信息來源於四川新聞網 / Cited from .newssc.org/ 春運火車票開始售賣以來,迷你倉旺角12306購票網站持續受到社會關注。有旅客反映網站不穩定、網站購票驗證碼看不清、“黃牛”用假身份證囤票等。記者為此採訪了12306網站。升級“靜態驗證碼”遏制搶票軟件 根據12306網站提供的數據,自2014年鐵路春運售票工作開始以來,12306網站運行基本正常。 針對有部分網民和媒體反映的12306網站購票驗證碼問題,12306技術人員表示,2014年鐵路春運售票工作開始後,個別互聯網公司以搶票瀏覽器、搶票插件等形式,對12306網站的驗證碼進行自動識別,進而達到插隊購票的目的。這種行為嚴重擾亂了互聯網購票秩序,影響了購票的公平和12306網站的安全。 為了維護公平的售票秩序和旅客的利益,12306網站採取了相應的技術措施,將靜態驗證碼更換為動態驗mini storage碼,有效地遏制了對驗證碼的自動識別行為,但同時也增加了旅客識別驗證碼的難度。 近日,根據部分網民和旅客的建議,12306網站對驗證碼方案進行了調整優化,將動態驗證碼更換為增加了底紋或干擾線的新版靜態驗證碼,既降低了旅客的識別難度,同時也保持了對自動識別軟件的有效防控。退回車票“自動隨機”再次放出 針對近日有媒體報道,部分黃牛用虛假身份證號直接購票囤票,找到買家後退票回購轉賣的現象,12306網站負責人指出,12306網站實行購票實名制,旅客購票應填寫有效的乘車人身份信息,如使用假身份證號購買車票,在車站窗口、鐵路客票代售點、自動售取票機等均不能辦理換票、退票手續。 對通過12306網站退回的車票,均採取計算機隨機處理的方式進行處理,系統會根據距離車票開車時間的遠近,在確保每一張車票都有充足時間售出的前提下,隨機將退回的車票再次放出,供旅客購買。 據新華社迷你倉
- 1月 06 週一 201408:35
12306 網站:假身份證買火車票不可退換
- 1月 05 週日 201416:11
愈冷愈開花 梅山賞梅正當時
連續幾波寒流讓嘉縣梅山公園種植大片梅樹陸續綻放白色梅花,存倉梅花在空中連綿成花海,壯闊景緻吸引遊客前來欣賞,同時品嘗在地梅子創意料理,大陸冷氣團又將報到,屆時氣溫驟降梅花將全數盛開。梅山公園老梅枝蜿蜒蒼勁,寒風中傲骨獨特,遊客漫步梅樹夾道的小徑,欣賞雪白花朵在山頭綻放,時而微風輕撫,空氣中飄散淡淡花香,令人心曠神怡,本周梅花盛開約5成,吸引民眾搶先來探花況。據乾隆七年(西元17儲存2年)編纂的《重修福建臺灣府志》中,「梅坑月霽」已列入諸羅縣的8景之一,然近年公園設施老舊,人潮也不如以往,縣府為促進地方觀光,耗時2年整修梅山公園,希望帶給舊地重遊的遊客耳目一新之感。文化觀光局長吳芳銘表示,梅山公園有遊客中心、賞梅步道、天空步道和瞭望台等便民設施,去年更獲「建築園冶獎」。當地有近20家產銷梅製品的老牌店家及梅子觀光工廠,民眾賞梅之餘,可品嘗在地梅子風味料理。迷你倉
- 1月 05 週日 201415:55
Ohio, U.S. expects major job growth in health care
Source: Dayton Daily News, OhioJan.24小時迷你倉 04--The health care and social assistance sector has been a main driver of Ohio's job growth, and it could remain that way since the sector will lead the nation in employment gains in the next decade, according to new labor projections from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.Health care and social assistance is projected to create five million new jobs nationwide by 2022, the bureau said. Nearly half of the 30 projected fastest-growing U.S. occupations are in health care.Health care and social assistance employs more Ohio workers than any other sector, and the state more heavily relies on these areas for jobs than most of the country.Continued health care growth will translate into more jobs for Ohio workers, according to some groups."At this point, there is no reason to expect that the growth in health care and social assistance jobs will slow in Ohio," said Benjamin Johnson, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.But some labor experts said they believe the government's employment projections are inflated, and hiring will have to slow down because otherwise it will outpace demand for medical services and providers will not be able to bring rising costs under control."If health care continues to grow as rapidly as it has in the recent past, then you really have to be concerned about our ability to pay for it and the effectiveness of any sort of health care reform," said Edward Hill, dean and professor at the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.Ohio's health care and social assistance sector has been a powerhouse of hiring for years, with payrolls increasing annually since at least 1990, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data.The sector employed 765,200 Ohio workers in November, which was down slightly from the summer of 2013, but up 10,600 from November 2012, the data show.The U.S. recession officially ended in June 2009, but the sector continued adding jobs during the economic downturn.Since the recovery began, Ohio has added about 147,400 jobs, one-third of which were in health care and social assistance, according to seasonally adjusted federal labor data.In 2012, the sector employed more than 17 percent of Ohio workers, the data show. Ohio also had a greater share of workers employed in these areas than all but nine other states, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.Caring for elderlyThe health care industry is expected to remain a strong source of job creation.Between 2012 and 2022, the U.S. economy is projected to create 15.6 million new jobs, 5 million of which will be health care and social assistance, according to federal projections released last month.Health care and social assistance will create more jobs than any other sector in the next decade, and it is tied with the construction field for the highest annual rate of job growth (2.6 percent), the projections show.The bureau said the growth partly reflects the changing needs of an aging population.Older residents tend to use more medical services, and shifting demographics should lead to increased demand for home health care services and jobs related to health information technology and data analytics, said Bryan Bucklew, president and CEO of the Greater Dayton Area Hospital Association.Uninsured residents often skip routine checkups, health screenings and preventative care, choosing only to seek treatment when they are sick or injured.But more Ohioans are expected to have health care coverage, and insured residents typically use medical services more frequently, Bucklew said."I think you'll see some (employment) areas decrease, but I think the healt迷你倉旺角 care industry overall will continue to see an increase," he said.The health care industry provides economic benefits beyond just its payrolls.Hospitals, for example, buy countless goods and services in their communities, and every dollar spent by a hospital supports about $2.30 of additional business activity, according to the American Hospital Association.Ohio's hospitals employed almost 282,000 workers in 2011, but they also supported 620,000 other jobs in the state, said John Palmer, spokesman for the Ohio Hospital Association.Ohio hospitals helped pump about $73.4 billion into the state's economy in 2011."They don't just provide health care, they also stimulate Ohio's economy," Palmer said.Will demand creat jobs?Health care employment will continue rising in coming years -- especially low-skilled positions that serve the elderly -- but the bureau's job estimates are "straight-line projections, which say your