2014-10-31

Day Light Savings Time Ends-FALL Back



It’s that time again. Daylight Saving Time always begins on the second Sunday of March and ends on the first Sunday of November. This means that, on Sunday, November 3, 2013, at 2:00 a.m. - you set the clocks back an hour. (Fall back)

American Leader Jesse Jackson accepts Mandela Bay Ambassadorial Position

American civil rights leader Reverend Jesse Jackson, Founder and President of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, graciously accepted a request to become an Ambassador for Nelson Mandela Bay. While officiating at the Annual Govan Mbeki Memorial Lecture as the guest speaker, Jackson said that he is not receiving any remuneration for it and will do it out of love.

Before leaving Nelson Mandela Bay for America, he said: “I accept with honor the request of a relationship with you for us to continue with our dream”.

Jackson, a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the US in 2000, also agreed to become the Patron for the Nelson Mandela Bay Memorial Monument and stated that it is a big deal to honor men and women who played a role in the liberation of South Africa. The Eastern Cape and Nelson Mandela Bay in particular contributed in a major way towards the liberation of South Africa.

He further agreed to a partnership between the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, Nelson Mandela Bay and Liberty DME to host the African Investment Forum in Los Angeles in March 2015 and in Nelson Mandela Bay in September 2015.

“The ANC is on the right track. Twenty years in power is a very short time but a lot has been done during this time,” he said.

Jackson came to South Africa to honor an invitation by Executive Mayor Benson Fihla despite the fact that his mother is currently ill.

MEC Pemmy Majodina thanked him for his contribution to the freedom of South Africa and wished his mother well.

Jackson’s visit came as a result of a high level visit, led by Executive Mayor Benson Fihla, to America to garner support for the establishment of an international film festival, an international gospel music festival and the development of a statue for Nelson Mandela in the city.

Mayor Fihla, a coveted anti-Apartheid activist who spent fourteen years on Robben Island, thanked Reverend Jackson for his crucial role in facilitating engagements during the American visits.

Issued on behalf of Executive Mayor Benson Fihla by Mayoral Spokesperson Kupido Baron (041 506 1500 /kbaron@mandelametro.gov.za / @kupidobaron).

2014-10-30

TV One presents "Fright Night Files" - Encore Showing Tonight - Saturday 11-1-14 8pm Eastern (7p central/6p mountain/5p pacific)

Elise Neal as Coffee Black on "Pillow Talk 187", part of TV One's "Fright Night Files" encore showing tonight at 8pm eastern (7p central/5p pacific). (Photo: TV One)

On TV One tonight, an Encore showing (Saturday 11-1-14) 8pm eastern (7 central/5 pacific) check out "Fright Night Files".

Similar to Tales from the Crypt, "Fright Night Files" presents a series of 30-minute horror programs.

One of the 30-minute files is titled "Pillow Talk 187".

"Pillow Talk 187" is a story about a sexy-sounding nighttime talk radio show host named 'Coffee Black', host of a highly rated show titled "Pillow Talk" on Channel "187".

On the show, Coffee Black's haunting past comes full circle. That's all I can tell ya now (per Russ Parr).

Yours truly Kirk Tanter is the announcer voice of the "Pillow Talk" radio show to include the scary "Promo".

Other familar voices on "Pillow Talk 187" are Radio One's DC Production Director Mike Chase, and "Straight from the Street" Sportscaster on the Russ Parr Morning Show "Supa-Ken". They are two of the radio show's callers-in to 'Pillow Talk w/ Coffee Black'. Coffee Black is played by Elise Neal, legendary radio morning man Russ Parr is the Director, and Cathy Hughes is the Executive Producer.

"Pillow Talk 187" is a chilling tale (I mean "chilling file") that will haunt you for a few days, especially those of you familiar with the radio industry.

Check out "Pillow Talk 187" tonight, as part of an Encore showing of "Fright Night Files" on TV One 8pm eastern (7p central/5p pacific).

TV One is available on many outlets including Direct TV, Verizon FiOs, Time Warner Cable, ATT U-Verse, Xfinity (Comcast), RCN Cable...to name a few.

Link to "Fright Night Files" behind the scene footage: http://tvone.tv/playlist/fright-night-files-behind-the-scenes/item/13845/

Shut em' down, shut em' shut em', shut em' down!!! San Francisco Giants 2014 World Champions!


Shut em Down (Video by AP)

Story by ESPN
Written by Jayson Stark

The bullpen gate opened in the bottom of the fifth inning, and here he came.

It was Madison K. Bumgarner, on his way to the office, to a lonely pitcher's mound in someone else's stadium. To a place where he could do those amazing things that he does.

Where he could save a game. Save a season. Save the San Francisco Giants. Rewrite the October history books. And, when his day's work was done, lug his team to the summit of a mountain that few groups of men have ever scaled.

(photo by Getty) It was Game 7 of the World Series. But really, it had turned into Madison Bumgarner's game. And Madison Bumgarner's October. And, especially, Madison Bumgarner's World Series.

"How it ended today pretty much summed up the Giants in the World Series," said his friend and teammate Jeremy Affeldt. "That guy carried us. He flat-out carried us."

How it ended Wednesday night was how the Giants' championship season had to end. With October's most dominant figure dominating one more time. This time as an emergency reliever, doing what no one had ever done in any World Series ever, in an epic 3-2 win over a Royals team that was able to triumph this October over everyone but him.

The Giants would have been happy to get a couple of innings out of Bumgarner in this game. He gave them five. Five? Seriously? Five innings? Of two-hit shutout relief? On two days' rest? In Game 7 of the World Series?

Right. Five. That isn't just how legends are made. That is how major motion pictures are made.

"I don't think I really have words to describe it," Affeldt said, as incredulous as the rest of us. "To throw seven [innings] and then throw nine and then, two days later, to throw five? You're in the World Series. You're pitching against the best hitters in the world. In Game 7. ... That can't happen. I don't think it will ever happen again. I just don't. I don't even know if we're real right now. I don't even know if I'm talking to you after that happened."

Oh, but it was real, all right. As real as the World Series trophy these players were reverently passing around their locker room. As real as the Mumm Napa Brut they'd spent the past 20 minutes uncorking. As real as the confetti that will be floating in the California sky later this week as the Giants parade through San Francisco for the third time in five years.

So let's try to digest what just happened here. The Giants of Mays, McCovey and Marichal won zero World Series. The often star-studded Giants teams that took the field from 1923 through 2009 won two World Series in 87 seasons, none of them after heading west for San Francisco in 1958.

Read more: http://espn.go.com/mlb/playoffs/2014/story/_/id/11788829/mlb-madison-bumgarner-saves-giants

2014-10-29

Dwight Howard Says He's over Kobe Bryant, but His Actions Scream Otherwise



Story by Bleacher Report
Written by Kevin Ding

NBA's Houston Rockets Center Dwight Howard is going to have a big-time season.

For all that he is not, he still is a great player. He's also healthier than he was in his lost season in Los Angeles with the Lakers in 2012-13.

The season opener Tuesday night between the Houston Rockets and Lakers was Howard's time to offer a peek at what lies ahead of him. And it's at a time when the aging superstar teammate he spurned, Kobe Bryant, 36, is just trying to hold it together a bit longer.

Despite missing half of training camp with a bruised knee suffered in practice, Howard was dominant right from the start. He wasn't perfect (13 points and 11 rebounds in only 21 minutes; 3-of-5 from the field, 7-of-16 from the line), but he ruled the paint at both ends, except when some iffy foul calls sat him down.

The Rockets ran circles around the Lakers in a 108-90 win, offering a golden opportunity for Howard simply to be the bigger man.

He wasn't.

Howard nailed Bryant in the jaw with an elbow, drawing a flagrant-1 foul, and then the two exchanged words. The Rockets were ahead by 25 points with 7:07 left in the game, and Bryant had taken the opportunity to show his frustration by standing up to Howard and trying to deny his outlet pass rather than just retreat on defense.

Bryant was called for a personal foul for hitting Howard's arm. If Howard had just waited for teammate Patrick Beverley to take a few more steps and create a passing lane—instead of swinging those elbows to the right and then to the left—it would've been Bryant who looked like the desperate fool.

And it would've been a very apt moment for Howard to do his usual routine of laughing it off, showing he really has moved on and is above this ongoing fray.

But that didn't happen because that isn't really the case.

Read More: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2248682-dwight-howard-says-hes-over-kobe-bryant-but-his-actions-scream-otherwise

2014-10-27

The Mad Violinist


"5k Walk to END HIV" at Freedom Plaza in Washington DC


Reach Media's News-Talk Network's News Anchor/Reporter, and now also the new News and Public Affairs Director of Radio One's five Washington DC radio stations, Ms. Ebony McMorris addressing a large crowd at the "5K Walk to End HIV" (formerly AIDS Walk Washington) at Freedom Plaza in Washington DC. McMorris primarily spoke about the commitment of her predecessor, the dearly departed former News and Public Affairs Director for Radio One DC, and also News Anchor/Reporter for the Syndication One (now Reach Media) News-Talk Network, Sheila Stewart. Stewart passed away last year in a car accident in Atlanta, Georgia - a day before last years 5k walk. Sheila was instrumental in the overall success of the "5k Walk to End HIV" for many years. Radio One walked the "2014 5k to End HIV" as "Team Sheila", honoring our energetic, purposeful, humorous, and fearless comrade, the late Sheila Stewart.

