Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Short Sale Homes For Sale Danville CA December 2012 Update ...

Short Sale Homes For Sale Danville CA December 2012 Update Danville CA Real Estate January 13, 2013 | Homes for Sale in San Ramon, Danville CA, Dublin CA, Pleasanton ?2013 Bay East. ?2013 CCAR. ?2013 EBRD. All rights reserved. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. This information is provided from three separate sources: Bay East, CCAR and EBRD. The listings presented here may or may not be listed by the Broker/Agent operating this website. Information last updated on 1/14/13 5:14 AM PST.

This IDX solution is (c) Diverse Solutions 2013.

Source: http://vickiesellshomes.com/short-sale-homes-for-sale-danville-ca-december-2012-update-danville-ca-real-estate-january-13-2013/

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Maine men accused in lobster crime face possible $190,000 fine

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (Reuters) - A Maine lobsterman and his son pleaded not guilty on Monday to illegally possessing more than 400 protected egg-bearing female lobsters and face a possible $190,000 fine, authorities said.

Marine patrol officers discovered the lobsters, marked with a v-shaped notch in their tails or mutilated to remove the notch, during an inspection last year of a boat owned by Ricky Curtis, the state Department of Marine Resources said in a statement.

Maine requires lobstermen to notch the tails of egg-bearing female lobsters before returning them to the ocean as a conservation measure. The lobsters may then reproduce several more times.

"We consider this a very serious crime," Colonel Joseph Fessenden, Marine Patrol chief, said in the statement.

"The illegal taking of any lobsters negatively affects the resource and is a direct theft from those lobstermen who abide by the laws every day that they fish," Fessenden said.

Ricky Curtis, 48, and his son Todd Curtis, 29, entered a not guilty plea through the mail at Knox County District Court in Rockland, Maine, a court clerk said.

They face a fine of more than $190,000 if they are convicted of the crime, the statement from wildlife authorities said.

Their attorney, Philip Cohen, declined to comment on the charges.

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/maine-men-accused-lobster-crime-face-possible-190-214006222.html

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Video: Dell Buyout Talks Heat Up

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50461599/

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Astronomers Discover a Group of Quasars 4 Billion Light Years Across

Consider all the entities [stars, galaxies, or whatnot] in your study as points in 3-space. The descriptive length of the data is the total number of bits that describes the location of all points in your study.

If all points are random and evenly distributed, then the total number of bits required is (number of points)x(number of bits for 1 location).

Suppose you notice a clumping of points. Is this a structure or random variation?

Rework your data description as follows: for any point, use the first bit to determine whether a point is a member of the clump or not, and subsequent bits to complete the description, depending on whether the point is in the clump.

For this description, the total number of bits required is 1x(total number of points) + (number of points in clump)x(number of bits for location relative to clump) + (number of points not in clump)x(number of bits for general location).

If the 2nd description is shorter than the 1st description, then by Occam's razor the second description is more likely correct.

In fact, the number of bits directly tells the probability that the 2nd description is correct: if the 2nd description requires 10 fewer bits (total) than the 1st, then the 2nd description is more likely to be correct by a factor of 1024. Alternately, there is a 1/1024 chance that the 2nd description is *not* the correct description of the data.

If you have lots of data, it's not unusual for a descriptive length to be thousands of bits shorter than the baseline description; meaning, that it's virtually certain that the new description is correct and that the new structure does not arise from random variation.

I haven't seen the data, but I assume that describing all galaxies in the universe using the newly described "clump" as a categorical structure gives a smaller descriptive entropy than describing all galaxies without the extra category of "clump".

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/u4julZFK7bM/story01.htm

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Video: Dodging US Debt

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50438568/

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Treating Dog Cataracts With Can-C N-Acetylcarnosine Eye Drops ...

The discovery of N-acetylcarnosine, in the type of Can-C eye drops for the treatment and reversal of canine cataract has provided a efficient and safe alternative to costly and high-risk eye surgical treatment. Proven in medical trials and in usage now for over 10 years by animal owners and veterinarians around the world, Can-C has shown itself to be the optimum treatment for pets struggling with debilitating cataracts.

N-acetylcarnosine is an unique ocular type of the peptide, L-carnosine a natural anti-oxidant that could reverse and avoid the impacts of age-related ailments like cataract. Canine cataract can trigger differing degrees of handicap in pet dogs which can vary from a little blurred vision to a total loss of vision or loss of sight. In domestic pets, cataracts are often genetic and gradual in their development, blocking even more and more vision as the mammal grows into old age. For more details, you need to pay a visit to: Can-C

Under the guidance of Innovative Vision Products founder, Dr. Mark Babizhayev MA PhD, medical studies were performed on rabbits, dogs and ultimately on humans to check the effectiveness and safety of Can-C N-acetylcarnosine eye drops. Canines with either immature or mature cataracts revealed significant decrease of cataract symptoms. Interestingly it was noted that canine cataracts actually responded earlier to the treatment then their human counterparts.

