Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Reference/lnstruction Librarian (Part-Time) (Newton Campus) | Jobs ...

This is a list of job announcements for any type of library within Georgia and the Southeast.

Posted by: Georgia Perimeter College

Posted date: 2012-Dec-11

Location: Georgia Perimeter College

Georgia Perimeter College seeks an enthusiastic, innovative, service-oriented part-time Librarian for the Newton Campus who participates in reference services, library instruction, collection development, and circulation in a team environment. The part-time Librarian will possess excellent customer service skills, and a focus on information literacy. The part-time Librarian will be prepared to apply new ideas and technologies to reference and instruction services including the creation of tutorials, research guides, and other instructional materials. The part-time Librarian will serve both face-to-face and online students and faculty.

*The successful candidate must be committed to working with students, staff and faulty of diverse socioeconomic, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds, including those with different levels of academic preparation and varying physical and learning abilities.
*Excellent oral and written communication skills.
*Excellent customer service skills.
*Ability to work independently as well as with others in a team environment.
*Proficiency with library catalog, Voyager ILS circulation module, Microsoft Office software, and GALILEO databases.
*Must be able to work flexible work hours, including nights, Saturdays and Sundays.

Source: http://www.georgialibraries.org/jobs/index.php?post_id=957

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Coping with Grief during the Holidays with Judy Brizendine 12/12 by ...

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    They are smart, they are gorgeous, they are talented and they are the wives and ex-wives of some of Hollywood?s Prince Charmings. Tune in to The Halli Casser-Jayne Show, Talk Radio for Fine Minds and Lovers of Hollywood Wives as they chat with Alana Stewart, Eliza Roberts and Joan Benedict Steiger.

  • Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Don Felder was the lyrical, edgy, unmistakable lead guitarist of The Eagles for 27 years. He joins Storytellers to talk about his first solo album in 30 years, Road to Forever.

  • From conversations with world figures to to inspiring the next generation of leaders, Tavis Smiley continues is an outstanding voice for change. TIME Magazine honored Smiley in 2009 as one of "The World's 100 Most Influential People."

  • Rhonda Vincent has been coined, "The Queen of Bluegrass". She chats with Jammin Jukebox Radio Show about her amazing, successful career and her latest release, "Sunday Morning Singing" which is ranked #1 on the Billboard Bluegrass music charts.

  • Holiday meal panning can be harrowing; but it doesn?t have to be. Westport, CT nutritionist and wellness coach Alison Held joins Los Angeles-based registered dietitian and nutrition consultant Lauren O?Conner to discuss meal planning and healthy tips for the holidays.

  • The Down & Dirty welcomes comedian Rodney Perry. He's worked with personalities like Mo'Nique and Tyler Perry, hosts his own radio show Rodney Perry Live, and is now the master of ceremonies on Off the Chain, a weekly standup showcase on the Bounce TV network!

  • Visit the Beautiful and Friendly City of Montreal! Travel Brigade tours the Canadiens Hockey Hall of Fame, Underground City, Mount Royal Park, Olympic Park and Tower, Le Ronde amusement park, jet boating the Lachine Rapids and the Montreal Botanical Gardens.

  • Kevin Sorbo quickly rose to stardom in the title role of the hit series, ?Hercules, the Legendary Journeys?. The immense popularity of the 5 initial 2-hour telefilms in 1993 resulted in the launch of a weekly series by 1994.

  • On-Line With Douglas visits with the legendary actress Jeanne Cooper who is known for her infamous role as Katherine Chancellor on the #1 Daytime drama, The Young and the Restless. She stops by to chat about her career including her new book, "Not Young Still Restless."

  • Former 1st Round NBA draft pick Luther Wright joins Butz and Butz Sports Radio to discuss his fall from grace as an NBA star to becoming homeless and broke. He'll talk about his book A Perfect Fit that tells the story of his rise, fall..and making his way back

  • LOTL RADIO Welcomes Kat Webb debut her new CD' "A Better Picture"In May 2011, she made her solo debut with ?An Old Soul?, a compilation of jazz standards and soul classics re-imagined for the modern listener, recorded entirely in analog with a live band to rec

  • Laura Theodore, the Jazzy Vegetarian welcomes singer-songwriter and vegetarian Laura Cheadle. Ms. Cheadle has opened for The Jonas Brothers, Spin Doctors, Garland Jeffreys, John Oates/Hall and Oates, and Average White Band among others.

  • Walking Dead Actor Vincent M. Ward has a phenomenal acting career. His success and consistent work ethic has set him apart. He has acquired a following of fans worldwide. He will be our very special guest on Celebrity Spotlight.

  • This December, in Teotihuacan, ?the place where humans awake and become God,? you have a chance to participate in the event of a lifetime?closing out the Mayan calendar and ushering in the new era?alongside international bestselling author don Miguel Ruiz.