The Mayor of Washington DC Vincent Gray was one of many prominent speakers at the 5k Walk to End HIV, hosted by the local NBC Channel 4 Television morning team. "Team Sheila" from Radio One took a few moments to pose for photos with the Washington DC Mayor, including me here with Mayor Gray.


The local NBC channel 4 team reported and hosted the Saturday morning 5K Run and Walk to End HIV.


Radio One's General Sales Manager Sam Tatum is geared-up to "Run" at the starting line competing with the best of them. There were separate runners and walkers this past Saturday at the "5k Walk to End HIV"


Runners take your mark!


For most of us out-of-shape folks that "decided" to hit the starting line with the runners instead of walkers, it was a grueling 5k run (3.1 miles) - that turned into a walk rather quickly. Achilles, hurt calfs, and aching thighs followed for a few days - and I ain't talking about tough-cooked chicken or turkey.

WMMJ 102.3 FM's mid-day Air Personality Michele Wright, President of Radio One Chris Wegmann, and Chris's dog share a moment on a sunny Saturday October 25th morning at Freedom Plaza, where the "5k Walk to End HIV" festivities and starting point took place. The name "Freedom Plaza" was so-named as this is where Martin Luther King Jr. refined his "I Have a Dream" Speech prior to the 1963 March on Washington.


The 5k runners and walkers witnessed a sunny day at the National Mall in DC with views of the Washington Monument.


The walkers (large group coming) and the runners (small group going) pass each other roughly a mile from the starting line at Freedom Plaze.

President of Radio One Chris Wegmann and his trusted Dog discuss tactical strategy for the 3.1 mile walk shortly before the beginning of the "5k Walk to End HIV" - walkers start time followed runners - this past Saturday morning in Washington DC.


The back of "Team Sheila" T-shirt during the "5K Walk to End HIV" says what we feel. "Sheila We Miss You".


Most of "Team Sheila" shortly before we did the long 5K walk to and from Freedom Plaza in Washington DC.


The Radio One 5k "Team Sheila" walkers carried the sign honoring Sheila Stewart.


A closer look at the Radio One sign commemorating the work that Sheila did to bring awareness to a disease that affects millions.




News and Public Affairs Director for Radio One Washington DC Market for a decade, the late Sheila Stewart (1969 - 2013) was the inspiration for this year's "Team Sheila" - the Radio One team that ran and walked this past Saturday morning at the "5k Walk to End HIV". Here is thee photo of Sheila Stewart that was stamped on front of our official "Team Sheila" T-Shirt, with "Sheila We Miss You" etched on the back. Stewart was instrumental in having Radio One as an annual participant in the "5K Walk to End HIV" years ago. Sheila passed away last year in 2013 in a car accident the day before the "5k Walk to End HIV". MISS YOU SLIM! RIP


*More "5k Walk to END HIV" highlights: http://kysdc.com/3399961/walk-to-end-hiv-honoring-sheila-stewart/
*5k Walk to END HIV organizers are Whitman-Walker Health: http://www.whitman-walker.org/page.aspx?pid=415
*Namesakes - Walt Whitman, Mary Walker, Elizabeth Taylor, Max Robinson, Bill Austin, Scott and Harper: http://www.whitman-walker.org/page.aspx?pid=439
*Press Releases: http://www.whitman-walker.org/page.aspx?pid=427

We Create More Jobs When Black-Women-Owned Businesses Succeed

Commentary by Marc Morial - President of the National Urban League

Each month I discuss the monthly U.S. Department of Labor jobs report on CNBC’s Power Lunch, and the findings are often bittersweet. Economists generally feel that our country is making progress. In fact, this summer, unemployment reached its lowest rate in six years—hovering close to 6 percent. Yet somehow, this improving trend continues to leave many African Americans behind.

In particular, African-American women are the only group whose employment prospects have not improved significantly over the last year. In the latest report, the unemployment rate for black women continued to hover right around 10 percent, and it’s not likely to move far from that position in the next report. The most perplexing aspect of this is that by contrast, a study from the Center for American Progress found that black women are starting businesses at a rate six times faster than that of the overall population—making up the fastest-growing segment of women-owned businesses in America.

So why is the unemployment rate still so unacceptably high for this group—and how can we work together to fill this gap, capitalizing on this success to help solve the problem? One of the first steps to accessing the potential of women entrepreneurs to drive job creation is to identify and address reasons that 80 percent of small businesses fail within the first five years.

As head of the National Urban League for the past 11 years, I’ve seen businesses flop because of lack of market demand, connections or networks, contracts, business owners’ lack of experience running day-to-day operations, and lack of access to or unsuccessful management of capital, among other hurdles. In addition, businesses started by women are more likely to fail because of specious stereotypes held by society and the industries in which they are aspiring to make their mark.

That’s why we’ve created programs like our Jobs Rebuild America initiative, which includes Entrepreneurship Centers in cities around the country that aim to power up jobs growth and improve the skills of small-business owners. Participants are provided basic business and management training so that they can seize new opportunities and keep their ventures on a steady, sustained course.

We work with entrepreneurs entering both the public and private sectors, helping them access capital and hire people from within their own communities and, in turn, helping to support the local economy. Most important, we encourage them to network with others who have succeeded. And because the best “giveback” is to give back, we ask them to mentor others who are learning the ropes behind them as they, too, become successful.

Our Entrepreneurship Centers are having an impact, with 70 percent of the 12,000 people served each year being women, and thousands of jobs created as a result of their success. But demand for these services far exceeds supply. Right now the centers are supported by partnerships and supplementary grants such as those with Coca-Cola, which focus specifically on women’s empowerment, and others. With the support of our dedicated partners, we hope to serve many more people left behind by the economic recovery who are determined to make a better life for themselves.

To succeed in a harsh labor environment, African-American women business owners or those seeking to start businesses should be empowered, supported by their communities and unencumbered as they advance toward their vision. We all have a role to play. If public, private and nonprofit sectors invest in bolstering their efforts, these women could help create a model for job creation that brightens the economic picture for those who seek a place in the workforce.

Streaming shows symbiotic ties to broadcast radio

Story by Inside Radio

The number of people who listen to webcasts keeps growing, and while it threatens to eat into time spent with broadcast radio there may be a silver lining. Bridge Ratings looked at web listeners’ behavior and found an upside for FM/AM radi its curation role is stronger than ever.

The survey of streaming audio users found 86% listen to broadcast radio for the songs they know. But even more noteworthy is how Americans rely on their favorite radio station to discover new music.

The latest survey found 43% of web radio listeners still go traditional radio to learn about what’s hot musically. That’s up seven points over the last Bridge survey in 2012. In fact 59% of people surveyed say listening to FM/AM helps them pick which songs to listen to online. And 40% says their favorite broadcast station is still an important part of their music streaming experience.

Bridge president Dave Van Dyke says the data suggests web radio listeners are “learning to appreciate” radio’s ability to select music worth hearing. “For this panel, radio serves as a curating funnel which on-demand streamers utilize to help them determine not only what they stream but also what they download and ultimately purchase,” he concludes.

The survey results are based on a national sample of 2,000 persons age 12 and older. The margin of error is +/- 2.2%.

2014-10-23

New book "Mayor for Life" by four-time Mayor of Washington DC Marion Barry

Marion Berry with me earlier today at Radio One Corporate Headquarters in Maryland where Berry was interviewed locally on all five of Washington D.C.'s Radio One stations; also interviewed by Al Sharpton on nationally syndicated radio show "Keepin' it Real with Al Sharpton"; and there is a star-studded reception in his honor this evening

Barnes and Noble Overview below of Marion Barry's book "Mayor for Life":

Four-time mayor of Washington, DC, Marion Barry, Jr. tells his shocking and courageous life story, beginning in the cotton fields in Mississippi to the executive offices of one of the most powerful cities in the world.

Known nationally as the mayor caught on camera smoking crack cocaine in a Washington DC hotel room, Marion Barry Jr. has led a controversial career. This provocative, captivating narrative follows the Civil Rights activist, going back to his Mississippi roots, his Memphis upbringing, and his academic school days, up through his college years and move to Washington, DC, where he became actively involved in Civil Rights, community activism, and bold politics.

