Local news, News

Women of Constituency #7

Buckie Got It….Women of Constituency #7, women of Unity and women of excellence all are invited to a special meeting on Wednesday 12th April 2017 at 7:00 pm sharp. Venue by Len Harris home. Ladies please walk with a friend and another lady, tell Sue, tell Mary and Jane too don’t forget ladies to bring a bag of ideas and plans for our Constituency. Something special awaits you. ?????

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Horoscope

The Thought of the Day

Published 11 April 2017

Buckie Got It….Good morning my dear families and friends I hope that we all had a good night’s rest.

The thought for today says “We only get what we believe that we deserve. Raise the bar, raise your standards and you will receive a better outcome.”
How we think about ourselves plays into this equation.  Also doing the work; putting forth the effort consistently to ensure we are ready to receive the next step. Have a blessed Tuesday.

Today’s Tip

Success is not defined by obtaining everything you want, but by appreciating everything you have.

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Local news, News

SKN Diaspora Community Mourning the Loss of a Stalwart

Publish 10 April 2017

SKN Diaspora Community Mourning the Loss of a Stalwart

Helen Marcella Byron-Baker

 

The SKN community in the diaspora and in particular New York is mourning the loss of a stalwart and true Kittitian and Nevisian patriot.

Helen Marcella Byron-Baker has passed away . Described as a woman of grace, class and champion of pride in self and country was a former senior property manager at Durst Fetner, one of the largest property developers in New York and a founding member of KABA Kittitian American Benevolent Association.

Firm, frank and fair was she.

A void will certainly be left in the community of citizens she served, KABA, the organization she co-founded, the organizations she worked with, her church, her family and dear friends.

She will be sorely missed.


Byron-Baker with St.Kitts US Town Councillor Hon. Kenrick W. Clifton
A number of St.Kitts-Nevis Groups , Organisations and dignataries have paid glowing tributes to the late proud daughter of the soil.

St.Kitts born US Town Councillor Attorney Kenrick Clifton opined “GOODBYE MY FRIEND…

No words can describe how saddened I am by the passing of a dear and wonderful soul whom I have known all my adult life.

Years earlier, I felt so honored and so blessed to have presented her with an Award for her amazing contribution to community, to her beloved country of St. Kitts and Nevis and to humanity.

We pray the love of God enfolds the family during this difficult time.”

The Green Valley Global Association issued the following statement “”To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.

A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted…….

A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance….

No other time pierces our hearts as deeply as one of life’s inevitable phases; the deep dark doldrums of death.

Death creates this void in our lives, filling us with pain and sorrow for the loss of a loved one……and yet it is a constant reminder that once we have life, we are sure one day to face death.

As we reminisce on the life of Helen Marcella Byron Baker, a champion for the cause of women, for country, for her church community and for her family, may we hold dear her undeniable passion for the service of others.

On behalf of the members and friends of GVG, Inc., I extend our sincere condolences to her dear family and friends.

May she rest peacefully in a world where neither pain nor sorrow will befall her.”

The Sandy Point Benevolent Society also issued an official statement regarding the passing of Lady Byron-Baker. The statement reads “SPBS takes this opportunity to convey our sincerest condolences to the family of Mrs Helen Marcella Byron-Baker.
Mrs Byron-Baker was a patriot from the Federation of St Kitts and Nevis and was one of the founding members of KABA. She worked tirelessly to improve the lives of the people of the Federation.
May she Rest In Peace.”

Mrs Baker-Byron is the sister of President of the Caribbean Court of Justice Sir Dennis Byron , Attorney-General of St.Kitts-Nevis Hon. Vincent Byron Jr. and former SKN Ambassador to Taiwan Attorney Terrance V Byron

In mourning her death, there is great appreciation for her selflessness, hence the importance in reflecting on her life and celebrating her contributions during her earthly sojourn..

Viewing and Tributes for Helen Marcella Byron will be on Monday, April 17, 2017 at J. Foster Phillips Funeral Home, 179-24 Linden Blvd, St. Albans, NY 11434 from 4pm to 8pm.

Church Service on Tuesday, @ 9:00 AM at St. John’s United Methodist Church, 2105 Stuart Ave, Valley Stream, NY.

Interment at the Wood Lawn Cemetery, Farmingdale, NY.

May her soul find eternal peace!