future is your past," said Hill, with the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs.Hill said the future will be different because the health care industry's growth rate is unsustainable. He said medical providers are already consolidating their operations to reduce costs and improve efficiencies."I would be surprised that if 10 years out we find the growth rate is anything like what is projected, because that would mean that all health care-cost restraints didn't work and, low and behold, we can't afford American society anymore," he said.Earlier this year, Catholic Health Partners, one of Ohio's largest employers, announced plans to restructure as the industry changes from a fee-for-service system to one that pays providers based on quality of care delivered.Mike Boehmer, a spokesman for the Cincinnati-based group that employs about 33,000 people in Ohio and Kentucky, previously said it was "consolidating system functions and repositioning our workforce." He said some jobs would be eliminated, but Catholic Health would also hire in other areas.Growing demand for health care will lead to job growth, but future health care jobs will be different than they are today, said Bob Kocher, a partner at Venrock, which is a venture capital firm based in Palo Alto, Calif., that has a focus on health care and technology.Health care is likely to become far more efficient in the next 20 years as it undergoes changes similar to those seen in manufacturing and other sectors, which occurred as employers adopted new technology and harnessed data to improve productivity, said Kocher, who also is a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution Engelberg Center for Health Reform."Care will be better when we get all the wasted time, tasks, rework out of care processes," he said.Tim Dutton, vice president of human resources with the Kettering Health Network, said he also believes the labor department's projections are too high.He said the aging population will grow "volume," but health care reform will put more focus on quality and outcomes, which could lead to a reduction in employment."We will not know how large the volume will be until some of the uncertainty around healthcare reform becomes clearer," he said.Kettering Health Network posted the most job-opening ads online between mid-October and mid-November in western Ohio, according to a state report released last month."We expect increased job growth in certain areas of our organization including nursing, physician extenders (nurse practitioners, physician assistants) and rehabilitation professionals," Dutton said.--Copyright: ___ (c)2014 the Dayton Daily News (Dayton, Ohio) Visit the Dayton Daily News (Dayton, Ohio) at .daytondailynews.com Distributed by MCT Information Servicesmini storage
- 1月 05 週日 201415:46
赴韓快速考駕照靠譜嗎
迷你倉 epaper.ynet.com/html/2014-01/05/content_34113.htm?div=-1...“近日,一則關於7日在韓國考駕照回國換本的廣告在多處出現。花一萬元左右,一邊去韓國學車,一邊在韓國購物,回國考個交規就可以...文件倉
- 1月 05 週日 201415:37
In brief: CdA officer won't be charged in deadly shooting
Source: The Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Wash.迷你倉Jan. 04--No charges will be filed against a Coeur d'Alene police officer who shot and killed a man armed with two knives in August.Officer Spencer Mortensen shot Eric B. Johnston, 35, five times in a confrontation that unfolded after Johnston crashed his truck into a utility pole and then fled to a friend's apartment near downtown Coeur d'Alene.The investigation into the shooting was led by the Idaho State Police. Bonner County Prosecuting Attorney Louis Marshall announced his decision against filing charges in a letter to Kootenai County Prosecuting Attorney Barry McHugh.Marshall wrote that Mortensen clearly announced himself and told Johnston to drop the knives several times. Mortensen fired after Johnston failed to follow commands and advanced on the officer, Marshall wrote. The incident was recorded on a body camera worn by Mortensen."The most plausible theory of this case after looking at all the evidence is that Eric Johnston purposefully walked at Officer Spencer Mortensen after picking up the two knives with the intent to commit suicide by cop," Marshall wrote.Just before police arrived Johnston told his friend that he did not want to go back to jail, Marshall wrote.Spokane's Jensen-Byrd building ranks second on the National Trust for Historic Preservation's "10 historic preservation saves" list for 2013.The national trust, which held its national conference in Spokane in 2012, said of the six-story building, "Preservationists persuaded Washington State University to restore and reuse this 104-year-old former warehouse, rather than sell and demolish the structure."The Jensen-Byrd became the symbol of debate over historic preservation in Spokane in recent years. WSU bought the structure in 2001 and in 2011 announced plans to tear it down. Local preservationists rallied and the company that planned to develop student housing on the site backed out of the deal. In August, WSU Spokane Chancellor Lisa Brown said it was likely the university would preserve the building.A semitruck loaded with mail smashed into a car that turned in front of it on Trent Avenue at Del Ray Drive shortly after 7 p.m. Friday, according to the Washington State Patrol.The driver of a red sedan had to be cut out of his car, but his injuries are not considered life-threatening, said Sgt. Scott Lasher.The semi was heading west and the car was turning east onto Trent from Del Ray. Neither speed nor alcohol are thought to be a factor in the accident, Lasher said.The force of the collision shoved the passenger car across the road and jackknifed the truck, forcing both directions of Trent to be shut down for more than an hour. "Weight and momentum played a role," Lasher said.The driver of the semi, who was not injured, will not be cited, Lasher said. The driver of the car may be cited for pulling out in front of the