In Mayor for Life, Marion Barry, Jr. tells all—including the story of his campaigns for mayor of Washington, his ultimate rise to power, his personal struggles and downfalls, and the night of embarrassment, followed by his term in federal prison and ultimately a victorious fourth term as mayor. From the man who, despite the setbacks, boldly served the community of Washington, DC, this is his full story of courage, empowerment, hope, tragedy, triumph, and inspiration.
____________________________________________________________


Radio One and TV One owner Cathy Hughes with Marion Barry at the Radio One reception a few hours ago in honor of the four-time Mayor of Washington DC Marion Barry. Marion Barry here speaks about his successful proposal to allot thirty-five (35) percent of DC's City Government contracts to African-Americans, which not only included the likes of then BET owner Robert Johnson but also allocation near 100-thousand dollars to Cathy Hughes when she first bought Radio One's flagship station WOL - Radio One is now 53 radio stations strong (largest in the world). Millions of dollars went to African-American contractors. Barry's Summer Jobs programs through Pride, Inc. for Washington DC's youth; Real Estate ventures in the African-American communities; and more. Hughes reminded us all not to read the Washington Post to get your information on African-American icons like Marion Barry, but to read/listen to/watch our own media outlets where we tell OUR OWN accurate story from an African-American point of view from the media outlets that we control. Hello!!!


Signed book from Marion Barry to yours truly.

Marion Barry signing my "Mayor for life" Book.


Link to purchase Barry's book "Mayor for Life": http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/mayor-for-life-marion-barry-jr/1115884761?ean=9781593095055

2014-10-22

'Mystery Woman' Involved In Teddy Pendergrass' Paralyzing Accident Speaks Out, 30 Years Later





Story by OWN's Where are they now?

In 1982, charismatic soul singer Teddy Pendergrass was at the peak of his career when he slammed his Rolls Royce into a tree, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. Though there were no other vehicles involved in the crash, there was a passenger in Pendergrass' car. In the wake of the accident, questions emerged about this mystery woman. Her name was Tenika Watson, a nightclub performer and transgender woman.

At first, there were rumors and speculation about the cause and details surrounding the accident, but Pendergrass remained focused on his recovery and his music. Watson, too, kept quiet. In fact, in the 30 years since the accident, Watson has rarely spoken about what happened that day or about the nature of her relationship with Pendergrass. Now, in an interview with "Oprah: Where Are They Now?," she tells her side of the story.

Like many Pendergrass fans, Watson admired the popular artist. "Teddy was a big star," she remembers. "His music was always playing. You couldn't get any bigger than he was, and he was a very handsome man, I must say."

Back then, Watson, a former prostitute, lived near the studio where Pendergrass recorded his music, and one day, she saw him walking down the street. "He called me over to his car -- it was a Rolls Royce," Watson says. "I thought he was a pimp because I wasn't used to people really having Rolls Royces."

Instead of talking with Pendergrass, Watson says she ran away. The other time they met was at a popular club in Philadelphia, where Watson was working as a nightclub entertainer and model. The two struck up a conversation and when Watson said it was time for her to go home, Pendergrass offered her a ride.

That's when both of their lives would change.

"First, the car started speeding up really fast, and I was wondering, 'Was he driving fast?' -- but he wasn't. It was out of control," Watson says. "Then I noticed he was struggling with the wheel, and all of a sudden I heard this great big bang."

The next moments were a blur. "The next thing I know, the press was there," she says.

Watson was relatively unhurt -- she had contusions and a chipped tooth -- so she boarded the ambulance with Pendergrass and accompanied him to the hospital. She didn't stay, however, and only learned about Pendergrass' paralysis when it was reported in the newspapers.

Soon after the accident, Watson tried to reach out to Pendergrass, but was unsuccessful. "I went to the hospital where he was and there was a woman there. She said, 'Well, you're not going to see him before his son does,' and she caused this big scene," Watson says. "I just left."

Two days after the accident, news broke of Watson's past, including the gender confirmation surgery she'd undergone five years prior ("I don't think Teddy knew about my transition at all," she says today) and her multiple arrests for prostitution.

In light of these facts, rumors swirled that Watson and Pendergrass were intimately involved during the moment of the crash. "The hardest thing for me to read was for them to insinuate that there was a sex act going [on]," she says. "There wasn't."

Watson was dropped by her modeling agency before her career could even get off the ground and says that she was forced back into prostitution to support herself. She also became addicted to drugs. "The doctor started giving me Valium, and the Valium made me feel like I could deal with things better. I got hooked on them," Watson admits. "I became strung out on drugs later."

In 2002, Watson finally got her chance to meet with Pendergrass. "Someone called me that knew Teddy's mother and they said, 'Tenika, you have to get here quick because Teddy's mother wants to see you,'" she says. "So I got myself together and went to where his mother was. She said, 'If you want to talk to Teddy his out in the car.'"

That's when Watson and Pendergrass came face to face for the first time in three decades.

"We didn't have much to say to each other it... But it was the closure that I needed," she says. "I had been through a lot and I'm sure he had too. I was clean and sober, and I had me back. I had my strength back."

Pendergrass died in 2010 of colon cancer.

Al Sharpton interview with President Obama October 2014

Link below to Al Sharpton's interview with President Obama on Nationally Syndicated Radio Show "Keeping it Real with Al Sharpton" on the Reach Media News-Talk Network: http://nationalactionnetwork.net/podcast/president-obama-joins-rev-sharpton-on-keepin-it-real-tuesday-1021-1-4pm-est/

Information on November 4th Voting: https://www.iwillvote.com/

Weather Warfare

"Others are engaging even in an eco-type of terrorism whereby they can alter the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves."

-- United States Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen, April, 1997

Secretary Cohen made this statement at a conference on Terrorism, Weapons of Mass Destruction and U.S. Strategy in his official capacity as the US Secretary of Defense; thus this can be taken as an official position of the United States. Further he used the word "are," not "could," "might" or "maybe sometime in the future." He further added: "It's real, and that's the reason why we have to intensify our efforts." If the United States Secretary of Defense says that the earth and the sky have been turned into weapons, and are being used as such in present time, I believe we should take this statement very seriously.

WEATHER WARFARE: The Military's Plan to Draft Mother Nature is not "conspiracy theory." This book has almost no theory and very little speculation. All the conclusions reached are the logical ones based on the presented facts. This is not "tabloid journalism." This is straight scientific reporting at a layman's level. I present solid evidence from military and scientific sources that intentional environmental modification (EnMod) is the 600-pound gorilla at the global warming debate that everyone is pretending isn't there.

In my 1998 book HAARP: The Ultimate Weapon of the Conspiracy I used HAARP (the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program) as a springboard to talk about globalist agendas such as the New World Order and Agenda 21. While there are passing references to Globalism in WEATHER WARFARE I keep such speculation to a minimum. That book was about the "who" and "why" behind the HAARP program, where this book documents the reality of intentional EnMod, and the threat to health and security it poses.

The heart of WEATHER WARFARE: The Military's Plan to Draft Mother Nature is proof that EnMod, which most people believe to be science fiction, is actually science fact and that we have neither the political nor legal infrastructure in place to deal with this technology. Addressed at length is the dismal failure of the 1978 United Nations EnMod Convention, which prohibits the use of environmental modification as a weapon of war. The unaddressed issue of ongoing intentional EnMod by various militaries, terrorists and civilians is a key factor skewing the evidence in the global warming/climate change debate and as such is of gravest importance. The politics of the 21st century, and possibly our survival as a species, will turn on how this debate plays out.

Despite the title, it is not just "The Military." A book's title is not precisely its contents, but rather a cry from the bookshelf to get a potential reader's attention. This book is about a great deal more than just the weather or the military. It is about the whole environment: earth, air and sea; it is about a lot of players: academic, commercial and military; with a lot of objectives: financial, militaristic and political.

There is substantial difference between climate and weather. Robert A.Heinlein wrote "climate is what you expect, weather is what you get." Mainstream science recognizes that man does have the ability to alter the weather on a limited scale intentionally, and to alter the climate on a vast scale unintentionally. I present solid evidence that what can be done intentionally is far greater than what the mainstream is willing to or able to admit.

WEATHER WARFARE: The Military's Plan to Draft Mother Nature covers the history of "weather control" from the Rain Makers of the 1890s through the development of cloud seeding in the middle of the twentieth century, to today's "off the shelf" technologies of precipitation enhancement, hail suppression and fog dispersal. I cover the many programs to manipulate hurricanes, such as Project Cirrus and Project Stormfury, and what evidence there is of being able to control hurricanes in the 21st Century.

It also covers Defense Secretary Cohen's claim that "Others ... can ... set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves." Starting with Nicola Tesla's earthquake machine of the 1890s I trace the possibility of "earthquakes on demand" from the development of a "tsunami bomb" during World War II (as revealed by documents recently declassified by the New Zealand government), through Project Faultless which caused a massive earthquake in the Nevada desert after a high yield atom bomb was intentionally detonated on a fault line, to evidences of human initiation of several major quakes and the 2004 Christmas tsunami with "scalar" or other electromagnetic waves.

