Tag Archives: pennsylvania

Emma The Amish Model On Howard Stern Show:New American Pinup Girl

Stumble This Digg This Share on Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet This *Sponsored Links* *Sponsored Links* Emma The Amish Model On Howard Stern Show:New American Pinup Girl – Howard Stern sure knows how to create a buzz for his radio interviews. Previous rumors had stated that Stern was being considered as a judge for “American Idol.” Some had speculated that he would be Simon Cowell’s replacement. He has been able to create a buzz again with his latest guest on his show, Emma the Amish Model. She sat in on the Howard Stern Show on Tuesday May 11 for two hours. Since her appearance on the show she has been searched for all over Google. At one point she was able to take over the top two trending spots. *Sponsored Links* She is from the Pennsylvania Dutch County and discussed her former lifestyle at length while she appeared on the Howard Stern Show. She indicated that while she loved everyone that she had left behind, she had decided that the lifestyle of the Amish was not a suitable one for her. It appears that the lifestyle that she is looking for is that of modeling. She is currently a part of “New American Pin-Up” girls, and was the April girl of the month. She was said to be “100% Amish”, according to the web site. She also goes by Bubblegum Girl on the site, most likely because a number of her pictures show her posing with a bubblegum machine. *Sponsored Links* Original post: Emma The Amish Model On Howard Stern Show:New American Pinup Girl Related posts: Parents’ Group To ‘American Idol’: Don’t Hire Howard Stern Executives at a parents’ rights group in the U.S…. Howard Stern Confirms ‘Idol’ Rumors Shock jock Howard Stern has confirmed reports he has… Jamie Jungers Howard Stern Tiger Woods Beauty Pageant Winner Stumble This Digg This Share on Delicious Share on… Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin .

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Emma The Amish Model On Howard Stern Show:New American Pinup Girl

Pennsylvania

We spent today in Pennsylvania, joined by former Governor Tom Ridge. We started off by touring General Electric Transportation’s Erie plant and hybrid locomotive production line. We met many of the employees and were able to see the new hybrid locomotive they designed. I met Jeff Immelt, GE Chairman and CEO, and watched Dad conduct an employee town hall at the facility. From there we flew to Harrisburg where he participated in some local interviews and attended a finance event. It was another great day on the trail! Song of the Day/Weekend: “Cold Hands (Warm Heart)” by Brendan Benson

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Pennsylvania

Ohio and Pennsylvania

The Straight Talk Express “Blogette Edition” continued to roll through Ohio and Pennsylvania over the weekend, from book signings to thanking volunteers to squeezing in some time at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.  We have been going nonstop, being powered by the enthusiasm of those we meet.  You guys have been phenomenal!  It was very cool campaigning with two U.S. Olympians – Larsen Jensen, a member of the U.S. Olympic Swimming team and Jason Read, a member of the U.S. 0lympic Rowing team.  They’re incredibly nice guys and it was great to have their support on the trail.  More to come from tonight’s debate in Nashville! Song of the Day: “Born to be Wild” by Steppenwolf

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Ohio and Pennsylvania

Road Trippin’

Our campaign roadtrip continues through Pennsylvania with Olympic athletes Larsen Jensen and Jason Reid. Again, I want to thank both of them for coming out with us on the trail and supporting my Dad’s campaign. I am having such a good time and the pictures speak for themselves! Song of the Day: “Baba O’Riley” by The Who

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Road Trippin’