Can-C N-acetylcarnosine eye drop solution is a safe and exceptional option in cases specifically where surgery is not a practical choice. Improvement of the condition presents as a gradual shrinking of the cataract accompanied by the pet dog?s improved behavior, mood and confidence.

The daily dosage made use of in dealing with pet dog cataract is a bit less then that recommended for people at 3 drops everyday to each affected eye. Over time and once ideal results have been attained; the dosage must be lowered to 1 drop a day for upkeep purposes. For much more details, you need to check out: Can-C eyedrops

Relying on the extent of the canines? cataract, reversal leading to improved vision is generally attained. When it come to steroid medication or diabetic induced cataract, complete recovery could take longer. Additionally, if the cataract is advanced to the point of total blindness, outcomes are generally less significant. In these cases the everyday application of Can-C (TM) can help to minimize cataract linked irritabilities, reduce infection threats and support the condition. Video

Can-C is a calming antioxidant solution which enhances the ph balance of examination and so causes no pain to the mammal. The product has been cost over a many years without reports of adverse adverse effects in either animals or people. Rather, it?s an item fully recommended to improve the general wellness of your pet?s eyes. When optimal outcomes have been achieved its recommended the item is made use of at reasonable quantity to prevent the return of cataract.

Source: http://articlepdq.com/health-fitness/beauty/treating-dog-cataracts-with-can-c-n-acetylcarnosine-eye-drops/

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Texas Lt. Gov.: Fund weapons training for teachers

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Texas Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst called Friday for state-funded, specialized firearms training for teachers and administrators to guard against school shootings.

Dewhurst, a Republican, said school districts would nominate who they wanted to carry weapons on campus. The training would be more extensive than what is currently required for a Texas concealed handgun license and include how to react in an active shooter situation.

"God forbid we should have an active shooter crisis in our schools," Dewhurst said.

His proposal came in the aftermath of last month's mass shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., where a gunman slaughtered 20 children and six adults before killing himself. Vice President Joe Biden has been meeting with groups this week to develop policy recommendations on how to prevent such tragedies.

The National Rifle Association has called for armed guards in every school in America and rejected any further restrictions on gun purchases or ownership.

Dewhurst said the eight hours of class instruction and two hours of shooting training for a concealed handgun license is "not sufficient" for school employees.

"It doesn't teach how to respond emotionally and technically" to a potentially chaotic situation where young lives could be at stake, he said.

Dewhurst has a concealed handgun license and made his comments in a speech to the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation.

He didn't provide any other details of his plan or specifics on what the training should include. He said the amount of state funding needed would depend on the number of school districts that participate and how many people want the training. School districts would not be required to participate.

Clay Robison, spokesman for the Texas State Teachers Association, said the state should spend more money on classroom instruction, not firearm instruction for teachers. The money Dewhurst is talking about would be better spent on equipping armed school security guards, he said.

"Teachers sign up to teach, not to be armed security guards in their classrooms," Robison said. "Even well-trained security guards with pistols are going to be at a disadvantage to a suicidal maniac with an assault rifle."

The prospects for his proposal weren't immediately clear. A spokesman for Sen. Joan Huffman, of Houston, leader of the Senate Republican Caucus, said she could not comment on Dewhurst's plan and its chances of passing the GOP-dominated chamber until the caucus meets next week.

Texas is a state where gun ownership is typically embraced. Concealed handgun license holders are allowed to bring weapons into the state Capitol and don't have to pass through security metal detectors.

Although state law generally bans guns from schools, school districts may grant teachers and staff permission to carry weapons on to campus if they are licensed.

But lawmakers don't pass every gun bill that gets proposed. In 2011, most of the state's lawmakers signed on in support of a bill allowing concealed weapons into college classrooms, but the bill failed without a final vote in the Republican-majority House.

Dewhurst said his plan would not be a mandate for more guns in schools, but would allow school districts to seek the state's help in guarding against a mass shooter.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry has said concealed handgun license holders should be allowed to carry their weapons wherever they want. A Perry spokesman did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment on Dewhurst's proposal.