Also included is an update on recent developments at HAARP. I analyze what they are willing to admit to having done with it and where the program may go in the future. The US Air Force insists that it has no interest in "controlling the weather" yet HAARP represents the expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars and a decade of research and construction in a program whose avowed purpose is to modify the atmosphere. What, if any, is the difference between "modifying the atmosphere" and "controlling the weather"?

WEATHER WARFARE also examines claims that chemicals are being deliberately injected into our atmosphere by high-flying planes that are criss-crossing our skies with "chemtrails." First I examine the environmental issues associated with jet aircraft condensation trails (contrails), which are indeed grave. Then I reveal that Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and numerous other national and international panels of scientists have extensively, and expensively, studied ways to mitigate global warming through schemes called "geo-engineering."

Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb and Associate Director of LLNL, actually advocated putting up a "sunscreen" to save the Earth. He proposed injecting aluminum and barium dust particles high into the atmosphere to increase the amount of solar energy being reflected out into space as a way to offset the heating by greenhouse gases.

Many scientific boards and committees have looked into this proposal and found it technologically feasible, but recognized that the legal and environmental hurdles would be too high to overcome to implement such a project--if done openly, so some proposed doing it covertly! Are they?

Packed with hundreds of quotes, the environmental mayhem documented in this 402-page book is founded on a solid base of mainstream scientific, military and media sources. If you are researching this topic you may well find the 31-page bibliography to be worth the price of the book alone! Also included are three appendices which include the full text of the EnMod Convention and more than 150 EnMod patents granted by the United States Patent Office.

Jerry E. Smith
WEATHER WARFARE

2014-10-21

T.I. discusses concept from his new album "Paperwork" - includes a track motivated by the Trayvon Martin tragedy


T.I. on his new download "Paperwork" project Track by Track released today

President Obama radio interview with Al Sharpton today at 1:22pm eastern - interview excerpts on MSNBC

Al Sharpton interview with President Obama airs today at 1:22pm eastern on "Keeping it Real with Al Sharpton" radio show. The show airs on many affiliate radio stations including WVON Chicago, WLIB New York, WAOK Atlanta, WOL Washington DC, WCHB Detroit...and their websites....to name a few. The show also airs on Satellite Radio on Sirius/XM Channel 126.

Excerpts of Sharpton's interview with President Obama aired on MSNBC's Morning Joe and Politics Nation earlier (links below).


Politics Nation
http://www.msnbc.com/politicsnation/watch/obama-on-the-importance-of-voter-turnout-345434179505


Morning Joe
http://www.msnbc.com/morning-joe/watch/democrats-hold-on-to-polling-advantages-345681475604

2014-10-20

ISIS forces launch multiple attacks on Kurdish territory in Iraq, officials say

Story by CNN
Written by Brian Walker

ISIS militants launched about 15 near-simultaneous attacks on Kurdish forces in northern Iraq on Monday in what Kurdish government officials and the Kurdish news agency Rudaw said was a fierce and renewed push for Kurdish-held territory.

The deadliest of the attacks targeted Mosul Dam, a hugely important location.

First, an ISIS-commandeered military truck loaded with explosives targeted a Peshmerga checkpoint along the security belt circling the dam, killing six Peshmerga security forces and injuring seven others critically, according to Peshmerga forces spokesman Said Mamazeen.

At almost the same time, ISIS militants launched an attack on the Nineveh Valley near the dam, which was repelled by Peshmerga forces using European and American weapons, the spokesman said.

Another Kurdish military official, who asked not to be named for protocol and security reasons, said that despite the attacks, it would be difficult for ISIS to gain control of the dam because of the large numbers of Peshmerga forces in the area.

A senior official at the Ministry of Peshmerga, who similarly asked not to be identified as a matter of government protocol, reported that ISIS fighters were also killed in the attacks, and that the Peshmerga successfully repelled most of the more than dozen incidents Monday.

Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/20/world/meast/isis-airstrikes/index.html

2014-10-16

Fright Night Files on TV One, This Saturday Night October 18th



Announcement by TV One

On Oct. 18, TV One is ready to scare you to death.

Fright Night Files is TV One's first, original horror film — 90 minutes of terror broken into three separate tales that will have you hiding behind your hands. And there to scare you through it all is Lynn Whitfield as Madame Mabry, a Jamaican, voodoo expert of the supernatural.


The trilogy event will feature the following stories:

Pillow Talk Channel 187
Late night radio DJ Coffee Black (Elise Neal) has the sultry voice that can seduce any man over the airwaves and in person, she brings them to their knees, in more ways than one. When Coffee begins to receive mysterious calls from past lovers like Isaiah (Bokeem Woodbine) her world is filled with dead air.

For The Love Of Lockwood
Jealousy engulfs Marla Peters (Eva Marcille) just as she is set to marry her fiancé Lockwood Masters (Sean Blakemore) driving him to call off the wedding. Lockwood ultimately forgives Marla and with a little assistance from Madame Mabry (Whitfield) promises to love her… to death.

Mirror, Mirror
Ronald (Harry Lennix) is caught in a love triangle between his new love Alexa (Victoria Rowell) and his live-in girlfriend Jessica (Davetta Sherwood). After coming home to find Jessica and friends including Monique (Karrueche Tran) performing a strange ritual, he breaks the relationship off. As a peace offering, Jessica brings an ornately-decorated mirror that changes his life forever.

For more information: http://tvone.tv/

Second Ebola Nurse to Be Moved Out of Dallas Hospital to Maryland

Story by ABC News
Written by Syndey Lupkin

Nina Pham, the first nurse to contract Ebola in the United States, will be transferred from Dallas to the National Institutes for Health hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, tonight, federal officials told ABC News.

Pham, a 26, contracted Ebola while treating Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas. She was diagnosed on Sunday. Duncan, a Liberian national, became the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States on Sept. 30. He died on Oct. 8.

On Wednesday, another nurse who treated Duncan was diagnosed with Ebola. Amber Vinson, 29, arrived at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital on Tuesday morning with a fever and was diagnosed with Ebola in the early hours of Wednesday morning. She was relocated to Emory University Hospital's isolation unit Wednesday night.
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PS by blogger: "Huh? Do us Marylanders have an choice, opinion, vote? Please quarantine and sequester all that work and enter the entire hospital, plus the folks on the plane she is flying on...with hourly Ebola testing. Thank you."
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White House Updated Response to Ebola


President Barack Obama delivers a statement to the press after a meeting with cabinet agencies coordinating the government's Ebola response, in the Cabinet Room of the White House, Oct.15, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza).

Story by White House
Written by Tanya Somanader - Deputy Director of Digital Content for the Office of Digital Strategy

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"We are monitoring, supervising, overseeing in a much more aggressive way exactly what has taken place in Dallas initially and making sure that the lessons learned are then transmitted to hospitals and clinics all across the country." President Barack Obama

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Here are the actions the President is putting into motion to ensure we effectively treat and prevent the spread of Ebola:

1. The CDC will now send a rapid response team, a "swat team, essentially" to be on the ground within 24 hours as soon as someone is diagnosed with Ebola so the CDC can walk the local hospital through the protocols step-by-step. That includes use and disposal of protective equipment.

2.We are communicating the lessons learned from the problems that occurred in Dallas to hospitals, clinics, and first-responders around the country on a ongoing and up-to-date basis.

3. We are working carefully with the city of Dallas and the state of Texas to ensure that, in the event any other cases arise among health workers, they are properly cared for in a way that is consistent with public safety.

4. We are "contact-tracing" to ensure that anyone who may have come into contact with the affected individuals are being monitored in a way to prevent the further spread of this disease.

5. We will continue to monitor the health status of the other health care workers in Dallas.

6. We will continue screening processes at airports and make sure teams are in place to transport suspected cases to specialized, secure hospitals if needed.

7. We will continue to lead the international response in West Africa because "the investment we make in helping Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea deal with this problem is an investment in our own public health."

"This is not a situation in which, like a flu, the risks of a rapid spread of the disease are imminent," the President said. "If we do these protocols properly, if we follow the steps, if we get the information out, then the likelihood of widespread Ebola outbreaks in this country are very, very low."

Take a look at three key points that you need to know -- then share them with your friends and family so everyone has the facts about Ebola.

Ebola cannot be spread through casual contact, air, water, or food in the U.S.


Ebola can only be contracted through body fluids, contaminated objects, or infected animals.


Ebola can only be contracted from someone who is showing symptoms.


Read More: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2014/10/15/president-obama-provides-update-our-response-ebola-us?utm_source=snapshot&utm_medium=email&utm_content=10152014-topper

U.S. Ebola Cases ’May Exceed Two Dozen by November’


Ebola Outbreak: Katie Couric's Interview with Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Couric's Interview/Story Link: https://news.yahoo.com/katie-couric-interviews-liberian-president-ellen-johnson-sirleaf-181216307.html?mktg=ykatie-sem-ybn-generic&chan=sem&ptnr=ybn&prop=ykatie&cmp=generic&sid=sr3_11470480_ms


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Story below by Bloomberg
Written by Michelle Fay Cortez and Lorraine Woellert
Video by Yahoo News

There could be as many as two dozen people in the U.S. infected with Ebola by the end of the month, according to researchers tracking the virus with a computer model.