  • For the past 9 years, this chaunteuse has been able to hold her own as a background singer for the Legendary Ms. Patti LaBelle, now the dynamic Mary Griffin has released an incredible solo project that is a force of nature. Join in on the fun!

  • Faith ABeliever welcomes, author minister & producer Devon Franklin who has appeared on Oprah, been in the Pulpit of Bishop TD Jakes; worked with Will Smith, and brought us great films like The Pursuit of Happyness. We will be discussing his new book: Produced

  • Tune in to listen to Season 2, Episode 2 of Verses and Flow with Luke James, and spoken word by Omar Holmon, Tasha Jones and Javon Johnson Brought to you by Lexus

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/livingfullyafter40/2012/12/12/coping-with-grief-during-the-holidays-with-judy-brizendine

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    Senate's Brodkorb legal bill fueled by 'settlement efforts' | MinnPost

    You have to wonder how different things would be if some GOP benefactor had simply handed Michael Brodkorb ?$200K months ago. Brian Bakst of the AP reports: ?Legal costs associated with a Minnesota Senate scandal involving a former Republican leader and her top aide have nearly doubled, a new invoice made public Tuesday showed. The Associated Press obtained the invoice ? prepared by the Senate's private attorney ? that contain $90,000 in new expenses. That brings overall cost to just less than $200,000. A Senate official familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak for attribution says the spiking costs reflect aggressive efforts to settle or dismiss the case. ? Most of the billing by the firm Larkin Hoffman Daly and Lindgren cover legal research, brief preparation and conferences involving key players. There also are charges for reviewing footage of interviews Brodkorb granted to media outlets in mid-October.? So, in other words, it costs taxpayers every time Brodkorb gives an interview.

    Directly related to Monday?s story about influential GOP legislators operating in both private insurance and legislative health ?reform,? Tom Scheck of MPR says today: ?The Healthy Minnesota Contribution Program was supposed to shift 4,200 people from the MinnesotaCare program to a voucher system. But the program itself is having a hard time getting off the ground. Judie Nyholm has not had health insurance since July, when the 61-year-old Brooklyn Center resident was dropped from MinnesotaCare. "One month came up, and I had $52 a month too much for one month, so they dropped me and told me that I could go on the Healthy Minnesota Contribution Program. ? The Healthy Minnesota Contribution Program was a top priority for GOP legislative leaders when they took control of the Legislature in January 2011. They initially pushed to give vouchers to nearly everyone enrolled in MinnesotaCare. Their efforts were scaled back when Republicans reached a budget deal with Gov. Mark Dayton in 2011. The move is expected to save taxpayers $36 million over the next three years. Republican state Sen. David Hann of Eden Prairie is chief author of the Senate bill that created the new program and also sits on the board for the Minnesota Association of Health Underwriters, which lobbied for the bill.? You gotta love that wholesome, earnest ?Healthy Minnesota? branding ?

    There?s a move afoot to nudge Minnesota?s moose up the ladder of concern. The Pioneer Press says: ?The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is highlighting concern about the state's declining moose population by proposing a change in the animal's status. The DNR wants to list moose as a ?species of concern.? The status wouldn't limit hunting?? that would happen only if the moose moves up on the list from ?species of concern? to threatened or endangered status. ?It doesn't do anything for the species legally. But it means they (DNR) are paying attention to what's going on. It's an official heads-up that something is wrong, even if they aren't endangered yet,? said Ron Moen, a wildlife biologist studying moose at the Natural Resources Research Institute of the University of Minnesota Duluth.?

    The GleanThis week?s survey says Minnesota eighth-graders are doing really, really well. Megan Boldt of the PiPress writes: ?Minnesota eighth-graders continued to make gains in math when compared with their peers worldwide, and their science performance remained near the top internationally. Those findings are in the 2011 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study results, released Tuesday, Dec. 11. The largest study of its kind tested students in 57 countries, provinces and states. Minnesota scores in eighth-grade math increased from 532 in 2007 to 545 in 2011. The average score in the U.S. was 509 and internationally was 500. Five countries and the state of Massachusetts posted significantly higher scores than Minnesota on eighth-grade math, about the same when Minnesota participated in the test in 2007.?

    Rayon ? from trees? Adam Belz of the Strib says: ?The future of the paper industry is not necessarily paper. Even here [in Cloquet], where Minnesotans have made paper since 1898 and Sappi Fine Paper's white cloud of steam pours into the sky above the St. Louis River valley, industry leaders are casting about for new products to make from trees. The South African owners of the state's largest mill have an idea: rayon. Sappi is spending $170 million to convert the mill into one that refines wood into fiber that can be turned into thread. Come springtime, the mill will stop making its own pulp. ?Paper is declining, has been for 10 years and most likely will continue,? said Rick Dwyer, the mill's manager. Paper mills are looking hard at the chemical business, trying to figure out where trees fit into global demand for biomaterial. Researchers want to make bulletproof vests, nail polish remover, dish detergent and even airplane wings from chemical components of wood.? Inevitably: Ye Olde Founding Father Classic Dentures ?