truck.A 70-year-old Deer Park man was arrested Friday afternoon 儲存倉fter a SWAT standoff prompted by a baseball bat assault, the Spokane County Sheriff's Office said.Michael Martin was booked into Spokane County Jail on Friday, several hours after deputies received a call from neighbors claiming Martin had beaten them with his fists and the bat, according to a news release. When officers arrived at Martin's trailer in the 300 block of South Fir Avenue, he walked inside and refused to leave, according to the Sheriff's Office.SWAT team members and hostage negotiators were called to the scene. Martin, who said he didn't want to open the door for the police, was arrested without incident after police entered the house with a search warrant, according to a news release.Martin faces assault charges in the incident, the Sheriff's Office said.A police search of a home near a Browne's Addition convenience store robbed multiple times last month revealed multiple guns thought to be owned by the nine-time convicted felon implicated in the thefts.Justin Werle, 28, has been in custody at Spokane County Jail since Tuesday, facing charges of owning modified weapons illegally. He was previously implicated in at least one attempted robbery Dec. 28 at Sunset Grocery, 1908 W. Sunset Blvd. But police said the store had been robbed twice previously in the previous four weeks and they thwarted Werle's plot for a third.Investigators think the same white man -- disguised in a hooded sweatshirt, gloves and a bandana -- committed the two successful robberies. Police found a .22 revolver, a rifle and an "old rusty revolver" in Werle's residence, just behind the convenience store.Prosecutors have not yet said whether they will pursue additional robbery charges against Werle, who was released from prison in January 2013 after serving time on multiple riot charges.Police responded to two unrelated bank robberies in Spokane on Friday.In the first robbery, three black males in their 20s entered the Washington Trust Bank branch at Maple Street and Garland Avenue just after 9:30 a.m., Spokane police said. They were wearing ski masks and demanded money at gunpoint, according to a Spokane Police Department news release.The FBI has joined that investigation, and police believe the robbery might be connected to a robbery at a North Side U.S. Bank branch on Dec. 20.The second bank robbery happened just before 5 p.m. Friday on the South Hill.A man described as white or Hispanic entered the U.S. Bank branch on East 30th Avenue and showed a note to a teller demanding money, Spokane police spokeswoman Monique Cotton said. The teller handed over an undisclosed amount of cash and the robber fled on foot, Cotton said. He did not display a weapon.Anyone with information about either robbery is asked to call Crime Check at (509) 456-2233.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) Visit The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) at .spokesman.com Distributed by MCT Information Services迷你倉最平
- 1月 05 週日 201415:11
The toughest takedown: Cancer is often not a fair fight
Source: Post-Bulletin, Rochester, Minn.self storageJan. 04--Grueling practices, weight cutting and intense one-on-one competition are a few of the reasons many consider wrestling the most demanding high school sport.But for Lance Benick and Mitchell McKee, wrestling is the easy part. And it's not simply because they're uber talented.In 2010, when Benick was just 13, his mother, Joanne, 47, was diagnosed with a rare form of brain cancer. Last March, McKee's father, Steve, 50, was diagnosed with chodrosarcoma after doctors found a mass in his chest wall tissue wedged between his left lung, heart, spine and aortic valve.Two families, two unrelenting cancers. They're still fighting, but it's often not a fair fight. In short, two of the great Minnesota wrestling families are suffering.Rochester has been a home away from home for both families. They've had many good times at UCR Regional Sports Center at events like the Minnesota Christmas Tournament and the Clash National Wrestling Duals. They're both competing at Clash XII today. Rochester also has been home to some of their toughest times; both Joanne Benick and Steve McKee have spent months at Mayo Clinic and Saint Marys Hospital while undergoing treatment for their cancer.Thanks to their elite sons and a supportive community, wrestling often has held their families together during the worst of times.Top dogLance Benick, who attends Totino-Grace, is the No. 1-ranked wrestler in the nation at 195 pounds.Benick's name may be familiar to local wrestling fans. He's the standout who "upset" Kasson-Mantorville's Broc Berge in the state finals last March. Berge was a two-time defending state champion and a senior. Benick was a sophomore.Now a junior, Benick is considered the class of 2015's No. 1 recruit nationally, in all weight classes.Already a two-time state champion, Benick also has dominated the summer circuit. In 2012, Benick won cadet national titles in folkstyle, greco and freestyle. Last summer, he won a USA Wrestling Junior National title in folkstyle and repeated his cadet titles in freestyle and greco. He also competed at FILA Nationals, winning a cadet title in freestyle.On the mat, Benick knows he can win. At home, it's not that simple.Joanne Benick's plight started late in 2009. She started feeling ill. Every day, she felt nauseated, often throwing up. Her fatigue and dizziness grew worse and worse.Joanne admits she's a bit "old school." She wasn't one to rush to the doctor. But one day, something Lance said finally made her seek medical attention."He came home from school, saw me in bed and asked if I was going to be lazy all day," Joanne said. "That's one word that definitely doesn't describe me, lazy. I thought, 'all right, that ticked me off.' So I got up and called the doctor."Doctor visitJoanne's husband and fellow Stillwater High School