The actual number will probably be far smaller and limited to a couple of airline passengers who enter the country already infected without showing symptoms, and the health workers who care for them, said Alessandro Vespignani, a Northeastern University professor who runs computer simulations of infectious disease outbreaks. The two newly infected nurses in Dallas don’t change the numbers because they were identified quickly and it’s unlikely they infected other people, he said.

The projections only run through October because it’s too difficult to model what will occur if the pace of the outbreak changes in West Africa, where more than 8,900 people have been infected and 4,400 have died, he said. If the outbreak isn’t contained, the numbers could rise significantly.

“If by the end of the year the growth rate hasn’t changed, then the game will be different,” Vespignani said. “It will increase for many other countries.”

Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-16/u-s-ebola-cases-may-exceed-two-dozen-by-november-.html

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Second infection case from the Ebola death of Thomas Eric Duncan in Dallas: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-15/second-ebola-worker-s-trip-raises-concerns-on-u-s-spread.html

Exerpts from above link:

...Infection Details

More details have been emerging about how the two health-care workers may have become infected. Frieden said both were in close contact with Thomas Eric Duncan, who flew from Liberia to visit family in Texas before showing symptoms and then dying at the Dallas hospital on Oct. 8.

Amber Vinson (left) graduated in 2003 from Firestone High School in Akron. (Photo Source: Akron Public Schools via Bloomberg)

National Nurses United, which has 185,000 members, said in a statement that workers who cared for Duncan were initially given safety suits with exposed necks, forcing them to use medical tape to cover their skin. Hospital managers also played down the need for more protective masks, and sent around lab specimens that weren’t specially sealed through the hospital’s tube system, the group said.

They also said Duncan initially was kept in a room with other patients before being isolated.

2014-10-15

We Remember: Augie Johnson – Founder of Side Effect Dies


Side Effect's version of "Keep That Same Old Feeling"


Soul Train appearance by Side Effect including interview with Don Corneilius

Story by EURWeb
Written by Lee Bailey

Wow, this is one of those “How can it be, I just saw him” moments.

That’s surely what it’s like for hundreds of record and radio industry associates who were at the annual “Legends and Icons” picnic at Woodley Park in LA’s San Fernando Valley last Sunday.

Augie Johnson and his Side Effect crew was there like everyone else having a great time as folks reminisced about the good ol’ days, family and all kinds of stuff like that.

Augie and Side Effect even regaled the picnic-ers with some of their acapella styling. In fact the song they sang features their female vocalist who wasn’t present, so Kathy Sledge (of the legendary Sister Sledge) , who was also there, helped the guys out as you can see from the picture below.

We don’t have specific details, but we were told that Johnson apparently died in his sleep Friday night and his girlfriend discovered him Saturday morning. She says he told her he wasn’t feeling well and was going to bed. She reportedly called him several times Saturday morning, but since he didn’t answer, she went to his place and found him dead.

Official statement from Augie Johnson’s (Lead 1970's group "Side Effect") family:


Side Effect's hit "Always There"

Official statement from Augie Johnson’s family:

On behalf of the Johnson family, we would like to thank you for your overwhelming love and support during the passing of our beloved August “Augie” William Johnson. We are consumed with grief and ask that you hold your calls and text messages. Soon we will release information on the public memorial service and ask that you respect the privacy of the family at this time. As he is remembered, it is our hope the focus will be on his love for life & people and not his death.

Cards and expressions of love can be sent to:
Augie Johnson
c/o Shades of Music Entertainment
PO BOX 6506
San Pedro, CA 90734

Further inquiries can be directed to:Publicist Lisa Humphrey – Premier Concepts PR, email: media@premierconceptspr.com or call 310.605.5472. Thank you for understanding.

The Johnson Family

2014-10-14

Cooking Show with Auntie Fee - Today's meal: Jumbo Shrimp


Auntie Fee was on Television cooking for the Steve Harvey show, Jimmy Kimmel Live show, and can also be found via youtube sharing her recipes with you: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=auntie+fee

President Obama - Then and Now


Common to United States Presidents is the face-paced aging process. Here is a five-year look at President Obama in 2009 and 2014.

Radio One goes Classic Hip-Hop in Houston.

Story by Inside Radio

Days after replacing all-news with all-Beyonce, Radio One has settled on a permanent format for Houston’s KROI. “Boom 92.1 FM,” a classic hip-hop station, launched yesterday on what was home to “News 92” for the past three years.

Radio One claims it’s “the first major market throwback hip-hop station of its kind in the country.”

Core acts include Jay Z, Biggie, 2Pac, Dr. Dre, Missy Elliott, Geto Boys and UGK.

The new station will complement urban AC “Majic 102.1” KMJQ and Rhythmic CHR “97.9 The Box” KBXX, giving the company a three-pronged approach to attracting the market’s African American population.

The company says its research uncovered a void for a format devoted exclusively to throwback hip-hop, which is typically too edgy for urban AC and too old for Urban and Rhythmic CHR.

Operations manager Terri Thomas said the new format will “bring Classic Hip-Hop back to listeners who grew up on the lyrics, beats and rhythm of this genre of music.”

2014-10-10

St. Louis Protesters Clash With Police In Second Night Of Unrest

Story by Reuters
Written by Carey Gillam and Kenny Bahr

ST LOUIS, Mo. - Police clashed with protesters in St. Louis on Thursday for a second night after an officer killed a black teenager, ahead of a weekend of planned rallies in the area over the August killing of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown.

Throughout the night, as many as 400 demonstrators spread out across several city blocks in south St. Louis, angrily shouting and chanting at rows of police officers, many of whom were clad in riot gear.

Dozens of protesters had met earlier at the site in the Shaw neighborhood where 18-year-old Vonderrit Myers Jr. was shot dead on Wednesday by an off-duty white officer working for a private security firm in what police described as a firefight.

But demonstrations grew increasingly chaotic. At one point early on Friday morning, a line of police pushed towards a group of several dozen protesters who jeered and cursed at them, pepper-spraying those who refused to disperse.

St. Louis Police Chief Sam Dotson told local television station Fox 2 that at one point during the tense protest, someone behind the massive crowd threw a knife that struck an officer's body vest at the shoulder.

He added that a police car and several businesses and residences had been damaged and that U.S. flags were burned. Two people had been arrested by midnight local time, Dotson said, during which one officer suffered minor injuries.

The St. Louis area is bracing for further unrest over the killing of Brown by a white police officer two months ago, with Myers' death on Wednesday expected to add fuel to the fire.

Several civil rights organizations and protest groups, including Hands Up United, planned to mark the weekend with marches and rallies in St. Louis and the suburb of Ferguson, Missouri, where Brown was killed.

The groups are demanding the arrest of the officer who killed Brown, and want to draw attention to police treatment of black Americans. Protest organizers said they are planning only peaceful activities, but fear that Wednesday's killing of the black teen might trigger violent outbursts.

"We never advocate violence ... But I do know that people were angry last night and they will be out this weekend," said Tory Russell, a leader of Hands Up United. "I don't know what they are going to do."

At least 6,000 have registered on an organizing website for the "weekend of resistance" events in and around Ferguson, which kick off on Friday with a "Justice Now" march to the office of St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch.

The weekend is to be capped with actions of "civil disobedience" on Monday.

Organizers said they are also planning to create a "memory altar" to victims of police violence and to hold a candlelight march carrying a coffin to the Ferguson Police Department.

Ferguson Mayor James Knowles said law enforcement officers throughout the area are planning for large crowds and possible violence.

"There are a lot of people coming into town," said Knowles. "We are going to be prepared. There is intel out there that there are people wanting to do bad things. And people who want to cause a problem are going to use that (the shooting on Wednesday) as a rallying cry," he said.

The police department would not identify the 32-year-old officer who shot Myers. Police said Myers fired multiple times at the officer, before the officer returned 17 shots and fatally wounded him.

The officer was not hurt and was placed on administrative leave as the shooting is investigated, police said.

Relatives of Myers said he did not have a gun, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

The shooting sparked protests that raged until dawn on Thursday. One person was arrested and several police vehicles were damaged in the unrest, police officials said. (Reporting by Carey Gillam in Kansas City, Mo.; Editing by Catherine Evans)

News/Talkers dial up the news to remain relevant.

Story by Inside Radio

News/Talk ratings experienced their typical seasonal bump in Nielsen’s September survey, inching up to an 8.8 (6+) share, its highest since April. But the longer term trend lines aren’t so rosy and that’s forced some news/talk stations to do things differently. The result is they’re bucking the ratings downdraft.

Buoyed by the mid-term elections and a pick-up in the news cycle, the current ratings uptrend is expected to continue in October. But the format isn’t likely to reverse its years-long ratings decline. News/Talk’s mostly white male audience is getting older — and smaller.

