Thursday, February 24, 2011

February 24, 2011

'Baby Gaga' breast milk ice-cream goes on sale

Victoria Hiley is a mother who is so passionate about breast feeding that she has had her milk turned into ice-cream at Icecreamists, a parlour in Covent Garden.


Victoria Hiley, 35, one of the women who provides the breast milk for Baby Gaga breast milk ice cream Victoria Hiley, one of the women who provides the breast milk for Baby Gaga breast milk ice cream at The Icecreamists shop. Photo: © Nick Obank/Barcroft Media
 
The 35-year-old has already donated a litre of her breast milk to the new ice-cream parlour.

She spotted an advert on the Mumsnet internet forum offering money to potential suppliers.

Now Mrs Hiley, who works with women who have problems breast feeding, has provided the raw material for a new concoction called Baby Gaga.

‘What’s the harm in using my assets for a bit of extra cash?’ said the mother of one from Leeds. ‘There’s nothing more natural than fresh mother’s milk.’

The London parlour pays £15 per third of a litre and already 15 mothers have taken up the offer.

Health checks for the lactating women are the same as those used by the NHS to screen blood donors.

Matt O’Connor, 44, who runs Icecreamists, blends the breast milk with Madagascan vanilla pods and lemon zest, which is then freshly churned.

He said he was confident his £14 Baby Gaga would go down a treat with customers.

‘No one’s done anything interesting with ice-cream in the last hundred years,’ he said.

‘Some people will hear about it and go, yuck! But actually it’s pure, organic, free range and totally natural.’

Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/856408-baby-gaga-breast-milk-ice-cream-goes-on-sale#ixzz1Ew7e31p1


I thought this article was really weird.  I wouldn't pay 14 pounds for a serving of ice cream which is equal to about $23 to $24 US dollars per serving.  I'd rather go eat a nice meal for $24.

February 24, 2011

Phone Call from Police Lobby Leads To Arrest

EUGENE - The young man apparently just wanted to phone his parents. But his mistake came when he made the call from the Eugene, Ore., police station lobby.
Police say an officer working a desk assignment Wednesday recognized the man from surveillance footage of Tuesday's robbery of a Wells Fargo bank branch.
The officer notified detectives, who arrested the man nearby.
Police say 23-year-old Nathan Alan Bramlage was booked into the Lane County Jail for investigation of second-degree robbery and violating probation.
Detective Ralph Burks tells the Register-Guard, "I just assume that he didn't believe that we'd recognize him."


Oh my gosh, could this kid not be any dumber.  The object of being a criminal is to not get caught, apparently this kid didn't get the memo.

Friday, February 11, 2011

February 11, 2011

Image: Snow-covered cattle in Baxter County, Arkansas
Kevin Pieper  /  AP
Snow-covered cows stand in a field in Baxter County, Ark., on Wednesday.
msnbc.com staff and news service reports msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 2 hours 31 minutes ago 2011-02-10T19:56:20


An icy blast tugged temperatures well below zero in a large swath of the South on Thursday, setting records for cold by late morning.
Forecasters had predicted lows of minus 11 degrees in northwest Arkansas and minus 10 degrees in parts of Oklahoma. But temperatures instead dipped to minus 18 in Fayetteville and to minus 28 in Bartlesville, Okla.
Nowata, Okla., recorded 31 degrees below zero — setting a new record low for the state. The previous lowest temperature in Oklahoma history was 27 below in 1930 and 1905, said Gary McManus, associate state climatologist with the Oklahoma Climatological Survey.
"We just had a very cold arctic air mass and a heavy snow pack and that allowed the temperatures to plummet when the wind died down," said McManus. "We got much colder temperatures than anyone thought would occur."
"We just had a very cold arctic air mass and a heavy snow pack and that allowed the temperatures to plummet when the wind died down," said McManus. "We got much colder temperatures than anyone thought would occur."
But states hit by the cold are expecting a thaw soon. McManus said temperatures in Oklahoma should rise to the 60s over the weekend and the 70s next week.


The wheat crops in both states were protected by a blanket of insulating snow, but the deep freeze increased stress on livestock, especially feedlot cattle.
In an area of the nation unaccustomed to such snow and subzero temperatures, the freeze had cattlemen such as Paul Marinoni crossing their fingers that pregnant cows won't give birth during the coldest hours. The newborns could stick to the ground, much like tongues on a flagpole, and die, Marinoni said.
"How do you prevent it?" Marinoni, 70, said from his farm outside Fayetteville. "You can't."
Marinoni said he leaves the cows out overnight because they're too messy to stay inside a barn. Even before the temperatures dipped to well below zero, some cows had collected fins of icicles down their backs as the snow.
"There ain't no way to keep them warm," he added.
"Minus 17 with about 20 inches of snow," he said of the conditions Thursday morning. "I've never seen anything like it."
Marinoni eventually made it out to his cattle and found that all 70 had survived and none had given birth. But he said none of his three new tractors would start.
The frigid temperatures followed a powerful blizzard that howled through the nation's midsection Wednesday and made its way into the Deep South, where it brought a mix of rain and snow to some areas.
More than 1,200 flights were canceled due to the storm Wednesday, according to the tracking service FlightAware.com.