    The latest adventure in ?Fire, Aim, Ready? ? Kay Fate of the Rochester Post-Bulletin says: ?A 16-year-old girl is in critical condition today after police say she was shot by her grandfather late Monday night. ? The man said the couple had been asleep when they heard a noise outside, the report says. The man grabbed his 9 mm handgun and told his wife to call the police as he went to investigate, according to Rochester Police Capt. Brian Winters. The homeowner saw a figure at the back door and fired at least two shots, one of which struck the 16-year-old girl in the upper torso, Winters said. Preliminary reports from medical staff indicate she'll survive her injuries, he said. The teenager has been living with her grandparents for a couple of months, Winters said. ? The homeowner told officers he recalled there had been a burglary recently at the Rochester Recreation Center, and that was on his mind, Winters said. The facility is less than a mile north of the residence.? Close enough for The Castle Doctrine.

    The Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board is going to meet and, supposedly, offer the Legislature some ideas to deal with the opaque mess that is Citizens United. At MPR, Catharine Richert says: ?To the average voter, it's difficult to distinguish between express advocacy ads and the issue advocacy ads the board may want more information about. The former ads tells voters to support or oppose a specific candidate and are paid for by a political fund, which has to report how much it has spent on the ads and where the money comes from. The latter ads may come in the form of a voter guide or a flier that criticizes or praises a candidate for their voting records, but don't go so far as to use the words ?vote for? or ?vote against.? As a result, groups don't have to say how much they've spent on such ads or where there money has come from. Groups don't have to give the board information about so-called electioneering communications either, which typically tell voters to thank their lawmakers for supporting specific policies. During this past election season, several groups influencing Minnesota legislative races took advantage of these nuances in the state's campaign finance rules.? If you can take a high level of infuriation, dial up Kai Ryssdal?s Frontline piece on the same games-playing in Montana.

    In Mankato, Dan Nienaber of the Free Press reports on the guy who killed two women while having sex as he drove: ?Saying he would trade his life for the lives of his two victims ?in a heartbeat,? Mark Chalin sobbed Monday as he begged a judge to not send him to prison for a 2011 crash that killed two women. ? Chalin?s attorney, Jacob Birkholz, asked District Court Judge Bradley Walker to issue a sentence below the 48 to 58 months recommended by sentencing guidelines. Birkholz said Chalin should receive 10 years of probation with the condition he serve one year in prison with work release privileges. That way he could start paying restitution through earnings from his minimum wage job at a fast-food restaurant, Birkholz said. ? His brother, Steve Chalin of St. Peter, told Walker he used to work at the prison in Stillwater. He said prison isn?t the place for Mark because nothing good ever happens there and ?he?s not as dumb as he was when he did this.? ?

    Power Line just hasn?t been as much fun since Election Day. We all miss the fanboy giddiness over Mitt Romney?s campaigning chops. But, John Hinderaker has a post up saying: ?Knowledgeable observers have always known that the U.S. cannot come close to balancing its budget by increasing taxes on the rich, for the simple reason that we have nowhere near enough rich people, and our rich people have nowhere near enough money. ? In a closely related phenomenon, Democrats are changing their tune on the Bush tax cuts. For 20 years, they have told us that the Bush tax cuts only benefited the rich. Now that they are about to expire, Democrats are having to execute some fancy footwork, and the American Enterprise Institute explains: ? if the Bush cuts actually were just ?tax cuts for the rich,? then their expiration couldn?t hurt the middle class. On the other hand, if their expiration would hurt the middle class, then characterizing them as ?tax cuts for the rich? was a false message all along.? ? Go ahead, read that again (or dial it up and read the whole thing). Then ask yourself if either of these guys would buy a used car from the other???? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???

    Source: http://www.minnpost.com/glean/2012/12/senates-brodkorb-legal-bill-fueled-settlement-efforts

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    physician marne: How to Avoid Heart Disease | Health and Fitness ...

    Heart disease consists of a number of problems affecting blood vessels in the heart and throughout the body. The types of heart disease are:

    Coronary artery disease, which is also known as CAD, is the most common form of heart disease that leads to heart attacks. CAD is when the arteries become hard and narrow. This causes the blood to have a hard time flowing properly leaving the heart without the amounts of blood it needs to function correctly.