After peaking at a lofty 14.1 national share in fall 2008, the format has been on a steady downward slope. Pundits point to an over-reliance on syndication and conservative political talk and say news/talk radio needs to become more inclusive — in the hosts it employs, the topics they talk about, and the audience they target.

“The old school talk of grab the newspaper, find a couple of red meat issues, hock them out there like you’re fishing, throw out some opinions and then try to reel in callers — that is a tired format and the ratings across the country show that,” says Pete Gammell, director of news & programming at Bonneville news/talk KIRO-FM, Seattle (97.3).

Some news/talkers are dialing up the news content as way to remain to relevant. Three-hour news blocks in morning and afternoon drive are becoming more common. “News is the gateway drug for hooking news/talk listeners,” says iHeartMedia EVP of programming Brad Hardin. “That right balance between the news and the entertaining talk is the recipe that wins.”

“News Radio” KFBK, Sacramento (93.1, 1530) was tied for second place in 6+ in September and tied for fifth in 25-54. Not only are both of the iHeartMedia station’s drive time dayparts devoted to local news blocks, it carries local hosts for all but 6 hours from 6pm-12midnight. And the two syndicated hosts it does air in primetime — Fox News Radio’s Tom Sullivan and Premiere’s Rush Limbaugh — were former local hosts on the station.

Being located in the capital of a state with no shortage of news and issues certainly helps KFBK tap the pulse of its audience. So does having an AM-FM simulcast. But most of its listening still happens on AM. In fact, the station gave up the stronger 92.5 frequency in January to launch a new country station, moving to the lower-powered 93.1 — without missed a beat in the ratings. In fact, iHeartMedia has unwound many of its news/talk simulcasts to use the FM to launch a new station.

“Most of the time, most of the listening still came from the AM,” Brad Hardin reasons, adding that he’s not worried about news/talk’s aging demographics. “As guys get older, the stations are going to age. And as far as creating a new generation of talk fans, they’ll listen regardless of what delivery system it’s on — if it is something that entertaining.”

Broadcasting solely on FM has helped Seattle’s KIRO-FM deliver a younger audience than the average news/talker and a nearly 50-50 male-female spilt. The station has improved its 25-54 share from 3.0-4.9 during the past year and currently ranks fourth.

2014-10-09

Am I next? Ferguson's protest through the eyes of a teenager

2014-10-08

United States EBOLA patient Thomas Eric Duncan DIES at Dallas Hospital



Story by Yahoo News
Written by Jason Sickle
Video by ABC News

DALLAS — The first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the United States died early Wednesday, officials with Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital announced.

“It is with profound sadness and heartfelt disappointment that we must inform you of the death of Thomas Eric Duncan this morning at 7:51 a.m.,” the hospital said in a written statement. “Mr. Duncan succumbed to an insidious disease, Ebola.”

The Liberian citizen, who recently traveled from West Africa to Dallas to reunite with a long-lost son and the teen's mother, had been in isolation at Texas Health Presbyterian for 10 days.

“This hurts deeply,” said Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings during a city council meeting. “We were hoping this was not going to happen.”

It was not immediately known what would happen to Duncan's body, which could remain contagious for several days. Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention call for the remains to be immediately shrouded in plastic and double-bagged in leak-proof bags at the hospital, then promptly cremated or buried in an airtight casket.

Duncan’s death comes four days after his condition was downgraded from serious to critical. Over the weekend, he had begun receiving brincidofovir, an experimental antiviral drug that recently gained emergency approval from the Food and Drug Administration.

“He fought courageously in this battle,” the hospital said in a statement. “Our professionals, the doctors and nurses in the unit, as well as the entire Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas community, are also grieving his passing. We have offered the family our support and condolences at this difficult time.”

Louise Troh, Duncan's fiancée, and three of her family members have been in quarantine for more than a week because they were living in the same apartment with him. On Tuesday, Duncan's son Karsiah travelled from West Texas to try and see his father for the first time in 16 years.

“My thoughts are with the family and friends of Thomas Eric Duncan at this time, especially his fiancée, Louise, their son, Karsiah, and all those who loved him,” Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said in a written statement. “We are also thinking of the dedicated hospital staff who assisted Mr. Duncan daily while he fought this terrible disease. We offer prayers of comfort and peace to everyone impacted by his passing.”

Duncan, 42, is the first person known to die of Ebola in the United States. The virus, which is spread through direct contact with bodily fluids, has killed more than 3,400 people in West Africa in 2014, the World Health Organization estimates.

Five Americans who were diagnosed with Ebola in Africa have returned to the United States for treatment since late July. Aid workers Kent Brantly, Nancy Writebol and Rick Sacra made full recoveries. WHO said one of its doctors was transported to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta on Sept. 9. No other details have been released. Ashoka Mukpo, a cameraman working for NBC News, arrived at the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha for treatment on Monday.

Duncan’s illness and treatment sparked controversy. He arrived in Dallas on Sept. 20 from Liberia, one of the areas hit hardest by the outbreak.

His neighbors in Monrovia told reporters that five days before his flight, Duncan helped a pregnant woman get to the hospital in a taxi. She was convulsing and vomiting. The woman died at home hours later, after being turned away from a crowded Ebola treatment ward.

It is unclear if Duncan knew the woman had Ebola, but Liberian government officials said they planned to prosecute him for lying on health forms he completed at the airport on Sept. 19.

Duncan answered “no” to questions about whether he had cared for an Ebola patient or touched the body of someone who had died in an area affected by Ebola.

CDC officials said Duncan didn’t have a fever or symptoms of Ebola when he boarded his flight in Liberia, which made multiple stops. He also had a three-hour layover in Washington, D.C., before arriving in Texas.

Five days after getting to Dallas, Troh drove Duncan to the emergency room at Texas Health Presbyterian. Hospital officials said he showed up in the middle of the night with a fever of 100.1 degrees, abdominal pain for two days, a sharp headache and decreased urination. The hospital said Duncan told them he had not experienced nausea, vomiting or diarrhea — strong indicators of Ebola.



Federal guidelines published in August state that someone in Duncan’s condition and who was known to have been in West Africa should be placed in isolation and tested for Ebola. Instead, Duncan was given a prescription for antibiotics and sent home.

Hospital officials initially blamed a flawed records system for the mix-up but have since retracted that explanation. No other explanation has been given for how the Ebola diagnosis was overlooked.

In her statement on Wednesday, Troh thanked several members of the Dallas civic and faith community for their support, but did not mention the hospital.

“I trust a thorough examination will take place regarding all aspects of his care,” Troh said.

Duncan’s condition had worsened by the time he was brought back to Texas Health Presbyterian two days after being discharged. He was reportedly vomiting as paramedics put him in the ambulance at the apartment complex where he had been living with family and friends.

Those paramedics are among seven health care workers who are now being monitored for Ebola symptoms. Three people from the apartment, including Troh, are also considered to be at high risk, since they had direct contact with Duncan.

An additional 38 individuals, including a man who was treated in the same ambulance after it had been used to transport Duncan, are considered low-risk contacts but will be monitored for 21 days, the maximum period it may take for symptoms to appear. No one being monitored has shown signs of the illness thus far, officials said.

Texas Health Presbyterian immediately isolated Duncan upon his second arrival at the hospital. According to the Dallas Morning News, the hospital may have violated federal guidelines by delaying a blood test for Ebola.

According to the report, other testing and blood work was done first to rule out other causes. The Ebola test was not performed and confirmed until two days after Duncan was placed in isolation.

The CDC's Frieden called the mishandling a "teachable moment" and issued a nationwide alert to all hospitals updating them on how to appropriately respond to possible Ebola cases.

On Wednesday, Dr. Lakey, the state health commissioner, acknowledged the hospital's efforts to treat Duncan.

“The past week has been an enormous test of our health system, but for one family, it has been far more personal,” Lakey said. “Today, they lost a dear member of their family. They have our sincere condolences, and we are keeping them in our thoughts. The doctors, nurses and staff at Presbyterian provided excellent and compassionate care, but Ebola is a disease that attacks the body in many ways. We’ll continue every effort to contain the spread of the virus and protect people from this threat.”

BREAKING: Radio One pulls all-news format from Houston FM.

Story by Inside Radio

Nearly three years after launching Houston’s first FM all-news radio station, Radio One has pulled the plug on “News92” KROI. The station aired its last broadcast today and is now stunting as all Beyoncé “B-92.” Radio One cites “sustained poor ratings performance and significant financial losses over the past three years” in making the decision. "News92" KROI had a 0.9 share (6+) in Nielsen’s September survey.

Inspired by the success of Hubbard Broadcasting’s all-news giant WTOP (103.5) in Radio One’s corporate backyard of Washington, DC, “News92” KROI launched in November 2011.

Dropping the gospel format that aired on the 92.1 frequency helped urban AC sister “Majic 102” KMJQ. But the all-news format never gained ratings traction, despite an ambitious effort and a multi-year commitment to the high-overhead format.