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Health

Allergies will be even more miserable in the future — thanks to global warming

Published 10 April 2017

Yay
It’s spring in California: the birds are chirping, the flowers are blooming, and my sinuses are so swollen they might just pop right out of my face.
I’m one of the 36 million or so Americans lucky enough to suffer from seasonal allergies. And experts tell me that I might suffer from this eye-itching, sinus-pounding misery even more in the future. Warming global temperatures may lead to longer blooming seasons, and rising CO2 levels could help weeds and trees grow more, and faster. That could mean more allergy-causing pollen, according to a growing crop of studies. This is especially bad news for people with allergic asthma, who can suffer from life-threatening attacks.
Seasonal allergies, also known as hay fever, are about sex — plant sex, that is. To reproduce, many (but not all) plants need to transfer pollen from the male plant onto a female flower. Some rely on pollinators like bees for this. “But some plants want to do it on the cheap, and they have the wind pollinate,” Lewis Ziska, a plant biologist with the US Department of Agriculture, tells The Verge. The problem is that wind pollination is not very efficient, Ziska says. So, some plants like ragweed have to pump out a billion-odd grains of pollen to ensure that a few land on a female flower.
In the spring, trees are the plants getting busy. In the summer, it’s grasses and weeds. In the fall, ragweed. For seasonal allergy sufferers like me, all this pollen stimulates the immune system, which recognizes innocuous pollen proteins as dangerous invaders. That makes immune cells pump out molecules that cause itchiness and swelling, like histamine — the molecule blocked by over-the-counter allergy medications like Benadryl. The result is itchy eyes, runny noses, a scratchy throat, and, in severe cases, constricted airways.
There are a couple of different ways that a changing climate could worsen allergies. Plants absorb carbon dioxide to make fuel via photosynthesis, so the idea is that more CO2 in the air means more food for the plants. That could lead to more plant growth — and more pollen. (Obviously, there are many other effects of climate change that are massively damaging to plants, like wildfires or extreme weather events.)
Rising CO2 levels are also causing global temperatures to rise, especially at higher latitudes, Charles Schmidt reports for Environmental Health Perspectives. This appears to be lengthening the growing season — allowing plants to make more pollen for longer periods of time.
All this could affect ragweed, a flowering plant that’s a main cause of hay fever. Scientists found that ragweed grown in the lab flowers more and produces more pollen when carbon dioxide levels go up. These results were observed out of the lab, too, in a little microcosm of global warming known as a city. There’s about 30 percent more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of downtown Baltimore than in nearby rural areas — and it’s about 3 degrees warmer, too. Ragweed grown in the downtown Baltimore plot thrived, growing bigger and puffing out larger plumes of pollen than its country counterpart.
Across the pond, in Europe, scientists led by Michelle Epstein at the University of Vienna also modeled ragweed’s expanding range and increasing pollen production. They calculate that by 2060, the number of Europeans suffering from ragweed-induced hay fever could double to 77 million.


Since it’s spring, ragweed isn’t the plant that’s making me miserable right now: trees are. And the picture is a little more complicated for trees. Depending on the species and the location, warmer spring temperatures can make a tree flower earlier or later, less or more. In some regions, like Denmark and Switzerland, pollen counts for certain species do seem to be rising along with spring temperatures. Oak and birch trees appear to be flowering earlier. And pine trees grown in an experimental site with higher CO2 levels released more pollen than trees grown under normal conditions. Birch trees grown in warmer temperatures also appear to produce more of a specific protein that’s especially allergenic. That means that these trees aren’t just producing pollen longer — they’re producing more potent pollen, too.
Still, nothing is set in stone. Ziska and his colleague Paul Beggs in Australia note in a 2012 review paper that there’s a lot left to learn about how warming temperatures and climbing carbon dioxide emissions will change trees’ pollination practices. One thing’s for sure: as temperatures continue to break records worldwide, I’m going to keep stocking up on antihistamines — just in case the apocalypse hits and the Benadryl, Allegra, and Claritin factories all go out of service.

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Business, Health, Local news

Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine Receives NIH Grant to Study Transmission of Mosquito-Borne Diseases

http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170207005161/en/Ross-University-School-Veterinary-Medicine-Receives-NIH #

Published 10 April 2017 

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts–(BUSINESS WIRE)–In recent years, mosquito-transmitted arboviruses such as chikungunya, dengue and Zika, have emerged as global public health threats. Scientists are still unsure as to how these viruses spread from their natural hosts, non-human primates in Africa and Asia, to people – resulting in epidemics around the world. Researchers at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (Ross) have been awarded a grant by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to study these viruses and advance our understanding of how they may be transmitted between animals and humans.Ross received grant from @NIAIDNews to study transmission of #chikungunya, #dengue and #Zika.

The research will investigate whether African Green Monkeys are infected with arboviruses in the five ecosystems present on the island of St. Kitts, identify the mosquitoes that may be involved in the transmission of the viruses among the monkeys, and probe how the virus is spread amongst people on the island.

“Without readily available vaccines and specific treatment for many arboviruses, it is critical to understand their transmission cycles in order to control the spread of the diseases they cause,” said Patrick Kelly, BVSC, Ph.D., Ross professor of small animal medicine, who is the principal investigator for this project. “This better understanding of the roles non-human primates play in the epidemiology of arboviral diseases will lead to improved surveillance and control strategies for the diseases.”

Kelly said the findings of this study could potentially help scientists who are studying the transmission dynamics of the viruses in other regions of the world, including Africa, South America and Asia.

“Our university’s location in the tropics provides an ideal backdrop for conducting surveillance and research programs of strategic importance to the developing world,” said Sean Callanan, dean at Ross. “This project leverages our skilled scientists and advanced research facilities to tackle one of the most pressing health issues of the 21st century.”

Led by Ross, the research is a collaborative effort with investigators at Kansas State University and the University of Georgia. The grant was awarded by NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (grant number 1R21AI128407-01). It is the first NIH grant awarded to a research team at Ross.

About Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine

Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (Ross), founded in 1982, is committed to preparing students to become members and leaders of the worldwide public and professional healthcare team and to advance human, animal and ecosystem health through research and knowledge exchange. Ross has focused research programs with an emphasis on emerging infectious and zoonotic diseases, conservation medicine, and ecosystem health. Ross offers postgraduate Masters’, Ph.D. and Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) programs accredited by the St. Christopher & Nevis Accreditation Board. The DVM program also holds accredited status from the American Veterinary Medical Association (www.avma.org). Ross is a part of DeVry Education Group (NYSE:DV). For more information about Ross, visit www.rossu.edu/vet.

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