Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Safety fears spur regulations for trampoline gyms

PROVO, Utah (AP) ? Stephen Merrill was finishing his freshman year of college two years ago when he and a group of friends went to an indoor trampoline park in Utah for a day of flipping, jumping and bouncing.

At one point, Merrill leaped from a platform into a pit full of foam blocks, and he shot right through them and landed on his head. He broke a vertebra in his neck, and was left paralyzed from the neck down.

Merrill's injury underscores recent warnings from doctors and government officials about the dangers of the jump gyms amid a heightened effort to regulate the indoor trampoline parks as they have become a popular rain-or-shine suburban entertainment for birthday parties and summer camps.

"Anything where something like that can happen, I mean, it's such a devastating injury," the 22-year-old Merrill said of his mishap in Provo. "It doesn't seem like things are properly regulated if something like that is possible."

Citing broken necks, shattered leg bones and one death, some doctors say the parks are dangerous and can lead to serious injuries that eclipse any benefits. Governments are starting to take notice, with proposed regulations in Utah and California among the first attempts in the country to address concerns about safety in the burgeoning industry.

Operators of the trampoline gyms say severe injuries are rare and safety fears are overblown.

They claim an injury rate lower than organized sports such as baseball or soccer and point out the gyms offer a place for adults and kids to have fun and get much-needed exercise.

The parks are typically giant warehouses filled with a series of trampolines that allow customers to bounce every which direction, slam-dunk basketballs and do gymnastics moves. Some parks feature angled trampolines sloping up the sides and pits filled with brick-size foam blocks. The industry has grown rapidly, from a handful of centers in the Western U.S. in 2007 to about 160 throughout the world, according to ASTM International, a standards-development organization.

For safety, many of the gyms post staffers around trampolines like lifeguards to enforce rules and require jumpers to first sign a waiver.

Emergency room doctors in one Utah county say that's not enough, and they've asked the health board to step in.

"You'll see a lot of these very severe, open wounds that you don't see unless you're in a high-velocity type of injury," Dr. Craig Cook, trauma director at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. "This is like a war type of injury or a motor vehicle crash."

Trauma staff at the hospital say they saw 52 injuries requiring multiple doctor visits from area jump gyms from May 2011 to November 2012, according to their emergency room records. Most of the patients are young men around 19 years old, they say, and have had injuries such as dislocated feet, brain hemorrhaging and paralysis.

Misty Uribe, who manages Lowes Extreme Air Sports in nearby Provo, said her gym already follows many of the health board proposals, but she's concerned the industry has been unfairly targeted.

Uribe said her center sees few injuries compared to the number of people that participate, citing one major injury for every 20,000 visitors. That was Merrill, and she said his jump violated the facility's rules but that the location still took steps to make the pits safer.

"My concern is, once they start with this, where is it going to end?" she said of the proposed regulations.

The Utah County Health Board is considering proposals that stipulate gyms must supervise the activities, report their injury rates to the county and warn jumpers about the risks beyond having them sign a waiver. The board will have a public discussion on the proposals this fall.

"We do feel like we have an obligation to inform the public about safety risks out there, especially when it's just open to general public," said Dr. Joseph Miner, executive director of the Utah County Health Department.

The Utah proposals are partly modeled after legislation pending in California that would create an inspection program for the parks akin to regulations for amusement park rides, in addition to requirements about insurance, employee training and injury reporting. The bill has been promoted by a Coronado woman whose 30-year-old son died days after breaking his neck at an Arizona trampoline park in 2012.

In Orem, the jump gym Get Air Hang Time has posted signs warning of rules and risks of "serious catastrophic injury or death" from the activity. In addition to requiring participants to sign a waiver, the gym requires jumpers to watch a safety video.

"We try to make sure that people understand what this activity is all about and that the risks are there just like any other recreational activities," owner Aaron Cobabe said.

Cobabe said his gym saw more than 150,000 visitors from July 2012 to July 2013, but during that time had about 11 major injuries that required multiple doctor visits.

"The vast majority of people that come in our facility," he said, "enjoy the activity and leave without any injuries."

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Associated Press writers Michelle Rindels in Las Vegas and Laura Olson in Sacramento, Calif., contributed to this story.

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Follow Michelle Price on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/michellelprice .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/safety-fears-spur-regulations-trampoline-gyms-071921972.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Spacey helps make TV history with 'House of Cards'

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Kevin Spacey loves being part of what he calls "a new paradigm": Internet television that's just as compelling and well produced as anything on a cable or broadcast channel.

Spacey was nominated for an Emmy Award Thursday for his leading role in "House of Cards," the Netflix original series that collected nine bids in all.