Man Wrongfully Imprisoned for Decades Happy to Start Relearning Life

Man wrongfully imprisoned for decades happy to start relearning life By Rich Phillips, CNN May 24, 2010 8:43 p.m. EDT Tampa, Florida (CNN) — Meeting 54-year-old James Bain, the one thing that stands out is that the smile never seems to leave his face. He appears happy and positive, and the bitterness that might be buried inside a man who was wrongly sent to prison for 35 years is nowhere to be found. “I kind of see myself as a man of God and being like Joseph,” he said. “In a sense, I feel like a bear, coming out of hibernation. Like, they come out to eat, mine would be coming out to enjoy what I have missed.” Bain has missed a lot. His life was returned to him and his family in December, when a Florida judge freed him after DNA testing proved he did not kidnap and rape a 9-year-old boy in 1974 in Lake Wales, Florida. With the help of the Innocence Project, a national public policy organization dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted people through DNA tests, Bain left a Florida courtroom and entered a world he had left a lifetime ago. He is now on the outside, in a world that has changed technologically and socially, and one in which he must now learn how to live — again. “I've been planning on going back to school, and getting ready to take my driving test again, and hoping to get a motorcycle license,” Bain said. In the backyard of his mother's home in Tampa, Florida, Bain said that he'd like to tour the country on his motorcycle. CNN spoke with him amidst grapefruit and orange trees that weren't even planted when he went to prison so many years ago. “You spend 35 years in prison, and just the little things, like a grapefruit tree or an orange tree … those had vanished for me,” he said. “I never thought I'd get a chance to see another one of these.” The past six months have been a whirlwind, and Bain has become a celebrity. He was brought to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by the Martin Luther King Jr. Association for Nonviolence to ring the Liberty Bell on Martin Luther King day. When it was revealed that his favorite movie was “Titanic,” the owners of the Orlando, Florida, exhibit “Titanic — the Experience” invited him and his family to spend the day at the site, where characters from the movie tell the story of the sunken vessel. Noting the movie symbolized hope and strength for him while in prison, Bain said the film sends chills through his body. “To me, it means love and care for what you feel about other persons, like my sisters and mother. I think about that key word from 'Titanic,' 'Don't ever let go,' ” Bain said. Bain was invited to Orlando by Lowell Lytle, the man who portrays the Titanic's captain, Edward Smith. Lytle was touched by the torment James experienced while wrongly imprisoned. “It just hit me how horrible that must have been. That man's youth was taken away from him,” Lytle said. “I thought, I need to do something to help this man. If I can bring a smile to his face … to be able to take him through this exhibit here, and take him through an experience he will remember forever, that was fun for me.” During the past six months, Bain also has spoken to church groups and organizations. “I try to show whoever I'm speaking to about choices. That's my key word. Choice. Only you can make it because you have to live with it,” he said. “My choice was snatched. … It was taken from me. They didn't leave me no alternative. It's like the old saying, the right place at the wrong time.” But Bain insists that he's not bitter. He said he believes he's returned to a better society — a better country than the one he left in 1974. He points to the fact that an African-American was elected president. “I saw a big difference when the president changed, which I never dreamed would happen,” he said. “To see that change, that goes to show me, now, that there's a lot of good that we've done in this country.” Bain has been living with his mother in Tampa. He's been paid to speak in a couple of places, money that will help tide him over until his big payday. He and his attorneys have filed with the state of Florida for the restitution that Bain is entitled to — $50,000 for every year he spent behind bars, for a total of $1.75 million. That's a lot of money to most of us, but not nearly enough to make up for 35 years, Bain said. “Not even if they gave me $100 million,” he said. “Even if they gave me that, it still wouldn't replace what I lost.” He said it's the money that's keeping him on his guard — and is one reason why he doesn't yet have a girlfriend. “I just don't want no woman to want me for my money, to be honest with you,” he said. “… You don't know what they have planned.” added by: EthicalVegan

Mathematicians Solve 140-Year-Old Boltzmann Equation

Two University of Pennsylvania mathematicians have found solutions to a 140-year-old, 7-dimensional equation that were not known to exist for more than a century despite its widespread use in modeling the behavior of gases. added by: danteglam

Bret Michaels Talks Losing Virginity On ‘When I Was 17’

‘It involved a motorcycle, a blanket and an 8-track,’ the Poison frontman admits on Saturday’s episode. By Eric Ditzian Photo: MTV News It’s been a harrowing but, ultimately, hopeful month for Bret Michaels , who suffered a near-fatal brain hemorrhage in late April, only to recover enough that he was able to tape an interview with Oprah Winfrey , airing Wednesday (May 19). Michaels is also set to appear on Sunday’s finale of “The Celebrity Apprentice.” It’s a dramatic turn of events for the Poison frontman, but it seems the 47-year-old star has always had a way of putting a theatrical spin on whatever he pursues. “I lost my virginity around 17. It involved a motorcycle, a blanket — I’m going to admit it — it was an 8-track pop-tape player at the Mechanicsburg Fish Hatchery,” Michaels reveals during the new episode of MTV’s “When I Was 17,” which airs Saturday at 11 a.m. We take it all this added up to one heck of a romantic gesture back in Pennsylvania in the early ’80s. Michaels, though, considered himself lucky to even be in a position to lose his virginity, given his face was covered in pimples at the time. “I worked at Bob’s Big Boy,” he explained. “I was the ultimate busboy, and eventually I got to the ultimate job, which was deep-fry cook. I’ve already got an acne problem, and now the grease flying up on my face isn’t really helping the situation.” Zits or not, Michaels had a way with the ladies. He also had a feeling that he wouldn’t be working at a fast-food joint for long. “I had a couple buddies there,” Michaels said. “We loved to raise hell. We’d go out, hang out by the dumpster on our break, because that was the cool thing to do. You make it work. You had to tell yourself, ‘It’s going to get better than this.’ ” “When I Was 17” — this week featuring Kevin Jonas, Bret Michaels and Katharine McPhee — airs Saturday at 11 a.m. on MTV.