The heaviest snow Wednesday was concentrated in the northeast corner of Oklahoma, where the towns of Colcord and Spavinaw got 22 and 23 inches, respectively. The deepest snow was reported near the village of Jay, with 25 inches.
Three people, including a mother and her infant, died in traffic accidents Wednesday along a snow-covered highway in Arkansas, and another woman was killed when she lost control of her vehicle in Springfield, Mo.
A van carrying prisoners skidded on ice and crashed on a highway in eastern Oklahoma on Thursday, injuring two prisoners. Blowing snow brought traffic to a halt in some areas and abandoned cars choked major highways after some drivers gave up and walked away.
The fresh snow was especially troublesome in Tulsa, Okla., where many roads were still impassable from last week's record 14-inch snowfall. The previous storm kept students out of school for at least six days. Mail, bus and trash service were only recently restored.


Five more inches of snow fell Wednesday in Tulsa, according to the National Weather Service. That raised the city's total for the winter to 25.9 inches, breaking the previous seasonal record of 25.6 inches, set during the winter of 1923-24.
Elsewhere in Oklahoma, ranchers struggled to keep their herds well fed and hydrated. Danny Engelman spent hours tending to some 300 cows.
"If the temperatures get down to zero, with wind chills of 20 below zero, you've got a good chance of losing a calf," Engelman said. "Sometimes you've got to put them in the pickup and get some heat on them."
Most ranchers prepare for winter storms by giving their cattle the right food to build up their energy reserves.
"If their belly is filled with high-protein feed, they can withstand incredible cold," Engelman said.
Story: 'Rude awakening' for central U.S.: 2 blizzards in a week
Meanwhile, poultry farmers will burn a lot of propane in the next few days trying to heat their chicken houses, said Dustan Clark, an Extension Service poultry veterinarian at the University of Arkansas.
"It's a balancing act — ventilating the house to keep it from getting too damp, bringing in the cold air, and heating it to keep it from getting too cold," he said.
In the Northeast, the Weather Channel reported that cold air blowing across Lake Ontario would result in a "fairly strong band of lake-effect snow" across western New York between Watertown and Syracuse Thursday. It said this could potentially bring one to two feet of snow by the evening.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.


I believe that it has been cold enough to hold new records.  I know that it didn't get close to -31 degrees here in Arkansas, but it was still cold here.  I watched KAIT last night and Ryan Vaughn said that Oklahoma was two degrees colder yesterday than the South Pole.  That was pretty cool, actually it was pretty cold.  I don't like being cold, and I'm thankful that I'm not a cow so that I don't have to stay outside in the freezing temperatures all night.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

February 1, 2011

Police: Mom kills her 2 children for being 'mouthy'

Tamara Lush and Mitch Stacy / Associated Press

Tampa, Fla.— The wife of a military officer shot and killed her son on the way to soccer practice, then drove to their upscale home and shot her daughter in the head while she studied at her computer, police said Friday. Afterward, the woman told detectives she killed the teens for being "mouthy."
Julie Powers Schenecker admitted the slayings after officers found her covered in blood on the back porch of her home Friday morning, police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said. Schenecker's mother had called police from Texas because she was unable to reach the 50-year-old woman, whom she said was depressed and had been complaining about her children.


Schenecker's husband, Parker Schenecker, is an Army colonel stationed at the headquarters of U.S. Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa. The father had been away for several days when the killings happened, said CentCom spokesman Lt. Col. Michael Lawhorn, describing him as a career Army intelligence officer.
Police said Parker Schenecker was in Qatar and was told of his children's deaths on Friday.
Julie Schenecker left a note detailing her plans to kill her disrespectful children and then herself, saying "they talked back and were mouthy and that she was going to take care of it," McElroy said. She provided the same motive to police who interviewed her.
"I think we will never understand how or why a mother could take the lives of her children," McElroy said. "That was the only reason she provided to our detectives."
The body of Schenecker's daughter, Calyx Powers Schenecker, 16, was found in an upstairs bedroom, McElroy said. The body of her son, Powers Beau Schenecker, 13, was found in an SUV in the garage.
An arrest affidavit said Schenecker shot her son twice in the head "for talking back" while driving him to soccer practice Thursday night. She drove home, went inside and shot her daughter in the back of head while the teen sat at a computer doing homework, then shot her in the face, the affidavit said.
McElroy said investigators believe the teens "never saw it coming." Both were killed with a .38-caliber pistol.
Julie Schenecker was jailed and charged with two counts of first-degree murder. Wearing a white jumpsuit, she was led into a county jail later Friday visibly shaking and being supported by a sheriff's deputy.
Her Facebook page says she earned a bachelor's degree in physical education from the University of Northern Iowa.
Sylvia Carroll, who attended Muscatine High School in Iowa with Julie Schenecker, said she was a popular and athletic girl who starred in basketball in the late 1970s. They reconnected about a year ago on Facebook.
"I'm just in shock," said Carroll, who now lives in Austin, Texas. "I can't believe this."
The family's home is on a cul-de-sac in a gated country club community in north Tampa. Hillsborough County property records show that the Scheneckers bought the house in 2008 for $448,000. It now has a market value of $261,000.
Associated Press writer David Fischer contributed from Miami.


When I first read this article my heart broke for the kids who were killed because they didn't deserve to be killed.  I then thought how could anyone do such a thing especially to their own children.  Killing your own kids for "talking back" is the most stupidest thing I have ever heard.  I also think that she should rot in jail and not be able to have the option of pleading "insanity."   Frankly, I don't believe in the insanity plea, in this case especially, because this was premeditated murder and she knew exactly what she was doing.