graduate, Tom, had begged her to go to the doctor for months -- nine months, actually. But it took Lance's little comment to finally get her moving."I came in there with a list of things that were wrong," Joanne said. "For the nine months I was sick, I'd write all the symptoms down on a little piece of paper. I was hoping if they looked at them together, they'd be able to figure something out."It's unfortunate, but doctors came up empty. They ordered blood work and performed tests over several weeks. But all the tests came back clean."Then it was on to the next doctor," Joanne said. "They did an EKG, they tested my chest, my heart, they did a cholesterol test. They sent me to an ear, nose and throat doctor, and he tested me for vertigo. Everything came back perfect."More tests and more doctor visits meant weeks and weeks would pass without diagnosis.Joanne grew sicker and sicker.After 10 different types of doctors, Joanne finally was sent to an internist. "He walked in and had a cross on his lapel, and I don't know why that moved me, but it just made me think that maybe he'd really listen to me and believe me and help me figure out what was wrong with me," Joanne said.The internist put in a request to test her thyroid and he reordered blood work. "He said, if that all comes back OK, we will order an MRI," Joanne said.Everything came back clean once again, so Joanne went in for her MRI late one Monday night.At 2 a.m. that same night, Tom left the family home near Scandia like he does several times a week. Since 1980, he's owned a tree service. One of his main jobs is hauling bark from the mill in Bemidji all the way back down to Gertens in Inver Grove Heights.Tom left for the Bemidji run as scheduled the night of Joanne's MRI.The callThe next morning, Joanne got a call from her doctor. He asked if she was alone."I said no because Lance was with me," Joanne said. "The doctor asked if he could drive. He was only 13 at the time."The MRI revealed Joanne had a brain tumor."The doctor said, 'you need to get to United within the hour, so you need to find someone to drive you,' " Joanne said. "He said I'd be in surgery in less than an hour."Joanne called Tom immediately. That was the toughest phone call she's ever had to make."It was horrible," she said. "It was so hard on him. I was taking it fine because it was so quick, but he was devastated. He was 500 miles away, waiting on a truck load. He felt helpless."When Joanne arrived at the hospital, she checked in and nurses immediately started flowing into her room. They started shaving her head in six spots.Joanne was given little explanation of what was going on."At one point, I just stopped them," Joanne said. "I didn't even know what was happening to me or what I had."Scared and not knowing what to do, Joanne called her sister-in-law, who runs a home health care company."She said I needed to be at Mayo if I had brain cancer, because Mayo was No. 2 in the world for brain cancer. United isn't even in the top 1,500," Joanne said.Off to MayoJoanne left United and headed to Mayo Clinic. Upon arrival, she underwent three days of rigorous testing directed by Dr. Ian Parney, who worked on Eleanor Mondale when she had brain surgery.After the tests, Joanne was diagnosed with anaplastic ependymoma, which is a rare tumor that forms in the fourth ventricle (brain stem). Parney gave Joanne three options.First, she could do nothing, and she would have between one hour and one week to live. Second, they could do a biopsy and find out what's wrong, and then they'd go back in and fix it. Third, they could skip the biopsy and just take care of it."I said, 'Just go in and do it!' I was so sick, I just wanted to get it done," she said.Dr. Parney was fairly certain it was ependymoma, but he wasn't sure how bad it was.It was bad. The worst, actually. Grade 3, which is, more often than not, a death sentence.On Aug. 12, 2010, the Mayo Clinic doctors went to work, performing a delicate, nine-hour surgery to remove as much of the tumor as possible.The surgery involved removing part of Joanne's skull and her C-1 vertebrae. They then split her cerebellum with a forceps so they could see the tumor, which as Joanne described it, looked like a large oyster."During the surgery they had my brain hooked up to all these little electrodes which are used for mapping and tracking, so they can tell what they're affecting when they touch different parts of the brain," Joanne said. "If they hit something, little buzzers go off."Joanne's tumor went all the way into her brain stem, so doctors were able to remove only 85 percent of the tumor."I asked the doctor when he knew to stop," Joanne said. "And he said, 'I quit when I was ready to crap my pants because all the buzzers were going off.' "Stroke of bad luckThe surgery went well, but a shunt placed near her brain to help with drainage caused a blood clot on the right side of Joanne's brain. The stroke caused her to have some paralysis in her left side. She had no peripheral vision on her left side and often had double-vision."The thing I was the most afraid of, going in, was just not being me after the surgery," Joanne said. "I could handle not walking or not moving, but I just wanted my mind to still be me. I hoped my kids would still know who I was and I would still know who they were. I couldn't stand the thought of losing that."Recovery was one of the roughest time for Joanne and for Tom, Lance and their oldest son Luke."I had the tubes down my throat, down my nose, IVs everywhere, my head was wrapped; I was just kind of a mess," she said. "Once they start waking you up, the next step is trying to get the breathing tube out. That took three days. I kept motioning that I wanted to write stuff down. They gave me a pen and some paper. It was tough to read, but my sister-in-law could read it. One of the things I wrote was, 'fresh air.' I also wrote 'am I me?' and 'where are my boys?' "At