"I'm so happy for the series and so happy for Netflix ... because it's a big acknowledgement of the show and its quality," said Spacey, also an executive producer. "For us to have broken through in ... so many categories, nine nominations, for what is really, in many ways, a new paradigm, is so thrilling."

Internet TV is a new frontier with new rules. For example, Netflix didn't require "House of Cards" to begin with a pilot episode introducing the main characters and story lines, freeing the writers to create natural suspense in an evolving story.

"It changes the creative process of how you write a show," said Spacey, 53. "When they gave us an order of 26 episodes ? or chapters, as we like to call them ? that was a remarkable thing for us because it meant that we could just get on with telling the story."

The way the show is distributed ? all 13 episodes available at once ? also offers audiences more choices about how to consume it.

Such creative flexibility draws film writers, directors and actors, such as Spacey, to the TV landscape.

"For storytellers who want to tell stories that are driven by character and not by explosions and things that only, in a sense, appeal to the heartbeat or the pulse and not the mind, then it makes sense to me that the best writers and directors and actors and storytellers are going to go to the ground where it is fertile," he said. "It's very fertile now, obviously. The streaming business is fertile, and the television business in its usual sense."

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spacey-helps-tv-history-house-cards-190138503.html

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Russian opposition leader sentenced to 5 years

KIROV, Russia (AP) ? Alexei Navalny, one of the Russian opposition's leading figures, was convicted of embezzlement Thursday and sentenced to five years in prison.

Navalny and his supporters claimed the case was politically driven to try to shut down the vehement Kremlin critic and intimidate his supporters.

Navalny was found guilty of heading a group that embezzled 16 million rubles' ($500,000) worth of timber from state-owned company Kirovles in 2009 while he worked as an unpaid adviser to the provincial governor in Kirov, about 760 kilometers (470 miles) east of Moscow.

The 37-year-old lawyer played with his smartphone for much of the nearly 3 ?-hour verdict reading. A post on his Twitter account after the sentence was pronounced said, "Oh, well. Don't get bored without me. And, importantly, don't be idle ..."

Navalny handed the phone and his watch to his wife, Yulia, before bailiffs took custody of him and co-defendant Pyotr Ofitserov, who was given a four-year sentence.

Navalny first came to wide attention for vigorous blogging about corruption. He was a top leader of the wave of massive protest rallies that broke out in late 2011 after a national parliamentary election scarred by allegations of widespread fraud.

It was Navalny who first called the dominant United Russia party "the party of crooks and thieves," a phrase that became a rallying cry for the nascent opposition to Russia's leader, Vladimir Putin.

More recently, he pushed his ambitions by declaring himself a candidate for this fall's Moscow mayoral election.

The head of his campaign staff, Leonid Volkov, said a decision on whether to pull out of the race would be made only after he could consult with Navalny, according to the ITAR-Tass news agency. Russian news reports said Navalny would be taken to a detention facility in Kirov before being sent to a prison.

Several dozen Navalny supporters gathered outside the detention facility soon after the sentencing.

Navalny's wife appeared composed after seeing her husband taken away in handcuffs, saying, "If someone hopes that Alexei's investigations will cease, that's wrong."

Catherine Ashton, foreign policy chief for the European Union, said she was concerned about the conviction and sentence, saying in a statement that the charges had not been substantiated during the trial.

"This outcome, given the procedural shortcomings, raises serious questions as to the state of the rule of law in Russia," she said.

The Russian stock market, sensitive to politically charged issues, dove within minutes of the verdict, with the main MICEX index dropping 1.4 percent before partly recovering.

Before the sentencing, Navalny's supporters had said they would rally in Moscow if he were sent to prison. That could provoke a confrontation with police, who routinely crack down harshly on any unsanctioned rallies.

The judge said he found the testimony of key prosecution witness Vyacheslav Opalev to be "trustworthy and consistent."

Opalev, who was the timber company's general director, got a suspended sentence in an expedited trial in December after pleading guilty to conspiring with Navalny.

Navalny insists Opalev framed him out of revenge: Navalny had recommended that Opalev be fired and that officials investigate potential corruption in his company, which had incurred 200 million rubles ($6 million) in losses by the time Navalny arrived in the region.

Throughout the trial, testimony of prosecution witnesses clashed with the core arguments of the indictment that claimed Navalny's work in Kirov led to the embezzlement. None of the managers at Kirovles who appeared in court, except for Opalev, was able to confirm that Navalny defrauded the company.

Navalny had long said he expected to be convicted, and in a final blog post before leaving Moscow for Kirov, he downplayed his personal importance to the wider opposition.