The Harrold Independent School District near the Oklahoma border is one of the few in Texas that allows school personnel with concealed handgun licenses to carry their weapons to school. The teachers and staff must first be approved by the school board and also take additional training on shooting accuracy, hostage situations and how to clear a classroom in a program designed for the school district.

Harrold schools Superintendent David Thweatt said he's heard from many Texas school districts about his program since the Newtown shootings. He said the program is cheaper than paying for an armed security guard.

"I'm getting a lot of calls from around the state," said Thweatt, who created his district's Guardian Plan in 2007.

"I think it's a good idea," Thweatt said of Dewhurst's idea. "One of the biggest objections to firearms in society is that some don't want people with that tool without some kind of extra training."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-lt-gov-fund-weapons-training-teachers-200317793.html

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Source: http://indexation-brigit.blogspot.com/2013/01/recreation-and-sportsswimming-articles.html

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Molecular ?switch? may play role in tumor suppression

Jan. 11, 2013 ? Newly published research by Indiana University structural biologist Joel Ybe and colleagues identifies a "topology switch" in the protein clathrin, the function of which may shed light on molecular processes involved in tumor suppression.

The paper, available in and featured on the front cover of the Jan. 16, 2013, issue of FEBS Letters, a journal of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies, could broaden scientists' understanding of the importance of clathrin and potentially lead to new strategies for controlling cancer.

"This is a totally unexpected but wonderful finding," Ybe said. "It has exciting implications for understanding the role that clathrin may play in the growth or suppression of tumors."

Ybe is a senior research scientist in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry in the IU College of Arts and Sciences. Co-authors of the paper are postdoctoral researchers Sarah Fontaine and Xiaoyan Lin; IU chemist Todd Stone; Sanjay Mishra, formerly at IU and now at Vanderbilt University; and Jay Nix of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Typically found in a three-legged form called a trimer, clathrin is best understood for its role in endocytosis, the process by which cells absorb proteins and other molecules. But recent research has suggested that clathrin in a one-legged form, or monomer, may have a role in suppressing tumors. Ybe and his team show how a "switch" in clathrin can be flipped to produce non-trimeric clathrin molecules.

"Clathrin is known to function as a trimer in receptor-mediated endocytosis, but the existence of the monomeric form and its role in tumor suppression is less well-accepted," said Alexandra Ainsztein, who oversees membrane trafficking grants at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. "By providing evidence for a model in which a molecular shift de-trimerizes clathrin and changes its cellular distribution, this work will spur further research into unanticipated roles for this important molecule in healthy and diseased cells."

In endocytosis, trimeric clathrin molecules bind together to form molecular packages that allow other substances to enter cells. Several years ago, researchers in Japan published evidence that clathrin can also serve as an activator of the protein p53, a known tumor suppressor.

For the activation to take place, clathrin and p53 must both be present in the cell's nucleus. The catch is that clathrin molecules cannot penetrate the nucleus in their usual, three-legged form. To enter, the three-legged clathrin molecule must be altered or "de-trimerized."

Using X-ray crystallography, Ybe and his team discovered a "topology switch" in the clathrin molecule. They showed they could break the switch by mutating one key amino acid that is part of the switch. The result: Clathrin was "detrimerized"; three-legged molecules were broken into one-legged ones.

Experimenting with both cancer and non-cancer cells, the researchers found the three-legged clathrin only in the cytoplasm of the cells, not the nucleus. But with the "switch" broken, clathrin formed monomers and was also present in the nucleus, where it could potentially activate tumor suppression.

Ybe said the results point to the need for additional research to better understand the structure and function of clathrin and the role it plays in cellular processes, including those involved in cancer. With the clathrin "switch" identified, researchers can attempt to better understand how it can be activated, with the goal of developing new therapies for suppressing the growth of tumors. Ybe has a patent pending on the idea to use the mutated form of clathrin to stimulate the natural anti-cancer activities of human cells.

The finding developed from Ybe's research on the role of clathrin in Huntington's disease, a genetic disorder that causes neurological degeneration and is estimated to affect about 15,000 people in the U.S. The National Institutes of Health awarded the project a $1.2 million, four-year grant in 2009. The NIH grant number is R01GM064387.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Indiana University, via Newswise.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Joel A. Ybe, Sarah N. Fontaine, Todd Stone, Jay Nix, Xiaoyan Lin, Sanjay Mishra. Nuclear localization of clathrin involves a labile helix outside the trimerization domain. FEBS Letters, 2013; 587 (2): 142 DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2012.11.005

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/e7N4qZGsCk4/130112195735.htm

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Woman able to decide on pregnancy | UK | Express.co.uk - Home of ...

