| American Specialty Health Names Pamela Lauper Chief Sales Officer
SAN DIEGO, Nov. 27, 2007 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- American Specialty Health (ASH), one of the nation's premier personal health improvement organizations, recently named Pamela Lauper its chief sales officer. As CSO, Lauper will lead and direct all sales-related activities of the company. In addition to fulfilling these responsibilities, Lauper will work closely with CEO George DeVries on ASH's executive management team. .
Every School Every Thursday -- Urbandale
Students from Laurie Ohland's fourth-grade class at Jensen Elementary are taking pictures and making movies. These students are in a group called "clickers" at Jensen Elementary. Jennifer Reiter teaches students in this group how to work better on computers. She has taught students to work on iPhoto and a little on iMovie. Students are working on creating a clickers yearbook DVD. The Jensen character assembly celebrating responsibility will be at 2:45 p.m. Friday. On Nov. 6 Jensen families will enjoy a skate night at Incrediroll. Karen Acres The champions for the Karen Acres fall running club are first-graders Sydnee Kracht, Anthony Berry and Courtney Hotovev, second-graders Bryce Hall and Aileen Guaillas, third-grader Jacob Chau, fourth-graders Noah Torstenson and Katelyn Foster, and fifth-graders Nathan Torstenson and Elena Brechtel.
Nigeria: How Electromolecular Medicine Cures Ailments
Medical scientists have ingeniously developed a device that could be used in the treatment of ailments without the use of the conventional drugs. Depth-empulse is an electromagnetic device that heals four times faster than any known technology or drugs. Godwin Haruna writes It is a novel device invented by Dr. Glenn Gordon, an American, as a curative therapy. Designed Electromagnetic Pulsed Therapy (DEPTH) has been found superior to drugs in the treatment of many conditions as diverse as arthritis, fractures, low back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome and many others. According to Dr. Tony Didigu, an associate of Gordon in Nigeria, the device is the only professional electromagnetic fields therapy in the world that speeds up free radical neutralisation by antioxidants 100 times faster and affects tissue restoration and repair four times faster than any other known technology or drugs.
Irondequoit to Better Track Renters
It's one of Rochester's fastest growing communities, and many who own property in the Town of Irondequoit are trying to cash in. Those who already live there are hoping a recently passed town ordinance will make landlords and future tenants live up to their responsibilities. The new law will help the town keep a close eye on rental properties, and whether or not they're being maintained properly. It's something all who live there have a stake in. Taking care of a piece of property all by yourself can be a handful, especially in the fall. "There's always raking, there's painting inside and updating appliances," said Bev Spayde. "All kinds of things and in actuality, it's a job," she said. Spayde has been taking care of a piece of property in Irondequoit for six years.
Our Kids News & Events
The board of directors of the Community Foundation has approved a technical assistance grant of $3,000 for Community Oral Health Services to provide staff training on recently acquired patient management software. The new system establishes a foundation for "tele-dentistry" among the organization's three mobile clinics and their administration office and will improve its ability to serve young children in remote areas on the Central Coast. .
Dixfield seeks money for repairing road
DIXFIELD - Town Manager Tom Richmond hopes to get Severy Hill Road fixed once and for all. Assisted by public works Director Tim Hanson, Richmond is applying for a premitigation grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for about $300,000 to get the job done. The 1.7 mile long road has been paved and patched for years. If the grant comes through, Richmond said not only will the road be ditched and paved, but it will also receive a new base. Hanson said the town would likely have to come up with about 10 percent of the cost if the grant comes through. The application must go into the federal agency, via the Maine Emergency Management Agency, by Jan. 31. Richmond said the hill is already on the Oxford County mitigation listing.
CT scans to determine heart disease in the emergency room
In the future, patients who arrive at a hospital Emergency Department complaining of chest pain may be diagnosed with a sophisticated CT scan. If the diagnosis is negative, the patient can go home�and the total time at the hospital will be much shorter than it is today. .
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