“Unfortunately, the market hasn’t shown a sustainable appetite for news radio, but each of you motivated us daily to produce a high-quality news program,”

Radio One says in a posting on KROI’s website. “Together, we made history.”

2014-10-07

President Obama Provides an Update on the EBOLA Outbreak


On October 6, 2014, President Obama was briefed on the Ebola outbreak in the U.S. and abroad, and provided an update on the U.S. preparedness and response to the epidemic.

Things you should know about the Ebola Flu Virus

Written by Dr. Rachael Ross

Remember, I am a practicing board certified family physician, so I have a number of patients who have approached me with questions about Ebola. So I have compiled a list of commonly asked questions and a list of things you should know about the Ebola virus.

Where Did The Name Ebola Come From?


Ebola virus hemorrhagic fever is named after the river in the Congo where the virus was originally discovered in 1976. Ebola is a zoonotic virus meaning that it originated in animals and was passed to humans by direct contact with bodily fluids of infected animals that are either alive or dead.

How Does One Become Infected With The Ebola Virus?

Ebola is passed through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person who has symptoms or from a deceased person who’s body is still infected with the virus.

If a person is infected with Ebola and has any of the following symptoms, their bodily fluids are likely contagious: high fever, vomiting, aches & pains, diarrhea, fatigue, and/or blood-shot eyes

What Does Direct Contact Mean? And What Are Bodily Fluids?

The Ebola virus isn’t an airborne virus. You cannot catch it simply by breathing in. Ebola is transmitted when the fluids of an infected person come into contact with broken skin on any part of the body of an uninfected person (a rash, sore, cut, unhealed wound or tattoo, etc) or in contact with the moist tissues of the body which are called mucous membranes (the eyes, inside of the nose, mouth, inner lips, and certain parts of the genitals). This is why Ebola caregivers cover themselves from head to toe and why they wear protective eye, nose, and mouth gear. It is to prevent the infected fluids from splashing on vulnerable areas of the body.

The most contagious of these bodily fluids are blood, vomit, urine, feces, breast milk, vaginal fluids, and semen. However, as the Ebola virus replicates in the body and more virus is present and the patient gets sicker and sicker, saliva, body sweat, and tears also become highly infective. So for a person that is very sick with the Ebola virus and potentially in their final stages of life, almost every bodily fluid they have carries enough of the virus to infect another person.

A child wiping her sick mother’s tears, a wife kissing her dying husband, a person touched by the sweaty shoulder of an infected passerby, and a loved one cleaning up infected vomit, are all vulnerable to Ebola virus. Ebola is a virus that spreads rapidly in environments where sharing space, helping others, hugging, touching, and socializing are important ways of life. That it what scares me the most about the virus.

Is it Safe to Assume that Most West Africans Could Have Ebola?

No. You have to fight the temptation to assume that every African you see has the Ebola virus. All of the available information suggests that Ebola is not contagious until the person has symptoms, and even though symptoms are vague, most people with Ebola feel awful and really just want to lay down and sleep. The chances that they are headed to work with you at 7am on the train are pretty slim. Chances are, a person with symptomatic Ebola is at home taking a sick day.

How Long Does it Take For the Ebola Virus to be Detected by Blood Test?


Currently the testing that the CDC uses to test for Ebola is a Real time RT-PCR test. When a hospital suspects Ebola, they have to send the specimen to a lab participating in the CDC’s Laboratory response network that runs the 3-4hr test. If the person has Ebola and has not started to have any symptoms, the PCR test will likely show that he does not have Ebola. The PCR test usually detects the virus if symptoms have been present three days or more.

Can The Ebola Virus Live on a Door Handle or on a Chair After Someone Infected With the Virus Gets Up?


The Ebola virus needs a host to stay active which means that it needs the be in the body fluids of an animal or human, dead or alive in order to survive for more than a few hours. Studies conducted by The CDC shows that in ideal conditions the virus outside the body can survive up to six days, but studies conducted in Africa suggest they survive in real conditions for less than twenty-four hours.

What Cleaning Products Will Destroy Ebola?


Bleach and chlorinated cleaning products have been used effectively to destroy the virus.

Since There Is a Cure That Was Used to Save American Lives, Why Can’t it be Shipped to West Africa?

ZMapp is an experimental drug that was used successfully to treat international aid workers and two Americans infected with Ebola, but they have run out of the drug. ZMapp is an experimental drug that hasn’t been tested on human subjects yet, nor has it been produced in large enough quantities to ship to Western Africa. In studies ZMapp protected monkeys even five days after infection. During animal clinical trials ZMapp was highly successful treating monkey with Ebola. Since the Ebola outbreak, two Americans have been successfully treated, but a Liberian doctor and a Spanish priest who were both given the drug died.

TKM-Ebola is also an experimental drug and has also been authorized by the US FDA and the CDC to be given to people with confirmed and suspected cases of Ebola. This drug got as far as a Phase 1 clinical trial which was actually suspended early 2014 due to human subjects developing flu-like symptoms.

If Ebola Becomes an Issue in the US, What Can I Do to Protect Myself?

If Ebola is a concern, some of the basic hygiene tips that we give during flu season will help, but in addition, worldwide, people will have to change how they socialize in order to stay safe.

Minimize skin to skin contact as much as possible. The virus can be transmitted through sweat and saliva. This means hugs, kisses, handshakes, fist bumps, etc.
Sunglasses to decrease the possibility that infected bodily fluids could splash into your eyes. Even a small drop of saliva could pass the virus.
Avoid touching surfaces and then touching your face.
Wear long sleeves and long pants to keep your skin covered as much as possible
Moisturize your skin and lips regularly to avoid cracking which can be a way for the virus to get inside your bloodstream
Carry around hand sanitizer and use it after each human encounter and after touching potentially infected surfaces.
We like to help, but take precautions when helping. Do not touch other people’s vomit, diarrhea, urine, or blood, without gloves.

In 1976 I discovered EBOLA - now I fear an unimaginable tragedy

Story by the Guardian
Written by Rafaela von Bredow and Veronika Hackenbroch

Peter Piot was a researcher at a lab in Antwerp when a pilot brought him a blood sample from a Belgian nun who had fallen mysteriously ill in Zaire

• Ebola isn't the big one. So what is? And are we ready for it?
• Answering the ten basic questions you were afraid to ask


Professor Peter Piot, the Director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine: ‘Around June it became clear to me there was something different about this outbreak. I began to get really worried’ Photograph: Leon Neal/AFP

Professor Piot, as a young scientist in Antwerp, you were part of the team that discovered the Ebola virus in 1976. How did it happen?

I still remember exactly. One day in September, a pilot from Sabena Airlines brought us a shiny blue Thermos and a letter from a doctor in Kinshasa in what was then Zaire. In the Thermos, he wrote, there was a blood sample from a Belgian nun who had recently fallen ill from a mysterious sickness in Yambuku, a remote village in the northern part of the country. He asked us to test the sample for yellow fever.

These days, Ebola may only be researched in high-security laboratories. How did you protect yourself back then?

We had no idea how dangerous the virus was. And there were no high-security labs in Belgium. We just wore our white lab coats and protective gloves. When we opened the Thermos, the ice inside had largely melted and one of the vials had broken. Blood and glass shards were floating in the ice water. We fished the other, intact, test tube out of the slop and began examining the blood for pathogens, using the methods that were standard at the time.

But the yellow fever virus apparently had nothing to do with the nun's illness.

No. And the tests for Lassa fever and typhoid were also negative. What, then, could it be? Our hopes were dependent on being able to isolate the virus from the sample. To do so, we injected it into mice and other lab animals. At first nothing happened for several days. We thought that perhaps the pathogen had been damaged from insufficient refrigeration in the Thermos. But then one animal after the next began to die. We began to realise that the sample contained something quite deadly.

But you continued?

Other samples from the nun, who had since died, arrived from Kinshasa. When we were just about able to begin examining the virus under an electron microscope, the World Health Organisation instructed us to send all of our samples to a high-security lab in England. But my boss at the time wanted to bring our work to conclusion no matter what. He grabbed a vial containing virus material to examine it, but his hand was shaking and he dropped it on a colleague's foot. The vial shattered. My only thought was: "Oh, shit!" We immediately disinfected everything, and luckily our colleague was wearing thick leather shoes. Nothing happened to any of us.

In the end, you were finally able to create an image of the virus using the electron microscope.

Yes, and our first thought was: "What the hell is that?" The virus that we had spent so much time searching for was very big, very long and worm-like. It had no similarities with yellow fever. Rather, it looked like the extremely dangerous Marburg virus which, like ebola, causes a haemorrhagic fever. In the 1960s the virus killed several laboratory workers in Marburg, Germany.

Were you afraid at that point?

I knew almost nothing about the Marburg virus at the time. When I tell my students about it today, they think I must come from the stone age. But I actually had to go the library and look it up in an atlas of virology. It was the American Centres for Disease Control which determined a short time later that it wasn't the Marburg virus, but a related, unknown virus. We had also learned in the meantime that hundreds of people had already succumbed to the virus in Yambuku and the area around it.