    CAD leads to angina, which is pain in the chest feeling like a squeezing pain in the chest and sometimes in the arms, neck, jaw, and back. Some people state it also feels like indigestion. Angina is not a heart attack, yet it can be a sign of a future heart attack. Heart attack is another element of CAD. This occurs when the arteries are either completely blocked or severely damaged.

    Heart failure happens when the heart is unable to pump the blood through the body, leaving the primary organs to receive insufficient amounts of blood and oxygen. The signs of heart failure are shortness of breath or feeling like there is not enough air, swelling in the legs, ankles, and feet, and extreme tiredness or fatigue.

    Heart arrhythmia is the changing of the heartbeat. People suffering from this complain of dizziness, feeling faint, out of breath, and having chest pains. In some cases, the irregular heartbeat is harmless yet in others, it results in surgery to install a pacemaker.

    Women need to worry about heart disease since one out of four women in America die of heart disease. In 2004, nearly 60more women died of cardiovascular disease than all forms of cancer combined. The odds of developing heart disease; increases with age. Both men and women have heart attacks yet women die more frequently from them then men.

    To help prevent heart diseases know your blood pressure. People with high blood pressure do not always show signs so it is recommended to have your blood pressure checked every 1 to 2 years.

    Avoid smoking since as it is one of the leading contributors to heart disease.

    Get tested for diabetes. People with diabetes have increased risks of heart disease and other serious health problems.

    Get your cholesterol checked. High cholesterol clogs the arteries keeping your heart from getting the blood it needs. This leads to heart attacks.

    Maintain a healthy weight. Being overweight increases your risks of heart disease.

    Limit alcohol consumption to one drink a day with no more than a 12-ounce beer or a 5-ounce glass of wine.

    Find healthy ways to deal with stress. Stress is a silent factor for heart disease.

    Changing your current life style can help reduce the risks of heart disease.

    Add exercise and a healthy diet to your life to improve the quality of life and reduce the risks of heart disease.

    Source: http://healthandfitnesstutor.com/how-to-avoid-heart-disease/

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    Source: http://physician-marne.blogspot.com/2012/12/how-to-avoid-heart-disease-health-and.html

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    Tuesday, December 11, 2012

    Structure of carbon's 'Hoyle state' revealed

    Dec. 10, 2012 ? A North Carolina State University researcher has taken a "snapshot" of the way particles combine to form carbon-12, the element that makes all life on Earth possible. And the picture looks like a bent arm.

    Carbon-12 can only exist when three alpha particles, or helium-4 nuclei, combine in a very specific way. This combination is known as the Hoyle state. NC State physicist Dean Lee and German colleagues Evgeny Epelbaum, Hermann Krebs and Ulf-G. Meissner had previously confirmed the existence of the Hoyle state using a numerical lattice that allowed the researchers to simulate how the protons and neutrons interact. When the researchers ran their simulations on the lattice, the Hoyle state appeared together with other observed states of carbon-12, proving the theory correct from first principles.

    But they also wanted to find out how the nucleons (the protons and neutrons inside the nucleus of an atom) were arranged inside the nucleus of carbon-12. This would enable them to "see" the structure of the Hoyle state. Using the same lattice, the researchers, along with collaborator Timo Laehde, found that carbon-12's six protons and six neutrons formed three "alpha clusters" of four nucleons each. At low energy, the alpha clusters tended to clump together in a compact triangular formation. But for the Hoyle state, which is an excited energy state, the three alpha clusters combined in a "bent arm" formation.

    The researchers' findings will appear this month in Physical Review Letters.

    "It's interesting that a straight chain seems not to be the preferred configuration for the Hoyle state," Lee says. "A bend in the chain seems necessary. This work leads us to the question of what other nuclei have such alpha cluster shapes. These would be rather exotic structures in nuclear physics and open some really interesting questions regarding shape and stability. For example, can we have longer chains of alpha clusters? We are investigating these possibilities."

    The work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy; the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren, and Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung in Germany; European Union HadronPhysics3 Project and the European Research Council; and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. Computational resources were provided by the Juelich Supercomputing Center. The NC State Department of Physics is part of the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by North Carolina State University.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Evgeny Epelbaum, Hermann Krebs, Timo L?hde, Dean Lee, Ulf-G. Mei?ner. Structure and Rotations of the Hoyle State. Physical Review Letters, 2012 (in press) [link]

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/9OAlEsSSF3Y/121210124715.htm

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    Video: Public attitude toward same-sex marriage changing

    Long-extinct lizard named after Obama

    Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: The mass extinction that killed off the dinosaurs also did in lots of lizards ? including a newly identified creature that's been named Obamadon gracilis in honor of President Barack Obama.

    Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/hardball/50151417/

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    Katt Williams PUNISHES Audience Member With Mic to the Head

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/katt-williams-punishes-audience-member-with-mic-to-the-head/

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