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Bret Michaels Talks Losing Virginity On ‘When I Was 17’

Joe Sestak defeats Arlen Specter in Pennsylvania Primary

U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter on Tuesday was defeated in a Democratic primary in his bid for a sixth term after taking the risky step of switching from the GOP. Voters picked U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak as the party's nominee and rejected the 80-year-old Specter in his first Democratic campaign since his Republican Party defection. With 79 percent of precincts reporting, Sestak received 435,630 votes, or 53 percent; Specter received 384,027 votes, about 47 percent. The vote also was a defeat for President Barack Obama, who supported Specter when he abandoned the Republican Party last year. In speaking to supporters at a downtown Philadelphia hotel after the race was called, Specter thanked Obama for his support. Specter said he had called Sestak to congratulate him and tell him “I think it's vital to keep this seat in the Democratic Party and I will support him.” Specter left while holding hands with his wife, Joan. He didn't answer questions from reporters. The moderate Specter had cast his switch as a decision of principle after inflaming the GOP by voting for Obama's economic stimulus bill. But many Democratic voters questioned his motives. Sestak faces Republican Pat Toomey in the fall election. Specter has been a fixture in American politics for three decades and served in the Senate since 1981, and his switch to the Democrats was a theme that dominated the race. Obama and other top Democrats embraced Specter, who used his willingness to cross party lines on key votes to bolster his clout in Congress. Sestak, a retired Navy vice admiral who has represented a suburban Philadelphia district since 2007, accused Specter of switching parties to save his job. He said Specter couldn't be trusted to support Democratic Party values. In the days before the primary, Specter and Sestak also argued over who had the best chance of beating Toomey in the fall. Specter leaned heavily on Obama's endorsement, repeatedly citing a television ad that used footage from a September rally in Philadelphia at which Obama spoke and get-out-the-vote efforts by the key unions backing him. Sestak tried to harness voter anger over political gridlock and the recession, with Pennsylvania's unemployment rate at 9 percent, its highest in more than a added by: UrbanGypsy

The Most Loathed Candidates Running in Today’s Primary Elections [Polidicks]

It’s election day! And as we all know, elections are about voting out politicians who we hate—especially this year, when a bunch of “establishment” candidates could lose. Let us help you figure out who you should hate today. More

