Hurricane’s Impact On Trees, And How Homeowners Can Prevent Sandy-Like Devastation Next Time

From Mother Nature Network’s Tom Oder:

Numerous studies have shown that trees add value to homes and communities.

A study of 3,229 municipally owned trees in Wooster, Ohio, in the summer of 2010, for example, found that each tree provided $83 in benefits annually, said Susan Littlefield, a horticulturalist with the National Gardening Association. The study found that the economic benefits of storing carbon, removing air pollution and helping to reduce storm water runoff provided a whopping $270,153 yearly value to the city! The study was conducted by Ohio State University graduate student Alejandro Chiriboga.

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Marijuana Pinatas: 425 Pounds Of Drugs Found In Arizona Shipment From Mexico

These piñatas aren’t for kids.

Police found more than 425 pounds of marijuana in a shipment of piñatas crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona last week, according to CBS 5 Arizona.

Drug-sniffing dogs detected the drugs on a truck driven by 24-year-old Tucson native Juan Marcelo Armstrong.

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The Most Expensive Thanksgiving Meal In America: 24/7 Wall St.

From 24/7 Wall St.: The cost of Thanksgiving dinner has gone up over the years. It averaged $34.56 in 2002 and now is nearly $50. But depending on where you live and where you shop, your family could spend less than $35 for turkey and all the trimmings this year — or nearly than two and a half times that amount.

The American Farm Bureau Federation identified the 12 basic grocery items used to make a standard Thanksgiving meal for ten. Based on cost-of-living data calculated by the Council for Community and Economic Research, 24/7 Wall St. determined how much this meal would cost at an inexpensive supermarket in the most inexpensive city in America, and what it would cost at an expensive supermarket in the most expensive city.

According to C2ER, the urban area with the lowest overall cost of living is Harlingen, Texas, where prices for all goods are roughly 80 percent of the national average. Located a few miles from the border with Mexico, Harlingen has a generally low-income or poor population. As of 2011, more than one in three residents were living below the poverty line. The median household income was just $32,714, compared to the national median household income of $50,502.

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Bonita Lynn Fields Dead: Former Mouseketeer Dies At 68

INDIANAPOLIS — Former Mouseketeer Bonita Lynn Fields Elder, an agile dancer who showcased those skills on the 1950s children’s show “The Mickey Mouse Club” and later performed on Broadway, has died in Indiana at age 68.

Her cousin Robbin Myers said Tuesday that Elder died Saturday at a Richmond hospital following a two-year battle with throat cancer. Elder had smoked for decades but quit after her diagnosis, Myers said.

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Happiness In Teen Years Linked To Higher Income [STUDY]

By: Trevor Stokes, MyHealthNewsDaily Contributor
Published: 11/19/2012 03:07 PM EST on MyHealthNewsDaily

Gloomy teens, take heed — your more happy-go-lucky classmates will likely earn more than you, according to new research.

Researchers followed more than 10,000 U.S. adolescents over a decade and found that happiness during the teen years and young adulthood was linked with income at age 29.

Downcast teens earned 30 percent less than the average salary at age 29, whereas happy teens earned 10 percent above average, according to researchers.

"Happiness is a good predictor of income," even after factors such as gender, IQ, physical health and height are taken into account, said study researcher Andrew Oswald, a professor of economics at the University of Warwick in England.

Why high spirits may translate to bigger salaries is unknown, but happiness during the teen years may allow people to focus on the tasks at hand instead of dwelling on their feelings.

"If you’re happy, you have less worries and distractions and stress that probably divert you away from the things that are important for work and getting promotions," Oswald said. "People who worry less can concentrate on being better employees."

Happiness and money

People in the study completed questionnaires about their emotional well-being at ages 16, 18 and 22, and researchers followed up with them when study participants reached age 29, as part of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.

The teens were asked to rate their life satisfaction on a five-point scale, and researchers found that each 1-point increase was associated with a $2,000 increase in income by age 29 on average.

Even within families, the researchers found that happier teens earned more than their more woeful siblings.

But teens can’t simply grin their way to bigger paychecks, Oswald said. The researchers found that teens also benefited from being outgoing and having fewer neuroses.