A judge made the declaration after concerns were raised that it might be appropriate for the Court of Protection to intervene and decide what is in the woman's best interests.

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, suffers from sickle cell disease which has already caused her to have a string of strokes.

Mr Justice Hedley, sitting in the Court of Protection at London's High Court, said the woman, who is 18 weeks pregnant and from the south of England, "manifestly lacked capacity" to participate in legal proceedings at the present time and required the assistance of the Official Solicitor to act as her "litigation friend".

But an independent expert in psychiatry, Dr Stephen Tyrer, expressed the view that she did have capacity "to decide whether or not to continue with, or terminate, pregnancy".

The judge said it was now also the position of all parties and all witnesses that she had capacity, "that being so, the Court of Protection has no jurisdiction to engage in an assessment of her best interests".

He added: "It is right to observe that both expert and professional and family evidence in the case is it would be in her best interests to continue with the pregnancy, but that is outwith the jurisdiction of this court."

The judge said it was very important to bear in mind that people with severe learning difficulties who might not be unable to function independently in the community in other aspects of their lives "may very well retain the capacity to make deeply personal decisions about how they conduct their lives".

These could include decisions about choice of partners, the extent of sexual activity, making permanent relationships "and decisions about their own medical care including, as in this case, the continuation or termination of pregnancy".

Source: http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/369908/Woman-able-to-decide-on-pregnancy

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Thursday, January 10, 2013

Mercurial Musings: Too Much Testing?

Standardized testing continues to be a controversial subject in education. On the one hand, it is necessary to assess what students are learning and the effectiveness of instruction. On the other, it is impossible for a single test to accurately reflect the complexities of the education process. One test cannot show the student who hated to write at the beginning of the school year who progressed to independently constructing complete paragraphs. One test cannot show the student who never enjoyed reading who finally found her niche and read five books outside of school this year. One test cannot reflect all those little moments in the classroom that add up to huge individual gains. Further, testing tends to focus only on the subjects of English/Language Arts and Math, thereby ignoring entire subjects in which students may excel. In many districts, standardized test prep courses have taken the places of academic electives like creative writing, public speaking, journalism, and poetry.

Increasingly, student test scores are being tied to teacher evaluations. Which leads to the dilemma of how to assess teachers who teach untested subjects. Unfortunately, the answer is typically to implement more standardized testing. The problem with this is manifold, but primarily rests in the fact that most careers our students will have upon leaving college will require them to be able to think creatively and outside the box. They are jobs in the fields of science and technology that will require students to be able to imagine and create, not just regurgitate rote information and memorized facts.?

Of course, this is a complex dilemma, one that cannot be sufficiently summarized in a short blog entry. My hope is to encourage discourse. We know the problems with standardized testing, but we also know it is necessary to measure student progress. What then are our options? If not standardized tests, then what? I'm looking forward to reading your thoughts.


Source: http://www.mymercurialmusings.com/2013/01/too-much-testing.html

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Project Shield revealed - Nvidia is making an Android-powered ...

Well, that's exciting! Hardware-maker Nvidia revealed development of an Android-powered handheld game console at a pre-CES press conference tonight. The system, currently going by the name "Project Shield," sports an Xbox 360-like controller with a 5" 720p touch screen attached. Nvidia claims that the internal battery allows for 5-10 hours of gameplay and up to 24 hours of video, putting it on par (if not slightly above) other handheld consoles on the market.

CEO Jen-Hsun Huang said that the handheld system is "pure Android" and showed off several different functions including video playback, social networking, and listening to audio, because it wouldn't be a game console if you couldn't watch <insert currently popular pop song> music videos on it.

Oh, and it plays video games--that's important. Huang showed off a few Android games, including a demo for the upcoming Hawken and some other Android games that looked great on the handheld's Tegra 4 processor. Even more exciting are Project Shield's PC gaming capabilities, which were also shown off (after a few technical hiccups). The system can't actually play PC games, but it can connect to a PC via wireless and stream Steam's Big Picture Mode. This, when mixed with the system's HDMI out capable of outputting 4K resolution, means you can play PC games on your TV with little lag (according to Nvidia), and serves as the link many need to get PC gaming on the television. In short, Project Shield is essentially working like the "rumored" Steam Box console was supposed to.

No price or release date were mentioned outside of the Q2 2013 launch window, but we'll definitely be keeping an eye on what appears to be the most exciting Android-powered game console of the bunch. You can find more information (and more shiny images) on Nvidia's website.

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Source: http://www.gamesradar.com/project-shield-revealed-nvidias-android-powered-game-console/

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Disney World to track visitors with wireless wristbands

6 hrs.