that point, the boys knew they had their mom back."That was the toughest time," Lance said. "When it first happened, everything was so quick, I didn't know what to think. But the surgery and stroke, that was the scariest time for the whole family."The road to recovery wasn't over yet. And with 15 percent of the cancer still in her brain stem, Joanne was far from healthy or "cured." She also had to deal with the blood clot in her brain, weeks of physical therapy, and eventually, radiation to further shrink the tumor.Joanne underwent 36 sessions of radiation. "It's the maximum amount you can do in a lifetime," she said.After three months at Saint Marys, Joanne finally went home. There still would be regular MRIs to monitor the cancer. And Joanne was given only between one and two years to live.Yet, here she is, still fighting in 2014.A setbackRight now, things are going well. That hasn't always been the case. There was one major hiccup in March of 2012.Joanne was getting sick again. She was a little scared, but not scared enough to go to the doctor.Joanne started noticing symptoms during the 2012 state tournament at Xcel Energy Center.Lance was just a freshman, but he advanced to the state finals at 182 pounds. During the match, Joanne popped up in her chair when Lance put his opponent on his back. In the process, Joanne became very dizzy and fell back over into her seat.After a few months of feeling sick, Joanne finally went back to Mayo Clinic. The cancer had returned. But Joanne was out of options."I thought, 'Well, this is it,'" Joanne said. "I had reached my maximum amount of radiation. There wasn't much they could do."But in the two years since Joanne's initial surgery, the treatment for her type of cancer was changing. "That's when they brought up Gamma Knife radiation," Joanne said.Gamma Knife radiosurgery uses specialized equipment to focus nearly 200 tiny beams of radiation on a tumor. It delivers a strong dose of radiation to a small location.Joanne's tumor initially was the size of an egg. But the second time, it was just the size of her pinky fingernail. It was caught early enough, so they went through with the new procedure.When the swelling went down, doctors were able to re-examine Joanne's tumor. It had not grown.Side effectsThough the tumor was under control, after radiosurgery, Joanne had trouble swallowing. She quickly lost 10 pounds. Joanne was placed on steroids. The side effects weren't pleasant. In three months, Joanne gained 80 pounds."I felt like a giant wood tick, ready to burst," she said.In May, Joanne finally finished her steroid medication, and she's lost 22 pounds and counting.In general, 2013 was a good year for Joanne and her family. Her MRIs have all come back with good results. She'll go back in two months for her next MRI. While she still gets nervous every time she goes in, s迷利倉e's also at peace.Joanne's type of cancer has a high rate of recurrence, but the Gamma Knife radiosurgery has worked in her favor. If she didn't do it, she wouldn't be here today."I am thankful because my kids are old enough that they'll remember me," she said. "At first, my goal was to see Luke graduate. I did that. Now, as time goes on, I set other little goals. Now it's to see Lance graduate."For Lance, the entire process has been brutal and devastating, though you'd never know it by looking at him or talking to him."I don't talk about it to many people at all, if anyone," he said.Lance always has been the tough one, and that means hiding emotions. He has bottled up a great deal of the pain and suffering he's endured surrounding his mother's illness."Lance is tough, and he tries to internalize things," Joanne said.A breakdownLance and Joanne had one big breakdown last year following a family outing to Mall of America. The outing didn't go well."We got to the parking lot at Lance's school, and Lance and I were screaming at each other," Joanne said. "I was crying, he was crying. Lance said 'you don't know how hard it is on me. Everyone think it's supposed to be so easy. I'm supposed to be good in school, in football, in wrestling. Nobody knows how hard it is to do all this and go through what's going on with my mom.' It was horrible. We just sat in the car and cried. But Lance holds a lot in. He's being tough and strong, but me being sick is something he worries about."Older brother Luke is better about vocalizing and showing his emotions. He was forced to grow up quickly. When Joanne was diagnosed, Luke was the only one in the family with a license. Lance was too young and Tom was off hauling bark. That meant Luke had to drive Lance to school and to practice and take Joanne to her appointments.Lance's one steady outlet has been wrestling. On the mat and in the wrestling room, he can, even if it's just for a few moments, focus on what's right in front of him."It's definitely an outlet, and it's a time to hang out with friends and do what I love," he said. "This whole experience has put things in perspective. If you're having a bad day or complaining about something, well, my mom has brain cancer. Things could be worse. You need to have a positive outlook at all times, and that's how I look at everything."The McKee familyFor the McKee family, the cancer bomb was dropped last March. It's been a vicious 10 months, and Steve's health has deteriorated quickly. Doctors have attempted seemingly every possible treatment for Steve's cancer.Steve's son Mitchell McKee is much like Lance Benick.Mitchell McKee is one of the state's elite wrestlers. He's just a sophomore, but he's ranked No. 1 in Minnesota at 120 pounds. He has qualified for the state tournament every year since seventh grade, finishing second once and third last March. He also helped St. Michael-Albertville win the state team title.Thanks to his summer success, Mitchell has earned national attention. He's ranked No. 16 in the nation at 120 pounds. Mitchell won Cadet national