A few days later, you became one of the first scientists to fly to Zaire.

Yes. The nun who had died and her fellow sisters were all from Belgium. In Yambuku, which had been part of the Belgian Congo, they operated a small mission hospital. When the Belgian government decided to send someone, I volunteered immediately. I was 27 and felt a bit like my childhood hero, Tintin. And, I have to admit, I was intoxicated by the chance to track down something totally new.

Was there any room for fear, or at least worry?

Of course it was clear to us that we were dealing with one of the deadliest infectious diseases the world had ever seen – and we had no idea that it was transmitted via bodily fluids! It could also have been mosquitoes. We wore protective suits and latex gloves and I even borrowed a pair of motorcycle goggles to cover my eyes. But in the jungle heat it was impossible to use the gas masks that we bought in Kinshasa. Even so, the Ebola patients I treated were probably just as shocked by my appearance as they were about their intense suffering. I took blood from around 10 of these patients. I was most worried about accidentally poking myself with the needle and infecting myself that way.

But you apparently managed to avoid becoming infected.

Well, at some point I did actually develop a high fever, a headache and diarrhoea …

... similar to Ebola symptoms?

Exactly. I immediately thought: "Damn, this is it!" But then I tried to keep my cool. I knew the symptoms I had could be from something completely different and harmless. And it really would have been stupid to spend two weeks in the horrible isolation tent that had been set up for us scientists for the worst case. So I just stayed alone in my room and waited. Of course, I didn't get a wink of sleep, but luckily I began feeling better by the next day. It was just a gastrointestinal infection. Actually, that is the best thing that can happen in your life: you look death in the eye but survive. It changed my whole approach, my whole outlook on life at the time.

You were also the one who gave the virus its name. Why Ebola?

On that day our team sat together late into the night – we had also had a couple of drinks – discussing the question. We definitely didn't want to name the new pathogen "Yambuku virus", because that would have stigmatised the place forever. There was a map hanging on the wall and our American team leader suggested looking for the nearest river and giving the virus its name. It was the Ebola river. So by around three or four in the morning we had found a name. But the map was small and inexact. We only learned later that the nearest river was actually a different one. But Ebola is a nice name, isn't it?

In the end, you discovered that the Belgian nuns had unwittingly spread the virus. How did that happen?

In their hospital they regularly gave pregnant women vitamin injections using unsterilised needles. By doing so, they infected many young women in Yambuku with the virus. We told the nuns about the terrible mistake they had made, but looking back I would say that we were much too careful in our choice of words. Clinics that failed to observe this and other rules of hygiene functioned as catalysts in all additional Ebola outbreaks. They drastically sped up the spread of the virus or made the spread possible in the first place. Even in the current Ebola outbreak in west Africa, hospitals unfortunately played this ignominious role in the beginning.

After Yambuku, you spent the next 30 years of your professional life devoted to combating Aids. But now Ebola has caught up to you again. American scientists fear that hundreds of thousands of people could ultimately become infected. Was such an epidemic to be expected?

No, not at all. On the contrary, I always thought that Ebola, in comparison to Aids or malaria, didn't present much of a problem because the outbreaks were always brief and local. Around June it became clear to me that there was something fundamentally different about this outbreak. At about the same time, the aid organisation Médecins Sans Frontières sounded the alarm. We Flemish tend to be rather unemotional, but it was at that point that I began to get really worried.

Why did WHO react so late?

On the one hand, it was because their African regional office isn't staffed with the most capable people but with political appointees. And the headquarters in Geneva suffered large budget cuts that had been agreed to by member states. The department for haemorrhagic fever and the one responsible for the management of epidemic emergencies were hit hard. But since August WHO has regained a leadership role.

There is actually a well-established procedure for curtailing Ebola outbreaks: isolating those infected and closely monitoring those who had contact with them. How could a catastrophe such as the one we are now seeing even happen?

I think it is what people call a perfect storm: when every individual circumstance is a bit worse than normal and they then combine to create a disaster. And with this epidemic there were many factors that were disadvantageous from the very beginning. Some of the countries involved were just emerging from terrible civil wars, many of their doctors had fled and their healthcare systems had collapsed. In all of Liberia, for example, there were only 51 doctors in 2010, and many of them have since died of Ebola.

The fact that the outbreak began in the densely populated border region between Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia ...

… also contributed to the catastrophe. Because the people there are extremely mobile, it was much more difficult than usual to track down those who had had contact with the infected people. Because the dead in this region are traditionally buried in the towns and villages they were born in, there were highly contagious Ebola corpses travelling back and forth across the borders in pickups and taxis. The result was that the epidemic kept flaring up in different places.

For the first time in its history, the virus also reached metropolises such as Monrovia and Freetown. Is that the worst thing that can happen?

In large cities – particularly in chaotic slums – it is virtually impossible to find those who had contact with patients, no matter how great the effort. That is why I am so worried about Nigeria as well. The country is home to mega-cities like Lagos and Port Harcourt, and if the Ebola virus lodges there and begins to spread, it would be an unimaginable catastrophe.

Have we completely lost control of the epidemic?

I have always been an optimist and I think that we now have no other choice than to try everything, really everything. It's good that the United States and some other countries are finally beginning to help. But Germany or even Belgium, for example, must do a lot more. And it should be clear to all of us: This isn't just an epidemic any more. This is a humanitarian catastrophe. We don't just need care personnel, but also logistics experts, trucks, jeeps and foodstuffs. Such an epidemic can destabilise entire regions. I can only hope that we will be able to get it under control. I really never thought that it could get this bad.

What can really be done in a situation when anyone can become infected on the streets and, like in Monrovia, even the taxis are contaminated?

We urgently need to come up with new strategies. Currently, helpers are no longer able to care for all the patients in treatment centres. So caregivers need to teach family members who are providing care to patients how to protect themselves from infection to the extent possible. This on-site educational work is currently the greatest challenge. Sierra Leone experimented with a three-day curfew in an attempt to at least flatten out the infection curve a bit. At first I thought: "That is totally crazy." But now I wonder, "why not?" At least, as long as these measures aren't imposed with military power.

A three-day curfew sounds a bit desperate.

Yes, it is rather medieval. But what can you do? Even in 2014, we hardly have any way to combat this virus.

Do you think we might be facing the beginnings of a pandemic?

There will certainly be Ebola patients from Africa who come to us in the hopes of receiving treatment. And they might even infect a few people here who may then die. But an outbreak in Europe or North America would quickly be brought under control. I am more worried about the many people from India who work in trade or industry in west Africa. It would only take one of them to become infected, travel to India to visit relatives during the virus's incubation period, and then, once he becomes sick, go to a public hospital there. Doctors and nurses in India, too, often don't wear protective gloves. They would immediately become infected and spread the virus.

The virus is continually changing its genetic makeup. The more people who become infected, the greater the chance becomes that it will mutate ...


... which might speed its spread. Yes, that really is the apocalyptic scenario. Humans are actually just an accidental host for the virus, and not a good one. From the perspective of a virus, it isn't desirable for its host, within which the pathogen hopes to multiply, to die so quickly. It would be much better for the virus to allow us to stay alive longer.

Could the virus suddenly change itself such that it could be spread through the air?

Like measles, you mean? Luckily that is extremely unlikely. But a mutation that would allow Ebola patients to live a couple of weeks longer is certainly possible and would be advantageous for the virus. But that would allow Ebola patients to infect many, many more people than is currently the case.

But that is just speculation, isn't it?

Certainly. But it is just one of many possible ways the virus could change to spread itself more easily. And it is clear that the virus is mutating.

You and two colleagues wrote a piece for the Wall Street Journal supporting the testing of experimental drugs. Do you think that could be the solution?

Patients could probably be treated most quickly with blood serum from Ebola survivors, even if that would likely be extremely difficult given the chaotic local conditions. We need to find out now if these methods, or if experimental drugs like ZMapp, really help. But we should definitely not rely entirely on new treatments. For most people, they will come too late in this epidemic. But if they help, they should be made available for the next outbreak.

Testing of two vaccines is also beginning. It will take a while, of course, but could it be that only a vaccine can stop the epidemic?

I hope that's not the case. But who knows? Maybe.

In Zaire during that first outbreak, a hospital with poor hygiene was responsible for spreading the illness. Today almost the same thing is happening. Was Louis Pasteur right when he said: "It is the microbes who will have the last word"?

Of course, we are a long way away from declaring victory over bacteria and viruses. HIV is still here; in London alone, five gay men become infected daily. An increasing number of bacteria are becoming resistant to antibiotics. And I can still see the Ebola patients in Yambuku, how they died in their shacks and we couldn't do anything except let them die. In principle, it's still the same today. That is very depressing. But it also provides me with a strong motivation to do something. I love life. That is why I am doing everything I can to convince the powerful in this world to finally send sufficient help to west Africa. Now!