The researchers emphasized that the link may work in both directions, with income levels and happiness influencing each other.Among study participants, happiness levels were further boosted by earning a college degree, getting hired for a job and receiving promotions, researchers found.

How parents might help gloomy teens

Parents can help their teens improve their incomes, experts said.

"One take-home message for parents might be that actually, it is important how your kids are feeling," Maria Iacovou, senior research fellow at the University of Essex in England, told MyHealthNewsDaily. Iacovou studies how families affect children’s incomes, but was not involved in the new study.

"Children’s mental health and well-being — when they’re teenagers — maybe it isn’t just something that should be ignored and be assumed it will all come out right in the end, it is something that should actually be paid attention to right here and right now," Iacovou said.

However, this doesn’t mean that teens can or should simply start smiling more.

"The effects in this paper are not small by the standards of social sciences, but they’re not huge," Iacovou said. "It doesn’t mean that if you have a gloomy teenager or if you are a gloomy teenager that you will necessarily end up with the rest of your life ruined."

The study appeared online today (Nov. 19) in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

Pass it on: Ensuring teenagers are happy may help them earn bigger paychecks in the future.

FollowMyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND. We’re also on Facebook & Google+.

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New York School Districts Face Financial, Educational Insolvency: Superintendents Survey

More than half of New York’s superintendents say they won’t be able to keep up with student instruction mandates, and 41 percent say it’ll only be two to four years before they will no longer be able to survive financially, according to a recent survey.

The New York State Council of School Superintendents conducted the online member survey of 249 superintendents in August and September.

Fifty-one percent of district superintendents said they foresee educational insolvency within four years, 19 percent within two years, in which their districts will no longer be able to fund all state and federally mandated student instruction and services.

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Anna Gristina Released From Prison: ‘Madam Millionaire’ Leaves Jail After Being Sentenced To Time Served

NEW YORK — A suburban New York mother of four who pleaded guilty to promoting prostitution has been released from jail following a sentence of time served.

Anna Gristina got six months in jail on Tuesday and five years of probation.

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2012 Black Friday: Best Deals For TVs, Computers, Clothing And More

With practically every store under the sun promising you the best Black Friday deals, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. Here’s a roundup of some of the most competitive deals retailers are offering come Thanksgiving. (Deals vary depending on location, so check with your local retailer before you hit the ground running.)

TELEVISIONS

The Senate Is About to Let More Than 22 Agencies Spy on Your Email and Documents Without a Warrant (Update: Not Any More)

What began as a bill designed to protect the privacy of your digital life has been mangled at the behest of law enforcement agencies. CNET reports that if the revised Senate bill isn’t stopped before it goes to vote next week, 22 federal agencies will have warrantless access to troves of your private information. Let’s stop them. Updated below More »

Study shows kids want Apple products the most for Christmas

The holiday season is right around the corner, and it’ll kick in to full swing after this weekend when all of the Thanksgiving festivities wrap up. So then, what are the good little boys and girls putting on their Christmas lists this year for Santa? It seems Apple products are the go-to gadget for most kids.

According to research firm Nielsen, American kids aged 6-12 are more excited about the latest iOS devices than any other electronic devices. Almost half the kids surveyed wanted a full-sized iPad, and 36% wanted an iPad Mini. The iPod Touch and iPhone are were also on the list, with 36% and 33%, respectively.

In second place was the Nintendo Wii U, which garnered 39% of kids. It turns out that four out of the top five most wanted items by kids are Apple products. Coming in at number six is a computer with 31% interest from kids. Honestly, we’re not too surprised by the vast interest in Apple’s products, especially with kids. Apple names their products in order for people to easily remember them and they’re really simple names, so we’re not surprised that kids know what all the latest iDevices are all about.

Gaming was also a huge hit, according to the survey. Microsoft’s Xbox 360 made the list, as well as the PlayStation 3, and an assortment of Nintendo DS products. However, while Apple products dominated the top of the charts, the one item that kids were least excited about was the Apple TV. Frankly, we’re not too surprised by that, since kids probably aren’t big into televisions and all the cool video apps that you can get on the Apple TV. So for now, it seems that gaming, and playing around with tablets is the thing to do.


Study shows kids want Apple products the most for Christmas is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
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