titles in both greco and folkstyle in 2012 and followed that up with a second Cadet greco national championship last summer.But much like Lance Benick, wrestling is the easy part these days for Mitchell McKee.Steve's cancer came on quickly in February of 2013. There had been no symptoms other than pain in his chest that shot through his back."It felt like I had popped a rib out," Steve said. "I went to the chiropractor, and then to the doctor and they did an x-ray and saw the mass."Steve was losing circulation in his legs. It became painful to walk, and he also had pain in his ribs and spine. He headed to Mayo Clinic. After a few tests, Steve was diagnosed with chodrosaroma. The massive tumor was in a horrible location, essentially wedged between his lungs, heart and spine. A biopsy would later reveal the cancer already had spread into Steve's right lung.Keeping focusSteve and wife Nina found out just prior to last March's state wrestling tournament, but they didn't tell Mitchell, or his younger brother Patrick, who is just an eighth-grader, until after state. They didn't want to break Mitchell's focus during the big event.Steve, who always had been active, including countless hours on the wrestling mat with his two sons, underwent surgery March 19. Because the tumor was near his spine, it made it difficult for Steve to walk. It also meant surgery would be especially delicate.During the surgery, Dr. Bradford Currier at Mayo Clinic removed vertebrae to get at the tumor. Much of the tumor that was pushing against Steve's spine was removed, but doctors placed 13 screws and two metal rods in place of the vertebrae.While doctors were able to remove the part of the tumor pressing against Steve's spine, the rest of the tumor was too dangerous to remove.Following recovery from surgery, radiation therapy to attack Steve's remaining cancer would be up next.Steve's recovery was painful, but with Nina and the boys by his side, along with the entire wrestling family, he felt strong."Nina has been my rock through everything," he said. "I try to keep a positive attitude. God is going to do what he does. I think if I'm positive, it makes everyone worry less. I have a lot of people praying for me."Steve has needed every one of those prayers along the way.He was given a few weeks to recover from his surgery, and then Steve was right back at Mayo for more testing. The tests showed Steve was ready for radiation.More treatmentOn April 11, he underwent the first of 10 brutal radiation treatments in an attempt to shrink or at least stunt his remaining cancer. The treatments lasted two painful weeks. The weeks to come weren't much easier. Steve was weak and the radiation damaged his esophagus, making it difficult for him to swallow. That meant every time he ate or drink, it caused severe pain.The pain continued for three full weeks, but eventually things improved. Of course, that just meant another trip to Mayo Clinic. It also meant Steve would be starting chemotherapy.In May, Steve was given a clinical trial of a new chemotherapy. He took the chemo pills for two months, but they did not work. In fact, Steve's cancer had grown and spread during that time.It was a discouraging setback."They took me off the pills, and I just said I'm not doing any more chemo because I felt too good," he said. "I was feeling good and we spent a lot of time up at the lake that summer, so I didn't want that to change."But late in the summer, things did change. Steve started feeling ill again. He was having the same pain in his back, and he was losing circulation in his legs. He knew the tumor was pushing on his spine again.An MRI at Mayo Clinic confirmed Steve's belief. The tumor was back, and the only way to stop his legs from complete paralysis was to go back in and cut out the tumor again."The first time, they went in and took a little of the tumor away from the spine," Steve said. "I told them to get as much as possible this time around because I didn't want to be back in there in six months. But it was the same thing. They were only able to take 50 percent of it."Another attemptSteve was running out of options. On the Monday and Tuesday before Thanksgiving, doctors tried another cancer treatment, cryoablation. Basically, they attempted to freeze as many of the cancer cells as possible.During that procedure, they also removed a liter of fluid from Steve's left lung. Fluid in Steve's lungs had become quite common."That's always what scares me the most, when I hear the fluid start coming back in his lungs," Nina said. "He keeps getting it drained, but it will keep happening. With cancer in the lungs, you never know when they're going to shut down. So it's scary."Steve keeps fighting, though. Even though the cryoablation "kicked his butt," he felt like the process worked."Dad's a fighter," Mitchell said. "When we see him fighting, it makes it tough for us to not stay positive."A week after cryoablation, Steve's lung was "tapped" again."When I went in that time, the doctor said if I didn't do anything, I'd have two months to live," Steve said.Steve has more appointments set up back at Mayo Clinic in January. But the truth is, every day could be his last. Every wrestling meet, every family function, they're all precious now."I'm still fighting," he said. "It's something I've said to the kids in everyday life. You keep fighting, you don't give up. They can see when I'm doing pretty well, and it bothers them when I'm doing poorly. But I keep plugging away."Plenty of supportSteve said he couldn't do it without his support system."Nina, this I'm sure has been tough enough for her, but she's kept this family together," Steve said while fighting back tears. "She's a fabulous person. She takes care of me, keeps the kids on their regular schedule. She's a trooper."Mitchell said wrestling has helped him keep his mind off his father's illness. He's also immersed himself in his school work, again