"The most important thing is to muster up the strength, shake off laziness and do something. This doesn't require any leadership as such," he wrote.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-opposition-leader-sentenced-5-years-084213369.html

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Longest Walk 4: Return to Alcatraz - started yesterday at the Washington Monumen...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151747904156233&set=a.150733941232.143880.147969681232&type=1

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Curiosity Mars rover passes kilometer of driving

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The latest drive by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover brought the total distance that the rover has driven on Mars to more than 1 kilometer. One kilometer is about 0.62 mile.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/nasa/~3/xXDxK57L1Nw/130717175316.htm

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Sports Business Daily reports the Green Bay Packers set new records in earning 3081 million in revenue 543 million in prof...

19 years ago with the Jacksonville Suns.

5:45 PM: Jon Cooper of Saturday Down South reports that when asked who the rudest fans in the SEC were, Missouri QB James Franklin responded: "Missouri. My own fans."

5:30 PM: Green Hope (North Carolina) High School girls' soccer coach Bobby Peterson was arrested on child pornography charges on Saturday. Green Hope won the Class 4A state title in May, and Peterson has had a 125-15-1 record with the team since 2008.

5:15 PM: Alabama defensive back Ha Ha Clinton-Dix tweeted on Tuesday: "This is crazy George Zimmerman just hit the lotto for 37 million." However the original story was posted on The Onion satirical news site.

5:00 PM: The police officer assigned to escort South Carolina football player Jadeveon Clowney at Tuesday's SEC media days said about his job: "I'm 'security' for him. If he can't handle it, who am I?"

4:45 PM: Boston Red Sox pitcher Clay Buchholz is hosting a "Buchholz Bowl" on Thursday night, a charity bowling event organized to help children dealing with cancer.

4:30 PM: New Brooklyn Nets player Paul Pierce has been sharing photos on his Instagram account paying tribute to his time with the Boston Celtics.

4:15 PM: From The Onion: "Prince Fielder Dominates Home Run-Eating Contest". Second place: Pablo Sandoval

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=54018

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7-15 4:35pm Sports Talk: NFC South

-- -- -- covering the Atlanta Falcons for CBS sports dot com joining us now. Break down the Atlanta Falcons in the NFC south and not right now we look at some of the acquisitions starting with Stephen Jackson. For the Atlanta Falcons as they they seem to we've gotten better and hardy added and just another weapon that already code office. Yes he can accept it is definitely stepped up Michael Turner who was just. On the back -- of his career last year he got it on the ball harder than there is no break all the will be more than turner can't. But I think the most important thing projection into the team and versatility talk about -- -- -- have gotten ninety plus passing it in the season in the past he's got. Ian he'd get -- -- and -- -- -- -- Chris Rodgers in any more to have the receiver accurately can leave. Check him out there all the time. They and most importantly they can let Matt Bryant go to the line of scrimmage and changed plays or even call -- out of a no huddle because traction either run or catch the ball. I think they should sponsor -- the versatile. Knox who is the team that you think in the NFC south that's going to push Atlanta for the NFC south crown. I've I haven't I wouldn't camp that they are going to be in -- I honestly think it could be -- You might see situation this year where -- open the Falcons are seemed to be in the division but I think the Saints and the books could. Could both make the playoffs with a couple things go right for each team. I think they can either of them to LeapFrog over -- I mean let's not forget that no team has won in the peace now with back to Lexington to dig it up it. What's what's the biggest concern you have for Atlanta right now did they didn't make enough of grades on the defense out of football and they got. Osi Umenyiora in the mix but were where they got better and have the address those needs enough. I don't think they did okay on the peak at the powerball and if there's one. Clearly an issue like looping it around -- the on the offensive line and you're talking about -- that was a play away from the Super Bowl and other and there are. The following season where would you position battles and three players that are indeed on the on the option who lives so it doesn't. Right now I you know. Bryant had the apply to throw the ball but we don't win games in the fourth quarter like you know it's as. I'm trying to work in the training camp next week -- that the offensive line could be the biggest question. Visiting wood knocks -- covering the Atlanta Falcons for CBS sports stock comment Knox is anybody taken. Roddy white's Twitter account away from him yet he has learned to stay off Twitter and social media event C continues that. Enron is now they jumped on and about a George Zimmerman after the hurricane now how's that reaction up there about that. You know actually action from the -- it was a wee Reese and now I think apologized for the next morning it was a few of the moment thing. And it -- it was a terrible thing to say but it. He's known to be in on Twitter activity you know I love watching the ballot but the players Sherman from Seattle they go back and forth. Ed that the big twelve is not completely differently Q&A. Human trial I don't know how about doing things. That he gets -- government as the immediate happy and then she just forgot about that little. Seems to forget about it quite often knocks it out thanks. -- a bunch for the time we appreciate it covering the Atlanta Falcons for CBS sports dot com okay it's a with the aid again to analyze things a bunch of I'm.

Source: http://audio.wwl.com/a/78176902/7-15-4-35pm-sports-talk-nfc-south.htm

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