Best Food For Men And Women For Their Different Nutritional Needs

It is a common knowledge that men and women have different nutritional needs. According to Reader’s Digest Magazine: One in five women have a history of painful urinary tract infections. “I had three in one year,” says Patty Buxton*, a Colorado middle-school teacher. Reading that cranberry juice may help prevent these infections, Buxton went on a regimen a year ago, and since then she’s been infection-free. She thinks cranberry juice did the trick. Cranberry juice isn’t the only food that offers protection from specific illnesses. Here’s a list of disease-fighting foods for men and women. Foods for Men 1. Tomato Sauce This help fight against prostate cancer. So say researchers at Harvard, who studied the eating habits of more than 47,000 male health professionals. They found that men who ate tomato sauce two to four times per week had a 35 percent lower risk of developing prostate cancer than men who ate none. A carotenoid called lycopene, which tomatoes contain in abundance, appeared to be responsible. Lycopene should be cooked with some kind of fat to be effective. 2. Oysters An aphrodisiac.  Just two to three oysters deliver a full day’s supply of zinc, a mineral critical for normal functioning of the male reproductive system. Scientists are divided over reports that sperm counts have declined over the last 50 years and that environmental factors are to blame. Nutritional deficiencies do seem to be the cause of certain cases of low testosterone. Getting adequate zinc is sometimes the answer (11 mg per day is recommended for men; more than 40 mg can pose risks). In one trial, 22 men with low testosterone levels and sperm counts were given zinc every day for 45 to 50 days. Testosterone levels and sperm counts rose. 3. Broccoli Cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, may protect against bladder cancer. It’s one of the most common cancers in this country, and affects two to three times as many men as women. Scientists analyzed the diets of nearly 50,000 men and discovered that those who ate five servings or more per week of cruciferous veggies were half as likely to develop bladder cancer over a ten-year period as men who rarely ate them. And broccoli and cabbage were singled out as the most protective foods. 4. Peanut Butter Heart disease is the leading killer of men and women, but men fall victim at an earlier age. Researchers from Pennsylvania State University compared the cholesterol-lowering effect of the American Heart Association’s Step II Diet with a higher-fat diet based on peanuts. The AHA plan included more carbohydrates. The peanut regimen was 36 percent fat. After 24 days both diets lowered “bad” LDL cholesterol. But the peanut plan also caused a drop in blood fats called triglycerides and did not decrease HDL, the “good” cholesterol. The AHA diet raised levels of triglycerides and lowered levels of HDL. “Peanut butter is a little higher in fat,” says Penny Kris-Etherton, Ph.D., the lead author of the Penn State study. “But it’s the type that’s good for you — monounsaturated fat.” Researchers have predicted that the peanut diet could reduce heart-disease risk even more than could the AHA diet. Just don’t go nutty plastering on the tasty spread, since it is high in calories. 5. Watermelon More men suffer from high blood pressure than do women. Research suggests that foods rich in potassium can reduce the risk of high blood pressure and stroke. The evidence is so convincing that the Food and Drug Administration recently allowed food labels to bear a health claim about the connection between potassium-rich foods and blood pressure. “There isn’t a dietary requirement for potassium,” says Kathleen Cappellano, nutrition-information manager at Tufts University in Boston. “But a good goal is about 2000 milligrams or more a day.” Watermelon, a rich source of this mineral, has more potassium — 664 mg — in one large slice than the amount found in a banana or a cup of orange juice. So cut yourself another slice and enjoy the taste of summer. Foods for Women 1. Papaya This tropical fruit packs about twice the vitamin C of an orange. Add it to your arsenal against gallbladder disease, which afflicts twice as many women as men. After analyzing the blood of over 13,000 people, scientists from the University of California, San Francisco, found that women who had lower levels of vitamin C were more likely to have gallbladder illnesses. One medium papaya (about ten ounces), with its 188 mg of vitamin C and a mere 119 calories, is a refreshing source of the vitamin. The once exotic fruit now can be found in most supermarkets. 2. Flaxseed Bakers use this nutty-flavored seed mainly to add flavor and fiber. But scientists see the tiny reddish-brown seed, rich in estrogenlike compounds called lignans, as a potential weapon against breast cancer. An exciting report at last year’s San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium showed that adding flaxseed to the diet of women with breast cancer effectively slowed tumor growth. You can flavor your muffins with flaxseed, but the easiest way to get the beneficial lignans is to sprinkle a few tablespoons of ground flaxseed on your morning cereal. Look for the seeds in health food stores or in supermarkets on the flour aisle. They’re easy to grind in a blender or coffee grinder. But get seeds — there are no lignans in the oil. 3. Tofu Foods high in soy protein can lower cholesterol and may minimize menopausal hot flashes and strengthen bone. Isoflavones, plant chemicals in soybeans that have a structure similar to estrogen, may be the reason. Though animal studies form the bulk of the evidence, a human study found that 90 mg of isoflavones was beneficial to bone (specifically the spine). And two other studies suggest that 50 to 76 mg of isoflavones a day may offer some relief from hot flashes. A half-cup of tofu contains about 25 to 35 mg of isoflavones. 4. Buffalo Meat Due largely to menstruation, women tend to be anemic more than men. And low iron levels in blood can cause severe fatigue. To get a good dose of iron, try bison. Bison, or buffalo, meat is lean and has what diet-conscious women want — lots of iron and less fat than most cuts of beef. “The iron content is about 3 milligrams in a 3 1/2-ounce uncooked portion,” says Marty Marchello, Ph.D., at North Dakota State University. “That portion contains less than 3 grams of fat.” Buffalo meat can help boost energy and lower weight. And you don’t have to have a home on the range to get some bison anymore. You can pick it up at many supermarkets across the United States, or through mail order or on the Internet. 5. Collard Greens This humble vegetable may help fight osteoporosis, which afflicts many women late in life. In addition to getting adequate amounts of calcium and vitamin D, some studies suggest that vitamin K may have a bone-protective effect as well. Based on data from one of the largest studies of women, the Nurses’ Health Study, researchers discovered that women who ate enough vitamin K-rich foods (at least 109 micrograms of the vitamin daily) were 30 percent less likely to suffer a hip fracture during ten years of follow-up than women who ate less. Researchers point out that dark-green leafy vegetables — Brussels sprouts, spinach, broccoli — are all good sources of the vitamin. But collard greens, with about 375 micrograms per half-cup, are among the best. There you have it: five great foods for women and for men that can keep both of you well fed and healthy too. Best Food For Men And Women For Their Different Nutritional Needs is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading