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A scientific, eco-friendly breakthrough flashlight that is making a difference worldwide

BoGo Lights are solar powered flashlights with rechargeable batteries that last for 750 to 1,000 nights of individual use (photo by BoGo Light)

The average family in the developing world can spend 20 to 30 percent of their disposable income to purchase sources of illumination. A solar powered renewable light source significantly reduces or eliminates this cost for families who live on $1 to $2 per day.

Two billion people living in the developing world rely on kerosene lanterns, candles, and single-use battery flashlights for light at night. Not only are these options expensive, dangerous, and harmful to the environment, they also negatively impact health, education, and security.

You can provide light to those in developing countries who need it and get a BoGo light for yourself. Check out the Buy One Give One offers for the Mini-BoGo Light or the larger SN2. You can even choose where you want to send your donated light.

The BoGo Light is a handheld solar powered flashlight with rechargeable batteries that provides light for years. When the energy is exhausted, simply replace the three standard AA rechargeable batteries and keep going. Most flashlights are made by companies that sell batteries. A great way to power battery sales is to offer disposable flashlights with a short life measured in hours. BoGo Light life is measured in years and they are reusable.

Mark Bent founded two companies–SunNight Solar to sell solar lights to commercial and government clients; BoGo Light as a non-profit organization to provide lights to charities and under-developed countries. He has partnered with the World Bank on a program called Lighting Up the Bottom of the Pyramid.

FDR

Bronze statue of at the entrance to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial in Potomac Park shows the president seated in the wheelchair he designed to be unobtrusive (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Despite the fact that Franklin D. Roosevelt was permanently paralyzed from the waist down, he never allowed himself to be seen in a wheelchair in public.  For that reason, this life-size statue of FDR seated in his wheelchair became controversial.

The bronze statue by sculptor Robert Graham of Venice, CA is at the entrance to the seven-acre FDR Memorial site located between the Potomac River and the Tidal Basin south of the Lincoln Memorial. President Clinton dedicated the FDR Memorial in May 1997 but there were not any depictions of FDR with a disability. A committee, that included FDR’s granddaughter Anne Roosevelt, was formed to raise private sector contributions. Their five-year campaign raised $1.65 million.

When the statue of FDR was dedicated by President Clinton in January 2000, Alan Reich, then president of the National Organization on Disability said, “This dedication represents a great victory for people with disabilities. The statue will be an inspiration to people worldwide, disabled and non-disabled alike. FDR’s Memorial will finally acknowledge his significant disability experience, which forged his leadership qualities and enabled him to successfully lead the nation through the worst crises it had ever faced.”

Dentist Bill

Closeup of an American Dental Association claim form for dentistry services (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Dentists, oral surgeons, and orthodontists played a leading role in the drama of my youth. My teeth were a much bigger mess than they are now. They were growing in funky directions, some permanent teeth never made it, all photos from my formative school years reveal a face full of metal, and my jaw doesn’t function like everyone’s. Over the decades the interior of my face has been stabbed, drilled, cut, carved, sliced, wired, banded, filled, bridged, capped, and professionally flossed. In my mind, Freddy Krueger is a wuss compared to anyone engaged in dentistry. But my current dentist changed all that, one year and filling at a time.

In an era of ObamaCare, health maintenance organizations, and multi-office dental clinics staffed by a dentist-du-jour, my dentist only has one office and works with his wife. My dentist and his wife know my name, and the names of my family members. My dentist doesn’t need no stickin’ hygienist – he and his wife handle my checkups all by themselves. My dentist gives me a new toothbrush after each visit. Over the years I’ve recommended my dentist to friends. I trust my dentist to care for my wife and children. Remarkably, I’ve become good friends with my dentist and his wife.

While it’s not out of the ordinary for anyone to consider having a dentist as a friend, it is from my perspective extraordinary. I am dental fear’s poster child. Whatever you call it – odontophobia, dentophobia, dentist phobia, dental anxiety – I’m there. The horrific hallucinations I’ve experienced while under the influence of various anesthetics propelled dentists to a level of abhorrence for which there are no words. Drill-wielding goggled freaks in crisp white jackets have played a starring role in my nightmares for decades. Rinse and spit. Giant stainless steel syringes with glistening needles. The first time I saw the infamous Is. It. Safe? scene in the film Marathon Man it was easy to identify – finally, an accurate portrayal of how I felt.

I’m not the easiest patient. I use humor and antics to express my über nervousness. It would be easy to imagine my dentist retelling stories to his senior dental students about another strange encounter with his eccentric patient who asks too many questions, talks incessantly, and interferes. Not long ago when a permanent crown didn’t feel to me like it was seated properly, I reached in and took it out as soon as my dentist turned away. In the process I almost swallowed the little jewel. It wasn’t a conscious act of stupidity, but rather a misguided effort to help. Yesterday only once did I catch myself not breathing during drilling for a shiny new filling.

But my dentist shrugs off these peculiarities. He and his wife do their best to allay my fear. My dentist can administer a shot of Novocaine better than anyone else on the entire planet. I used to require “sedation dentistry,” nitrous oxide (aka laughing gas) before enjoying the Novocaine, but my dentist got me over that. Yesterday I went in with a broken tooth and we talked and laughed about popular issues – family, health care, politics, and the economy. My dentist proposed a filling when others may have recommended a more expensive crown. We laughed about my dental insurance coverage. I don’t ever recall laughing about anything while visiting a dentist.

A rare night launch early this morning at 5:21 Central Time for space shuttle Discovery hauling a crew of seven along with 10 tons of equipment for a 13-day mission. The 131st shuttle launch is the 33rd mission to the international space station (ISS) and only the 35th, and potentially last, launch in darkness. An easily visible ISS passed 220 miles above the launch site 15 minutes before blast off. This mission holds the record for the most women in space at the same time.

STS-131 Crew

Seated are STS-131 Commander Alan Poindexter (right), commander; and Pilot James Dutton. Standing from the left are Mission Specialists Rick Mastracchio, Stephanie Wilson, Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Naoko Yamazaki and NASA astronaut Clayton Anderson (photo by NASA)

Discovery and crew will spend 13 days in space on their mission to the International Space Station.

Only three more scheduled launches to go before the shuttle retires this year. Curiously, space travel still doesn’t seem to impress many these days. Fox News was the only news channel I found that provided coverage beginning more than two minutes before launch and as a bonus had a real astronaut on hand to provide commentary. Live video during launch from a camera mounted on the side of the external fuel tank and in the shuttle bay, three planned space walks scheduled for more than six hours each, solid rocket boosters generating more the five million pounds of thrust, and 0 to 17,000 miles per hour in six minutes are all just too pedestrian.

The Census Is Getting Personal

The E.J. “Lionel” Grizzaffi Bridge (Highway 90) on the left and the Long–Allen Bridge (Highway 182) on the right in Morgan City, LA (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Two passenger vehicle bridges span the Atchafalaya River to connect Morgan City, Louisiana with Berwick. The E.J. “Lionel” Grizzaffi Bridge (Highway 90) is a cantilever bridge named for a member of the Louisiana state house of representatives from 1948 to 1952. The Long–Allen Bridge (Highway 182) is a truss bridge named for Louisiana governors Huey Pierce Long, Jr. and Oscar Kelly (“O.K.”) Allen, Sr.

O.K. Allen, the 42nd governor of Louisiana from 1932 to 1964, earned his nickname for saying “okay” to Huey “Kingfish” Long who was the 40th governor of Louisiana from 1928 to 1932 and a U.S. senator from 1932 to 1935. At the peak of his popularity, Long was shot at the Louisiana State Capitol and died of internal bleeding two days later on September 10, 1935. Some believe Carl Austin Weiss, a young physician, assassinated Long. Others believe Weiss punched Long in the mouth and a stray bullet from bodyguards struck Long. Weiss was shot 61 times by Long’s bodyguards.

During his four-year term as governor, Long built more than 100 bridges and increased the mileage of paved highways in Louisiana to 2,301 from 331.

Dollar Is Up

Those betting on a weak dollar in Europe are disappointed (photo by Kenn Stearns)

So far this year the dollar is up more than 5% against the euro. Lingering fears of a European debt crisis are pushing the dollar to its highest point in nine months. Yesterday the euro slipped to $1.36.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are 31 million people currently unemployed. Millions of Americans are hurting.

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