taking the focus off what's happening at home.Much like Lance Benick, Mitchell doesn't talk about his father's illness often. He has a close circle of friends, and that has helped.Mitchell also has felt pressure to stay strong for his younger brother, "because if I don't, nobody will," he said. "I feel like a big brother more than ever. I want to stay strong for him, and I try to talk to him about it when he needs it. I guess as things have progressed, I've been forced to grow up quickly."A good talkMitchell McKee and Lance Benick are good friends through wrestling, but Mitchell said he hasn't spoken to Lance since his father became ill. Both said they hope that changes this weekend at the Clash."I'd love to talk to Lance," Mitchell said. "It's hard to talk to people, because they haven't been through this. They don't know what you're really going through. It would be nice to talk to a friend who has been through it."Steve and Nina often have hidden the worst parts of Steve's treatment from the boys. "They tell us eventually, but we usually don't know how bad it is until after it's over," Mitchell said.Steve said he believes his kids are doing remarkably well under the circumstances. Nina has seen a change in their behavior, but it's for the better. She said there are more hugs and "I love yous" around the McKee household these days.Somehow, through it all, Nina has remained upbeat. She's still active in the wrestling community and wouldn't have it any other way. That wrestling family has been there for every twist and turn during Steve's illness, and she knows they will be there when the fight is over."The wrestling family is what has kept us going," Nina said. "I can't even start to name off all the generosity we've received from our wrestling family. It brings you to tears thinking about it. Everything we've needed, we haven't had to ask for. They're just there for us."As Steve gets sicker, Nina continues to do her best to remain positive. She has fears, though. The thought of being alone, of the boys off at college, those thoughts scare her."We pray a lot and we have a lot of people praying for us," Nina said. "Every wrestling match we go to, it's hard to not think that it could be Steve's last one. Each one is a milestone, and I can see how proud Steve is of his boys, and that makes me happy. We're taking it one day at a time, because that's all we can do. But we all still see that fight in Steve. That helps us get through the day."Copyright: ___ (c)2014 the Post-Bulletin Visit the Post-Bulletin at .postbulletin.com Distributed by MCT Information Services迷你倉
- 1月 05 週日 201414:58
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選購顯示卡更重要 un3354:電視棒用來解電視訊號很重要,倉但顯示卡更重要!我有台pentium e6300 2.8 ram2G 配 gt210~220顯卡,看半天電視,電腦就會變藍畫面,自已重開!如果沒看電視開一整天,也不會重開機! 網路電視不需電視棒 Tdnj:網路電視基本上不需要電視棒就可以看了,所以買電視棒上面主要買來是看數位電視為主喔!當然大部分都是數位+類比(第4台)的產品,先弄清楚自己是要哪一種的產品,免得買下去才發現買錯喔。 只看有線節目買電視盒 Leo2012:中華電信的MOD和有線電視的數位機上盒,節目內容不一樣喔!如果只看有線電視的節目內容,那只要去買個「可獨立24小時迷你倉作的類比電視盒」就OK了!約1~2000元就有大牌子可選擇,要看電視時按下電視盒開關及電腦螢幕和喇叭即可,完全不需要開電腦。 Chromecast價格很親民 小米:外形和USB隨身碟相似的Chromecast,不需要外接電線,就能將智慧型手機、平板電腦和桌上型電腦的內容,透過串流方式,在電視螢幕上播放,而且很重要的是可以支援多種類型的裝置與系統,不像A牌、S牌h牌的,只能與原廠手機相容。Chromecast的價格也很親民,一支Chromecast 只要約35 美元就可以買到了,可以一邊用這個看電視或者手機影片,同時還能一邊繼續玩手機。 資料來源:Mobile01、uTalk、PCDVD數位科技討論區迷你倉旺角
- 1月 05 週日 201414:48
Like Hyde, OSU's Miller may want to stick around
Source: The Lima News, OhioJan.迷你倉 04--FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- Braxton Miller is like the brilliant improvisational musician applying for a job in a symphony orchestra.He might not be a perfect fit, but his unique talent makes him interesting. A little risky, but still interesting.Carlos Hyde is like a traditionally trained musician who never misses a note, consistently brings his best to a concert or practice, produces the sound of three ordinary players and can carry his entire section on his back.Which one do you want?Which one do you want, Hyde or Miller, if you are an NFL team?The answer right now seems obvious.If Hyde, a senior running back for Ohio State, lasts past the second round of the NFL draft, a lot of teams will have made a really bad mistake.Miller, the starting quarterback for OSU the last 2 1/2 seasons, is a junior who appears to be seriously considering declaring himself eligible for the NFL draft even though most people think if he does that he will be making a mistake.When the possibility of Miller turning pro before his senior season was first raised, many people, including me, were surprised.But going into Friday night's Orange Bowl game between OSU and Clemson, it appeared to be a 50-50 proposition.The case for Miller to stay at Ohio State another year starts with the fact that even though his passing showed dramatic improvement this season, at least until November, he is still far from a finished product.The case for him to go now begins with the fact that another year might not help him a lot with the NFL and that he would be leaving money on the table.As good as Miller is, and there was a time as late as last season when he was Ohio State's only offensive weapon, the answer to the question of how ready he is for the NFL is still in domini storagebt.Ready or not, he might be going.But maybe a little more appreciation for Hyde and a little less apprehension over Miller's future might be appropriate.Going into Friday night's game, the 235-pound Hyde was averaging 7.7 yards a carry. No other Ohio State back, big or small, who rushed for 1,000 yards in a season ever did that.Archie Griffin is second on the list at 6.6 yards a carry in 1974. When Eddie George set the OSU season rushing record with 1,927 yards in 1995, he averaged 5.9 yards a carry.After sitting out the first three games of this season, Hyde ran for 1,408 yards, an average of 140.8 yards a game. George averaged 147.7 yards a game in his record-setting season and Griffin averaged 141.2 yards a game in his best season.Expand Hyde's numbers to a full season and he would have rushed for more than 1,800 yards and probably would have been a finalist for the Heisman Trophy. He also ran for 970 yards in 2012.What many people have forgotten is that in a moment of anger two years ago, he also talked about leaving early.After leading Ohio State in rushing through the first six games in 2011, Hyde got the ball for only three carries in a 17-7 win over Illinois. Dan Herron, in his first game back after a six-game suspension, got 23 carries and Jordan Hall had 12.Hyde went on Twitter and said, "Guess I'm not good enough. Take myself elsewhere."He later deleted the tweet and went on to become one of the key players in Ohio State's almost uninterrupted success the last two seasons.That does not mean staying instead of leaving is always a better decision. But it certainly worked out well for Hyde and Ohio State.