New wireless-tracking wristbands designed to make the "Most Magical Place on Earth"?even more hassle-free will hit Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., over the next few months.

The "MagicBands" will be linked to customers' credit-card information and function as room keys and park entry passes, thanks to radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips, which are most commonly used in wireless toll collection and public-transit turnstiles.

The MagicBands are part of a bigger system called "MyMagic+," which also allows the theme park to collect sensitive personal information, including names of guests both young and old, their purchasing and riding patterns and real-time location data.

"Imagine booking guaranteed ride times for your favorite shows and attractions even before setting foot in the park," wrote Tom Staggs, chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, in a blog posting on Monday. "With MyMagic+, guests will be able to do that and more, enabling them to spend more time together and creating an experience that?s better for everyone."

Granular controls
Compared with many companies foraying deeper into the world of data collection, Disney seems to make it very easy for customers to control what and how much information is shared with whom or to opt out of the program completely.

The New York Times reports that, for example, mascot characters could use the information transmitted by the MagicBands to greet visiting children by name ? and even wish them happy birthday if so informed.

But parents could also choose not to share their children's information with park employees in that manner.

The Times said a new part of the official Disney World website, called "My Disney Experience," makes it fairly straightforward to manage MagicBand privacy controls for each member of a family. (There's already a MyDisneyExperience app for iOS and Android devices.)

Parents could share more information about themselves and less about their children, or choose whether to link a credit card to the wristband or simply use it as a ticket to a park or attraction.

Creepy or convenient?
The operation is a huge one. Analysts told the Times that they estimate the cost of installing the system, which will impact 60,000 employees and more than 100,000 guests every day, at somewhere between $800 million and $1 billion.

Some commenters on the StitchKingdom Disney fan site?said they felt "a bit creeped out" and "not terribly comfortable with the idea" in response to an article on MyMagic+ posted in March.

But most commenters there and on other Disney fan sites either thought MyMagic+ was a great idea, or lamented that its users would be able to jump queues ahead of holders of other premium Disney ticket options.

There's no word on when the MyMagic+ program will spread to the four other Disney theme parks in southern California, Japan, Paris and Hong Kong.

More from TechNewsDaily:

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/travelkit/disney-world-track-visitors-wireless-wristbands-1B7874882

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Monday, January 7, 2013

SC woman, oldest living US citizen, dies at 114

A 114-year-old South Carolina woman who was the oldest living U.S. citizen has died, two of her daughters said Saturday.

Mamie Rearden of Edgefield, who held the title as the country's oldest person for about two weeks, died Wednesday at a hospital in Augusta, Ga., said Sara Rearden of Burtonsville, Md., and Janie Ruth Osborne of Edgefield. They said their mother broke her hip after a fall about three weeks ago.

Gerontology Research Group, which verifies age information for Guinness World Records, listed Mamie Rearden as the oldest living American after last month's passing of 115-year-old Dina Manfredini of Iowa. Rearden's Sept. 7, 1898, birth was recorded in the 1900 U.S. Census, the group's Robert Young said.

Rearden was more than a year younger than the world's oldest person, 115-year-old Jiroemon Kimura of Japan.

"My mom was not president of the bank or anything, but she was very instrumental in raising a family and being a community person," said Sara Rearden, her youngest child. "Everybody can't go be president of a bank or president of a college, but we feel just as proud of her in her role as housewife and particularly as mother and homemaker."

Mamie Rearden, who was married to her husband Oacy for 59 years until his death in 1979, raised 11 children, 10 of whom survive, Sara Rearden said. She lived in the family homestead with a son and a daughter on land that had been in the family since her father's accumulation of acreage made him one of the area's largest black landowners.

Her father sent her off to earn a teaching certificate at Bettis Academy on the far side of the county, spending an entire day on a loaded wagon to reach the school along dirt roads, her daughter said. She taught for several years until becoming pregnant with her third child.

In the mid-1960s at age 65, when some settled into retirement, she learned to drive a car for the first time and started volunteering for an Edgefield County program that had her driving to the end of remote rural roads to find children whose parents were keeping them home from school, Sara Rearden said.

Mamie Rearden always counseled that her children should treat others as they wanted to be treated and that included never gossiping or speaking ill of others. When asked about a preacher's uninspiring sermon, her daughter recalled her mother saying: "'Well, it came from the Bible.' She never would bad-mouth them."

___

Emery Dalesio can be reached at http://twitter.com/emerydalesio

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-05-US-Oldest-American-Dies/id-325229d3ae2145f797cb7dc5e2a4d69d

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