A British customer bought five personal vaporizers (PV) to take back to his buddies, because they were cheaper here than back in the UK,” Tsivadze said.
People don’t just start vaping because they are done with smoking, like I was. A CWG employee told me that customers purchase zero nicotine liquids for the experience, not to satisfy an addiction.
“Non-nicotine, fruity e-liquids are becoming more popular, but Parliament and Golden Virginia are still our bestsellers,” the employee said.
CWG offers quite a range of e-liquids: More than 150 varieties of e-liquids can be seen on display, ranging from traditional tobacco flavors, to Rum, Chocolate, and Barberry. Devices from popular brands such as KangerTech, Joytech, Innokin, Smoktech, and others, are also available.
Not everyone is a fan of e-cigarettes. Some argue that it serves as a gateway to cigarettes for kids, due to the attractive flavors and appeal of blowing vapor clouds, similar to hookahs.
A study conducted by researchers from Portland State University tested a brand of e-liquid and found formaldehyde gas was produced when vaping the liquid. Propylene glycol, when heated, is known to release formaldehyde gas. The higher the vaping voltage the more formaldehyde was detected. Formaldehyde is a suspected cancer-causing agent.
Although any harmful chemical is cause for concern, critics argue that real world scenarios of e-cig operation don’t reach the voltages that were used in the study. The long-term effects of vaping are still being studied.
However, it is still considered to be a healthier alternative to smoking, and despite the controversy, advocates continue to support e-cigarettes.
The devices can be purchased around town at Cig-Ara on Ingorokva Street, Inotech Georgia in Karvasla Shopping Center, and at shopping centers and supermarket boutiques. You can also buy them online at smoking.ge while e-liquids can be purchased at 24 hour drive-thru tobacco stores, Drive Tobacco and Nicotine, found around the city.
Unlike some of the small boutiques, Corsair World offers high quality vaping devices, ranging from 25 GEL to 500 GEL, and e-liquids at a fraction of the price of its competitors. CWG, with its friendly and knowledgeable staff, hip interior, and unbeatable prices, is doing it right, if you ask me.
The future of e-cigs in Georgia looks bright. The CWG owner believes it’s a growing market.
“Soon, our e-liquids will be available at all Socar fuel stations, and we have plans to expand into other regions of Georgia as well,” Tsivadze told me.

Resource: http://georgiatoday.ge