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 The Lima News (Lima, Ohio) Visit The Lima News (Lima, Ohio) at .limaohio.com Distributed by MCT Information Servicesself storage
- 1月 05 週日 201413:51
Two restaurant veterans open new Eugene dining spot, Baker Butcher
Source: The Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.迷利倉Jan. 04--Two seasoned chefs who left established careers in Los Angeles to be closer to family in Eugene have opened a restaurant in the Fifth Street Public Market in downtown Eugene.The husband-and-wife team of Scott and Nicole Garrett recently opened Baker Butcher, an Italian restaurant, in the market's international food court.The Garretts moved to Oregon, where Nicole grew up, after Nicole's brother and sister-in-law, Drew and Michelle Wattier, were seriously injured in a hit-and-run accident in November 2012. The Wattiers were struck while walking outside the resort where they were staying in Los Cabos, Mexico."Nicole tended to her brother, and I took a job working for Oakway Catering and eventually took over the catering department," Scott Garrett said. Nicole eventually went to work for Oakway Catering, too, making cakes and specialty desserts.Scott, 39, previously had been executive chef for the Blue Plate Restaurant Group, which has three restaurants in Santa Monica, Calif. Nicole, 37, had been former executive head baker for SusieCakes, which has four locations in Los Angeles and four in San Francisco.When a restaurant space opened at Fifth Street market, the Garretts partnered with Borzi Marashi, owner of Oakway Catering, to open Baker Butcher.The restaurant is open 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Thursday; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.In addition to the Garretts, the business has four other employees, including head chef Garrett Kirsch, who previously worked for b2 Wine Bar in Eugene.Baker Butcher serves a variety of soups, salads, sandwiches, and entrees daily, plus breakfast on weekends, with an emphasis on fresh, local ingredients. Popular dishes include specials featuring the gnocchi Scott Garrett makes by hand on Saturdays; orecchiette pasta with sausage, kale, peas and dates for $13; and a meatball "pub sub" sandwich for $11, they said. Breakfast fare on Saturday and Sunday mornings includes four varieties of frittatas for $5 to $7; rosemary polenta with grilled prosciutto and two eggs over easy for $7; and the Garretts' own version of French toast, with eggs and grilled sausage, $8.Both were working full time as they raced to get the restaurant open. They said they would get up at 5 a.m., go to their jobs at the c迷你倉tering company, then work on the Baker Butcher space from 5 or 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m."We did that every day for three weeks," Scott Garrett said.The Garretts looked at various spaces around town for their restaurant but were drawn to the food court at Fifth Street market."Every (city) has a location like the Fifth Street market," Garrett said. "In San Francisco, it's the Ferry Building. There's so much diversity and culture and things to do and try. That's what drew us to the Fifth Street market, families and people getting together and enjoying each other's company, and trying new things."What I love to see is when families of five come in and everyone gets food from (a different restaurant)," he said."Just as much as I want to succeed, I want the Fifth Street market to succeed," Garrett said. "It's such a beautiful historic building."Next year, Baker Butcher wants to add after-hours activities, such as cooking and baking classes; oyster and champagne events; and summertime farmer's market dinners.After their high-powered careers in Southern California, moving to Eugene isn't a step down, Garrett said, "It's just different.""There's something to be said of having a smaller community," he said. "You get to know each other more easily. Friendships are formed. You're constantly educating yourself."Garrett said that when he first moved to Eugene, "I didn't have any ideas where I could fit in in the culinary community. I decided that if we wanted to get something going and do what we needed to do, we needed to do it ourselves."My wife and I both spent years upon years making other people successful," he said. "What we want to do is to just not have to do it for anyone anymore."He said he's not exactly sure how to measure the success of their venture, but he knows it's not just about money."I think it's about keeping people happy and offering different things and keeping people coming down here and learning and trying new things," he said.Garrett also is happy to report that a year after their accident and extensive medical treatments, Drew and Michelle Wattier are back at home together."They're both helping each other get rehabilitated," he said.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 The Register-Guard (Eugene, Ore.) Visit The Register-Guard (Eugene, Ore.) at .registerguard.com Distributed by MCT Information Services自存倉
